2 ~—tittle -brook—at-the—feot—of—that |_-WASHIN: } ‘by to stir them. . forbidden * was, * beyond the windows than inside . There, roving- eyes would catch A long lineup formed imme diately this week when tic- kets for the 1966 Stratford Festival went on sale for the ELLEN’S DIARY “415,000 TO GO first time. A total of 415,000 tickets are available for the : seven planned productions, ranging from Shakespearian ¢ Old Memories Revived As Apple Spirals Fall Nice: memories come, to. mind * ‘on just such a winter day as was this, when this farmwife pares apples for a pie. Scents, sights, : and sounds return to her as she + peels -and : which according to the old say- slices that fruit, ' ing, if eaten as is, and “one a * day” scan ‘keep the doctor @ ’ way.” Scent of apple blooni in the * bee-time, we can fancy, aroma of fruit at the harvesting; fra- ’ ‘grance of barrel or bin in con- . junction with that of a lighted > tallow candle in the cellar when all summery days were past. Aa old orchard by the roadside . ‘we can see, silver poplars to one side showing the white suede lining of their leaves, when a light breeze off the shore came We have too glimpses of a schoolroom where bites were ‘some- times taken in class. . . Quaintly furnished that room scenes more intriguing often with a longing for the out- - doors, the clanging skies-of-thewarped-and_worn.”” seasons; catch too, glimpses of the river, that below the vil- lage backed to alittle rustic bridge spanning the Sandy Point Road where on tha nearer side trouts could be , and be- yond children coul@ keep excit+ ing appointments) with the smelts each new spring. Rag- gedy spruces made aclittle shel- tering grove there. And below was the fearful marsh with its deep - cut channels, which brought in, and carried out, the varied tides of the Strait. Sourids? So many we could bear in the twist of the apple’s peel: The sunny music of the orchard - with one | day, alas, how we mourned it!‘ a yellowed leaf floating quietly off to the sea; the robins—nowhere since have they thrilled more sweetly for us; the steady clip-clop or rhythmic staccato of hoof-beats on the old_ Post. Road near by, bg ° ~ an exciting experience, mixed emotions: an admir, for its swiftness, and some prehension, -becatse how ful it would be if as sdéme. fo! i: #8 declared it should swoop down suddenly to “‘sew up” a little girl’s eyes, and leave her in a “It’s the memories that go with it” we said. ‘‘We should by rights, i the men can find the time for it, put a new floor here” we Sweeping off the verandah this morning. “The boards ere Peter had come i; "armed with bow and quiver, every inch @ young brave, his greeting only a throaty ‘‘How.” “We will re-deck it, perhaps with concrete” we said. . “‘T wouldn’t’”? he commented soberly. “And why not?” ‘Because I like it just as it is’’ AS we. did this winter day - just as it lwas, clean white and WANTS oe ae United ates a requests from Turky and Greece to help modernize their armieu. The requests will be taken up after John T Mc- | Naughton, assistant defence sec- | retary, returns from Athens and | Ankara.where he had discus- | sions last week. plays to opera, ballet and two other plays. The 18-week ‘schedule is longest ever. (CP Wirephoto.) pane ee J ele marco can sing, dance act. She can also do the hula,~she is in danger of be- ing type - cast as a beautiful eastern girl and she~is of Chinese _- Canadian ancestry. That's .Toronto’s Shirley Temple, not the Hollywood “one who made movie fame‘as a child star. She was born Shirley Ma, she uses the pro- Appearing recently as Lotus Blossom, the female lead in Teahouse of the August Moon at the Royal Alexandra The- atre here, Shirley said in an interview she is always get- s, into productions chest: the aT was in the national com- pany of Flower Drum before I was married,” she said. : ‘Few seeing her as a feat- ured singer in a supper club would suspect that she designs spotlight. It’s an ability that ‘fits well with the second part of her life, as wife and mother. She _|- hag three =_year:-_old_identical twin sons, John ad David. Because of her family, she ac- cepts out-of-town dates only three times a year and for no more than two weeks at a time. ro gal a up .in ‘Toronto, where studied sing- ing, kee and piano. She attended University of West ern Ontario in London, study- in that golden and now vanish- ing business, then spent two ;} years as a kindergarten ; teacher, She-has been in the |. entertainment business for + seven years: -|other ‘Basil McQuaid; ‘jand Jim MacDougall. . HAPPENINGS "Audrey Jenkins, Women’s Editor, Phone 448506 Billy McEwen, who has been | Ian MacGreate, student at | employed for some time at Lynn|Truro Agricultural College, | Lake, Man. has returned to his spent the week end with his home in Rajlo Bay, ‘parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart MacGregor, East Baltic. St. Michael's Catholic Wo- men’s League of Corran Ban .. Souris, spent, a, held a card party recently. Win- |few days recently in Toronto, mers were: ladies high; Mrs. | Ohtario. consolation, ‘Mrs. Ernest Peters; men’s ‘high’*"’Mtrs.