‘MB. AND MRS. KENNETH E. MOASE November Marriage Held — At Bedeque United Church Bedeque United Church’ was the sceng of a November - wed- ding wiren Charlene Ethel Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs , Middleton, | was united in marriage to Ken- meth Edgar Moase, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Moas-. Kelvin Grove. Rev. R. M. Cameron was the. officiating clergyman. The church was - decorated with ferns, Chinese lanterns, and ehrysanthemums. The soloist, Mrs. Edwin John- son of Margate, sang ‘‘The Wed- ding Prayer” and ‘I'll Walk Be- side You"’, accompanied by Mrs Walter Craig as organist. Given in marriage by her f a- ther, the bride wore a white floor length gown with an Em- pire bodice of metallic brocade and matching train,. both trim- med with whi . Her waist length veil of four-tier tulle illu- sion was held by a cap of metal- lic brocade. She wore heart - shaped cultured pearl earrings, a gift from the groom. and car- ried a cascade bouquet of oran- bride’s was her matron-of-honor, and Phyllis Murphy and Norma Seaman! a} were her bridesmaids: Her cousin, Patti Gaffney. was flo- wer girl. All four attendants were gowned in blue and_ gold metallic brocade, with head- | dresses of matching material, in a leaf design, with short veils | Their bouquets were in Autumn tones. The best mah was the grooms brother, Willard Moase, and ush- ers. were Maurice Wright . and Layton Huestis. ‘|pan for the warm milk, they '| day. |.ELLEN’S DIARY. Are Hives Of Now the sunlight returned in a welcome sunrise which turn- ed the ambered sky above the dusky eastern hills to rose, while the farmlands up and down the valley were white with the rime of hoarfrost, and over all lay ‘that exquisite silence of a morning* whith breathless a- waits the coming of the wind of the new day. Western-born it was. It came down on padded footsteps along the green aisles of the woodlands, “up the creek”. Presently sunbeams stole into a stable to caress the backs af the cows, at which the calves nursed. No longer are the barns lone- ly spots. There is rattle of tying chains now, and rustle of man- gered hay and bedding straw. A calf lows, ‘A horse nei tention. Cats wait beside their know will be put there. And if you stop b y quietly you will hear the tidy little lady of bantam ing with her handsome | speck’ ord and master the forthcoming interests of their Now the moonlight falls softly on a night so beautiful we quite any errors” in judgement in regard to the weather: for the traffic hazards of foggy mornings and evenings, for the cloudy days and dampish for the lessened daylight hours, and so many of those lost de- So pleasant the night, it seem- ed as though the skies had smil- ed on those most concerned with an event which celebrated the 30th Anniversary of a WI in a community hall to which the company forgathered. Mem- bers of the WI in the district in s for at- | be kind’. It was fitting that the -eharter members. who had™ ‘gp makers To quote: Once More The Barns Activity given the dedication of the to the: aims and ideals of sisterhood which according to the Collect must remember “to honored. flect that D planned and worked, and: laugh- few. had been taken by Death, in the lengthy interval of years. “Ellen!” James calls, from his bed, ‘what keeps you down there? Do you forget there's another day coming, and we have to rise early?” Until tomorrow - - - Diary - - which Rob’s and “the other Good-night. . . . _ setae moms rero certo HAPPE ' Audrey Jenkins, Women’ Sra Sec NINGS 's Editor. Phone 41-8506 Mr. and Mrs. Lioyd Fraser and daughters, Montague, were recent guests of Mr. . Fraser's parents, Rev. A. C. Fraser and Mrs. Fraser; ‘Sydney Mines. fir. and Mrs. Frank Peters, who have spent many years in Watertown, Mass., have taken up residence in St. Peter’s PEI. Mrs. Peters, the former. McIsaac, was born in St. Char- | BY IDA BAILEY ALLEN | It’s the high cost of fresh milk that often swamps the food budget according to. the reactions of thousands of home- “My food allowance