-. V,__._. * tea hour on Wednesda h g y onoring “ed D5" Mrs. Edward Warren ,ot Moncton. Ilappellngt or The Week ‘-p.-um; United Church. is spend-- in; the week-and in l-lalifax, with her friend Mrs. H. G. Guild of uugqnodoboit Harbor. . . . ‘the Beta Chapter of the Phiat ggmrlty held their weekly meet- ing at the Y. M. C. A. on Thurs- ¢.y_ April 22. Miss June Mac- uan, who is to be married in the near future. was presented with a "gain; gift by the President, Miss dean Mldhthne. along with the Club's bellrwlshes. The next meet- ing will bee business supper meet- ing beginning .at.o:§0. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Ken Macnougali of lummerslde had as their East.-- er week-end guests, their daugh- mg, ml: Eleanor MacDougall and Mrs. llldwerd Warren, with her three children, also their son. Ro- hertz, and Mr. Warren, all of Mona- ton, N. 3. ‘Mrs. Eric sheen entertained at her home in Summerside at the "Worn ALIIMA KRAFT ALUMINUM ‘AWNING DEALER "cl-'i‘ANn‘i.ea BROS. . Dial 6557 CKABLOITETOWN PRESENT A Canadian Tire Feature Value A $79.50 WITH ALI. THE PIATURES! Full 18" cut. Housing of heavy cast naeeiieht muffllng Weighs only 35 lbs. Rubber-tired ball bearing Once over cuts any helgh eeeeaieeoo the machine. 0 . if blcde hits hard object. engine-service available LAWNMA THE POWER MOWER aluminum alloy. device Pulverlzes grass clippings eliminating raking. Adjustable for 3 cutting heights. Blade easily sharpened without removing it. from Automatic slip clutch prevents damage to crankshaft power drive-—no chains or pulleys. Made in Canada and powered by Johnson Iron-Horse .N. B. . . . Miss Ella Gay was hostess at three ltablee of bridge at Mulberry Lodge. Summerslde. on Monday evening. I O O i ‘Miss Lorna Ellis, R. N., has ‘returned to, her home in Burn- ‘merside after an extended visit In lMontreal and New York. Last evening Mrs. B. F. Hunter was hostess at her home in sum- lmerside when bridge was in play. . . . l I Mrs. s. K. Todd and Miss Ruth lRoss. R. N.. of Charlottetown, ivlsited friends in summerside on Sunday. 0 O I Rev. and Mrs. J. Donald Mac- -‘Kay of Summerslde. have had as ‘their guests this week, the form- er's brother-in-law and sister. Cap- lain and Mrs. A. M. Ervin with their son. Sandy, of Ottawa. . . . ‘ Mrs. Evelyn MacAlpine and brother. Mr. Ross Macxenzie, entertained at Garden Lodge. sum- imerside. on Sunday evening in ‘honor of Mr. and Mrs. George Chan. who are leaving in the near ,future to take up residence in lcornerbrook, Newfoundland. e ,a e ‘ Also entertaining for Mr. and Mrs. Chan on a previous evening was Miss Helen Mills at her home in Summerside. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Macxenzie and two daughters of Truro. N. 5., spent the Easter holidays in Sum- merside. guests of the former‘: par- ents. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Frank MacKenzie. eee Mr. and Mrs, W. A. Currie re- turned to their home in Summer- side on Monday from a visit with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hurst, in Yar- mouth. N. S., and Mr. and Mrs. :0. Ci. Robinson in Hantsport. N. S. . . . Mrs. E. T. Tanton was hostess at her home in Suninicrside on Monday evening. . . . , Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Emery were _given a presentation on Monday evening at Epworth Hall. Summer- !side. by the “Mr. and Mrs. Club" of Trinity Church. Mr. Emery is leaving in the near future for Goose Bay, Newfoundland. e 0 0 Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Iiiman are leaving Summerside today for st. Peters. Cape Breton Island. where they will remain for several months. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Walker of Summerside. spent a few days this week in Backville. N. B., guests of their son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. J. 1'‘. Frank. . . . Mrs. Jack MacLeod entertained at her home in Summerside on IN6 THE STER 1'. M. Reg'd. t . wheels. t. anywhere. l hstrange But True By I. H. MacArthur Marathon dancing. once so popular in the U. S. A. and Can- ada, still goes on amongst Boron Indians in the jungles of North- ern Peru. The Micmac Indians sometimes did this dance. The men lined up on a log and their squaws stood facing them on the ground. At a given signal the men ‘ started chanting and jumping up and down on the log. Mount Carmel, Pa., has an East 7th street. a West 7th street. and a South 7th street. It's simply amazing how some industries come into being. Take for example, this one: But to start at the beginning. If a_ shipping clerk hadn't. sent the wrong can to Tom Collard, it might never have happened. The year was i932. Collard had ordered a 5 gallon can of paint. Instead the clerk sent him I can of latex. then considered useless except in the preparation of gutta- percha. When Collard opened the can and looked at the milky colored fuid. he reported the error to the clerk. Then he tried to find out what he did have. He dipped a paint brush into the stuff and painted some boards and a few strips of cloth. Then he put one of the painted strips of cloth on one nf the painted boards and something happened. They stuck together firmly. When the paint salesman drop- ped in in take the c_an Collard decided to keep it. He remember- ed that some automobile manu- ‘iaclurers used cloth rubber and lmelal to make a long-lasting glue. Before long every company was using Collard‘: latex method for body trim cement and rubber-cov- ered metal parts. It might never have happened if a shipping clerk hadn't made a careless mistake!‘ . A giraffe doesn't have to do the split in order to drink as most books and writers have reported. The giraffe can bend over very easily when it wants to. What is the name of the moun- lain on whéch the president 3 faces are carve ? Ans. Mount Rush- more, in Black Hills of South Da- knta. _ , The term “via the grapevine’ started in the Civil War. and re- ferrerl to news and 803519 Clfflld by word of mouth. Nowadays all j_____j___.__ Tuesday at the tea hour honor- ing Mrs. Lloyd Inman. Wh° 15"‘ this week to take up residence in Cape Breton Island. . . Lt. and Mrs. G. D. Clark. with _their children Brian and Betty. of Vancouver. 3- Cu 5" "I‘"'I“5 their families in Bedeque. Continued from Page I The Stars say social functions should enliven the ‘summer months. and there is a lstrong possibility that. through an [influential person. your personal prestige will reach a new peak dur- mg the fall and further broaden your horizons from a business or , profusional point of view. Romantic and domestic matters will be under excellent aspects dur- ‘lng most of the year. sisntitive and sympathetic, but inclined toward etubbornnese. SKILLED POE!‘ Francis Turrisr Palgrave. pro- fessor of poetry at Oxford Uni- versity. served as private secre- tary to the great Gladstone. A child born on this day will be ' inmates _of prisons use the grape- vine system when they wish to spread secret messages among themselves. ‘The word “bootlegger" had it's ‘origin aniongst the North Ameri- can Indians from the practice of carrying liquor to the redmen in the legs of long leather boots. Peddling liquor to Indians was a- gainst the law. 0 O O In all of our prairie provinces, a quarter is spoken of as “two bits.” Why? During the lath cen- tury when the Spanish dollar cir- culated frequently, it was some- times cut in four parts for small change. Each part or fourth of a dollar was called two bits. Mrs. Nicholas Croff of Okla- homa City, Okla., recently gave birth to her llth baby in 15 years. She is only 34 years of age. Death came suddenly to Mrs. Minnie Lee, 74, of Somerville, Mass.. at a funeral home, while she was attending services for a friend. If you want to travel cheaply here's a tip from Joseph Bromel. a 25-year-old student from Que- bec. Since he left home seven months ago Bromel has traveled in 20 countries on 3 continents and strange but true he has spent only $8.66 doiiig it. in 1952 he drove an auto to Flor- ida for an elderly man. En route they picked up four paying pas- sengers and this money -560. was turned over to Bromel. In Miami he had a chance