_______ And it was a new day.. One in MR. AND MRS. DAVID E. ALLEN. tion of the Montague Girl Guides was held in the Montague Ele- mentary School on Monday, No- vember Ist. Mrs. John Hughes, district commissioner, chaired the meeting. Minutes were read y the secretary, Mrs. Ruth of the secretary, Mrs. Mary Craig, the financial report was | read by Mrs. George Warner. Several items of business were brought before the meeting in- cluding: a discussion concern- ing brownie, guide and ranger attendance refer the matter to a future I meeting, when it is hoped more |freshments for the executive mothers will be in attendance. It |meeting as one of their service was decided that the brownies, MONTPEAL WEDDING Married recently in Mon- treal, Mrs. Allen is the former Patsy Murchison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs- Charles S. Mur-° chison of 350 Springfield Ave., ELLEN’S DIARY Greenfield Park and grand- daughter of Mrs. John M. Murchison of Murchcroft, Point Prim, P.E.I. Visit To Winter Fair ls Happy Gala Event And then with our Sunday gone by, seemingly as though we had just turned a leaf to read the next chapter of a new book, we this morning, stepped off in- to a brand new week. Some in- dication of its trail was to be seen at»daybreak. It pointed to a veiled distance, which we were jto explore slowly, only step by step. What should we discover along the way, we wondered? What see from its hilltops? What was around its bends? the answers ¢o0 our questions |>re were denied us* at the outset. We would be allowed to read the them only at our day’s close. We would be allowed to read Then we would know what ad- ventures had eben by the way- side, what pleasontries, and what shadowed spots as well. “Are you awake, Ellen?” James queried softly from the next pillow. .‘‘Then, it’s all very well to lie here” he smiled. “but it won’t buy the child a frock, now will it?. Or pay for the one he is wearing! Besides” he added, ‘‘It’s almost broad daylight-time to be to work!” which even the sounds of the morning about: the lows of cows come down the lane to he barnyard, the neighs and the cantering hoofbeats of the horses In the near meadow, the blithe crowings from the- poultryyard seemed to declare that there in- deed was a day made new. We heard James presently greet Scampie in the yard below, be- fore we lost the sound of voice and step along the apath which leads to the barns. We opened the small window, one of the quaint pair under the eave east- ward. The sun was showing now against the gray of the morn- ing. Rather listlessly, the thought came. Would this be a washday? James settled this ase or less satisfactorily at “T believe, Ellen, if I were in your shoes, with not too much to do—Well’’ he amended with some apology, ‘nothing that won’t keep for a day or so-and go to that Fair.” So we have ‘‘come to the Fair. the carnival spirit, that is, and any Bse had the chance, I’d up and go quiet | shout 3 The worthy grand patron of the Grand Chapter Order of the Eastern Star of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, Frank Ripley of Kentville, N.S., con stituted Montague Chapter No. 69 in the Elementary School, Montague, recently. This put the seal of approval on the Chapter. The officers and members have been working hard since the Institution six months ago to become proficient in the ritual. Assisted by the worthy grand matron, Mrs. Olive Croft of Halifax, N.S., Mr. Ripley then installed the officers into office. The worthy patron of the Chapter, Howard MacLeod, of Dundas, was unable to be pres- A’ meeting of the Jocal associa- | acDonald and in the absence | uniforms, but due to the small | it was decided to | new group of Rangers would be 6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Nov. 8, 1965. Montague Chapter 69 OES Is Officially Constituted | Brownies, Guides, Rangers || To Parade In Montague guides and rangers will take jpart in the Novrmber lith parade and will lay a wreath from the Guide family. Mrs. George Inman, division- jal commissioner for Kings, in- | formed the group that the Pro- |vincial executive meeting will take place in Montague Wednes- |day, November 10th at the Ele- mentary School and t all | King’s Division Guides who at- jtended the Heritage and Inter- national camps will