D:ec.sM1sER 303.1952" A Urges No'Cul- - in American Plane Oulpui By Roger D. Uncut Twenty-Five Deaths In 195 2From Highway And, Street Accidents In PEI WASHINGTON, Dec. 20 -(AP) GENTBAL GUARDIAN of local interest, but advertising of a newly nature may be inserted at five cents a word. strictly pay- able in advance. JIMMY? TAXI - Phone call. C graphs. Tl-IE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN Scores Pseudo-Scientific W "W '- "W Attacks On Christianity C Posing the question, "Has the hristian belief out of which the hrlstmas feast rises been dis- credited by Science?" Rev. W. J. 03A5W'll-l- W '30”! Ph0l0- Enrlght, c.sm., of the Church of the Holy Redeemer. made a. con- Gsn. Hoyt vie: Russia l CRIS. vandei-berg said: equalling our output. bettering lt." ' in industries Association. or the world, of acute crisis." said: me peace. of the world." incoming Republican spending. has attained only the mark. planes. he said. are dbsolescent. services. Vandenberg said depended tor security upon short-lived atomic monopoly." Heavy Buying one instalment Plan OTTAWA. Dec. to buy heavily on the plan in the three months 000 for that period. period of 1951 when The controls were May. In the third quarter cent compared 000,000 from sl9'l.400.000. Purchases through 5566.500.000 from S538,500,000. olnrlls. Minnlnsos. DEATHS Soc Per lnsortloe BIRTHS pcreaux. a son. (JURBIE-At the and Mrs. Charles L. Currie. S. Vanderberg. air force Chief 0f M": Wild WW 50' due .to highway accidents in this his Dr0d"'-Wll ll" Province reached a new high in times as many planes as tbe'Unlt- 1953, mm . cuuglgy lm 0; 33 all States durlnl the last five persons Twenty-five such deaths The U. 8. Air Force chief laid that with the atomic bomb now in possession of the soviet Union." "we are entering a period of in- creased tension and, in some parts Deploring what he called the American "111-olidl:1y" in tplane pro- duction dur g t e pos -war years t uni" '0 the ”.'"”'”'k "i ll" K": gyllbllge W::E:rlilaveDel?e:rrlmse:llpll:d can W" l” mid 1959- V”"l””l"5' by Mr. H. E. Miller. district en- "we must meet'our lair-powher goals ll W9 5” W 3" ” dredging plant of the Department strength to counter the threat 1- Wu engaged as follows; goinst our national security and vandenberfa Ball 0331' lll ll" on' dredging at Vernon. Rocky lace of growing reports that the Point. Wood Islands. administra- unn may seek to trim military tain Alex Macllean - carried on vmdellbdl-3 guld mm 1;; the 29 Launching, south Cardigan Ferry months since the United States Dock and Belle River. ' began its air build-up. the pro- m a a;:..::.r;; ::.:1"..:1:;:.::;”;. ”l;:i:”l..:.l.f.?'il:i More than half the air force's vandenberg said that during the current build-up, the aircraft in- dustry has delivered some 16.000 planes of all types to the armed Historical Work to v:::.:. 93:; l .e.. u. s. By Falher Reardon power declined "while the mill); . ' Published In U.S. 39 --(GP) - Edward Islander. Rev. James Mich- Shoppers in retail stores continued 331 Real-doll, pug” and .. lu-dl,llel- ll15lElm6l'll4 of Mr. M. W. Reardon, and of Mrs mdm John Connolly. Fitzroy Street, Char- last September. boosting total re- lomllnwl-l, fall stores to more than 52.800.000.- Thls is an increase of more than Mun-.y' A,cl,l,l,l,l,p M St paul as 5300r000v”00 9V" ll" 533-'”v”00l”09 a contribution to the celebration of worth of total sales in the similar the '0,” hundredth annlveumy of mleml c0"' the erection of the diocese on July lrols restricted instalment buying. )9. 1950. No more mung mmo, ”m9V9d lb” could have been chosen, as Father of 1952. -n -1- by m.ooo.ooo ::sr::":; ':..:c:::'.::.:"::l;:."l:::. F9 51'990'0o0'"o0 llom 51930-590-oo”' seminary. superior of them. Paul 1”” W” l" bwt" ll: ll me” 3'6 9” Diocesan Missionary Band. editor . l” A 59'P"'”'” in chief of the st Paul Catholic "lump 1” mtalmm buying m I314" Bulletin and naswr. first in St. emf" "' Church and school and later in counts increased by 5.3 per cent to -Mmneapous where he brought to m"A"AMTAl me Kl”3-" C”""ty record of that amazing vovage un- ;l1"p"”g' Mpecamheg gllh 19536 ” lime in the annals of travel," writes '- an "- "ll 1”” 3"” W Father Reafdon. "tells the story of ch l u town of this group of Catholic explorers u.,.,,ll,l on Dec. ,9. 