Y’ , inn: GUARDIAN. cnaanowarowu _ Q...- -... w- 1---- -~~<-@——-— ---——-=- -~ OCTOBER 18. i949 Offices: ‘Yes, you can have $200 a month when you're ready to retire. And you’ll have nothing more laborious to do than walking your pup, trims ming the hedge or pursuing your favorite hobby: To be sure you trill have a comfortable‘ pension when you are ready to retire, let us help you plan it now. With a flexible Great-West Life Plan, your first unit of Pension Insurance may cost less than a dollar a week. As your. earnings increase, you can add to your ‘Great-West Life plan.- iAnd remember, for every $.10 a month of 'pension, there's $1,000 of life insurance pro-I itection for your family, beginning at once. You Fchoose your own retirement age, and payments liars guaranteed for as long as you may live.‘ iThafs security! Let us tell you all about it todayi YOUR FUTUII IS OUI. IUSINISS TODAY ASSURANCE‘ COMPANY w t. a l Phil.‘ 1.. f.» l... --E__AD orrrcc HYNDMAN 8t CO. LTD. Managers for Prince Edward Island Summerside l Charlottetown Ul-Il GREAT-WEST LIFE Montague Lonely Parade B! Fannie Hurst CHAPTER Xl without interlude o! curtain, a sharp electric blue base flooded bare stage and auditorium alike, light seaming to pour in s colored dust into which, against a blueout of bodies and features, a hundred pale hands wove their separate in- tropretntion of a Bach fuzut. It reanained a quiet audience of straight faces and receliumy- A snigger. a, repressed bit of laughter or that light wave of movement that can rise from even the most decorous assemblage. would have been match to tinder. Through eleven minutes of pale gyretion, during which the bodies of blue-clad figures swam gradually into view. the posturing hands and torsos slowly took on movement. drifting to what might be called their climax oi digital maneuvers. Crowding the horizon of backdrop with their flutterings and sinuo- sities, gradually, with no relationship to the fugue which played faintly after them, they drifted off, leaving vagueness that you could almost see and touch. lncertitude hung for a moment. an indecisive audience still waiting for the drop of the leaf that was to determine its reation. Apparently the Charlottenburg had reCkbllefl with the importance of the fall of that leaf. Without musical accom- paniment it fluttered slowly on stage in the form of a sylph of a slip of a girl, her drapes in their high coloring and jagged outline-s sugggesting a maple leaf in autumn. Silently and with immense curves of movement and color, more leaves began to fall-and fall-crowding the stage with dancers whose bodies had neither identity nor form. Fas- ter and faster! Leaves in autumn. Death in autumn. Rainbows in suggesting a maple leaf in autumn. And suddenly, fast as the fall of the leaves th6n1Sel\'e5—app1ntl5€ -applause against every stricture -a,pplause_ For two hours, burst after burst of it, on to the last number which again took place in the sprangled motes of the blue dust, Through the blue of the d-ust a march of pilgrims succeeded in giving amaz- ingly realistic effect, by way of body eloquence, of the climbing agonies of a. band of visitants up toward some Tibetan monastery. Bonetired parched, lame and halt, blind and footsore, they pulled upward and toward —upward and toward, drifting around the last exhausting curve and leaving the stage, for its finale. bathed in the silent, the bright blue dust. Thus the evening. petering out as casually as it had begun. Blue dust to blue dust. Without giving the audience a split second to reach a conclusion that must ultimately fall on the sublime or ridiculous side of a split hair, the Charlottenburg strode to the stage, Sure. abundant, wrap- ped in electric-blue fog, she took her place behind the doused foot- lights and without preamble began speaking against the applause that greeted her appearance. "Customers, the Europiums and I are grateful for your enthusiasm. It has been our conviction that this unorthodox and cerebral form By tlllffcrll McBride which you have witnessed here tonight is a signal leap ahead. As Iapolaon and lITcle Elhy on ‘THIS Fil- EXHIBT“ ON ALI- A HORRIBLE JOKE.’ TBQSH.’ NSTFNTLY: BA ‘IWKE. YGJR Fit-TH I lTRIEEWDTELI-‘OU WFDNAPO it IS BE? BUT NOD VQULUQ"? I ‘ ‘THIS STUFF’ l5‘ I RBARIAN‘ ADD v udunu you Disobedients see, we do not invite your palm beating, which we feel would shatter the moods these artists have created by way of What is undoubtedly the perfect ("om- blnation of intellect and emotion, as applied to this new form of the dance. . ’ "Believe it or not, Customers, we, are going to do all in our power to prevent the Europiums from becom- ing a popular success. Help us keep our secret‘ until such time as we think wider audiences are ready for the aecouchement which will deliver a new muse. "I want to acknowledge my appreciation to my associate and student of Europium. Mr. Tony B§VES HiMRtGHT NOW IF PH Wflfi A FOQLOFHIMEFELF. l TR!!!)TD HIM YOU PAINTE WCTUREQ WITH YDURTHIL g TELL a b \ . , \ . In... Nev-alum em»... v s nu u: mace- {THERE UU(iH’i“’i‘0 as A LAW Chiano, to my colleagues, Miss Sierra Baldwin. for her warm co- operation, including the finanlal, D YEARS M99. QCQIMPLEV ’ and to Miss Kitty Mullane who, ladies and gentlemen, is respon- sible for the startling original co- lor effects, including this gorgeous fog in which we are now gather and on which you have feasted your eyes tonight for the first time on any stage. "Sitting in at this birth 0f a new art would be a. privilege for me ii there were not a penny in it, heaven forbid, and with your support, heaven will. (Laughter) "And now, boys and girls, good night, and remember, help mo keep the Europiums from becoming a premature popular sucess." by Fagoly t"? Shorten“ AT LAST.’ OUR OWN i ANNED AND QAVED FQQ rs \ l l i '7 q-EANED 1B an’, _, REFRlGERATOR . ALL _ our new EEFRIGERATOP .0 n ‘~ "i5\“°",.n'"_ . “Wfiggrigtgfiago I ,_ ‘i i w‘ kp‘; »_ a serous! . ' é I" ‘n _ ) / y, €1 y... . , ( _ / ‘ r . _,_,- ‘ a -‘ i‘ d“ . ‘x0 ' ’ i . $9 \e s‘ i ' / l -' ' - l H _ ‘ileum sue suswscao’ f , \ ' ‘aouesnouonaouizz M» ~ - mousse, o‘ . "r sue won ~ . . ; - " is ur- i - w" " ;‘ new; mv. III! mm turf. sflliillfflfitlfldcfll l?» PITTSBURGH PAINTS was Ber???" 43,7921’ ,0... pl"\ilirf(ill in...» u. ..l.-. mum CHAPTER X11 Just how Kitty, with one maid- servant, managed to keep Twenty- one East the precise little estabish- ment into which fitted with nicety three so dlvesified, was s, feat more complicated than appeared on the smooth surface. Although she concealed it with a Sense of painful private embar- rassment from Sierra and the Char- iottenburg, she was not above S of a midnight, wrapped in an old negligee which she pinned high above her knees, out into the hallways of the darkened house, polishing at mirrors where it blur might have caught her wary eye during the day, dusting, or window washing, seating herself on the sill, closing the frame down into her lap and polishing away, some. times in cold that threatened to freeze the svatcr against the pane. To be continued FORD - MACNEILL NAUPTIALS A quiet wedding was solemn- ized on Wednesday September 28th at 11 o'clock in St. Pnuls chapel when Rev. J.T. lbbott united in the holy bonds of matrimony nnily Eleanor eldest daughter of Nix. and Mrs. Charles Ford of this city and George Herbert son of Mr. and Mrs. Torquil MacNeill of Milton, P.E.I. The young couple were attended by the bride's sister Miss Norma Ford and Reagh MacNeill mother of the groom. The bride was becomingly at- tired in a Burgundy wine gab“- dine suit with black accessories and acre a corsage of Talisman roses. The biidesmaid wore a grey prin stripe suit