_ al ' JUDY CRAWLEY, co-owner of the largest film company in Canada, edits film in a $500,- 000 studio in Ottawa. She and her husband Budge made Films Made In their first movie on Ile d’Or- leans on their honeymoon .in 1939. Today their film com- pany grosses $1,250,000 an- nually., (CP Photo) 22 Languages * the family archives. Have Received 150 Awards By MARILYN ARGUE ple make -movies of their holi- hair in a casual bob. day trips. They are usually POPCORN DID TRICK shown toa few: bored friends; In the early days she was and relatives, then retired to réctor, cameraman and la lyear-old Jennifer, in an° accel- |tient see him in his office the fol- |let published recently by a pro- > mor. Her clothes are classie | OTTAWA (CP)—Lots of peo-iand she wears her silver-grey sian ! HAPPENINGS Audrey Jenkins, Women's Editor, Phone 4-8506 | ELLEN’S DIARY Mrs. Myrtle Wood, Boston, Thursday evening with a maee has ee a yr. cond of 18 tables: in play visiting relatives n estern : . Prince for a brief time. While-g@® [f highest — scor here she visited with. her aunt, @Warded to Mrs. Sterling Thomp- | phere was no whistle yet of a | Mrs. Frafik Yeo, also Mr. and son and Earle Thompson. T | Mrs. Wentworth Yeo, Dock Road. lucky chair prize was won by | March washday! scores cently included Mr, and Mrs. were served by members of the the green-gowned one had about \Bradford Bernard,and Keith and Institute assisted by Mrs. Velda reached our door. And so love- |Mrs. Gard. and Mrs. Ensor-Weitse""* ily, the day was, with an over- | arched sky, sunny and bl W. A. MacPhee has returned to Horace Crozier returned to come down to touch thé white Heatherdale after spending the Mount Allison University re- hills. . . past three months in Florida. cently to resume his ‘studies aft- . Peter was but about. his voice | : er spendihg a couple of days with |as bright as the morning, when | Mrs, Pius. Fit7Patrick . mised. AN, , — The Calendar Today Says e!. That Spring Has Sprung ‘read with much anticipation, in The starling to be heard - and this a that he and Peter have enjoyed ed during roll call,.which was an- ; Nor broken | nibblings from it in their Comics | swered by naming a | Other guests at the Yeo home re- Urban Laughlin. Refreshments | tri}! of a robin, though Spring on TV, and in their books of |Canadian and making a_ brief | children’s stories. ‘‘I'll read it and tell it to you and ‘that will freshenyit in your mind” he pro- So he will recall this March ® day, because of the book, as do | Islander, namely Dr. F.J. Steven- we remember a childhood day | . when we read, “The Milf |Hazel Grove, and a and his parents, Mr. and~Mrs. Bruce he talked with the white kitten, Othe Floss.’ A winter storm |school he learned his three R's. | charge of the. “‘Fun—and Non- Hunter R.-WI Discusses Famous Canadian Men Mrs. Ernest Bolger was hos-| After some discussion ft was tess for the March meeting of | decided that the Hunter River Hunter River-Women's Institute. | Wt tyke ie — oe Gree, i i riod was enjoy- vale, nnies : An interesting pe eee ah te tha teases | March 23rd for a social evening at which time a pane) will be comment on the life of same. The | presented by members from the response. was most enlightening. | Greenvale and Hunter River In- famous “The ‘name which perhaps | Stitutes who had attended the: brought forth the most discus- | Seminar. ’ ; sion was that of a Prince Edward | Routine business was disposed of“ineluding reports of standing !committees, and the reading of son, who was born on a farm at Committee in thére in that | correspondence. children, Michael and Marie of Crozier, Baltic. Souris are visiting, at Commer- |he met on a path, or with scam- was blowing that day, white |He attended Prince of Wales Col- ipie..the great shaggy dog, his drifts resting along the fields lsense”’ period put on a ‘‘Spelling = | MARY HAWORTH- cial Cross, guests of her sister Mr. and Mrs. Horace Paynt-.