l ALICE BROOKSL DESIGNS I -:ContiAri-iiedTfrVoTriA Page ii - .......h..-A-:- Parents Disiraughl he feels a need of a sweetheart- mother type of wife - as self- lessly solicitous, naturally, as his mom has been. Perhaps he might have remained a bachelor indef- initely. if his firm hadn't sent him so far from parents - and if fate hadn't introduced him to Martha just then, Good Family Keeps Secrets Now for advice: 1. When Mar- tha marries John; with his full knowledge of her mistake, this new development cancels out the past irregularity, and they owe no backward-looking explanation to anybody. Nor do you, his par- ents. It would be very wrong of his dad to betray John's confid- ences labout Martha) to whom- ever tries to pry. The wise per- son never discusses family secrets -with outsiders. and coolly stares down presumptuous questioners. 2. Good parents will accept a son's wife as devotedly. as trust- fully. as if she were their dingh- ter - disposed to -believe the best of her, regardless of cloudy ru- rnor. John's dad would be wrong again if he icily put Martha on probation to start. 3. Don't ask the clergy to spy on Martha -- a move you'd re- gret after they marry (and I feel you can't stop theml. 4.. To head off gossip, why not b. saw the traditional policy of rC,)LIlill)lE maternity homes. for throwing social protection around the so-called fatherless child? Namely. the policy of letting the heedless public assume that the aborted parental I lationship was legitimate. Only persons directly concerned are entitled to all the facts. M. II. Mary I-laworth ' ” h her column, not by mail or per- sonal interview. Write her h ears of The Guardian, Charlotte- town. ITAND OUT Dormer windows stand vertically from a sloping roof surface. while skylights are flush with the nir- face. 5w A V MIXER-COVER DOLL Let this 333' 5011 ll your elec- tric mixer spotlessl .1 tait her on top of it-her long. full skirt is its protective cover! Use colorful remnants. Wonderful Bazaar Gift. Pattern 7199: Pattern pieces, transfers, directions for making mixer-cover doll. Easy! Such funl Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this pattern (stamps cannot be accepted) to Alice Brooks designs clo The Guard. Ian. 60 Front Street West, Tor- onto, Ontario. Please print plainly NAME. ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. WONDERFUL la the word A for our NEW Alice Brooks Needlecraft Catalog for 1955 Exciting. enchanting, - our new dc are all that - and even mor l Send 25 cents for your WP! of this terrific atalog - NOW! You'll want to o der every wonderful design in it! BRACKLEY SCHOOL Report for month of March of Brackley School: GRADE X 1, John Blntcli 2. Wallace Jackson GRADE IX 1. Darrell Miller GRADE VIII 1. Virginia MacKay 2. Ralph Miller GRADE VII 1. Marie Bryenton 2. Bernice Newson 3. Eugene Grey GRADE VI 1. Luella Clark 2. Hazel Walker .1. Allison Miller GRADE V l. Faye Sellick 2. Carol MacMillaa 3. Jeannie Jenkins GRADE iv 1. Carol Miller 2. Helen Pierce 3. Donald Roper GRADE Illl l.' Elaine Bryenlon 2. Janet Cudmore 3. Ernest Prowse GRADE I . Lawrence Cudmord 2. Heather lilacliiillaii 3. Wendell Bryenton Teacher - Shirley Mcfiinn MILLCOVE SCHOOL March report of Millcove School: GRADE VIII - 1, -Nelson Court 2. Philip Arbing 3. Aubrey Arbing GRADE Vi 1. Stella Hughes 2. Edward McQuaid 3. Leonard Arbing GRADE V 1. Marie Mclntyre and Eleanor Sheehan. equal GRADE IV . 