15,? ,: M. from the distant fiords of Scandin- Tlis yearly mounting death toll were investigated by the "L" Di- " Declaring that any out in U. a. vision of tl'le.R.C.M.P.. which oc- production can be '"cataatrbphic." curred in various parts of the Is- land. . "Even today the Rusilans are .'I'he greatest number cf.deaths or pellhlpi recorded as the result of acci- ti dents occurred in the month of Vanderberg expesebd his view; November when seven were in- M drtlcle W.-men lo, plan”, vestigated, with the month oi July official publcation oi the Aircraft Tllllllllll 559055 lllEll95t Wllen llll Federal Public Works , The following details or work gineer: During the season of 1952 the Dredge P.W.D. "Pownal No. 2". Captain B. T Batchilder - carried Dredge P.W.D. "No.-14" - Cap- dredglng at Skinner's Pond. Dredge P.W.D. "No. 17" -4- Cap- Head, North Rustico and Red Head. Dredge P.W.D. "NO. 1i6"-Ca.p- taln James Keddy - .carried on dredging on Montague River. Repairs and improvements were "The Catholic Church in the Dio- cese ofcst Paul. from earliest origin to centennial achievement." is the title of a scholarly work recently published in St. Paul. Minnesota. the author being a former Prince The history was undertaken at the request of the Most Rev. J. G. Reardon has had nearly sixty years' Paul where he built st. Mary's completion the Basilica of St. Mary with its sacristy and pastoral resi- dence. The book is beautifully published and illustrated. and in its opening chapter takes the reader back to the arrival of the first white men in Minnesota. This occurred nearly six centuries ago. when a -group of Swedes and. Norwegians made a journey west from Vinland and camped beside a lake on what is now Minnesota soil. "The written the heroic and tragic wanderings ,. avla who. in their hour of peril. s..,.v l.;,,l,,, Chlulell 10 ll”. 3 ob invoked the aid of the Mother of DEATHS (:AnlrBEITAt the Prince mwud Western World.” This record came to light in lass. 29th. 1953- Slwlleylilnllnt daughter when a. mule stone was unearthed of Mr, ma Ml-g, 130',-luld cumpbdll, near Kenslngton. in Douglas Coun- Charlottetown, 1:-ungl-pl g.-um Mac. ty. Minn. which later was decipher- l.elln's Funeral Home, Tuesday, at ed and is now widely accented by 1.00 p, M, Interment Montgguc archaeologists as authentic. It con- Island Hospital. Monday. December cemetery. Cvmtnll-In Roxbury. Mass, Dec. l9lh. 1952. Leslie W.. of 12 Gayland btrect. son of Amelia and the late William D. Currie. Funeral ser- Funeral Home, 490 Columbia Road. 30th. at 2 P. M. Gov't God in the first prayer of which we have any extant account in the ..m... Continued from page I vices at the J. 3. c l G. Gl Currie- oe "Mn What happened. it is under- Dorchester. on Saturday. December 5l'09dv 35 ill” "'9" W"'ll- "3"" 0' horses were needed for the clear- ing job but that only one or two HISSIITT-At Halifax on Sunday. such combinations could be found. ”"i'- 28. 1952. Clarence N. Blsseti. so horses were hired in nearby The body wlll ,l.,l.,, ll; (ll, Mac. Pembroke at 31-a-day apiece in a Loan Funeral Home this evening private deal by army personnel. and will be transferred to the I-"b0l'9" lllnd for the- project resldenc f C. G. K. P k 121 were then told they could be up- North n'l..:.. pml wl.,..,".-f'.,,ll. graded from rs cents an hour to rest until tomorrow noon. Fun- ol-nl from St. Peter's Cathedral to- "ml l""'5 M marrow (Wednesday) afternoon. 81.50 - the rate paid the men their own - if they would agree to kick back '10 . -- . cents of the 81.60. , smlce commencing at 2 oclock. The men”: money Wu med Interment in Sherwood Cemetery. to pay for the horses under the EGAN-At his home in St. An- Drivau arrangement and the dis- drew: on Monday. Dec 28, 1952, position of what was left is not - Frank Egan in his 83rd year. His remains were transferred lasi "Vmlhl from the A clear. The government's adherents can , A. l.l,,me,, argue that. while there may have My Funeral Home'io his late re- mm ""M"""l'l ll” ”ml' lmd Sldence. The funeral will take what it originally planned to pay lvllicefwedneaday at ta o'clock