be present, ‘and will give a brief talk on | their camp experiences. It was also decided that the asked to take charge of the re- projects. ent because of illness. The officers installed were: worthy matron, Mrs. E.T. Buffum; as sociate matron, Mrs. Robert Leard, Mt. Stewart; associate patron, Robert Leard, Mt. Stewart; secretary, Mrs. Gordon McKnight; treasurer, Mrs. Rich- ard Knox; conductress, Mrs. Ernest MacDonald; associate conductress, Mrs. Russell Mac- Donald; chaplain, Mrs. Weston Johnston, Murray Harbour; marshall, Mrs. Raymond Reilly, ‘Gaspereaux; organist, Mrs. At- wood MacDonald; Ada,| Mrs. Howard MacLeod, Dundas; Ruth, Mrs. Louis Roper, Brud- enell; Esther, Mrs. Forhan Bears, Commercial Cross; Mar- might see a deer”, or the sheen there when a personable Tabby hunted treasure amid the brown- ing grass in a village yard? Over on the Island the windows at Alderiea willbe dark, 3 g g g q g " & For Dry Biscu Can mixes be made at home? This question is often asked when the Chef and I make_per- sonal appeafances before clubs and other organizations. . Yes, some dry mixes can be . ‘They cost less than commercial-mixes and are suf- ficient for three meal-times for six persons. KEEP IN CANISTERS As these mixes must be kept in tight-closed canisters in a dry place, be sure you have suitable space in which to store them. They will keep fresh weeks Here in the test-kitchen, we chk, TEEN TWOSOME TUNED IN to the teen tempo =—this Empire jumper swings out to dances as a dress. The cuff-neckline blouse is a beauty mates with skirts. Printed Pattern 4621: Teen Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 jum- 45-inch fabric; blouse 2 yards 35-inch. “ Hitt i fit bh effect! Creat- es.a lovely backdrop for plant, vase or dinner set. Rounds and rounds of pineap- ples (great fun to crochet) create petal-pretty doilies or luncheon set. Pattern 7200: cro- chet directions. THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins) for — p (no stamps, please) to Guardian attern Alice Brooks, caré of - Patriot Needlecraft » © Front St. W. Toronto i tern sumber, mame, address... CHOICE PINEAPPLE Ontario residents add one |grated sharp American cheese cent sales tax. Print plainly pat- to 2 ¢. homemade have worked out formulas for several homemade mixes, which will be columned from time to time it to put the following biscuit mix formual together. With it, and with just one effort, it's possible to turn out all kinds of biscuits and quick rolls in double quick time. pan. Add shortening. Chop in with pastry-blender until mix- ture resembles coarse cornmeal, Your homemade biscuit mix is now ready to store in closed canister on pantry shelf or to use as follows: Drop Biscuits (from home- made bistuit mix): Into bowl, Measure, do not pack, 1% ec. homemade biscuit mix. Make hollow in center. Add % c. milk; stir in with fork until all of mix is moistened. Oil small muffin pans. Half-ill with dough. Bake in very hot oven, 425 degrees F, to 450 degrees F., about 15 min. Makes about 1 doz. BAKING POWDER BISCUITS (basic recipe) 3 e¢» homeade biscuit mix (do not pack) % c. milk Measure homemade biscuit mix -into bowl. Make hollow in center. Add milk and stir with fork (about 25 strokes). Turn onto slightly floured surface. Knead 6 times. Roll out or pat) %" thick.. Cut into 2” rounds with floured cutters; place on baking sheet. Bake ine very hot oven, 425 to 450 degrees F. about | 15 min. . Cheese Biscuits; Add % e, biscuit mix took the Chef just 11 min. | tha, Mrs. Stanley Llewellyn, Gaspereaux; Electa, Mrs. Weir MacLure, Murray Harbour North; warder, Barbara Mabon and sentinel, Louis Roper, Brud- enell. Mrs. Cecil Palmer and Mrs. Freeman Webster, both of Char- lottetown,. were | | bers of the Montague Chapter. IDA BAILEY ALLEN © Do-It-Yourself Recipe it Mixes wl the edge of heavy saucer). Slightly beat eggs with the salt and Ac’cent. Brush all over chicken breasts. Cover evenly of white bread; let stand 30 min. to firm. Melt butter or margarine in heavy large frypan. Gently brown coated chicken in this, first on one side, then other. Tra- msfer to slightly oiled baking sheet; bake 20 min. or until fork-tender in mod oven, 375 degrees F. (not packed down). Stir in 2-3 ¢, |' on both sides with tiny cubelets. MR. AND MRS. R. R. MELOCHE Former