I Vice Regal Party Guests Of The A total of thirty - nine guests were present at the official din- ner in Government House on the evening of Wednesday, May 14, in honour of His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey, Governor General of Canada. Accompanying the Governor General were Commander F. J. D. Pemberton, Comptroller of the Household, the Governor Gener- al’s daughter - in - law, Mrs. Lionel Massey, Flight Lieutenant Ian MacMillan, Aide - de - Camp and Lieutenant Alan Henley, R. C. N., Aide - de - Camp. The other guests besides the vice - regal party were mem- Are Governor. bers of the judiciary, the Govern- ment and their wives. Two refectory shaped tables were placed respectively in_ the main dining - room, approxima- tely thirty by twenty feet, and the adjoining room. . . These tables were covered with white damask tablecloths. Silver and cut glass bowls were placed at intervals on the table. The flowers used were white pom-pom chrysanthemums and pink snap-‘ dragons. The dishes were cream and gold. The flat silverware was both plain and ornate in de- sign. In the dining - room at old ELLEN’S DIARY Lovely, Mayiti Its Mgny Reg We do have. the nicest chats with the birds and the animals about. Wordy, when the children ,are present, or it may be word- less as today. Silly? Perhaps, though there a.re those who de- clare that it is humans’ loss not to have the gift of understand- ing them, since they do speak in knowing tongues of their own. “What’s them?” a sparrow-bird neat .and pretty, questioned peer- ing curiously over the edge of the back - verandah roof this af- ternoon at the baskets James was carrying from the house to a pig- gery across the yard. She hadset down for thema- ment the golden feather she was «hearing off to a broad eaves’ nook V above, to provide downy material . for cushioning her couch-to-be, or perhaps in its prettiness, it «came to mind fancifully, to add I ‘5 a touch of beauty to her sur- roundings to help shorten for‘ her that period of domesticity which shoiild before long bind her to the , nes . ~ “What's them?” we repeated her question with a friendly smile. She nodded, eyes sharp as she followed James steps out of sight. “You must be a newcomer to this neighborhood?" we queried. “You can say that again!”»she me Bringsl ,uIoIr Duties, teeth removed. Like tho’,-ioppene dix or tonsils” we " are there usually t In any event when‘-' __ teeth are nipped offjgli‘ more content in the"'s,ty. Andxit must be done out of sound of the m 0 th e r. So the farmers, bring them to the kitchen. vItF"d'oesn’t take long. Only a few minutes and they are ready to be return- ed to her _ . “Do piglets always come in the daytime?" ‘ ~ “Oh dear no. At all hours, most- ly through the night” we replied. And then looking back through the years of -our farming at Al- derlea we chuckled “If all the piglets that had first teeth remov- ed in the old kitchen were placed nose to-tail, or vice versa, the line would circle the globe!” “Monotonous — a little?” “Oh no. Every occasion is dif- ferent and interesting. Sometimes there is only a small litter, while at others there are so many, one immediately begins to make a list in mind of the things she will buy! A new hat, or a frock. . .” “Counting chickens. . I know” she smiled. “And anticipations are thrilling in themselves.” I “And sometimes there. is win- ter on the farmers’ feet when gigled shyly “Jes’ come.” “Those” we said, “are piglets- youngsters. just c-ome. They have been having extractions — first they bring in younglings. Or they scuff through autumn leaves. Or it is summer with the doors wide . . or sight and scent of the spring VERNMENT HOSE DINING-R00 Government House is a 160 yea!’ old buffe and beautiful old ina- hogany chairs. The