~|| 4- v; J t? 51.345: _-‘ -_._,- air-v“-.. .. __~_ __; ___ “r __>,,,,__., _.....;.,. . . ' l‘ i n ‘ 31 . ‘ Ir. l ,"///'/'II; . a y!"iV-if;%3fi~.$'-\Klshhm-I4*.y,~ur-=- v- - 4.. - 8 you can" nowbuy solemn” snows LABEL TEA 25 .11. Rebate form have already been mailed to all retail grocers so they can make this price effective at once. ~ SALADA TEA DDMPANY DF DANADA, LIMITED through its parochial and diocesan units. I feel safe in saying that if the League did not exist we should be hearing on all sides pleas for the organization oi Just such a society, and likely the loudest pleas would be from many who are not mem- bers oi the League today, and who are absolutely indifferent to its wel- fare. It is this class of Catholics do this you must have the correct outlook on the purposes and ideals of the league. and use in the arts oi persuasion to convince them to become enthusiastic supporters of your organization. United Action The League came into existence precisely to meet u ditions that call for united action. Its founders fully realized that there would be numerous occasions when the na- tional organization would be the only efficient means oi coping with problems that are incapable of solution by sporadic efforts in the districts where they crop in. They foresaw all too plainly that the needs of modern times would call, with increasing frequency, for the united expression of our Christian conscience and its defense in mat- ters of such vital importance as marriage, education, social legisla- tion and kindred subjects. Above all, they hoped that the League would weld together all classes of women, not only in clear-cut propaganda oi Christian morality, but’ into a might phalanx of zealous cham- pions of the Faith, inspired with enthusiasms that would sweep away the petty social and racial barriers which have retarded the Church's progress in the past. Ch ’Town Bishop Sends Greetings r‘____,__w_..w_.. ‘ The National chaplain of the Catholic Women's League (the Bishop oi Charlottetown) sent the following Easter message to the League, his first in his capacity of Chaplain" ' No matter how unworldly the mo- tivcs which inspire our good deeds, an honest word of praise is always appreciated and at times seems al- most a necessary tonic for young and old. We all need the sunshine of en- couragement. The budding faculties of childhood's unschcoled heart ex- pand and flower under its feeble ruys. Even while life's battles have knocked all softness and sentiment- alism out of us, a single word oi sympathetic praise will cause the coldest heart to thmb at a. faster and merrier pace, Just as sureLv as the continued lack oi appreciation will cause the most buoyant spirits to languish, and the best oi en- ihuslasms to cool and perish. Pos- sibly this hunger for a. word oi ap- Male Help Wanted Summerside Two men wanted by large manufacturing company for demonstration work in homes. Selling experience an advant- tage, but not essential. About ten days work at good pay. Salary and commission. Ap- ply Monday morning between eleven and twelve-thirty. Mr. preciation is a reflex of humanity's universal consciousness that life's fabric is being spun out under the searching eye oi Omnipotence: it may be a distant longing to an- ticipate the final verdict that awaits us all. At any rate there is something in our make-up which seems to crave this stimulant. Of course, in the true analysis of life's endesvo a we are to look solely to God for praise. We have to keep on doing our duty, heroically and perseveringly, even though surrounded by the chilling silence of indifference. or its worse counterpart, which is contempt. But in the ordinary course of events, human words oi praise and encouragement have their time and place, and saints and sinners stand fairly good doses with beneficial results. THE LEAGUES WORK ‘ It seems the proper time for someone to say such a word of praise to the officers and members of the Catholic Women's League for the fine work they have ac- complished, espécially since lest autumn, in spite oi really over- whelming difficulties. If the office oi National Chap- lain, with which you honored me last summer, has any obligations attached to it, one must surely be the pleasant duty of expressing the Kelley, Clifton Hotel. appreciation which is so sincerely felt by many members oi the Can- adian hierarchy and clergy for the achievement of the League since its inception and for its recent in- itiative in meeting the pressing problems that have caused such 1 " in our ‘ ' coun- try. In spite of diminished reven- ues, the League has continued to support its numerous enterprises, without allowing even one to lapse, and considering the numerical and financial resources at its disposal, it has contributed in generous pro- portions to the material reliei of distress. On this angle oi its work, alone, the League has surely won many new friends. Even the most sceptical are con- vinced oi a society's usefulness, and its existence is amply Justified, when there are positive proofs oi its successful functioning for the good