se CRAIG - GREEN NUPTIALS Mr.-and Mrs. Arthur W. Craig|lottetown and the groom fs the following their marriage, Nov. 14)son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Wilfred at Trinity United Church, Char-|Craig, Middleton. lottetown. Rev. R.S. Latimer performed The bride was the former Shir-jthe ceremony, assisted by Rev. lee Jean Green, daughter of Mr.|J.L. Stewart, Tatamagouche, N. @nd Mrs. Preston M. Green, Char- | Scotia. IDA BAILEY ALLEN os r . t 7 ’ Sea Food Recipes Hail Back To Days Of Sailing Ships — “At Mystic, Connecticut, T have n 6 bu Fead,” observed the Chef, “‘that mercant ships built in the 19th century sailed from the ports of New England to the West Indies, Zanzibar, to India and to the farthest port of the rich East. “What for? In quest of spices! TOOK TWO YEARS “These voyages took two years before the ships brought home each fluffy. ‘ Place 2 tsp. over each serving. Bake 5 min. or until tender in mod. oven, 375 degrees F. Garnish with fresh lemon slicés. % ¢. butter or margarine in Remove from heat; in 3 tbsp. flour. ~F Stir in 1 23 c. whole milk and 23 c. light cream or undiluted evaporated milk. Cook-stir until medium-thick. Do not boil. Remove necks from 1 pt. fresh clams. Put through coarse blade of food chopper. Then cook re- maining clams below boiling pcint in their own juice 5 min. or until tender ao ‘Tl ii Just before serving add to gauce. Stir in % tsp. salt, 1 tsp. onion salt, % tsp. ground nutmeg, asparagus tips like the spokes of a wheel atop the turkey hash af- ter baking, with a ripe olive in center. % tsp. ground white pepper and/the 1-16 tsp. garlic salt. If bisque thickens while stand- fng, thin as desired with a little hot water. - Garnish with parsley flakes. Pass pilot or New England ‘“‘com- HUNTERS’ VICTIMS TOMIFOBIA, Que. (CP) — Two purebred Hereford yearling cows were found shot in a field in this Stanstead County district, appar- ently mistaken for game by hunt- :jers. One animal recovered; the ~~ OUTFITTED FOR OLYMPICS : Kul-e-tuk, the Eskimo word ae eee trimmed with lso the of | white teamed with for parka, is a Peete we | red eke aah this new hooded } mem- | seal-skin boots. The parka is bers of the Canadian Women’s | similar in style to those worn Olympic team will wear when | in the eastern Arctic. Olympic travelling and sight-secing at | wardrobes were a highlight of Squaw Valley, California, sile | a series of fashion shows held x the .winter Olympics Feb. | recently at the first Winter 18-22. Of white fiee-~ and au- | Sports Fatr in the Queen Eliza- thentic in cut, * is made of | beth Hotel, Me OM Pak ea ae si li z. i 3 i a al i i g © : : S i f F 7 Er g Hl | i i F | é Fy ‘. a if i ge i BF } I. if is Ladies Social Club of the Church of Christ was held at home of Mrs. Pearl Metherall @. Dec. 17. The “Devotional | for the evening, Mrs. MacKay, gave a wm Petite French Star Helped mate! By Poor Following Accident. By BERNARD GAVZER NEW YORK (AP) — Ginette Marguerite Auger is a Frenchwoman with an extrava- There who . but as familiar : i : | f le i B af a : I = ef Pee 1 te ; | i ; ib a8 58 7 r i i BEgE x re 3 3 i ; Bg | q wo i & g 3 2% &s 9 3 is{i z : a HE ; i Pg 3 fi ; i i E : : st bs Se $ & ge q § g I - z $3 H ; 5 E § if _ ° < eo < ¢ a BGR 38 FE _ x sf ra live a little bit. I will travel for my own pleasure and I will spend more time with the people I love.” Enforced leisure also gives her her mispronunciations. She is cén- vinced that her French accent is slowly disappearing, although she keeps running into trouble with ORWELL. COVE W.I. will visit with Mr. Vickerson’s ty-one pins to the various classes for perfect attendance and certi- ficates to Marlene Brown, Joyce, Murray, Jean MacKay and Fay Henderson; also to Mrs. K.R. MacKay and Mrs: Ellis Burgoy- ne. The offering was taken with offertory prayer given by Isobel Campbell. Miss Ann MacLeod gave a talk basing our thoughts on “Let us be in church on Sunday if we want true rest,” followed by a talk by Miss Ruth MacEwen such things. It’s wonderful.” time to polish her English. Paar| sel can to preserve them. _lexperiment with your® taking as her subject The Ten Commandments. Dear Mary Haworth: For the past three or four years I have been a ranting, raving man, at odds with my family over things that come up, which I disapprove. will be an issue in the children's rearing. I have been sending her to school and now she has left home and renounced her education— which I believe it is my duty to give her. I-have always loved my wife and children and they've al- ways come first. But I know I don’t have their love and_respect. It’s possible I need outside ad- vice, but I wouldn't know where to go. My wife has been\a won- derful mother all these years and I've never been unfaithful to her; but she sees the children’s views and none of mine. Please tell me what to do. S.L. VERSION OF CANUTE? Dear S.L.: Plainly you are