picture above the buffet is a very old print of the Fathers of Confederation. His Excellency Most Reverend Bishop MacEachern o f f e r e d grace. The toast to The Queen was given by His Honour, The Lieutenant Governor. ‘ Rev. Donald Campbell, presi- dent of the Ministerial Associa- tion of Prince Edward Island,‘ was a guest. In the drawing - room much interest was_ shown by guests in the interesting pieces of furni- ture belonging to the Hyndman family. Among these was a slip- per ohair embroidered in wine colored needlepoint. There was also a portrait of Mrs. Robert Harris, wife of the Canadian Ar- tist. Harris was a grand - as now. And to look in on the small things when they have cud- dled down with their mother, is one of the most engaging sights on the farm.” Also a Maytime-litter we had at Alderlea this afternoon with a spring- mist banding in filmy gray the heights of t-he valley and a bride of sparrow-bird out of Scripture was hearing nesting ma- .' terial (or a pretty souvenir) to Cher nest .on the eave. ~ - What does James, husband of this house lunch upon? A handful of‘ raisined molasses cookies and a glass of milk serve to sign and seal now, the busy record of his day. . p , Until tomorrow —- —- Diary - Goodnight. . . . MARY HAWORTI-_-I Need To Run .WI1oIe Show Dear Mary Haworth: I am considering‘ marrying a divorcee who has »a seven-year-old son. It appears that this diVorcee’s former husband makes a 200- mile trip, a couple of times a year, to see her and their son—. bringing presents and acting in a very friendly manner. My quandary is this: In the event that'I marry this woman, I should want» to legally adopt the boy and guide him—-along with his mother’s guidance, of course —in the direction I thought best. But inasmuch as his father is, apparently, still interested in the boy, I feel that he might exert his influence on him in various The bride is the former Verna c Bryanton, daughter f M Mrs. Melville Bryanton, half: Que. The groom is the son of M1; and Mrs. David Clark, Kensing. ton. Mrs. Gerald Caseley, sister CLARK - BRYANTON WEDDING IS PRETTY Marriage took place recently at the Umted Church Manse, Ken- sington of Mr. and Mrs. James of the bride was matron of honor and Mr. Ingham MacNeil, con- 5m 0f the groom. was best man. -— _Photo by Heckbert. uncle of the governor. The Pic- ture of Mrs. Harris is lovely and the period is of the 90’s W1II.h.th€ flattering clothes of that time- In the personal living ' P0031 of the Hyndmans desk which belonged I0 the Governor’s grandfather. The Governor General will sleep in a four poster.ornat_e1y carved bed in a room facing south and overlooking the har- bour. The bed has a canoye and there is a three - stteP.Pie°_e of furniture which «assists in climb- ing into the bed. The vice - regal party were greatly impressed with the beau- ty of the old Georgian architec- ture, Government House 84l1d.1fI2S fine hospitality» Their are looking forward to other happy events during their Prince Edward Is- land visit. \ ways. Would it be considered im- reasonalhle to request this _m~a_n to not ever see his son again,‘ in view of a new father coming into the picture? I would be grateful for your views on the subject. — E. B. MAKE HASTE ISLQWLY Dear E. B.: You.can’tg‘go into a private huddle ~wi.th a confiden- tial adviser. and" arrive at right answers to th-eques-tiovnls lat is- sue. You wilL~have to explore pos-sible avenues of constructive procedure, in open-minded ‘ judi- cious exchange with the hoy’s two natural parents. Your overallattitude, ‘at pres- ent—of needing» to run: the whole show, if you marry the divorcee rying trouble a second time, if she marries you, which would be sad indeed. for the bov and her- tself. . My recommendation is “make haste