NOVEMBER 28. 19 50 . THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETCWN . . PAGE THIRTEEN Iii P.E.I. Native llies in 3.0. 1-zastened broke her ago, death teriioon '-0 yer. 89. pifliesident of Port Alberni. 3. c. M the put eight and: half years Mrs. 30.;-yer was born W.-1., Pl'lliCe April 24, 1861, pi-Luce lad daughter gums and Mrs. Burns. survivors are a sister, Mrs. RA- becca Waugh. Summerslde. P. E. I u brother, Edmund Burns, Firec- u','...,,. p, E, 1., and Leslie J. slui- ker of Whitefish. Montana; grandchildren and four grandchildren. ' Funeral services were held Firi- day afternoon tmm the Funeral Home with Rev. McKay officiutiiig. Interment was in the Greenwood cemetery- twest Coast Advocap) while advancing years curtailed her activities in Port Albemi, she was a fervent member of the Bap- list denomination and took a. keen interest in the church. For the past sixteen years she him made her home with her grandson-in-law and granddaugh- tcr, xlr. and Mrs. Glentworth V. Jones of Port Albernl. Prior to a.i'i'lHli in Port Albemi, they re- sided for many years in Lethbridge. Aliwcrlu. c(ntuw.iLL w. M. 3. great- Tile i-egiilar meeting of the Curilwilii W. M. S. was held at the llflhit of Mn. Pearl Scott. Mead- Oivilallk, on Tuesdayrevenirig Nov. Hill. Twenty-five members and some visitors were present. Rcv Mrs. Chnrman presided, the dctiiillilliii port of the meeting was lril by Mrs. Merrll Godfrey assist- etl by Mrs. George McMillan. llrs. Walter Boyle presented a Baby Band Life membership cert- lilCCllE to Master Millard Clow. hrs. Boyle also reported 612.75 mlsoti by the Baby Band. lira. L. H. Drake reported the funds raised to date quite favor- aiiic in comparison with last year. Mrs. Charles Hyde read I letter from Mrs. J. F. Scott on Christian S'.('il'niiliSili)). urging all member: to cite account of their talents. liisx I.-aura Crosby presented the second chapter of the Study Book on Japan in a very interesting man- her, the subject was "The Unbrok- en Liiicmze." Mrs. Cliarman invited the mem- bars to meet at the Parsonage for the December meeting when the programme will take the place of a Christmas entertainment for which the following are a commit- ice: MISS Laura Crosby, Mrs. Stewart Drake and Mrs. George '.iiaCMiii3li. Meeting closed with prayer after which lunch- was served by . Scott and committee and a. pleas- tnt social hour enjoyed by Iii. WESTMOEELAND w. r. The thirteenth annual meeting of ivestmoreland wt. was held at the home of Mrs. wrixon Moore. Eleven members and several visitors were present. After meeting opened the treasurer gave a report on the ilnfiliclai standing of the Institute at present and reviewed the work done by the mernb a during the year At present they are busy try- in: to raise funds for a new school limo. i:Iect.lon of officers for the 1960- 51 term was an important item with all members anxious for office .'specially the position of secretary- treasurer. Following is the new slate of officers - it-resident. Mrs. Charles MncKenzie; vice president, -W5. Eldon beard; secretary treas- urer. Mrs. wrixon Moore; auditors, lliss Elsie sherren and Miss Ella vmt-than: directors. Mrs. Roy C-'0-ssnmn. Mrs. Robert Mayhew and ifrs. James Moore. Rlcmliers were each to knit mitts Or socks for some small children mil V3 "Y and have them ready for Hm meeting. Roll call at December meeting is in be answered by In exchange of Ehristmits gifts not valued at over -0?. Christmas cards were display- Ni llllfi each member took some boxes to 5911, ' New committees appointed were: ichool. Miss Elsie she:-i-en; sick, Tits. Hebcr Cnnficlcl and Mrs. Ed rousdale; social. Mrs. my Cross- Fimu and Mrs. Eldon Leard: educa- E?l"3J- Mrs. Hal Rngetson and Miss (3 Crossman: lunch. Mrs. Charles -i'3'PKFll7.iC. Mrs. Eldon Leard, Mrs. Vlrtxon Moore. btzlrs. llcber Canfleld invited mem- S0 5 for December meeting. After i T9 discussion meeting closed (oi. W911 by lunch. NEW JOB FOR CORVETTE LIVORNO. Italy. Nov. 7! - (OP) 1: lormer Canadian corvette yes- ” :3 made her inaugural voyage "W and Portoferrario. by a fall in which she hip about four weeks came last Tuesday af- Mrs. Emma Jane Bov- in the west Coast Hos- in Free- Edward Island on of a ward Island Provincial Go.