with pink accessories and wore a colrsage of Better- time roses. After the ceremony the wedding party dined at the Queen Hotel. The table was centered iviiii a three tier wedding cake topped with a miniature bride and groom. The grocims gift to the grooms- man was n gold signet ring and the brides to the bfldflilfnflid was a pearl locket with matching ear- rings. The happy couple lcfi ialei- on a m? by car through the Mari- times. Prior lo her marriage the bride was tendered a miscellaneous shower where she received many lovely gills. _'I‘heir many friends join in Wishing Mr. and Mrs. MacNeill many years of happy wedded life. DINNER SPECIAL 1 CAN STRING BEANS L§ PK. POTATUEQ 1 LB. CARROTS 1 TURNIP 1 LB STEAK or 11/; LB. STEW MEAT 1 PKG. DESSERT 1 LB. ONIONS This Dinner Special Runs Until Further Notice. This is outstanding value. Try One. The Meat is Top Quality. Regular Value 1.35 Until Further Notice ALL FOR 1.00 s liAY SPEtiIAL CHOICE COOKING _ APPLES 6 lbs. 20c Perlb. 4e EATING GRAPES Z155. 29c i A complete line of fresh meet curried at ell times. Very choice quality. b ORDER EARLY , Macfiuiyen’: Grocery I Meets m slim $0. 546-1- - FREE DELIVERY held by Acting Iiieut-Cdr. Henry P. Leldl, R..C.N. who has been appointed to the staff of the Senior Officer (London). R.C.A.F. for three years transferring in March, i945, to the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve for Fleet Air Arm duty. Later in the same year he transferred to the Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve. advanced flying course. Bishop Waterman Holds Confirmation At Milton . On Widnesday, Oct". 12th the It. Rev. R. H. Waterman, D.D.. cosdjutor Bishop of the Diocese of Nova Scotia, made a visit to 8t. John's Church, Milton, to admin- ister the rite of Confirmation t0 a joint Mllton-Rustico class. The Milton candidates'were: Mr. and Mrs. John Poole, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Curtis, Mr. Howard White, Alton Coles, Gerald Coles, Heather Coles, Beryl Coles, Marie Coles and Elaine Coles. The Rustico candidates were: Jean Carr, Alberta Buntain, Shir- iey Craswell and Alma Craswell. A fairly large congregation wit- nessed the administration of the sacred rile. The candidates were presented by the Rector, Rev. A. E. Plercey, The Bishop's message. though di- rected to the candidates, was ex- ceedingly helpful to the whole con- gregation. Bishop Waterman spent the greater part of Thursday, Oct. 13th, in the parish as guest at the Rectory. Ottawa Announces Navy Appointments UITAWA, - Lieut. (P) William H. Fearon, R.C.N. of Edmonton, has Charge oi the Naval Detachment at the R.C.A.F. Winter Experim- ental Naval Headquarters announced. been appointed Officer-in- Estiiblishment, Edmonton, The post previously had been (Pi Canadian Naval Liaison Lieut. Fearon served with the before In March. i946, he went to the aircraft carrier "Warrior" with 803 squadron. Then, after a short per- 10d at Dartmouth, he Joined the R.C.N. Air Detachment at Namao. Alber- ta, as Senior Pilot. i946. he entered force of the R.C.N. with the rank of Lieutenant. ‘ the R.C.N. All‘ Station, In October. the permanent Early in 1947 Lleut. Fearon was appointed to the United Kingdom on the staff of the Senior Canad- ian Naval Liaison Otficer don). In March, i948. he was as signed to the Empire Test Pilots Course and became the first Can- (Lon- adian naval pilot to complete this He re- turned to Canada in December. i948, and prior to his latest ap- pointment was serving in H.M.C.S. "Nadcn", Esquimalt. Unto That Goldie Shore By Peter A. Reilly (Dedicated to his dear parents) The years have passed in fleeting time. the changes have been great ~ Since they were born on P E. Isle. in Eighteen Fifty Eight, , Ffll‘ down the winding road of life, that leads thru play and toil Of nlnty years and more ago, upon their native soil.