——————— 7 -\in ‘the field is another concern, Big Need For ' Medical Record ‘Librarians NELSON, B.C. (CP)—Notre Dame University will bachelor’ of. science degrees ip May to perhaps the smallest graduating class in Canada— |, three young™“women who have | spent four years studying the medical reaords library set. | ence, The course was initiated in 1963 by Sister Mary Catherine, | a member of the Roman Catho- lic order of St. Ann, before No- tre Dame was a degree.grant- ing college. Later she became director of the first university- affiliated medical records libra- | rian course in Canada. In May Sister Mary Cathe- rine, who now conducting a class for 12 students in the |course, will- witness the gradua- tion of the initial “¢lass—Sister May Ganzaga of Winnipeg, also |. \a Sister of St. Ann, Catherine |Carroll of Tappen, B.C., and | Judy Lang of Montreal. “When we finish here, we've ireally got something crete,” | says -Miss Carroll, emphasizing ‘that the need for qualified med- jical. cord librarians in -Canada [ae acuw: Only 90 students grad- the country. ~ “Of the 832 Canadian_hospi-. tals eligible for. accreditation, | only -45 per cent are accredffed fa and in many—eases-the—lack of | , accreditation is associated with | 'the lack of competent and ade- | quate personnel in the medical | records department,’’ says ter- Mary Catherine.” | She says so small hospl- | ‘tals are well |records personnel’ who ha learned by apprenticeship but there is a_gréat.need:.for ‘!more medical ,. record librariang with | radvanced éducation.’””. ‘ | The dearth of male students | she says, although of late there : give | ate in this course each_-year_ rved by medical | * | | | In the new .parish of Ste. ; zz | 3 PPENI F, Asdrey Jenkins, Women’s Editor, Phone 4-8506° | Mrs. jamés Kenny and son |Saint John, N. B., after ‘attent- Jimmy have returned to their Jing. th |home in Nova Scotia after spend. ° Mes. T a of his mother, lings a few weeks With her pa- eran irents, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert! Mr. ‘and a eile: Psi j i ' : < elix Pcters, | MacQuaid, - Richmond. | Souris : West: . ar John Ww if jams, Souris spent th ast Frank Arsenault ha§ retufn- weekend in Halifax. Xd app y ‘ed to Kensington after spend- they visited with vdlaiveas and ; ling the past three months at the friends. # home of his brother-in-law and | _ sister. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard : ie ; foe Richmond While _in Jee Peters, Jr. Souris and Kensington, he resides with his Ch 1 frs. Claude Peters. | sister and. brother- in-law, Mr. tone are now spend- ‘and Mrs, Alfred “Arsenault. ‘Berm “Ag weeks holidaying in / Wende ll Bridges “Richmond, ee ® jleft recently for Port Aux Bas- Among those attending the ‘que, whére he Is 1 now employed. | funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Bol- \ger of Richmond were her 5 | Mr. and. Mrs. Wilson Ramsay | 50ns. daughters, brothers sis- Montreal, Que., ‘have returned |t€TS and grandchildren as fol- i ‘horne after attending the fune- ‘OWS: Mr: and Mrs Joseph ral of Mrs. Ramsay’s mother, Bolger and daughter. Tracy, U. foe Mrs. T. L.2Whelan in Charlotte. 5: 4:; Mrs. Gilles Pigeon and : s town. three children, and Charis} A | Bolger: of Monttreal, Que.;. Sgt. | Wigred ‘Whelan has—return a | <n Bolger of “Manitoba; Mr. | to Halifax, N. S. following the | and Mrs.-Fabian Breau and Mr | [funeral of his mather, Mrs. |.and Mrs. Phillip’ Gallant, US.A. Whelan. r. and Mrs. Victor Egan and} cp Erie Egan of Charlottetown and Nein. Whelan returned to; Mr.—and—Mrs.- Eric ee St. |Augustine's Seminafy, Scar- of Moncton N- B. fe borotreh=--O rte -atter—atiending | his mother's funeral in Charlo- - . Albert Cameron, Wellington ~ ‘ ttetown. + has returned to his home: fol- : : _ | lowing a stay in Summerside at = | Mr. and Mrs: Merle Whelan | the home of Mr. and Mrs> Frank % _| have returned to their bone in Deighat. -~ {t. pens e ° Toronto furse’ Beverly Ban- where she will: ‘find. herself sistant to an eye — specalist, | ton, shown with médel of am nursing illiterate .peasants, Dr. Harold Stefn, and will do j a eye, plans to leave Canada-fon . nfany of whom believe in voo- similar work im Haiti.. (C P wp a month-long stay ms Haiti, Beverly, 22, is an as- Wirephoto) l ite cover of snow to be the poor | ELLEN’S DIARY man's fertilizer and its clean- 6 The Guardian, CtarlOeidtown, Sat., April 2, 1966. ~ | sing rains, the former ‘to vanish | « he quickly;’ the latter_to hasten the - | Our Lives Are Patterned flowerings,...