Double Ring Ceremony Held At Cavendish Manse A quiet, but pretty wedding was solemnized at the Cavendish manse when Margaret Shirley, el- dest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Davis Moffatt of Mayfield, P.E. I. was united in marriage with James Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Andrews of Hunt- er River, P.E.I. ~ Rev. E. ‘A. C. Haley officiated at the double ring ceremony. The bride given in marniage by her father looked lovely in a ballerina length gown of nylon net and lace over satin under- skirt. The lace jacket had long sleeves coming to a pointhover the wrist. Her fingertip veil, fell from a coronet head dress trim- nosegay of red roses and white carnations. Miss Marie Nunn, friend of the brideiwas her only attendant. She wore a/ballerina length gown of ice blue net over taffeta, with matching bolero, headdress and mitts. She carried a nosegay of pink and white carnations. A friend, Mr. Alvin MacNeill, capably supported the groom..- The bride’s mother chose for her daughter’s wedding, a brown taffeta dress with beige and brown accessories. He); corsage was of yellow roses. The groom’s mother. wore a blue dress withmatching acces- med with pearls. She carried a sories. Her corsage was of white carnations. L. M. Montgomeiry Chapter Noted Item Of Interest I The January meeting of the L. M. Montgomery Chapter, I.O.D.E was held Monday evening, Jan- uary 6th, at the home of Mrs. R. B. Smith with twenty members present, and ,'Miss Margaret Ril-, ey, regent, presiding. The prayer‘ of the order opened the. meeting, after which the flag was brought forward, and the minutes of the December meeting were read and approved. ‘ ' Routine business was dealt with and reports from» the various working committees were pre- sented. Mrs. G. G. Hughes gave a very interesting report on the Christmas party for the Cerebral Palsied children, mentioning their wonderful progress under the tu- ition of their teacher, Miss Cum- miskey. , ‘ Letters from headquarters were read, and the following item of interest was noted. The members made tentative plans for a rummage saleto be held in February, and wool fori garments for the overseas box ts‘! bevsent in May was distribut- It was learned with much re- gret that Mrs. A. E. Lehnen is soon to leave us to take up 1-es}. Standin Piccadilly Circus for In hour and you’rc bound to see dence in Halifax. Her willingness and enthusiasm will be greatly missed at our meetings, and in the carrying out of our various’ projects. A nominating committee, con- sisting of Mrs. Clive Stewart, convener, Miss Catherine’ Beth- une and Mrs. Edward Miller, brought in a tentative slate of officers for the coming year, to be votedon at the Annual Meet- ing in February. ~ At the conclusion of the busi- ness meeting Miss Miriam, Mat- thew gave a most interesting pa- per on “Commonwealth High- lights of 1957 - 1958”. This was much appreciated by the mem- bers. _ - The hostess assisted by lI/Its. R. G. Dumont, Mrs. G. G. Hugh- es, Mrs. H. E. Miller Jr., and Mrs. Tom D. DeBlois, served re- freshments and ‘brought an en- joyable evening to a close, Queen‘ Mary’s famous needle- point carpet still continues to raise money for charity, through the use of the copyright which is owned by The Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire. ' Mrs. Richardson, National Pres- ident, announced that two busi- ness firms had been granted per- MR. . JAMES H. AN nnw Arrnanrs Following the ceremony a re- ception was held at the Charlotte- town Hotel. The bride’s table was arranged with a three’ tier wed- ding cake, topped with a minia- ture bride and groom, and flank- ed on either side by white can- dles in silver holders. During the reception, telegrams were read by Alvin MacNeill. Mrs. Robert Andrews was in charge of the guest book. , Following the reception, the happy young couple left on a honeymoon trip to the Royal Win- ter Fair at Toronto going by way of Canada and returning through the United States, stopping at var- ious places including Sydney, N. S ‘Mr. and Mrs. Andrews ‘will re- side in, Hunter River where the groom is engaged in farming. Previous to her wedding the bride-to-be was entertained at a- shower at the home of Mr. and mission from the I.O.D.E. to use a design of one panel of the car- pet. An English publication (Wo- ,rnan’s Journal) has reproduced a needle-point tapestry to be wor- ked on as a firescreen, and in lieu of .a royalty has made a do- nation in the name of the I.O.D.E. to ‘the Soldiers’, x Sailors’ and Airmen’s Famili s -Association (S.S.A.F.A.) in Great Britain.