Double Ring Ceremony Unites A Happy Couple The marriage took place re-jencrusted -with @ently of Janet Marina, only dau- ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm MacKenzie, to Charles Maxwell, _g@m of Mr. and Mrs. Heath Ste- - wart, Montague, at the home of the bride’s parents, 35 Sidmount ‘MR. AND MRS. CHARLES M. STEWART Rheoceents and pearls. She carried a bouquet of white and red carnations in the shape of a heart. Miss Anna MacPhail, a class- mate of the bride in the Prince Edward Island Hospital School of Nursing, was bridesmaid. Miss which was ahaa with bou- quets of white and yellow chry- santhemums, red and yellow car- nations and ivory tapers in sil- ver candelabra, was centred with a. three-tier wedding cake. Mrs. Harold Partridge and Mrs. Gerald Bowness presided at the tea tables. Miss Elizabeth Atkinson, a classmate of the bride, was in charge of the guest book. During the reception Miss Sondra Sutherland played varied selections on the piano. re = atti Lena Caroline McLure, Women's Editor, Phone #508 .* 6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, » HAPPENINGS — Tues, May 12, 1959. Miss Elizabeth MacCabe (Bet- ty) of Pinckney Street, EE pPalesti ae z i At pre sent Miss Batcheller is busy making preparations for a region- # conference in Ottawa of C.F.U. ah and dark with an animat- ed manner, Miss Batcheller was very smart in a black dressmak- er suit with red and white polka dot hat high cloche style. In pri- -|vate life Miss Batcheller is the Mrs. D. I. MacKinnon of Belle- ville. «4 Mr. Alder Dickieson, New Glasgow, is in the ve Ed- — Island Hospital re he undergone surgery. His many friends will be pleased to hear that he is doing nicely and will be home before too long. Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Warren have returned to their home in North Rustico having spent the past six months with their fam- ily in Ottawa. Head table guests at the Col- lege Dinner for the American College of Surgeons in Le Grand Salon of the Queen Elizabeth were Canadian author Hugh Mae- Lennan and Dr. Katherine Fus- sel of New York. ELLEN’S . DIARY Measure Your Health- 1Beautiful Hats Will Be .. Modelled At Talismen Tea The Teliemen Ten te a: ment, Hi ey Fick F u | ( : z : 5 EE za a Canadian Gitl Royal Ballet Ballerina —- - Lynn Springbett, Canadian, is the Western world’s most sensa- tional dancing star today. The names of two mountain creeks both of which empty into Van- couver harbor, provide her with her stage name—Lynn Seymour. The twenty year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Springbett (Mr. Springbett is a Vancouver den- tist) danced the leading role at Covent Garden in Swan Lake; an extremely difficult role that 39 year-old Dame Margot Fon- teyn always has -reserved for herself as her favorite. Autograph hunters have been showing their form of recogni- tion and mingling with the vege- lh if bie iF a, Tal Tea ail "t take us f i : 4} : : Ff if 4 i uf : i ral srizi e 3 a iE “Ei Feet E 7 Fe ( Is A On November 20, 1953, the 85 pound, 14 year-old Lyn in an aud- ition of less than two minutes became a student of Sadier’s Well Ballet School in London. By the time she was 16 she had the great honor to be a demonstra- tor at Sadler's Wells. Summer School. Less than a year ago she trium- phed in the lead role of The Diary of Anne Frank. After personal coaching by Dame Margot Fon- teyn came Lynn's triumphant tour of Australia. “Like a rebirth of the young Fonteyn” is the-tribute to the world’s No. 1 ballerina who eom- FREE Ge TOOTH PASTE IN EACH PKG. Ab | ' EATING OR COOKING APPLES 5 AS | MAPLE Leap oe WITH AN ORDER % LARD 2 = 25 | Avenue, Charlottetown. The Rev-|MacPhail wore a ballerina length| The toast to. the bride was}... Sa be e erend Donald A. Campbell, min-| gown of red velvet and carried|Proposed by the Reverend Mr. h E ' hi table market workers outside Co-|¢s Whirling out of our young na- raga Campbell and was responded to}. T oreau Writes On T iS vent Garden. —______jtion, Canada. — \ } ister of Zion Presbyterian Church, officiated in the double-ring cere- mony. The young bride was charming! fm a ballerina length gown of white Chantilly lace and gossa- mer tulle. The fitted bodice of _ Chantilly lace featured a sab rina neckline leading to floating back panels. The sleeves were leng and tapering to points over the hands. Handclipped lace appliques enhanced the bouffant skirt which billowed out over bridal satin and full hoop. Her shoulder- length veil of bridal illusion fell a heart-shaped bouquet of white carnations. Mr. Ian M. MacLeod, L. L. B. Charlottetown, was best man. For her daughter's wedding of |Mrs. MacKenzie wore a dress of mauve lace over taffeta with