igion ‘ A By Very Rev. George C. Pigeon lint Moderator of the United Church of Canada I (Copyright) 1 ye," ago one of my professors um p115, "The centre of every gum of theology ought to be the Ev, o: God." It is also the cen- mi experience of- the Christian wflhis is not merely a nice senti- ment; it is a law of life. The issue before the nations is this: Is love ,0 b, the governing principle oi ‘ii human relationships, or are we to descend to the appetites and in- nlnrts which govern the brutes? International experiments and experiences in the past, and par- mulgrly in our own immediate p351, prove - that no other law iiniwm to men will work; the hu- man spirit will submit to no wverelgnty but ehat of love. The source of this Christian |itlilld9—i!lld it is the only atti- tude that is really Christlan-ds John’! doctrine, "God is love.” This rncfllls that at the heart of all that |;, and at the fount of all that is w be, ls immeasurable goodwill im- n1casilrably active. The aim of love p, lvi-rything God creates is its development to the height of its rgipfrfilty} if it has bccn marred or bypkrn the creative energy of the Iililili? nature moves toward its re- rcmtion; and the claim of love [nr iis object is his rise into the yiiost intimate fellowship with God. This means that love is the es- mire of the divine, “not merely an pitribute of God, but His very nat- ire." ' - As one writer puts it: "Judaism taught the righteousness of God. Greek thought apprehended Him ss wisdom, modern science posits Gfifl as force, Jesus Christ displays Beverages and - w»? iitaemilk I In any can J Rive. as can be! , Pours like Cream! ‘ (Try the smell size ) “n. m.- nine-ow‘ EVAPORAT ’ llnoisrlfl nuns II HLK \_Nillifi//"--—"’ 30/229113‘ IRRADIATED EVAPDRATED MIIK o“ "lfklgélfdlb? good/f Him as love." (Findley). The most recent book on the first Epistle oi John is by Professor C. H. Dodd and he says that “in speaking of the love of God We are thinking of loving action, definite, concrete, and recognizable on the historical plane." He points out, further, what is implied in the statement, "God is love" over and above what is implied in the state- mentfGod loves". The latter state- ment might stand alongside other statements such as, “God creates," “God rules." "God judges"; that is to say, it means that love is one of His activities. But to say, "God i5 love" irrpiies that all His activity is loving activity. If He creates, He creates in love; ii He rules, He rulcs in love; if He Judges. He judges in love. All that He does is the expression of His nature, which is to love. The first fact to be noted here is that our knowledge of the love of God comes from Christian exper- ience. Man could never reach that conception in its fulness from "a study of Nature. The man whom Tennyson describes represents a large number of earnest spirits! “Who tnisted God was love indeed And love Creations final law—‘ Tho’ Nature, red in tooth and claw With ravine, shrleked against his creed." The love which burst into the soul oi’ Jesus of Nazareth as He came up from the waters oi bap- tism, took command of His entire ministry. He taught the sover- eignty oi love; He lived by the law oi love; He refused to consider any means for the establishment of His Kingdom that was inconsistent with the love which He had found in the heart oi God; He accepted the Cross rather than crush his foes by the powers at His command. This experience of the love oi God is open lo every soul who seeks Him. This ivrlier speaks oi what he knows—when the love of God shines into the soul, it is like the brightness oi the sun, it blinds one to everything else. -lt is the source of all the joy in the Christian life. Look at the outburst of song which follows every genuine revival of re- liglonl Its joy resembles the joy oi the spring-time, when gladness pours from every bough and floods the morning; it is because love is fir} action and love is leading to e. This is the Christian's message to the world today. In the face of all its hatred and strife the mes- sage oi the Gospel is that love ls king. Missionaries are in every land at this moment proclaiming by word and deed God's love for men and God's invitation to every human soul to accept love as his portion. These men penetrate into regions, where hate has always ruled and might was the only right. unarmed, seeking