slowly,” as a proverb says. If you are truly devoted to the lady, and‘ seriously want to share her life’in a helpful way, accepting the role of father to her son, then I think you should get acquainted with the former hus- band, since he too is still inter- ested. . The purpose would be to try to establish a friendly understand- ing with him, as regards the good spirit of your intentions. If he finds you a man whom he can like and respect, he may feel relieved to turn over the guard- ianship of the boy to you—and re- cede into the background as a faroff friend and wel-l-wisher. But if, on the other hand, he gets the idea that you are a xbusylbody, trying to push him out all the way, determined to give you a hard time. Rather than let yourself in for that, you had better bypass the lady, I think. situation before taking steps. M. H. NEEDS SOCIAL CLUB Dear Mary Haworth: Recently I beca-me a widow. Due to the good fortune, of having good neiglibo_rs,. wtiosaw that I wasn’t left alone for long’ periods, I have made a fair recovery from shock and grief. Now I am very conscious of the sympathetic help that widows have been a widow is to realize the ‘problem of despair, in that crisis when life seems to have lost its purpose. - There ought to be a medium- whereby they could find and know each other on a more per- sonal basis, than church, work and civic activity provide. We housie University. Their son Al- is a pulpit . punch bowl with matching ladle ——suggests that s-helmay be mar- - of the picture, he may fight you — In short, my advice is study the can give one another—~beca'~u-sc to 3 an organization — for widows. ‘ Lena Caroline McL.ure. Women’! Editor. Phone 85!! Page 8, The Guardian Thui;., May 15, 1958 HAPPENINGS The Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey, Governor- General of Canada, his daughter-in -law, Mrs. Lionel Massey and other members of the vice- regal party are being welcomed to Prince Edward Is- land. ‘ / The Hon Thane ‘A. Campbell, Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island, and Mrs. Campbell left Wednesday for Halifax to attend the convocation exercises at Dal- exander (Sandy) will graduate in law. Among those attending the Mt. A 1 1 i s o n convocation exercises were Mr. and Mrs. John C. Mac- ‘Bieth, Forest Hill. They were ac companied by Mr. MacBeth’s sis- ter, Mrs. A. G. King, Charlotte- town. . Miss Lily Seaman. accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Donald Seaman and Miss Winnifred Schurman, left Wednesday by car for Hali- fax. They will be present at the Convocation at Dalhousie Univer- sity where Miss Seaman will re- ceive her LL.D. Mrs. T. H. B. Somers leaves Saturday on a holiday trip to New York City. By IDA BAILEY ALLEN “The office shower you helped us plan for Jane was a great success," writes. a young busi- ness girl. hours -and was so pretty and easy. I “We cleared the largest desk, covered it with a paper table- cloth, set out pink flowered pa.- per napkins, ‘silver’ paper plates and flowered green paper cups. “Amusing little gifts for the Bride-to-be were wrapped in pink and silver paper and flower dec- orations were nosegays for the guests. . “The evening before, we girls made the cookies you suggested, which are out of this world! The punch we made on the spot. “Instead of giving expensive individual presents, we pooled our money and bought the free form double candlelabra we used on the table and a lovely glass as our gift to the‘-bride-to-be.” PINK PUNCH The Day Before the Party: Fill a heart-shaped (or other) mold with water and freeze in the cold- est part of the freezer. To Make: Combine 1 c. sugar with 2 c. water; boil 5 min. Cool. Add 1 (6 oz.) can frozen pine- apple - orange juice concentrate 1/2 c. lemon juice, 1/2 