of a free boat ride to Cuba. He took it. Then he worked his passage to Central America. There he won a free plane ride to Uruguay by writing a jingle winning line for some advertising firm. By this time his fame had spread far and near and hotels competed to give him board and room. - O O I It doesn't pay to judge things by their size. Sometimes even a wo- man's thumb has a man under it. Blessed is the fellow who, hav- ing nothing to say, abstains from giving wordy evidence of that fact. We must be getting our second wind. More than 60.000 mouth organs were sold in Canada in 1952. in order to get his bride in the frst place, Bill Kemp of California, promised her he'd serve her a cup of coffee in bed every morning of their wedded life. On their 60th. wedding anniver- sary Mrs. Kemp drank her 21.- 915th cup of coffee in bed, strange but true. Church mortgages like other mortgages have to be paid and the St. James Episcopal Church in Hartford. Conn.. solved their fin- anclal problem in a rather unique way. Before each meal in every home in the church parish each mem- her of the family drops a penny into a small can. The can has be- come as standard on tables as salt and pepper shakers and what's more the pennies are going a long way to pay off the church mort- gage. ’ The day will never come when Little Sande And Vicinity Mr. Bruce MacPherson who Is also employed on the ferry, spent somn time at his home in Little Sands during his Easter holidays. ..‘Mr. Lloyd Wheeler who is em- ployed by the Northumberland Ferries left Pictou by truck on April 15 and arrived in Little Sands through the night to spend his Easter holidays at his home here. Several employees of the Northumberland Ferries accompan- ld him. He left on return for Pictou on Easter Sunday morn- ing to resume his duties on “The Charles E. Dunning." Those who were disheartened and doubtful that spring was just around the corner (to all it seem- ed A long corner) and those who listened patiently each night for the call of the whip-poor-will and the song of the frogs. they were heartened on April 15 to hear the whip-poor-will call and on Friday tr. hear the frogs in the brook with their first awakening notes. On Easter Monday night, the air was full of the noise of the frogs. What a wonderful time the spring is with its inspiration of new hope and song and cheer. On the following day the winter saw some Mayflowerii. They too survive and again burst forth in bloom. Easter Sunday was a wet dis- agreeable day but the following day was a beautiful spring day with its sunshine and balmy breeze. Some of the fishermen took advantage of the good day to paint their boats. This is is very busy time for the fisher- men. Truck loads of traps and other fishing equipment are seen daily being taken to the shore. The men have less than two weeks to finish getting ready for the big day of May 1. Several fishermen in this vicinity and surrounding districts are hav- ing new boats built this spring. On Good Friday, Mr. George H. Blue brought his new boat (built by Mr. Hector Stewart, Wood is- lands) to Little Sands. This too was a fine looking boat. and was’ brought up by tractor and trailer. Here's wishing all the fishermen a very prosperous season. Once again the farmers here are pestered by the wild life. This time it is the lowly hen who has to pay the price. The skunk was getting a lot of the blame and justly so, but on Sunday evening some time after midnight a racoon ::_: there will be work for all and all for work. Except in the capital in Wash- ington, D. C., the only place the stars and stripes are allowed to fly at full mast 24 hours a day in times oi‘. peace is over the grave of Francis Key who wrote the "Star-Spangled Banner" while the British were shelling Fort Mc- I-fenry in 1814. The flying of the flag over Key's grave is a symbol of American ii Iniagheedtettlthmodevnvantywoeldelofor your Iaetiwooenl Colourful, durable Psnelyte bolllnqiwoter won't bother II Ponetyte'epedestforkltdueeslv5IiaoedcouIentoo— for dlnettee. hen-la feet,,A|I. bevy eerfacee. WhetlieryeoeIe|lyeureelferheveldooe,beeure ofihefineetpIonIe|ambote—aek Vleityeur-IunbererIsur‘ld‘mg eeeleriele euppilener wrltejor a free sample and PameIyte'e new ooloeuzful brochure. IANHVTI DIVISION. 