} good ‘friend. Now the and brother-in-law, Mr’and Mrs er, .Clinton, spent an enjoyable | doors were open, the tractor and Gordon Ward and family. holiday in Boston. Mass. and | wagon drawn up. beside. were recent guests of Mr. and} The Sherbrooke WI sponsored Mrs. Hartwell Bernard of Belle | a card party in the school on Rica, Mass. On Saturday there had been a hurried ‘call forthe gun, which after an old fashion in pioneer homes, hangs on the kitéhen wall. In the course of this chor- ing, an excursioning, white-stri- ped animal caught in a trap in.a B |an experienced marksman, | Mack however did very well, Pe- a jter now treasuring the spent cartridge which came to him. | Their mother, a small lady, jlooked for snowdrops’ green- | jings in the gun of the flower- \6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., March 21, 1966. porder this morning. It is still . \snow-spréad. ‘‘We should see ‘them by Easter, if the mildish | weather keeps'’ we said. ‘I hope it will’. Peter smiles wistfully, “because I do like the Easter Bunny to come.” This afternoon, Alex. brought home “Ivanhee“-fram school to & Woman Doctor Had Will To Be Kind Arid Helpful | ay planning, was directly con- cerned to improve wages and |far field must be dispatched. Not 5 Vineatias delightful things: stable We, however forgot them, and |of Doctor of Philosophy ‘in the | the gusts in the chimney, as we |United States, in which country The! went with Maggie Tulliver and |he made his home. He became men were there atthe cleaning. | Tom to another land and more (chief of the USDA National Pota- summery scenes. | Now Spring, by this, is here, in | | | {a date on the calendar. | days are pretty well over. Read- ings on the glass come warmer. Before long, we shall have those | when the haze | Sebago, Katahdin and Kennebec. ue, in which we shall | on the farm, will be spgpad above the fields- a wisp of av- ple-bloom, lilacs and roses, springtime which brings folks | to the cropping is almost at hand. Today with its sunshine, its baring yards and ‘light wind, | {brought us suggestions of the | house-cleaning season. We | might#we said to ourself, per- haps clean a cupboard below, or | a closet upstairs, ‘‘just to have, it done’, the better to enioyv the | busier months ahead. old armchair was vacant. The | | clock ticked rather lazily. A’ Wintry | Tt | will declare to us too, that the | jused for . information in fo. | But the the Seminar which was held in| e and later received a degree |Bee"’. . r After . adjournment, _refresh- |ments were served by hostess jand committee. ae to Breeding. Program, and through his*research and experi-— ment attained several new varie- ties of potatoes. have’ been pro- duced, which are well known in this province and elsewhere. A- mong the varieties that his re- nowned geneticist produced are —PLEADS GUILTY NEW YORK (AP) — Robert Friede, 25:year-old grandson of ‘the late Philadelphia publisher M. L. Annenberg, pleaded ty Friday to second-degree man- |slaughter in the narcotics death lof Celeste Crenshaw, 19. Miss Crenshaw's body was — found Feb. 7 in the trunk of a car Friede was. driving. She had been dead ‘about two weeks. Death was attributed to ‘acute and chronic intravenous nar- cotism."’ Friede will be’ sen- tenced April" 15. %. fee ts your pain RHEUMATIC ee ARTHRITIC? Do you long for rclief from the of rheumatic and arthritic pain Thousands get speedy relief from their nnees by using T-R-C's. Mrs. Donald Powell, as con- vener of Cultural activities and in keeping with the idea of Edu- cation Week, presented a_splen- did program on ‘Education’. Following her talk she distribut- | ed several school books of yester- years:among which was a geo- graphy used over 50 years ago| and a school register of 1912. The Hunter River History was | ing education in this area, in for- mer years. The president spoke briefly on | DEAR MARY HAWORTH: {generally need more -education T would like to rebut the gist of on how and where to get emer- a discourse in .our column, |gency medical ‘aid. which seemed to suggest that a| Because of the changing trend spirit of selfish materialism: is |in medical practice in this na- mutating the doctor-patient re- tion, many doctors find.they are |lationship: ' jable to give. better serviee by You cite an instance in which |restricting their practice to of- a top-bracket doctor (since de- fice and hospital visits. Hence, ceased) declined to make a) jhouse call in response to an |emergency summons after mid- Two others are still in school— nighton a Saturday night. In- Roderick, 19, in Paris, and 14 stead he proposed that the pa-| continuing relationship with an individual doctor, check that vital detail. In fact, to quote from a pamph- before a client establishes a sertation, and-the pamphlet you | backwoods of Georgia, that is. (4 he should |), to lower its standards, working conditions in hospitals, quiet sincing fire was on the |program carried out there and land was elected to office in me- ‘dieal societies by her admiring ing. We would read for a while. jideas as *o how this = program is i i 1 i - include and le colleagues. All this in ad- We picked up a book which beg- could be presented to inclu dition to r substantial ‘“‘regu- ged for it: .