c. grenadine ready to serve. Add 1 qt. ginger ale. Unmold the ice molds; place in a punch bowl. Pour over the punch; garnish with fresh straw- berries. Serve with the frozen ice block and fresh strawberries. Makes about 2"dts. Tomorrow’s Dinner — Chilled vegetable juice, curry of lamb, flaky rice, hot broccoli salad, should know each other in our homes — to share friendship. travel, hobbies, etc. With millions of lonely widows in our population, the project might be developed on anational scale, don’t you think? (I would Dear C. D.: huddle together for mutual sym- pathy. Isn’t it better to stay in the main stream of life to the fullest possible ex-tent—mingling with people as people, not with wound scars? — M. H. Mary Haiworth counsels through her ‘column; not by mail or per- of this newspaper. OAKWOOD East Royalty Open May 15 for Wedding Receptions Dial 4522 V ‘delicious, flavour ,7 goes _farthe_r EXTRA C. N. R. SERVICE CAPE TORMENTINE - BORDE.N FERRY For the convenience of travellers to and from Prince. Edward Island over the Victoria Day holiday weekend, the- C.N.R. ferries will operate nine trips in each direction daily, from-Friday, May 16, to Monday, May 19, The ships will leave Borden and Cape Tormentine at 8:25 a.m., 10:05 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 12.50 p.m., 2:15 p.m., 3:40 p.m., 5:25 p.m., 7:30 p.m. In addition, there will be an early morn- ing trip from Borden at 7:00 a.m. and a late evening trip from Cape Tormentine at 9:15 p.m. Atlantic Standard Time. NAnuN,A_l' Rehi~_ei§ inclusive. “It was held after 6 and stir until blended. Chill until" appreciate your publishing this). C. D. ‘ ' I’m not sure it I would be a boon to ‘widows, to ‘ specific reference to their major ‘ sonal interview. Write her in care 5' Planned Office Party Was Attractive And Easy fruit cup, new nougat cookies, coffee, tea or milk. All measurements are level; recipes proportioned to -serve 4 to New Nougat Cookies: Blend -1 c. room-soft ‘butter or margarine and 1 c. sugar. When fluffy beat in 1 egg and 1 tsp. vanilla. ,Sif-t together 3 c. already-sifted enriched flour, 1 tsp. baking pow- der, 1/2 tsp. baking soda and 1/2 tsp. salt. Add 1 c. chopped wal- nuts, pecans or filberts. Mix into the first mixture. Remove half the dough. ' To the remainder, mix in 1/2 c. sugar and 2 squares melted un- d I repair . any ‘ province jsupply, install ’ type. fiariywhe _, Electric coii_tracting- - . I from i/7eI“p’:-iiring: ‘a lamp’ socket to re_wi_ring your-’house—-FREE es-‘ ANIIEIIREPAIRS - Q motors, ti-anges, automatic . wash- ; ers, STIIREY-IE 136 PRINCE ST, LEOTRIC sweetened chocolate. On a large sheet of waxed P3‘ per, form 1-3 of the plain dough down the center, lengthwise. Lift the waxed paper and roll the chocolate dough around the plain dough. Pinch the edges together; press into an even roll. Wrap in waxed PEIIJEIV Rel’?-‘at- making 3 rolls. Chill at least 2 hrs. _ To bake, slice the roll Vs 111- thick. Bake 8 to 10 min. in a moderate oven, 375 degrees F - Makes 6 to 7 dozen. Trick of the Chef: _ Add 1 tbsp. crushed minced fresh mint leaves to the P1111911- LITTLE FLOWER C. W. L. The Little Flower - sub - divi- sion held their annual meeting on May 6 with thegpresident Mrs. T. W-. Dunn presiding. The meet- ing opened with «the League Pféfy‘ er opened by Rev. Eric Robin. The minutes of -the prevlolls monthly meeting and the previous annual meeting were read by the secretary Mrs. Somerlid Kelly. The minutes were approved and signed as read. Roll call was an- swered by paying League dues. The annual report was read by the retiring president Mrs. T. W. Dunn, who gave a detailed report on the year’s activities and ex- pressed her thanks for the whole hearted co - operation she _re- ceived during her term of office. The