no reward, giving themselves without stint to all who will accept their service in order that men may be awakened to what God is and what God means for them. The South Sea Islands were inhabited by cannib- als less than a century ago, yet when American airmen were forced down on these islands they were given every attention that Chris- tian love could inspire. Christian missions had wrought the change. So it is in every land. This is the law of life here at home-the only law that will work. We shall follow out a few oi its implications in succeeding studies, and we should like our readers to study carefully the first Epistle of John. But, whether we trace this back to its source or not, this is the Church's message to nations trembling on the verge of deadly strife-turn from violence to love as the only way to life. Our daily papers are carrying editorials on the character and career of Adolf Schweitzer, one of the greatest ministers of love in any age. It is because he has ‘given his life to love and its healing grace that he is moving the world. CHILD KILLED BY TRAIN BRANTFORD, Ont, July 10- (CP)—-Lorne Boomsma, 21-month: old, suffered fatal injuries Fridly when struck by a locomotive be- fore the eye; oi his father. George Boomsma said the child was standing by the track, chanting "choo-cnoo-triiin: Chev-choa-lrain". as the train bore down on him. fine folmccoa in one cigarette means mlld cool tacit‘. Central Guardian This lumn in reserved for new: of local interest, but advertising of I M"! nature may be inserted at live cents a word, strictly pay- able in advance. JWlllli-‘S TAXI. pnone D25. CBASWELL Ivor Pfwwirlphs. CONFIDIRATION LIFE IN- SUBANOE. STBAW HATS—PBHB.ITISS, Tropi- cal Mean, etc, at Jack Cameron's, Queen Street, ieznporary quarter-g over Toombs Music Store. 83 1/3% DISCOUNT on all dress. es and coats at The Fashion Shoppe. All .newest styles and shades. SWIM SUITS — Bnaippy and m]. orful at Jack Cameron's, Queen Slffieii. tempo"?! quarters over Toombs Music Store. SCHEDULED FLIGHTS daily to Summereide and Moncton. Phone Maritime Central Airways Limited, 2061 or 540. PASSED EXAMS-The follow- ing pupils of Kelly's Cross School received Grade Vlll Certificates: Joseph Roberts, Mary Roberts. Cyril Molyneux. Noreen Flood (Green Bay). Eileen Kelly. CITY POLICE COURT-At the Siipcndlary Magistrate's Court yes- terday, six persons charged with being drunk and incapable ap- peared; one was sentenced to l0 days in jail, one was fined $10 and costs or 20 days; two were fined $5 and costs or l0 days each. and the remaining two were both remanded until Tuesday. BIRTHDAY PlCNIC—Mr. and Mrs. William Green, Hampshire, were guests oi honor at a birth- day beach party on Wednesday, July 5th at Brackley. The occas- ion was the eighty-fifth birthday of Mr. Green. Attending the gathering were Mrs. May Willis and Mrs. Owen Younker, daught- ers of the guest of honor, and their immediate families and friends. Noted for their culinary art, the ladies served a sumpt- uous supper to approximately for- ty gay picnickcrs. The beautiful birthday cake made by Mrs. May and Mrs. Earl Willis was the cen- tre of table interest. BRIDAL SHOWER - On Thursday evening, June 30th, friends and relatives gathered at the home oi Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Graham, Cavendish, to tender a miscellaneous shower for their daughter Anna Elizabeth. As the Wedding Margit was being played by Mrs. Lloyd Houston, the bride- fo-be was escorted to a chair un- der pink and white streamers and decorated with roses and ferns. by Mrs. Louis Campbell. Carol Ann Graham, nelce of the bride-to-be. presented her with a bouquet of flowers. The baskets of gifts were carried in by Misses Margaret Simpson and Carol Mc- Leod. and opened by Mrs; Harold MacLean and Miss Sylvia Simp- son, while Miss Jennie Moore read the accompanying verses, and Miss Ethel Moore placed the gifts on the table. Ann gracious- ly expressed her thanks and all joined in singing “For She's A Jolly Good Fellow." Refreshments were then served by the ladies and the remainder of the evening was spent in dancing. All join in to wish Anna much happiness in! the future-(Patrlot please copy). Personals Mr. Preston MacAskill. Mt. Stewart. has again been engaged as teacher of Park Corner school. to the general satisfaction of trustees, parents and