Dy ' o'p . .4 .m) ml . 5 will "'"llple //.. ? I -——1 g. i Golden Wedd Celebrated At m, and Mrs. James H. Mac- mfld, Saint Georges, celebrat- dm golden Wedding anniver- ‘y on October 27th. The Plas- u; Father Bonnet MacDonald, a] all the members of the fam- wcre present with the excep- of one daughter, Sister Mary ‘ - , who was with her be- parents in spirit and in 4* smnptumis dinner was en- ' by all the immediate mem— bers of the family. The table, fill its arrangement of autumn flowers and lights, was centered by a beautifully, decorated wed- iig cake. 1: the afitemoon I host of m and neighbours gathered ppresent their good wishes and d a delicious turkey supper. m where t h e i r daughter As". congratulations to the happy cou- pie alter Mulch everyone enjoy- Mr. and Mrs. MacDonald were [re recipients of many lovely gifts. Friends‘from tar and near an flowers, telegrams, and cards alof which testify to the esteem h which the happy couple is U11. . 0n the following day the luv Martens were guests of the Sus- m of the Precious Blood Mon- J ing Day St. George’s Mary, has been a sister for the past nineteen years. B e t o r e leaving Mr. and Mrs. MacDonald were consecrated to the Precious Blood. 'llhe numerousfrlends of the happy couple wish them many more years of happiness in~wed- ded life. (“WW Lena can)an MCLUI‘E. Women's Editor, Phone 8508 flied” Nov. 12, 1958 ELLEN'S DIARY After A Holi The Guardian Page 7 day, Ellen Again Is Grand Reading Sun and pleasant wind. In the orchard bronze leaves and rus- sets falling—that was today. “You and I, Missis, have had many a day together” Blackle the old dog remarked smiling his thanksafter he had licked his breakfastJbowl clean. “Yes. many a day with their ups and their downs. Well this is all very fine loitering here chatting but I must be off to the field. I've missed them" he grinned ruetfully, “now these old I‘ll have to trust to feet to carry me there.” We stopped to watch him go this faithful old fellow who at lends the farmers‘ out~goings and in-comings from the fields. He us ually catches a ride, there are occasions like fields, or penhaps preferring to take to the road, keeping well to a shoulder. He is uncannin knowing, able without being told, to sense any excursion away from EBENEZER W.I. Mrs. Norman Mmber 5. The president, Mrs Md and adopted. The secretary answers gave her we their reports. The ofificers tilting year are President, Mrs Alex Ford; vice-president, Mrs flied Stead; secretary. Mrs W5, Mrs. In. Emerson MacLeod; W‘s, Mrs. Cliff Matheson and Tim Barbara Ford. W? Hall on November 28. beheld alt the I lunch committee. 3 cents.- MaoRae was lostess for the annual meeting d Ebenezer W.I. which met on IacRae, conducted the meeting fich opened by singing thel “Ode” and repeating the “Mary Wart collect” in unison. The 431 call was answered by four- légn members paying dues. . The minutes of the last annual Id last regular meetings were . (spurt. several bills were paid all school and sick committees elected for the It was decided to have safety In! at the school in the near We. Each member to take A leadership course for Officers is to be held at Central The December meeting is to home of Mrs. Gator Dover with Mrs. Norma-n l‘ifi'flcevand Mrs. Chester Dover be surprise box brought in a Douglas MacDonald (re-elected); . Norman Mac- V BIG, Mrs. John MacDonald and audi- "Nothing upsets your father like stole crackers!" Emu mu human: clear your skin of embar- milllt. external blemishes, Eczema, M Dies. Itchins. Cracking. Peelinfl It1M: Foot Itch set new scientific, anti- - haunt. NIXODERM from drug- “W! (or o clearer, softer. smoother “I- It work: while you sleep. Quickly mummy um irritation. Get. Nixo- Hdn . . . look better tomorrow. LIFE - FIRE - AUTO HOME & SCHOOL ACCIDENTS ‘ C. M. FRAZEE 1'5 Queen st. Phone 6726 Charlottetown S‘ DEVELOPING YII! Films for 20 Years Mgr-n1)th Christmas Cards $1.50 a Doz. WHUM PHOTO STUDIO II x... 5., Ch’town the happy g.______ NUR’N SUNK 80 LIFE [MKS PUNK? huh up your liver bile and hill]? worth Iiring again. u M “Ver bile “110 your system d‘y your food ma) not digest .' ‘you “Her from constipation and h dill seems worth lmng! That s ’0“ need Carter‘s Little Liver mild and gentle Vegetable “Nate the flow of bile. \ our suns Working naturally and h "dd locks good. Remember, if an“ Worth lmng it may be the ‘KW Clrlcr‘s Liule ant Pills .N Only five. km liver doesn‘t pour up to two D Salted & Unsalted VIAIS or Moo-HS hit IGet McCormiclé’s . . . .OErac'ke/r 100 YEARS of baking know-how makes McCormick’s the freshest l - cracker in town. Get McCormick’s I . . . the man’s cracker . . . todoyl M‘Cormic’s Wfifiwhflgys good taste in biscuits ;. .