_ imnbovun _ QY Mokkudkv to l‘ . luculn IILINQ STILL THE CIGARETTE SENSATION cirtmcn or lmtftiiisi- 1101.1: izcoeiaiiui: Hun. Rtdeciiter o1; LilC form of _ . s. Tiler were said at, 7.30, 9 and 10.30 dcirck. The 10.30 Aims “as conducted bl.’ Rev. A A. Ainciliiialtl. rt tor In the EVCIllXY-I llciiedictim of the Most BiCirflll Hacitiiiiciit was HlIlR by Rev. Fr M. Donald and the official Thanksgiving 11!‘.'i_\'€!' of the Church. 1-11,- "Te Dcum" was sung. There o'er-e large cotigrega~ Lions at all Masses. This l'l'lO!’l‘tiil;1 a,» 7.30 a Requiei High Mass will be sting for all those who lost their lives ciurin; the war. This War-Four Years Ago Dy The Canadian Press AUGUST 20. Mitt-Prime Min- ister MacKenzie King arrived in Britain after ii tr; irlantic ilivht to attend meetings the war cab- inet. Cuban consular staff ordered to leave Germany. Attstralian par- liament held a speciil session to dismiss Far F"i<'er11 situation. F1515 irTcrow w. 1. On Monday evening, Aug. 6th. the Fredericton Women's Institute met at the home of Mrs. Frank Cutclifle with eight members and two visitors present. President pre. sided. Mretine opened with Ode, followed by Creed; roll call was re- sponded to with a nirkle collection amounting to 50c. Minutes oi last meeting were read and approved. Sick committee reported one call made. New" committees were ap- pointed: Sick, Mrs. E. Murray and Mrs. H. Buchanan; school, Mrs. Eldred Weeks and Mrs. Millar Stev_ tnson. Mrs. N. A. Cutclifle gave an int- eresting report on annual conven- tion, which was followed by a brief report from local convention at Bradalbane. Correspondence was read and it was moved and sec- onded we send donation to Prin- cess Alice foundation fund. It was moved and seconded we hold an ice cream social Aug. 11th. A com- mittee of three were appointed to see about painting school. Mrs. Lorne Weeks thanked mem_ bers for symnothy card received. Mrs. Eldred Weeks invited mem- bers to meet at her home for next meeting, roll call to be answered with a cent for every size of shoe worn. Meeting closed with the National Anthem. NAIROBI, Kenya - rCPl - Kenya's lh'fill‘ifill~“.fi\\'el‘ problem is so acute that the authorities de- clnre it is impossible to release women who have been directed to do wm-‘k oi national importance. and they will nrohrvhlv not be re- leased until the end of the war with _Jamn SCHOLARSHIPS The C. W. L. 1| oiferln a lim- ited number of scholars ipe to Catholic young ladies who have completed lligh School and who wish to continue their studios at St. Dunstanb College. Applications, accompanied by m record ol work done, must. be in the hands of Miss Hilda Gillie, 2 llillsborn Ants" Charlottetown. not later than August 24th. _— II. J. MABOII OPTOMBTRIST lilting and Supplyin; Ginsu Etc. ' Montague. P. l. I. Ollla Bouts: l0 to ll A. M. I to 5 P. 50nd! S 01¢» by appointment Off cc Connected with DRUGSTORE I Preaching at s service of National "I'll Ill-K PUIJIT Thanksgiving in the Kirk yesterday morning on the text. "Make us lad accot to the days wherein ou hast aff oted us. and the years wherein we have seen evil." (Psalm 9015.‘. the minister, the Rev. TJ-I. Bussell Somers, said: And now 'we face a new era. frauzht with 1mm tremendous possibilities aria grave dangers. 1t is hardly to be ex- ipocted that. than will be very many swift transitions. Even when the i prisoner has been delivered from his letters, his limbs are stiff and sore where they have fretted him. and Ithut is. and will be. the condition ;oi multitudes in eve laud and from varying causes. are will be no magic transformation from dark- ness to light. no immediate realiz- ation of hopes and ideals, and-mer- haps above all—r1o return to what has been. to what l4 described as “normalcy? We shall be in the ltion of a city in which there as been a vut clearance of con- demned buildings. The abodes of vice and misery have dlmppeared. but there will always be reason to tear lest something more evil still ma! occupy that ground, and that. m- stead of somethlnl be tar. the ex- pelled devil may ret to his 01d lurking place. accompanied bysew en others more hateful and hideous than himself. It will he necessary. therefore, to realize peace as an activity. Hitherto all the unity, the glamour, and the sacrifice have been re- served