pupils. Mrs. Ralph Steele and two chil- dren. and Patricia Kickham of Brookline, Mass., ere visiting Mr, and Mrs. George Irving of Cherry Valley. Mrs. Steele and Miss Kickham are returning Tuesday. Robert and Margaret Steele are staying with their aunt and uncle for their summer vacation. IN MEMORIAM _ Wbndell who lccidentaly drowned July 11th, 1048. He little thought when leaving home Be wound no more return; That isle dn death. no lodn would And lawns here to mourn. Wedidnotknoiwthepeinhebore We did not aec him die, We only know he placed any And never said good-bye. Invtngly Remembered by Father, Everett, Elmer, Waiter and Jean. IN MEMORIAM . l I rnory o! lea blolilserwewendcll cuviaoni who Mu accidentally -CI'OIIIQC Jab! 11th, ll“. The blow wee greae the Itoek lev- Wblltileflknewhlndenthaonur hbewlthuatheeanseold any beourdelrestwiehto-day. sadly Mined by sister Mary, fired and Children. IN MEMORIAM In loving main of our dear Ion and brother but Wendell Claw (lob) who wll toned July 11th, 194D. Wblttleknewwhen svewoketlut morn, ‘Theeorrmvthatde would beta Ihr-theoollwnelu atheltogk more g: wltmuienrlovedeoudzr, a ea rnenwy We,%re|nemberthce. lverllemembcred liltcr Marion lrother-ln-hiw and children. i ‘Africa Flight g VII Gielgud CHAPTER XI. DESERT MARCH The three figures, with every pace looking more like absurd mar- ionettes jerked along by invisible wires, grew smaller and lmllier Hubert Manson put his arm round his wife's shoulders. Flesch stooped over his camera. Saunders cleared his throat, and spat emotionally into the sand. And illimitably high overhead, the tiniest of tiny specks against the burning blue or the sky. three vultures soared effort- less on vast leathery creaking waited. And the swift tropical dusk swallowed alike those who watch- ed. and those who marched. A 11%“! Journey is very nearly an indescribable thing to those who have never had the experience in their own persons. Most of all it approximates to Arctic or Antarctic travelling. There is the same ut- ter desolation and fricndlessnese of the environment; the same mono- tony of acute. and occasionally viol- ent dlscomiort; the same absence of variety of landscape or land- marks. And gradually only three things emerge into the foreground 0! the Picture; emerge. lose all proportion, swell into hideous car- icatures. Your boots, the water- boitles, and the sun , What Larrimore thought during the first two days of that Journey to El Fayoum, it is impossible to say. Certainly he never spoke of it. He merely led the way. his shoulders a little stripped. his jaw a trifle out-thrust, his length of stride never altering. During those forty-eight hours. he was so wrapped, up in the practical problem of assuring him- self of the accuracy oi the course, of giving Carol a lead with- out explolting her gallantry in following to breaking-point. that he thought oi nothing but the Job in hand. Carol. for her part, thought of nothing but Larrimore. She walk- ed steadily at his elbow for mile after mile, hardly speaking, but al- ways ready with the suspiclon of a smile when he needed it. And more than at any time since she had known him, she realized that she loved Larrimore; the hard, sweat-streaked Jaw; the keen peer- ing eyes; the steady piston-like drive of his legs, which drove her forward almost as definitely as it drove him, by sheer magnet-like example; the hair curling a little at the base of his neck; the worn khaki breeches; the open shirt. She felt that, rather than appear in- adequate in the eyes of this man so obviously here in his clement, she could die on her feet without so much as a whimper. . And though her feet grew sore and swollen, and her eyes raw and gummy, and the straps of her water-bottles cut into her shoul- ders, and her breeches chafed. and a three-hourly mouthful of water seemed no more than a mockery to her dried tongue and dust-parch- ed throat, she marched so well that Isrrimore found her endurance as hard to believe, as he would have flatly disbelieved the truth-that only for love of him could the girl ever have done it. And Antony Sothern? That fine flower oi elegant civilization was rapidly and frankly in ’a pretty bad way. He was learn- ing, iike other and better men be- fore him, that it is easier to pose as a. man of action than to act; to level a. pistol than to fire it; to talk of a