‘ , The Cunard Steamship ‘Com- pany will reproduce the same pa- nel for use on their first-class -menus, and in lieu of a royalty will make a donation on behalf of the I.0.D.E. to the British Sail- ors’ Society in Canada and in Bri tain. , N. .GRANVILI.E W.M.S. The Women’s Missionary Soc- ing on January 6, at the home of Mrs. Horace Taper with 5 mem- bers and 1 visitor present. The worship period was led by the president, Mrs. Horace Tap- er, taking for her lesson what was given in [the Missionary Monthly. A discussion on the lesson follow- ed after .which' Mrs. Stafford Coles led in prayer for the‘ adopt- ed Missionary. , ' Minutes of last meeting read, approved and signed. Roll Call answered by telling something about Paul. Correspondence read, Bills were passed in and paid. Sick committee reported 37 cards iety med ‘for their regular meet-= Mrs. Byron Houston, Mayfield. The bride was escorted to the prettily decorated seat of honour‘ by Mrs. Heath Houston while Mrs. Lloyd Houston played, “Here Comes the Bride.” _ ' She was presented with a bou- quet of flowers by her little cou- sin, Arlene Houston. The baskets of gifts-were carried in by Donna Houston ,5‘ and Beth Johnston.- ’ Mrs. William Andrew opened the gifts with Mrs. Edwz. d Mac- Donald and Mrs. Byron Houston read the accompanying verses and wishes. Mrs. Elbert Orr arranged the many lovely and useful gifts on the table. The newlyweds were also ten- dered a community shower by« friends and neighbours in Hunt- er River Hall on Jan. 6th, where many lovely gifts were received. Dancing was enjoyed during the evening. sent, 12 home calls, and 6 hos- pital calls. made during month, 6 books read during month. Reports from the treasuror’s were given and were very encour- aging. The allocation had been exceeded by $14.00 Mrs. Stafford Coles invited the members to meet, at her home for next meet- ing, with Mrs. George Dunning as Worship leader. Mrs. Orville Taylor to have prayer for adopt- ed Missionary. ' , As Study Books had not arrived in time W.M.S. unable to have a Study lesson. Meeting closed by repeating the Mizhap benedic- tion, Lunch was served by the hostess. WlFE__ PRESERVERS A basket can be a slep-savor fot you if it is fined out with an assort- ment of rags, brushes, polishes and window SPVGYS--filings you wai often for small clean-up jobs. Then you can do a lot in one trip ihrouji the house. PICCADILLY ans, N someone you know — no matter saying, and for many visitors to where you're from. That’s the old London it holds true. — Photo wmm Lena Caroline McLure, Women’: Editor. Phone BSII HAPPE Page 8 The Guardian Tues., Jan_ 14, 1958 NINGS The year, nineteen hundred and fifty-eight -is to celebrate still ano- ther first in- Prince Edward Is- land. The first .Charity Ball, un- der the auspices of the Canadian Foundation for Poliomyelitis and Rehabilitation, is to be held at the Charlottetown Hotel on Wed- nesday evening, January 22nd, under the distinguished patron- age of His Honour, Lieutenant Governor T.W.L. Prowse and Mrs. Prowse. Guests, from all over the pro- vince, have been invited. All pro- ceeds from this ball are to be used for the Prince Edward Is- land chapter of which Mr. J. Lincoln Dewar, is president. What a fitting introduction to the new year’s social season -— a season reflecting growth, buoyancy, phil- .anthropy and economic achieve- ment. Rev. and Mrs. T. H. B. Som- ers have had as their guest for a short visit Mrs. Frank R. Ash- ford of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Mr. and Mrs. W. Hayward entertained at bridge last week at their residence, Crestwood Drive. The St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Women’s Association of St. And- rew’s Church, King Street, To- ronto last week held a ballet thea- tre night. A Toronto writer said: “Most of the folk who belong to this auld Scots kirk have names that bear the hint of the heather, and so the audience will be fill- :ed with bonny Scottish faces and lbraw Scottish accents.” _At the head of the list of those attending are Ontario's new Lieu- tenant Governor and Mrs. J. Keil- ler Mackay, who will be there as imembers and supporters of St. :Andrew’s. They will share a box ‘with Rev. and Mrs. Paul Stirling.