‘+40 Three delegates of the Uni- tarian Service Committee are geen prior te their ann meeting held in the Dominion building last week. From the left are Mrs. A. A. MacKin- mon, director of ways and means, Dr. Lotta Hitschma- | nova, executive director of the USC in Canada, and Mrs. Fred Osborne, chairman of the Charlottetown branch of the USC. Service Pins Presented — At USC Annual Meeting Dr. Lotta Hitschmanova pre sided at the branch meeting of the PEI. Unitarian Service Committee, held at the packing rooms in the Dominion Building, Charlottetown last week, when reports on the year's work were om e that treasurer reported the-sim of $554.31 had heen rea» ved in acknovviedging all gifts of We stopped # moment hzerl which inviuded donations clothing received at the pack- vard to watch the gentle fog, meal-to the water bubbling in placed. in hattles throuzhont the area and collected. weekly At this point, asked that all cash donations be ! forwarded to headquarters in Ottawa before the end of_ the year —— Lena MacCallum reported RI Mrs. Ruth Barlow stated one member of the group accompa- nies the willing workers each Monday night. Mrs. Walter MacMillan and Doris BBrown were two : recipients of the Unitarian. Ser vice Pin. These pins were presen- ted in recognition of work invol- ing rooms \- «Mrs. Fred Osborne,- President, Dr. Hitschmanove referred to the Taithfulness of fields, uftil the sun climbs above |remember’ — and the working group. During the question and ans- wer period, Dr. Hitschtpanova advised group that” baby’yshirts and heelless socks are. constan- | fayettes completed and forwar tly in-demand, the latter to be ent it, and Scampie’s bark ques (kept ee Vases of giadioli, baskets of mums and pajted fern decoral- ed the sanctuary of Margate Un- ‘ ‘ited Church for the marriage’ of Doris Evelyn, daughter of Mrs Preston Woodside, Margate, and “the late Mr. Woodside and Sian- ley Lorne, elder, son of Captain and Mrs. Cecil Parsons of Pentz, NS. ° Rey. W. A. Paterson officiated at the double ring ceremony, which took place on Saturday afternoon, September 4 at three o'clock in the afternoon “Mrs. Russell MacKay was in charge of the music and played Lohengrin’s “Wedding March” as the wedding. party entered the church. “Praise my Soul the |King of Heaven’ was sung by the choir and congregation, and a solo, “O Perfect Love” was rendered by Mrs. Edwin John- son. both pripr to the ceremony During the signing of the regist- er the soilist sang “I'll Walk be- \side You" The bride, given in marriage by her brother, James, wore a | whit street length gown of nylon sheer ovre taffeta. Embr- | Oidered,. appliques trimmed the | bell shaped skirt and the fitted | bodice. which was designed with J a square neck! ine and short sleeves Her tiered veil of tulle |illusion was held in place by a leuster of matching roses, and stie carried a cascade. of red roses and whité carnations Mrs. David Stewart was trori of honor for her sister Her gown was in romance blue and | was fashioned ‘with a bodice of 'lace and a full skirt of nylon net over taffeta. A cluster of mat- ching roses. held her tiered veil of the same shade and she car- ried a nosegay of yellow’ mums, Lorraine Parsons, sister of the groom, and. Merilla W 00 dside, Sister of the bride, were junior bridesmaids. Both were dress- ed_in romance blue in design si- milar to that worn by the mat- ron of honor. with matching tie ‘red veils held by wedding ring headdresses trimmed with lily- of - the - valley. They carried small nosegays of vellow mums. | Brenda Woodside,- niece of the | bride was flower girl wearing baby blue brocade with match- ing veil held in place by a clus ter of roses. She carried a bas- Mae ELLEN’S DIARY i At Length The Sun Rose Above The Valley’s Rim> - in the liously, watching us stir salt and 6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues. Sept. 28, 1965.) 