MR. AND MRS. RICHARD COFFIN Couple Exchange Vows At Two Ring Ceremony The United Baptist Church at Murray River was the scene of the recent marriage of Kather- ime Jean. dauchter #@ Mr and Mrs PDP MM. MacKinnon. Va r- ray River and Richard Clifford. son of Mr and Mrs Clifford Coffin, Charietteteun The deuble ring ceremony was performed by Rex Hareld LL Btn Fredericter, NBR as sisted be Rev A G J Steeves. Montagne As the bridal party entered the church, the organist,. Mrs. Ross Howard. Char inttetown “rendered “Praise My Soul, The Kinz ami? also ac- companied the soleist. Mrs. Jack Palmer of Wolfville. NS. whe sang “The Lord's Praver” pre- cedinz the wedding ceremony and “© Perfect Love” during the sceme of the register Gren m marmace by her father. the bride wore a floor; length A-ime gown of Htalian silk faille with short jacket ef French gwipure iace. featuring bell - shaped. elhew lencth slee- wes Her detachable Wattean trate was ¥ Itahan silk with matching appliqued lace bord- er For a headmere she wore a cuciet af lace fiesers. holding fe place a French silk illusion ved She. carmed a heoquct of mame and vellew erchids with stephanetis and smal! Enclish try _ The brwde was attended br her sister - in - law. Mrs. Malcolm MacKineros, «who wore a flonr- length cown of white brocaded @ik with meet creenm branded satin sash She wore a match- fmg headdress and carried a bouquet of mint tinted and white carnations Jennifer MacKinnon. niece of the bride was flower girl. wea- rng a fieer 'ength cown of mint green brocade silk with white velvet sath. and hair bow, and she carried a basket of small white roses and carnations Lawrence Coffin. Charictte- tewn. brother of the croom. was best man. Ushering were Garth Coffin. Chariettetean. cousin af the greom. and Malcolm Mae- Kirnen_ Rarcetville. brother ef the bride For her daughters wedding Mrs) MacKinnon wore a pink lace: sheath dre«s with match img organra petal hat Beige and white accessories with cor- sage of white rosebods compiet- ed her costume Mrs. Coffin, mother of the groom. cheese arm aqua =tlace sheath dress and jacket «with matrhing fle wered hat and white accessories. Her corsace was of aqua tinted carnations A reception was held at the Church Hall where Vrs Perre Sharam. aunt of the bride and Mrs Ceci! Ladner, weter of the groom. poured § Servier were ecousies of the bride “Wre Wil- Bam MarcGreesr. Mre George Scantiehbary. Wires Stiriine Gid @iegs. Wires Rev Seantleherr. Mrs Gerdes Gridiecs Varce ret ard Rebecca (Gidedinges. aff of Charictieteowe Vrs Gordes Giddings circulated the guest honk Rev. Hareld Mitton preopesed fhe trast to the bride uhile law fence Coffin, master of coreme mies. read the teecrarmn an’ Propesed the trast te the hides mand of Heaven Fer a homewmonn t New Rampshire. the bride chose a erek beecie crit with tuntened herce bot and matchresc arre<s eres. Her corsage wat 7 «tite Tews Mr and Mrs. Coffin «it re aide at West Jeddore, \S where be will be taking the lerddeore Owster Pend Unced Baptrst Pastarate for the ort mer te September they will be ving im Wolfville. where ir Coffin expects te complete © s senior year toward a Bachelor of Arts decree at Acadia Um versity. Mrs Coffin ic a grade. ate of th PEI Respi tal Behe! of Nursies fmt af the. prevince guests t- @iuded: Rev. and Mrs. Harold, Mitton. Fredericton, N B - and Mrs Anthony Lashua. Bos- tes. Alice Coffin. Toronte:- Fliicht - Lt amd Mrs Duane Frericks. Argentia. Nfld LAC and Mrs and Jennifer. Bagetville. Que: Mr ard Mrs Jack Palmer. Wolfville NS amd Wir< Har- ald Turner alse of Wolfville: Mr and Mrs) Lierd Rohertwa, Trur NS ‘Mr- and Mere Ver rar Procter. Halifax. Rev and Mrs. Murray Shaw. Head of St. Margaret's Bay. NS and Henry Sharam. Kestville. NS (Phate bx Edith Rebinsen) Tignish CWL Hear Reports Of Conveners Mrs. Theima Harper chaired the meeting of the Tignuish Par- ish Council of the Catholic We men’s League which was beid im the Dalton Schon! recentiy. The meeting opened arth prayer. 