a pretty shook-gp man since your oe spelled the same in Eng- lish and French. She does needle- point work as she talks, com- ments, “I like veree much this’ neddlepwahn.” | MOTHERS STRAYS When she is able to get away from her attractive three - room penthouse apartment in mid-Man- hattan, she goes off to the coun- tryside where she invariably be-' comes involved with animals. She has a French poodle upon which she lavishes attention, but she is ready to mother any homeless litter of kittens and went on a door - knocking tour to get them homes “but I had no luck be-| cause it is very difficult to give! cats away in the country.” | Instead, she mentioned her problem on Paar’s show and was unteered their homes. Then she) went abgut investigating the’ peo-| ple to make sure they could pro-| vide proper care. She can give a more graphic example of the power of the Paar show from her standpoint. “When I first come on the show three years ago I received | $600 a week for three shows a night in the night clubs. One year later, for just one show.a night, I receive $6900.” MAKING HEADWAY Making so much money some- times mystifies her. But to Gen- evieve, the best proof that she is) making headway is in recogniz-| ing a change that has come over her in her buying habits. “In France, when a woman, buys a dress, no matter how} rich she is, she feels the mater-! ial to see how good it is for she is figuring to wear this dress two, three years. Now, I buy a dress so quick as the secretaries for Jack Paar, they are so smart and chic looking. Two, three months and they give the dress away. It’s only here people do HOUSEHOLD HINT Sea shells make useful ash- trays and ornaments for the home. When clean and dry, spray them with shellac from an aero- Before serving home - canned fruits and vegetables, check them to make sure the liquid is! clear. Cloudy liquid often indicat- es spoilage, which can cause vio- lent illness. Save time when shopping for groceries by picking your time carefully. In different neighbor- hoods, the busy hours yary, so) un- | til you know when iat’s least apt to be busy and do your shopping CAN’T STOP BOASTING WASHINGTON (AP)—The Rus- sians boast. about their space achievements even when Mikhail outside covers sketches depicting the launching of three Lunik sat- ellites this year. f | BUS CRASH KILLS EIGHT LIMA, Peru (AP) — Eight per- fons were killed and 20 were hurt Thursday in a truck-bus head-on collision near Chiclayo, 380 miles north of Lima. daughter left home, or you would not be on your knees (figura- tively), asking guidance, and suf- fering from a cloudy sense of — all wrong, though meaning well, As I get the pitch, you are an old-style heavy parent, who, like King Canute, has tried to com- mand the waves on the shore to stand still. Well, you just can’t enforce that much authority over nature. Your children are growing @p and you can’t stop it, much as you might wish to turn back the clock, and start again, to try to get better RO. MARY HAWORTH Wife Sides With Children Rather Than With Husband crisis in family relations makes itself felt in the children’s latter outside, new -interests shared with persons newly important to them, thotgh scarcely known by the parents perha ps. ; I figure that’s why you've been on the war path at home, the last three or four years, ‘‘over things that came up” of which you disapprove. Your narrative you say; and the youngest child is a senior in high school (the 18-year-old engaged girl, I take it). No doubt the two older chil- dren were wanting more freedom, fight began. I can imagine that their mother thas made sense in siding with them, and that she was trying to deliver them whole, as it were, into adult society; rather than let you grind them down into broken, submissive, more or less puppet characters. Thus the family rift developed and widened, as you found fault with their healthy in- itiative, instead of giving it ju- dicious assistance. DESIBE FOR HELP It is unfortunate that you've forfeited influence with your daughter and that she seems headed for a problem marriage, when too young for marriage in any case. The one bad result is linked to the other, no doubt; so don’t blame her so much as | yourself, if she plunges into dif- | ficulties beyond her depth. ' Iam glad you hint for help in ' getting your bearings. It suggests | there is hope that you may wake up, cast off your mistaken views, and rebuild companionship with your wife, at least. To tfack dow 2 suitable counselling service, in- _quire.ef the Family Service Unit (affiliated with the Travelers Aid) eat or dog. Once, she inherited a) s-quainted with them, before they in the town through which you write. Or. ask the director of the (City) Child Guidance Center for squares with that deduction. You' have been married over 20 years, appropriate to their age, than you! were willing to concede, when the | CLASSIC