'Parsons-Woodside Vows Solemnized At Margate — ‘Mrs. Sarah Parsons and Mr s. BRISTOL Mr and Mrs. John O'Neill, are planning on turning the farm over to their son for the winter months at least and move to The bride's nephew, Jimmie Woodside, was ring bearer Hilbert Woodside, brother af the bride, attended the groom. Ushering the guests to the pews marked with miniature white baskets of white and blue sweet peas. were Preston Woodside, brother of the bride, and Lawr- ence Parsons, brother of the: groom. A reception for 60 guests was held in the church hall. Vases of summer flowers graced the ta- bles. The bride's table featured lighted tapers on either side of a three tiered wedding cake, topped with a miniature bride! and groom. The toast to the. bride was proposed by Rev. Pa-| terson and responded to by the groom. Mr. Paterson also pro- posed a toast to the bridal party, | and the best man, Hilbert Wood- side, responded. A telegram from | the groom's uncle and aunt, Mr. injured Islander, Ralph Sin of Kitchener, Ontario, has to vacation in his home village of Bristol. He is as a cabinet maker Kitchener and before moving to Ontario was employed with a Charlottetown woodmaking firm for ll years. i _'WOMEN’S ORGANIZATIONS St. Mark’s Women Hear Panel On Amalgamation The women of St. Mark's Ang- * lican Church, Kensington, were invited recently by the leaders ) of the three church groups ‘to the church ,hall where they heard a pane! discussion on the theme. ‘Let's take a look at our- selves’. The members are con- | cerned that three groups are op- ening within the church, when it’! is possible that one group compo- sed of the present three would be quite as effective, preventing overlapping of activities and re- | quiring only one set of officers instead of three. » ' of erator for a well prepared pane! discussion. Panel ists were Mrs. E.J. Fiainder, Mrs. Elmer Moase, and Mrs. D. L. “fcInnis. Mrs. Fiander spoke on the many areas of service open to |women in the vor!d as Chris- tians. She made it clear that a woman may make an effective Christian witness in any walk of life, in the home or out in the world. Mrs, Moase spoke on the work of the WA first as a stric tly missionary enterpr's up to the present day when the work the WA is any work The program followed a sat- which the church calls upon jt isfying pot luck supper enjoyed by young and older E. J. Fiander was mod- | MARY HAWORTH and Mrs. Stanley Parsons, Hall-| fax. was read by the best man. The guest book was circulated by Mrs. James Woodside, sister. - Need Expert in-law of the bride, The _ bride’s mother, Mrs. Woodside, received the guests Dear Mary Haworth: . David wearing a baltic blue dress with) and [ have been married nedrly white trim, matching blue jacket 19 years. He is 12 years my sen- and a white hat. Her corsage jor, grew up during the 1930s de- was of white carnations. ‘pression, and I've hever heard The groontix” mother, Mrs him speak happily of his child- Parsons, woré a sheath of baby ‘hood, blue silk shantung, a matching | Each year I feel I know him hat and white accessories and @ less. He is a fanatic about work corsage of pink carnations: ‘and very strict-with the chil- For a honeymoon tour of the dren — his son Mike, 10, by a for- Island the bride choise a two-| mer marriage, and our daughter piece suit of peacock blue with @/ Judy, 7. Now he is after me to get white feather hat, and a corsage a job. I think he deeply resents of white carnations. having to support us... His year- The newlyweds" are residing at '¥ salary is about $10,000. 