last two months with her sister, | Members who added to the success of the Daffodil Tea sponsored by the Women's Services Committee of the ‘Lo- \ HAPPE Audrey... Jenkins, Women’ Mr. and Mrs. Wilson MacDon- ald, Johnson's River, left on} Saturday by plane for Toronto, Ont. to visit members of their family in Mimico, Ont. : Margatie MacFarlane, RN, has-returned to duty at Sunny Brook Hospital in Toronto, aft- | er spetiding four days. visiting parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cyril] MacFarlane at Fernwood. ‘Mr. and Mre“Charles Aitken. of Oshawa, Ont. were recent visitors to Baltic “where they were guests of Mrs. Aitken’s brother, Edgar Matthews and Mrs. .Matthews. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Maclsaac and their son Michael-and-daw | ghter, Lori, who have’ been in| Toronto, Ont., for the past two years are moviing to Cen tral Bedeque and will take up resi- dence in the house owned ‘by John Green. Reeves arrived) plane on) the, Mrs. Carrie home to Bedeque hy ‘Wednesday after spending Mrs. Mae Teed in Florida. John Brander left recently for his home in Mankota, Sask. after spending the past couple | of weeks with his brother, Wil- | ~Ham, and Mrs. Brander at Bal- ties 3Everett L. Donald has return- | ed to his home in Kensington after spending—a-.week—with_his brother Robert Donald and Mrs Donald at Halifax, N. 8. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Reeves and their three daughters of Hamilton, Ont., arrived home Knit’ »’ Embroider _ Knit. jacket from neck down “sleeves, too, in stockinette stitch. Trim with stitchery. Embroider red rages on easy-knit jacket. Transfer) given actual size - stmple to | place, Pattern 7262: sizes 32- 34: 36 - 38; 40 - 42; 44 - 46 incl. THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins) for each pattern (no stamps). please) to Alice Brooks, care of | Guardian — Patriot Needlecraft | Dept--f0-Front—St,.W.—Roronto | 1, Ont. Ontario residents. add one cent sales tax. Print plainly pat- | 4 Che cal Cancer Society Unit stand- ing are (LEFT) .Mrs> mar Sherren and Mrs. Percy eron, who. were Din aeae NINGS. 's ‘Editor. Phone 485% ;recently for a short holiday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter: Reeves at Ross’ Corner, | who celebrated - their 50th. wed: ding anniversary on Wednesday, | March 30th.--- — Mrs: Keir Crafer, Baltic is vi- jsiting in London, Ontario with | her soh, and daughter in law, | Mr. and Mrs. John Crafer. She | was accompanied to eee Pe “/Mrs. B. Graham of Kensin Marjorie MacArthur, RN 2 the Halifax General Hospital re- iturned recently to resume her | iduties after spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs MacArthur, — R. R. Mr.and Mrs. Alfred Carew, |Hunter River will be at home to their relatives ‘and friends| today, April 5th from 2 - 4 and from 8 - 10 p. m. on their 50th wedding anniversary. HOUSEHOLD HINTS| Edges on the rug or “carpet frayed? Repair them right on the floor-with-iron—on--rug—bind-+ ing tape. Nothing’s gayer in closets | and —drawers than adhesive- backed plastic covering, and it can be wiped clean. ° When you sweep the basement or garage floor, keep down the dust by first strewing it with strips of dampened newspaper. You can beat summer to the punch. by cleaning and repaint- ing garden furniture in the spring. Fasy-see Diagram Indoors or out in the garden, ithis top-interest sheath. will idelight you all spring and sum- mer. Yoke with shoulder exten- ision is so flattering. Whip it up: in jersey, Dacron. Printed pattern 4598: |Misses’ Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, Size 16 takes 2% yds. 45-in. FIFTY CENTS (50 cents) (no stamps. please) for each pattern. Ontario residents 18, ‘tern number. name, address. GIANT 19866 Needlecraft Cata-. log. stars knit, crochet many) more, needlecraft designs. 4 3) free patterns. printed in catalof | Send 25 cents, NEW! 12 Collectors” patterns for you in color, with | quilting motifs. Finest pattern | ever collected from famous mu- seums. Send 60 cents for new Museum Quilt. Book No. 1 sixteen e@omplete patterns, Quilt 6c. teare of Guardian-Patriot NAME, | NUMBER Send order tewANNE ADAMS, Pat- tern Dept., 60 Front St. W., Toronto Ontario. COME ALIVE FOR SPRING! | Send for our new Spring- Sum- mer Pattern Catalog. 