to hr mm "M h""' "l "'50 ”' St. Andrew's Church. . Interment hour -- that both the horses and men were on the Job and fully ex- deatbs were recorded. August and -October each had a casualty, list of four. l l In Charlottetown there were two fatalities, one in June and one AT THE GALLEBYl-fine adlan paintings. POLICE COURT - In the City vincing rebuttal in speaking be- Clint fore the Charlottetown Rotary Club yesterday. Following is the text of Father Enright'a address: ,''There was a. time. not so very in November while sunimerside had p ll c g tg d . - l one fatal accident for the year in ;.f..”M.gfl.,lf:'K', R; 5:0 l:i.';Enya”;;eo:,Vll;eng.”;.';ll:e ":l:l:gel:: gclvallah id?” lfg"l:ll0l'-"W'1l "till v-srani-s were committed to Jail politicians, publicists and pedogo- "mma" Ni” 9” w'” "V" ' 103' 00 dlyl. a drunk and l!lC8i1- gues were very positive about 89-ted by U16 P011136 03 the 3'”P06' able was fined S10 and costs or 10 themgelvgg ulld ghoul; well 34;. vs. municipalities. year, over 1951. - '0 o 0 Activities der the foreman noted: Fortune Bkw., botham; Bay Fortune fin; Belle River, Simon Stuart; Brooks shore. Joshua Mom-thur; Charlottetown Railway John Manderson; ard Llewellyn; Continued .on page 8 than a century. years. evidence on every page of being a and value. St. Paul, Minn.. where he was or- dained on June 4, 1898. by the late above noted. he id a brother of Mr. of his ordination. SPRINGVALE W: I. fourteen members and two visitors present. ' - The meeting opened with the The roll was called and four mem- bers pald their mem" ”', fees The minutes r.of the November meeting were read. approved and signed. cards of thanks for fruit and an acknowledgementf card, also a let- for seals it was decided to disre- gard'this. After some discussion the salvation Army; Cancer fund and the Protestant Orphanage. The school com chasing tee reported pur- the necessities for the mounting to seventy-nine cents. the members for their January to be answered with "What look forward to in the New Year" mlttee. Premier De Velol; CHILDREN'S PARTY -' Chlldfell 01 N10 911111103805 It Life started some time. somehow. the Maritime Central Airways and game place, maybe in the sea and the M.C.A.M. were given a party maybe not ln the gag, gnd' ll at the Charlottetown Armouries worked its way from wriggling to l on Saturday with Santa Claus swimming and so on up till it effected or proposed by day la- playing a leading part. In addi- anlxnated up lnalvldual who was hour at the following works, un- tlon to the treats which he hand- brainy enough to start at least a ed out in profusion to each of the cold war. Alberton Myrlclu. I-Ioward Clark; children, they were shown a mov- Alberton Queen's. Howard Clark; lng picture. FORDIEII ISLANDER PASSES- Wlll-fl. A telegram was received by Mr. Cllllonl L0lll5 Percy Worth, conveying he was the d is 1 di W th' Other chapters in the book deal Egd apfolgszgg n or '5 with early missionary activities am- Chest”. Survlvlng ong the Indians of Minnesota and the former Irene G l I :f”');h;'hedlgcr:s:thdo:,x:ld nhilgilggmgge glgglsrlgngllgzg cllyr 0"? daughter halo it with the same reverence The work is fully documented (Janie). from parish chronicles and other and percy Bulillenlilc -90lll'095- and Wlltllllll 59" Mrs. L. R. McKenny of Kalamazoo. ery of all virtues eral pages of references and a com- Mlchq (Adelnldex Mm Arlln Nave. ' Dltlie lnClEX- 13 9VlClCn'vlY lllV0lV9d 3 Seattle, Wash. and Frederick. Ver- this utopian era about to dawn great deal of research. and bears non, 3.5. ' filled the Gordon Avard, this issue these dictators. The speaker was introduced by the using run on time, They also chairman. Dr. W. J. P. MacMil1an made people run on time, some The December meeting of the and lllanlicd l0? l1l5 Mldre-58 by people had to run faster than oth- Bpringvale W. I. was held at the P11-"ld6l'll AV3l”d- Fllllml Plelce WES era. The lesser breeds had to run home 01 M”, om," mill wllll, song leader with O. K. Presby at the fastest of all. Waller couldn't run ,fast enough were Tll0m8-'5 seized and thrown into concentra- McAvlnn and Rev. T. H. B. Som- tlon camp; to be used as gullled. the piano. Conrad. Charles Rogers. Ode, Creed -and a silent Prayer. 