3279 Connaught Ave., Halifax,| Dave insists on a clean house, Both are members of HMCS§ Which I like too. Anyone enter- Stadacona. Mr. Parsons is @ 108 our house remarks how neat medical assistant, and Mrs: Par- it is. Too neat, I sometimes think. sotis is a navigation operator. It-doesn’t look lived-in, but that’s i how he wants it. He wants no Out of the province guests im) $n . guests, especially none with chil- cluded Captain and ‘Mrs, Cee | Gren whe might ‘mess up” the Parsons and family, Pentz, ‘house i Captain and Mrs., William Wilk- es : ie. La Have. N.S.: Mr. and Mrs.|_ The children’s bicycles must Allison Frizzell Saint John,|be parked against the left in- N.B.: Mr. and Mrs. David, Side wall of the garage (no place Stewart, Hamilton, Ont.; Mr. an@|else) when not is use, and bask- rence | ets emptied. When Dave gets -_ mare, Mrs home from work he usually asks ‘ -if I've washed the car; or how Elizabeth Engram all .of: Halifax, 140) weeding I've done. ade He wants all of us up when he ket of mixed flowers which these summery rcornings the pan. ‘Oh, odd times’ we ——— neta veils lightly -the S eptember confessed. “The time we most it wasn’t H A p V E the wooded hills eastward to lift funny — was in girlhood, at | it. So winsome it was, and quiet home, you know?” Audrey Jenkins,, Women’s Editer, Phone 4-8506 leaves early for work and ex- ipects us to work the same hours “ee does.” Mike's duties include: ‘mowing the lawn, keeping ga- rage and basement clean; but NINGS the surroundings, and serene.! He nodded. Only Chanticleer’s sharp crow); “Your great.-- grandmother, Roy @McArthur. Kensington, from the poultry -house to ace- |had a misegy that morning which spent a few days during the past r-in bed, so it fell to us to week in-Toronto, Ont. z ded-since-May-Ordering-mater-— knitted—loosely—and—long:—A-1|tioning—a—_truck--passing lane's make breakfast It happened _ dal for this work through Miss cardigans are ‘also to be knitted end... A pairof jays flew into |there was a guest at the house: |° Mr. and Mrs. Wansley Lewis, Legge of Truro was . discussed, tong in body and sleeve. Bootees the orchard. A flicker came to a man who had come from the Ajberton, had as recent guests and final arrangements ‘ieft in are a luxury, not a) necessity. search for breakfast on the Mainland ~ Nova Scotia, it was — their sonin - law and daughter,’ hands of the committee | Expressio of pleasure work heights of a weathered, and now \to buy horses. Your great- Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wildy with Mrs Ernest ell. reporting ing with the Charlotteto wmjuseless, teleph one pole. We |grandfather was to drive him ,by their children, Linda, Joanne for Home sewing and knitting. |Branch—was voiced, and refer- came indoors with Peter on his |horse and wagon of course, to and Kennet':, of Edmonton. told of work accomplis he d jence made to two delegates who early call, when well rested and jthose farms that were offering , throughout the year and Mrs. A. ‘attended the 20th Anniversary B. Cosh, in her report included |of the founding of the Unitarian work completed by members of Service Committee of Canada, Queen Mary Needlework Guild, held in Ottawa. four hundred (400) articles hav- ing been contributed through the year. j From the shipping committee eame-word { ro-m-—Mrs- Moore, _who told of over 6,000 lbs. shipped _ overseas since May. Assisting with this work were Messrs. | Jenkins. 2 Valleyfield United Church~ re Mrs.~ Marjorie~McKinnon;-ef,-cently...when Nancy _ Dianne, ways and means reported the ;deughter of Mr. and Mrs. John - purchase of a new sewing ma- MacKenzie, Valleyfield. West, aon TS RPT BCR meting, became. the..bride.ot..lohn. Alan, onayour best _?