——w’ "We men want McCormick’s . . . they're so crisp they snap!” / ‘r .1 entering truck or trailer as resolutely as might one of the children, though this morning when he follows on foot. We catch sight of him, a dark moving object a'way oflf on the the farms, that would be denied to him. “You must come with me to the barn” Mack smiled coming by in the early morning. “We've something new“ he nodded. “What fetching items we have come there to welcome and ad- mire through our years at A1- dcrlea: early lambkins in pro- mise of pussy willows and the rippling thawings of spring; a first calf, to swell the fortunes of the herd; a foal to be de. , lightful treasure-trove for James; _ piglets, pink against a mother's breast, and the blind. blessed kit- _ cats, wonders to the children, come to some warm strawy nook. - “Perhaps you'd like to make a guess as to what it is?“ Mack suggested leading off. "Kittens?" we queried. He shook his head. “You're not even warm" he offered. Now James joined our parade Alex in his arms. The younger farmer busy in a stable left his interest of the moment too to fol- low. “You‘ll soon see" Mack said opening the half-door which ad- mits to select stalls. “There he is—not much like a kitten. is he?" Mack chuckled. “It was a new herdsirel Ad— mitledly a sturdy, handsome an- imal, most attractive in his fall- coat. yet to us, a farm-hazard. more or less. “He's quiet,” one offered. “Aye, but like every herdsire not to be trusted,” James nod- ded. “See those powerful fore- feet. and that forehead!" he pointed out. “A man unprotected, would have little chance of com- ing oflf best in a duel with one of those." What’s new?” James asks now that the night has returned him to us. The fishman made his last round today—brought us our sup- ply of winter fish. He asked af- ter your health, and hopes to see us next spring, he said.” “The time" James nods. look- ing back across the interval of summery months, which had brought the busy truck weekly to the door “surely slips alway.” Until tomorrow — — — Diary, Good-night. FLAME BURNS 0N PARIS (Reutersl—Police early Monday arrested an unnamed young woman after she at- tempted to put out the eternal flame at the tomb of France‘s un- knownsoldier in the Arc de Tri- omplhe by smothering it with her scarf. lWE AND OUR NEIGHBORS Unhappily The Fog Is Too Thick Between Us By Ruhamah S. Frank There was a ship in the harbor last week. a bright yellow ship, and I would have liked to go aboard, but the wind was high and sharp--—. I settled instead for a comfortable chair and a warm corner in the lounge of the small hotel where I live at present. For there too can I get brief glimpses of ships — ships that pass in the night — the guests that come and go---. MYSTERIOUS GUESTS Closed faces, mysterious lives are the ones that appear for a moment in the doorway, pause at the desk, dis-appear into some room — and are gone before breakfast the next day. At times a face. a figure, dress, bearing detaches itself from the others. That small stooped man with the close set eyes. that pretty girl clutching a worn hand-bag — rich fare for the detective-story Whiter-abut of no sinister mean- ing whatever--- THE GRAPE-VIN E As we discover when —— and if — as often happens, the small man and the pretty girl reap- pear at breakfast and stay for a while. Via the grape-vine that trails along the corridors of every place where people live under the same roof tor a longer or shorter period, we learn that the little man’s stoop is the re- sult of an ailment; his close-set eyes a quirk of nature. "He used to be as straight as anything” and he is a kind and honest man, as his neighbors know. As for the pretty girl and the worn handbag she clutched — She “clutched” because she had never stayed at a hotel before -— and she was nervous! The hand- bag was “worn” because she had no other. Before many hours in the big town passed, she was dangling a new shining red hand- bag jauntily from her arm —— in the latest manner! SMILING MASKS A few there are who stay long enough to become part of our hotel lives. We'are hotel~frlends —— no obiligations. Via the grape- vine or underground (mentioned above) we know more about each other than either suspect (though the information may be more or less inaccurate). We do not wish to come close. We have all given our sincere friendship too often on too short acquaintance. We are wary —— LET THE STEEL TOP STOVE STAY HOT. YOU CAN CLEAN, POLISH PERFECT- “WWW KRKKKWKWASKKKKKMKKK’égbfimfififiKKK‘QKKKKKKKR’KWK’S’KAEfififi'm‘fi’g : 55a; .51..." POLICE CAR graphed metal. tery ‘included. SALE. Each 88c JIG SAW PUZZLE Nursery story pictures. SALE. Set- 88: GUN, HOLSTER SET gun. gun. SALE. Set 88c DART BOARD 1 0 u in diam. bound with metal rim, three metal darts with plastic flights. Approx. Hard-pressed, 4K KKKKKKKKKKafififi‘flfiKKKKKKWKKK‘KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKWKKKWKKKKAGNKW WWWWKQKKKPQEREEEE5%9%KKKKKKtfilfiEfiwfifififis‘fiéfl'flfi'fl‘flfifififitfléfifl Battery - operated, litho— Rubber tires, movable front wheels. Bat- Four gaily coloured wood- en puzzles; approx. 