x SEPTEMBER 26. 1951 iidaclionaid-Wright Wedding A beautiful autumn wedding of interest to a large circle of friends and relatives took place at Bed- eque United Church on Saturday, Sept. 22nd at 3 p.m.. when Helen Ruth. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Trueman Wright of Scarle- ton was united in marriage with Norman Warren Franklin. son of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin MacDonald of Crapaud. The ceremony was performed by the bride's pastor. Rev. W. Burton Crowe. B.A., assisted by Rev. Leonard Bacon. B.A.. or 'rryon. The church was tastefiiily deco- rated with gladioll, sweet peas. asters and asparagus fern. The decorating was done by the Bed- coue choir of which the bride was a valued member. Mrs. Walter Craig played the nuptial music. The bride was given in marriage by her father. She looked lovely in a white bridal gown of embroid- cred nylon net over Dutch satin. Her shoulder-length veil was held in place by 3 Jewel coronct. Her ornaments were a cameo pendant and matching ear rings. .glfts of the groom. She carried a bouquet of red roses. Miss Mary Wright. R.N.. sister of the bride was bridesmaid and was attired in apple green taffeta. trimmed with lace and with mat- ching headdress. She carried a' cascade bouquet of yellow haby mums. Little Miss Catherine My- crs. niece of the groom was flower girl and was attired in a pink or- candy floor-length gown and car- ried a basket of mixed flowers. Mr. Fred Norton of Charlottetown act- ed as groomsmaii. Mr. Charles wright and Mr. Ralph Myers were the ushers. The bride's mother was attired ill rust crepe with brown accessor- ies and her corsage was of yellow gladioli. The groom's mother wore ii mauve crepe with matching ac- cessories and corsage of pink glad- ioll. During the signing of the regis- ter the guest soloist, Mr. J. B. Lewis. sang "Because". A reception was held at the home of the bride where a delic- ious lunch was ser.ved to over sixty guests. Many beautiful flow- ers adorned the rooms. The bride's table was covered with a lace cloth and centered with a three- tier wedding cake. Mrs. Norman Clark. aunt of the bride, and Mrs. Wright Leard pre- sided over the tea cups. Those as- sistlng with the serving were Mrs. Arnold Henderson. Mrs. Ken- neth Muttart. Mrs. Maud New- some, Mrs. Earl MacDonald. Miss Llrace Darby. Miss Margaret Mac- Donald,Miss Georgina Leard. Miss Orlo Jones. and Miss Joan Craig. Ilyan-lliehard Wedding -St. Simon and St. Jude Church Tiginish. was the scene of a very pretty wedding on Wednesday Sept. 12th when Mary Alma Rich- ard daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Richard of St. Peters. became the bride of John Leo Ryan son of the late Mr. William Ryan and Mrs. Ryan of Green- mounn. The nuptial mass was celebrat- ed by Rev. J. A. MacDonald who also performed the marriage ceremony. The bride looked lovely in a navy blue gaibardine suit, with white scccsories. and carried a white prayer book and pearl rosary. She was attended by Miss Eleanor Douce te who also wore a navy blue sui with white acces- nries. The groomsman was Joseph Richard, brother of the bride. Following the ceremony a wedd- in-g breakfast was served to relatives, at the home of the giooms mother. The breakfast table was tastefully decorated with fall flowers and a beauti- ful three tier wedding ca.ke.: At noon the bridal party mot- cred to the home of the bride's parents. where dinner was served to a large numlber of friends Among the guests present weie Rev. Fr. MacDonald and Rev. Fr. Gallant of Tlgnish. The bride and groom received a large number of beautiful gifts. accomlpanied by good wishes for health and hap- piness They will reside in Green- iriount where the groom is a pro- siperous farmer. The wedding cake was served to the bridal party by Miss Barbara Taylor. niece of the groom. The toast to the bride was proposed by Rev. W. Burton Crowe and re- spondcd to by the groom. After the reception the baidal couple left by car for points of in- terest in the Mnritimcs. The bride travelled in a taupe wool gabardine suit with rose and brown accessories, and a corsage of yellow 'mums. On their return they will reside in Crapaud where the groom is a prosperous farmer. The bride is a graduate of Prince of Wales College and taughtschool in the folowing districts: Scarle- town. Lower Bedeque, and Tryon. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Norman Clark. Saint John. N. 3.; Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Trenholm, Fort Lawrence, N.S.; Mr. Edgar Wright, Kerrwood. Ontario. and Miss Orlo Jones. R.T.. of Toronto. The catering was under the di- rection of Mrs. Spurgeon Clark and Miss Dorothy Taylor. Illarris-idatilsaac Wedding -A Very pretty summer wed- ding was soiemnlzed on Wednes- day afternoon. August 29th. in the Olenwood United Church. when ev. John M. Sheen of Elmsdale u ited in the bonds of holy matri- mony Joyce Gorrill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Maclsaac. Cvlenwood. and James Gordon. son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harris of Knutsford. The church was deco- rated with flowers and potted plants. The organist was Mrs. Leslie Gorrill. During the signing of the register. Miss LorraineMac- Neill rendered "I'll Walk Beside You". The bride who was given in marriage by her father. was lovely in her gown of white nylon sheer over taffeta. fitted waist. and bus- tle hipline. with matching poke bonnet. She carried a bouquet of white gladioli and yellow roses. The maid of honor was her sis- ter. Mrs. Vaughan MacDougall, O'- Leary. who wore pink sheer with matching bonnet and carried a nosegay of flowers. Her brides- maid was Miss Phyllis Maclsaac. She was gowned in blue sheer with matching poke bonnet and carried a noscgay. The groom was supported by his brother, Mr. Winburii Harris. The ushers were 'I'herin Ellis and Har- ry Leard. The bride's mother wore black chiffon velvet and n corsacc of red roses. The groom's mother wore powder blue flower crepe with black accessories and a Corsage of white roses. Following the wedding ceremony a reception was held at the bride's oarents' home for about one hun- died guests. The rooms were very appropriately decorated. The liaonv vcun: couple left on a motor trip to Three Rivets. cnieben. On their return. Mr. and Mrs. Harris will reside in O'Learv where the groom is employed with Swift Canadian C0,. and the bride is a valued em- ployee of the 0'Lcary Farmers' Co-Op. Prior to her marriage the bride was tendered several show- CPS. l'lliEll mvous ti coiisririurni Get relief from constipation-indh gestion. Positive results from FRUIT A-TIVES proven by tens of thousands. FRUIT-A-TIVES contain extracts of frulta and herbs. OUT OUR WAY VMPE OUT TH WHY, A SECONDS STUDY AN' DJ COULD 0H,50lT PRNCIPLE. '- WE JUST CONK EM gas TH' THING eun:r 'THI5.GA'fE AN' rr's AIJTDMATI - i A LITTLE sripp.-12-rz xl.n),'.-5: r THOT WE'D GOT INTO A iPATENT CATTLE TRAP" FLEW AROUND AND BEANED HER AND 'TH' WHOLE r-1':i.icE- FELL on By J. R. Williams Is A GATE! WE. AND FENCE 'EAA CALLV! THAT HER! 7J'- R.wiLLtAM9 " V.I.QIQ .I.MV.NF eon. an IV nu crevice. Inc. Sun aoiinpiisic HOUSE” T :r.-.--..---. --- - - Z BOMB A5 HAEML .9 ? Aize vau REELIMG IN ANY MACKEREL WITH YOUR BATH 6Ai:r THAT MAKES THE ATOM Po? OF A TOY BALLOON .?--- orz WILL You RETURN fro Your? PRO!-'Esstoi4 or: - ?CDLLECTlN6 ', ARTICLES MOT MAILED ES5 AS THE rC41rM ATTR New PULL IN THAT Asir- Wi& EATEl2'6 BEAK OF vouias, Twtse-5, IF You WANTA Pin-coal. IN IT! SMART Mosiev--- GO INTO PERDUCT-' ION ON A COUPLA Ml LLION ) BAGS I" Maior Hoopla DOMW V Boom-BATH is Ac.TtMl PLEMTY or MONTH WE'LL . THE GUARDIAN, 'K)R.0NTO. Sept. 25-A Lieuten. ant-Governor. Provincial Premiers, Canada's Minister of Finance, the governor of The Bank of Canada and president of the Canadian National Railway all appeared on I public platform here at noon to- day to mark the opening of a 25- storey bank structure which symbolized Canadals economic "coming of age." Premier Angus Macdonaid. of Nova Scotla. and Premier Leslie Frost. of Ontario, appeared in per- son whlle the premiers of every other province were heard in mes- sages they had specially recorded for the occasion. Present also on the platform were Mayor lliram Mccnllum. of Toronto. and offic- ials of The Bank of Nova Scotia who saw the building they had planned 20 years ago officially opened. The new Bank of Nova scotia Building-twice as high as Niagara Falls, with floor space one and a half times that of the Roman Coliseum-is the third large fin- nncial structure to be completed in recent years at Toronto's main intersection. Government and busi- hess loaders cited this as evidence of Canada's growing economy which has become more and more sustained by Canadians own ef- forts. ' ”It is a sign and a symbol of the faith the bank has in its own future and in Canada," said Prem- ier Macclonald. "Works of this sort are not undertaken by the faint of heart and dull of soul." Historic Occasion a The occasion not only marked the first time provincial premiers. a cabinet minister. rziil and bank heads have been heard from a single platform. but it is the first occasion in Canada when televis- ion has been used to give spectat- ors a ring-side seat at an outdoor ceremony. A mobile television studio transmitted the program to nearly 2,000 of Canada's financial and