matching accessories and a cor- sage of white carnations. The groom's mother chose a gown of figured blue silk and a corsage of pink and white carnations. Following the ceremony, a re- ception was held in the Charlot- tetown Hotel for approximately ninety guests. The bride's table iby the groom. The bride andj. ‘groom received messages |congratulations and good wishes isn of by telephone and telegram from classmates and friends as far dis- tant as Florida, U. S. A. For -travelling the bride wore a dress of rose wool with a cor- sage of variegated pink carna- tions, and-a grey Persian lamb jacket. The young couple left amid a for a honeymoon in the Maritim- es. Photo by George Wotton. Photography, Summerside. Yo eee th of ing bud|at eighteen companies. ‘“‘We are That Leosen ——— who has been a patient in the|likely this late in the spring.” | see the promise unfolding i ’ 0! s snail ‘ i ; ; : on the branches about. We were|not doing too much in the way i Es MARY HAWORTH Prince Edward Island Hospital,} A wind was playing a cool CaP | ot so aged then after all. And|of acquisitions this year. We must Need Not Embarrass | MON. - TUE. - WED. - J ey oo i to hear that she is considerably, ready our world was astir. The °' : 4 Restrainin Hand N eded improved in health. ewes in the stilldrab meadow |"is morning was good. ‘nel. There's a store ———— ther plate oye | oe [> . G below the lane hastened to meet} “There are Jack-odamtern pum- | training program - starting. - Per-| bied at just the wrong time. Do not Mr. and Mrs. William Murphy the younger farmer as, in an en- pkins” Mack offered leafing | sonnel is the key from here on. Joet apetnkis o lnnte Bhat ata ae ('0-OP SUP ‘ For Good Table Manners Jr., returned on Thursday, from| gaging scene‘(to us) he spread a |*irough a seed catalogue he had|If we go too fast we will find alkaline (non-scid) powder, on your ; a honeymoon- trip through New great bundle of breakfast-nay Picked up, primarily to help pass | our — a a er a. = pm es eee es -bowl: pass some- B k. AC. there. Then he stood a long mom- | @"0ther day away from, his class- Com petition n the field Is Ea-| not sour. Checks “piste odor” (den- een * seas ber Mary Barer: - po body's Slate. Why doesn't the — ent evidently taking the roll-call es. “Did you know you could buy | ton "o ae v _ maa fins Sreth) ee PAST at ang 117 Queeh Stroct Charlottetown , re : the-Table ei r t sent. We seeds of those?” he queried.|Bay Co. In the U. S. proportion- 5 : ter, whom I love very much = Head-of say: ‘No no. IRISHTOWN W.I. . jo be sure ail were pre . “Well, it says so right here. I/ately there is much greater com- * e has two children. I wouldn't to have her feelings hurt, but I am afraid this will happen if something isn’t done soon. Y All her friends and relatives have stopped asking her and her family to dinner, or even to visit, because of the way her two little girls behave. One is age three; the other, two. The minute thesé children are im the house they start rearrang- ing all the knickknacks. Aq table they eat the entire meal with their hands. BAD TABLE MANNERS If they want more food they And then, in kindly language, ex- plain that “in the house each must eat his own plate, and wait until he is served.” And so on. That is sufficient hint to Mama | | financial for the past month, are pleased . The May meeting of the W.I. was held at the home of Mrs. Kenneth MacLeod. The Ode was isung, followed by the collect in Seventeen members and three) visitors were present. Minutes) treasurer gave a_ satisfactory statement. The sick) visitors made one call and took | one treat. School supplies were bought and a member volunteered to visit the school for May. Bills shower of confetti and good wishes | “K’s a strange spring this— ‘t it Ellen?” James observed at breakfast this morning. “‘No gulls in from the river. Oh, there has been the odd one \to be sure —1I see one now, above the stream but there have been no flocks of them like we used to see other years. Remember how _n | would light on that field on |rise opposite? And all morning the air would be filled with their screams. How peaceful R was when the afternoon took them \| away! We may, of course, see in the branches without; but. al- “by your sympathy with morn- ing and spring. If there is no re- sponse in you to the awakening of nature, if the prospect of an early morning walk does not ban- ish sleep, if the warble of the first bluebird does not thrill you, know that the morning and spring sof your life is past. Thus you may | }feel your pulse.” A robin with head lifted trill- ed from the lawn. Papa Starling whistled down the cool wind—not so much of dear, Springs past as |0f this “the best