Charlottetown Girl In an all white setting of chry- santhemuras and candlelight, at St- John de Brebeuf Cath- olic Church, Kingsville, Ontar-" jo, on Saturday afternoon, Oct. | 9, Maureen’ Louisa Paoli was united in marriage with Richard Robert Meloche. The double-ring ceremony was solemnized by Rev. M.J. Dalton, who also offered the nup- tial mass. Mrs. Len Howe was soloist, accompanied by. the church or- ganist. Hymns chosen - were “The Wedding Prayer’, “Ave ce ”* and ‘The Lord's Pray- The bride is the younger dau- ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Simon P. Paoli of Kingsville, Ont., former- byjand Mrs. Arthur L. Meloche of Amherstburg,- Ont. Escorted to the altar by her father who gave her in marr- iage, the bride wore a regal em- pire gown of peau de soie with a detachable chapel train sweep- ing from a self bow at the wais- fline. A delicate diamond pat- tern of crystal and seed pear] embroidery enhanced the elbow length sleeves, sabrina neck- line and encircled the AA-line ekirt. Her four-tiered shoulder length veil of illusion was held with an openwork-crown of the same seed pearls and crystals and she carried white cymbl- dium orchids, stepanotis B i Married In Kingsville, Ont. Anderdon in Amherstburg. Mrs. Paoli wore a Doir blue Italian silk two-piece dress with match- ing accessories. Her high cro- wned pillbox of iredescent co- que feathers was in smoke tones and her corsage was a cymdi- dium.orchid. The bridegroom’s mother was in a brown silk shantung ensem- ble. 4 brown feathered hat and also wore an orchjd corsage. On their return from a wed- ding trip through Northern Mi- chigan, Mr. and Mrs. Meloche will take up residence at the Blue Haven Apartments in Am- herstburg. For travelling the bride chose a Wedgewood blue wool boucle suit ensemble with bracelet sleeves and tuxedo la- pels, over a pleated shell of matching silk shantung. A pill- box of black maribou, black ac- cessories and a gardenia com- pleted her costume. . WIFE PRESERVERS Electric blenders are self- cleaning. Put soap, warm wat- er in the jar and “‘blend.” Drain ginse well, dry. Another spin and blades and bearings are dry, too. Pour cool soapsuds over “in wedding anniversary. They were entertained in the early evening at a private by Wendell and Audrey in their home. Following the supper, a num- ber of guests, members of both families, and friends arrived to in the celebration. After were assembled, Heber Mrs. Ivan Craig lead to seats of honor. hb MacCaull read an commending them for h good neighbours and in the community, and congratulations and from all. The read- ing ended with a humorous _— referring to their sporting le. _ Mrs» Bennie Coughlin and z Re 25th Anniversary Observed. By Carleton Siding Couple MARY HAWORTH MacLeod then pre- . Ramsay ally sented gifts to Mr. and Mrs. Myers on behalf of all present. A fitting reply was made by Mr. Myers expressing appreciation for the gifts and for their thoughtfulness. Rev. E.S. Weeks then made a few remarks, recalling their wedding at which he had offic- iated 25 years before at Spring- field West. The couple were called upon to cut an anniversary cake, made and decorated by Mrs. Ralph MacCaull, after which the guests enjoyed n-hour of fellowship, followed by refresh- ments served by the hostess, Mrs. Wendell Myers assisted by Mrs. Gordon Myers, Mrs. Bennie Coughlin, Mrs. David Baarlow; MacCaull and Elizabeth Mac- Caull. + Dear Mary Haworth: We learn from living and I have a mes- sage for women who s and sacrifi e and do without in many ways, to help their hus- bands pay for mortgages, securi- es, a car, the children’s school- , ete. They ought to think twice be- fore depriving themselyes and their families habitually, solely with the eim of “‘building an es- tate’’ to leave to the children. Nothing is sure in this life. We don't know what Fate has in store for us. The self-denying wife may die unseasonably. And soon the grieving husband may marry again—some young thing who believes in living now, enjoying the goods the gods provide, lux- uriating in the harvest of her predecessor’s frugality. In which case the children of the first marriage probably will be eased out of the picture grad- ually.” If the man dies before she does, the widow’s share of the estate would be hers, to