™urbs, everyday! Tunnel belt fits pe smoothly. eee Printed Pattern 4864: Misses’ |Donald ‘of Heatherdale, P.E.I. Rev. Graeme Fraser officiat- ed at the double ring ceremony. Eva. Bears, Brooklyn, the solo list, sang “I'll Walk Beside You” \prior to the ceremony and ‘'O Perfect Love” during the sign- Couple Wed At Valleyfield Make-Home-|n- Oshawa ~ = “Cairns; MacLean, Walker ~:and- —-"The~marriage-took- place ~-in-ing-of-the. register. She was..ac-.: une.t6 start away the house- |". Mr.and:Mrs....Joseph.MacKene. The bride, given in marriage s by- fume Sebi | ' "IN TWO LENGTHS! ae ” mee Choose the regular or “demi” } SS Bensth for the action skirt that's IT'S JIFFY KNIT bet. for school, sub- « Look glamorous! Knit a lacy shell quickly te team. with skirts, slacks. aist Sizes 24, 25, 26 2%, W, 32. “ Jiffy-knit shell of mohair— ze 2 takes 1 yards 35-inch popcorn design against’ lacy eee tabric. ” background. Crocheted edging ee , ae — adds smart finish’ Pattern oie FIFTY CENTS (530 cents). in | 7083: sizes 32-34: 96-38 incl. coins (no stamps, please) for | each pattern. Ontario residents THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins) -sfover-taffeta-with a-large bow: at-—~""The-cereat-tooked-perfect-wr- ae | Out of the province guests att- ending th. wedding were from happy, as children should be, he them for sale. This time it was’ Judith Woodside, nurse - in ; took up the affairs of his day. a heavy team he wanted, but training in Prince County. Hos- ‘‘Do you ever forget to put salt sometimes it was a driving- pital spent the weekend at her ‘in the cereal?” he inquired cur- horse, or perhaps smallish ones home in.Sea View. ’ he looked for te work in the ~ jmines.— : | Mr. and Mrs. Biair Warren - | We stirred the cooking cereal, have arrived from Toronto to taking every care to have it the spend a holiday’ with their ‘par jexact consistency, neither too ents, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon War-,. thick, nor too thin, to meet with ren, Mill River and M . and Mrs. jour--usband’s- approval:—-Ht-“is;-Lorne~Leard; South Kildare: — iwe have’ found, a wise. proced-_| “Mrs°-Pres to nm hold's-day-with -a-—good-- break= zie and-Mr. amt Mrs. John €ra- fast, one well made, and nicely fer, Baltic, left recently for served: ‘We have-discovered-dlso-Oshawa, Ont“ where they, plan-to™ by her father, wore a floor ‘at # James, by and large, is spend the winter months. ~": length - gown.-of-.white-rayon taf SC¢Mingly _ oblivious to WOMEN a oo canine tel scooped neckline, and long 1 i'l y /8!ven his choice he prefers his South, recently visited her son point sleeves. The full skirt fell | tea served ina pretty china cup and daughter - in - law, Mr. and from a fitted lace trimmed... 224 What then?” Peter ques- Mrs. Roy Skerry in Dartmouth, waist accented with a large back tioned. . NS. :. ae bow. Her headpiece was a pearl ,. The cereal we used was crown, which -held a shoulder fine oatmeal from the mill. Ser length veil of nylon tulle, with scalloped edges. She carried a ‘i bouquet of ted roses. oo) or syru ag whatever Mrs. T S. Noonan, Albany, . sweetener one used, was extra PEI. and also visited het bro Mrs. Stephen Trainor of La- sweet in those days... Porridge, ther Ham Noonan in Sydney, fleche, Quebec was matron -of- homemade bread : honor for her sister, and brides’ and tea, and eggs a oe ie — maid was Norma Van Buskirk, that was the menu. Well cousin, of the bride, Roslindale, ‘one can boil an egg. if she wat- Mass. They wore street length | ches the clock ® But when it was dresses, of blue and pink nylon almost time to lift them. we de- over taffeta and matching head- cided the few minutes it would pieces of tulle with pearl trims take to go down cellar to the ‘companied by~ \Peardon of Heatherdale. Mrs. Dan O'Hara of Schom- was good. And somehow ‘the back. She wore a white flow- poured to the bowls.. We were er headpiece and carried a bou- real proud of it, until your great- quet ef white and yellow carnat- grandfather tasting his, remark: ions. ed quietly, “I'm afraid Ellen, The groom was attended hy there is something missing from his. brother Ivan MacDonald and | this. Did you" he smiled. ‘‘forget Joey MacKenzie, nephew of the |Something’?” bride. Ushers were Harvey Mac-|' “It would taste horrible ,.