MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM 0. MACRAE SEPTEMBER Marriage vows were exchan ged recently at Kingston oe hurch, hetween_ oynker, and Mrs. Ralph} Younker Kingston,_and_William_Owen MacRae, son of Mr. and. Mrs Milton MacRae, Bonshaw. - _Lioyd~ officiated a t.. _Seaping Baby _ Old-Fashioned LONDON’ (UPI — Scientists doubt they will be able to dent an age - old tradition of mother- +tes;,—_They—are_now-residing_in—- ie ee a? IDA BAILEY ALLEN *s a WEDDING the double’ _ring ceremony. “Following a reception at Corn wall United Church, the trip to the New England Sta- North River. ~ (Photo ‘by Geor . Texas Téener The Tops _ In Party Giving —Contest BY IDA BAILEY ALLEN Eighteen_- year - old Linda Ellis, the nation’s top teen hos- tess from Houston, Tex., has° | been cooking since she was 10, baking since she was 12, and trying out new recipes of her family and friends for as long as she can remember. Contest Wi ser , The attractive brunetie re- cently won first prize in. a “‘Par- ty-of-the-Year” contest given by a leading teenagers’ magazine with her plan-for-—an tional ‘Passport Party” for teéns.. She took to the- kitchen early, because she thought that being able to cook_was a sign of being grown wp. ' Eventually, she graduated to esoking meals for -the family. This project was encouraged by her mother. Mrs. Norma Ellis, who agreed to pay Linda one. dollar a week for planning. and “cooking dinner—_during--summer vacations. “tnnovation isthe sp tee of cooking,””- Linda believes, and she’s always eager to try new ideas and to eaperinent with recipes. : ~ PIZZA ‘PARTY- (| (Each of 4 couples completes a pizza)) For this party, the dough for four (12”) plain pizzas is made from a pkg. mix, and the pizza | shells are made ahead of time— ready-to-bake. Thin green pep- per strips divide each pan into 2 portions per couple. Setting the Table: Put ready- to-bake pizza shells along the "back “Of a @—ft-—trarrew—table_ Put tor the sticky- fingered guests at right ~hand| 7 end. -Line up platiers of pizza “toppers” _ (follow) ready for interna-|~ _| basket of red les; ind sarge meg guests to us Meat. sauce goes over a heating unit. to keep hot. Grated cheese and o)) for sprinkling tie completed pizzas come last. -Each couple (in turn) takes a pizza shell from. the table, adds Italian meat sauce and aaghoice several to p- pings. “ a * When the wii have done -their bit, the pizzas are sent to ‘the kitchen for baking about 30 min., or according to pizza pkg. directions. ‘ Measurements level =~ recipes for 6 ; —ITALI4Z MEAT. SAUCE Ingredients: ‘4 c. shoneet peeled onion; 2 tbsp. olive oil; 1 lb. chopped beef chuck; 1 tsp. garlic. salt; % isp. ground pep- per: 2° cans (8 oz.) tomato sauce; 1 bay leaf; % tsp. crushed oregano; % tsp. ground rosemary. To Prepare: Saute onion in olive oil 3.min: Add meat and cook, stirring 2 min. more. Dust with gatlic salt and pepper. Stir in tomato sauce and seasonings Sicmer 5 min. Remove baf leaf. - ‘TOPPERS - Ingredients: 14 lb. sweet Ital- ian sausage; % lb: hot. Italian sausage; 1 lb. mozzarella cheese 2 sweet red onions; % Wb. fresh mushrooms; 1 lb. shrimp —— cooked, shelled and deveined. Te Prepare: Cook each kind of sausage in ; slowly and and slice. + Slice the cheese. Peel and slice onions; separate into rings. Sliee mushrooms. Cut shrimp into bite-sizes. *‘on. ~ Mesdames et adimneldhiine: | After Linda's arty _ we think of for dinner except pizzas? They are always fun “Minestrone soup, homemade or canned; pizzas with a choice of mon'); a tossed mixed green salad; and for dessert, a big _} years in the north where he wor- what . can |? the old church across the high- way where -the late Rev. Peter Gordon, its first_minister, serv- ed for three years, 1806 to 1809. He. died here in 1809 and a mo- nument is erected to his memory in the old cemetry in the Harbor