125 lshapes for sun, fun, dancing, | ‘dining, everyday! One: free pat- tern—clup eoupon in Catalog. i Send 50e. ‘ “Mr, _|regular menu. In! add | 2c sales tax. Print plainly SIZE, | ADDRESS, STYLE) ‘op | a | | | | | [ | * imind, as the new ANNUAL DAFFODIL TEA ~ -pf the social tonetion and pouring tea is Mrs. Frank J. MacDonald, wife of the pro- vincial president of the Can- cer Society. | seven-league boots! | to us more suggestive or more |this time of year, not the safest e- red cli E | ‘the cove? white- gulls excursio-| beginning to the housecleaning ned. How very far a child could |and 4"Now all jies! ELLEN'S DIARY | Fleecy Spring Take Fanciful White clouds,-in great wooly In cottage and’ trains. Even: But -none fanciful shapes: castle, planes, deeply enticing, than the shios little. and larger, with board there. swallows “tame and went ae from nests in the and down toward on quick go on those cloud-boats! To dis- tant larids and delightful for a long minute today as we fashion enjoying well, |invariably do every last outing yet?’ yet May.’ least ee ‘measure of regret when atleng-.weather- warms—then—and short or longer we make, never experiencing the th we turn steps toward home. . . jof the season: pling the fields, its flecks on.the stream. ing off the minutes and the hours rather leisurely “then. This -morhing was busier. What was the m interest in lay lifted it- self over the quiet{of the east’s treetops? flames ggested it. together, my heart- he said encouragingly set- ting his feet to the floor, when the rival crowings of the heads atthe flock in the poultryhouse us |'The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., alle, ss 5, 1966. 7 | IDA BAILEY “ALLEN Split Pea, Oni At last, I-received an’ invita- tion long wished for: The op- portunity to “titich “with tthe chefs. of -N. Y.'s | Waldrof- Astoria Hotel in their own dining room. We were greeted cordially by the executive. chef, Eugene Scanlan, a brilliant Irishman-American who excels in French and international cookery. Given _A_ Lift Up (not down) we. went fn the éleVator, walked around a corner, then direct te_the chef's dining room, where the table was carefully laid with a white linen cloth, and set with the | silverware for the meal, “We often taste-test new items -we are considering for service here at the hotel—some of them created by the chefs.’ said_chef Scanlan. ‘‘But the chefs prefer simpler, less com- plicated foods. “Today’s lunch- eon menu is typical.’ LUNCHEON WITH CHEFS AT WALDORF-ASTORIA — (Double the Recipe and There is a _planned-Over — Dinner for Another Day) | Combination Split Pea and ion Soup ‘with Sour h Bread 8 utter 5 — Radishes Ripe and Stuffed Olives Celery Hearts amb Chops Boulangere ~ Salad of Bibb Lettuce French Dressing -Macedoine of Fresh Spring Fruits au Kirsch » Coffee, Tea. : Measurements level; T ’ |recipes from the Waldort-Astoria adapted to home service fo: 6 COMBINATION SPLIT PEA’ AND: ONION SOUP . “At the ‘Waldorf’’, explained Seanlan, ‘‘we run several kinds of soup.a day on the Sometimes they can be combined to make ‘still another soup, a good addition to the menu without extra work. A favorite with many of we guests is the combination of split pea and onion soup on today’s menu — each ments the other. B { can make this soup by Jombin, pea soup and canned enion soup, with the amount of wate# designated on the cans. Serve bubbling hot. It is not laziness ‘jto use convenience items, if the taste-quality still remains high. Or sometimes at home, the ready-to-use item can, be sea- or with a little sauee that makes it taste like an ‘original’. “At thé chef's luncheon we enjoy bread and sweet butter with our soup,” he céntinued. |Today it is sour-dough bread from an oitside -bakery which rwe are taste-testing for quality. The Lamb Chops Boulangere (meaning baker) is a classic {French dish.” LAMB CHOPS BOULANGERE 10 medium-size peeled white p®tatoes, Sliced ‘»'’ thick 4 3 peeled onions, sliced thin and cut in quarters 2 tsp. salt “4 tsp. pepper ~f tsp. Worcestershire sauce 1 tsp, minced fresh niint or mint flakes 6 rib lamb chops or 3 halved large shoulder lamb chops 2 ¢. boiling ‘lamb broth “Or Lier tsp. broth powder and 2 e. ig water | fi | | | | Picked ‘For Chefs’ Menu ing equal parts of canned split soned with an interesting herb { ion Soup: % e. mincéd parsiéy In a well-buttered _2-qt.. cas-_ serole,—layerhalf_ the potatoes, onions and seasonings co m- bined: On this, layer lamb chops. Top with second layer of eombined remaining pota- toes, onions and seasonings. Pour in lamb broth; close-cover. Bake 2 hr. in slow-to-mod.: oven 325 to 350 degrees F. To serve, top. with parsley. MACEDOINE. OF FRESH SPRING FRUITS—AU-— KIRSCH Ingredients: Segments. from 2 California oranges — 1 large winter pear, peeled, cored and sliced —1 ¢. seeded halved grapes— 1 ¢. thin-sliced fresh pineapple, cut bite-size—'z c. Kirschwasser —i e. halved: fresh 'stirred us toward rising fleeces, moved across the spring we'll get those stovepipes, blue of ‘this afternoon's sky. sails ‘ed. spread, we since a child could | winds .Down at the far \ter the sparks of a flue-fire, ‘edge of the Strait -those would |one chanced to catch!” jcome in,.on a day when a quiet tide lapped on the near sands; | when. 