°Charles Taylor, Dundas» |Erank Watts; consolation, Ke- Centre, left recently for Pictou, vin Hughes. Freezeoiut was a-(N. S., where ~ will « visit with | warded to Mrs. Ray Gallant | imembers of her family. ‘The door prize was won by Stella Fitz- 3 patrick. Theatre Curtain Mrs. R. W. Ri ceson of New Is. Bold, Simp le: Glasgow, P. E. I. is today (Mar. | Oprawa (CP)—It Er take '3) celebrating her birthday, \atbout six. months to weave the Mrs. Stevenson enjoys excellent |4,600-square-foot wool curtain health ani is at present busily | \for the main theatre in Ot- making patchwork quilts her 10 grand daughters. Ten tables of whist were in work of Mariette Rousseau-Ver- play at the weekly party sponsor. |mette of St. Adele, Que., one of ed by the Miscouche Firemen. |three women tapestry designers Ladies first, Mrs. Charles De, |@sked to submit designs. Coste; consolation, Mrs. John | It is an abstract pattern of | C. Poirier, men’s first, Stanley |vertical masses of blue, purple, | Martin: Birt, /performing arts. | ‘ley 6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Thur., March 3, 1966. ‘MARY HAWORTH Deserted By Older Mate Wife Blames His Sister DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I wish you would come to the defense of young widows who marry older widowers. In my case, it was my second |husband’s sister who waged a |concentrated campaign to un- dermine and degrade my status as his wife. She based her campaign on a ‘Catalogue- of ‘‘true™ stories”. of “scheming designing |young widows who captured and |preyed upon the older husband, cheating his. married children of their .proper . inheritance. How can one defend oneself ‘\against this sort of brainwash ing? I loved my husband very much and liked his married children. |But his sister's campaign went lon and on. And she beckoned from sunny Florida until he packed his bags and stole away I am now 40, alone, with three children to rear. We tried our best to make him happy and welcome as head of the house: But nothing could please him, due to the image implanted in |his mind. He shut himself away from us’ and made lists of our shortcomings, We had four years of frustra- ition and sadness, thanks to his family, and now we are left in despair.....The humiliation, the lack of appreciation, the’ male lprotection withdrawn, all hang ay | act Russia! ‘s Youth-Dislike—. Drab School Uniforms By JOHN BEST MOSCOW (CP)—When a Rus- | Sian girl gets tired of her school | uniform and starts dreaming of | wearing dresses to class she is, it is to give the girl something The teacher, Natalia Dolinina, jumped into a debate that goes }on more or less continuously in | the Soviet Union: What to do “labout the school uniform. , SERIOUS BUSI NESS? Tt fooks tke serious business for Mark . Collett, five-year- , old son of Vancouver golf*pro Len — Collett. But Leslie Reid, 4. sees a humorous’ side to it as Mark connects with » y the—ball.___Vancouver golfers are hitting the fairways in droves this: spring’ with last December’s snowfall now long gone, (CP Wirephoto) - fashioned .~. . §\and not without godd grounds,” &|\Dolinina wrote acute sts rr ikea | A minority of citizens would j\like to see it @bolished. Many others want it retained but would like to see it dressed up a bit. Give the poor, suffering pupil a break, they say. At present the uniform for girls consists of a brown. dress of wool or cotton and a_ pull- over black apron—all.in all a pretty drab outfit. Boys wear a grey suit. made of. heavy cot- ton. The existing uniform is ‘‘old- children hate it to a Moscow newspaper. Talk about introducing @ A ott ot eports-like aniform been going on for years. Bat a change of uniform--would provide only a ‘‘superficial solu- tion” to the problems of young but from the emptiness of in- \ternal life, from a_ bourgeois ,Spirit—this is the main, danger- jous shortcoming of some con- sz, temporary young people.”” The teacher was replying to a Leningrad mother who had © complained ina letter to