district. Those who had. the pleasure of meeting and knowing G. W. Fichaud, store manager in Hol-| man’s ‘Charlottetown store for. quite a number of years, and al- ‘so head -of--many sports events such as Gold Cup and Saucer rade will ‘be sorry to learn he is leaving the_Island_to_return_to his home in Montreal. “Mr. Fi- chaud, will be missed by many of us who.had the pleasyre of knowing him through thé years. Sometimes the shoe goes on ‘thé: other foot. For many years we have had stove and: furnace men from the city doing jobs here such as installing furnaces afid stoves, ete: Last week a crew from the Morell Heating Company were -doing this work in- the city. The . hungry travellers we mentioned last- week are ‘remin- ded the busy Village Diner is open for business again with the staff rested~ up after vacation. The er, Mr. Carol Mc- Adam. has many many. years of experience in the business. ELLERSLIE. Friends are pleased. .to see — Engiand where she underwent surgery. Marilyn Williams has returned to-Toronto-aftervisiting her par- ents, Mr. liams. : Mr. and Mrs. William Grant were recent guests of their daughter . and son-in-law, Mr. | and Mrs. Shermon Hutchinson. ,Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. mond Adams and Mr. and Mrs. @-| Warren Buchanan and family, Halifax, N.S. Mr. and-Mrs:-John- Williams and daughter Halifax,. N. S:, were recent visitors .of his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. ¢ Clifford Williams. Joan Burleigh, RN, was a re- -cent~visitor’ of her parents, .Mr. and Mrs. Burton Burleigh. Lemuel Day, ‘Wellington was a.week-end visitor of Mr.. and Mrs. Peter Millar. ' Mr, and Mrs. Harold Gillis are We had a pleasant chat with this, ity. Asa ollowing world war ated a general store from Douglas station and voy road. Well slong | in following @ number of a¢ aith aievincx cident list of accidental oa here incraeses since the George Barry also Jost his life in _accident,. two _men were shot in later years and a Bae “Feally “old-fashtoned—and— “there better and safer ways of keeping the very young clean. Some scientists, in fact, are against bat hs’ 3for newborn olhsores i 4 te aa Ta u cau who blak: mothers should change their methods, the British: Journal has! conceded_it.did not expect the campaign to have much success. But it itaplied “that mothers should at least know about the w con ae method. of bath- ing the baby has these disadvan- ag 1769, records kept by the fa- mous Thomas Chippendale in- dicated prices equivalent to nearly $400 each for 7 x 44-inch mirror plates. "Because the giass was un- Leven-andheavy.....Mercury....Waa| usedfor_silvering, few.of the |. early English mirrors have survived in condition. Some_of the beautiful old mir- ror frames have been preserv- ed in museums and private col- 8. * s St. Augustine CWL Will Aid- School Project, St. Augustine Parish was held’ in the convent on October 19th. The president, Mrs. John Pineau ned the meeting. by prayer “ pournal.’ =. Tt-makes. the baby — slippery, thus leading to anxiety tension in the the baby will fall on takes too long; there the soap will get into: _eyes_and_there is scum on baby from interaction of” “soap and hard water. It quoted scientisis who be fieve that a mixture of ntoin and hexachlorophane the —“hathwater does “away—with - the need for soap. The no-bath scientists AF @ eoncemned_mainty wi new- born. In one British experiment 160 infants who -were not bathed but who were dabbed with an antiseptic solution were compared’ with 129 infants who were given daily soap and water - baths. The researchers found that the no-bathing technique did. not increase the incidence of rashes or other —— aoe they er ar wil probably continue to use soap and water because it is traditional — in spite of the fear that they (or their hus- bands).will _— the-baby.on the floor, but in- the nursery