$0 tat, as Robert, MARY HAWORTH - | : ae in od “April ar : it so nicely,’ even thou M d [- Ve > Mi On The Loom Of Time Train. sheets from the towered) Married For’Y¥ ears, ate’ fe clouds at times, we shall re- OUR LIVES ARE PATTERNED |fully to mind. “If we might /member with him, | | d B Si i We weave, we remember “the |just hear a robin sing its broken |. Jt is not raining to me oy S ntri Ig ve y ister pattern. of our lives on the loom |notes, rather than the parting |It’s raining daff : ; : : of.Time. ° The minutes, we-fan-|calls of the Canada Geese. . .1¢|19 every dimpled oa ogee | DEAR MARY . HAWORTH: trayed y your husband and sis- | cy;-are the threads, and steadily janly this were April’ we said Wild flowers on the hills. |I don’t know ‘what to do. I have|ter, while they, on the other and often unwittingly on our |with some longing. Though clouds ofyeray eng tH /been married for 17 years. f hi d, offer Joint—testimeny—that part, the design grows. Day by| April rain there will be. And |-day |have two sons and a daughter, | y imagining things’ - - Pe “day we add to-its length; soime=|indeed— snowfall: ~—-Coolt--winds+424 overwhelm- the--town---~----;all-very- nice--children-—--But~-1-this of--tension;- ‘indefinitely- cea EN ‘brittle over the drab fields of the. i -—+— brighten our web. . -—head,.. & “(na times. we _ suspect _in-_sombre hues. Yet among these appear the colorful shades,- because it fs a sad day jndeed in which we can find no. happimess along the hours, no scene to treasure, no word that is heart-warming, to .So--many lo- vely things there are now in ths season when the earth shrugs off its winter garments, “and clothes itself anew. We think of the swelling buds on the branches, the first flowerings, the curls on the alders, the bright promise and: expectancy of the ever-new delights that lie a- By this April will have” e. “April, the tearful one’’ a flouse- wife commented recéntlyj with little enthusiasm, at -t pros- pect. And we -recalled that when fall days were_ shortening when sunlight was brief and settling farmsteads, and the white of the winter was to be seen in the clouds. lowered to a hjlitop, April’s name. came wist- 4867 SIZES 8-18 “SMART EXIT LINE Curve collar ends ties to create a witty, wonderful | exit line. Sew the nippethshift, in | crepe, shantung or linen—_ or- ange ice, lime, raspberry sher- | bet, coffee crete. Printed Pattern 4867: Misses! THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins)* Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16’for each pattern takes 2%4 yds, 39-in. ’ FIFTY CENTS (50 cents) tn stamps please) for each pattern. Ontario residents add 2c ‘gales tax. Print plainly SIZE, | NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER Send order to ANNE ADAMS, care of ‘Guardian-Patriot Pat- tern Dept., 60 Front St.* W:, Toronto Ontario.’ : COME ALIVE FOR SPRING! will sometimes blow. Yet how exciting it will be, as we go a- out the day's round, to -note that the air is filing with the voices of returned - feathered friends - to have our tiny song- sparrow sing for us from the “ivy” which climbs eave-ward by the front-door: “Back in the years, we'd be in the woods-now harvesting the fence-rails, "EL len: the ‘Var’ longers” James recalled today, a little lost? we could appreciate,:over the chan- ges inthe ways of the farming, even the last decade has wrought “And when we had the trees down and split, we would take advantage of any new~snowfall- to get them hauled to the fence- rows where we were to use them It was all work that I enjoyed, thuugh it-was no light chore! It meant we. were stepping- ott at last into the spring.” Now the spring’ was here: an- other week of it deawing to a close, moving farm-folks on to- ward the busy days of the crop- ping ahead. Brooklets coursed here and there-down the slope, nevertheless. the yards firm, and | we say we never saw the fields bare so fast. . . April will bring PINEAPPLE BEAUTY Attract all eyes, win compli- Send 25 cents. Dress -up--your dining table vith this lace cloth— most fa- | jonable. Pattern 7388: crochet) \directions 50-in cloth in No. 20; about 75 in string. (no . stamps). , please) to Alice Brooks, care of "Guardian -. Patriot Needlecraft Dept., 60 Front St. W, Toront 1, Ont. Ontario residents cent sales tax. Print p tern number, name, GIANT 19666 Need log stars knit, erochet— many more heedlecraft designs. 3 free patterns printed in catalof ° NEW! #312 Collectors’ Qtrit Bend. for our new Spring-Sum- | patterns for you in color, with 4 mer Pattern—Catalog. 