| Kenzie, Valleyfield and Wayne wouldn't it?” Peter shrugged. | They carried bouquets of car- dairy tfor butter, would be os MacKinnon, Brooklyn. \‘Not much of a breakfast that” For the reception at the Hill- ihe observed. nations to match their -gowns:--~>nejther here nor there in the The flower girl, Darlene Mac’ cooking. And so... ."Hard as Askill, niece ‘of the bride, was go balls, they'd be’ he grin- in adress of ice green:_nylon | ned : side Inn, Montague, the bride's | And this morn-i ng, when at mother received wearing a-coral [@nzth the sun appeared above 4 dress with matching three quar- ‘he valley's rim, lifting then the gentle September fog, our far- ter coat. ssories were c > white and Her corsage, white car- leek found in the fields a per- nations. ect harvest day. The bridegroom's mother was, Until tomorrow — Diary. “ae in a two - piece ensemble of Gond - night..... flowered blue and white jersey with white accessories. She wore * MANY GO HUNGRY L'il Angel: ted the guest book. - 50 per cent suffer from hunger. For travelling to points ef in- terest around the Island, the i bride chose a three piece suit of ; pink linen with pink hat-.and> D R |white accessories. Her corsage |was of pink carnations. The IRRITATION - . newlyweds will reside at 822 pe |King Street East, Oshawa, Ont. MAY DISTURB SLEEP are made miserable by common urinary §. irritation caused by a germ, Escherichia L'il Angel: there are some tasks that only a Mr. and Mrs. Joseph’ Murphy, man can do. Confronted with | Montreal, are guests of Mr. and these, D a ve gets so mad he Mrs. Wansley Lewis, Alberton. | slams doors, pounds the wall =} -with-his-fist-and-huris—his-¢eye- Mrs. George MacKay _w_a‘s | glasses across the room. __ hostess to the members of the Mike had a morning paper Clinton WI for their regular route this summer. His manag- meeting last week. Presid- er said to try to complete the ent, Mrs. Harold Heaney, chair- |deliveries by 7.15 a.m, but Dave ed the meeting which opened insisted it be done by 6.15 a.m. with Mary Stewart collect in un- |Mike usually is up and out by | Mate’s Neurotic Tensions Counselling You say he is very disconten- ted with his. present work, . just as he ‘was discontented wit Army life, transferring from time to time to escape one com- manding officer or another whose personality-he disliked." As for what to do, a proverb says ‘‘Understanding is half. of cure.” Your feeling that you know your husband less each succeeding year is a valid obser- vation, I think. As I get the overall picture, he is a very sick man, emotion- ally sick, in the grip of progres- much |to do. Mrs. McInnis jsome of the many projects car- lof amalgamation of the related jed out by the church Guild since its organization. ‘‘But'’, she said, “we could not have done all this without the help of the. WA groups,as_well_as the women of the church who are not mem- bers of any group.” Following the panel discuss- jon the meeting was divided into two groups for discussion on the advantages ‘and disadvantages three groups. Opinions were freely ex- pressed and those taking part felt that the first step had been taken by providing food for thought on the solving of the problem of finding ‘a way by which all the women of the church may be involved in effec- tive. service NEW LONDON WI An interesting demonstration of jewellery tinting was given by Mrs. Tupper Taylor of Gran- ville, and Mrs. Louis MacLeod of, Grahanj's Road gave