1. Francis McQuaid 2. Noreen Hughes 3. Helen Connick GRADE Ill 1. Paula Connick 2, Bernard Mclntyre 3. Maureen Shreenas CRADE 'l l. Bertha McIntyre Z. iiiary Arbing 3. Bernadette Arbing GRADE I 1. Mary lVlcQuaid and Laura Hughes. equal 2. Pearle Martin 3. Elmer McDougall Teacher - Mrs. Ernest "Peters TEACHER! STRIKE PARIS (Reuters) - A strike called for 200.000 members of the French National Federation of Lay ” hoolteachers affected about half the school children in the Paris area Wednesday. The union organ- ized the 24-hour strike in protest against a bill to allow private groups to run agricultural-training centres in rural areas. A union spokesman said the teachers fear private farm schools may permit an increase of religious influence in French education. - Z00 CLOSED MONTREAL (C?)-The city's zoo in Lafontalne park closed Sat- urday and the last of the animals. three bears. were loaded on a truck for the 60- mile run to Grsnby, Que.. their new home. City officials recently decided to close the we on the grounds that its facilities were "sfactory. Granby has agreed to return the animals if a new we is built here. i ANNE ADAMS PATTERNS A.-1 fiche 1i” IUMMEB STAB ! Perfect topping for your pret- tiest summer fashions! You'll sew this nnart little jacket quickly. easily-love it all season! Tuxedo front and turned-up sleeves are so flattering; the back is a graceful flare. Choose a soft pastel wool- atart sewing it nowl Pattern 4503: Miuee' Sizes 10. 12. I4. 16. 1!, ii. size It takes Ills yards 54-inch fabric. g This pattern easy to use. lim- ple to sew. is tested for fit. Has complete ill ' d instructions. - Send THIRTY-FIVI: CENTS (lie) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print - SIZE. NAME. ADDRESS. NUMBER. Ind order to ANNE ADAMS cla The Guardian. so horn ltreat West. Toronto. IAEISPINTBIM The overweigiits who set out to lose 2) excess pounds by Eng. er. and lost them, must feel lubu. ant this week-end. But those who dieted carefully and failed to lose on schedule are sorely in need of encouragement. The arch grenilin for struggling dieters is water retention, As fat is burned. water may be retained in the tissues. Since water weighs heavier than the fat it replaces. even a small amount can postpone the registration of the loss. In some instances, the amount ef wat- er stored may show up as . 2 to 3 pound gain! Many authorities claim that it is often futile for overweights to start a diet until they are fully acquainted with the up-and- down water swings. The water may be stored at the beginning of a reducing period. or not until later after the initial soft fat has been lost. It may occur once or many times during the reducing period, But hold on . . . this con- dition is temporary. and within two to three weeks the water will be released. When this hap- pens the pointer will plunge. regist- ering the loss of many pounds. To illustrate: One overweight who was dieting with her husband was completely frustrated at the end of three weeks, for she had lost nary a pound while he had reduced 9 pounds. Discouraged, she decided to quit. That morn- ing. from force of habit. she stepped on the scales. Instead of the same bad news. to her amaze- ment. the pointer plunged 11 pounds! Actually that is the a- mount she had been losing over the three weeks, but the registra- tion had been postponed. due to stored water. Here is encouragement passed along from a letter received from this week: "I watched your col- .. gurfrito Ilcvkafeyl umn for suggestions and inspira- tion which I needed badly in the 2 to 8 weeks water retention per- iods I passed through several tiniea while losing 57 pounds." To counteract the tendency to store water. boost the protein. To take full advantage of the stepped