‘‘Lamb .in His Bo- benefit the -greatest number of jlar’’ medical practice and _a'som’” by Caroline Miller, which | members. - hearty family. life with husband jis as we learned “A poignant and sons. ( saga of a courageous young -wo- = It seenis to me that your dis- man of the Old South” in the ¢ quote, aim to “educate” the pub- ‘‘One cannot rest till one knows if con what -happens to these people” | 4 cerning the quality of person- | one critic says of it. And another |¢ to-person interest to expect from ‘There is-a fine sense of beauty | the medical profession.+ now here."’ So here we go again to_| ‘hearth. Conditions were inveigi- |then asked the members for | > nn v LADIES! | Adella’s Millinery ~- Now has in stock a complete | erated: class. at an Ottawa high | school. f lowing Monday. | regional medical associ- shaping up ‘read on into the quite delight- ine of spring But by then, you say, the pa- |. Alexander, ‘18, is still. perform- jtient already had undergone ing — playing guitar” with a jemergency surgery for acute ap- tion: “The client (in search of a family doctor) should find out about the doctor's appointments Mary ‘Haworth counsels /ful story, while in the quiet of Hats. through her-column, not by night, James enjoys a favorite mail or personal interview. |programi on TV. ~ Visit us today, opposite the post rock‘n‘roll group. “It's the first. pendicitis, as the rejecting doc- |about emergencies, house calls. time I've seen Sandy «work so | \hard at anything," /mother. HAD TO BE. VERSATILE The Crawleys_ recently adopted Maria, 10 months, who has yet to make her screen di-. ee : } b debut. staff for some of her movies— | Then there's Judy and Budge 22 of them on child care, She Younger, I used to be at work Crawley. . had no- trouble finding actors. In 1939, on their honeymoon, All of her five children showed they ‘made a little movie about acting talent. the Ile d'Orleans in the St. Law-| ‘“‘We had our problems, rence River. Today they own though. Once we did a film on Canada’s largest film company, toilet training, to show how grossing $1,250,000 annually. strict schedules only made the They operate from a $250,000 baby unhappy. -sgound.._.stage..in..the nearby ‘‘One of our boys; who was Gatineau Hills, and a $500,000 ‘a. year old then, was supposed studio building in Ottawa. Their to be sitting op the toidy seat films in 22 languages have won looking angry~ and unco-opera- 150 international awards. jtive. He sat there for two hours Mrs. Crawley, 50, is the com- smiling and chuckling until we pany’s script supervisor. She jnearly went mad: — used to write and edit films in| ‘‘Finally his older brother the attic of her father-in-law’s came in eating some popcorn house, “hut now we've got big which the little hoy really and organized, so I have to loved. He got quite upset, and have some sort of a title.” jwe had our picture.*’ She’s. friendly. and matter-of- | Early stardom -didn't go to fact with an active sense of hu- easels ena ceegpecerms te a ——. \ I AS the children’s heads, though. Michal, the oldest girl, joined lthe firm after graduating from university at 19. Patrick, 22, iworks in the. sound department. | 7318 A846 |/ Ne 24-22% | Ys | by lice Brveles ee by fone Helos | JIFFY SET | Quick crochet! Make baby's ELEGANT COSTUME Flatter your figure with this tool princess dress. With _ its -hand_neckline jacket, it can tra- | vel from spring through mer, from desk to date. Printed Pattern 4846: alf Sizes 12%, 14%, 16 18'2, 20', 22'5. Size 1612 dress 2% yds. 39- in.: jacket 1% yvds sum- new jiffy ches deoesg 00D with tern 7318 crochet cap. bootees, jacket. THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins) for each pattern (no stamps). please) to Alice Brooks, care ot -hootees, cap, jacket in a Open and closed shell stid- In 3-ply hahy yarn. i soft... pretty — choose white directions FIFTY CENTS 50 cents) ' Guardian - Patriot Needlecraft (no stamps please: for each Pept., 60 Front St. W.%Toronto pattern. Ontario residents” add 9}, Ont. Ontario residents add one % sales tax, Print plainly SIZE, cent sales tax. Print plainly pat {films for them.” e 12 hours a day, But when they | get to be teen-agers, I feel you -should be at home. Anyway, the unions hav-e- made working- easier. Now you have to stop sometimes.”’ a Mrs. Crawley feels the early lean days, when they had/| moved from the attic to a: church hall, made their com-_ pany the most versatile any- where. jotes | “We've made every kind of film — educational, industrial, ipublic relations, animated cartoons, and full-length features. We had -to--do-—anything...that—-was.—of- fered.” For the last vear she’s been working on movies to be shown jat the fedetal government pa- ivilion at Expo 67. In five 4'%4- minute ‘‘spéctaculars’’ Canada’s ‘history will’ be shown to fair visitors, “The audience sits on a huge \‘donut’ end of each film, the ‘donut’ re- | ivolves until the audience is. in the next theatre.” : LANGUAGE 1S HANDICAP The films will have no narra- | tion and as little speaking as possihle. | “We're not trying to teach— we're giving impressions in| sound and movement. Each. will have_a_ different director | and use a different technique— an animated cartoon covers the Confederation: -period, and_ the | post-Confederation era is ex- plained through the cinematic | use of stills.” Canada’s film industry is growing—''we get at least a let- | ter a week from someone who | wants to work for us.’’ But Judy | Crawley doesn't think this coun- try will-ever—be—a- major film } centre. | “It's unfortunate that the two major producers, the U.S. and” Britain, speak the same langu- age as we do. The Danes and | the Swedes have a ‘ready-made market because of their langu- age. Nobody else can make | Although audiences all over | the world are watching Crawley | films—the star of a documen- | tary on teen-agers is quite a | celebrity in Trinidad—the Craw- levs hardly. ever go to a movie. | “We went to a movie on our ‘first date,’’ admits Mrs. Craw- NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE! tern number. name, address. NUMBER GIANT 19666 Needlecraft Cata- Send order to ANNE, ADAMS, log stars knit, crochet— many care Guardian-Patriot Pat- more .needlecraft designs. 3 tern Dept., 60 Front St. W., free’ patterns printed in catalof Toronto Ontario Send 25 "cents COME ALIVE FOR SPRING! NEW! ol2 Collectors’ Quill. - Send for our new Spring-Sum-. patterns for you in color, with mer Pattern Catalog 125° ‘op quilting motifs Finest -paftern shapes for sun, fun, dancing, ever collected from famous mu dining, everyday One free pat. seum Send 60 cénts for new‘ tern dp coupon in Catalog. Musenm Quili Book No. 1 Bend "Se. y . ‘gixteen complete patterns. 60c. ay 4 oft) 5 na ’ eF » ley. “But we never have time! now. We live out in the country | with horses and dogs and all | that—and it’s such a- long way | pink, blue or yellow. Paat- [HOUSEHOLD HINTS: After painted walls have been washed, apply a very thin coat of ordinary laundry starch with a paint brush or roller. Next time the walt needs washing, the job's easier hecause the dirt comes off with the starch, kf Most rugs can he brightened by wiping a carbon tetrachloride dampened cheesecloth ever the surface. But remember to keep windows ‘open to avoid fumes. Put scraps of all types) of soaps: ina wide - mouth quart jar and add hot water. Keep handy in the laundry. Pre-treat collars, cuffs, knees, ege., using fis liquid. soap applies with a fand-type serub brush. a says his |ple chagrin. \from ‘the ical viewpoint, for | was able to obtain the necessary. the children ~ were | staff training, (48% and, peers over the shoul- /fits-his requirements. It works TV series | with the pie - shaped | zs ‘theatres in the centre. At the | 0perations. -\ three yéars later.” Write her in care of The Guar- ‘\dian. . ‘tor learned days later, to his pur- and if he specializes. . ."’ | Going back to the incident The moral of the incident, you report, obviously the patient medical care ‘in time. | Probably this was done through an emer- |gency medical referral service. usually listed in the yellow pa- ges of the telephone directory. Finally, on the vexed question of equitable fees. again may I jwhieh I speak, is that. people | Wife Finds Surgical Art a] i quote from the pamphlet -afore- ~~ @ Terylyene and @ Terylene Taffote Fasci nating mentioned: ‘How an you tell if Cotton @ Cottons WATERLOO, -Ont. (CP) — you can afford the doctor's fees? @ Blends Sentient Douglas Mary Hutchinson, wife | Ask him. .