- Others who are expected are IMrs. W. D. Ross, and Mr. Jus- ‘tice and Mrs. George McGi1livray Mrs. C. Swain, Port Mouton, Nova Scotia, is on a short visit _ELLEN’S DIARY “Whew! What a load that is!” our old friend the sparrow, set- ~ tled within easy chatting distance, oumide the window, beside which we sat mending James’ other ov- eralls, commented this afternoon. He surveyed as did we, the heap of straw-bales the tractor was drawing along the driveway to deliver at -the barns. “It’s long and wide - high too” he nodded. “It’s like the missiles and such- like they experiment with these times, it reaches up into outer .space’.f "he added with a whim- sical grin. What a fine load it was, neat- ly packed in tiers and retaining in its folds some of the sun and sheen of the harvest. To look at it, was to picture gra-in-sacks fil- li g magically, straw mounding from the beat of the thresher set in a near or far field. \ “Wouldn’t you like to climb it, right to the top?” he queried softly watching it settle by a door of a barn. “The sights one_ could see from that comfortable height! You could look away up along the valley. And catch the wander- ings of the miillstream from the far end of the field across the creek, right down past the lane bridge to the spillways on the dam. I_ guess you too could see the lacey foam where it falls there. And over the spruces be- side it, glimpse it hurrying a- way to meet the tides down be- low. . But” he twinkled “ ‘Do you think at your age’ you could climb heights?”. Now they were busily lifting and bearing off the bales to shel- ter. “Well well, if they aren’t the two most industrious men around this place” he commented. “And they actually seem to enjoy it.” with her son-in-law and daugh- ter, Mr. and Mrs. H.E. Hynd- man, 43 Greenfield Avenue. Mr. Lewis "Turner is leaving January 14th on a holiday trip to Montreal. LAC Vincent MacAdam has re- turned to Quebec Prov., af- ter spending his holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mac- Adam, 89 McGill Ave.. Charlotte- own. Mr. and Mr. Hazen MacWil- 1-iams, Cape Traverse, and Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Dawson, Augus- tine Cove, have returned from a ten-day trip. They visited rela- tives in Boston, travelling from that city to Buffalo via the Mas- achusetts Turnpike. They visited Niagara Falls, Toronto and Mon- treal returning home via Quebec City, Riviere du _Loup and Saint John River route. The York Concert Society last week announced that Lois Mar- shall will be unable to sing the soprano part injMahler’s Ressur- rection Symphony, which is be- ing presented at Massey Hall on Jan. 22. ‘ . Miss Marshall undergoes min- or surgery this month, prior to her American tour in February. Mary Simmons, who was heard at Sunday aft *noion’s Pop Con- cert, will sing the part in her place. Claramae Turner, contralto, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and the Bach-Elgar Choir from Ham- ilton under the direction of John Sidgwick, will unfold the com- plete symphony under the baton of Dr. Heinx Unger. Fresh spring flowers from Corn; wall left Britain by air, recently for the Toronto Art Gallery where 18th century British paintings are on exhibition. The consignment, first of six weekly shipments, is part of a campaign to promote spring at- tractions in Britain. ' It ,Winter Comes "Can Spring Be:Far Behind “The work? Oh, yes,” we a- greed, “every m-inute and chore of it. These farmers are dedicat- ed to the farming — that’s ‘\for sure.’ As a matter ‘of fact” we chuckled, “if some king were to stop by Alderlea they’d have him off to the stables or along the fields with them in no time. And if he -couldn't talk shop intelli- gently, he'd be “a poorly edu- cated creature” and to their mind “not a fit man to run the country at all!”’ “Just -so!” "Friend Sparrow smiled understandingly. “Well, I always maintain that one need waste no pity on the man who loves his work. Instead, he’s to be envied, for he is .truly the happiest man on earth . . . A nice January” he continued “for the farmers to get on with their work. No snow to hinder them, no doors to clear nor sleigh trails to make along the fields." “They plan to be off to the wood’s work shortly” we offered. “That reminds me —— I must be off now to join the rest! So ‘Cherrio” and be good. It’s been nice chatting” he smiled, rising and winging away. . This was a quiet day, rihboned about with a silken wind that suggested March suns and drip- ping icicles. But still it was win- ter! bare branches silver against the lowering sky, faded stubble, dampish fields. “If winter comes in earnest with snow, we’ll find the work more trying” James says coming in now at his day’s end. “ ‘If winter comes” we chuck- le “ ‘can Spring be far behind?” Until tomorrow -— — — Diary —- Goodnight. . . . A September Many Maritime artists will get their first big chance to display their talents at an art exhibition scheduled for Fredericton in Sep- tember. And the person making it possible for these struggling ar- tists to show their efforts that otherwise might be lost to many who really care is Lord Beaver- brook, a patron of the arts, and one who has a faculty for pro- moting a thing just at the right time — when it really needs a boost. The exhibition is planned to co- incide with the official opening in Fredericton of the new Beaver- brook Art Gallery, His Lordship’s latest gift to the province. The beautiful, glazed - brick building will feature three main galleries — the central gallery in which priceless works by the old mas- ters will be displayed, a Canad- ian gallery and one devoted to paintings by British artists. The travelling. Exhibition Room in which the Maritime show will be presented is located in the down- stairs section of the building. Meanwhile, Maritime art clubs and groups have been invited to consider the entry of their work and replies to date have been most encouraging. The fortlicom-. I by the British Travel Association. Fredericton Will Have Art Exhibit art ever assembled. Artists contemplating entries in the special exhibition organiz- ed especially for them by Lord Beaverbrook are alerted to the following conditions: Works sub- mitted must be offered for exhi- bition for the first time; a price tag must be attached to each pic- ture and the public will be invit- ed to make purchases, although the art gallery reserves the right to first opportunity to purchase. Pictures for inspection by the selection committee, which will be guided in its decisions by Sir Alec Martin, widely - known Lon- don expert, must be received by August 1. This, it was felt, will allow artists desiring to do so, plenty of time to create some- thing this year, rather than not be content with submitting an ear- lier painting that just might not be representative of their best expressions and talent. Notice of intention to submit pictures for selection should be sent to R. A. Tweedie, secretary, j>Beaverbrook Art Gallery, P. 0. Box 36, Fredericton, N.B. CAREFUL SHOPPING Knowledge of food values of meats, vegetables, fruits and ing exhibition promises to be the cereals makes for economical largest display of truly Maritime shopping. IdeaI Way To IsFrom The To The following article by Chris- tian Nagel is of interest to those contemplating a trip for the first time to Great Britain or to those who already know the bus routes well. Now Mr. Nagel —— There is something unique a- bout London’s buses, and every Canadian who has seen pictures of London is familar with their double-deck, box - like shape making splashes-« of scarlet a- mong the city traffic. They are friendly. bulldoggish, and com- pletely British, and they provide the best way of getting a panora- mic view of the City. In the nineteenth century over- seas visitors viewedvthe sights of London from the ‘open tops of the old horse-buses. Later they