9”- Mr. J. F. Lafferty. Charlotte- l. . ll! ll l - 4 t -I-ha conespondenc. comulod or '33: Hofbllzzlvenl ll ll" Chnllolle Man is the measure of all things, ter re donation for the T, B. Lea- Mm All,,,l,, gue. As everyone in the district lend the usually made a habit of donating llodpllal for lmllmeml Plans were made to help the tea- A. F. left by plane cher decorate the hall for the Trenton. Ontario. after Christmas concert and Mrs. Ausl his Christmas holidays with his man body works than to cut it up? tin sentner and Mrs. Ralph Crabbe parents. Mr. were appointed go sell the candy. Doucette. Edward St. it Wilfred lege. served by the hostels and com- lo dnend llle son. Eugene. to Miss Kay Morris. l”'""”ll9"3 R.N.. of Klnkora on January zglll more tensciousl, to their ethnical d3Y5- 3 drunk and dl50l'd9l'lY WM compllshmenls, and about what M”""''” P”"” ''c”"”'”””"” fined 85 and costs or 5 days and they were going to do in the fut- an increase of over one hundred . drunk and dlgordel-ly non-fatal awcidenta -reported this manded until Jan. 2. Fol-woaplerzetz udmed mm in God eliefs of their own. lng a motor vehicle at an excessive Rgllglol-l to t em was 3 cu;-loglly, rate of speed. a city resident was an interesting study, like the ruins fined 810 and costs or lo days. of a Greek temple. or the skull of a prehistoric man. "They had faith in evolution. "They had boundless faith in This was followed by man. Man was the measure of all Anglo Rllatlco. Theollhlllll 3lHn- a one-act play "two crooks and in things. It was derogatory to his chard; Annandale, Marcel Camp- lady" Pfeienled by the grade VIII dignity to recognize anybody above bell; Basin I-lead. Neil Macbeilan: pupils of West Kent School. Duke him. Man was the pinnacle of the Bayfield. John J McPhoe: Bay Neilsen arranged and directed the pyramid. Since God was a lumen- Alfreil Hlsshv programme. with Arthur Wildish tlty there was no point in having North officiated as Master-of-Ceremonies. churches. Therefore all places of Whlirll Allied Hlssinbotbem: 333' Val Magee arranged and control- worship were turned over to pro- Fortune South Wharf. Irving Cof- led the lighting effects. fane uses. Science the Key "And of course the highest faith the gall of all was the faith in science. C0125: Crimberry. Joseph Fliheti news 01 the sudden pdgglng of M,-, Science ,was the key to all locks. Dllmley BE5lIll Rfllilll 1'l0FdZ El? Harry R, wol-ll; by Salem, Oregon the answer to all the riddles. mont Bay. Cyril Araenault; Fish- who passed away all hl. home Dec, Science had debunked the Bible lng Cove. Clayton Noye; George- 23 and Wu hurled Dec. Mn town Queen's. Angus McLean; worm was born ln Charlollelown itself. They (the scientisu) were Georgetown Railway Wharf. I-low- and was me am of the G”h”m'" Pond' and Mrs Henry Worth I-Ie been residing least 40 years, where proprietor of a department store tains the only runic inscription d ll df ms b 1 found in America and it ante-dates ggusreagrli bfgmworthuivgiwaugif oppressed the minds of men and and proved that the universe runs late Mr. going to bury religion and God has himself ,in the cemetery of dead things. to relegate them among the phantoms of a defunct past Too long had religion held un- challenged sway, too long had it at desolated generations. Hence- "le "W535 M o”l"mb"3 by ml)" mer member of St Pauils Church I m klnd ld b k - m ' or man won as in c 358:? ii:-izzling brightness of the peer- I ess are. his Wlfe talked of nothing but science. they Hellderson 8150 spelled it with a capital "is" to luminary -'- Science. They End that had heretofore been vouch- the following sitters and brothers. salad the name of God, gcleme Sentner was the creator of peace, the pur- (Leahl. veyor of universal, weal, the nurs- "The descriptions they gave of were so full of empty lyricism and frothy enthusiam as to be burles- labour of love. The 36118111 reader. ROTARIANS PAY TRIBUTE - que. Here is 9. sample: 'Scientific as well as students of church hls- Fitting reference was made yes- humanity will march forward tory, will find it of great interest terday to the death lof Mr. C. N through the centuries, fecundatlng Bissett at