up metabolism. have a protein food at each meal, start- ing with breakfast. Alao, cut down on salt and salty foods until the pounds start moving. With a low- ered salt intake, the salt content of the tissues will be somewhat decreased, and this will result in elimination of water. On the calorie score . . to make sure you are using a third less than you burn, for the next week keep an accurate record of everything you eat. If you stay with a 1000 to 1200 calorie pro- tective diet, you are burning stor- ed fat. regardless of what the scales show. Hold on . . . you will losel NEW YORK. (CPD W A trim, blonde Toronto playwright. who had the courage to sit through her New York opening in a small Greenwich Village theatre Tues- day night, woke up today with a hi I. Patricia Joudry's "Teach Me How To Cry," produced at the off-Broadway Theatre De Lye, got the best reviews of the season for such a show-and some of the best compared with Broadway's offerings this season. Her bittersweet tale of love- and the unloved-in a high school in a small town scored high with the first-night audience-and the three lcading New York critics agreed. Miss Joudry. 33 and no stranger to writing after several years of successful work in radio, was making her first bid on the legiti- mate stage-and it won't be her last PLANS OTHE RS "You bet I'll do another-even if they murder me." she told The Canadian Press after Tuesday's opening and before the first-string crltics' reception. There was some speculation to- day that she might become in- volved in moving "Teach Me How To Cry" farther uptown before she has a chance to do another. Produced with stark but effec- tive sets. particularly that of the burned-out, haunted. abandoned bandstand that hangs as a sym- bollc menace over the young lovers. Miss Joudry'a play was given a superb portrayal by the New York cast - notably Deirdre Owens and Richard Morse as the lovers and Nan McFarland and John C. Becher as the boys' par- ents. The acting couldn't have been better and the entire produc- non made what reviewer Mark Barron of The Associated Press called "an exciting event in the theatre." Brooks Atkinson of the New York Times calls it "a superior work in all categories." "TOUCIIING" PLAY Walter F. Kerr of The Herald Tribune says Miss Joudry "had done honorably by most of her characters." He calls the play "a new eolection of remembered and ” touching fragments." The downtown audience ap- plauded each of the 10 scenes in the two-hour play and at the end Miss Joudry was called to the stage where she hugged the lead- ing performers to a standing ova- tion. Earlier. she said she I.-ti STABILIZED would I l).......w nun, PEANUT BUTTER Toronto Playwrighl Scores Hit in. New York Opening break the tradition of many play- wrights who can't sit through their opening nights. And she sat right down in the middle of the audi- ence to overhear their comments. They were all good, Miss Joudry is the wife of the- atrical photographer John Steele of Toronto and mother of two daughters. KELLY'I CROSS SCHOOL Kellyls Cross School report for March: GRADE IX 1. Earl Moiyneaux GRADE VIII 1. Desmond Curley 2. Margaret Roberts GRADE VII 1. Jerome Monaghan GRADE VI 1. Theresa Monaghal 2. Kenneth Curley GRADE V 1. James Nantes. Patricia Kelly (equal) GRADE IV 1, Leonard Smith 2. Janet Waddcll GRADE III 1. Desmond Nantes 2. Bertha McQuaid GRADE II 1- Louis Bradley 2. Donnie Waddell 3. Paula Nantes GRADE I (at 1. Mary Bradley GRADE I (b) 1. Hilda McQuaid Perfect attendance for the month: Earl Molyneaux. Patricia Kelly. Janet Waddell. Desmond York