were motorised, and today the top deck is roofed and stream- lined, but the familiar red paint remains and beneath modern grooming and efficiency you can still trace their ancestry back-to those horse drawn ‘buses of the ’90s. There are thousands of buses in London, and scarcely a street where they do‘ not run. They will take you through Westminster, Chelsea, Soho, or Cheapside, n- mong the dark, Dickensian al- leys of the city or the smartest shopping streets, past cathedral or law court, park or mansion. There are, of course, many spe- cially arranged conducted coach tours through London, but if you like exploring on your own there is no’ better way than to do it by bus. v Fhr a few pence you can trav- el right through the heart of the city in any direction, and if you do this on five or six different routes you will get a complete general impression without walk- -ing at all! Or if you see some- thing which looks specially inter- esting you can get off at the next stop and finish the journey later, or even-next day. London and its buses will be there just the same, and fares are so cheap that you need not fret about sacrificing part of one. _ There are two things to remem- ber before you set off to see Lon- don by bus: get one of London Transport’s maps which show all the streets and the numbers~of the different bus routes, ‘and make sure you know the direc- tion in which you want to go - it is», so easy to board the right bus going the wrong way. Try and get one of the four front seats on the top deck and you will have a view which the most luxurious limousine ever made cannot give you. ' One of the most interesting of all the routes is No. 11. Take it at the west end of King’s Road, Chelsea, and travel eastward. Fir;t comes‘the whole length of the King’s Road, once a private drive used by Charles II and the ladies of his court on their way to Hampton Court Palace. Chel- sea was originally a riverside village, and it is still one of the - most attractive districts of Lon- don, an artist’s quarter, and now an exclusive residential district. We can see the small squares and delightful terraces- of eigh- teenth century houses, antique shops by the dozen, small res- taurants, old inns, young un- known bearded artists in the tra- ditional velvet jacket, and cele- brities who look just like every- body else and pass unnoticed in the crowd. The bus passes Sloane Square and on eastwards to Victoria Sta- tion, along Victoria Street, pass- ing the turning to the Roman Catholic Westminster Cathedral, and there on our right in all tis time — weathered beauty of an- cient stone is Westminster Abbey. We drive right past it and are now in Parliament Square, the very heart of the British Com- monwealth. Here are the Hou-ses of Parliament, the. clock tower of Big Ben,- and on our right Westminster ‘Bridge across the Thames. We turn away up Whitehall and pass Downing Street, home of Bri- tish prime ministers'. Ahead is Trafalgar Square and we drive round three sides of it, with a fine view of Landseer’s lions and the London pigeons which peck and flutter there eternally. Here, too, are the National Gallery, Nel- son’s Column, and the church of St. Martin-in-the - fields, and then go away by the Strand to Fleet Street, hub of London's newspap- er world, and up Ludgate Hill to St. Paul’s Cathedral. Here most people will get out, but you can go on to the Mansion House and the Bank of England, and end the tour at Liverpool Street Station in the very heart of .the City (Spelt with a capital “c’ this means the oldest part of London, >_ east of the Strand). Another fascinating route is No. 25. This starts at Victoria Sta- tion and goes up Grosvenor Place to Hyde Park Corner, where one can get off and walk down Con- stitution Hill to Buckingham Pal- ace in less than ten. minutes. No bus passes the Palace gates. Back in the No. 25 we drive a- round Hyde Park Corner, passing Apsley House, once the home of the great Duke of Wellington and now a museum, arid along Pic- cadilly. This is the only bus which goes through Bond Street, Lon- don’s most exclusive shopping centre, and along this street we see jewellers and confectioners, couturiens