5% x 4”. Leather holster and belt with metal single shot cap Plastic handy-grip on mm mm SALE PRICE «mnmwnmamxwewxzemmmeeeuu frame, jewellery box. TELEPHONE BANK telephone Polyethylene sorted colours. SALE. Each GARAGE Brightly lithographed metal. Automatic door lifts. Approx. 9” x 71.5 x 81,2” high. I! 31’: SALE. Set 88: SALE. Set 88: g. KflififlKflflfiifilfilfififitfimfllfiffi’é’tmmfififlfiWlflflmtfiflfitfll ” MONDAY i RS f? g D " ‘I'I'Yl'f'Y'r'frrrr EACH or SET 9 am. to 5:45 pm. LY SAFE WITH DRESSER SET TREE LIGHTS 5—Piece, plastic construction Bldg!“ series set- mirror, comb, brush, picture SALE. , SALE. Set 88: in as- 88: TWIN TRANSPORTS Brightly coloured plastic. One flat top and one tanker with interchangeable cabs on trailers, Approx. 11" long. to THURSDAY ,v....y WW Exciting Pre-christmas Savings TOY Slug PLUSH DOLLS Rubber life-like face about 3" high, assorted colours. SALE. EACH 38: SALE. WM “mgfikflflflflmmflflfiKKIKKKK%%“K£“KKKKKMKW ffifim 9 am. to 9 pm. EATON’S TOYLAN‘D OPENS THURSDAY - BUY NOW FROM THE SPARKLI‘NG- COL- LECTION OF TOYS FOR GIRLS AND BOYS! W“ Set 88: Set 88: FRIDAY - . . . , . . . v r DISTRESS SIGNAL hoist we prefer the smiling masks we! turn toward each other. But sometimes we would have it otherwise. We have a feeling that some of these ships that pass in the night are trying to a distress signal would like to answer but the fog is too thick between us. ANNAN, Scotland nearby Chapel Cross. we four planned for Chapel LONDON day aircraft. WINS SECOND AWARD (AP) — Andrei Tu- polev, the man who put the “TU” in Russia's TU-104 jet airliner, has been awarded another Order of Lenin to mark his 70th birth- Radio Moscow announced the award and hailed the air- craft designer as the brain be- hind 100 different types of Soviet military purposes. REACTOR STARTS WORK chutersl— Scotland's first atomic power rc- actor begun operation Sunday at Britain's atomic energy authority reported Monday. The reactor is one ol Cross. Each will have a BOOM-kilowatt capacity and produce electrimty for the public and plutonium for HELEN’S DRESS Special Prices SHOP COATS SUITS DRESSES SKIRTS BLOUSES LINGERIE ADDRESS FREE .0. RHEUMATISM ARTHRITIStNEURIlIS PAINS Thanks to scientific Rosa] formu- lation, thousands of sufierers are finding new, blessed relief from the pains of Rheumatism, Arthri- tis, Neuritis, Fibrositis, Bursitis and Neuralgia. Thousands say they have curbed pain in hands, back. legs and arms—that they can do fl-l-g-e-I-Ii-I-I-I-IIII-III..--------.-.---.------ FREE $1.00 ROSAI. FREE ROSAL, For! lrio, Onllrlo, Department 749 Without cost or obligation send me $1.00 \Rosal free. (Please print name and address.) Ft. Erie, Ont. PROVINCE their work again. sleep better and now enjoy life. To prove that you too may enjoy such blessed ease comfort and relief. simply send you! name and address on the coupon below and we will send you a 31 package of Rosa] free. No Post. no obligation. Just tell other sufferers how fast Rosal helps you. Rosal, /. F " FRIDAY; 9 RM. CLEANING SET Consisting of cornbroom, approx. 26" long; cotton dust mop approx. 21” long, plas- tic dustpan, plastic apron and brush 9” long. SALE. Set 88: BAG DOLL 21” high—of polka dot cot— ton with plastic blouse and hard plastic face. SALE. Each 88c IOY BUILDER 137 pieces and full instruc- tions for over three dozen toys. Non—toxic colours. SALE. Set 88: SATURDAY 9 am. to 5:45 pm. THESE SPECIALS ON SALE AT 9:00 A.M. THURSDAY MORNING AND REMAIN SALE WHILE QUANTITIES LAST OR UNTIL ON RUBBER TOYS A bear, a duck and an ole- phant. They’re break-resis- tant, and squeak when squeezed. SALE. Set 88: . a A SPIN ABOUT Metal lithographed frame complete with plastic dart pistol and suction darts. SALE. Each 88: BOWLING GAME approx. 6" Wood construction and paint- 5-pins, high r ~ r‘. Three peter. ed white and bowling balls, l‘f' SALE. Set 88: TELEPHONE 6593 .«1: EATON co MA=|T|MES LIVI‘TII CNARLDTIETGWI IIAICN EK’EKJEKW