ay. v ELEANOR iross it has become the thing to stay liumceat least a few evenings a l week. How does one know this? Why. by looking around at the new at- home fashions. and learning that they are selling as well as the go-out clothes. When so many de- lsigners and manufacturers invest so much money in leisure fashions, . is after a most enjoyable holiday y"".may be 5"” that someone with Mr. Lewia' aiater Mr. and buymg and wearing them" Mrs. Donald Longworth and fam- Drggging 1,; Home ily. Costa Rica. , , Whether it's radio, television or York station is . busy place a record player concert. or cards right now; peoplg .1-2 busy gel. . or conversation, women are dress- ting their pmago” "my, ,ing up to go nowhere at all. And ;wlial we like about these delight- ful at-home clothes is that most of them are eminently practical. as well as pretty. Most of them take to suds with M”. Gordon Crockett Ym.k'lpei'fect safety. Whether its tore- lador pants and velvet boleros. or 3;: vE:ne:,he.t 13:: ITT;;:diati'l l sweeping skirts and blouses. ' " P lwomen want leisure finery that to 3" ML Ramsay Auld' who is isn't going to cost a fortune to a patient there. keep fresh and pretty. So nylon .velvet it is, and it's washable. 3 May Be Washed Mrs. Peter Proudlspent Thur day in Charlottetown. ' Mr. Eric Sproule. son of Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Sproule. left on Thursday for Quebec, where he will Join up with the R.C.A.F. His many friends wish him suc- cess. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Lewis have returned to their home in York, Mr. Irving MacDonald is busy hauling turnips, which are at a good price. Mr. Will Watts, York. Friday in the City. spent Rayops and silks and synthetic Mrs. Will Cooper. Southpnrt. l fabrics all take to soap and water has returned to her home after: spending a holiday in York, the guest of her son, Mr. and Mrs Wesley Cooper. ACROSS 3. Seaweed The many friends of Mrs. lie :33?!" "Rm-l"ll't hert Lewis are sorry to hear oil ' W” :0”? god her illness. . nplnm 0, 'b;””d”"l Mr. Arthur Brown, York. spent, upmie for 7. Sunday in the city. 3 God in mm at ' B k t' J h ' Mrs. Leonard Newson was hos-. .23,” 0 8g 322;? tea: to the C.G.I.T. on Friday. 1r3,wraUf attended by evening with a good attendanccf M.Girl's name disorderly 15.Craze fr h His manyifriends of York are 16.41 combllke 9, 3:51;:-as sorry to hear of the serious ill- part ('1.ool.) weed ness of Mr. Ramsay Auld, Cove- 17. Gold (I-ier.) lo. Memberola head. in the P.E.I. Hospital. ; X8. Short Mongogogd Stocking tribe Mr, and Mrs. Eddison Watts,l W-A 8h0Wy ml-iawaiiag Charlottetown, were guests of Mrs. ' fl0Wel' food Frank Watts on Wednesday even- gall" j mg. . u tan decree Mrs. Willard Murray. York. , 3-Gll-Tmlled spent Tuesday in Charlottetown. g:;9:lPa) Mrs. Eddison Hardy and son zkpleces "T" Graham spent Friday in Char- 3'A . lonemwn. conjunction 33.Pald back At the card game hold in York 3G':;ar:ub"'5 hall April 4th the highest scores. :8 River "I were those of Mrs, Harry Wei-' tn”), ton and Mr. Allen Brown. 