oi others. Of course, the blind will not see, but possibly those who were indifferent in the past will be convinced that the League is worth supporting, if they are brought face to face with such convincing facts. It is scarcely exaggeration to say that the unusual difficulties oi the .1 fibre of the League, and it has been found worthy of the strain put upon it. EDUCATIONAL VALUE If we look a little closer at the picture, we will see that the League has been doing something which is even more important than the ac- .tuai activities it has fostered. It has been developing, slowly but surely, among its members, a fine sense of corporate responsibility. It has been accentuating our "‘:l-‘ in the mystical body of Christ, as "members one of an- other in Christ Jesus." It has $808M us to “bear one mother's burdens" and has shown that unit- ed action is practical in Canada, in spite of our scattered forces and our WWW! divergent interests. The leadership that the League past eight months have tested the‘ “BLACK IWISTTHEWIND l-IICKEY o NICI-IOISON Trusty as anLoId friendwit never tailsto please with its lasting flavour. has provided in this nutter has been very considerable, and n11 who have criticized it, or "damned it with faint praise" should give more "W! 8 Peeling thought to this con- tribution which it has made to the Church in Canada, and should gladly admit that the League has vigorously grappled with general problems of primary importance to all parts of the country, while at Catholic Action I Were these merely dreams-nice ravings of pious souls, but imprac- ticable? Some thought so, and it has been a. slow work educating even a. respectable following who were convinced that thisi was a f ‘“ project. ' To show positively that this was no dream, but on the contrary an urgent necessity of our times, we need only recall‘ the striking words used by our beloved Holy Father in describing. Catholic Action. He says: “It consists not merely of the pursuit of personal Christian per- handled innumerable 100i! wrtlvities that have to be converted, and to’ To WESTERN GUARDIAN g-LOBSTER FISHING pays. Or. der supplies at Brace‘s. 20144-1541 -—FLOOR BOARD RUBBER mats tdfit any type car. 81-50 i0 $300 It Braces. 20144-1541 —NBW BABY esrrllltl. very special prices at Bruce's. aou-a-gs-a -BEDEQUE UNITED Church of Canada, Rev. L. P. Archibald, Minister. Services for Sunday, April 1'ith. Bedeque 1i a. m. Searletown 8 o- m~ 0am ‘Inverse 7 p. m. The minister will prach at all services. PERSONALS ' -Frends will be pleased t0 know that Mr. Claude Kenny of Summerside, who is seriously ill, is a little improved-B. _Miss Mae Levers, R. N., has returned to her home in Souris ~from Summerside where she had been nursing Mrs. Callaghan at the Prince County Hospital. Mrs Callaghan is making satisfactory progress-B. ._1vu-_ Lloyd E.‘ Inman of Sum- merside, son of Mr. and Mrs.. Wilfred Inman, North TYYQII. spent a very pleasant wcck end 118 the guest of Mrs. P. S. Howatt and family of Borden. EASTERN DIIARDIAN mssnn or‘ BEARS a BEARS. _ Montague, will be continued for two week; 2040-4-16-sat-mon-wed-3i have not been able to understand the purpose back of the League. and it is not surprising that some of your members failed to take any interest in works which‘ Seemed strange and unnecessary 15° them- Much To Do The thing now is to consolidate your forces, for likely the fill/life will be cloudy enough for months to come and there will be lots to do, sufficient to tax the energies of ‘many times our numbers. Make sure that all your members have grasped the ideals of the League and are filled with a hcly deter- mination to extend its usefulness. I fectlon (which is, however, before all others, its greatest end), but itI also consists of a true apostolatc in which Catholics of every sociaiI class participate, coming thus to be [ united in thought and action! around those centres of sound doc- trine and multiple social activity, {legitimately constituted, and as a. Iresult, aided and sustained by the‘ Iauthority of the bishops." TheI league, as it existed in the mind‘ of its founders, certainly provided ‘m? Proper machinery for carrying‘ iout the Pope's ardent wishes and it has been endeavoring ever since it started to carry out this program, I wish every member would take ya few minutes to study those words of Pius XI, and having grasped‘ their remarkable significance, i Preach them to other women and inculcate them into the hearts of your daughters or any others whom you can influence. In so far as our women are imbued with this _out- look upon their responsibiliues as members of the Church, will the League flourish and win active and loyal supporters. Those words of ‘he H01)’ Father should be printed‘ in large letters and hung in every meeting room of the League, Courage Needed Great courage and unbounded irust in God must inspire you to emerged from the period of justi- fying your existence and educating your members to proper outlooks and national perspectives. It is not surprising that in this process there should have been many