-or-nment member, Hon. Stuart five Stevens l”5-Wiser ship between Pioma A Long Island Railroad express passenger train rammed the rear tangled wreckage. of another LIRR passenger train -.:;.t .......-........t-......... ' RESCUE TEAM Mrs. J. T. Richardson. Vancouver, ministered to the injured in the or it till: Says Continued from page 2 train wreck at Canoe River. Mrs. Richardson is a registered nurse and organized rescue parties at the wreck scene. children and helping him make his fortune. The real test of a girl's HVUBCUVGHESS is in belniz llble to charm a young man into assuming her board bill and shopping ticket for life. Occasionally a girl succeeds in making a. man divorce his wife and marry her, but not often. and she seldom builds a home of happi- ness on the ruins of the home she has wrecked. Sometimes the girl falls so much in love with the married man who cannot, and will not marry her that she ruins her own life by becoming it "back-street wife." or else she becomes sour and cynical with the knowledge that she has wnsted all of her youth and beauty and enthusiasm on a man to whom she was one of many plnythlngs, and who threw her away when he got tired of her. And the siillest of girls must, know that If she goes with married men single men will pass her up. She will be out of their class for one thing and. for another, the world always believe: the worst of an affair between a girl find a married man, and not many young men want a married man's leiivlngs. Every girl who goes out with married men does something that she prays no other girl will do to her when she marries. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: What attitude is it possible to take to- ward old people whose Ideas seem ugly and wrong to us and yet who are tied to us by bonds of blood or marriage? The Bible says: "Honor ihy father and mother." yet I have found that. the hardest of all the commandments to obey. Our minds expand by studying and reading and contact with life. while the minds of the old are static. How can one honor an outmoded, narrow and intolerant point of view? How can one honor a censorinus attitude and mind that refuses new Ideas? I have obeyed the command to honor my parents. and the unuttereri retort. the meek silence and -polite attention for a long. drawn-out. dull period have been a veritable torture. It seemed the only course at the time, yet I wonder whether it was wise. MRS. H. C. L. ANSWER: Every kindly act is more than wise. It is a benedic- tion that biessel those that give and those that receive. and I am sure that the knowledge that you showed your old parents tenderness in- stead of irritability: that you bit back the sharp speech. and that you made their last days happy will be among the thing: that you will like best, to remember when you audit your account with life. It does not Icem to me that we are justified in taking any atti- tude toward the old except that of infinite patience and infinite kind- ness. And this is a hard laying because old age in not always sweet and lovely and appreciative. It is not even often so. We may well remember that these old father: and mothers Icrlmp- ed and saved to give up the education they never had. But for them we might Itill have the closed mind that refuse: new, ideas; the nar- row. intolerant point of view which we deride. They lifted lll into in world above themselves and opened doors through which they know they could never enter. And so the least that we can do il to make a few sacrifice: for those who have made lo many for us. DEAR DOROTI-IY DIX: lit what age i! it advisable for I boy and girl to marry? Also what should be the minimum amount of the boy's Iaiary T . DICK ANSWER: I do not think any boy and girl should marr until they are in their twenties. because up to' that time they are lm ature Indlncapable of knowing what they went in a husband or wife. The amount of mone that I! young couple should have to marry on de- pends upon the scale of life to which they have been accustomed. It should cover the way they are willing to live. with a little over for emergencies and for the rainy -day that is lure to come to us all. oono-my