won’t stretch to cover the milk’ bill. My husband grudgingly pays it as an extra.” “We can’t afford the quantity of milk advocated for each can manage is 2 qts. a day for the three little ones. The grown ups, including Grandma, go “Shall we cat down on milk?” “Cut down on meat, poultry, fish or eggs?” “Or cut down on fresh fruits and vegetables?” None of these ideas are good, 6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Nov. 29, 1966. for although milk is an essential food for s of all ages, other m foods are import- ant. ' Possible Alternate’ milk, processell whole milk can be used as an alternate. For use, try evaporated milk (this is not sweetened) 13-0z. ean. It is the equivalent of fresh For the reception at Bedeque United Church Hall, the bride’s mother received wearing a three piece suit of aqua and white wool knit,~with matching accessories, and a corsage of scented white carnations, The bridegroom's mother wore ae suit of teal blue wool with a win- ter white hat, and a corsage of feathered pink carnations For a honeymoon to Maine and New Brunswick the bride wore adress of tangerine wool, |@ fellow student, Sam, whom I |¥ent types. with a winter white coat. trim- med with bleached raccoon fur, a winter white hat. and alliga- tor shoes and handbag. Her _corsage_was_of Orange i roses. Mr. and Mrs®Moase are re- siding at Kelvin Grove. ELEGANT-EASY! “Add a precious touch te a hope chest, shower or Christmas lin- ens with cutwork. Just a touch of cutwork js Arne Hons Kook! The tunie ——fashion's exciting, new star ——slides over slim ‘skirt or slacks to create TWO different devasting outfits. Choose knit, diagonal wool, rayon. Printed Pattern 4570: .Misses Sizes, 10, 12, 14,16, 18. See pat- tern for yardages. CENTS (50c) im. coins (no” stamps, please) for each pattern. Ontarie residents add 3e_sales tax. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE , NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, care of Guardian-Patriot Pat- tern Dept., 60 Front Street W., Toronto, Ontario. Summer Fashion Festival — 350 design ideas in pattern-pack- ed Catalog. Fun, play, work, travel clothes — all sizes. Clip couvon in Catalog — Choose one free pattern. Hurry, send 50c for Catalog. equally | | @asy— even for beginners. Cre- | cheted edging adds finishes. Pat- | tern 7080: sixteen otifs 3% x 11 | to 2% x 3 ins. . ; | THIRTY - FIVE CENTS ‘(in coin) for each. pattern ‘no stamps, please) to Alice Brooks, care of Guardian-Patriot- Needle- craft Dept.. 60 Front St. W., Tor- onto 1, Ont. Ontario residents add 2c sales tax. Print NAME ADDRESS. Giant 1966 Needle- craft Catalog stars knit, —cro- chet — many more needlecraft designs. Three free patterns printed in catalog. Send. 25c, NEW! 12 Collectors’ Quilt Pat- terns for youn in color, with quilting motifs. Finest patterns ever collected from famous mus eums. Send 60c for new Museum Quilt Book No. 2 Deluxe Quilt | Book No. 1 — sixteen complete patterns, 60c. . SHIP SINKS, ONE DIES | ; | e FALLS. KILL Six ©: TOKYO (AP) — Six mount- | sank in the North Sea Sunday | aineers were killed and seven others injured Sunday while at- tempting to scale Japan's Mount Fuji in bad weather, police re- | sea rescue service said seven | ported. They said falls from | of the eight crew members of | widens, proportionate to [West German motorship Jan | after a collision in fog with the | 13,900 - ton Liberian freighter | World Peace. The West German _| and Ida were only friends, but | Meeting Held BREMEN (AP)-—The 499-ton | MARY HAWORTH ' DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I am a girl, 19, a college student on a southern campus. ° There is like very much, but my heart is hurting. He tells me he likes me very much; he says this when we are alone together. But as soon as er girl. Ida, and tells her that he | likes her and isn’t talking ta | me. i __At first he had told me that he much more of this. When I ask him which of us he is going to this campus, ‘great lover’’. A. A. Dear A. A: To get yourself out of the emotional