the regular weekly meet- the surface of the earth. bettering A, ll young man, Father Real-don lng of Rotary, held at the Cl'i8.I'- the condition of all races. abolish- taught school in Prince Edward l0NA!t0Wn Hotel. V Bland ,0, three was l,l-log go hlg been a valued member of the club industry, introducing entmlng Lawll Unlvemlty and com- during the years of his residence and deeper system of education, pletlng his Bccleslasllcal smdles ln in this city, and for several terms establishing a with fidelity and tisf sllremlty owned mm: an reumghls Well so ac on o occupations, ranscen mg a. M bo Reference was also Christian conceptions. inaugurat- Amhbmhop John ne1md' 3 Va n,Il1f:;l1;?erbytNtl!.ht1on:lss1l)irecftor. Pbw lng everywhere the ideal reign of Mlw. Random also 01 lgh". flog, sheen -o!0Ma10ml7 B IfldK";lIerM113mll'ii;f-ti brotherhood and social solidarity. Connolly. Fitzroy Street. at ot - Governor of Rolary wen Wwllf Ml” Cl""l93 R'”d""- selmet here. Letters of appreciation were by these reckless dreamers. They ml. M;..”.::::.?..:"d..l:r i-.1. lg-d..l:.or-5 was 5- up by - mm or lo- - - - e e rose . J. T. R - v Hampshire: and ML” Agnes ROML mum 0: En F 0 ors and carried along a perfectly don. who is secretary to Father mission, acknowledging gifts Reardon in Minneapolis. Where he money raised through the Rotary Berlin and in another 9. dangling continues actively engaged in his Auction. F. A. Large reported for by the heels on a public square duties as Rector of the Basilica the Boy's Work Committee having 1;, lvllllm, there, visited this Polio patientc at the Father Reardon's last visit home Sanatoriom accomimnlell by was in 1948. when he was oriviibged 0Wen Curl-ls. K. A. Parker to celebrate Mass at St. Dunstanls PPS-tlldenli Basilica on the fiftieth anniversary lzllts "Om Romy Wm dlsmbuk argued. we ought to be able to ed- The Kllast Bvpealier W8-5 REV. W. rise.frcm men to surpermen. J. Enright, C.SsR, whose address appears elsewhere in Bissett had ing wars. consecrating labour and a broader morality eman- "And you know what happened known to the errors that were set afloat C0m- straight line to their logical con- 01 clusion. In one case a suicide in "Those smart fellows discarded D1 their faith in God lind took up and faith in evolution. Since we had When risen from tadpoles to men. they "They were really progressive. They made the Those who pigs for the advancement of the science in the name of which the dictators were operating. New Frontiers "The old dreamers who said: forgot to say which man. But Hit- ler and Mussolini had trouble fig- l"1'lH'll'l5 Will rEK1'9l'a 90 l88-Tn lrlmt uring out that answer. They said has 01- Man is the measure of all thlngs' Prince Edward island and the man with the most power is the measure of all other men. They pushed out new' frontiers in J H J Miss Laurie MacDonald return- psychology by delving into the l5 W03 90 Selwlv lllfee ed by plane to Montreal Saturday question of how much abuse the Clllflly l'6llGl8 01' ln5llWtl0M '0 after spending Christmas with her human spirit can stand. What don!-M 9-0. 01' Collect for. during the parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Mac- better way was there to find out year 1953. The ones chosen were Donald, 1'15 Hlllsboro St. how germs and germicldes, physics and pharmacals will work on the Kler Dcucelic of the R. C. human body than to try them Sunday for out on the human body? What spending better way to learn how the hu- ”This onslaught on r e 1 i g i o n spearheaded by two rampaging fiends. gained such momentum Cadet Walter Conrad. son of Lt. "133 101' 11 llme the dymlmlc of school md ll-lg teacher gm md ",3 Col. F. B, Conrad, and Mrs, can, our Christian world was threaten- ml dd -pl, ddk. ug . rad. arrived on Saturday pmxlied sending lrulfm :el,.rl:y Kingston, Ont, where he is 3 am. ever right triumphed over might. Em A collectlon Wu "ken ., dent at the Royal Military Col- ' Cadet Conrad will be Mrs. Murdock Macswain invited l'”"”"l let" "M" MOM”- from ed with actual extinction. How- "The crackpots who set those ex- on ploeive ideas adrift in the world styled themselves philosophers. A philosopher is a lover of wisdom . Mr. W. R. R d. f Wi ds , Of course you can be a. lover of xgltmgaltglle l!l:.in.:h comrnlutrtgs tglbn: onurlol hu ,.,.3i'3..., (ll. lllen call. 9. thing wlithout polssessing it. For Pueuonl Mm Abwduce Don” Md ::ldlg:go,glnt,';knatn nutp JAE new dulled instance. am a over of music. ' l 2 Mrs, Omar Neill. and the roll call Mn, 0, Cam” P”""”"” but I M” Mt pmlum” "' I . epithet musical of myself. "They were mediocre philos- Mr. ml M , w, w, M l. , ophere. poor historians and worse .'1'h0 meellm clmd V”! 