'we So ing at today?” we mer this evening inquired. weit in the same make-believe not too much. Just the chores’ ~ The—singing fire, And ‘the old clock: check- | noon. ioning a fence from strands of twine come from the used bales at the barns, white arm-chair where at the time his grandfather sat reading. She was seemingly quite eontent to enter into his play, as he adjusted and tied, and: chatted at.,his work. one spring day.” Ellen’’ James smiled, workaday week, away. | Girl Still Undaracibus After Clouds: Shapes “And and at feast the kitchen , Chimney, cleaned. in no time!" It wa a convenient morning for it, a a sensible precaution to take at Season where fire is concern- “April will have its high ‘They would soon scat- if James. said, work - clad now, and at a window looking out on the day. It was a clean, hhappy—tune, restored to our hearth a length in, iftame to mind.“a nice the -busier days ahead. “And what were you chaps work- a visiting. far- “Oh, James replied. “Any lambs “There's none due till “That's the best time for - the natural season. The the ewes are, on pasture. It's all |\So today we came hack happily very well to have winter - born lto the:old paths and the scenes jones, but they do make a lot of the sunshine dap- extra steps.” | A little lad came by from the hearth- house across the lane this after- He amused himself, fash- to confine the kitten beneath the old watching “There's a sign in it’ we et over the child’s head. ‘He will be a farmer fencing his. ae “Well, if he if he likes it, “it is a happy and rewarding ‘life. There | has the call to it. . is none better, as I see it."’ And’.a’ second day of our new now wanders | Record Period - CLEARWATER, Fila. ¢AP)— Thirty-one-year-old Elaine Espo- “Tsito -has set a world record— one of human tragedy. For the last 25 years she has’ been in a coma—the longest pe- riod of human -unconsciousness known to medical science. On Aug. 6, 1941, the six-year- old daughter and only child of Mr. was given anesthesia d surgery for a athioed. appen- dix. She never regained consci- ousness, ated open-eyed- unawareness of the} and Mrs. Louis* Epeaite and since has altern- between deep. sleep and world about her, knowing neither her mother nor father. idaughter whose last words had | Stir in the |been, “‘ Mommy, ze aot afraid. and. pineapple .slices. Kirsehwasser,—Top—with—t-h strawberries. Refrigerate 30 min. Stir slightly with a fork just before serving. THE CHEF ANNOUNCES Tomorrow we will have news, ofthe special training course |meticulou for young men who desire to! ing} hair dome: I.said the same end tt was true, until I absolutely flipped over 2: married male movie star about 2 vear ago., I never, thought “it could: happen to me. Since then | ‘ami buyins least -six :movie magazine 29 month to see what he’s up 9, And it really takes dredgin: to check:on him. T think he mst pay a press agent to keep his Name__out of print, I so seldom see it there Regularly,: 1 pass cies friends assorted magazines Tf subscribe to Atlantic ee Holiday, The New .Yorker, yee - even Esquire, without self-con- sciousness, But I heap myselt making the ee excuses for having gazines around —. somebody doing research gave them to-me. . or I collect them for the janitor. somehow Tf just can’t admit I parted with money for such trash. N. B DEAR N. B.: TI would sun mimise that your own particular two-faced attitude towards mo- | vie magazines has to do with a ,conflict between the person you feel you_are and the person you wish to bee taken for I think the sort of person who devour movie magazines, eith- er openly or furtively, are feed-- ing on fantasy rather than appl- lying themselves to —-reality—tr— \disciplined fashion, in their ;quest for satisfaction in life. Probably you think © of your+ self as a person of taste, mean- ing that you aspire to identify to THE YOUNG. LADY OF FASHION: Some cla a differ- | (LEFT) with tow- placed slot- |with ‘‘the finer things of life’ such a shift | ted ribbon sash above a brief jas the phrase is. vaguely ruffle skirt. Another choice in }you have a valid sense that In the spring a young lady’s dresses. fancy is still for: white in party ent touch jreader* mentality it aims at. Hence, in buying an atmful ‘out apology and.consider it|of such, magazines monthly, f | quite manly to read ‘the sports|you simultaneously take issue | Pages none of which is brain -|with yourself, no doubt. for. sub- | stretching. scribing to a taste, or acquired Likewise