for ——newhborn babies many _pediatri-- _eians will prefer the no - bath technique — oO hexachloro- phane.” _ : —- Wall-Mirrors-— = Make Rooms Seem Larger ¢ Mirrors are being used by - many decorators today, te ereate illusions of space. This idea is a practice that ‘began in “eatly Renaissance times, thetigh it was in 18th-cen “tury-England that the fine art “4~ of designing and using mirrors seéms,to have reached a peak. ; Pier glass, for example, was 4 introduced ‘tm the Stuart fs period to decorate the narrow Bs wall or-pier between .windows. matching side table, Lreryiadn an ar With it ft wa feet tall, betas sented to the proportions of the rooms where they were used. Chimney on which .we would now call fireplace or : mantel mirrors, ‘were i tw grand in size. P srere placed opposite that one would reflect the ~ other, optically doubling the sizeof the room ; from almost: ’ any vantage point. - The general popularity and ‘use, of. mirrors in decorating was associated closely _ with the progress~ of - glassmaking in England. Until 1663, when the English mirror. pftte in- dustry was established, Mur- ~ gino, Italy, Had been the ” main source of Pecan: glass Early English products were smal! in size, low in qual- i i ‘« Ba oe mirrors - m sot; CWL Makes Presentation The members_of_Seven_ Mile Bay CWL held their monthly ‘meeting in the parish hall re- cently. with the president, Mrs. reported distributing gro- clothes and fruit to needy er of education suggested a box’ be placed: in the vestibule of the church for collection of used stamps. asked to post a list of names for the psrpetual rosary onthe first Saturday of.each month. Tbership fee to include the maga- zine subscription was discussed and favored by the majority. ““Tt was decided te begin” the weekly card parties. on Novem- ber 2nd. Mrs. Everett Muttart and Mrs. Lorne Noonan report- are. busily quilting while the main topic of Albany Rural’s nal singimtg. Mrs. George Mur- phy requested Father MacDo- nald’s permission to invite Sis- fer Mary Jude from Kinkora Convent to direct singing for a few Sundays. Father MacDon- ald and all members present were in accord with this request Father MacDonald read a let- ter concerning the sale of copies A highlight of the evening " was the presentation of the past pre- sident’s pin to Mrs. Gerald Murray with the presentation — -made by Father MacDo- GETS DEATH SENTENCE SALISBURY (Reuters) — Bh a judge Tuesday for: tossing a hand: grenade ‘at a house in Salisbury. He wis fourd. guilty under the hanging clause of the Law and Order Maintenance Act which makes certain of- fences, among them the throw- ing bombs, carry a mandatory q|death sentence. Tatisayi threw the grenade at a house occupied hy a white -family. No one .was ee Even.in- | hort. ¥ 2 4% = om i ait infil iain 2. --The— spirittial—_eonvener—w-a-8-} The idea of raising the mem |h unit meeting was congregatio- | ¢ ol “The Carnatic Cares - Ear- ed_and encouraged the Commu- =Pity School project-telling “ttre= members that the school child- ren are interested im the new way of teaching catechism. : The president encouraged members to attend the conven- members voted against the double membership as the CWL magazine is subscribed to by two or three neighbors. She also_sent_for 25 books—on_s-e-x Pp. | education. Mrs. Francis Gallant sald she would go to the Red Cross Office to get material and yarn, and would take it to the Home and ‘School meeting on the following Monday. It was mentioned that we should help the AA building Sevéral members had visited the sick. : , ~The” meeting “or the CWE" an tion on October” 20th and“t tre ‘ 3 & 3 7 delayed as the railing is still not} / ae ee on the highway near fatal accidents involving ehild- ren in different years, and a a ea f fs EF it 32 i i i pall fe “a ai. tt § 3 e gtd : 4 + =) i fe! ff i i i [ Hl { it | > his_son-in