and the great cosmet- ic houses. Bond Street has seen much history. Here Nelson lodg- ed after losing his arm in the battle of Cape St. Vincent, and the house was stoned because it was the only one not decorated with candles to celebrate his vic- tory! You can still shop at the chemist which supplied dressings for his wound. Next we turn right into Oxford Street, across Oxford Circus and away into the City by way of Holborn, running a parallel course to the No. 11, but farther to the north. Here is the Old Bailey —— the Central Criminal Court and scene of notorious murder trials — Cheapside, much changed since the roistering days pictur- ed in Shakespeare’s Henry IV, and so to the Bank of England again and on along Cornhill and Leadenhall streets to Aldgate. From there, if you have not had See Iondon p Of A Bus your fill of sightseeing, you can take a No. 42 to the Tower of London. _ For a more open-air route, take: a No. 74 in Kensington. eastwards; along the Cromwell Road. .F1rSt you will pass the Natural History Museum, the magnificent Victor- ia and Albert Museum, the great Roman Catholic church called Brompton Oratory. hnd the fine dress -shops of BromPt011 R°‘?d and Knightsbridge. After this, however, the bus runs along be- side Hyde Park for the whole length of Park Lane, then up Baker Street to the famous Lord S Cricket Ground, and finally m°1:e th a n halfway round Regents Park, home of the London 00 and the Open Air Theatre. To see the Thames, take a 109 from Westminster Bridge along the Victoria Embankment to Blackfriars, and you Will‘ pass gardens and stately buildings while boats pass up and down the river. Or the 39 which crosses Battersea Bridge from the south bank and runs along Cheyne Walk the most fascinating part of Chel- sea’s river front, and then up to Chelsea Hospital, Charles II’s foundation for old soldiers, where you can still see the scarlet -coat- ed pensioners taking their case. _MARY HAWORTl__-_| ‘ Consul Helps In This Case Dear Mary Haworth: In the past I’vé always been able to get essential information from read- ing your column. So far 37011 haven’t failed me; and I hope you can help with the following: How do I go about getting mar- ried? I am an American girl; and the man I am going to marry is English; and a member of the crew of an ocean liner. The ship is due to dock here on January 17, and we had plan- ned to get married the followmg day. But I wasn't aware, until now, of all the red tape that is connected with it. George will be here only three days. And I had thought that I could apply for the marriage li- cense by myself, but I find I can’t. Meantime, George is under the impression that everything is set; and so is his family. But here I am right Where I started. If you can think of a solution, I shall be ‘very grateful. IMPORT DUTY DUE As George’s stay will be so short, mother was thinking of giving a party for all our friends, after the wedding. There would be about 50 people,‘ and as her rooms are small, it might be somewhat crowded. So, have you any other suggestions? Next year I expect to make my home in England with George. Will I have to pay duty on any- thing I bring in-—I mean linens, kitchenware, furniture, and such? I sincerely hope that I won’t have to pay duty on wedding gifts.‘I don’t know that we will he stay- ing permanently in England. Will that make a difference? I would appreciate an early reply. - S. Y. CONSUL HELPFUL Dear S. Y.: It occurs to me that the staff of the British con- su1’s office in your city might be in a position to help you unsnanl the legal red tape of marrying an Englishman who can’t be here to representhimself in the ad- vanceplanning phase. nation is in business. in another land--to look after the interests of its countrymen abroad, in a «friendly efficient way. And of course George is an Englishman abroad, when he arrives in your town to marry you. Still another possibility of help, in getting the marriage license on your own (by special dispensa- tion), is your town’s legal aid Bureau. An attorney there might be willing to advise and represent you in the special circumstances, and maybe induce the powers - that - be