125 shapes for sun, fun, dancing, | dining, everyday! One free—pat- tern—clup eoupon in Catalog.. Send Me. “rn f) ‘op | quilting motifs. Finest pattern ever collected from famous mu- seums, Museum Quilt sixteén complete. patterns. Send-60 cents for new. Book No. 1 60c. e . TMrs. It is not raining rain, to me . It’s raining roses down: It is not. raining rain to me But fields of clover bloom, Where any buccaneering bee May find a bed and room. A health unto the happy, A fig for him who frets- It -is_ not raining rain, to me It's raining violets.’’ ‘Until Monday - - -Diary ++ -- Good-night. . .°. . : EAST BALTIC dt Marie MacDonald, Souris is -a—patient.in the. Kings County Hospital, Montague. Marie’ is the daughter of Mr: and Mrs. Gerald MacDonald, Souris: ‘Mr.-and Mrs. Ralkph—Robert- son, Kingsboro, on March -17 celebrated their 44th wedding anniversty at their home. Mrs. Robertson is © enjoying good ‘health and Mr. Robertson had been confited to his home and hospital for several weeks but is now able to be out and about. Mr. and Mrs. M. Power, have returned to their home in Little with members. of their family | in- Boston. Mrs. Power while en- route to Boston became involved in a bue accident | was travelling and to re- | main in hospital in Maine ‘tor ‘a few. days. Due to. her condi- tion their trip was cut short. | Mrs. Power is now convalescing at her home and‘she is much improved. Robertson is Mrs%. Rebacca confined to her home in Munns Road through iliness. — ___ RICHMOND Mrs. Mary Madeline Gallant ‘;Passed away on March 28, in her 102 year. The late Mrs. Gallant resided »with -her- son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Foustin ‘Richard; Mr: and Mrs. William Shaw |have recently taken up residence ‘in Richmond. Recent visiton¥ at the home of Emily Gallant, Richmond were her daughter “and son-in- \law, Mr. and Mrs. James Arsen- |ault, Summerside and her son, «|Roanie, student at St. Dunstan’s | University. TO BE Harbour having spent a few days, aS |= ROT ments for this exquisite crochet- | in breezy ed, pifeapple cloth. lhas been an increase in the | Odile in Quebec City, duties |fear my marriage may be brok- len up. I have a sister, 23, of whom my husband always. has been very fond. But recently, he has been: seeing her’ more and more often. = About a month ago he told me ‘j\he-was going out of town on- business. That night I’thought I heard a prowler: outside’ and, being scared, I telephoned my sister, who lives three blocks a- way. My husband answered the phone. Evidently he recognized ‘my voice, for he handed the phone to my sister, who said that the person..._.who answered - w a 5 “just a ftiend who stopped by.” I am sure it- was my husband. \, I told him about it and he said the whole thing was ridiculous. But I can tell by the way the y look at each other that they are come victims" ‘of a broken home. What should "I do? C.B. DEAR C. B.: Taking your | for the sake of discussion that are in fact fanning a flame of in- trigue beh{id your back, I feel. that you should find a reliable’ counsellor, in your own locality -Te- |with whom to explore your an- xiety and thaternal forebodings. In that psychologically sup- portive, therapy-type relation- ship you will have a certain a- mount of insurance against act- ing‘ rashly, in your urgent con- cern to save the marriage,. if possible, for the children’s sake. In my opinion, it would be un- wise of you to try to keep. the whole problem under cover, so to speak, :in your own mind, in the face of your husband's re- fusal to concede any grounds for your suspicions. The emotional tension, on your. part of feeling miserably isolat- ed with the—personat—tonviction that you are being furtively. be- 24466666 H. BENNETT CARR Sun Life’ of Canada District Supervisor Insurance Counselling Charlottetown, P.E.T. Phone 4-8817 - 4-5435 23662660 006626666 20066660 06666 6406 9OOO60O oe @ GOOD" in love. I don't care myself, but }- I don't want my childréfi to be- |. story at/ face value, ‘assuming |. your husband and—your sister |” nrokiged. could tear your men- h to shreds: ‘ore, your first obliga- tion, in circumstances, is to break out the “bind” in. which you've been cornered, by telling the story, exactly as you see it, to a reliable family re- lations counsellor. . Thus you will begin to naizo: tiate firm hold on. your native capacity to separate fact from speculation, and to think clear- ly about the “realitie of the problem. : In fairness. - ei I should say, in conclusion - - there is a remote possibility, hardly like- ta} ~ The number of men taking | courses. ‘ena is