39.1;-lune, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Watts, Traw 41' ff,”,”2f.',”” cadie were recent visitors to an;-,odde,,, of York, the guests of Mrs. Watts' peace mother, Mrs. Hebert Lewis. who gpaegin is convalescing at her home. 44,cnm-nn shelters Miss Helen Lewis. City. spent Sunday at her home at York. DOWN B0 1. Shinto temple 2. A fellow member of a ALBANY VILLAGE SCHOOL "Manny -Report for March of Albany Village School: ' Senior Department GRADE X - 1. Ida Delaney; 2. Phyl arren. GRAD V l - l. Doniiie Mac- Cornl 2. Elizabeth Trainer; 1!. John Noonan. GRADE VII - 1. Joan Hamilton; 2. Allison Green; 3. Freya Walsh. GRADE VI - 1. Eleanor Nnonan: 2. Charles Murray; 8. Marleen Muttart. Principal - Helena Green. zai-isr-"rt WAI-ISTFTI Yestei-day's Cryptoquote: Primary Department GRADE V - 1. Garth Murray. i-asrei i-our-s - lite and Pink as and I et Only sass Narusatizses lapel coion.. Sites and Widths. Al Shoes Wear in FASHION SHOW- soon, mscousrr , GRADE IV (sin) A 1. Marilyn ; lg'ntIellflI3blhsalgr:'1:i3delLnne Cur ?'j'i11ill;18I;!:as:.-msandrl Green: 3- i.:r(r?v2:Ts 2'-Iftacinsz-l Te-cl-er - Mar! Robert! GRADE IV (J.r.) - 1. Harvey 3; 1;-o,',',';,l2',,g 1'1?-:T,'.,",I,b"" CRASH SETTLEMENT 0'" oazlbvlsonili - 1. Margaret Ann ,o,i(g,";.a,l,. zj VANCOUVER (Cp) ...A;3o,ooo Warren and Vivian Bassett dlgofder .19.-anon settlement was approved by Chief (equal): 2- Veldn Noonan; 3. n.Wocrly lshun Justice Wendell B. Farris here Alan MRCCOFHIIC. perennials 8.A contour Wednesday on behalf of- the family GRADE 11 - 1. Nora Noonan; 2. i3. By oneself renum of George Herbert Glllett, 52, Jean Bassett: 8. Cheryl Butter- u.Ea.st by (0rnilh.) killed April 8. 1954, in a mid-air field. mum gem-n Mme collision between an RCAF trainer GRADE 1 - 1. Joanne Greeh and Iabbr.) il.Showy and a Trans-Canada Air Lines Beverley Sherry; 2. Ivan Noon- !5. Wrcstlin. flowered plane over Moose Jaw. Suit. The .n; 3, wnunm Dglaney, ,1 1.-,e,.,ch Nam (wag mmley l3 l0 '3 Pl” by the 91'9"" Asslstan - Frances Cairns. 'seaport U. S.) . and TCA' ' t9.Lsrge tree I6. Upward (Phil. 1;.) curving so. Large wild of a ship's ' e l l l kl Suggestions For The Easter Bunny ...."..'.".7...... '”" ”' Nply Numbered pencil coloring sets; Boxed doll cut- l '3-Riv" '1; outs; Horse shoe pitching sets; Miniature Snnp- Q .5 Rurrimy, etc; Children's books, 20c and up; Genuine l njcmw .601 india rubber balls. These and many other items ; ss. Rant I 82. Hawk. At the parrot i 36. Responded . 3'I.l"ortify - Island look liooin I 1 mm M Open this afternoon, April 6 and Thursday evening i .0 gglzmlr AV"! 7' 411 Rugged mountain er-sat - C.Tlie suslik or ground squirrel LePAliE SHOE G0. LTD. ............ - pools ' I.Plurnl l pronoun C. Toward he mouth) (Zool. bowie Lvaricoee x mm A DAILY CROSSWORD l ' - . . Some Washable Fashions Wail Another Week - You'll Lose glitz”; X'"c..”;'.'i.':f.'...Y:i".:”:.:l lrlilaleaalain ?To .Wear While at Home if one uses ,commonsense as a laundering ingredient. House dresses go to market or luncheon with aplomb, sure that they look fresh and smart and up-to-dale, A woman can look pretty as can be in the new long- torso house dresses that make use of every new fashion detail: You can find all the style and silhou- ette interest in an inexpensive. washable house dress that you find in far more expensive clothes. Consider New Offerings So, if your house dress ward- robe is petering out. have a look at the newest offerings. You'll re- joice in the new workaday cof- tons, some with skirts that flare widely from a low hipiine, for all the world like a fashion magazine picture of a costly afternoon or evening dress. There are culled hiplines, low-cuffed necklines -- and shirtwaist dresses with elas- tic inserts at waist or aides to make for easy fit and ease in motion. All sorts of new fabrics are in- cluded. such as dotted broadcloth, novelty checks. printed linenlike cottons and pongee type cotton fabrics with water-color type prints. sashes (Ja.p.) Most furtsve Gun (3 E :4 :3. Eliiil-ilili gumy Ieaterdnfe Answq 22 23 :4. Close to 27. Exclamao tion &.Guided ILA ' 33.Ma.le -mop 