nix cannot personally reply to” mom. but will un- Iver letters of general Interest through her column . near Jamaica. N.Y., recently and an estimated 78 persons died in the In the hours that followed rescuers strove des- Awhcre T;-ctgedy Struck Stately to hel th - iured. Picture ghoufa due .gr1Ie:f .13. H'JI'ienl:,tiecx,3;i'-g.thc last rites to one or Picture shows the interior .mn -WHERE 20 WERE KILLED .. Sixtecn meinrbers of the Canadian Arrnys special brigade and four trainmen were killed in the train wreck at Canoe River, B.C., shown app mug. of the bottom car. -ail? here from the air. A troop train from Shilo, Man., carryin-g artil- lery-men to Fort Lewis, Wash.. smlhed into the C.N.l'i..'s Contin- ental Limited on route from Van- In addition couver to Montreal. to,the 20 killed, there were 49 per- sons injured scverely enough to need hospital treatment. The con- dition of four is critical. Be-opening Services liensington church -Sunday, November 19th, 1950. marked the re-opening of Kens- ington Presbyterian Church, after extensive repairs and renovation. Large congregations attended both morning and evening servic- es, although unfavorable weather greeted the worshippers turning out at the earlier hour. The church, made beautiful with new inner walls and a handsome new end window. depicting the symbols of the bread and wine. and scenes in the life of our Lord. was further enhanced with a beautifully painted copy of the Presbyterian emblem, the Burning Bush, "Burning but not consum- ed". and new hymn boards, marked with the Cross of St. George. on this auspicious occasion lovely bouquets of late blooming flowers had been placed about the altar and gave purpose to artistic corner brackets. The minister. Rev. James A. Mc- Gowan. ccnducted the morning ser- vice, and preached a rable sermon. Basing his words on the text found in the 28th verse of the 20th chaptc: of the Acts of the Apostles, "The Church of God." which He has purchased with His own -Blood." Paul is seen on the way to Jerusalem, sending for the Maritime Life A 3:; f0K)x7). 'l'. W. Bentley. (l.l..ll.. Mn. P.E.I. Branch. Charlottetown. P.l.I. elders of the Church of Ephesus to come to him at Mllatus, where the climax of his address to them dealt with one of the greatest of the Church - Christ on the Cross, ii-econclllng the world unto Him- self. Other conceptions of the church. as pictured by Paul were cited by the minister, one "as the body of Christ". which he said "is the llving' organization through which the Lord still speaks His message. still carries on His work of re-making the world; and flu- ally as the church is made up of redeemed christians, "Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy spirit." Following Paul's own manner of preaching the Christ Cruclfied the speaker quoted many passages of scripture. establishing beyond question that we are "bought with 3 price.'' and that price is the blood of Jesus. "In our text, Paul Ispeaks of the church as an organization. Jesus Christ has purchased for Himself with His own Blood." The scene in the Upper Room tells the story of Jesus placing Himself in the place of the Pascal Lamb. Pic- turing Jesus dispensing the bread and wine. the speaker affirmed- the conceptions which God had for ireierence to the beautifying man. L. A, Boyd Bearisto and Mrs. Cilady the emblem. Mr. Major congratulation from Rev. Lewis M. --1t to Mr. MoOowan's value in the Presbytery, and voiced regret that he should be leaving its ranks for service eliewhere. Taking for, his text the words found in the lath chapter of cor- inthlans, verse 1a,, "Now we see through: Glass Darkly," his ser- mon dealt with the mysteries of the world we live in, which, he said become: more mysterious. the older a person grows. Telling a boy that when he grows up he will un- derstend more, is only half-truth. for we find that the more the scientists leeirn. the more myster- ious life becomes. Long ago, it was believed the earth was flat, and people were content. Then it was found to be round and revolving, and the nearest star was found to be trlllons of miles away. Like the light from I great bonfire, which makes the surroundings appear dairker, so is the