2 decade of the rosary for the sick and shotam members There were 18 members present. The minutes of the previeus meeting were read by the recordimz ser- retary. Mrs. Walter Hecar. fol- lowed bv the fimarcital report given by Mrs. Wade Harper All comveners reported om their ac- tivities for the past month Twe delegates. Mrs Frank Gaudet and Mrs. Wilfrid Shea were chosen te attend ‘he ore simncial convention te he beld @ Charisttetoan June @2I. and money was voted for the trip Twe new members were «el- comed inte the League. Mrs. Ferdinand Gaudet and = Mrs Fred Martin. Rev. Clare Malicoim MarcKirrca - ‘Delegates Hear Provosal For Leadership Program Bs JEAN SHARP cP Wemen's Eder ite > af 4 sme this age groors reore sents the MA\Imum petentia inf uence ,im ure an the fut WANT TO HELP “Young me women are s earet nec the "a cere otic utims Satisfving te Corr are mm comtenst t© serve 3 Capacities requiring on ual skills They want the oppor tunity te participate stn ally is cemmunrty affairs Lin pt Alr>eazh the level of educa- somen has increased. it he assumed that these eens Then” feel compe- to apply ‘heir potential to rgamize community action. Nor s- ot be assumed thaf. once mllated into a voluntary organ- will om. thes will be able to par- nate effectively.” Mrs Griffiths report said short ‘erm ‘raimimg courses save oroved ineffective -Amother topic im the discus- sm greups was the possibility nz retatiem of the an- nua matiomal meetings \ repert presested by Mrs. SM. Milne of Winniper pro. pesed a plan based om a nine- ear reanen It was designed suth an eve to giving each area s @ te have a cpon- “oosing an area the basis of the num- is im the area: and te 2 © resemtation over several years and partly om that basis drew a possible schedule which would er two annual meetings in ame om the course of every ™ ‘ears ne ee Brownies = receiving their Golden Hand on Thursday afternoon at the ceremony BIG DAY FOR BROWNIES held at the elementary school, from left te Betty Ferguson, Deb- Montague ‘are: right, bie Dewar. Nancy Beck and Joan Power A number of brownies” mothers were pres- j wives differ in their reaction | their disposal ii “Some partake. others don't.” | You sav in sneaking of service organizxtions to be found on m: . litery , osts, to help wives, “ad just to a very disordered exis ™ civilian life. clus her recolicc tion that “there were always | wives’ clubs. and smaller ¢rouns jwithin these clubs, to help you get acclimated.” in the service social whirl. indicates that she leaned heavily, and hapvily unen the military “wives” organizatio nal format to pattern her Air Force leisure for her Thus her oresent prim ar: need is to be blasted out of cro oved osycholecical accomoda tion to the special supports of the past ‘which no lencer ex's: in her case’. and encouraged to plunge into the main stream of civilian self - reliant endeavor. | where persone! iritiative end Steady perseverance are indi< pensable -ids to “getting along.” MH Mary Hawerth counsels through her column. not by ma:! or persone! interview Write her in care of The Guardian DO YOU GASP FOR BREATH, WHEEZE, COUGH? > Does asthma of Chrome bronchitis keep yOu om misery evth citficult breathing whee»nng. Coughrg 80 it 1s hard to do your work, impossible to sleep? Do you sit up aff night struggling te get breath thre your bronchial tubes? Then here is ent and tea was served follew- ing the presentation and dis- play by the brownies % Ib. uncooked fine spaghetti broken into 1's” lengths ‘about 4c.) “ee grated Parmesan: cheese “6 The aa Charletictons, Ten J pee 3, 1965. Thoroughly mix beef. crumbs,’ ‘DA BAILEY ALLEN Meat Balls In New Way TODAY. we presest a revolu- Tamary methed for meat halls and spaghetti MRS. C_ MacKINNON, RN TO TEACH At the recent 3 convora! <— of McGill University, Mrs Charlies MacKinnes. RN af Corewali. P_E_I recetved a diploma te teaching and vip- ervision tm schools of sursing Mrs. MacKinnon. the former Margaret Ress. dauchier of Mr_ and Mrs. John A Rass