a talk on “music appreciation’ at. the sively worsening, indeed dang- mber meeting of the New erously mounting neurotic ten- sions, that are winding his “nerv- ous system tighter. and tighter, | so that he suffers continually | mowadays from a volcanic sense lof almost unbearble hatred of | Mhdndon WI.held at the home of Mrs. Mont MacPiwen.’' The president, Mrs. Marion Cole, presided and roll call was responded to by naming a song The secretary, Mrs. E1+is any person or situation that sug-/Burgoyne, read the minutes of gests ‘‘pressure”’ to him. As to why this explosive tur- moil within his personality, I, would infer that he feels caught — yet-with no real awareness | of what goes on — between the | the previous meeting. It was decided to purchase two copies of the WI book, “Down Through the Years’. The trea- surer, Mrs. Eric MacEwen gave her report and plans were made jupper and nether millstoncs of |to cater to the swimm ing in- maddeningly. relentless demands /structors, in the hall (as it seems to him) on his wan- The October meeting will be ing psychological and physical held at the home of Mrs. Oscar energies. Topside, tangible and visible, there. are. the realistic. demands , of family life, his manifold oblig- | ations to dependents, plus ¢t he demands of his work, his means of livelihood 5 | On + under side he is beset: by | @ spectral horde of Chaotic bit: | t | 'terly frustrated, crying emtotio- nal needs, hungover from his mi- serable childhood — psychoneu | rotic needs that press for-ex-+ ‘pression and appeasement, but | idon’t ‘get through" into his conscious thought - process. As a result, he is in a perpetu- | |ved with cool, creamy milk,| it berg, Ont. spent the past 10 days” the visiting her p arents, Mr. and | ‘to various parts of U.S.A. Office Workers: L'il Angel, we’re sorry we forgot. You see, I guess we’ve been too close.to..the United Appeal, and the reminders just passed us by. We've certainly had good special talk from our employer, on top — Right, but now, instead of bemoaning Office Workers: And they are? ~ : That the United Fund Campaign still needs. that $281,876.00 very badly to carry on their work for 27 agencies, ” ‘This Advertisement Was Publi al turbulence of ‘‘free floating” ison. Treasurer's report was 6 a.m. but one morning he over- aggressive - defensive anger and given by Mrs. William Cotton slept (one of the few times) and and seven members responded Dave wakened.us all at 6 a.m.- anxiety and self - pity, which fo- to roll call. Correspondence-was by pounding on the: wall. He jcuses irrationally, with white- read and discussed, after which (said Mike should quit the job if| heat fury, on whatever pass- refreshments were served by the he couldn’t get up; he also said ing irritant claims his attention hostess. ; . he despises the boy. : momentarily. es -~ast month he sent Miké- to My advice is, get firsthand fa- Mrs. Archié Fraser-has retur-~gleep’in the basement for three mily relations counselling help, ‘ ned to her home in Alberton weeks, for getting fingerprints or psychoanalytic diagnostic South, after visiting her son, on his bedroom wall. Our meal- help immediately, in learning. Blair Fraser, in Toropto, Ont. (times are sad affairs. Judy is the therapeutic A-B-C’s of cop- cen etn pee gecewee wel pn asking if she can have her din-ing constructively with his. un- Brian Caseléey; bones Her earlier. SEEDER —~<_| reason, a threat of major magni- spent the past week in Sea View, a and. Mrs.. B= thig is-happening-I°grew.up.in a you: -M.H. ee “ptitets very relaxed family > he-| Mary Ha@orth-eounsels Mr mand Mrs G=8=tavy, ete re. with many friends Sree ah. through-her-cotumn;-not-by tall Fecently for Rocktand, Maine, ;Ves- visiting us--—Mer ally ‘A.R.gpr. personal interview. Write her where