the! newspaper that her daughter, after passing Grade 9 at one of only refused to wear a uniform but also took to wearing nylons, high—héels.and_tall hairstyles. “And she says everybody is dressed like her,’’ the mother added disapprovirgly. Dolinina asked how it hap- pened that school, parents and teachers all had so failed to “fill the girls’ souls” that their interests lay in dresses. The teacher went on to say that no uniform could eliminate this tendency. ‘‘There is only one’ way—to give other, more important things to youth.” It was necessary to under- stand the ‘‘complicated.. pro- cesses’ acting on young people and try to influence them wisely. It was necessary to show interest in youth’s “inner world, ufidggand its searches, world, under and its searches, But that was as far as the teacher went. The ‘‘more im- portant things” were left un- identified. - . The Last Battle Published for the first time anywhere, here at last is the feat—by Cornelius Ryan, author of The Longest Day. In March Reader's Digest is the first of three parts of this dramatic chronicle. ‘ Filled with new information, this insight into Berlin in the grip of panic is destined to be- come—a--best—seller-—a—n classic in the literature of World. War II. Don’t miss the March. Reader’s Digest. * 0 New Spring HATS arriving daily! } ADELLA’S MILLINERY 100 Queen St. Charlottetown senault Roches won| Mrs. ee Pe ee vee Roches wy F she visited galleries | It, ti Fred Ar- |rese ‘and green. ecu consolation, Fri se ati she | - — Parnes he Ps in Canada and | pattern was the result of a com: versation with a former col- league. He pointed out that hori- folds and are very tiresome.” | She also had to consider the effects of stage lighting. “We experimented with e va-| riety of colored and patterned lights. Theatre technicians have become. so ingenious and inven- tive, we had to provide for all types of production situations.” Mrs. Vermette had never de- signed for industrial. production before. She has been working with technicians. ata —textile plant in Huntingdon, Que., ex- perimenting with dyes and weaving processes to her scale model full-size. Wife of ceramist Claude Ver- mette and mother of several Mrs. Vermette has been weaving since she was 12. \She has shown in several solo and group shows since her first exhibition under the ee of the National Gallery in | over us like a cloud of death, | rendering us helplessly, hope-) lessly lost. I’ve seen other ‘‘step'’-wives and children with the same haunted subservient air about them. They feel guilty for liv- ing and ashamed of being treat- | as unworthy humans. + for tawa’s centennial centre of the | The bold, simple design is the | (other countries, | zontal. patterns waver with the! |NUMBER 4954 ‘SIZES 144-24%2 .~<>y | iy RS - §8LENDER PLEATS Slender - falling soft pleats set the skirt in motion— long-waist- ed line is a wise choice for short- er half-sizes. All told, an excel- lent investment. Printéd Pattern 4054: Half Sizes 14%, 1642, 18%, 0, 22%, 1/2444. Size 16% ‘requires 3 yards 45inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS (50 cents) | | (no stamps please), for—ea pattern. Ontario residents add 2c_sales_tax. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, 8TYLE Send order to-ANNE ADAMS, care of Guardian-Patriot Pat- tern Dept., 60- Front - St. We Toronto Ontario. COME ALIVE FOR SPRING! Send for our new Spring-Sum- mer Pattern Catalog.. 125 ‘top shapes for sun, fun, dining, everyday! One free pat- tern—clup coupon in Catalog. Send 50c. Nutty Food S Filberts (perhaps known to you as “hazel nuts’) have been appreciated for centuries for their delightful flavor, But the filbert is also very nutri- tious —a good source of protein, |’ the B vitamins, and containing substantial amounts of minerals as well as Vitamin C. Variety Of Uses Filberts are plentiful this year and budgetwise when used as a supplement to the more costly proteins; or when used in tossing a salad; in stuffing for baked eggplant; topping for a fruit pie; or in a hot bread {to bring up the protein content |of an otherwise unbalanced The Filbert. Praline Powder we are columning today origi- nated long ago in New Orleans, _|where it was used as a topping for pies, cakes, fruit, caters | and ice ream, Measurements level; rec’ for 6 to 8 FILBERT’ PRALINE POWDER % ce. granulated sugar. % c. water % e. filbert nutmeats In qt. saucepan; combine sugar and water. Stir - cook over medium heat until sugar dissolves and mixture boils. Stir in filberts. Cook- over high heat without stirring until mix- ture is color of molasses. Pour onto lightly oiled eockie t; cool. Break into pieces and buzz.in electric blender praline through | food ior using fine blade.. Store praline powder in covered container in | refrigerator. FILBERT PRALINE CREAM.) 