34. Prepare for 10. Property publication 0!.) DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work B A X Y D L I A A X R h L 0 N G F I L In 0 W One letter simply stands for another. It thk example A is neat for the three L's. X for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. spoo- tropliies. the length and formation of the words are A) hint; Each day the code letters are different. A Cryptograen Quotation HWW IVHI IAFIVH 63 W P I V I W O W F Y A I RWCZAS-MATTOBCT. STUDIOUS Of EASE AND POND OF HUMBLE THINGS--PHILIPS. DAILY CROSSWOR I-1HEIIlii l'I.'.'lLli-i clan . 34. World- . ly BEER is laillll-:l 28. Lar 4' cmgn Ieuei-day's Aalwae 2'1. Turned I3.To let in inside I4. Confuse out I6. Famous I6. shelve nil-ion 30. Moist. ('l'ex.) 82. Myra 00. To see -, lobe.) plants! on. Epoch . DAILY ORYPIOQUUIE-lfelnte low to well It AXYDLBAAXI is r.oNoIrar.r.ow en. aanpiymnaaforanotnor. nimaaiasinoshaeee for the three us. It for the two 0's. etc. ling-is lomi-I. apoc- uopines. the length and formation of he west are all lute. loch day the code letters he Meant. Aeneas:-I-Ootuloa seer. arreasea. are ev use as err xan sea err rernvev. ass" nos rerun vv ceases ICC-OIIALO Yesterdari eryptoquetei WEARING ALL THAT Wllollf UM-NI! Hi 1 6 The Guardian Page 0 Saturday, April I. 1956 CLAIM TRUCE VIOLATED AMMAN. J or dan (Reuters)A Arab ilegation sources here said Saturday to Israeli soldiers crossed the armistice line into Jordan territory and fired mortar! and automatic rifles at Aneen vil- lage. in the Jcnin area. A United Nations observers team left for the site after Jordan lodged a com- plaint with the mixed armistice commission. ll How the family growai plain or decorative Sylvoply. home remodelling material. 00 ' A more professional looking. Alex-it-m om You'll dunk w.i."v ill 'iq?:.' liliil Mi 3? KINE iIlllE COFFEE with sYLvD0AllGIgFLlliYLYW00D Converting your unit to sleeping quarters for the younqstsri can help to solve your space problems; it's a worthwhile proisct that can add greatly to the value of your home when you use real wood panels of Because the big sheets of Sylvaply cover 32 square feet of wall, ceiling, or floor, at I time, you can do a quicker iob with fewer joins. l-i-if-l Cupboarda, shelving and other kitchen improvement probate cost less to build with self-framing 56. inch Sylvaply. Iylvapw saw: on clean as other woods with power now or hand law; mails close to the edge without splitting. No trielry Ielnenl either; simple glued and nailed butt-Iointa are possible with Sylvapiy-iim another reason why Syivapiy is the most popular 0 When you decide to partition your basement for extra living space, consider the tremendous advantage of making addi- tional storage ipace at the some time. Easy to work Sylvaply requires only simple carpentry for cupboards or storage walls as shown above. With Sylvaply, you get all the advantages of real wood-and moral liq ssll-framing panels of V; Inch or K inch Sylvaply spend yaw work; malre any lab you do In addition to regular I feel by U lee! panels, you can now buy handy sizes for those small job: and repairs . . . malres "doing-it yourself” easier than ever. "Take Home" panels are available at your lumber dealers in size: from l2 by 36 inches up. Curry them home or slip them in your ear irunli. BIIIZZEII DOUGLAS FIR PLYWOOD Serving lumber Dealers Coast in Court NACNILLAN I ILOEDEL LIMITED 38 Lr. Water St. MacDONALD - ROWE WOODWORKING co. LTD. Dial 8575 - 8576 Belmont St. CHANDLER IROS. cusmiir woooworurnas DHC557 TIWW 1 iilkvtu TM AVAILABLE AT lHUiiMANr win-.-irrins i.Vl'-:7 it.”l)lp '