they will visit Mrs. Levy’s Physically I feel the strain in care of The Guardian. sister, Mrs. W. P. Fales before living this way, but don’t know returning to Arnprior, Ont. Mr. What to do about it. Can you ad-| “REPORT BUSHFIRES and Mrs. Levy have been guests Vise me? T. R. — of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Riley, | Dear T.R.::In condensing your ~“SYDNEY, N.S.W. (Reuters)— Baltic forthe. past_week. letter by half, I've kept only the Three large bushfires burned s: ‘ out of control Monday in coastal ne ‘jllustrative outlines of your dif- Harry” Tuplin, Darnley, ac- ficulties, omitting reference to areas of New South Wales One companied by his father, And- your husband’s many years as a fire cut the main highway lead- rew Tuplin of Margate lef t re- widely traveled Army officer, ing south of Sydney for three cently for a six week motor trip-.prior to his present civilian em- hours. The fires were caused by a freak spring heat wave. | ployment. a ere - The “GOOD L’'IL ANGEL” ee OFFICE WORKERS — Have You Given Your Fair Share to the United Fund? m., =< Nimans, > ve “PLAN, we'll meet- ou Office Workers: You ‘know we're rea payroll deduction pla intentions, and we even had a 1/4-hr’s pay per week, is so_-small, we'll - a corsage of white carnations. About 15 . of al : ae Sesvey, Meudioguns, > lontte o per cent ot f all that. pay per month that ter-in - law of the bride, circula- ‘ally undernourishedand up to ies _it— but never miss it, Dut Ww rt fates, let’s face the facta. L'il Angel: ae _. like, you’re sold. a Office Workers: We sure are. - FICE WORKERS... Share ...like, NOW! prevalent ailments, often’ Sometimes I can’t believe all tude to the wéll Being..of gall of & il ] Ite wot A) That {f-every wérkér'gete on the Pay. roll Dediction Plan, THE FAIR SHARE On payroll deductions, it’s. automatic. Say, you should be on my team. I mean ~ ..are you ALL YOu OF- we shed by @ Local Public - Spirited Firm. MacKay. The secretary conduc- ed a- guessing contest, and re freshments were served by the hostess assisted by the commit- tee. i SBRARRAARARARRRRRARR 6 ~PURITY. DAIRY “Parents Prefer Z 4 Z % Purity Products” -317 Kent St. Dial &7128 £2 VOOR. When a Child Has Diarrhea When annoying Diarrhea upsets some one in the family, all is well again whes Mother remembers Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. It brings quick, soothing relief; Effective for children of adults. Or. Fowler's Extract has beea family-proven for over 115 years. Simple. Diarrhea is one of the mow MLL DS dently with nausea, crampe'and intestinas keap._Or, Fowler's sie Pain, Burning, Tenderness on Bottom of Feet _ =SUPIRAAS “SpElEt l= Por fast, grateful relief, get Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads. They also remove callouses one of the quickest ways known. Sold everywhere. or r objective. lly glad about the n. That one-hour’s we'll be giving or 4 ould we remember, “Bers _ I mean, Your Fair“ + VrOAROAMAAOAAGSS |” sud ie add two cents sales tax. Print | for e@ach pattern (no stamps, Coli. To quickly combat the secondary plainly size, name, address, | please) to Alice Bronks, care of Chatham, and Oromocto, N.B.; fsused by Kidney and Biadger izrtauon Send order i» Anne Adams | Beet aA aa. ee sof eater 3 times anily Jor m fee i / Adams, . a : : i : . is a cleaning urinary - care of Guardian-Patriot Pattern | 1, Ont. Ontario residents add one fae sana te, Ont:; . Roslindale, |geptic. also an ansisesic pam reliever for . @ Front St. W. Toronto | cent sales tax. Print plainly pat. | * ass; Brockton, Mass. and Backache and muscular pains. i Dept., p A omg ag | 1, tern number, name, address. |Halifax, N.S, j (SSSSSE Saves Sruceiel, Foal etter {opm drueaisi Peet better faa . a ol oe ; ; — ; : \ Aen - oo ~ {Soe ER See Te