women play bridge, (add that, in your mind, ie window shop, ‘do needlepoint, |‘A88ed a8 sifamefully unworthy hang on the phone, yak-it-up|% your preferred self-image... over coffee, all equally non; And, because you thus feel brain-fagging. . pee -feathered with guilt, Yet how m th fin t leeper reaches of your: Nc May oh Cheba, de conflicted self, you have-a strong compulsion to disown the - pur” chase, in a too talkative way. | MARY H AWORTH the pastel pink A-line with ‘much’ movie magazine report. ruffled sleeves and embroid- jing caters to a morbid or vulgar L ered top. (CP Photo). | keyhole peeper. curiosity in- the: - Movie Book Addict Hog Men play golf and poker. with- Tarred-And-Feathered Guil DEAR ‘MARY HAWORTH: \I wonder if you. and or some of your ‘philosophicat ° readers | would furnish ‘a clue to the in- {tellectual snobbery © which exists with regard to reading so-called movie magazines? tube four times a day. Medica- tion also is administered through =| ea ‘have bee 14 | he Espositos. have in to! over and” over: by“specialists-that self. heading the list, would ad- _|there is no hope for Elaine, that |mit reading and enjoying movie ‘lshe ean. never recover from|™agazines? In beauty shops one Of 2 5 Y such _extensive brain damage |8ee8 & oe variety of ace SHOPS OCEECCOO SSO OOOOS and can_never_be normal._ Journals: arper’s Bazaar, Vo- . ears “But 1 always hoped they y | Bue, Rages note ete. H. = aa -CARR » ut. what are m i Canada Medical opinion has been: di- |Were wrene ae en han " Movie p District Supervisor who-has. gh- ing under the — dryer? vided as to whether the child) ter through other serious il- | magazines. had incipient encephalitis at the oneo5esbaeo Scvsdapsee lime of the appendectomy ce Meee: It i ace for wom- Charlottetown, P.E.1 ee whether oxygen to the brain was Two years alter the appendec- Ge tomy she had further major ab- vie ROA i. while getting their 0060006 oo-00o+es insufficient while she was on the operating table. Surgeons were closing the in: cision’ when their patient went into, convulsions and her _tem- peratare. ‘sored to 107.6. +: "At first the doctors told us| dominal surgery and. .was given | .— a 1-to-1,000 chance of pulling through: She has survived sev- eral bouts of pneumonia and an attack of measles. About 16 years ago the girl's right ting collapsed ‘and bed Elaine wouldn't live through the said that a lower rib growing iy night. I waited for her, to open |the hip bone is causing her body | | her eyes and speak me .. ./|to curve as she grows. Alth but she never did/* Mrs. Espo-jshe has .gained a few ‘sito recalled as she adjusted the|and_ added a few inches sinee coverlet around the shoulders of |childhood—she now weighs c\N her dark - haired, dark - eyed|her hands and feet , are “| lthose of a six-year-old. When the Espositos realized “that medicat science could ~o: them no hopé, they made a last 'e |desperate-effort to rescue their daughter from her living death, and took her to the Grotto at Lourdes —in southern France ,in search of a miracle. Today, ‘their lives absorbed by N MARCH LAY-A-WAY - . WUISALE) =| c. \ 4 : is i con The tenacity swith: which the young woman has clung to has baffled medical science. At. tending physicians: atéribute the ifact that, > is still--alive to the- devoted nursing her. mother. island furriers itd. she receives fro ovina fanaa c ee Pe ee ‘ pro Account — these are the services you're looking for nine times out of ten when you go inte a bank. At Canada’s © First Bank, you'll find.these-are the services we work a little harder at performing quickly, efficiently, effectively, That’s the way all our branches are set up. They're organizgd with the emphasis in what we think is the right place — absolutely top service to you in the vital services you use in your day-to-day banking. Basic Banking, we call this system. You'll find other facilities, too, at your neighbourhood branch of the Bank of Montreal. A complete range of financial — services unmatched bYEny other type of financial institution. Why not drop in for a quick visit next time you're passing a branch of Canada’s First Bank?, SAVINGS ACCOUNT SEEN 2 rE strawberries. become chefs, as carried out at| Kept as late-—as——a-jthe—unstirring—figure-in—a—pink % 79 Grafton St. Dial 2-1273 ‘To Prepare: Combine orange|the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. is ibaby, she is fe ght ounces of |bed with the blue bows, they segments, pear slices, grapes'New York. special formula through a nazal are still waiting for the miracle. SLE L LEO UOT TOOORID : cs aS : i —— “Canada’s First Bank its - BANK OF. v MonrreAt W RANK TOS MMR a 1 PERSONAL Oe aii | CHEQUING ecoUX nae