Y » Pequires 3% yards 35-inch fabric. @oins (no stamps please) Wed At Kings MR. AND MRS. DONALD GORDON ton United Couple Reside In Ontario The marriage of Gloria Jean, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs Earl Willis, North River, and Donald Percy, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Gordon, Appin Road, was solemnized recently at Kingston United Church Rev. Isaac Walls, of Cornwall; United Church officiated at the double ring ceremony Mrs. Stanley Newman was organist and accompanied Mrs. Sterling MacLeod who sang “The Wedding Prayer’’ prior to the ceremony and ‘‘The Voice That Breathed O’er Eden’’ du- Ting the signing of the register Given in marriage by her fa- he was attired in grey flannels and a red jacket. Grant Edwards, friend of the groom was best man and Allan Willis and Dale Hicks ushered the guests to the pews. The mother of the bride, Mrs accessories. The groom's mother chose a with teal blue crepe dress black accessories. A reception for 8 guests was held at the Queen Hotel. of ceremonies and Mr. Walls pro- posed the toast to the bride, see ther the pride -wore’'r” white swenien Yay Fes 5 mde ar to By the en _ Velvet and lace sheath dressi groom. A toast to the brides- Willard Proud was master Willis, wore a cranberry wool suit with hat to match and black IDA BAILEY ALLEN ~.s, Quickly-Cooked Barley | Takes Barely IN the old days, fine cooks served duck and barley casser- ole toge:her: no potato was needed in the menu | With the new quick - cooking barley, the casserole is ready-to -eat in less than an hour Measurements level; recipes for 6 OLD . FASHIONED | BARLEY CASSEROLE 1 ¢. quicx-cooking barley 2 chicken bouillon cubes \% tsp. salt 4c. boiling water 6 slices bacon % c. chopped onion 1 tbsp. bacon fat % tsp. each ground sage and | thyme % tsp. pepper Add_ barley, bouillon cubes | and salt to boiling water. Redu-,! (7% oz.) can flaked tuna, drai- ce heat; simmer 10 to 12 min.; stir occasionally. Do not drain. 4 ¢. shredded Cheddar cheese Pan-fry bacon in large skil-| let; drain and crumble. Light- 84ucepan. Stir in flour, salt and smooth, grad- ly brown onion in bacon fat. Combine barley, bacon fy Any Time Baked Crumbed Canned Tomato, Crisp Potato .Chips Lemon Pie Coffee or Tea Milk TUNA FILLETS OF FLOUNDER (Based on caper sauce) Caper Sauce 1-3 ¢. butter or margarine 1-3 c. flour % tsp. salt \% tsp. paprika 2c. milk 1 tbsp. chopped parsley 1 tsp. grated lemon rind 1 tbsp. fresh lemon juice 2 tbsp. drained capers Remaining Ingredients 2 Ib. fillet of flounder (fresh, or frozen and thaw-| i. funeral of her father ed) ned Caper sauce: Melt butter paprika. When ———_____ 2 (‘The Guardian,.Charlottetown, Fri, Feb. 5, 1965.7 ~ HAPPENINGS Audrey Jenkins. Women’s Editor, Phone 48506 M MacGregor, and Vally stir in milk. Stir-cook 3! nsrtmouth, N-S. remaining ingredients in unoiled, ™in. or until thickened. Mix in| 11% qt. casserole. Serve hot | SUNDAY DINNER Cups of Consomme Frozen Chives Garnish | Roast Duck | Cherry Tomato Garnish | Old-Fashioned Barley Casserole Brussels Sprouts Canned Pears in Orange-Gel with Honeyed.Sour Cream Coffee or Tea Milk | TOMORROW'S DINNER | Red and White Cabbage-and- | Black Olive Saladettes | Tuna Fillets of Flounder onion, parsley, lemon rind and/| Bake uncovered in mod. oven, mon juice. Mix thoroughly. Re-| 4 therton (350 degrees F.)-about 30 min, Move from heat. Add capers; cool To complete: Place fish fillets on sheet of aluminum _ foil. Spoon 2 tbsp. tuna on each fillet, deque left recently for Toronto, then starting at narrow end roll up snug, keeping tuna in center. Fasten’ with wooden picks. Place fillet rolls in oiled shal- | low baking - dish. Spoon ove-r| }eaper sauce; dust with cheese. | Bake uncovered 20 to 25 min. in| mod. oven, 375 degrees F. TRICK OF THE CHEF Always crush lemon or orange rind after grating to release fla- voring oils Moncton, spent the past week- Bain recently. The devotional Mexico City a few years ago|tions he asks, he'll leat lend with her parents, Mr and period was led by « the hostess | by Canadians living there. And | quickly." : eae Mrs. Stewart MacGregor, East and roll call was answered by | now it’s played on two rinks by| Chacho is eager to “get all Baltic. “re yar nenorted tat | 17 teams — a five-team senior | the experience I can” before re- one tra- le and a i2team lor | t 4 Noreen Mooney, Boston, | velling apron had been camels} cieeae! ue me fo tsetse wath oer Mass. afrivéd home to attend ted and another is to be start-| Having established a beach-|home games and travels with p And- ed shortly — the money to go|head. Mexico's organizers now|the juniors in addition