comparatively little knowledge which has been learned. "However the truth al- ways proves to be better and more wonderful than the original con- ception." Religion, he said does not solve mysteries, and great harm is done by those who say it does. ”At the very core of our religion is the greatest mystery, the loveliest life ever to come to this earth was crucified. Love was killed by hate" The bible recognizes the mysteries of life in many assages, but faces up to it. ind faces to the fact, as we must that "there is always enough light to live by." however dark and unfathomable life may seem at the moment. ' Bewlldering as life's mysteries must be to all of us, thespeaker advanced the thought of how awful it would be if the world and its meaning were so shallow that we could see and understand all of it's depths. Life and its mysteries present I. challenge. and we are given strength and courage to meet it. "The lord Gives us en- ough Light to Rise by and we Rise." The solo, "Beside Still Waters" was very sweetly rendered by Mrs. Bruce M.s.cPherson. The choir presented the beaut- iful anl.-hem. "Praise the Lord", with Mrs. Rzeagh Sudsbury, Mrs Horace Paynter and Mr. Edson Raynotr as soloists.-Bur OYSTER BED BRIDGE W. I. The annual meeting of the Oy- ster Bed Bridge Women's Institute met at the home of Mrs. Philip Mahhcson with six members and three visitors present. In the absence of the president. the vice-president, Mrs. Philip Matheson opened the meeting by refpeatlng the Club Woman's creed in unison. The treasurer gave the following financial statement: Re- ceipts from past year 3150.25; ex- pense 3105.37; balance 844.88. The total -proceeds, 53.00, from ice- cfeam festival were given to the secretary. not 85.00 as previously re- ported in the Guardian. The 5163.98 proceeds mom the chicken supper is also used for school repairs. It was moved and seconded that 35.00 be given to the Bible society and 5.00 for the Cancer Fund. The officers for the year are: Pre- Ildent, Mrs. Howard Corr: vice- presidont. Mrs. Rufus Axworthy: secretary, Mrs. Wallace Higgins: treasurer, Mrs. Russel Smith; sick, Miss Cora Matheson and Mrs. R. L. MacPherson; schools, Mrs. Rxufus Axwoi-thy; cords of sympathy, Mrs. Raymond Ling; auditors. Miss Hazel Matheson. Mrs. omer Younker; dir- ectors, Mrs. Raymond Ling. Mrs. Daniel MacPherson and Mrs. Colin Higgins. . s The correspondence was read and discussed. The birthday box was opened and contained 34.34. Mrs. Raymond Ling and Mrs. Howard Carr agreed to make a Christmas cake to be sent to the adopted in- stltute. The December meeting is to be held at the home of Mrs. Howard can-. Roll call will be answered with an article for the auction sale. Lunch committee, Miss Hazel Matheson. Mrs. Rufus Axwortliy and Mrs. Omer Ycunker. The meet- ing close with the National Anthem after which a delicious lunch was served by the hostess and lunch committee. BURGESS IEIITIME Continued from Page 10 it careful. Once when Pilot was and use you for the re-making of mu grown he and two cthers of others." At both services, the minister that channel and followed it until welcomed the many visitors. and in at last they had come out into the of open ocean again at the other end the building, gave public recognit- of that long island. It had been :1 ion to the work done by the Board great adventure. He never 1134 9-Tied of Managers-Ed Dyment, chair- it, again, but he never had. forgot- Mann, Harold Mouse, ten it. his own size had wandered into 5 He was remembering it now 85 Dunning, and all others who had he led the others in their fanti: assisted. Others to whom he paid rush to escape the Terrible one. tribute were-Mr. J. Evans Inglis. The waterln that ehannelmlght not for the workmanship and espec- be deep enough now that he W35 tally the designing and painting of so much bigger than that lcng-ago Inglis. day. but it offered the only hon: lstic eye and clever hands contrib- of escape. so he was piloting the hands has contributed much to the way, living up to his name. and his beauty of the sancturay; Mr. Mal- mgmened followers were blindly A country ilariiel Continued from page 1 seedlings and the Hybrid To Roses must be covered or they wl every one -be killed over the win- er. They must be covered with earth brought from another part of the garden and this should be left until all danger from front input: in this climate it is about the mid- dle of May before it is safe to take away the winter protection. It is best to take it away gradually and on a dull day as the run is apt to scald. the tender stems. Those tea roses are still bloom- ing in the garden and are worth all this trouble. Panisies have been planted this week and they will bloom as soon as the snow has gone in the spring. 