SPORT IN GOOD SHAPE Scuba diving is growing in popularity among girls in the year - old mother of three, has been in the water at least NDA BAILEY ALLEN | The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., Feb. 20, 1965. 7. HAPPENINGS Audrey Jenkins. Women’s Editor Phone 48506 | A Heads-Up Suggestion Our Uoside-Down Cake! THE CHEF stil! chuckles over an old joke about the no- | vice cook who stands on her head to make upside - down cake | A quick glance at our recipe that follows wil! assure inexper- fenced cooks that acrobatics are unnecessary Measurements level; recipes for 6 COLONIAL GINER TOPSY - TURVY CAKE 4 canned pineapple slices (3 of them drained and halved 7 maraschino cherries, drained 1-3 ¢ unsulphured molasses % ¢. sugar 1 tbsp. butter or margarine 1% c¢. sifted flour |% tsp. salt l tsp. baking powder % tsp. baking soda % tsp. ground ginger % tsp. ground clove % c. shortening % ¢. sugar (additional) % c. unsulohured molasses (‘ad- ditional 1 egg (beaten) %c. hot water Whipped cream sweetened with unsulphured molasses to taste Arrange 6 halved pineapple slices around bottom edge of buttered 9°’ cake pan. Center with whole pineapple slice; place cherry in center round of each pineapple half. Pour in 1-3 ¢ molasses; dust with “% c. sugar and dot with butter Sift together flour, salt. bak- iking powder, baking soda and spices Cream together shortening and remaining sugar; blend in remaining unsulphured molas- Vancouver area. Among the twice a week for six weeks. ses. Stir in % c. of flour mi most enthusiastic are Mrs The girls want to hunt octopu- . _ ~ a . ture; beat in the egg. Add hot Peter Hartman (left) and ses in the Strait of Juan de : . . Glasgow. Sonja. 30- F CP Phot water alternately with remain- Sonja Glasg Sonja, = ae ing flour mixture. Turn {nto | prepared pan {Bake 40..min... in moder -Women-Join-Expeditions~— To Favorite Sea Haunts By DENNIS ORCHARD VANCOUVER (CP) — Scuba diving has gone co-educational on the Pacific Coast Equipped with the best in scuba and snorkel livery women are joining expeditions to favorite sea haunts, shrinking from none of those wiggly, crawly things that every good ocean offers Daring has nothing to do with {t, says Sonja Glasgow, 30-year- old mother of three and perhaps the most enthusiastic among a dozen girls who have seized on the sport She has been in the water at least twice a week, week in and week out, for six years. Few challenges go unanswered by her, and she is pondering a couple right now One is to form a women's team for an underwater hockey league operating in a Van- couver poo! MAY TRY OCTOPUSES The other is to enter an an- nual west Coast Hunt for octo- puses “Not too many women have gone on the octopus grapple.” she mused recently as she pulled the last shirt from a washer, finishing her work for the day at a North Vancouver eleaning firm “Now that would be a lot of fun, wouldn't it?” Sonja wil! inevitably find out She has an ideal background for the pursuit, which attracts di- vers to the Strait of Juan de Fuca from as far away as California. Two-man teams frighten the Octopuses out of their lairs, and by-fnne Hdoms A REAL WRAP! Quick princess wrap- quick to sew, quick to walk into! Sew it , in print for shopping or loung- ing. In white or solid, smart uniform or smock. it's a Printed Pattern 4809: Misses’ | Sizes 12, 14, 16, 16, 20. Size 16 re- quires 4% yards 45-inch fabrie. F NTS (50 cents) in oins (mo stamps please) tor is pattern.Ontarte residents ‘the winner is the team that brings the biggest one back “They come # to 30 pounds around here, some of them much larger.’ said Sonja. “They're quite docile. You force them out with copper sulphate Then you grab them in the pouch at the side of the head.” Sonja and her friends prowl bays near Vancouver, always armed with spearguns They go after everything that moves, and they ve become seafood connoisseurs URCHINS UNSAVORY “We try anything once Ling, rock cod... octopus, abalone. I must say I didn't like raw scal- lops and sea urchin omelette.” Sonja, who is separated from her husband, has children seven, nine and 10. They go along on expeditions. although she dcesn't want them diving until they are 15 or 16. The group usually starts div- ing in scuba outfits—form-fit- ting, self-containeqd underwater breathing apparatus. Once their compressed-air tanks are used up, usually in an hour or so under water. they switch to snorkels, which are. simple breathing tubes for shallow un- derwater ewimming Last year at a contest off Vancouver Island, Sonja speared an -pound skate, a ray-fish that flashes a danger- ous, razor-sharp tail “I had never seen one before and I didn't know I could be cut,” she said. ‘“‘It took me down three or four times I would just get a breath of air and down it would go again. When I landed it I couldn't even pull it out myself.” The skate measured 49 inches by 68 inches. She is waiting on a check with the Underwater Society of America to determine loops. ‘Pattern 7499: directions; sizes S, M, L, incl. THIRTY-FIVE. CENT? (coin) ‘oven. tnVert immediately ‘on round serving platter. Serve | with whipped cream, sweetened with a few drops of unsulphured molasses te, ness in. America, (Red and White Cabbage) Colonia] Topsy - Turvy Ginger Cake Caffee or Tea Milk PEANUTS FOR PIQUANCY In colonial Virginia, peanuts were sometimes used in cooking. In a French salad dressing, 3 tbsp. of chopped roasted pea- nuts will coax many youngs- ters and some ‘‘oldsters'’’ to eat and enjoy simple. salads . Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nichol- ee eee Hazel Grove, are visit- TOMORROWS DINNER ing the latter's brother. Mr Salad on Lettuce, and Mrs) Myron Matheson, Peanut | Dressing Montreal Broiled Fresh or Frozen Fish with Hot Sauce Tartare, Potato Puffs (Frozen) mon Meringue Pie Coffee or Tea Milk | The Breadalbane WI! sponsor- jed a successful Valentine party lat Breadalbane school recently Mrs. Alan J. MacDonald was \in charge of the program and HOT SAUCE TARTARE Mrs. Wilmer Stewart read FROM THE CHEF a story contest to which many ,% ¢. sour cream humorous answers were contri- %@ ¢. mayonnaise, well-seasoned | buted Mrs. William Graham 2 tbsp. tart minced pickle relish | was in charge of the bazaar 2 medium - chopped pimientos (table which was supvlied with 2 tbsp. fine - chopped parsley or| varied and interesting items, cress and the ‘‘fish nond'’ was amus- 1 tsp. chonped green onion of ing for the children who enjoy- scallion ed the unusual ‘fish’ obtained Combine ingredients in pt. there saucepan. Stir until well Refreshments were Served mixed Heat slowly, — stirring : , gently with fork Do not boil; by a number of the WI mem- bers serve hot MARY HAWORTH Fences Are Good Idea Until Control Is Exercised DEAR MARY HAWORTH: | typical “family’’ neighborhood This letter refers to your reply, where children are expelled to the English - American wife from their homes to roam the who broke down under the stres-- community in bands ses of They are unsupervised, un- as to what constitutes I wish to defend any house- wives (as well as LY’s psychia-| Ddaries of activity. Their eee rist), who choose to ease such! ers ‘or the maids in charge) | stress by ‘erecting high fences} make no effort to establish a. around their property, to ward| line of command, by-checking | neighborhood aaa Mr. and Mrs. James Mac- Lure have returned to their home in Murray Harbor North after spending some time in Tor- onto. Ont., where they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Millar and family. Carl Johnston. Montague, has returned to his home after spending a few days in Halifax, N.S Willina Gillis has returned home to Ellerslie after being in Toronto, Ont. for the past six months Mr. and Mrs. Justin MacNeill, Montague, motored to Halifax recently, where they -attended the annual Dalhousie Pharmacy | Ball Mardie MacDonald, of Saska- toon, Sask. is svending her va- cation with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Rankin, Mur- ray River. She will also visit with her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Ford Keenan. Mrs. Hazel McCarron, St. Mary's Road. had returned to her home after spending the past 10 days visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Clarence Camp- bell, Miscouche. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnston, Montague have as their guests this week, Mr. and Mrs. Au- ta Ginger: Sha whtiiniited” as to tent: Oustus —Keonan...Murray....River-, Church... Results of last week's card party at Lower Newton school are as follows: ladies’ first, Rita Grant; ladies’ second, Mrs Note: In colonial days, 1 me- off the hordes of trespassers) in with one another, to determ-|Joe Edmonds: ladies’ consola- dium apple, pared, cored and cut in wedge - shaped slices would have been substituted “for can- ned pineapple slices and maras- chino cherries COLONIAL - TYPE DINNER FOR SUNDAY , Oxtail Soup (Canned) Smal! Baking Powder Biscuits Baked Ham Virginia Style Raisin Sauce - Roast Sweet Potatoes Broccoli Parmesan Pan or Patchwork Saladettes and secure for themselves some| ine whether (or not) it is con- of the God - given peace andj venient for the children of one} privacy that our ancestors| household to converge upon strove to secure and preserve. | another at a given time. Contrary to your implication,| ,The condit!on is one of anar-| t Sana .|chy, actually, with children Door prize went to Mrs. Mike) that sech 4 builders are clis wandering back to their respec-| Flynn and freezeout to Robert) ging to a fossilized, out - moded concept of (self - centered) fam-| ily life, I proclaim they are manifesting a healthy construc- tive resistance to a destruc- tive trend in our urbanized so-! ciety tive headquarters for food when they feel hungry. And this is not a slum area, mind you. It is the average middle and upper income community in our cities and suburbs. If, as you indicate, we are des- |“ Your viewpoint might be Gifs tined by the evolutionary _pro-| P.E.1. Consumers Association Participates In Plans were made for an open meeting to which the public will be invited. The meeting will feature ‘‘Potatoes’” and it ig hoped to have a potato insp- ector present who will answer any questions the consumers may ask. This was decided at the executive meeting of the P.E.I. Consumers Association of ;Canada which was held at the, home of Mrs. Loran McLellan, president, on February 16th. Members were brought up to date on the activities of the Na- tional CAC: — Wing Comman- der Arthur H. Tinker, MBE, CD, has been appointed Executive Director of the CAC, and he will be responsible for effecting the policies of CAD and for co-or- | dinating the work which the As- sociation carries’ out on behalf of the consumer at its local, pro- vincial and national levels. | Committees continue to work | toward getting more satisfactory | packages for bacon, better lab-| els on fruit drinks to distinguish |them from pure fruit juices, /and clearer information for con-| |sumers on the amount of money | \they are paying for credit. Sev- enty complaints have been re-| ceived at the National Office since sSeptember and have a referred to the committees con- cerned. Specifications for Canada Standard Sizes for 23 children's garments have been revised and. completed along with standard ments which it is hoped will be ready for use for the fall and winter of 1965-66 | The local Assoctation has par- ticipated in three surveys dur-| ing the past winter, one o them being the survey on deter- | gents, the results of which ap-| peared in the last issue (Jan- Feb, '65) of the Canadian Cdn- sumer. Information concerning Is-| land laws on Consumer Credit | and Garnisheeing of Wages has | been sent to a National Commit-| tee studying these problems ac- ross Canada. The local Association is con-| cerned about packagers using staples to close plastic bags as it, has been found that these stap- les drop into the food and are taken into the mouth. Packagers are being asked to use wire ties or heat sealing. Complaints have been recei- ved from consumers about gro- cery stores piling magazines, cl- TS Career School School Library Eight members and one tor answered roll call at | théy enjoy,.as members of a kind! vist- of neighborhood family - of- the man, in radical contrast to the or personal tion, Mrs. Edward Martin. Fol- lowing men’s prizes were won: men’s first, David Gillis; second, Kenny MactPherson: consolation, James Halliday MacKenzie and Monty Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Emmerson Mur- ray, Breadalbane, have moved into their new home in Fred- ericton, P.E.I. risen oS * Hee, ary i | it j | returning to its place. “Was it always there?” queried. | “Always” we replied mented, dropping the pot. | Ellen If February ’ ther’’ jus always. to “Speak Well.”