87. IIGIS PAOII COIPANV TOANADAI IIIITII. 'Ss.Joluu, Quebec TEETHING TROUBLE GORA is a mild sedative in liquid form that soothes babies’ gums instantly. And they love its pleasant taste. Bottles with handy applicator 750 at all drugstores.’ wtlisr GOD A we did it ourselves with PANELYTE * HER forknelytel 1.. as roots & co. Peell’e em LIIIIEII eel llllmlla SUPPLIES em 5511-5512 was seen on the roof of a build- ing et the farmhou whe t hens had just prev.lbualy "diet: 31:» 65550. III. Ooldh OJ; peered. A number of boys. who - had been sitting in a car, noticed 1-Ill‘! VII l0fV°<I III 9!! haul the animal in the bright moon- and committee. light and ‘endeavored with more help and a rifle to dislodge the intruder. This they were success- ful in doing by a rifle shot, but the racoon after tumbling down, made his getaway to a nearby bush and then to the big woods later. It is to be hoped that he carried away enough lead to keep him from returning to visit an- other henhouse. —-CO. I 0enede'e eee.l deposits have be: estimated at more than one-duh of the total world reeoureea_ Saturday. April 24. use The Guardian IPBINGVALE W. I. Twelve members of springvaie W. I. met at the home of Mrs. Murdock Macsween on April 13, to hold their monthly meeting. There were also three visitors present. Roll call was rsponderl lo by each member giving the name of their first school teacher and receiving a cook book. It was decided to pack woollens for blankets on April 20 at the school. The school committee reported attending to the school necessities and the sick committee to the sick. Plans were made to remember the shut-iris at Easter with fruit. Mrs. Fred Coles thanked the members for fruit sent to Mr. Coles while in the hospital. Mrs. Ralph Crabbe reported purchasing gift for new bride in the district and Mrs. Prank Crabbe on the gifts for first aid instructors. The correspondences C0ll5loIPI'I of letters re Mysore proiect. dislrirt convention. immunization clinics. radio programs and receipts from the Red Cross and March of Dimes. Donations for the Cake sale were received from Miss Erna Coles. I-lrs. Austin Seiitner and Mrs. Murdock -Macsween. Mrs. Hans Peterson invited members for the next meeting, roll call to be answered with a flower slip. Lunch committee are: Mrs. Omar Neill, Mrs. Frank Crabbe, Mrs. One ‘A lb. pecker pm- videe variety to melu a cookie plate more appealing. PEElfIili!I’s .. Wwul IIISGIIITS ‘ Mr. Peek G Mr. flees CANADIAN 4—DOOR M MEANS ECONOMY—’1he Canadian »l-Door Rambler is smvsi? , am r/riw 1'! 41 your Nan’; dcalcr link A NEW FAMILY CAR AT A FAMILY PRICE! How can you buy a car that will give your family a safe, comfortable ride. yet will be easy on your pocketbook and budget ? The answer is right here in the new Nash Canadian 4-Door Rambler. A triumph of engineering (kill. combining wonderful economy with ample room for a family of sin.- , MEANS $AFETY—-This tar features uvrldfemmis Nirsh Airilyte consrruction—a one piece Unitized welded body and ‘ frame that provide! you with maximum safay. ' MEANS QUAI.lTY—Recause of If! Airtlyte construction the Rsmhlcr is completely free from annoying squeaks and rattles. Nash construuion is quality controlled from bumper to hamper; M MEANS COMFORT—Ynm NHII Canadian 4-Door Rambler was designed by Italy": famed Pinin Farina, who placed emphasis on luxurious comfort for driver and passengers. Yes. the Nash Canadian 4-Door Rambler is the perfect as at an ideal family pm; See it It your Nash dealer‘: right away, and find out how little it cost: to own a bnnduagsv and beautiful Nash Canadian 4-Door Ilunbls. hf AIIFLYTE VAMILV AMBASSADOR I CANADIAN SYATESMAN O IAMILII I MITIOPOLTTAN ‘Z141. GREENE’S GARAGE MOTORS OF'CANADA IIMITID Main Office and Manufacturing P|ont—Tononto,Ontnr|o East Ieyelty. cltarlettetevni ill 3 Ilal OIII lg‘ lg! . 5 .: »_s.;_~ —., . .-. 9- .