fix you are in, you’ve got to summon the energy and personal initiative ta develop other meaningful social interests, to weigh in the scales against Sam. As. of today, Sam probably is more a symptom of what's lem itself. cseiaa ee you are a lonely girl with more time on 's than you have friends on the {campus and therefore you t reacting to Sam's pos- sibly half-curious, half-attract ed attentions to you. For.lack of a lively routine social interchange with various groups and persons, such as naturally popular or conscienti- ously busy student enjoy, you dwell too much on “liking” Sam and labor too much the ‘ques- tion of his “‘liking’’ you; and, al- 80, speculate too pryingly into the nature of his present and = future affiliation with a. And of course it is the very Marrowness and intensity of your preoccupation on this score reflecting not so much a person to-person love of Sam as pover- ty of social resources on your part. It is this threadbare as- pect of your behavior that is so self-defeating in relation to him. Thus the remedy for your “hurting” feeling of being chea- ted, deceived, second - rated, ete., by the campus great lover is to deliberately address your intelligence and your spare time to becoming a campus “joiner” Join the theater ‘group, the girls’ athletic groups, lowship groups’ (concerned to foster student sociability), any and all groups. to which a would- 0 faithful ‘ participant may, be- ong. This program of activity not only will-take up the slack in your habitual empty hours, which find you defenseless a- gainst your present sorrow, but ‘Of Life itself, giving you need- ed exercise in dealing with the cut-and-thrust of competitive human nature at the adolescent level. Then, as your perspective your slippery slopes near the sum- the Jan were rescued from the | growing firsthand knowledge of mit caused the deaths end in- it water by the Dutch pilot | what people are like, you are ship Castor. | bound te see Sam for the incon- he leaves me he looks up anoth. | the fel- | it will carry yor. into the Schoo">4- Girl Told To Forget- Fickle College Student sequential figure he really is, as Mary Haworth . through her column, not by Write her in care of The Guar- dian. ‘ Mt: Sica WI Annual at the annual meeting of Mt. Herbert WI held at the home of Mrs. Eileen Woodruff. Roll call | as yet); auditors, Mrs. Gilbert Morsters, Mrs. Andrew Jardine visiting committee, Mrs. Joseph | Mrs. Winston Wood; music, . Arnold Burhoe, Mrs Ralph Raynor. * CHINA BUYS FERTILIZER PEKING (AFP)—An agree- ment providing for purchase by China of 3,000,000 tons of chem- feal fertilizer was reached here recently between the Chinsee China's biggest fertilizer. order to date. Mrs. Ralph Raynor presided| whole milk in nutritive values at approximately half the cost. evaporated milk can even be. whipped to use in place of whip- | ped cream (see Chef tomorrow). Ati easy way to prepare eva- porated mr ilk ready-to-use for cooking purposes is to pour the contents of a 13-0z. can into a 1-qt. glass jar. Add cold water as directed on the package. Cover: and shake to blend. Re- ing purposes. Milk Bills Evaporate But Not The Vitamins However, instead off r e-s h_|___room-soft | frigerate, and use in place of | fresh milk for any and all cook- j minutes of that 40 years ago. of the deceased Beryl MacKinnon, Montague, | les. Mr. and Mrs.*Peters were George and Mrs. Sohn MacKay | bers and .a minutes silence was is spending her vacation in Ha-| proprietor of the Down East| Three of the original charter | Observed in memory of them. lifax, N.S. as the guest of her|Dance Hall in Watertown. members are still. active mem-| At the conclusion of the ban- friend Joyce Dewar. * bers of the Institute,’ namely, | quet the regular business meet- ; Mrs. Russell MacGregor of | Mrs. John Walker, Mrs. Urville | mg was held. The retiring pre- Mrs. Fred Arsenault; Pius-| Montague, and Shirley MacGre- | Large and Mrs. George MacKay | sident, Mrs. Eldon Large extend- ville, left ‘recently for Boston, | gor of