" EIGHTEEN - MeetiiiaipopuIarpilced —'- Ielisstlssjlylietstets (Oonttnuadjrom page ll) "hr Asia - Canoe Cove. farmer. J. Philip Matheson (P.0d Oyster Bad Bridge. farmer. Lorne l. Houston, (C.C.P'.) Hun- ter R-lvq farmer. ‘Ihlrd Queens:- Ior Councillor:- Eugene Cullen. thib.) Char- ‘ottetown. dsiryman. J. J. MacDonald. (EC). John- ston's River. farmer. For Assemblyman:- Ruslell C. Clark, (Lib), Mt. ltewart merchant. John A. Gillies. (PC), Char- lottetown. salesman. lossrtls Queen’ -- Ior Councillor:- Matthew W. Wood. (P.C.). Southport, rarmer. ' J. Walter Jones, (IiibJ Buuhury. Iarmer. For Aslernblymam- ' Dougald McKinnon, (Lib). Mt. " h ,farmer. D. J. Riley. (P.C.). Belle River. Merchant. Fifth Queen's:- tbr Councillor:- W. J. P. MacMillan. (RC). Charlottetown, Physician. r. Ohss. Dougan, (ma), Char- buys-nan.- Leilhlin I. MacKinnon, (us), THE_ QUAWIQQLAN, __CHARLOTTETO\[1_§{ ) ._. ~» .v~ Front row, 1m to right: Lilla Strickland. Marsuorlte Murm- JW!" Lilly. llliizabeth Wood. Shirley Bcott. Elizabeth Stetson. Lon: suwt§m_ Second row, left to HIM? Rllllh 5¢°u~ wan“ Wwd’ C :1‘- eMunn zell, Donna Wood, George Strickland, Donnie Jenkins, Rod e i Lloyd Scott. Back row. left to right: Celine Doyle (teacher). Jane Vgoodfiogifeltll’ Foster. Iris Mimi], Millicent Munn. Barbara Jenkins. BethM ret- Irene Foster. Shirley Dennis. Lila Muttlfl- Mel-WT" 5”“ “g3 sCOtt."-PhDtO by Garnhum. Bridge, carriage builder. (Isrdiew- mmihmt- John R. MacLean. (PC). Bouris Fourg Kllllilfli- merchant. For unc or:- _ second King’s:— llilurdnpglcchlildxseowan. (P.C.). Kil *__ " P, - 1 and chmuilsciiifgtrr’ (no) st. Peters hhlexander w. Matheson. (nun. iottetown, dentist. Douglas McFarlane. (0.03). Bodegas. farmer. SOLD BY R. T. HOLMAN LTD. SUMMERSIDE and CHARLOTTETOWN Guaranteed Satisfaction Since i851 For Assemblyman:- ‘1’. William L. Prowse, (Lib) Charlottetown, merchant. David L. Mathleson. (P.0d, Charlottetown, barrister. pay, farmer. M’. u gh:1'rs9:e°:;g"kl?':5t“* (33.13: n’ Guam’ mm’ d" ' hobo A. CamDbeil. (ma). Hwthr rollilagrsfierfilygloazg"_(bib.) erggankmlgierhdacliarlanc. mbster packer. Murray Harbour, merchant. Milton Rogerson, (P.C.), Peakes Fifth Klnffl- bmlonl fume; For Councillor:- M," 1L (no). rumor suwsnn isuno . women's INSTITUTE nnsuu rssuvm. PROVINCIAL DIANA COMMITTII / Honorary Chairman Provincial Ohairrnan . Vice-Chairman (Queen's) Vice-Chairman (Prince) Vice-Chairman (King's) Mrs. Harold Laird. Kelvin Grove Little ra..i'..'"‘aori Charlottetown ' Drama Library (PEI. Libraries) Director Mr. Bramweli chandler Prizes Mrs. Brewer Auld. Freetown. Mrs. Wilfred Pickering. Clinton lllrs. Fred Gates. West Royalty _... To be chosen Membership Publicity . Auditor RULES AND REGULATIONS 1948 FESTIVAL Entries ‘Close Marsh I. 1M0 an , The Festival is onen to any (FIELD organization. society. or amateur drama group. outside of Charlottetown and summerside. An Entry Fee of $2.00. the name of pisv. rovalty or next-royalty. the name and address of person directincz the play. or some responsible person in the cost. must be submitted to the Secretary-Treasurer F _ _ _._-___ Mrs. Julian Herring. Charlottetown Miss Laura Crosby. Meadowbank Mrs. Harold Linkietter. Linkletter Mrs. Murdock MaoGowaznlciimuir Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. Ray Macbeod. Graham's Road ' LIAISON. onisoisns c. w. L Mrs. Henry ‘Prainor. Kinkora w. J. A. Lawson. 165 lluston 8t. Mrs. John Mullins. Kelly's Cross QEQEWWER 9. 194) " N _ \ s i; /f../’5'“2 §\// /'/ s" * Chorus -" Willem A. Kells, ( .C.F.). Cen- » ' -_ fled G. Johnston. (P.C.) Mul- ‘Mrs. Ray litliv-Leod. not later than March 1. 194B. "u°."c“" t-fll Evita-RY. iflmef- c 1£$rgo§£fiilis};- , _ ray Harbour North, larmc!‘ l!" 3. Festival will be held in Mav and June. dates to bc arranged. First. Kln"|:_ Kw. Clark, (hm). Montuu‘ lobster packer. 