. | “Speak well ef people—tell the | kindly things | The neighbors do, and how they i always try To make the day a little easier, Talk about sun and wind and |. open sky, | Have praise upon your lips like jewels rare; Talk ; oe peace, and eventide, | MR. AND MRS. GEORGE GARNHUM | MARRIAGE VOWS PLEDGED The marriage took place re- Edward Carlyle Garnhum, | cently at Zion Presbyterian on-of Mr, and Mrs. Danie! Charioticiown. of. Gareham- Chet iottetown: / | Cora Mae Folland, daughter ° . of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Folland, Rev. D. A. Campbell perform North Granville, and George ed the double ring ceremony. ELLEN’S DIARY Quiet Clouds Dipped Above The Wooded Slope § prag"edicte. | Once more in the turn of| blended the ingredients by hand. |? $17 Kent St. Dial 47125 \time, a February Satur d a y| And what the exact measure- ame writes ‘The End’ to our work-| ments were, we can not say. We aday week. Pleasant days, all recall that Mack, chancing to in all, they were. We spoke of| have come by for a drink at the Until Monday — Diary — {od Retr medi ate Mehsana de eae adjustment to the accepted fact rents the New Frontier freeriom| thinker. M.H. Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mail interview. Write her in care of The Guardian. February meeting of Kilmuir | Citeumscribed, insulated, forma-| Women's Institute held at the lized, regimented design for home of Mrs. C. M. MacDonald. living ‘each household a kind of | The meeting opened with the In.|0cial fortress, self - centered! stitute Ode, followed by the|#0d matter of factly exclusive) | ‘ that was Croat, end Coren wot itn ed’’ when my children were Books lor the echest Mbrary |". ry ; ; babe fed, and a Quite obviously, this some- were reverted | enocinied to | What free - form latterday style) get further information on this|! Reighborly interchange ‘en-| by. my. grandchildren) | matter, and report at the next . | meeting. Visitation committee | CUldn’t possibly transpire, in| that treas nded |* it, in terms of the many par-| ting was completed and ha ents involved making a positive! A card party was planned for, he home of . Me eatin MacDonald. "when | CHRONIG BRONCHITIS f refreshments will be in charge of BRONCHIAL COUGH, ASTHMA De you cough, cough, cough night ond dey becewe of bronchie! irritetion cowed b for breath, wheeze end cough 10 Mrs. Forban Bears, Mrs. D. Monroe,- Mrs.. Edna Graham and Mrs. R. Campbell. Visitation committee for next! month will be Mrs. Dot Camp- bell and Mrs. Effie MacPhee. The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. James Campbell, roll call to’ be answered with a) donation bake sale. efi Hi jl You con get this same satistactery relict. Get At the close of the . Te mocting, fe | SEAN srontes ton tens sete freshments were. served by the hostess. : For daily delivery to your door call 894-5556 nik, ~ had been/® climate of general accord, un- | telling a friend in a telephone [measurements for outer gar- distributed and Red Cross knit-/'€8s the community is geared conversation that she intended to kill herself and her family. MOTHER, SONS DIE CLEVELAND (AP)—A young mother and her four sons were supposedly “civiliz-| shot to death in their home here | late Thursday in what police said was murder-suicide Po- lice said Doris Johnson, 27, sep- arated from her husband Wil- liam, shot her sons, aged 11 months..to seven years, and took her own life shortly after In Memoriam In Loving Memory of Wendall Stewart Mae- Callum who departed this life Feb. 20, 1962. Ever remembered by his wife Edith and Family. | them at supper, when Alex and |time said, “‘Now let it be all |Peter were our guests... “You! white! Don’t -o messing it up ferent if you had ever lived in @ ios. to accede to the break-|that, on the home front (in that|see it’s this way” Peter ex-|with spices. And cover it with down of protective barriers pre-/neighborhood,. at least) child-| plained