4 eggs; at room tempera- 4 [IDA BAILEY ALLEN “High Fashioned Filberts upplement into 2 - qt. serving bowl. Re- frigerate 3 hr. When serving, dust. with remaining filbert pra- line powder. . TOMORROW'S DINNER Green Beans and Fordhook Lima Bean Saladettes, Vinaigrette Dressing — Baked- Panned Liver and Bologna. Slices or Broiled’ Beef Steak (any cut desired), Franconian Sweet Potatoes, Chopped Kale —Filbert Praline Cream, or Cooked Prunes with Orange Sections—Coffee, Tea, Milk. BAKED LIVER AND BOLOGNA SLICES 1% tsp. ground sage 1 tsp. seasoned salt 1% Ib. skinned beef liver. sliced 14" ‘thick % Ib. thin slices bologna, halved “peal Mix seasonings and ru |sliced liver on both sides. = jrange in single layer in well- | buttered or margar' baking pan. Bake 7 min. in oven, then turn. ' At this point, arrange bo- sliced liver. _Bake 5 min. more. Turn bologna at the end of 3 min. Serve ‘‘as is’, or garnish THE CHEF CAUTIONS - Mesdames: Filbert Praline Powder needs constant atten- tion, for if it is overcooked, the mixture. will be “grainy.” As a precaution, you can add % tep. cream of tartar or 1 tsp... light corn syrup when starting to cook. Without affecting: fla- of |Vor, either of these causes -a physical and chemical change in the sugar that prevents ture (separated). 1-3 c; sugar ~ 1-3-¢. flour 2% ec. milk 1-16th tsp. salt 1 tbsp. sugar, additional % ec. filbert praline powder _1 tsp. each vanilla and rum flavoring — Separate eggs, dropping yolks into 2 - qt. bow! Beat egg sane and 1-3 e. su- Halifax Hires Woman Lawyer HALIFAX (CP)—Sandra El- len Oxner, the city law depart- | ment’s first woman lawyer and ithe fifth to enter. practice in Ww. ‘Nova Scotia, says Jaw can bring | ; ;women in touch ‘vith an amaz- | DEAR G. W.: ~My first bit of ing variety of matters.” advice is to stop rending your; Miss Oxner, a 24 - year - old | garments and tearing yéur hair, graduate. of Dalhousie: Univer- | figuratively speaking, in the sity law school here, says she | wake of your brainwashed hus- entered law to learn ‘‘how peo- | gglet can you say to help oth- er young widows and their child- ren who enter a new marriage with shining hope and love in their hearts? How prepare them for abandonment and rejection? And how fortify them to face) the-world again? — Sincerely, ° ais G. As you know, the healing gift ganized.” of valiant understatement, a-| ‘1 think of law not so much | bout tough or jevous situa-|@8 @ system of penalties but as | tions, comes eaten from the |@2 organizing force, a kind British character. \guideline of how to live. The words we use about our au Bie their yfioel now is | \Cubs, Guides, band’s sneaky fade-out-—- ——— ple_can_live together and be or- | 4 MISCOUCHE Mr. Charles W. Mallett! of |Miscouche is a — in Prince County Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Harris Johnston, Charlottetown, were recent vis- \iters at the home of Mr. and) 'Mrs. George Veno of Miscouche. The annual Lord Baden Powell |church service was held for Brownies and iScouts of St. John the Baptist ao on aw morning in —evening-.a- < Heat milk just: to boiling. Gradually. pour into egg yolk mixture, beating constantly Bring to a boil over low heat. + |into deep 1 - - — whites | gar until thick and lemon-colo- - ~|red.” Stir in flour. it oes pein meke bed? Thisi nasdine.weetoginsoaie thousands in misery. But here is news for all i Simmer-boil 2 min. beating con- | stantly with wire whisk. Trans- | }fer to 2-qt. bowl. | Add salt to egg whites. Stir | in additional sugar; beat until | soft peaks form. ~-Fold egg. whites into hot egg -yolk mikx- ture with % e. cues ten powder and flavorings. \> leieey concert was staged by |the . various groups. A Mr. Frank Squarebriggs of of | crowd attended. 