<He will gladly tell you @ Sizes Junior @ Senttined. lof a University of Waterloo pro- approximately what his fees Petite $-15 @ Priced from fessor, has combined her two are. Then you can plan accor- te 8-24% $5.98 te $17.98 interests — medicine and art— | dingly.” : into a career. as a surgical; Doctors and their methods artist. | vary from one community to an- One-of--18 accredited surgical |Other, as from one specialty to artists in Canada, Mrs. Hutchin- | another. It behooves the aver- son travels to Victoria Hospital | age person to take the trouble lin London, Ont., every Wednes- |to locate the doctor who best UNIFORMS | carry Smartest Look in ree Uniforms. THE FASHION SHOPPE 144 Great George St. Open All Day Saturday, Dial 43355 ff Until tomorrow - - - Diary - Good-night.. ...... , POSH SSOOCOCOOOOO the Newest; Brightest and office, 100 Queen Street ‘ Open Saturday Afternoon until June T'S, COT TO BE GOOD" Charlottetown on’ February ze |Don't eon en ne i pains longer. 3s Sed 2mm, Eee curioes TEMPLETON'S T-R-C's-Only@Se and $1.65 at drug counters everywhere, Fer.extve fest relief, use Templeten’s LAME. Cream Liniment in the roll-on bottle exteraelly, while toking T-R-C's internally. PLADE-Creem, $0.28." > 2. 763-9 LEOPOLDO OP OFSSOS ISO SOLD IDOI ISO LOLOL OO OOO GO? and Easter SOOSCOOSOCOOSSCSOSCOCSOOOOOOSD ders—of' surgeons while they | to their mutual benefit. Since operate. : | rely, Gey. | While the operation is in pro-| DEAR C. J.: In the episode gress, she makes brief sketches | cited~-above, the patient — got ‘and then returns home to com- | under the wire in time, not with |plete her drawings. The finished |the aid of the yellow pages, nor sketches are for medical text-|with the help of an emergency. jbooks, color charts, medical | medical referral service, but journals and other publications. | with the canny guidance of an- | “IT have completed sketches jother doctor whom the patient's jon heart, gall bladder and brain family happened to know |operations and now-plan to com- | When the physivian first ap- ‘pile a series of drawings on vein proached made clear his dect- sion to go back to sleep, the pa- Her finished sketches are the |tient's family simply called + direct result of -a three-year |other doctor, a woman this time, preparatory course at the de- |who took a wide-awake interest inaeaty - aici in__.the ae patient's symptoms as re- nive } | ported. “It was a rigorous course. T| Over the telphone, a number sat a on ae Se ro | of por iaaerii asked and = wrote exams on anatomy, |swered, a tentative program tology, pathology and embryol- | action outlined, including a list ren hOva NAME of ‘‘do's’’, and *‘don’ts’”’, and the 4 » . ‘doctor advised what signs to ies port her most siesta watch for, to determine how soon ob to date was a series -of | or whether, the ient- should three drawings of gall bladder | be. transferred o a_ hospital: operations. After watching 32 | And so it went. operations, Mrs. Hutchinson; By and large, the difference spent more than 10 hours in the | jn reaction of the two doctors, operating room drawing prelim- | to the same patient’s needs, was ae sketches for her colored | 4 difference implicit in their res- charts. | pective temperatures. Suffice The artist says it was pure ben bay the vena doctor had a Ini he sureen art tel." |Maeg’ a enoeedge, and" é . | plication e, and a Mel it con ane | one eae ee ; oy to-be-helpful, that would not oe a c at. , |ed_ practice. Ooi fantitatid tie aed eilée tit, fmcieene See i * ‘munity betterment were many, cas aes Ad aid vial | significant and-—unobstrusive. , as eae She did pioneering cancer re- hen I was 18 and. finished search, took a vanguard. inter- sia had jest in promoting responsible fa- peeee et $ H. BENNETT CARR The only problem during the course was with her Christian name Douglas which traditionally in her family has 3 been given to the first girl. $ Was eS rae t “When I first arrived for the % strict Supervisor 3 ( > Insurance Counselling course, they thought I was a z Charlottetown, P.ELL g es , tow i. a ROE ee ete ea ea | Phone 4-8817 - 45435 + scrambling of room-mates when i 7 I finally registered.” 26400400000 CCOOOo (JAA LALLA LIA LAL LL dd — -WAY.-- 4 : a: CT CREDIT Te ETN EES Where can you buy a "I = a white broadcloth with. Buy your Fur now! ; @ No down payment @ No carrying charges ~ @ Free storage and insurance until Delivery, island furriers ltd. - 79 Gratton St. Dial 2-1273 #1321, white. $2.00. g Two reasons why Baan ae bra that comes in 34 sizes (practically custom fit) and has. Cérdtex* inserts. for lasting uplift, at suéh a low, low price? No wonder.it's Canada’s most popular bra! 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