for war. Peace. however, must be recognized as constructive, progresive, corporate. and organ- ized. Property is important, but personality is more important, and a sluni is not to be retained be- cause somebody owns it but dee- troyed because somebody else must not live in it or bring up children in it. Individuality is to be culti- vated fcr the sake of the commu- nity. not at. the expense of the aainntunity. Scientific, industrial, artistic, and civic excellence mus’. be rewarded with the same hom- age hitherto reserved for prowess in war. The day school teachers must not be paid a pittance. while the pugilist or the iilm star is load- ecl with wealth. Indeed, the post- war world, must not be considered primarily in terms of the material and the secular. No one questions the importance of employment. housing, town-planning, trans- portation, ani all the rest of it, but until thc mind and heart have been provided to create and ex- ecute on high levels, utilitarian ‘blue prints are of little value and less vitality. The whole character ‘of civilization changes when peace its realised as an activity and only of such a peace is our Lord the ‘Prince. Therefore .11. the dawn of world peace it may be welt for us to pan- der these things We shall be liv- ing soon in ‘days when decisions, [standard-s and ideas will matter Aremendousiy, and we must de- termine the principles on which those decisions shall be made, those standards erected. those ideas based, those votes recorded and those actions founded. There is. we are told, much Christianity in the air, but you can no more get, Christianity out of the air without the Church than vuu can get. music out of the air without the re ‘ing setfThat is wily ThomasCa his “French Revolution“, that that. min was blessed the Church. and breath “Emerson. Jesus Chl‘l3i med on Calvary, and that fact Dunsccre Church yonder!" It is so strange that we accept 1h:- mind of Christ—or think we do-until we get to politics, economics. or in- ternatloiial and social relationships. Surely, unless the Christian way of lite runs through these things, it ceases to be a way of life, and becomes only a mode of thought- withotit connection with human betterment e1 individual service. When we pray passionately. not verfunvlvrily - "Thv Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth" we have true devrrion to Him Whose Cross has risen again be- fore the eyes of our generation, set there once more by the sins of the world, but able. if we will let it. to reconcile us to God and to each other and in the effectiveness of that reconciliation will lie the happiness and security of the peace that now is ours. MORE omens NEEDED IDNDON - (GP) Tm Na- tional Jewellers’ Association do not believe that 40.000 clocks sent here from Canada are sufficient to meet demands and are planning built , Britain as soon as possible. to start watch and clock-making 111* . Study oI Dominion-Isrovin-clal Post-War Ac solved. The long waits, the heavy-burdened walks, the incon- veniences and overcrowding which have been the necessary lot of every wartime traveller will then be memories instead of firing daily realities. At your disposal will be u new General Motors cur . . . u sleek, distinctive cur built for economy, endurance and dependability, styled and engineered by master craftsmen in the famous General Motors tradition a . . c cur eager and willing to fake you safely, speedily and comfortably to your every destina- fion, near or fur. "Someday |’lI own at SOME day for sure! Then the frunsporfufion problem will be xi! ‘Fcmsvltotsr ' PONTIAC OLDSMOBILE BUICK CADILLAC ‘ll-Ii h THE GENERAL MOTORS DEALER WILL BE READY TO BRING Plan to Keep Employment Level High . . . Greater - g =~vemmen°&°"5i’“éiiiaifmliili.i‘iii,°i’§.“";i‘?..i“"€. post-war matters on which definite action will be fiannetgl I .;;...i1;.iai;..ii..t. m; YOU THE BEST IN TOMORROW?) CAR AND TRUCK VALUES Reconstruction Conference sessions a a and Train Eat-Soul“ PIIIOMQI nd w a u. ma - lunar ll Eeconvgmenn indueatgea tohrjgqcoggitrftlnpighodbcgfiilz’, WI ct atten on to possible lid i0 In nutter . . . Aid Small Industry In the him of the National Reconstruction Conform“ g Wm“ cm‘! Wales t! the Ottawa sessions will be pImTg °1' mlIfll-Biflifl! a high level of employment, absorbing mm