treasurer Mrs. J. B. Jay gave a report of the collections 3;-eta;-y then read her re*P0!'f which showed a membership of ninety - 0116- ' The presentation of the conven- er-S reports revealed a very S110- cessfm year by this group- Th -ewly elected officers are: Presiedgnt, Mrs. Somerlid Kelly; 151;, vice - president. Mrs. Cyrus L<aPienre; 2nd. vice - president, Mrs. John Hughes; 3rd. vice - president, Mrs. P. R. Sinnott; Secpetary Mrs. J. B. McCarton; Treasurer, Mrs. J. B. Jay, fe- elected. The spiritual adviser Rev. Eric Robin thanked the retiring offic- ers for their work done in the society and their splendid lead- enship given by an m the parish work and‘ . ,l._ the hope that the new ‘S13 officers would receive thg, support from all membe1.§_ He then expressedms th for their personal kindness-sh to him and his first mas Mothers Day. May 11 wows I. offered for their intentions_ ‘ 78 Great Ge Dial 4311 om 8‘ and disbursement for the year showing a good balance. The se- Bake a batch of crusty ariety of materials and fancy patterns. 10118 ‘and. leeves. Select’ from this large outstanding range." Dinner ROIIS 0 If you bake at home, you’ll want to try a batch of crunchy Dinner Rolls. They’re so easy to make when you use fast rising dry Best Yeast! » -4 CRUSTY DINNER ROLLS ‘ Measure into a large bowl 1/5 Ac. lukewarm water; crumble and add 1 cake Best Yeast——or stir in 1 tsp. . granulated sugar and sprinkle with 1 envelope Best dry Yeast. Let stand 10 minutes, THEN stir well. Add % c. lukewarm water and 1 tsp. salt. Add, all at once, 3% c. once-sifted all-purpose flour and work in with the hands; work in 3 tbs. soft shortening. Knead on lightly-floured board until smooth and elastic. Place in greased bowl. Cover with a damp cloth and set in warm place, free from draft. Lei rise until doubled in bulk. in into 2 equal portions; shape each portion into a long roll about lit’ cloth and let rest 15 mins. Using t _ a floured sharp knife, cut dough-‘ into 2' lengths and place, ‘ ‘ —: apart, on ungreased cookie j Sprinkle rolls with commealuu], let rise, uncovered, for 1/; hour, Brush with cold water and letrise ,. another 1/3 hour. Meanwhile, stand , a broad shallow pan of hot wan; ; « in the oven and preheat-oventohot, 9 let’ 425°. Remove pan of Water from .-‘ oven and bake the rolls in V filled oven for 1/; hour, ’’ them with cold water and spriijk. Punch down dough in bowl, fold ling lightly with cornmeal aftcitlic'.,_ , over, cover and again let rise until first 15 mins., and again bmshing ' I doubled in bulk. Turn out on them with cold water 2. minutes ,-, ’ lightly-floured board and divide before removing baked buns from _ ' DIAL 7341, . the oven. Yield—l8 rolls. diameter. Cover with a damp : 4' is fit "\‘ SUGAR ...... TASTY PAK PEAS 2 for 29¢ 10 LBS. P SILVER SEAL 16 OZ. BOT. 39° EANUT. 89¢: BUTTER . FIRSTIGRADE CREAMERY, NEW GLASGOW 2 LBS. ....I.33 RAYNOR’S WHITE GRADE A LARGE PERFECTION . link ... .5 tins 73¢ 25 LB. BAG OGILVIES FI.OI.IR% . . . . . 16 oz. iar SANDWICH SPREAD 8 oz. iur 29c 49: L49 ROBIN HOOD . / OATS".......55c 5 LB. BAG HEINZ out PIICKLES I 2 bottles 49': SILVER SEAL NIOLASSES D . A. 2 qts. 65c OMESTIC 2 LBS. SHORTENING 63c YORK CHOICE PEARS,,20 oz. tin 2 for 45c PORK FRESH ROASTING lb. 53c FOWL . GRADE A 6 LB. AVERAGE . . . II3. 39c BACON SPECIAL lb. A BOLOGNA . . . Ib. 37c Tomatoes, pkg, Bananas, 2 lbs, CHOICE Grape Fruit. 3 for 29: Carrots. 2 lbs. Cukes. 2 for , . Onions, 2 lbs. .. Lemons. 3 for . ‘I9: 29¢ 23: ‘I4: 29: . . 39¢ FQR Your, HOLIDIIY OUTING- MAPLE LEAF 7 WlEN.E;RS, lb. 49: I CLARK'S DEVILLED ’ HAM , 6 OZ. TIN 25c SLICED COOKED HAM -|b- 49¢ MEAT LOAF? .. pkg. KRAFT ‘I CHEESE ‘/2 Ib.t35c7 I LARGE SIZE Potato 2 3° Chips GINGER ALE PEERLESS 2 3 90 so oz. _ _ BOTS. PLUS norTLES