9119,14 spring Sf.."Charloitetoiv:,rplel't ixwcholoslsta. They did not know Queen and a delicious lunch was 5, "all. l.-lldlly lo, Toronto. on," that ma.vl's religious instinct is as m.,,..l.,gg of lhel, deep-rooted as his instinct of self- that nations cling tices than to the soil of their na- l ih . " -' '”"'"" """l"l' latent. not non-existent, lulu that the norm aim set on the w- Reruns From Hospital rolls in any form. Whether that will still the horse time that a retina of his eye had .-.. become partially detached threat- DUBLIN, Dec. 29-(AP)-Prime enlng total blindness. turned home tonight after 4 H2 at the university eye hospital (in months of successful eye surgery Uirecht)." he said. "the retina is my sight is al. the position It was "As a result of the treatment . reattached and in. st. Anthony's Church. Toronto. Mlle” and l0 W5” Telllldlll Dm- T tlve land; that they will fight and die for their temples as well as for their convinced that they are doomed as hearths. 'nltlnctively race the moment" they lose their faith in God. Communist Threat "There is another threat on the Argyle Shore llterdam. N. n. l'"3h' "nil" to l” ''''1- Minister Eamon de Valera re- uNDlTtAT” V endi treatment in an Utrecht now completely 3 dug; clln c. P ' I will: to (bank '11! my school ClIIrfotIIUW.B Ill chums, friends. relatives and by a large crowd of well-wlahera. . l ' ' neighbours. who called. tent Including hesldant and Mrs. seen truth Wiialful mm or card: to me during my O'Kelly. l I ",0"; In recent accident. 5” m him. in a statement issued at Am- . t W I I GIIATIST LANGUAGE English it the mbst the 70-year-old Prime commercial, Minister disclosed for lilo first lomalic language. He was greeted at the airport before the detachment occurred." horizon of the Oh:-Igtlgn wol-ld to. day. It comes from the horde: of militant godless in Russia. Marx- Lenlnfst atheism dreams of or- Rev. W. J. Enrlght. C.ls.R. achievements of industry. Y-ht titanism of man's mammoth indus- trial potentialities. "scarcely had the Bolsheviks seized control in Russia, when they openly declared themselves the enemies of God and of all religi- ous faith. With a fiendish frenzy they set. about annihilating Chris- tianity. They tortured. imprison- ed and massacred thousands of ministers of religion. They trans- formed the churches into club- rooms or into places of blasphemy. They organized a sacrilegecus propaganda to ridicule God. They opened up athelstlc schools for the communist youth. "Despite their frantic efforts to give the outside world the impres- sion that they are ultra-progres- sive. we know that Russia is re- trograding to barbarism. That is the inexorable fate of every na- tion that casts off the restraining influence of belief in God. Her economy is the most lopsided in the worldf "A high-placed official of Red Russia who eventually saw the light, coldly records what he saw. He says: 'The imperial palaces were equipped with clinics for the working classes, but rats were de- vouring babics in the Moscow hos- pitals. We build radio stations, but multitudes of urchins sleep in the gutters. The Institute dedicated to Lenin thrusts heavenward its vainglcreous facade. but all around it reign ignorance, lousy misery, and the most revolting practices of sorcery. We introduce electricity into remote villages. but in scores of areas the country- folk have to till the soil with course sticks. The working class is in power. but veritable armies of un- employed stampede our cities. We show movies in isolated hamlets. but there are sections in Russia where the inhabitants never even saw a wheel." Lesson of History "History demonstrates conclu- sively that there is hope of survival only