to work- |rew Joe Mooney, Peake Stat. toward repairs in the church. ;are afxious to refine their/ing out with junior-age teams ion. Newly elected officers for] game by learning from the ex-|in the metropolitan area. 1965 are: president, Mrs. Frank|perts. They settled on Montreal| On his return home he will i Alvin MacKenzie, Murray Bain: vice president, Mrs. Cecil| Canadiens of the National|meet with his father’s associa- | starbour, was a recent guest of Watts; secretary, Mrs. Gordon | Hockey League. | tion. “I'm going to tell them his sister and brother ~_in-jaw, L. Coles; treasurer, Mrs. Allan! Last fall, Jamie Roberts, sec-/what I did here and what 1 |Mr. and Mrs’ Gerald Grey, MacDonald and community/)retary of the Mexico City | learned and then I'm going to friendship, Mrs. John Watts) Hockey Association, wrote to|try to show my other players and Mrs. Ernest Coles. | Canadiens appealing for assist- O-S Norman Larter has left Mrs. James MacNabbs will | ance. as your supposed competitor in to join the Royal be hostess for the February! Canadiens invited him to| the woman’s arena of life. | Canadian Navy at HMCS Corn- meeting. After the Benediction, | Montreal where he spent sev-| It is significant, I think, that wallis. ee were served by/eral days observing the team|you cast her off, figuratively rs. Bain |in operation. And Montreal as-| and to some extent literally, co-| ’ j Mae Bradshaw of Central Be- | signed Scotty Bowman, coach|incidental with your father’s ; Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Mac-/| of the Junior Canadiens, to con-| death, Until then, your seeming |. Ontario, where she is employed Donald and son, Robbie of | duet hockey schools next sum-/| pliability in relation to her may | ‘Georgetown were recent visi-/mer in Mexico City, at Cana-|have been motivated principal- Pleasant Gove United Church tors to New Glasgow, N.8., | diens expense. ly by your (competitive rival) ; where they visited relatives. desire to stand well with |SON WORKS OUT dad. And perhaps hie altitude AYPA To Hold Mr. and Mrs. Walter Roger-| Meanwhile, back in Mexico| plainly said “Please your moth- son, Peakes, returned home City, Robert's 17-year-old son/er if you wish to me.” 20th Conference Plans -for bettering the 1965 | AYPA Conference were discuss- ed at the P.E.I. Deanery Local Council meeting held in Gordon - Ferg Are Solemniized At daughter’s wedding a woollen A pretty wedding was solem- with matching coronet holding | maids was made by Mr. Hicks|nized at Tryon United Baptist | her bouffant veil. Complement-| to which Grant Edwards replied.|Church, Tryon, PE, when| uson Vows Tryon he ham « dress of laurel pink, with mat- ching hat, and her corsage was ag Mary’s Hall, Summerside, re- cently. As this is to be the 20th anniversary, suggestions and assistance were offered by Barry Champion, chairman of student yrtle tist Bible School, 1% c¢. fine-chopped peeled onion at the Bap last week from Ontario, where | Chacho, who learned to skate they spent the past six weeks Omly -e year ago, was—teading visiting with members of their| the city junior league scoring | race with 14 goals in 11 games. | As a reward he was picked and) for a month-long visit to Mont- young son, Michael of Toronto,| Tea! to work out with Cana- are visiting with Mrs. Cookley’s|diens-sppnsored junior teams. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alton| unn’s Road. family. Mrs. James Cookley Mrs. George ~--|-Kingsboro; -is visiting with ‘her? Women January meeting was held at the home of Mrs. Frank | |embrace hockey? Implausable as it may seem, | but if it’s possible to judge by the game was introduced in his Canadian Girls Become] Bullfighters In Mexico MONTREAL fighting is to Mexicans what|team called Canadiens hockey is to Canadians and it/it wears never seemed likely the twain|terned after those of would meet. It’s true that in recent years) a couple of Canadian Elizabeth Bilboa of Toronto|there aren't jand Carolyn Hayward of St.\all the John's, Nfid. bullfighters in Mexico. But who would have thought/ father was Chacho, who arrived here in mid-January, says the NHL has | quite a following in his country, MacDonald,;}and both Bobby Hull and Stan | City.” (CP). — Bull-) At home, Chacho plays for blue uniforms pat- Maple Leafs. “We have to girls— o'clock in the — have become) precise 2 interest : } ing this ensemble, was a floor! 4) Willis circulated the Barbara Gail, youngest daught-|of tinted carnations. Mrs. Fer-|read and Ruby MacInnis, mis-| length train, and she carried a | oasat hos, er of Mr. and Mrs. James K.