CRISIS You are having great difficulty coming to terms with the fact ‘' that hardy, healthy young people steering information. M.H. Mary Haworth eounsels through her column, not by mail pass from tlieir parents’ control or personal interview. Write her deluged by people who vol-' in time. The beginning of that’ in care of this newspaper. GEORGETOWN Miss Carol Walker, student |nurse at the Prince Edward Is- Christmas Carols, land Hospital was a recent guest vith the spirit of Christmas. Much of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. | Spurgeon Walker. St. Dunstan’s University, . stu- dents spending the season's holi- days at their homes are: Joey Walsh, Joseph Martell, Leonard Martell, Joseph Murphy O'Brian Curley. On Tuesday morning the pup- PRINCESS’ SUITOR BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)—Ital- ian Prince Raimondo Orsini, whose. name has been linked romantically with Iranian Prin- cess Soraya, arrived here Christ- mas night for a 10-day visit in the Middle East. The prince was originally booked to spend the Christmas holidays in St. Moritz, Switzerland, where Soraya is staying, but he changed his plans. Orsini refused to talk about his friendship with Soraya, divorced wife of the Shah of Iran. DEVELOPING Your Film For 20 Years In Today — Out Tomorrow GARNHUM PHOTO | ils of Grades 1 to 5 of George- town High School, \paraded | throughout the Town singing in keeping | favourable comments was forth- coming from the citizens for the fine performance of those chil- |dren and for their teachers for | training them. | Seaman Gerard MacDonald of | H.M.C.S. Cootney, recently spent several days as the guest of his ;parents, Mr. and Mrs. Aeneas MacDonald. _ REPRINTS of local pictures | that appear in the THE GUARDIAN and the EVENING PATRIOT shut-ins were reported. Each member gave a gift towards the box which is to be forwarded to the port worker at Halifax, and a large assortment of useful articles were received. most inexpensive | salesman you can employ ---a GUARDIAN - PATRIOT WANT AD Phone 8506 } Our experience of over three-quarters of a century, as Insurance Underwriters, is at you gisposal. re Offices: CHARLOTTETOWN, SUMMERSIDE, MONTAGUE, ALBERTON Agents thoughout the Province. All lines of Insurance effected. IT’S GOOD POLICY be Adequately Insured HYNDMAN & CO. LTD. Insurance Since 1872 - AN ne nd “Fietation,” according to Hannah, “s attention without intention!" SEA FOOD A SPECIALTY SPECIAL EACH, DAY \Fall Course Dinner, only 0c PANETT 8725 oT ee fs Open bam S27 am Merchandise Sold For Cash § Also Off Current Credit Account (excluding SPECIAL at LePAGES’ | Today - Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday ey a mmneel ~HONORED ON BIRTHDAY are available Mrs. John N. ee Weel . she very gracious- at Whim Road, who last everyone for a most , was honored with a surp-'se exciting day. the following. ; dinner party on the occasion of |; Mrs. MacDonald was born in | ' her. 79th. birthday. /Lower Montague, but moved to | prices The party was held at the . Whim Road at the time of her home of her nephew, W.D. Fras-. marriage and has since resided er. Thirty-five guests were pres- in that community. She is active 5 x 7 GLOSSY ent, and although Mrs. Mac- in every way and takes part in j Donald was completely taken | community life. 1.25 each” Ios k St. Andrew’s WMS Packs Box | 8 « 10 atossy mo . 1.50 each For Port Worker At Halifax | MONTAGUE — The December] At the close of the meeting, PHONE 8506 méeting of the Women’s Mission-| lunch was served by the hostess, ~ ary Society of St. Andrew’s Pres-|assisted by Mrs. ‘MacEachern byterian Church, Montague,/ and Miss Catherine Currie. er call im person was held at the home of Mrs. W. A. Johnstone with 18 mem- oh the sultehheant bers present. . The devotional leader, Mrs. THE GUARDIAN William MacEachern, opened the - meeting with the call to worship, | end followed by —_—. The vd lesson was re in unison, the exposition on the theme “‘Em- caeatdet With Us’’,, was read 1 THE EVENING by up tage oat egg ped gin members 0: wit as prayer for two mission- | PATRIOT aries, Miss Mary Nichol of the Bhil Mission, India, and Miss ;: Anna MacDonald, in British Branch Offices Guiana, by Mrs. Harry Miller and at Mrs. Byron Stewart. During the mission study, in- ; teresting papers were read by ° Mrs. ee — ree Gavin EASTERN TRUST Summerside Hicken and Mrs. A.D, MaclLuarre. The business period was ca- COMPANY Souris ducted by the ae eae A. F. MacKenzie. The minutes Rich { the previous meeting were read apg ee mg e Montague by Mrs. Marion Hume and the Al financial report was presentec ‘ berton by Mrs. H. E. Nelson. BRANCHES ACROSS CANADA A number of visits to sick and " ! MOORE & McLEOD © STORE HOURS DECEMBER 28 - 3], MON. to THURS. - 9.to 5 CLOSED JAN. Ist. and 2nd. a — eveeseree, —, a oe $50.7 $2500? 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