industrial leaders assembled in the fourth floor dining rooms of the new building. While crowds could watch the actual perform- ance on King Street. thousands more around the corner on Bay Street viewed the ceremonies in other television sets mounted in the bank windows. The 11 acres of floor space with- in the new building include feat- ures which make it one of the most modern structures in the world. The bank vaults with their 55-ton doors are the first atomic- lilast proof vaults ever to be con- structed; the building is one of the first two in Canada to install electronically-operated elevators; the three-storey main banking room supports Canada's largest sculptured mural on its north wall; and new engineering devel- opments have been used to provide a complete, fool-proof air condit- ioning system. Adjoining the safety vaults in the new Bank scotia Building are conference rooms. big and small, where in- dividuals can examine their valu- ables or groups can confer on estate matters or study documents. walls of these rooms are in limed oak with beige and brown leather upholstered chairs. Tclephoncscan be plugged in for box holders use. Tennessee marble floors and Bot- ticlno marble wnlls complete the main banking room; counters and cheque desks are finished in Breccia Rosata marble from Italy. The 40-tfOOlS high ceiling of this vast rocm lsof prc-castflbrous plaster painted to simulate misty height. and gilded with gold-fesf. Office walls throughout the bank floors are done in pastel shades. often with two walls in the same room of different shades or colour for pleasing working conditions. solid rubber tile floors blend with the walls. deposit of Nova. Office Equipment Office equipment is mostly of dark, or metalcscent green for serviceabllity with light-coloured linoleum tops for pleasant working space. Much of the equipment. used by women employees in par- ticular. was newly designed for the new building. It is built at heights convenient to women workers; provides ample shell and work areas; and is easily moved on rubber-tired wheels. Girl elevator operators in the new bank structure wear bright tartan skirts and short navy jackets to mark the Nova. scotian origin of the batik. some 550 em- ployees of the bank and a like number with an insurance com- pany are fed in about a hundred minutes every noon in the fourth floor dining rooms. Supported on solid rock foundat- ions 44) feet below street level, the two-storey bank vaults are of "is- land" construction. They were built first. then the building erect- ed around and above them. Mir- rors surround the vault walls giv- ing guards a constant view of all four sides and a dead space un- der the lower vault floor. VValll are of three foot concrete, rein- forced with 35 miles of heavy steel rods set horizontally and vertically on six inch cenii-cs. Two-inch stecl lines the inside. Four vault doors each have two feet of solid metal thickness. including 11 inches of pure copper to prevent cutting by burner torch. The d which leads from the lower ha lag floor to the vault is further protected by a control room with walls of two- fnch laminated bullet-proof glass. Electronics automatically regu- late the 12 high speed elevators 30 llrovids average 22 second ser- vice and assure that no one wait: more than 20 seconds after touch- ing the "up" or "down" button. The buttons are not pushed: electric influence of the human finger activates an electronic cell behind glass panels with just s touch to summon elevator cars. Main Banking mom Probably the most a:;hltcc.ural. Magnificent New Building For Bank (iillova Scotia CHARLOTTETOWN an ..-AGE NINIL lletiredcanadian Newspapers Man continent, the 40-foot hi-zh main banking room covers an area of ' 17.000 square feet. The 600 square ' foot mural on the north wall symbolizes the industries of Can- ada and foreign countries which the Bank of Nova. scotla has helped to finance. The mural took 14 months to create and a half year to carve out of Hauteville marble from France. The air conditioning of this vast . office building filters. out smoke. ' dirt and pollen from the air; cools at it by three refrigeration machines; heats it with a boiler plant that also accommodates two neighbour ' ing buildings to eliminate their smoke; and regulates temperature to winter comfort and to reduce "physiological shock" in summer, The refrigeration machines pro- duce enough ice every 24 hours to make 19 standard size ice rinks or meet requirements of 570 butcher shops. The shock of stepping from a ioocool building into summer heat is reduced by automatic controls which raise building temperature one degree for every three degrees rise outside. Muzak (transcribed music spec- ially recorded to relieve boredom and fatigue) is played 22 minutes in every hour throughout the first eight floors occupied by the bank and the next six floors tciieiiled by an insurance company. The up- per storeys supply office accom- modation for more than 60 ten- ants. Adjoining the main floor bank- ing room is a. 7.000 square foot an- nex which houses calculating and recording machinery in a sound- proof. north-lighted. atmosphere. Cheques from the bank's 380 branches are fed into multi-total "proof" machines which automatic- ally sort the cheques into compart- mcnts of a revolving drum and keeps track of the amounts. Two machines. largest to be installed by any Canadian bank, can each keep track of 32 "lists" of figures at one time. The Gander River in Newfound- land. a fine salmon stream, is barely five hours flying time from New York. SQUIRREL HUNT AMERSHAM. England -tcP' - in Buckinghamshire was annoyed because grey squirrels was eating his vegetable garden produce. He offered half a crown for the of every squirrel shot. within quarter-mile of his garden. Lb-V . . . . . . .. , , Londoners cor re te ouLid. B if 1 ' li Councillor A. Stevens of this town some wow or mggxlgzl i 9 uc mgham Palace 3”” Impmg 10' a ways ke.to See from J.-lalmoral Castle where they were holidaying, to be with him dur. ing the Opcllltloll. Expressions of sympathy and concern for the Kings t 'llhr'ti'flll i'e'.1cnct'. tit. 'l ':- i C v . . , aialmlrgpcl e re a e rcni ommonuealth, the U. S. and Western and was viont to praise or criticize Dies In Toronto 'IlOiR0lN'IlO. Sept. 5 -.(GP)- John Scott, a. newsboy who bo- came one of Canada's leading newspaper men, died Sunday. 110 was 7'1. An active newspaper man for nearly 40 years before his retin- ment in 1.936. Mr. Scott suffered I stroke and died in his sleep at his home here. A son, John C. Scott. publicity director of the Ontsrit Department. of llcalih. survives. President of thecanadian Press, Canada's national news service, for two years. from 1929 to 1051. Mr. Scott was managing director of the Toronto Mall and Empire for nine years until 1936 when it was Purchased and merged with the Toronto Globe by W. H. Wright, wealthy mining man who died in Barrie. Ont.. last week; The combined paper now is pub. lished as the T0:'0ll'.0 Globe and Mail. , Before going to the Mail and Empire, Mr. Scott worked for 25 years on the M-Jllireal Gazette where he had been proof reader. reporter. city editor and managing editor. Before that he had been on the staff of the old Gazette in his native saint John, N. B, berm. Joining the Saint Jllllll Telegraph, Mr. Scott's uzlc. the format Jane Cahan Mc.Ju ;:n who died in 1936. also worked on the Gaz. ette. They were n-,;.i--mi m 1903. the year after he until, to Mon. treal to Join the masons in that; city. It was through sports that Mr, Scott got into the lien:-paper pro- fession. ll9lV:lJO)' iritli initiative, he held his own ill a iozigli busness where the choicest cc:-iicss went to the aggressive. lln liircd others to sell papers for him and spent his earnings on night school. In his Si-Mire time he nzarnizod a semi. pro baseball team. saint John Al. erts, and tool: the (suits of the team's games into lilo Gazette, H, W35 8SSlSned to cover hockey games and boxing bouts, than be. came a full-tiinc rt-pm-ter, A physical (lisubility arising from a boyhood lc;: llljll:y did not prevent soft-hearted. soft-spoken John Scott from helix; fl glave to duty. indifferent to the clock. As managing director of tho Mail and Empire, he frequently worked from 9 or 10 A. M. until, early the following morning. ")2 the paper to .-, . ............ g The Queen, and later Princess Margaret. new bed-" he Said- In retirement, he continued my interest in the profession. He re. mained I. keen newspaper reader the handling of breaks. various news I also iy splendid business office on the FUll COLOR ROYAL PICTURES by KARSH allied Pl as 20 met: or came: an I2-P065 mom '7,” . (W 0 IS A SCOT i . Up in the Highlands. as Roy- WITH PHOTOS BY LOUl5 JAQUE5 R M707 K--::rr&4 any has for ninety-nine years past, Princess Elizabeth and Prince i Philip enjoy their family holidays. This week, Gregory Clark takes you on a delightful visit to this quaint old town. PIN-UPS A pin-up gal has to have a title like "The Girl Weld Most Like to Play Post Office With". See our 4-page picture story of titled pin-up beau. Lies. (N0 whistling. please). ' B.C. Salmon Fishing A vivid story of the romance of 1110 salmon run and the men who go down to the sea in ships off B.C.'l "'889d- IPECIACIIIII coast. Fivo . pages of pictures. j-n-11:.-nu-:1-1 IIAIAIWI, 0010', NOVEL tuntiurti