- Their path of life has wended on. thru years of work and lean Since life began neath Island sun, and orbits nightly gleam Thru sunny springs and summer's heat. and autumns fading rays And winter's frosty wind and snow, and blustry shortened days, They passed from childhood into youth. and into prime and age They lived and loved and wedded were. and gave their heritage Of health and strength and moral worth. to those beget by ihsm Of children three to womanhood, and six to sturdy men. They saw the sickle and the scythe, the reaper and the rack The mowers and the binders work. and felt the aching hack. Of those who gleaned with sickle's sweep, and bound grain from the snood Of scythes that tum-bled golden grain. by those who swung and strode. They. saw the timbers topple down. as strong men plied the axe To fashion cabins from the Hill. in which they might relax In wsnnth before the fireplace hearth, within the friendly glow That came from burning logs of birch. sway from frost anal snow. That swirled and swished in f.ury‘s might, outside the cabin door While women spun the silken flax, upon the tlmbered floor And knitted into mlts and socks. the threads of virgin wool And weaved upon the home made loam, the cloth from shuttled spool. ‘they saw their children born and grow. floni childhood into p ins And then depart to other lands, far from the Maritime: / n» meet the challenge o? new 1m. with science and machine That gives to them s life of ease, compared with manual mien. 8o here's to P1. Islanders. with strength of mind and soul _' With physical endurance stimq. that helps than reach the goal Of life's rewards whatfer they bs. that lay for "III in store While travel“!!! W. the road of life, unto God's Golden shore. Czar Ivan the Terrible was only three years of are when proclaim- earuleretaiilueals. . Moore , £9? McLeod Limited - 811110111166 The Presentation of an Outstanding Collection OF ' _ HOLT RENFREW FURS . 0N Saturday 6i Monday — October 22nd—- 24th The collection is wide in scope and includes the newest Q models of the most-in-demand furs, created by New York's and H. R.’s own talented designers. An Holt Renfrew representative will be pleased to greet am‘ advise you '.n satisfying your Fur requirements. Irrespective of whether or not you want to buy a Fur Coat atithis time, you are cordially invited to i view this presentation of fine H. It. Fur Coats. None better in Canada. e MCDRE E. M‘LEOD "WI l A F J d They’re New! Theyfiie Smart! Prices To Suit Everyone! It's GreendaPs For- Fine Fashions! Good Values! '- FUR. ooars, CLOTH cons, KAINCOATS. SUITS, DRESSES and EVENING GOWNS! . Before investing in your new Fall wardrobe we iifvlte you to inspect our lines-Our buyers are ever on the alert for new and smarter numbers, so don't miss this op- portunity to keep in touch with the latest from the Montreal market. ' coArs......... $21.50 up su|rs...... 15.95 rip eeeeeesse e-neeeeeeee eeeeea Use Our lay-Away Plan—A Small Deposit Will Hold Any Garment SPECIAL FEATURES IN MOWER PRICE DEPARTMENT Specials Men's 8i BoysflWear Men's Winter Overeoats 19.50 to 29.50 Men's Topooats 19.50 Men's TrencbCoats .. . .. 6.95 Men's Suits 14.05 to $4.50 Men's Dress Pants 5.05 Men's Dress Shirts 1.05 Men's Fleeee Combs. 8.50 Men’pl)ress8lioes.. ...‘......_4.49 Men's Work Boots ;. 8.95 Bournemouth». 2.50 Spsclalrlailies’ Wear New House Dresses . .~. 1.79 to 2.95 Wool Jersey Blouses, all colon . . 8-95 Indies‘ Vests 79¢ Cotton House Costs 4-95 Elastlclilrllles......... “.135 Baby's Sweaters 1-95 Baby's Wool Seekers 95¢ Ohildrenb Skirts 1-49 Children's Sleepere1-95 new Arrival-Wool Plaid m...» m . . .-.-~¢---..-- 30?!’ Breeches 8.50 up 49¢ 3°!l'i|lciete....-....‘..... ltsyeallose...l........ 49° axcuisivnnamnswnn T’ i. soqunsmsrnm Iowan mos man A " 101 ocean mm in". carillon tonltii. y"