to issue a license to George, by proxy. HAS A PURPOSE About the party: Inasmuch as marriage is a public contract, as well as a sacramental rite, it is fitting and proper to celebrate the ceremony with social festivity - and thus takerone’s place in the community as Mr. and Mrs., with the support and approval of a host of friends. And 50 guests aren’t too many for even a small apartment. It needn't be a sit - down.or stay- all-evening party. A reception on a modest scale, with a generously stocked buffet table, from which guests may help themselves to snack foods and wedding cake, will do. With tea and coffee also available at opposite ends of the table; _and maybe champagne punch in good supply too, from a sideboard or possibly a make. do bar in the kitchen, you’d have That’s why the consulate of any ‘ all the essentials of hospita11ty_ No matter how humble or simple. there is more style an warmth to home hospitality than to parties given in public rooms ——as at a clubhouse or hotel‘ although at times one has n choice but to employ the latter, INFORMED ANSWERS Just do what you can do; and don't try to do more, on the score. of party - giving, than your ch-. cumstances and funds permit comfortably. ' As for the _question of paying import duty on year - old house. hold goods (including wedding gifts), I shouldn't think you'd have to. But to end suspense, get the whole answer, here and now, from the staff of the British consulate aforementioned. Thel- too, would be the logical place to get informed answers to all per. tinent questions that come t. mind, apropos living in England eventually. - M. H. Waistline Do n, By DOROTHY non NEW YORK (AP)—The waist. line goes down, down, down—an¢ the hemline goes 119. 11!. up. . . That could be set to music 3; the theme song of Maurice Rem. ner’s s p r i n g 1958 collection, shown Thursday to visiting fash. ion editors. More than most New York do. signers, Rentner adopts the sil. houette of the 1920s for daytime outfits featuring hip belts and short pleated skirts. But even this extreme example of the re. turn of flapper styles is not en. tirely shapeless, as the designer adapts subtle shaping to achieve a slender but not sacklike sil. houette that he calls .“mobile." In his collection of evening gowns, Rentner features the un. even hemline, short in front, long in back, which also was popular in the ’20s and ’30s. Also included in Thursday’: lineup of openings are those of the house of Hattie Carnegie and Ben Reig. Designers carrying on the tn. ‘dition -of the late queen of the American dress business show the unmistakable C arnegio touch in sleek, flattering, fem- inine suits and quietly elegant dresses that give full play to nat- ural curves, yet are never tightly fitted. DRESSES ARE SIMPLE Simple dresses which touch the body only at bust and hipline adopt the “arrow” silhouette, and suits usually have hipbone jack- ets and slender skirts, in-wools as soft and light as whipped cream, featuring such softly neu- tral tones as almond shell and peanut shell. Ben Reig shows a varied col- lection of suits with loose jackets and pleated skirts, with brief bolero jackets and slim skirts, with bloused or peplum jackets. His collection also includes dress- and-jacket costumes, cocktail and evening gowns, ,all with the ac- cent on feminity. HOUSEHOLD HINT To clean a soiled paint brush, slap it back and forth over a washboard propped up in a pail of thick soapsuds. Dip the brush down into the suds, then rub it across the board. Rinse in clear water; let dry, wrap and store until needed. cunmoiursi DRY CLEANERS 120 Kent St. Phone 498 . When it comes I to fine food . . The Rendezvoli Cli’town . more and more folks Come to . . PRESCRIPTION a ENJOY OIIRE ‘,_ - o Biiiiieiiiiailittls For Propt 0 Brad oi’-strv Courteous , .___C_‘“‘k°? _.l"’E‘1'L__c'J! Delivery PHONE 8747 CALL 5,,,,,P,e., ENTERPRISE Pharmacy B A K E R Y DIAL 4171 203 Grafton st. C|I"°"' F9[§L‘gE“E§T. iHIo.v.\iav.v.\na-.1 BC Holmes Tailored AND o;MapenrieO . easu Bradley Super Km. non THE BEST Tone and Nfiféiattfto ““‘°' CHILDREN'S Pam“ . . WE” . F. A. S. Jones 159 Queen St. Dial 3414 129 Kent at. Hemline Up....." nial3_1fl