FFE a : , | placed. When this has been done the bridge will open for traffic. | This is the fourth bridge across the river in. less several times, corner of ‘the main highway nel. Built in 1 years ago, its doors were closed a few years ago when a new —_ BALTIC being a patient in the P.E.J. . Charlotietown. . Mil- a . ed for their Units of North Car-|dred is the daughter of Mr. and ~Meton’ and Atbany Rural respec-; Mrs. “Lyman: = tively. North Carleton members : Stapleton, Valleyfield, visited. in the east- ern areas on ie mses with friends. ane aps “spent te wale: ipl 2 i zy i i e! : : i t { zt “The old Bristol United Church | , seventy-eight | i i “WORTH:S” : PHARMACY « “NEW FAB HAS BOF BORAX RIGHT INIT — says Mrs ice White Charlottetown, PLE. I eth ctahetbetn 4 As you have and Mrs. Budd Wil waa visiting ‘Hertford, Com, guests of Mrs. Gillis’ sister, Ruth Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred-MacLean |have- returned- home after —visit- 3 | ein “Ontario. Mr: and Mrs. Hurry Gillis and family were. recent visitors to |Saint.John, N.B., guest of _Mr. ‘TGillis—sisterand_ brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Meslvin Hutchin- son. Mr. and Mrs. James Burleigh and Mr. and Mrs..L.A. Burleigh thave: returned home after visit- ing in U.S.A.” ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Erwin ~ Dennis Bernard Adams were Mr. ‘ and Pie Mrs. Westey Adams, Mr. andes returned home. after visit- =. s Adams. Mr. ~~ Ray ae and Mrs. Brian Enman and daughter, Summerside were retent-guests of —her—_parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Morrison. Mr -apd- Mrs. Clifford —-Mac= Dougall and Mrs, Earl Maynard and Lee MacDougall, " Toronto, were recent guests of their par- ents,.Mr. and, Mrs. James Mac- Dougall. Mrs. MacDougall is a patient in Stewart Memorial Health Centre. : Frances Williams, Charlotte- town was a weekend visitor at the home of her parents, Mr. and\Mrs. Budd. Williams. eS Sorters & See - __ Sharon Crizier, Halifax spent. Coun the—weekend in Baltic. ~ Her many friends will be pleas- ed to learn Mrs. Richard Wail, Baltic, is making a gopd recov- ‘ery following surgery in the Prince County. Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Caseley, Baltic spent a most enjoyable holiday in Newfoundland and also visited relatives: in Hiali- fax, N.S., returning home ° on Tuesday. Caro) Wallace, nurse-intrais- ing in Prince County Hospital, spent the weekend «at-her home in Hamilton. Elmer Caseley, Baltic, is a pital. > Mr...and -Mrs__George_Bryan-. ton. and daughter of Charlotte- town, were weekend guests of Pa Mrs. Raiph. Bryanton, | ~ CENTRAL - BEDEQUE | Mrs. Ross .Howatt (nee Mar- patient in Prince County Hos- Ernest Johnson of Bedeque a patient in the Prince ae pjorie MacFarlane of Toront ot Toronto) ~HOLLIS’S DISCOUNT STI ORE FALL HARVEST OF VALUES ~ Across From Post=—Office The "KING" miLLINERY | i sons Patt 5648 2 + Fa8 } j i i : 10.95. New only— SKIRTS The mod look, in petite 957) ‘Sizes 26 to 44. Some with leather cuffs and haar Reg. 39.95. Now only— ; cof the = ~ $75; 000 OF WINTER MERCHANDISE TO CLEAR N ez read In the newspapers the price of suits ond Harts {7 Tweed Coats are going up, but Hollis is Chil te opr ow po oe 4 “Three Reasons Why We Have The Be: ye = Low Cost-Of-Operation --__® We Sell For Cash}: = We Buy Direct From The Manufacturers New te the time t buy. Tm ing SKI JACKETS. F Bench Warmer Fay hgh oo SPORT JACKETS — os 9” * 16.95 ‘Men's High Cut BOOTS Insulated with ofl resistant nsles, all stone to, stock 6 to 12, Now enly— Young Men's Corduroy PANTS Sizes QUEEN STREET ” = Ae ncaa ¢ te, pte herd,: doe 38. New. ame hohe sidh vend 2 5.95 * ' we sthvtoch ston te —" tM hahah te : on toy S.cventbeeefhee i, fhocwd OPEN Thur., a Nights ‘Til 9.30 P. M. Sat. Til 5.30: CORNEY’S “FAMILY CLOTHING STORE} Next Door To ‘Sompie's Pharmacy