Page 14 The Guardian HUNTER aivn w. is. a. Mrs. George smith entertained the members of the Auxiliary of Thursday. June 1'1, 1954 Maclieod. Mrs. Cousins and Mn. Bowman form a committee to look after ii special service for the W.M.B Mrs. G. Smith. Mrs. seller me w~M-5» "1 1”’ h°m° °“ J““°‘Iand Mrs. Spence were appointed 3- Th! them“ “'55 ‘M “°°“d A5'~to the lunch for the Baby Band sembly of the World Council oflplcmt Churches which 1' W W“ ml Mrs. Fred smiui invited the E‘”““"°n’ mm°”’ USA" Auwuh members to her home for_ the next 19:89 preside“, opened me me..- meeting ii-iiicii will be held on ing with "Take Time to be Hoiy";Septeml.ier 2. Study is to be the and readings from the Missionarypaook of Leviticiis." and the roll Monthly in unison. 'I‘iiis was fol- call word is "world." Lunch com- iowecl by Scripture reading andirnlttee for September will be Mrs. hymn "O. For a Faith That will Ira Racirham. Mrs. Lepage and Not Shrink." The study of the‘Mrs. Jackie Bernard. The hymn Book ot Exodus was carried out "All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Villh several of the members taking‘ Name" iiiiii the Lords P ra ye r pan ‘closcii the meeting. Lunch was The supply secretary reported tlicn scrvccl by the cpgigmigtjae in the bale of clothing was ready '0i€h<'“8°- 5-55‘-“ed by followed by 11 social hour. send. It was decided that Mrs. ) gag” Service Seasons come and go — bringing, favorite recipes for cool drinks or hot soups . . . for summer-cottage meals. or cnlrl-weaihcr parties. Carnation Home Director gt"-E’ gfll/0RI1':_=s But the recipes we rcrillu Irivc. are ones }il'ii'<lDiill\lf‘ to (ill scasons. Those are the kind of l‘(‘(‘lpf‘S I give you here. They all call for Carnation Evaporatcri Milk, of course. For Carnation does such grand things for foods. It's specially heat-refined for extra-smooth consistency, extra-rich flavor. And because it‘s concentrated to double-richness, Carnation can be used undiluted, to give miracle- cooking-rcsults that just aren't possible with any other form of milk. Hcres a recipe where Carnations special advantages shine! CHICKEN ’N' VEGETABLE LOAF (Makes A seminar) 1 cups diced cooked chicken K rup lemon juice iU_- taps. sa.lt V; tsp. peviier $5 cu soda bis- cu t crumbs J.‘ “ 1 ear 1 cup diced nookrii carrots 1 cup well-drained rooked peas 1 cup uniillim-_d_ Carnation Evaporated Milk Combine all ingredients until thoroughly blended. Line loaf van (9 x .'i x 3 inches) with heavy waxed paper. spread loaf mixture in pan and bake in moderate oven (:i.'ilt"l-‘.) about 45 minutes. Serve hot. For spring-like freshness —- serve Chicken ’n' Vegetable Loaf with fresh or frozen asparagus. For a bright touch for cold-weather meals. serve with a cream sauce to which diced piniienfo and g'rcc11. popper have been added. SEASON IN, SEASON OUT . . . there’: one recipe that every woman treasures——the recipe for good cnfiee. Would you like yours to taste better? "Cream" it with Carnation Evaporated Milk. It's easy as that! Cama- tion gives coffee is richer. more satisfying flavor . . . smoother consistency . . . wonderful body. Yet it costs only lfigas much as lightest creami IF EVER THERE WAS A YEAR- ’l0UND FAVORITE, it's something dressed up with a whipped top- ping — or a dessert that calls for whipped cream. So. high on your list of all-season favorites. is sure LISTEN to the delightful Saturday to be —- whipped Carnation Evap- orated Milk‘ Because it's double- concentrated and specially heat- rofitied, Carnation whips like a dream — piles up in billowy mounds, tripling in volume. Here's how: Chill l cup undiluted Carnation hi freeilng tray until soft ice crystal: form around edges of tray (about 25 minutes). Pour into chilled howl; whip rapidly until ltifl. Add 2 lhsps. lemon Juice and 1-ontinuewhip ng until very I ilf. sweeten to taste. (if you have no mechanical refrig- erator.1'hilltbe Carnation over night on ice in the unopened can.) FOR USE AS TOPPINO: After sweeten- ing to taste. and davorinl chosen from the following: Grated orange or lemon rind: vanilla; a hint of peppermint use-nee. Ilse on short.