for religious peoples. When a nation in one of those criminal upheavals that subvert states re- pudiates all religious beliefs, it either comes back of itself, im- pelled by a force which is nothing else than its re-awakened instinct. of self-preservation: or it experi- ences all the plagues of expiring races. dissolves in demagogic dis- order, or succumbs to Caesarism buttressed by militarism groans under the heel of brute force and finally dies, because. having placed itself outside the laws of life. it is no longer worthy of life. "A professor at the University of Cambridge said: "I believe that England is a deeply religious coun- try, and if she ever ceases to be religious, she will cease to be great." The slime applies to any country in the world. Napoleon said the same thing, in his brutal way: 'A people without religion cannot be governed, it can only be machine- gunned.' "At the Constitutional Conven- tion July 20, 1787. Ben. Franklin declared: if have lived e. long time. and the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth - that God governs in the affairs of men. And if s. marrow cannot fail to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid?' Perverted Theories "All the fnhumanities I referred to were perpetrated in the name of science - in its most comprehen- sive meaning. But it wasn't sci- ence at all; it was a perversion of science. .Absurd theories can be palmed off on the masses much more speedily when they are la- belled 'scienl.ific', or tprcgressive' People are naturally inclined to try to rationalize even their most fatuous weaknesses; like the hue. band who will tell you: 'I would not be a drunkard today if I had not married a nagging wife.' "Our Christian belief has been challenged only by counterfeit science. And the onslaughts stem- ming from that spurious source bear within themselves the ele- ments of their own destruction. There can never be any clash be- tween true science and religion because they revolve in separate orbits. Far from, contradicting each other, they complement each other. "Science. in the measure in which it participates in truth. is an august thins. one of the glories of the human mind. Science is penetrating deeper all the time into the knowledge of matter and its laws. and with' those better CHARLOTTETOWN FUNERAL HOME I PHONE ,508 Complete Funeral and Ambulance Service -Dlraetoro- common ganiglng all mankind into one and dlp- great godless totalitarian state. It hasl faith only in the creative I. Fl. Bradley J. W. Mcismn .2-u--&-j-nuzz '3 FKGE FIVE Committed To Masons Hold Slllllemggollrl Annual St. John's .33..s:::r;u.2:l':.:i..M.:.l:?::l:f Day Banquet G-audet, Carl Prowse. undergoing j. preliminary hearing for , ion pug Grand Mute, wl E 3”- of stolen goods. knowlns -them to son presided at the annual st. be stolen, was committed to the Jolmrll day banquet of Ancleng Supreme Court 101' 1'l9l at the Mxl Free and Accepted Masons of St. llson Gilli: for the accused. SOUTH WINSLOE Y. P. D. 9th The following Christmas while Mrs. Erlth Hughes used her meditation. "Christmas Children's Homes. The service closed by singing by Mrs. Dannie Coles. giving. The minutes of last call was answered by members, who were pleased have five visitors present. Mrs. Earl Rodd reported that table would be available for Gerald Dollar and Mrs. wered with membership fees the coming year. "The following elected for 1953: Norman ilambly; Orville Turrier; Mrs. Hardy; Gillespie; Friendship Convener, Mrs. Gerald Mrs. Ivan Turner; lng. Mrr. Hardy; vyn and Wayne Gillespie. Tile collection amounted that the meeting be Blythe Rodd took over the games were played. hostess and the committee kind hospitality shown to applications. precipitated by the brutality of time: it offers life. going up." of 12:30. session. Mr. J. P. Nicholson ap- John-3 D69-Ted 10F U35 CT0Wn- and Ml!'