4. An annual meetintr will be held as soon as possible after the Festival l'or Councillora- flex-Chang George E. Saville. (Lib-l. Annafl- at. which the following are elizible to vote: Augustine A. MacDonald, (PC) L 5 Hung“. (pp), Brldga- dale. farmer. (a) One dolomite frrm any group or society which contributes or Souris, physician. drown merchant. ror Assemblymanr— ‘ nays a Foe of $2.00. T. J. Kickham, (Lib) Sourls For Assemblymarn- William flushes. (LlbJ, Sol-ll‘! (ht Contributing Annual Members (not less than 25c). farmer. Joseph G. Campbell. tub.) “est, merchant. (c) Life members An Annual Member may become a Life Member For Assemblymanz- poplar p01,,“ mflhanic, Daniel M- MBCLBBYI- P-CJ» 9°‘ by naving $25.00. El"! S- Francis, (Lib). Willi!“ John A. MacDonald, (P.C.). d"! Mlfsh. farmer. 5. Plays shall be One-Act. non-rovalty. or rovaitv not exceeding $5.00 . All plavs shall be presented under original title. U. Play-otls. Semi-Finals. and Finals shall be arranged by the Pro- vincial Drama Committee. '1. Adjudicators for a Play-oi! may be chosen by the groups competing in the Play-off. _ ' 8. Adiudicatcrrs for Semi-Finals shall be chosen by Provincial Drama Committee. 9. Adiudicators for Finals shall be chosen by Provincial Drama Oom- mittee from outside the province. 10. Plays shall be presented. when possible. in groups of 3. ll. Drama Groups shall be allowed legitimate and reasonable expenses in the Semi-Finals and Finals. Balance of door receipts from same shall be paid into the Drama llestival Fund 12. Diplomas will be awarded to: ‘ m: tum ‘O ItAIIOItAI ucm cosuslsv ‘ A l-A. s TIIB CEMENT WQRKEI! nu: uiciuzi. woiunau depend on each other In a single year more than 32,000 barrels of Pors- gd Cement are used by the nadian Nickel industry. 240 carloads of brick and high temperature cement are used for repairing furnaces and con- verters. The purchase of this material means jobs for lar e numbers of workers in e cement industry. The cement industry, in mm, uses a rear deal ot‘ equi ment conssissng Nickel. lnsi e the kilns illustrated here, for in- stance, scores of buckets made /_ t of Nickel steel are used, be- cause Nickel steel staods up under the terrific heat necessary is making cement. So the Canadian Nickel worker produces the Nickel the cement industry needs: the Canadian cement worker reduces the cement required y the Cans- dian Nickel induct . Each and every indus y in t is country creates employment in other so- dussries. No marina bow we urn a lloin . we 4n all one family, sub ending on the others Cannons): Nscsnis; use. 2s xmosrsssr w. tomato » 1. “firming Groups in (a) Semi-Finals (b) Finals (s) Semi-Finals we) Finals no n in writing within 48 hours raries. Send to the Prince Ed play or plays in the catalogue y I- Libraries. and order from the 2. To the beat Actor and Actress in 1S. The Provincial Drama Committee reserves the right to disqualify an entry for infringement o! rules. . Complaints or protests must be presented to the Secretary-Treasurer and must be accompanied bv a protest lee of $1.00. said tee to be returned if protest is sustained. Decision oi’ the Provincial Drama Committee in such cases shall be final. 15. THE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND LIBRARIES are co- our Festival work to issuing free of charge a catalogue of One-Act non-rovaitv and $5.00 royalty plays suitable for Drama Festivals. This catalogue will be ready November 16th. may obtain a copy without cost upon application to P. 1!. !. Lib. ward Island Libraries. Charlottetown. for any ou wish to read. Return plays u; p, g7, Publishing 1-1 us th be o! the play you have iinallv selected for prgsedtatisiifium r 0100p!" ma: Lrrrut THEATRE (mow or CHARLOT pared to co-operate as much as possible with or tor the Drama Festival. I: any Institute or group arrange a meeting for discussion on play production. Won't You Come To Tea Alternoon tea is perhaps the pleasant mode of