- cshes. Jelly desserts, fruit. ..uddinge. IQ USE IN lECIPE§:Whip Carna- tion as above. inrludlng the leinou juice and light sweetening. Use in iu-runiptioiis eiiarlorte riiues, bays- rian rreaml. fanrlr Jeilled home-made ice cream. I-I-4-. radio show. "Stars Over Hollywood“. A complete half-hour play every week — featuring in person top dramatic stars of screen and radio See vniir newspaper for time and station. V," FREE NEW BOOK: "Baking Secrets". some of my favorite recipes for cakes. froetlngs. pies and ‘ W" 9 Iucuasao-N0 cookies. Write Dept. N. Carnation Company Limited. Toronto. Ontarion‘ II/,0”, Borden and - " Vicinity ——-Miss i-‘reds Noonan who has, been employed at Rothesiiy. N. B., is spending the summer at her home in Borden. She was ac- companied home by Miss Mar- garet Jarvis of Fairfield. Mrs. Clinton liovvatt. who rec- ently undcrwent an appendectomy in the Charlottetown Hospital re- turned to her home in Borden on June 7. O. S. E. M. S. Stanley Toomba is spending 30 days leave with his mother, Mrs. Bessie Tuombs, at Borden. Mr. Herbert Burst.-y of Moncion. is visiting his sister. Mrs. Reg- inald Rodgers. and Mr. Rodgers at Borden. Mrs. Niirmuii Oatway. who has been ill for some time. eiitered the hospital at Charlottetown rec- ently. Her many friends here join in wishing her a speedy return to good health. Mrs. Lorne Ciiiisin. Borden. and Mrs. Bismarck Cousins of Brads]- bane. left on June 11. for Buffalo. N. Y._ \vhere they will attend the wedding of Miss Betty Cousins on June 19. Ml.% Edith Mrfli-iiigli of Bor- den, is a patient in the P. C. Hos- pital. Her friends here wish her a speedy recovery. Miss Phyllis White of Moncton. spent the last neck-end with her parcnts, Mr. :iiirl Mrs. W. E. White Borden. A.W.i liiargucrite Wcstiiaver anti A.w.1 Phyllis Herensberger of the R. C. A. F. Station at St. Sylves- tre. Quebec, are spending their leave with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Westhaver at Borden. Mi§ Laura Ozon of Moncton, spent last week-end at her home in Borden. She was accompanied by Misses Sheila and Eileen Wood- man of Moncion. AB E. M. George Jay of l-i.M.C. 5. Quebec. returned to Halifax on June 13 after spending the week- end with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Jay at Borden. Miss Dorothy Jenkins of Char- lottetown, was it week-end guest of her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. White, Borden. Mr. and Mrs. David Maclieod and daughter Jo Anne oi Borden. spent June 13 with David's par- ents. Mr. and Mrs. Ray MacLeod. Graham's Road. Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Rodgers of Borden. and Mr. and Mrs. El- don Campbell of Charlottetown. returned home on June 13 after spending the week-end at Fundy Park, N. B. —L IN MEMORIAM MRS. JAMES L. VVADE Mrs. Helen Schurman Wade, 65, died on Thursday afternoon. .lune lOth. in the North Adams Hospital, Mass.. U. S. A. where she had been a patient for one week. Mrs. Wade. \\‘i('i(i\\‘ of James L. Wade. who died in 1949. was born in Central Bedequc. Prince Ed- ward island, daughter of the late Albert and Phoebe Schurman. She went to North Adams in mi! and three years later graduated from the Nurses‘ Training School at the North Adam's Hospital. She was married in 1918. She leaves to mourn a brother and two sisters living in Prince Ed- ward lsland. They are Howard Schurman. Central Bedeque. Mrs. Albert E. Baker, Charlottetown. and Mrs. John Lewis. Freetown. She is also survived by several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held at the -Simmon‘a Funeral Home on June 12. with Rev. Ronald R, Adams. pastor of the First Bap. ilst Church, officiating. Burial was in Siiuthview Cemetery, North Adams. Mass. Strange But True By I. ll. MacArthur No tribe of humans has even been found that does not possess a. well-organised language: no coin- inunity that does not know the use of fire and of weapons with which to defend themselves. it is curious to note that Carus divides the human race into “peo- ple of the day, night and down." In our school days we were taught that there is a black, red. yellow. white and brown race. But does not the book of Genesis tell us “God created man in His own image, in the image of God creat- cd He him; male and female creat- ed He them." This being the case. then we all belong to one group, or one race. no matter whether we speak different languages or have different colored skins. . . . By an Act of Parliament in 1145 barbers lost the right to perform operation and to dissect human be- ings. And this Act calls to mind a strange story of a scene that took place at Tyburn. England and an- other equally strange. in the Bar- bers Hsll. The year was 1740. The body of a notorious criminal had just been cut from the gallows Silently the crowds melt away. satisfied that Justice had been done. In some two we see the body of the criminal being carried into the barbers hall for dissection. But Just as these crude surgeons were preparing their knives for the grue- some task