to his grandfather, when seven minute frosting — and scribed by the Constitution, as rearing is the most import ant James came in to the meal, “we that” he smiled; “wit! bee jessential to the develonoment of function, for the time being. want to see the next TV pro- cake! the individual, then God save In that spirit, the parents’) gram. So” he nodded, “it was) We remember too that for Th S America... , jhearts and hands and doors) just as well to stay. Besides” |jeaven, in a departure from ree urveys The greatest psychiatrists, are open to visiting “‘hordes,”| he added, “we were invited.” the wouel, eee’ the combine. , | psychologists and sociologists of| ¥00 are also supervised; "admon-| Beans? Yes" and by Way of| ation of Tartar rn ¢ garettes or-candy in front of|our day have pointed out the ished, corrected and efficiently| a tasteful change, an oatmeal/sdda. Because . ot | the cash register so the problems of proximity in our) %¢"¢t home” as occasion re-/loaf replaced the usual brown|oear, had turned to inquire er is unable to see the amount |increasingly impacted commu. | . ‘bread which complements them. | about this, before back which is being rung in, CAC is/ nities. The greatest architects... | For what it may be worth as/Rolls too, fresh from the oven./to the window acti- asking grocers to correct this. |and urban planners are trying|#" observation,.it seems tome Pieces of a cake made after the/vity without. hitched to A radio program ‘‘Calling All| to engineer us out of the dilem-| ‘at today’s young ents, | old-time method, which disregar-ja sleigh by door was Consumers” is now heard every| ma.. into a better- planned en- . who've liad) ding the mixer, had stirred and | awaiting the completion of the Wednesday morning at 10.55| vironment, permissive ofipri-| Some growth experience in load of stable - cleanings, he am over CFCY. In this pro-|vacy... |group living, away from kin-| was to take : gram the P.EJ. President off Unti? burgeoning Ameri-|{lks, prior to marriage ( as Margate Group er, a cat, black CAC, Mrs. L. J. McLe1!an/ca learns prover resvect for the, dormitary living during prep | : 3 jed smartly up | brings to the consumer informa: rights of each of its, members, Schoo! or college years’, accom-| Hears AUGress ler the golden tion about food products, con-/|fences will serve as a lifeli ne|modate more hospitably to non- ns sumer problems, testing of con-|towards the future when hope-| fenced- in, neighbor oriented! Character in Youth was the overhanging sumer products as reported in fully, they will not be needed,| livimg than do persons reared | subject of an address given by the magazine ‘‘Canadian Consu-|Sincerely, VY. entirely in an old - style, walled-| James R 3 of mer’, and other information of . in home environment. . Regional High interest to the Island consumer. DEAR VY: As ft hapoens, 1, In my view. it’s not the pro-|School, at the regular meeting FA have hordes of grandchildren blems of proximity, but the|of Margate Fellowship Group. | living in precisely the kind of en-| ages - old problems issuing | Devotions were led by Mr. Books Needed vironment that vou describe, tfrom proverty and man’s im-|and Mrs. Lorne Adams and . . with a hint of anathema. |memorial inhumanity to man,|Mrs Robert Heaney. In the ab- For Kilmuir And, to tell you the truth, I've| that makes proximity look to be |sence of the president, Mrs. often envied them and their pa-|the villian. to the superfic ia !|Reg occupied the chair | speaker end Mrs. Arthur : ae ate ten eee oe ie alten Will be the only Charlottetown Store open FREE JE! cs ow) ae > ag * en bie sae ae i me aetnd Bt NOW -NOW -NOW , + es ET eS %. » “ cm Fs * i) ~ tk rei! “That's a long time” he com the tea into '~ “This has heen a good week, continues jas it has, we sha‘'n'’t have any | cause to complain of the wea- James. commented ~ at | supper. And all the time shall we not have eyes to see, ears to hear, jand a mind to comorehend all |the wonder and beauty of the season about? And what of our” |“walk and conversation?” In regard to the latter, one reminds To brighten up a day, and give © it wings.” it. dnnannnatandpneaghtaatantinaie ee srid ee ee