normally earried out by men have on taken, over “by 17 attractive girl _students— The ‘girls, wearing special uni- forms and ‘christened. host«s- ses in the house’of God, serve as ushers, collect the offering _and check for lost, articles af- ter services. (CP Photo) ° ing your tusband’ts _inter- est in your sister But if so, it still makes se to unburden your heart to.an accredited per- sonal counsellor, as the coun- lor himself (or herself) could | a. as a necessary. start to- | wards .getitng at, and clearing ‘up, the source of the trouble, whatever it is: @ You wouldn't have written | in the vein you have, if an urgent family health-and-welfare’ prob- lem of some sort weren't weigh- Church _ organized. missionary. : WOMENSS ORGANIZATIONS MRS. T.-W. HOWARD. Honored The Long Creek Baptist guild recently under the name of ‘“Geérgia Howard Mission- Mrs. TW. Howard Honored By New Missionary Guild and roll call will be responded to with a.name of a missionary. | Eood_..committee...will _include... th: hostess, assisted OY Helen MacPhail. ~ To avoid: clothes- tangle in the jwasher, place the clothes in bundles: on all four sides of the ., agitator instead of stringing 2 ¢hem-ardund fey It's the heat, not the pressure, that drons the clothes. Try: td break the habit of ‘pressing. down- on the iroft. ly, eter oe you are an- a t_warrant, concern- ing on you. M.H. _ Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mail or personal interview. Write het in care of The Guar- dian. ¢ a RELISH TASTY TITBIT The palms of the polar bear’s paws are a gourmet Sere to the. Eskimo. ary Guild - in honor of Mrs. ev.) T.°W. Howard, who play- ed' a major part in organizing this.new group. ~ = The Aneeting was held at the jhome of Mrs. Donald MacEa- cchern when roll call was answer- ed with ‘a verse of scripture con- taining ‘the word “heart”. > The devotional progrram was led by Mrs. Meredith .MacEachern, the topic being ‘‘Bolivia’’. Mem- a ‘bers were requested to save la- bels. from Canada Packers’ pro- ducts to purchase a premium for the parsonage. Next meeting will be: held at | the home of Phyllis MacFadyen STAR CHERISHES 'HOME CBC singer Betty Robertson is married to a Toronto physical education constltant and has two children, aged 11 and six. “ae FAMOUS QB) RANGE wre | FLE-CLEAMING OVEN “It cleans itself electrically” The following were. elected first officers in the new guild: president, Pearl MacEachern vice-president, Kay MacPhee; secretary, Ferne MacPhee, and treasurer, Joyce Blackett. Mrs T. W. Howard was elected as counsellor. The overall” Mari- time superintendent is Mary. Millett_of Nova Scotia. START OF AN INDUSTRY — Canada's first paper-mill was | begun in 1803 at Montreal by James Brown. | LUMBAGO BACK-ACHE, ©. LAME BACK When your back is stiff and painful se. it is hard for you to stoop or_bend take the remedy that has re reliel to thousands—TEMPLETON'S T-R-C’'s. Don't suffer a day longer than you have to. Get T-R-C's today. Orly So at $1.6 at drug here. For extra fast relief, use Tem > Cream. Liniment in the roll-on teee exten lnelly, while toking 1-R-C’s internelly. -Ce . .25. LAME-Creom, $1.25. — dials-and it cleans itself! No cleanser of any kind needed! No more scrubbing! No smoke or fumes}. The cost? Just a few pennies per clean- ing. Tested and approved by dian * Standards: Association for use in‘Gana- . dian homes. . PLUS...such wonderful cooking features as these: @ Fast, flameless Calrod units for cook, | clean surface cooking. a _@ Easy-set oven timer control for perfect. baking, broiling, roasting. a ‘No more dirty oven cleaning. Just set the -~ fF © Infinite heat switches to raise or lower Fi HOUSEHOLD HINTS « OF CpsTer +: davelin 1g white, > , pulse-quickening colors 7” - Now jis thé-time’to come to Holman’s — the beautiful brims of Easter are here. You'll delight in the ‘airy organzas (a8 shown),;—textured—straws,—sewn-straws—and fabrics, —_They re great flatterers and top fashion, values all! Come choose . your Easter toppery today at Holman’s. Every wanted shades ‘THE, AIRY BRIMS———} cooking heat precisely as you wish, -and many other eéxtia features. at Vi 98 Uu |p ee (shown 8.98 and 9.9 We carry the Newest, Brightest and ff} uc: TALISMAN Model S708 |. = Only Al 9g 95 ema = Smartest Look in Professional Uniforms. {}---.: or) : ‘ we and @ Terylene thihete : : ae : . ; © Blends Stead 5 6 It 2 “Open a Convenient dhol iene. m woo oF : ee Le i sre te 8- 2414. $i ‘ Soon at i . THE FASHION SHOPPE sae are “ Agen All Day Siturday 144 Great George St; Diat-4.3355 ee ; | : = po ae A = ee