Flat River, retures to the ‘staff of the Prince Edward Island espa’ Me- Donald spoke briefly om the =on- derful work dove by the mem- bers especially their charity and their willingness te help others. The meeting closed with pray- er br Rev. McDonald For the remaineer of the eve ning a game of cards was joyed by Prihbes as follows Mokler: freezeoat fret. Mr= - n- the members. «ith Mrs. F_ Ber- nard and Mrs William Hamdira- han ard beoby. Handrakan_ Mrs. Wilaem POTATO GROWERS A vital advance | in weed contre] for Potate Growers STAM F-34 Commmarate for Cmmandiaars Miggrealiare. ROHM HAAS COMPANY —. ~~ ‘STAM « @ wete wert, Peg. Coveten Fat OF” ent @ pr eniget terme (nor meg, PESTRIBU TED BY CANADA PACKERS LTP. CRARLOTTETOUN OR THE DEALER NEAREST YOU : Cooked With Spaghetti Usualiy this is'a rather prosa- cooking ic dish. but it attains beth glam- cur and flavwer with this sew ~ methed Swedish Type Tres dsh ceonosts of meat halls of the Swedish type. cook- ed im well - seasoned canned te mate pore to. which the spazh- etti is added. I do net mean cook- ‘ed spaghetti is added I do not mean cooked spaghetti — Taw spaghetti lengths With this but im contrast to cooking the spa- ghetti separately im quarts. of boilimg water. draining off the water which contains the vitam- ins and minerals all going down the ‘sink — and after that, rinsing with cold water, washing away more nutritive values’ Measurements level; recipes fer 6 SAILLET WEAT BALLS AND SPAGHETTI I‘: Ib chopped raw beef 1-3 C_ fine dry bread crumbs le. fime « — onoa I's tsp. salt ‘4 tsp. pepper lc. evaporated milk ‘not diluted) 3 thsp. butter 1 thsp. cooking ofl “ ¢ coarse - chopped green & ¢ tomate puice 1 «mall bay leaf ™. tsp. greand oregano broken im 1'2”. ‘2 c. of onion, * tsp. of salt, Pepper and evaporated milk. Shape into 12 balls In an over - size “giant” skil- let or heavy 10° kettle. heat but- ter and oil over medium heat. Add meat balls: turn to brown all over. Push them to the sides \of skillet. | Spoon remaining onion and green pepper in the center. sim- mer - saute 3 min. Pour tomate juice over meat balls stir im remaining salt, bay leaf and oregano. Bring to boil over high heat. Stir in spaghetti Tight - cover skillet or kettle: turn heat low ard sinu cook 23-35 min. or until spachett: is bite - tender ‘Remme hay leaf.) Stir spaghetti occasional- ly with kitchen fork. If more H- quid is needed. add | e tomate juice or meat broth Serve dusted with Parmesam cheese. MONDAY DINNER Tossed Cabbage - Lettuce Salad with Pckled Beets Skil- let Meat Balls with Spaghetti — May ~ Time Ambrosia of Orange Segments, Sliced Bananas, and Strawberries Raisin Cookies (homemade or from refrigera- tor case’ — Coffee or Tea, Milk THE CHEF’S MAY-TIME. AMBROSIA 2e orange segments, from refrigerator S$ thsp. sugar 1% ¢. sliced hulled nes : 2 large bananas Msc. pkg. flaked cocenst 6 whole strawbernes, bull's fer garnish’ Combine and mix oranze seg- ments with 2 thsp. of the sugar. Chil 15 min. or more. Mean- time put prepared strawhernes im bow! and stir in remaning sugar. Peel and slice bananas Layer prepared oranze seg- fresh ox case strawher- ‘Glen With cash in advance through a low-cost Royal Bank termDlan loan When you're planning to buy any siajor item — rnishings. fridec. washer, dryer or other vale- able appliance — borrow everything you need, first. | Then you'll be free to shop whenever and w , You please. A low-cost Royal Bank loan gives you the cash im advance, placing you im the key position to select the best walue. No interest charged antil you use the moncy: easy to get; fast, confidential service (frequently under 24 hars.); life- insured for estate protection; acar, fu Check and you don't have te be a regular Royal Bank customer te qualify. Visit vow nearest Royal Bank branch teday - there's ene im your ncighbourhood. i against other loan plans available - see how low-cost termp lan really is: Typical = Conveniemt «= Monthly qumewn! sr: perieds: repayment: 30008 86tlmonths§= = $ 