entertainment. A cup of tea, well made and’ sc- necessary {or a delightful little party. As the holiday season draws near. it is well to have the cookie tin 114 c m __ 1 filled. so one is Prepared to ex- 2-3 chgslwfhteigbed due! tend an invitation to the friends who drqp in for a little chat when they are home for a weekend or longer, or for the neighbor who brings her knitting over to check on the intricacies o! the pattern. It is nice, also, to be ieady to call up several cronies in the morning and invite them to bring their various bits ot Christmas fancy work over to sew together and en- joy a little retreshsnent. The Home Economists o1 the Consumer Section, Dominion De- partment ot Agriculture have some cookie recipes which may be called "party fare" as they are a hit richer and sweater than those we have been having during the last few years. Meringue: airways make a hit. and contrary to common belief, they are easy to make. The oven temper- ature is the important point. Long slow backing to dry out the mix- ture. but not brown it. is essential When making meringues there is another cookie which uses egg yolks. The diflerence in texture and flavour of the two types makes them excellent cornpnnions. Extra egg yolks may be utilised in custard or salad dressing. i ‘ infill!!! 4 Git whites i‘ teaspoon salt l cup fruit sugar it teaspoon almond extract lest egg whites with salt until stilt. Beat in sugar very gradually. Add liavouring. Drop meringues on a lhhtiy greased pan with a teas- poon or pastry tube. Bake so min- utes in a slow oven. iloolflhsru oft hest.and leave in oven until com- sroall cakes. pletaly" an. ma»: ma: a stolen ' OR’ 1 :9‘ cups 5-11 Purim" flour 3 "Winona vanilla ll teaspoon salt Oresm shortening and mgfgglly- Add ex: yolk and s“; - X in flour. vanilla and sslt. c oki h most simple as well as a most so 11.12.11: tririgodgninflz: t"? With "wdemfl oven. esoor. Then dent again. Bak 1 i companled by thinly sliced buttered jelly or e 5 m “um ]°“'°" m" l bread and a cookie. is all that is still hogmlvtilaltefih; ‘riielspreulon while g4 "l? granulated sugar '5 “ill! clwmied nuts 2-3 cup butter l 1% cups brown mg" 2 eggs 3 "l" WW flour 0R a 2-9 tTnBles about w- thlcl- 5PM‘ °‘°" WP! all Purpose flour. ‘ ‘A teaspoon salt ‘dltlllioon soda. °°°k ‘Mll- lllssr and water moderately hot oven flwl- l“ until thick-about l0 mimic”, M“ “out 15 minutes, nuts and cool. Cream butter. Add lull!‘ and cream well together. medium cookies. keys, Ducks and Geese to your is being purchased ea a rsll rode basis. a...» m1 THEY All lulu uonms Give Philip Morris this Christmas: Remember, Philip Morris carries its own glad welcome every- where. Boih fomiii and friends will appreciate the disiilidivl flavour of this very distinctive cigarette. operating in Interested groups TETOWN is pre-' ganizations preparing otlnstitutes wish to 0 SUIGT l» Place on a greased ter in a zen cookies. DAT! 1mm. U" ' Add beaten ens and be" "m" sifted d ingredients. Chiiiuihti’; qughly. ivide mixture 120m rts. Roll sePflFBmY m“ “ with one 1.1mm‘: nazzrggilf “' jelly roll. 111° w° ' (m; mtg 1,4 inch slices. Bali! i" ' Makes approximately t 4°” ,_____-- e-Qaeceettt‘, lnn:ss:o PouLTnv ; For best results ship your Dressed Chicken, Fowl, TI"- SWIFT POULTRY AND EGG PLANT AT ~ ' CHARLOTTETOWN . ' We are paying the following prices delivered our plant; GRADE MFA Ci-IICKENS-ell m. no _; GRADE MFI CitlCKENS-all m. v -. - GRAD! s cuteness-om s A». 25c‘ csAos s. ZttICKINS-under s u... 20c csAo: A FOWL-ovsr 51in. 11¢ csAo: A FOWL-under s 1°= GRADE lFOWL-ovarj lbs. . - csAos- s FOWL-under s u». 1k csAos A vouue TUtKlYS-il in. down .. 40¢ csAos A vouuo TUlKEYS-over is u». . GRADE s v0 us roams-is u». down an; osAos s v0 NG TURKiYS-over is u». 21¢ ‘W; ‘are still taking In live poultry at our plant and W" E SWIFT‘! Si! C! SATISFIES A ,swirr osilsnun to. l. J. CLARK‘! M.“