vet” at. hand. How good to hear them and to everything considered, our health saw him eye the ewe approach- ing from the direction of the stream. Had she perhaps left a new-born lambkin down there in the rushes? A glance—no. There | were no new lambkins te. be jcounted im with the flock this morning. were read and approved. The| The flu-sufferers in the family [Until tomorrow—Diary—Good- were decidedly bettering today. “Pf it stops with those’’ we said, pausing in our housework at a) | twinge to determine if we were entertaining any of its symptoms soreness, headache—piain mis ery. must order a packet of them. Be- cause when you grow something isn't it just_as well to grow the night kind?” he said. No stars tonight—no pond-pip- ings. But another lived and. spent ;day going out in the-dim. Local Man Is Planning A Merchandising Empire The Financial. Post has a full |page story on J. A’ H. ‘(Pete)’ Paton written by Rodney Touche. Thirty-nine year old Mr.—Paton, president of the Great West Sad- diery, feels he has in the ecom- pany a base for building a new merchandising empire. Curréntly Mr. Paton is looking mght. ENJOY consolidate and build up person- petition. The Paton expansions will be rural to a large extent, particularly in the North country. Great West Saddlery has hired four former executives off Mac- Leod's Lt., the Winnipeg Retail chain. Among these executives is Miss Kay Gordon, a noted mer- | chandising executive. The George Hees Company which Mr. Paton bought out has had its man- agement entirely replaced. As an introduction to a brief run-down of Mr. Paton’s career the following is amusing and of \ prem “wn PACKS WITH AN ORDER | Toilet Tissue =. Toilet Tissuess:43° j PORK LIVER = 23° j SHOULDER—A REAL MONEY SAVER Pork Chops « 4% s% | Moore & McLeod Ltd. 14 DAY FREE TRIAL _ BUY A FLOATING ACTION amounting to $17.94 were present-| For “She's one bad one! or ed and paid. [that’s what they say of it ae It was agreed that one article | #or offered today. lead out in the expériment? be donated for handicraft sale at We smiled remembering some- If this doesn’t succeed, then | in. Exhibition, towards expense thing of Thoreau's we had read. will be time enough to tip het iting for delegates to business| Measure your health” he said off—as I think you should. M.H. meetings. A letter was read with ary Haworth, counsels the information that .June 11th. Sroneh her cotpmum, Bot ty meal) os 5 ves date of tela Gettiat personal interview. Wri in care of this oe sae Convention to be entertained by the Kelvin Grove W.I. GEORGETOWN |ices‘st’tsaderat( was" ate te icles of handicraft was asked to Mr. and Mrs. Alee MacKin-| © Used that day. The executive non returned to their home in meeting will be on May 14th. Georgetown recently from Ottawa wih Mrs. Borden Campbell ss Ontario, where they spent the just dig their hands into the fapves bowls. They take bites of t and pickle, then put the un- eaten portion back in the bowl. They even reach into the person’s plate next to them, and help . themselves. wf They also do mean things the other children, like kicking and biting. My sister feeis that these chil-| dn are behaving as all children do. She even goes so far as to say how grown-up and sweet they are. She chooses to ignore all their faults, when it would be so simple for her to correct them. She keeps asking me why they aren't invited out anymore. Fit and Comfort Guaranteed or Your Money Back! ROSE BRAND BREAD ano BUTTER PICKLES pasteurized to retain’ mission to buy what she thought suitable. Mrs.’ David Campbel was requested to contact a ma to wash ceiling, also paint th outside of the hall ‘as soon a convenient. $20.00 was given t Mr. H.B. MacLeod for hall ex penses. Collection amounted’ to $1.70: garden freshness - MATTHEWS-WELLS COMPANY LIMITES new executive member. $11.00 z aaa ag 6 was voted towards sdholar- | town players was presented in the oar ca wa let time | winter. ship fund. , hall in April and enjoyed by a : cha ; oor : oy Qne new member was wel-| goodly number. The proceeds’ : — eee ; Mrs. J.W. Lavers and Miss! .omed to WL A request was|was equally divided. The. pl « makers of Rose Brand Pickles « Olives ¢ Pure Jams Sheila DeLory yisited Montague on Tuesday and were guests at dx of oarpective 4 how Yount ah gag of Cst. - Mrs. Ron | children should be curbed, to : ? coos’ Pein’ mar te de Mr. Paul Batchilder, son of J < - the fact that ‘sle gets out to | Mr. and Mrs. L.S. Batchilder, | little since she’s been a mother.’ has completed his 1958-59 stud- Mavbe she has a harder row to |ies at the Nova Scotia Agricul-| hoe than the rest of you; less tural College in Truro, N.S. and | money. fewer social opportuni-|arrived home last week. Paul of the June meeting to be decid-, é | ed later on. j } voiced for a new satchel for the secretary, who was given per- The Shoe & Clothing SALE the family s buzz-buzz about your sister isn’t exactly fair play. Her ’ ties, little relief from baby tend- ing. Hard - presséd young mothers ean get so bogged down’ in child rearing. and so dependent upon will be employed with the Pro- of Agriculture for the. summer | of Agriculture for the summer will be employed \with the Pro- vincial Government Department ; of The Season Shop Now And Save For Mothers’ Day ! We have in stock a complete line of women’s pumps, in new styles, in spike and levie heels. Pointed and round toes in many new, shades.-«Also in leather an d buckskin, white and silver brocaded shoes. Flatteys, wedges and sandles in many new patterns. Nurses, C areergirl and White Cross shoes. And for teen agers, patent leather and suede ballerinas In many shades, a |so full line of children’s footwear. For the men and‘boys a full line in patterns and size s in Ritchie, Greb, Stratford, and English made dress shoes. Greb, Palmer and Comeau in cork and leather sole work boots. Wellington and Desert Boots, A complete line of miner rubber footwear and raincoats. MARKED DOWN CLEARANCE LOT. . . On our Clearance Sale counter on main floor we hav e 800 prs. of broken lines, men’ 7% women’s, and chil- dren’s shoes, men’s and boys reg. 3.95 to 13.95. NO W ONLY 1.95 to 8.25. Ladies’ pumps black, blue, brown, tan: and white oxford loafers and sandles reg. 3.95 to 9.95. NOW 1.95 to 3.95. All must go. We have a complete line 6f G WG cloth ing, jackets, pants, jeans, shirts and overalls. Also. underwear, sweaters, T-shirts and Sport Jackets, suede and leather jackets. Also for clearing 200 broken line sport shirts at $1.00 each.. 50 pairs aabartify pants, going at $3.00, we have many items in children’s clothing. Also 100 gal. Paint ........ccccccscsssscssse sessssssmecsneneeeery, Clearing $2.00 per gal. Also 60 gal. Paint .............. .. Clearing $3. 00 per gal, The eR Shoe & Cloaks 158 Queen St. STORE Dial 5312 the children’s companionship as It h i ate principal humen contect, a ure for the — that they lose sight of the fact oe 4 : tha , s res their - | * a neues appre-| _ Spr. Jackie Publicover of the ; : Canadian Army, stationed at ciative interest in the mitacle- | : n ‘ supe of the growing child's in- |Camp ‘Borden, is spending his\}, creasing awareness of life and re- |!eave with his parents, Mr. and sponsiveness to it. Mrs. James Publicover. NOTHING UNUSUAL Actually. the little girls’ enter- prise in rearranging their host- ess’s knickknacks, and in using their fists as feeding utensils, is fairly normal home - front be- havior, according to the present day pattern of letting toddlers feel comfortable —-' rather than anxiously overstrained — in the fumbling use of their faculties. ; In the early rounds of getting ~ geclimated to -surroundings,...I “mean = However, I grant that it is in- avvropriate performance in other | “people's homes. But my exper- lence of children, mv own. and others. leads me to think that the hod'ess herself is the person who 3 ought to gently but firmly delin- eate the pattern of what is per- migted in het bailiwick. ™ the family relationship is sound, between you sisters and brothers, whv doesn't Macduff or Mrs. Macduff, at the head of the 4gble, sneaks out warmly when 3- ear-old. or 2-year-old Dor- ~tns is eaten. at the serving FOR THOSE WHO WANT AND FOR THOSE WHO LOVE A 2 section cup comfort 4 section circle stitched cop Bat Aeon e+ -CIRCL-O-FORM *. an rcl-O-Form Brassieres are unconditionally guaranteed to fit perfectly. If after a 14 Day Trial you are not completely satisfied your full purchase price will be refunded. Just return the brassiere with a DATED sales check to Exquisite Form, Dept. 14, 215 Spadina Ave., Tororto, Ont. OFFER STARTS TO-DAY., EXPIRES JUNE 15, 1959 Gerald D. Murphy, Ray Mur-,; phy, Terry Soloman, Vernon) Myers, Joseph Martell, Joseph Murphy, Brian Curley, Harold | Mastell and Lawrence Mastell, have returned to their homes fol-| lowing the .completition of the college year. Mr. John Hemphill of St. ,Pet-| ers Bay recently spent several | days in Georgetown visiting old friends. ba nie nu SATIN.....A, B and Ccups, WHITE $98 ES MOORE & McLEOD LIMITED - On The Island It's | “Your Favorite Shopping Centre ag Mr. Russell White returned to} Thursday, after spending the winter in Charlottetown, with his his home in Georgetown on Thursday, after . spending the winter in Charlottetown, with his sister, Mrs. John Turner and Mr. Turner. oT Mrs. Lemuel MacCormiack ‘was a recent visitor to the City. Friends of- Mrs. Mary Yorston,