OCTOBER 22. 1951 p W,--rue GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN 9 ; Vllaclionald-llowiing Wedding st. Edwvaz'd's Church in Winni- W; was the scene of a double- ,,.,g wedding at 10 a.m.. Sept. 29. tihen Elizaibeth Anne. youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. 1)oI.vliIig was united in Inarriage ..,;1h Leonard A. MacDonald. youngest son of Mrs. W.. A. Mac- Donald and the late Mr. w. A. MacDonald. Grand Tracadie. RE. 1. Rev. P. F. MacDonald. Char- 1o'.tetown. P.E.I.. brother of the -midegmom. officiated. I The bride wore R. gown of white "pi-ucaded taffeta. The fitted bo- (IICC had A little rolled collar. me long sleeves ended in petal m.mI.5 over her hands. The full 5i4"fl fell into a train. A white ,,.. bnndeau. studded with seed in-ms, held her veil of illusion. she carried a white mother of pg.-.r1 prayer book 'ovcrlaid witii pink roses and while stephanotis. Miss Margaret Dowling. of w.I.iIin-gton, D.p., sister of the ly"'.dC, was maid of honor. Brides- maid was Miss Bernice El'hatton. Jusepll J. MacDonald was best min. Ushering the guests were llanald Bell and William Pren- dergast. Attending the bridegroom ....,.; Robert Dowiinvg, brother of the bride. Miss Gloria Morasutti one soloist and Miss Norma Mo- ;';L-illti played the wedding music. A reception was held at the Profession-nl and Business Wo- Im-n's Club. Evergreen Place. Mr. and Mrs. MacDonald left on a nodding hip to Kenor:-I. They all reside in Winnipeg. SOIJTHAMPTDN. England. Oct. it)--(Reuters) - Angry dock work KY5 overturned a Conservat- ire loudspeaker car when it in-ouglit intcrrnptioiis whilc Prime Minister Atilee was speaking here. 'I'iro men in the Conservative car had to be escorted to safety mi-ough the crowd of 5.000. u--.. Elizabeth Murphy. Eleanor O'Donnell, 1. The wedding took John's Chapel. Cathedral. Toronto. Given in marriage than the bride fitted bodice edge with lace. skirt swept into II Her shoulder brocade crescent ricd a bouquet of lions and glodioli. Miss Rose Marie sister of the bride, taffeta. The bridegroom by Mr. Both Mr. bride is a graduate Mrs. O'Donnell is Monsignor Murphy, :1 grandson of Mrs. ham. Souris West. than anywhere America. O'Donnell - Murphy ' - Wedding Jomcs Cardinal Mccluigan offi- ciated at the marriage of Barbara Mr. and Mrs. Patrick B. Murphy of Regina, and Richard Maurice O'Donnell. Lunigan, son of Souris, P. E. St. chose a gown of white brocadecl and long slewes. The length - veil caught by lily-of-the-vullcy .lo a shaped matching her gown and she car- llumbolt as bridesmaid wore an ice blue brocade gown with fit- tcd bodice, and Gail Murphy. only bridesmaid in a gown of was Andrew Tetzlof. Baton Rouge. Louisiana and Mr. lvlucston, Ottawa. ushered. During the ceremony Monsignor Ron:In's choir boys sang. and Mrs. are recent graduates of the Uni- versity of, Saskatchewan and the vcrsity of Toronto 1951 class. They will live in Toronto where the groom is continuing his stu- dios at the university. P. E. Island and Mr. Richard Kick- ' FAMOUS DEER There are morn wiiitc-tailed deer to the square mile in Nova Scotiu. else in North The Birthilay Murder by huge Lewis CHAPTER SIX Disgust and an old friendship struggled with each other in Vic- toria. she noted once more that Bernice'a chin was starting to sag. "Love is a luxury you've done without for II. good many years," she said brutally,l"I'm afraid you are going to keep on doing with- out it. unless you find it with wal- ter. Stan can't support you; you believe you can't suppont your- self . . . ." "A war job, I suppose." Bernice ahrlllcd wiiclly. "A riveting. ma- chinei" "The best thing for you to do is to forget Stan Imcl try to keep Walter. I sound like the Good Will daughter of Mrs. place in St. Michael's by her fa- period satin. bouifant chapel train. was cup IOSES, carna- Hour. But you buttered your planer DI bread. Bernice. and