misunder- standings, and that many may not have kept up their interest in the society. Those losses have been re- grettable, but inevitable. Sumo of the same time it has successfully \‘ -. BRINGING UP FATHER BY GOLLY- ‘rt-Al's SPRMG INNER v5 AWFUL- 0-1051‘ CANT 5T»! the finest people in the —When Malcolm E. Parrott, a busi- ness man, fell in love with Mrs. G. Minard smith, it was quite all right with Mrs. Smiths husband. He was in love with Parrott's wife anyhow. Smith, next door neighbors, obtain- ed Mexican divorces from their hus- country bands hope you will gradually discover suitable contacts with sister organ-l izutions that Bishops and parish] priests will permit to affiliate with] you, while retaining their own‘ identity, so that you may really] fulfill your designed role in the. sphere of Catholic Action. It is a: work which calls for wise leadery ship, unselfish merging of personal ‘ and local interests for the common; good, and an unflagging enthus- iasm in the welfare of all League enterprises on the part of even the most modest and retiring member. The Future I fclt this Easter festival would be a suitable time to urge you all to a restatement of your aims, and a reconsecration of yourselves for the welfare of God's interests and those of our country. Easter speaks to us of new hopes, new life, new vic- tories. We need its sweet encour- agement in these days, but I am sure it is a refreshing thought for the devoted members of the League to remember that the first messages of the Resurrection were heralded by a little band of women, and that Catholic women have always nobly borne their share in the sufferings and have signally co-operated in the triumphs of the Church down through its long history. continue what. you have begun so ° , simth’ sale manager ‘or T In“ well, and carried to such successful Wlves Change h company’ obtained cmmdy issues. Certainly there is much still Husbands a n d. a’ I‘ mm to be done, for you have scarcely Iflve FOUR Poxms m ‘In REEF POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., April 15, so lsst week Mrs. Parrott and lvh-s. And last night at Sharon, Conn, they traded husbands. we by a prolific Smith became Mrs. Parrott and Mrs. Parrott bees-m Mrs. Smith. And to show there were no hard feelings, other. Afterward they all left for a honeymoon together. Mrs R. A. Doherty demonstrates All WABASSO PRODUCTS Here-B days, Saturday April 16th.,' to Tuesday April 19th. -_Yoi1 are cordially invited to visit this notably interesting '- demonstration on any of the days mentioned When you call you will receive a card which entitles you to a draw on a beautiful COLORED bro SET - which is on display during demonstration. Special Values during Demonstration! Wabasso‘ Hemstitched Sheets heavy round thread, 81x100. pair . . . .' . . . Wabasso hemstitched Sheets Finest quality, 72x99 pair Wabasso Hemstitched Pillow Cases, 40x33, fine medium. Pair.................., ' Wabasso Circular Pillow Cotton, finest make, 40x42 inch. , 39¢- Wabasso Colored Border Hemstitched BED SETS made from fine evenly woven Wabasso Cotton with border colors of Rose, Gold & Blue, Green and Helio. 1 sheet, 72399 and 2 pillow cases, 42x33 offered "at the very special price of $2.95 set. wAsAsso corroa osmousraanorl ammo," INIIIII Illlliiilillluuusi IINIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIII T’; llllllililll IIINI nififziifiriiivlw r s'~‘&'¢$'6'» I , -3:~te.e.;,g Wabasso hemstitched Sheets best quality, 81x100. Pair_................ Hemmed Sheets, a good medium weight 68x88. Pair Wabasso cases, even thread, extra quality, 42x 33. Pair . . . . . really $1.69 hemstitched Pillow 65c. 1 22c. eeneseecl Wabasso Circular Pillow cotton, 40 in wide. Yd. . . These come boiled, ~ FREE Hemming All Sheeting 35c. and up will be hemmed free Wabasso Prints Charming patterns 15c Yd. 711W imliléolw each couple attended the queen; must be enough food within hive to not only supply the themselves, but to feed the oncom- ing generation of bees; (3) Suffi- cient room for the normal expun-[ther of spring." (2) There sion of the brood nest and for the the storage of any surplus nectm" M10 bees pollen which the early flowers ml! yicld. and <4) Ample Prowl“ from the cold and changeable wea- é-Ygri pulaticns," writes Apiarist in the current Beasonabie Hints, "is to encourage brood production to its maximum and there are four factors neces- sary to secure it. and for which the beerkeeper alone ING “The object of all spring mani- the Dominion “we o! apvriallty. Q is responsribldI (l). Each colony must be heeded i wan-nu. co at YUTHI snow wrm woo ' ‘Ib-vmm-vr-ro LIKE ‘m en 1H5‘? TROOPE- wan- N-Ll WANT wou TO po |o_ ~r¢ 9mm A om . ml ME 1r r 6O -ro amen cumu- ‘ms Pa»:- Pronrpt Service. nmiIorI on rcqnvsl. SIARR MANUFACTURING COMPANY LIMITED DARTMOUTH, NOVA E-(‘OIIA i i .. er GOLLY-You ._ ' rear. Aeueav puca- = . wauhe Au. RIGHT- Ptnnf in the East Price List Write 010M? -¢. ‘V i »'_-',¢'_)Il'-l9§Il!!!~-i"3; till!!!’ cnnomlum PLATING NICKEL SILVER CADMIUM Tho i..n;;csl Pintin" Plating, qnd Rustproolui Automobile parts our 44