before them. the corpse showed signs of life. First; there- ivas a slight flickering of one eyelid. then feeble breath and lo and behold the “dead" man's heart began to beat again. At this point the disecting knives were laid aside and the barber surgeons worked over the body for some time. Finally the man began to breath evenly and it became obvious that the hang- man had been cheated. The dead man vias alive. The palor gmdiiolly went out of his face as the blood began cours- ing through his veins. and, at length. his eyes opened! What a situation for the criminal and the barbers! The criminal in that second when his brain began to function normally no doubt had ii flash back of the gallows. the shouting. angry mob. The anato- mists. too, must have felt strange- ly queer. They had brought back to life a man whom by order of the law, should not be completely dissected. And what about the liangman? Would he still be able to collect his nlggardly fee? Would the criminal still belong to the state or had the act of hanging set him free in the eyes of hu- 1na.nity'.’ What would society now do un- der slmilar circumstances, But the barber-surgeons. sitting in the dissecting room with the man who was officially deed decid- ed that his return to life must be kept secret. They reasoned that the fellow had paid the price for his crime, and that they were honor-' bound to stand by him in his hour of need, So they clothed and fed and nursed him back to normalcy, and one dark night. they gave him money. wished him all the luck in the world, and shipped him to Germany. The man who had been hanged and saved from a gruesome end, departed gratefully. We should like to know if he left a mother to mourn him. a wife. or children who thought him dead. But: details are scarce. . I . However our amaalng story does not end here. The years rolled by Then one day there arrived at the Barber surgeon's Hall a per- son whose dress and bearing in- dicated one of wealth. He turned Professional cards E. E. Parkman REGENT THEATRE BLDG. Slimmer St. Summg .:,:. A. Raymond Grant, B.Sc., 0.1). :33 Water street durnme “ Above Maurice Mill‘: Men's Wear PHONE 8580 Che rte red Accounts his 1’. Earle Hickey Canadian Bank of Commerce Building - Summeriiirle, P.E.l. -- Phone 3888 w. Aiiii-it §8iiei-1iio'ii 1'. ll. I. MUTUAL BUILDING Granville at Water Street lumnieraide mat. I’. 0. nos 3344 "1 Cu INSURANCE 8. E. Ellk A1 Son Limited lire — Auto — Casualty a summer at. Sunni -“ - Optometrists _l B. F. Hunter. 3.0. eunimeralde. P.E.i. — Phone sue auausurcs BUILDING Dentists Dr. J. A. Doirol Dental x-lays SMALLMAN BUILDING Dial aim L. K. ZIELINSKI. M.D. General Practitioner Maipeque load lenslngton. P. 3. i. Plionei leualnguu I VETERINARIAN Dr. J. ghsuuahghan Water St. East PHOTOGRAPHERS TIIEREADSTUDIO nw. BIAIS Phone kl out to be the very man who has been hanged is years earlier. the man who barely elalptl til! 0- aeotlng some of his fellow nitu. Under a new mm the fellow had 0 made good and was a rich and in- fluential merchant in his adopted country. Then are few such stories to be found in the world. It stands a testimony of the quirks of fate. a proof that while there is life there is hope. a reminder to us that no matter how low e. human being may fall he still is a enough to turn over the new in if only society would give him a second chance. .... .. O I 0 It ll sometimes claimed that the phenomenon of mixture of peoples in the world is unique. that a similar mingling has never occur- red before in the world's history, and that as a result of two world wars the peoples of earth are dea- tlned to became what some writers choose to term a “mongrel" race in a sense that has never been seen before. Should a third world war he loos- ed upon the world this process of mixture would increase measur- ably. for the two last wars have shown us that soldiers stationed for long periods in a foreign coun- try take unto themselves wives who are natives of that country. Today we have many Canadian soldiers married to Chinese, Jap- anese. German and Russian girls to name a few countries from which these men have chosen wives. should this process of mixture continue (and we have no reason to believe that it will not) the time may come when we may dismiss the assumption of the existence of 11 pure type in any part of Eur- ope or America. When. furthermore. we are un- able to discover any proof of the superiority of one race over an- other, more and more intermixtures will take place. Too. it seems obv- ioua that lntermlxture, as soon as the social barriers have been removed. must go ahead at I ni- pid rate so that in say ioo year; from now, in the bulk of our DOP- Ulltion. very few pure descendants of the present immigration will Pliieiiille A111! Vicinity ed! pull of Iliu Linda I alt are sorry to learn she is confined to her home through ill- non. All hope to see her back to school again in the near future. The June niaetin of the st. Anna Club was hel at the home of lira. Johnnie Gallant. The lucky winner of the free tickets to St. Anna, Quebec. were won bl’ llra. William Gallant and I. P Gallant. 