0 O 0 Winter blooming house plants are taking on new life these sunny days and the Paper White Nu- clssus is fragrant and lovely; these bulbs were planted in bowl: for the house several weeks ago and they are grown in the light with- out any time in the clap . They will grow in pebbles water but they will not grow in the gar- den and there are golden yellow flowers as well as the better known paperwhite. Coming at this time of year when other flower: and bulbs are not in bloom they are very welcome. A reader asked me to writs something about the culture of the African Violet and I shall try to do so next week and I feel sorry that the busy summer prevented me from looking up this informa- tion soon after the request. cunt in by mail. Some good gardeners I know how grown beautiful violets but there are many methods and we shall talk about them when I have obtained the knowledge from the experience of others. T00 TIRED T0 PRAY She thought when night had rin- ally ended day "Dear Lord, tonight I am too tired. to pray." And wearily she closed her eye! in sleep, Slipping far into shadowed deep. Up in Heaven the dear Lord heard and smiled. "Today She soothed I little. crying chil . She sic-pped her work to take 011! Ella Kloop A fragrant, warming bowl of her good souip. Her house was orderly, her garden tended, Her children fed, their clothes all clean and mended. Her husband home from work, found ha-ppinese, And qu-let peace in her deep gentleness." The dear Lord smiled again- "roo tired to pray? Ter hands have offered prayer! of love all day." -Jane Coffin. the ...M.::--- COFFEE TABLE DOILY DESIGN N0. E-1016 id. i This beautiful oblong dolly ll crocheted for a coffee table. Pine apple medallion center is ed: with a mesh and fan design. Po tern No. 12-1016 contains comule instructions. To order. Send 20 cents in co to Needlework Bureau, Charlott town, Guardian. Design No. E-1016 Name Address 1 City colm Lott, student minister at following him. Marshfleld, for arrangement of the choir loft, for which chairs had been loaned by R. 3. Hum- phrey. A much appreciated letter of The Unermisery and Distress of Murray on behalf of Kansington United Church was read by the minister. 0 Features of the morning service were the re-dedication rites; an anthem by the church choir, "0 For a Thousand Tongues." with Mrs. George Ramsay, and Mrs. "we cannot get away from this phrase-"which he has purchased with His own blood," without tearing both the gospels and epis- tles to shreds, for this concep- tion runs through the whole New Testament." Followers of Christ down through the centuries have held to that belief, and the "sanctuary standing, as it symbol of the church. it is only right. that we should make it beautiful." in recognition of God's love brought Poul face to face with us. Him that oometh I will in wise out out. Not only will accep you. He will re-make great love for us. The sacrificial guest speaker. who eight Christ. "That. same love is seeking McCowan's no this church. He you. remargks, Mr. Somers paid tribute Lorne Dunning, and Mrs. Reagh Sudsbury and Miss Marlon Lock- hart taking duet parts. Mr. J. Elma: Dunning. of Morit- ague was heard in 9. very pleasing rendition of The Ninety and Nine. The evening service was conduct ed by the minister, who welcomed the choir members from Malpeque; Mrs. Bruce MacPherson, soloist from zlon Church; and the Rev. T. H. B. Somers, M. A., S. T. M, of the Kirk of st. Jiunec, the years ago this week. had preached Mr. induction sermon in of time mlsorlu. Preiaclng his sermon with brief BUCKLEW8 CINN HEADCOLDS GRIPPE MAGIC! 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