|guson wore a ¢wo-piece dress in|sionary projects convener, re MARY HAWORTH bouquet of red roses. , | For travelling. the bride wore Gordon. Appin Road. was unit-|shades of titac, and white ac-|ported that acknowledgement , ; . Attendants" were Nadell Mac. FottTavelling, the bride wore qin marriage to George Ly. censors. a :; Fayden, Scarboro and Nora man Ferguson, son of Mr. and | mong t guests was . adio | h Proud, Kensington. They wore Serene hat Mrs. G. Victor Ferguson ot Donaid Gordon, grandmother of oom Sere — Dr. F. | Mot er’s Managing Ways nymph green velvet gowns with : Hampton. bride. L corncil is requesting matching jackets and headdres-. Out of town guests included Rev. E.G. Brittain performed| Following the ceremony, a|AYPA branches to make a fur- ed h meee carried white car-| Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Willis and the double ring ceremony. | reception was held in the church | ther collection. for this purpose | Resent By Daug ter cl oat nations. family, Scarboro, Mrs. John The bride, given in marriage | hall, served by the Baptist Lad-| during the coming Lenten sea-| pulse of Twin flower girls were Donel-| Holt, Moncton, Mr. and Mrs. by her father, wore a floor len-| ies’ Guild. The bride's table was | son. | Dear Mary Haworth: I didn’t for several hours. I phoned her. da and Darlene Docherty, cou- Dale Hicks, Port Elgin, Grant gth gown of taffeta faille, styled |centered with lighted t-pers,| A lengthy discussion was held |cut loosefrom the maternal | Sure enough, she was hurt be which sins of the bride, who wore full Edwards, Glydon Green and with sweetheart neckline, andjand a three-tiered wedding cake | regarding the fourth annual /apron-strings in the teens, as|cause she'd been told to limit | grudge skirted dresses of red velvet/ John MacPhee of Toronto long front panel of sequins and |topped with a miniature bride | Deanery variety concert, and it/ most girls do. I broke away aft-|her visits... mark of and carried baskets of white Mr. and Mrs. Gordon will re- Pearls. Her tiered, shoulder len-/and groom. |e apetes that plans for this|er marriage, and then not con-| I take my ates as they tries to mums. Hubert Willis, cousin of) side in Sudbury, Ontario, where sth veil was held in »lace by a} Rev. Brittain proposed a toast be finalized at the next! sciously. are. . .Mother is constantly This, 1 is the pitch ; . , to the bride, which was resvond- y | Early in marriage, at my | icizing hers....At the end of an pin ay the bride, was ring bearer, and! they are both employed pear! headdress and she carried | , your wavering a cascade of white roses ed to by the groom. | The executive reported -|parents’ urging, and because jevening (she and 7 ae for, new The bride’s only attendant! For their trip through the/|ing St. John’s AYPA branch in| my busband’s work then involv-/| in-law usually have with gnuaie edna ELLEN’S DIARY was Marjorie Ferguson, who|Maritimes, the bride wore a/| Ellerslie and further visits to| ed travelling, I lived with them /|us once a week), I am exhaust- mother. | wore a street length dress of tur-| jade green wool suit, with mat-|other branches will be made. (during the week (I was preg-jed from listening to her... F etaten quoise peau de soie, with match-|Ching shoes, white accessories} Rev. E.J. Fiander closed the | mant then, too). My tusband advises me to| or take colt. So pesine, h h W d dB k ing shoes and headdress. Her |aDd a corsage of white carna-| meeting with the enediction,| I did this for 18 months, until | je her do things for us (she is J a sas they T OUG ts Wandere ac bouquet was of tinted carna- | tions. jatter which St. Mary’s branch |my tather died (mother was 47 | siways ets, WOE in weeny perfect." Why aren’ tions. The couple are residing in/provided refreshments for the |at the time). Them I stopped do-/her as ), 60 she won't equally magnanimous ” Sil lvT Old T il The groom wes attended by ing things her way, stopped con-| feel shut out. But 1 hate to ask |7°Ur "ther? oak lent y!o ras [bis brother, “Wendell, “and Jos gating her bation move, her for any assistance. T would ie §, oe ae . leph Ferguson a onald any “Do you rise early these tim-|‘Are you lads intending to get Moore ushered the guests to general. Not that I cut myself | give me better perspective on eae coe Gale es?” we overheard James in-|up today? Can't you feel the |pews marked with white satin off completely; I just started be- my peteee 2S. ina : ‘i ok i ee quire of a visitor in their chat-|sun burning a hole in y our | bows. ing a grown woman with my C.C.: Having studied be] — ‘oo ting today backs?’ While it wasn’t that| Joanne Wood accompanied own ideas... - your letter ‘(here condensed) ws separates you from “Not too early, I'm afraid” |high, its reflection was bright |Mrs. Eric MacEachern as she I have been sick for the sot and the clipping which accom- — MH. of the other replied. “I was think-|on a wall when P roused today!" |sang ‘‘O Perfect Love” prior to three months and I realize panied it (an excerpt from a ee Haworth ing this morning of Mrs..... the! ‘‘Oh well, so long as a fellow |the ceremony and “O Lord Of my preoccupation with getting | newspaper series on psycholog- 6 ee ee older lady. You remember -gets his chores done these {|All Creation’ during the sign- on the right basis with — feal topics), 1 get the impress-|or personal interview. her?” times, he’s not doing too badly. |ing of the register. or attaining to peace of mind i= ion that you resent your mother |in care of The Guardian. James nodded. Smiled | Unless he has potatoes to grade. |--Mrs.-Gordon~- chose - for. her: jasioting inher, tn. 9. remit, of |-—-—-——-5-— aii aiaeenmanaenembenpenemtiaaeatin “A great woman” he com-|He could be Picking away at) physical inactivity. tes oa mented. “‘And”’ added, “‘a those. But there’s no getting off | e . Here are a few samples of pretty woman.” ito cut wood—not with all the | Question Period her quiet but effective ways of “Well, I recall staying there |snow we have around now. Un-| bothering me: criticizes me . overnight with the boys. And in ess his supply of fuel-is running Folfows Tall to the older (we have | = 2 the morning she came to the |low. five). When bora, ef foot of the stairs and called:| ‘And that wouldn't be much| The January meeting of the mother came . | fun, would it?” the visitor offer-| Englewood Regional High Home ranged the : or- ed with a twinkle. ‘I've had my | and School Association was held dered more clothes (char- turn at that odd times, back in|in the school auditorium on ee the years.” Thursday, January .28,' 1965.. The consulting me. As I was count- There was a silence, while) president, Mrs. Clifford Daw- ing costs, I didn’t appreciate thoughts wandered back to old! son, presided. the outlay. Yet had I expressed af trails. +| The 1967 National Centennial displeasure, she would have. ‘ it would be from the|project was discussed, and it been shocked at my ingratitude. chopping-block to the stove” | was decided to support the Can- I realize that her intervention James recalled. ‘‘And the stove|adian Association in this effort. was ber way of letting me know was hard to satisfy with the} M.F. Hagan, president of the that I am not a good organizer; green. stuff!’’ the other grinned.|P.E.J. Home and School Asso- she prides “It does take more! Yes, there’s|ciatign and Guidance counsellor good oom. a time to get the wood—a right /at the Provincial Vocational In- Mother was away time too to saw and split, and /|stitute, addressed the meeting tered the hospital season and store it” James said.|on “future planning of the indi- rent illness, and A stick of cherry-wood burns | vidual from a guidance point of = now on our hearth. It has not! view’. He defined guidance as a quest, told the fire, or, we fancy, the warm-| service which is designed to as- would be are as th of the yellow birch or the | sist a student to understand him- ew re cay Seg. oer maple, but it spreads a pleasant | self, his educational opportuni- curred in i - scent in the kitchen... It will not) ties, and his responsibilities -to ‘eit day -4 returned e foward the’ west, and’by ‘the |i”: 4 question period tel. Ode ae ben ton SHIFT INTO FASHION Shift into high fashion gear— sew this deeply collared shift in cotton knit, linen, surah, poplin with same or contrast color bind- ing. Printed Pattern 4574; Misses’ Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 FIFTY CENTS (50 = or this pattern. Ontario toward the west, and by stream riverward, the wild cherry trees will be wearing their crowns of dainty white bloom. “There!"’ Mack smiled this afternoon, putting by his books at his schoolday’s end, “the midyear tests are over!” “And there” Alex echoed, “mine too are done.” “Let’s have a bite, and then ¥ ed at the barns, add 1 cent sales tax. Print plainly, SIZE, NAME, AD- DRESS, STYLE NUMBER. | Send order to Anne Adams, eare of Guardian - Patriot Pat- ter Dept. 60 Front St. W. Tor- onto 1, Ont. pal. ihpate Diary — Good- soek SONG FROM DOCKS The popular song, Limehouse Blues, was inspired London's tough Lime- house. Officers Elected At Kensington The annual meeting of the Kensington Presbyterian Young Women’s Guild was held at the home of Mrs. Charles Beéairsto recently. The meeting, over by the president, Mrs. John Ber- bers and one guest. nard, was attended by 14 mem- |__ Devotions