Halifax, N. S., accompa- |S‘ other original charter mem- ed words of welcome to the visi- Mass., where she will visit rela-| mied by Louise Dewar, Monta-| bers still live in the province | tors, and thanks to the members tives. . gue, left by car recently for the | 22d invitations had been for their cooperation during 4 . United States. Miss Dewar will Rev. James A. Fraser, Tata-| spend the winter months in magouche, N. S., was a recent | Newtonville, : visitor at the home of his broth- nie, Monk, ent: Wes. @ eni-sicterintaw, Mr. ond MacGregor and Miss MacGre- Mrs. Lloyd Fra ser, and family, | Sor will visit. friends and rela- , Montague. tives there for several weeks. IDA BAILEY ALLEN & AOth Anniversary Marked By Albany Rural Institute which ‘had been written by ‘her, Mrs. Gamble read the names school committee, Mra. Je Dawson, Mrs. Lorne ‘Noonan; visiting committee, Mrs. Albas Keough, Mrs. Eldon Large. The Institute News subscrip- tions were renewed, and the meeting adjourned. ~ A very pleasant social hour was then spent. ’ CHINA ACCUSES INDONESIA TOKYO (AP)— The Commu- nist Chinese government ac- cused Indonesia Monday. of step- ping up “its large-scale anti- Chinese activities in‘all parts of the country.” The New China news agency charges in a monitored ,here that first meeting, charter mem- Dust with salt and pepper. Top each toma- (previously columned) Stir butter until smooth, gradually working in sug ar, beaten eggs and orange. ex- tract. Combine and sift together flour and baking powder. Add alternately with milk to’ first mixture. Transfer to 6 oiled muffin pans, 2%" in diameter. Bake 30 min. in mod. oven, 350 to 375 degrees F. Prt pe with chocolate or orange sauce. -THE CHEF CONDEMNS The — ridiculous, and careless habit auc people who “salt and pepper” food-.at table - before tasting. This is a real faux pas, espe- cially when you are a guest—at. DINNER. And think of the cook, parbleu! QUESTION ‘IMPROPER’ . OTTAWA (CP) — Conserva- tive eae C. Coates (Cumber! ) describing the royal comitnission on bilingual. ism and biculturalism as a “multi - million dollar flop,” ‘dians would have to wait for the | TIL 10 P.M: STEDMANS | ROYALTY }{ MALL - SHOPPING CENTRE Free Parking for g @e Cars. & — ——- HOMINY |eommission’s final report. ae | Speaker Lucien Lamoureux A tbep cooking. oil_or 7 =} ated--the-question—improper-——- {TAYLORS oo YOUR SILVER DESERVES THE FINEST CARE | eer { dpskcdh CH SEALS ¥ _ Help continue this RISTMAS _-7.B, IS’ PREVENTIBLE =|. _ - Prevention of Tuberculosis is based Ga finding active cases and treating them The Christmas Sea] Mobile X-ray Unit is one of the best means of finding unknews wntire cose ames ur so-solled Wall gepuaates. 5 AD Qn “VEW FAB HAS BORAX RIGHT INIT you usually have-to add : cate te not with Fab /Borax.”” says Mrs. Vietor Campbell Charlottetown, P.E.I. What's your stand on registering life insurance policies to claim increased © _ income tax deductions? 4 Mr. Vincent: If it’s possible, 'm all for it! Interviewer: It is. You can buy a policy now from The Mutual Life and ask them to register it with the Government. Within certain limits, the savings por- tion of your premium can then be deducted when you-are making out — your 1966 income tax return. Mr: Vincent: What about the policies Town now? Interviewer: They could also be reg- istered, providing they are not term insurance policies. Mr. Vincent: It seems to me that every- body should know about this! interviewer: You're right! Especially people who are building a pension . CHARLOTTETOWN BRANCH Dominion Bldg., Ph: ¢ for themselves. Many are buying new policies from The Mutual Life and are ’ saving on their income tax in this way. Mr. Vincent: Look, Id like to check into this. Where can | get complete infor- mation? co R Interviewer: Just call your nearest Mutual Life representative, wLss-188 . * aad s oonsenesheente cenieadbaicamnentiienaliemetieshs: [MJ ae . The Mutual ‘Life ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA MEAD OFFICE: WATERLOO, ONTARIO/ESTABLISHED 1989 894-8513