now you have to lie in it." ' "Everything! so hard. so hard." moaned Bernice. "Nothing ever goes well for me." "I think you've had a pretty pleasant life." said Victoria. Sud- denly Bernice flared up. Her brown eyes had almost 3. red color as she" spit: "You- haven't an ounce of sympathy in you You're gloating. gloating over what's hap- pened to me. You're glad it's hap- pened!" The other woman's venom shocked Victoria even while she understood its cause, 3. rebellion against the hard choice between the penny and the cake. "I'm not glad. I'm sorry. sorry mostly for Walter. but sorry. I'm sorry you ever met Stan. You asked my ad- vice. You don't have to take it. You probably won't. Most people ask advice hoping to be told to do What they want to do. You hoped I'd say everything would be ducky for you and Stan. I won't say it." Bernice did not reply. She was slumped low on the sofa. staring at the silver tee things before her. her drink tilted forgotten in her was junior TOSC attended Don O'Donnell of the Uni- a niece of St. Mary's. O'Donnell For Smqofb, ' Youflrikll .16'kin . NEW PALMOIIVE 6ts"MllD.' H 4' Smurf Yoonq say PALMOLIVE-lIs'MllD.' hand. Victoria straightened it gently. After several minutes of silence. she noticed how dim it Was SFOWIHIZ in the room. and looked at her watch. A quarter before six. She snapped on the lamp beside the sofa. Bernice started. and looked toward the light, her eyes still blank with thought. : "Listen. Why don't you have dinner here with Albert and me?" Bernice shook her head. Victoria . saw she had only half heard. l "I ought to change and things started. Do you another drink?" - Bernice shook her head again. Victoria stood up. looked at her friend irresolutely for a moment and then went into the dining room and down the hall that led get want to her den and her bedroom be- yond. It would do Bernice no I harm. she thought, to consider what she had told her. Although it must have made hard listening, it had been a bitterly correct anal- 3:15 of the situation. Poor Ber- ICC. Victoria had plannedlio put on Winner: in red dress, but decided this would I The Neighbors . xxz' ' cam. Ia-22. lr.I n' &tn in B By George Clark I"l hope you're working up appetites. I'm going 10 MV9 ' to bake about 150 piesl". , seem too heartless; she chose 9. 1 short, dressy black one instead. and noticed with pleasure that her look quite slender. She brush- ; ed her crisp hair. sitting before the mirror of the vanity. table be- low the high north windows. through which cold twilight fell and mingled with the light of the two white lumps. She bent for- : ward and peered at her mirrored reflection. Her face looked chisel- I ed and durable. as though it had been carved out of a .harder aub- staucc Ihan Bernice's. She won- 1 dered if she had been too unkind: ,- she had wanted so desperrltcly to jog Bernice from her crazy panic, to force her to loo): at the problem realistically. Bernice usually wept first and thought afterward. She looked at her wrist again. Albert had told her morning that he would be than usual tonight; that she had a. good two- hours don't i1eDUli watch that later meant before There Ought To .Be A ' WITH HIS FINGER M Low .'l1I.L HE mcxeolue . AND HEADED FOR HOME . mag mm: mews, VANCOUVER. gwasu. I lt' The task of arm-waving orches- tra conductors has been made lighter since someone dreamed up the idea of making baton: of aluminum. This gave us the notion that aluminum buil- hddics would be a lot lighter to lug around. But, sure enough, someone had thought of that. looi Aluminum certainly light- ens the load for lots of people these days--and in lots of ways. To make more of this metal available Alcan is embarked on a further long-range expan- sion programme which will run to a quarter of a billion dollars. Aluminum Company of Canada. Ltd. (Alcan). she might expect him. The cas- seroles