desert march than to carry it out. Sothern was not really in condition. He refused to accept Larrlmoreh parole, and as a con- sequence was not only burdened with his nonnsl share of water and equipment, but also with two pis- tols, and a. bandolier filled with ammunition. As a matter of course he brought up the rear of the marching party. Completely incapable as he was of appreciating Liarrimoreh strictly realist attitude, Soihern still thought of the situation in terms of "playing at soldiers." That was why he started the march some ten yards behind Carol and Larrimore; why, for the first four or five miles he added vastly to his own discomfort by keeping a hand on the butt of one of his pistols. He persisted in seeing himself. as it were, in tactical control of the situation. Such an attitude was ‘compara- tively unimportant. Sothern, ef- ter all, was no fool. He was more- iy young and jealous and vain. But when he was forced to realize that that his isolation from the other two was practically unnecemsry. he also realized, with a mixture of horror and despair that even if he would, he could not make their pace. He tolled and swelled in their rear, his walk tending more and more to become a lurch, futile oaths dying in whispers on his cracked lips. and everything in th'e world forgotten but the molten vastness of the sun, the damnable slltherlng sag of the send under “Co! for treatment of Rheumatic and Arthritic Pains Neuriiln, etc. Q ‘Iboeewbo have ltd work and lowered their incomes due to crip- pling Arthritlo In‘ Rheumatic pains. Ill" found [antigen "C" ‘reel Invest- neat. Artis- rItIs moot be treated early. Aekyourdrng- a gist today! Price $6.00 leille islmoiii moments instill wings-soared, and watched. and ' v THE GUARDIAN, QHARIJOTTETOWN PAGE “TREE feel better all day. from your grocer today. Pas/é‘ Realize: Breakfast ls Specially Impor- Iunl’. With a good breakfast you " should start the day right. a day's work has been spoiled through a hasty breakfast. You sec: that '- ekimped breakfast encourages fa- tigue, irritability and lowered cili- ciency. With a better breakfast you Remember. Grupe-Nuts-u Special breakfast Cereal. To furnish the cereal share of a really good breakfast serve deli- cioua Grape-Nuts regularly. For nourish- ment there’e nothing finer than these appetizing, golden crunchy kernels of whole wheat and malted barle . The whole family will benefit from ueefu amounts of carbohydrates, minerals and proteins: fine food values. Grand with milk or cream. Recipes for different uses are also on the package. Order economical Grape-Nuts \ EGrapmNuf But many Prove {low You dene/if /I"0m Be/fer Break/hf: Check these few, simple iruibs. Here's an easy way to feel better. Here's an enjoyable way io aei beiier. How you can gain benefits for yourself — for your folks aihome. i [It re n S I‘ A Product of General Food! his feet, and his thirst. To the average European, thirst is just something that makes beer fizzle deliciously in the gullet; 11ml; turns water to Olympian nec- tar; that proves that one's game of golf or tennis was properly hard-fought. Thirst — real thirst that deserves the initial capital letter-is a very different thing. It withers the heart and cracks the tongue. It dries, and bewllders. and ultimately iiorments. It is one of the first things that civilization has set out to abolish. Which is why Sothern, an essen- tially civilized man. was in no case to withstand it. You must Ama- glne him, a little light-headed. cruelly bruised about the feet. his lips cracking. and his tongue swol- len so that it felt like mushy rub- ber in his mouth. ploughing das- perately across those leagues of sand towards an objective almost unimaginable —~ and with the weight oi four heavy water bot- ties thudding against his thighs as he went. Even when they halted, as they did at regular intervals-Soihern found no relief. Conversation with Larrfinore was impossible. The air- man had simply put Sothern out of his thoughts, except as a handi- capping factor in the enterprise. And Sothern’s own actions had raised an impassable barrier he- tween them. As for Carol, she was too grimly occupied in what sht had set herself to do to have any words to spare for Sothern. She simply set herself blindly. all-nos! ferociously, to copy Larrimore. 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