'i'lie next meeting V: be held at the home of In. and Ira. Peter E Gal- lant. A delicious lunch was then served by the hostess. Min Angela Corcoran recently spent a few days in Mill River. Mr. and Mrs. James Rooney. Mill River. were recent visitors to Piusville and Roseville. Miss Yvonne Blanchard. re- turned to her home in Bi-octon after spending two weeks visit- ing in htronto. Mr. Leo Gallant, Piuavllle. was a business visitor to Moncton on June 10. ifir. and Mrs. Alton Mclnac. He ron. were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Corcoran. AID FOR PILOT MIJICINI HAT. Aita.. (OP)- Pred ltonan stopped his truck to give the right-of-way to a low- flying airplane". Rnnen signalled with his spotlight to the pilot whose plane was low or; fuel. and the plane made an emergency landing on the highway. INDIAN RIVER W. I. —!‘ourteen members and two visitors attended the June I meet- ing of Indian River W. I. held at the home of Mrs. William Sin- clair. and answered to the roll call with the mime of their fav- ourite flowers. Discussion period dealt mainly with arrangements. programme. etc. for the forthcoming District lure: W. I. is hoataaa. Iflla Orau tater. vioe- dent and tan. Justin Incl. ilau. eccrItIf&‘-treu- urtr. will be the delegate: to the district convention. u well II to the provincial convention. The school committee supplied duatbsne. and money for year- eud pi-iau, donated. as well u . treat. for the school closing! the van and means otmnilttce have tickets on ule for a blanket. tum-ii concentrated effort and work iiin be done as soon as the iiclioo; closes on the fencing lay-out “cg of the school grounds. CAPITOL Iummoulile TODAY (Thursday) 3:30 - 7:15 - 9:15 TRUE. DEATH-DINING EXPLOITS OF THE GREAT DAIIDEVILI EEIIIIDIHI . st oeeen er TOIIEIIIIOOIOI be found_ "‘ Sport Coats * Sport Jackets * Slacks * spoii shim "' Dress Shirts ”' Hosiery * Luggage "‘ Cuii Links "‘ Ties — Bow Ties "‘ Belts — Billfolcls W. I. Convention for which Indian FATHER'S DAY TIE SALE! stirring iniiv Jilin ‘liIl|l'l'|S*"ll|8ll . -10 ml" I'Ili|lf|- r-vie-nittiiii ill - Dirttitlliuuii I iiiiii Set-wtrllfiliil-tasocinituiiyiianiiuiuiia-iiiiiltiiititiig ALSO LATEST NEWS REEL [[EGEN',|,‘ 111-11111111 1.15 . 9.15 Friday 3:30-7:15-9:15; Saturday 2:30-7:15-9:15 1 . “ THE KIDNAPPERS ” Vincent Winter - Jon Whiteley A story of two little lads of ii Scot's settle- ment who became "Kldnoppers" . . . In rug- ged Novo Scotie. A movie with a lieeirt as big as Canada itself. FATHER'S DAY 15 JUNE For the He-Man—ihe Particular men—Execuiive—Handymen—Sport‘sman or His real Iiomebody—maI<e Dad‘: big day extra special with thoughtful gifts he can really use. - - - Of course you'll score it hit by your selection at Sma|Imen's — the store where Dad always does his personal shopping - - - Here are iusi a few of our exceptional gift- buys—You'I| find many more. of course. in our Main Floor Men's Wear Section. WHITE DRESS SHIRTS "Country Club" "Century 600" Fit For A King — So right for Dad — that's the quality tailored white dress shii-ta..f-le'll be speci- ally pleased with the fused collar with choice or regular or short atyllng...An ever welcome gift Ind so reasonably priced. .. _ 4.95 A SPORT SHIRTS Styled by Aicoi sport shirts like these remind Ill of leisurely summer evenings — sports and an air of contentment -that's for dad if you select one of our newest arrivals in nylon and acetate...tailored to fit and hand washable In shades of blue. grey sand. 4.95 SMART TIES Dad will be delighted with a brace of these handsome tleai some are narrow. some are regu- lar; All are out amply ions 101' good looks...aI.yled Just for dad. with the new color approach in a wonderful range of panels. Dai- tame. solids. Itrlpee. 1.50 These are all high quality tin in smart. individualised styling — all taken from regular Fathers Day gifting. ewok specially for Values to i.5o—65c...2 for 1.25 SMALLNAIPS MEN'S wna om.--smai n._oo1i It‘: always SniuIIIi¢ii's for Top Values at Lowest Prices.