43.93.. $2000.90 3%® months S754 Stann oo 34 months $115.73 6 ROYAL BANK Charlottetown Branch — E. C. WRIGHT, ! Branches sie te Hunter River, Mount Stewart, Sammerside and Tyne Valley MARY HAWORTH. Reunions Compensate For The Family Separations . Dear Mary Hawerth: My re. sponse is to you, not to the soc- ially sidetracked former Aijir Force wife who signs herself ce T can't remain silent In the face of your implication that old- fashioned self - reliant. git - up and-git is a virtue peculiar te civilian life Heavens, that's al! service wives ever do cr - up - and git — to home after home. in all sorts of places. in different countries. dealing with climate extremes. unfamiliar folkways, new schools. new doctors, new languages often. traveling under trying circumstances. It's something to see a young mother making an ocean voy- age on her own with small chil- dren. She hadn't’ gone with her husband months earlier be cause housing wasn't available then ments, strawberries and hap- nanas in shallow glass bow!, al- ternating with and ending with coconut. Refrigerate 1 hr. o@ more Garnish strawberries hornet shat ee ee a aL il did Water Street “forced by the man's 2 ip Ya Barely is she seitied — in be- fore it's time to pack again, tra- vel, unpack and start over. She doesn't’ complain unduly, grate- ful always that ‘at least! or at last!) the family is<all together. The great majority of people, the world over. don't choose to endure / such living arrange- ment there -is no necessity. But some of us must. and we find priceless compensations Shared inconveniences are as nothing compared to the ordeal of painful family separation. military duty. Thousands of military wives wait out a year’s separation 3s the husband and father serves his hardship tour in areas where families aren't allowed. Nav y wives see their husbands go te sea for months on end. -on rou- tine duty. Marine families aren't allowed at many over- seas posts. Who watches over the wives and children while the men are away’ Nobody. These are great women: strong. brave. devoted, resourceful. Service organizations exist for SPORT COATS In Checks, Neats, Plains by Warren K. Cook, Savile Row, Stately 5-00 4.35 Te SPORT PANTS English all wool worsted flanaek. Tery- lene and weel blends. Terylene and cot- ten bends. Cotten casuas. With er witheut pleats—Regular or Mirrice Millia CLOTHING OF DISTINCTION FOR MEN . and bases, yes, to help ease their good neas! Thousands: of Canadians use g miltions of RAZ-MANH capsules each yea: and get for retiet trom their symptoms guictiy. Try Tempteton's RAZ-MAH les today only BSc and . $1.6 at drug Counters everywhere. service wives on posts. stations adjustment to’ a very existence. Some wives partake, others don't. “One gets accustomed to that sort of thing,”” to use your words, it is still quite simple, on the average, not ‘distasteful,’ as you suggest. for a former ser- vice wife to ‘elbow her way into =~ the swim of ordinary civilians | ‘ routine and fight her own pri- © ! vate war to get where, she hopes — , i to go in society."” Actually I've never felt I was fighting a war to get where I want to go. My aim as wife and mother is te make a good home and rear fine children wherev- er we are. to give support te the man whe is ‘fighting the war.” Whether marned te a civilian or a military man. 3s wife's duty is to make the home his” strength and pride Then al! of us can go as far as merit all- ows. Sincerely, C F Dear.C.F.: In effect you are futing yourself into Mrs. C B's | shoes and firing exasperated re- “ torts back at me, apropos my - effort to prod her into action on | exneenerserEtia tn PONTERA NINES SE RELENTLESS With ADEQUATE WIRING yea are net faced with added wiring costs whee you buy that new appliance fer your heme. ELECTRIC SERVICE LEAGUE . OF P. E. 1. t . . 5 When you're a farmer and your own boss, you should meet who helps you get more for what you do because he's part of some- thing bigger.. imperial Oil Summeride RMN. pier