took fully that long. She snapped Off the lights and re- turned to Bernice. Bernice's mood had changed. She was in the bright kitchen, Washing teacups. Bernice had al- ways been a. scrupulous house- keeper. The sugar bowl was back in its proper place on the dining room sldeboiird. the silver teapot beside it. Bernice's eyes slightly reddened from tears,. surveyed Victoria's face and then went to her ctomiwh. "Still on your diet?" she asked lightly. "All that weight around your hips and tummy is coming back." The change was almost too much for Victoria. They might have been Just discussing any- thing buccatastrophe. "No sugar, nor starcl'Ies.' she said. "That's good." Bernice put last tcacup neatly away in cupboard. "Would you like to stay for sup- per?" Victoria asked. "Albert won't be home until late." "Ion, no. I must see Stan. He's meeting me for dinner at six- ti-Ilrty." Bernice put on her glo oz. looked at her watch. "Goodness! I must fly!" The green purse was on the kitchen sideboard. She open- ed it, surveyed her ravaged face in the mirror of her large flat compact, dabbed powder on her nose. Some of the powder clung to her black glove. "This is your night for fixing dinner for you and Albert. isn't it?" Bernice asked as she brought out some lipstick. "Yes. my one gesture at domes- ticity." Bernice smiled in almost a. perior way. "Honestly. How man stands it!" she said. "Have you decided what you're going to do?" blurted Victoria. Bernice surveyed her casually around the rim of the open- com- pact. "Oh yes. I'm going to give up Stan." , Victoria watched her go down the steps to her large, substantial Packard parked in the Bernice got in, slammed the door after her, waved one black-gloved hand out of the window briefly. As the car drove away in the first twilight, Victoria. thought how much it looked like a. hearse. Twilight was thickening night. Victoria had put the seroles into the oven and making the coffee. The green cof- fee canister, one of a row of such canisters on the kitchen sideboard was nearly empty. A search of the cupboard above revealed no coffee either. and Victoria. forgot the problem of her friend Bernice long enough to decide that she would have to scold Hazel in the moming. I-fazel was a. Jewel. but ran to myopia. and occasional streaks of absent mindednesa. Her nearsightedneos oould be forgiven her because she could not help it, but she knew how fond Albert was of his coffee and should not have allowed it to run so low. There was barely enough for three cups. The lower glass globe of the silex on the stove was Just half full. she turned out the gas. '"l'here." she thought. "Now there's Just the salad to put dress- ing on. the rolls to heat and the table to set." She set the table. she used the pale blue clothes. the gayly painted china. The bowl of bougoinvilleo from her roof made s fine centrepiece. and she will the the su- any . To be continued now to IILIIVI IIIIHIAGO cull”. IICK Apply worn oil to region of coronal. vubblng until oil In oIoorbod.AIDruggintu 5., .5 ,..,.I ST-I IIOW YO IIIIIVI PAIN Ill flll JOINTS wmi ahead pom. lot in warm oil. lfnp driveway. ' awn white candles at each side of Tentli Maritime lli-Y conference The tenth annual Y.M C.A. conference of Maritime l-ll-Y Club: was held Saturday. October 6 through Monday. October 8th, in Halifax. The theme of the con- ference was 111-? Horizons. Del- egate from all over the Maritime: attended. Of the sixty delegates forty-eight were boys. Eight delegates. two from each of the Acmy, Alpha. Beta and Delta Clubs of Charlottetown at- tended along with Joan Martin, Girls' work secretary, Charlotte- town Y.M.C.A. and many other non-delegates from the Island. Upon arrival the delegates regis- tered at the temporary headquart- era of the Halifax Y.M.C.A. in the Wanderera'. Club house and were billeted for the most part in private homes. At 