- 51' Chariottetonw last night. in than ChMge' A vote of thank! was ex- uthor left an estate valued at a , . tended to Helen and Earl for 311: H6733; (sm28v252)' Young People, and the meeting But it can never eulpplant religion in the soul of the masses. The reason for that l is because science cannot satisfy The 15 Jewel watch donated , the lofty aspirations of the hu- by M0359 man soul; it opens no new horizons on the mysterious hereafter to- Customer who made correct wlmii which we feel ourselves or nearest correct estimate inexorable of principles to guide man's moral Wednesday Afternoon Closing Tomorrow. Wednesday. our slore will resume closing each Wednesday afternoon more 6 M9LED'DE and Victoria Lodges of unavoidable absence of the Grand Master 1". I. Dell. More than 120 members of the Craft. took part in the assembly at A candle light meeting of South the y. M. c A. banquet room ln )l:VlnSl0e1X;;I P. U. was held at ' the accordance wlll, the well um),-l- "me 0 1 mil Mm EB” R0Cld lished custom. in honour of the 0" T"e5d9Y 9Vc””lK'- Dccemb" Patron saint of the order Saint John the Evangelist whose day fl The meeting opened with Call December 27”, to worship by Mrs. Dannie Coles, who was in eharge of the service. Camdavv lollowed by -lcmcen ma 937015 the toast were 5”"3: "J03 T" The wmld-" Grand Master R. E. Kemp offered Mn Came Upon A Mldlllglll C1957-" the toast to "The Craft" and Bro- Olll Come All Ye Faithful," "Sll- her Rev. lv 0. Hogs proposed the gfgghlttakejhlgroiuglgilgea 7V9;:' toast to "The Saints John” Closing . es 746' Mr. Hardy lead in lmiyerv ;eimarks by the chairman follow. The programme opened with "O "The Queen". Past 33 The brelherh then repaired to 1” the lodge room in Masonic Temple W0l'5lllP where Past Grand Master H. R. "Wlllle Carruthers She herds Watched Their Flasks elected officers of saint John's BY lgml" and Way" W35 0”9l"d Lodge No. 1. and Victoria Lodge installed the newly No.2 in due and ancient form. Mr. Hardy then gave a 'shcrt past Grand Mane, R. E. Kemp address on the spirit of Christmas acted as Grand Marshal. Officers of st. John's Lodge: "well"! Worshipful Master w. E. Macin- were read and approved. The rol 1-us. senlo, warden W, R. Brennm elevell Junior Warden J. A. Carruthers. "3 Treasurer R. E. Kemp, Secretary E. C. MaoMi1lan. Chaplain A. G. ” Reid. senior Deacon C. E. Walker. Fl?! Junior Deacon G. 3. Hughes. Di- lmmly sale- The llexl meelmg rector of Ceremonies G. D. Mur- will -be held at the home of Mrs. chlsonl senlm. Stewart M. la. Ree- William and Mrs. Norman Hamb-..,eSl Junior Slewam, G, R. l,low,l.d 135 lunch C0mmm'5e M be M”-llnner Guard P. J. Sentner. Tyler . N9”"a"'W. J. Carr, Tmistee E. R. White. I-lambly. It was moved and sec- onded that the roll call be ans- ml MM-Eel. E. ll lord, Senlm. Wu... ml" den R. C. Greene Junior Warden L Victoria Lodge No. 2; Worship- L. Hawkes, Treasurer Floyd Drake 0lflC9l”3 , were Secretary E. 5. Lord. Chaplain Rev l"e5ld9"lv .ll”5' E. G. Evans. Senior Deacon E L. Vlce'p”5lde"t- Johnston, Junior Deacon C. W. Mrs. Erith Hughes: secretary, Mlrs. Boswell Dll-eclor of Ceremonies ”,”5l"”- M” W. S. Farrar, Senior Steward W. Dannie Coles; Missions Convener, D. rl-Antony Junlor slewlml ll. Culmre Ccnvemh Maclnnls. Inner Guard Keith Fellowship Convener. Mrs. Lloyd Macxlmmnl Tyler (3. R, 3,-Edy, 55”el'3rY- Trustee H. E. Ward. Dollar: Citizenship Mrs. Earl Rodd; Leadership Train- recreation. Mar- PINEAPPLE SUN-BONNETS GRAHAMSTOWN. South Africa (CF)-More than a million grow- lb lng, pineapples in South Africa si.95. It was moved and seconded will wear sun-bonnets next season adjourned. to ward off sunburn. The bonnets. re- made of waterproof paper with a creation and some very enjoyable holei n the centre, will be fitted over the fruit before the crops A dainty lunch was served by the ripen- i 1-r-ijw n George Bernard Shaw. British closed by singing "The Queen." , known laws, is making astounding In Moose Jewellers Window Jewellers to the the number of rings. watches, jewellery, in the display window is awarded no "The only scientific -hceriflcloztion to B 1 a n c h e MacDougall, bordering on religion t at I now ho de the of is this: the collection plate go- gglne W ma lng down the aisle is never half Y as successful as the fashion plate total. guess of the l'Iero'o'fo the New Year! May you wel- come It joyoualy, live II happily, and fool: Incl: upon it fondly as a year of progress and achievement . . . of good Iieallla en- joyed . . . of hopes realised . . . and dseamoeomeu-out