'Miscouche is a patient in Prince County Annex. problems do make a difference «i, 9 period of transition.” in our cumulative reactions to, “In the last era, a woman's | POLICE HUNT YOUTH MANILA, Philippines (Reut- large | them; hence a difference in the | outcome. My next bit of sivics is, skip the dramatic woebegone brack- eting | of: yourself with - all. the place swas only in the home. jers)—Police were issued shoot- |Now she is leading more . and |to-kill orders here Monday in more a double life.” \their hunt for four youths sus- | For any woman who wants to pected of killing a policenian leave. the. kitchen, Miss Oxner with a steel dart. The dart, fired ifrom a slingshot, hit the police. | the city’s best schools, had not ing bite story of Hitler’s final > wronged “young widows -with recommends law. children” who ever lived, or ever will. very much, or else she will re- | sent’ it. She will have to spend | ‘That sort of grandiose carry- = lots of nights in the library.” fig-orr “But she must want to do ft'man in the right eye as ihe ‘tried to break up a fight be- ‘tween two teen-age gangs. | tsa kind-of-refusal-to-deal forthrightly ‘with the fact that you personally have a problem to cope with. Common sense requires you to reduce the prob- lem to manageable size, and then get on with the business of liv- Thus, from my view, it is for- tunate for your children’s so0- cial development that they are spared the, ordeal of growing up under the demoralizing: in- | fluence of. such a sleazy step-fa-/ ther and grasping step-aunt. | “Good riddance of bad rubbish” As I get the picture, your deserter husband “was a broken reed.at—best,.in. the role of fa- mily head. He was looking for shelter, not offering strength of any sort, when he married you. - Furthermore, judging by his sister’s vicious. campaign to en- force her own brand of though- control of his life, they ae be a’ pretty sick combination, like ee up the pieces. Mary through her column not by mail or personal interview. Write her in care of The Guar- | dian. MONTREAL, March 3rd... ee it comes to money (as it so often does!), I prefer to keep it simple and safe. That’s why, when! I need to send money by mail, I use one of, the safe and speedy services of ‘THE BANK) \ OF NOVA SCOTIA.:. I buy a Scotiabank) Personal Money Order. It costs just a few pennies and takes just}|' a few seconds to Pos: See PMO, and you can buy ie gidte in: any amount up to The charge is 15¢ up to $150; $150 — not much to pay for a ‘sense of security’. Sco abank Money Orders are available ‘now in U.S. as well as- Canadian | dollars —- and are good anywhere. . ce ARE OFTEN TIMES when feminine irregularity calls| for a special mild laxative — oe y one that will avoid upsets that hy on with some all-purpose laxatives. To his need, Pharmaco. (Canada) Ltd. rr develo CORRECTOL* — a laxative that is remarkably effective in a new gentle way. Instead, of producing a heavy bulk, COR- RECTOL combines a simple. waste-softening agent with a laxative ingredient so mild and A pecans, it all a be used even after childbirth. Ask for COR- *Reg. TM. STORMY WEATHER DOESNT BOTHER CN PASSENGERS. I roads, fog and other-nuisances.do not affect the| * schedules and comfort of CN. You just ‘settle; back, read, chat with a companion and enjoy), the weather-free world of a smooth and quiet} yy 7 CN train. Nothing is so reassuring as to see they polo storm ontal od eee while a relax - ml warm and hospitable surroundings on boa SCN CN’s downtown-to-downtown way of the wo free is tops in transportation — and now you get the best “ at low fares'with Red Bargain Days —-so why drive yourself...? | HERE’S AN ALMOST ‘MAGIC’ WAY to make pin tgs T find shopping at DOMINION STORES cuts my food. costs substantially (a penny saved are a nickel there soon adds up to a size- able sum). Ag onIne ea Cae Hone nion is tops! Eve ing you buy at Domi- S.<» 5 nion is guaranteed or your money back, eae and this applies, of course, on the meat * u buy, too. While the savings are wordertal, ¢ it is still eet because ‘of the meat that more Canadians shop’ at Dominio at ‘any. other store. For my money, there’s no. better vise, to shop, Discover Dominion for ees YOu soon notice a as i nd {ere for the ‘better, should be your motto, in picking | ; | Haworth counsels AVY ' counters. In pink tablets: 24 for $4.25. 19 GS I ‘Hot Flashes’| You can get help with’ Lydia E. Pinkham i AT ALL ORUG COUNTERS 2 ee iz =| ' (All our bakery products as dients are used. \ 4s (SPECIAL AT OUR LUNCH COUNTER | SALMON POT PIE. } A Meal-In-Itself, Made from fresh peas, diced cas are prepared eet voto Outs tie according to our laboratory tested recipes. Only the with logna slices between pieces of wpe v UNIFORMS We carry the Newest, Brightest and Smartest Look @ Terytyene and ' @Terylone teffote 2 Aieles les @ cottons ise @ Sizes Junior @ Sentined, Petite 5-15 @ Priced from fe 8-24% $5.98 to $17.98 THE FASHION SHOPPE in Professional Uniforms. our modern bake shops, finest quality ingre- "fresh salmon, diced carrots, white cream sauce ‘ = pie crust. AVAILABLE AT | WOOLWORTH’ S Queen st ll i OE tr xv 70° Dial 4-8571- Oh’town |