share with another husband eventual- ly, no doubt. That is how the working of fate may divert the fruits of the first wife’s sacrific- es from those for whom it was intended, and give it to strang- So I say to first wives: be generous to yourselves, your husbands and your children, pon while you are-all still toge- Stop spoiling your youth, hap- piness, looks and health with worry about old age, or about leaving money to the children, or other remote objectives hav- ing to do with a tomorrow that may never come. Give them health, education, love and happiness as you can, with what you have today, and take time to enjoy life with them, day to day. This is non transferable treasure. Sincere- ly,—C.P; Dear C.P.: Your conclusion is sound enough, namely, that one should live each day as if it might be one’s last opportunity to do good to those around him. door plants to remove aphids or lice. i attendants. ushers were Les lard, Roland Drouillard, both of LaSalle, and Louis Paoli, Peterborough, brother of bride. A reception followed at the SEE BODY IN TRUNK BLACKPOOL, England (AP) Police put out an alert after re- ceiving reports that a driven by a woman was with a man’s hand and é Fe tH i eee 7 a fis A8 i i Siz | eEHET zE 2 § “i! _ Heath M “THE LAST TWO NAMES ON THE BALLOT” Wives Advised To Think Before Building Estate eeom, to them, to threaten their financial house-of-cards. St. Paul’s attitude towards supply— of coping equably with muck or little, meanwhile recog- nizing God as the source of all good—is the attitude of a mor- mature and balanced per- sonality. Riches cannot dehum- anize such a man. Neither can we imagine him plotting narrowly to guarantee, if possible, that his passing share of the bounty of Provid- ence shal! be reapportioned, aft er he’s gone, strictly according to his designs, and no other way.—M.H. Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mail or personal interview. Write her in care of The Guardia f & by you lead up to that tion, is rather sleazy, I think. As you say, we can’t foretell what Fate has in store for us tomorrow. Even so, I don't be- lieve that we should “think twice” about ‘‘building an es- tate,” if that achievement is within our competence, only be- cause we mightn’t be able to legislate immutably as to who shall inherit it, long years hence. ORDERED TO PAY ‘LONDON (CP)—A north Lon- don car-rental firm received an electricity bill for $0 because it hadn't used any power. Soon after it received a letter d- manding to know why the bill had not ben paid. A check was made and a spokesman for the or. company sheepishly ad- tted someone had blundered. It takes all kinds to make a world, you know; and some wiv- es wouldn't be happy, in their time on earth, if they weren't skimping and sacrificing arid “putting by” a cumulative store of security-savings, with which, hopefully, to hold indeterminate future hazards at bay. Other wives are well content to take each day as it comes, property-wise, living: amply or frugally as present circumstan- ces indicate. And in that respect they remind us of St. Paul's un- flappable philosophy with re- gard to material goods, concern- ing which he wrote in effect that he knew both how to abound and how to do without, in either case giving thanks to God. One. of the major moral and psychological risks of putting your faith and trust'in money- making chiefly—as a passport to social status, ease in old age, or as a prestige legacy to your chil- dren—is that as people get rich, | they tend to become cowardly, in terms of fearing desperately to lose what they’ve acquired, and consequently ruthless in their efforts to control whatever situations or individuals may i But your prior reasoning, where- VOTE gus MacLean d CANADA SAVINGS BONDS ROYAL SECURITIES CORP. LTD. Grafton St., Ch’town M. Wilson, Mgr. 4-8583 137 A. Phone 4-£f17 - 4-5435 UPSET STOMACH ete acidity this pleasant, easy are Banish the dis ng ree gee ion, he vd n, stomach acid and flatulence. Get DICKSON'S STOMACH POWDER \ acquarrie LAW _ MACQUARRIE, VICTORIA, P. E. 1. POLITICAL SCIENCE JONES, B.B. BUNBURY, P.E.I. FARMER -MacGUIGAN, MARK CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. PROFESSOR HEATH, ‘MacFARLANE, DOUGLAS BEDEQUE, P.E.I. 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