8:30 Saturday evening the opening banquet was held at the Y. M. C. A. Peter Darrach. Presid- ent of the Halifax Hi-Y Grand Chapter was chairman of the con- vention Iaesslcns. After the delic- ious meal the delegates were warm- ly welcomed by A.C. Archibald, President of Y.M.C.A.. Halifax. Dr. A.E. Kerr. President of Dal- housie University. addressing the delegates said. "It is a privilege to live in Canada and people of many nations are keenly conscious of it." Remarking on the fact that the conference was being held over the rhankagivlng week-end, Dr. Ker: continued, "We have an inherit- once in Canada. that should pro- vide ground for the most sincere thanksgiving on the part of all thoughtful people. and the opport- unities that challenge our enter- prise and imagination in this vast young country should inspire grat- itude in the hearts of all." A sing-song followed led by Don Rogers of Halifax. He was accom- panied by 9. talented pianist, Mor- ris Connors, who is blind. Later the group danced to rec- ords and was entertained. On Sunday morning opening worship was held at the Y.M.C. A. After this the first session of the discussion groups got underway. There were five groups from which to choose. Youth and Edu- cation for Life. Hi-Y Programme and Projects. Hi-Y and World Service workshop for Hi-Y Offic- ers. and I-ll-Y Membership and Or- ganization. Each of these discussion groups was very capably led by lcziers in their field. Each city tried to send at least one representative to each discusion group. Each group set down a body of topics which they would like to discuss during the next two sessions. Following the recess for dinnc: the highlight of the afternoon was a bus tour through historic Hali- fax. There were so many points of interest it was hard to keep up with the guide as he told us the history of each site. The evening banquet was held at I I I I I i 5 I the Y. M. C. A. Mr. Arnold Word. Young Adult Secretary, National Council of Y.M.C.A.'o cave I short interesting talk. The delegate: left as a group for church service at at. Matth- ewa United Church where Norman slaughter extended a wel- Peter Darrach assisted at the ser- vlce with the reading of the scrip- ture. - - The second session of discussion groups was followed by the serv- ing of refieshmenia and everyone left for home. The third oesai of uiscimio. groups followed and at 10:30 the conference summa 1 was given by Ross Bannerman. Boys' work See- retary, Y.M.C.A.. St. John. Sev- eral recommendations from each of the discussion groups were giv- en, among these the need of each club to have their own advisor. It was decided that Maritime Hi-Ya would support Earl Buckley who is going to Japan to carry on Y. M. C. A. work there. A closing address was given by Arnold Ward. Lunch was served and the final farewells said. The delegates started on their return journey home with much wider horizons due to a most successful l-fl-Y Conference. FAMOUS CHURCH The so-called "New Building" of the Cathedral at Peterborough, - Rev. . come to the visiting delegates. I x England, was started in 1438. ALSO IN ECONOMICAL V1 POUND "NS Crown Diamond Products are sold By: 'PROWSE BROS.. Charlottetown. P. E. I. PIRE9 Without flu Canadian National Institute for the Blind. "theirs is o PERMANENT BLACKOUT! Help the Blind to help Themselves! CANADIAN NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR THE BLIND ANNUAL PROVINCIAL CAMPAIGN opens OCTOBER 22nd, I9sI PROVINCIAL OBJECTIVE 156200.00 4-umln-LENESS and DESPAIR 1... . . Hope and p Opportunity! Provincial Chairman: Judge C. St. Clair Tralnor Cliariotteiomn Special Names Chairman: Sidney 1'. Green Say "THANK YOU" for YOUR SIGHT by being generous when called on for your contribution. or when forwarding your help to the Cuudlul National Institute for the Blind llcadquorfers at 14214 Grant Geotgo Street in Charlottetown. w