4.! II.1:1Ilii'17el (brother of the bride) usher; Mr. Maurice Walsh" (brother of the groom) best man: the .l X. i - ,. 'l and bride: Miss Marie Brazel (sister of the, bridei maid of honor; Miss Thelma Walsh (sister of Amm hiidesinaid' Miss Noreen Mullen, bridesmaid; Mr. Fraiicis Bell (cousin of the groom) usher. .1-,,,, ,,;-;yi.- was the fo hier Margaret (Peggy), daughter of Mr. anti .Virs. Thomas Bruzcl of Johnston's itmr aiiil her liiishanrl is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Walsh, East Rvi)ilIl.V-'-IIIIWIH by )le)l'TS)- llie gioonii I i('0llI,lnLICd from page 3) CIRL PLANS :ii;"rcl to visit us; and Mary Jo 5.1-, permitted to go out Willi iiilicr young people, nor is she al- mcd to select any of her clothes. sac and her brother have less to gpiiiirl iIl.".ll aiiy children in their mt.-i nlllltlllilll the father's in- .,.:r.o is far above average. Cali you will its” F- G- li'.tS (iRANl)M.-I FAIRMINDI-JD? DEAR F. G.; After John fell in t with Ann. and you begin to (i 3(illl'SCii for his second mar- vou probably talked tbo lo the children about the Ci'Illll(lllCS of getting along with I sir-p:iiotliei: And the tinconsclous i.:ii of your lectures may have wit in indelibly remind the chil- i:-r: ihai you and their mother uric iiisicoiiicrs in their exper- iriiii, And that Ann would never be (fill? the real thing, no matter lam well she did by them. lzii not sure you were tiie soul nl (lL3)l0l'Il;iCy in exhorting the chil- dirii in accept Ann in the mother- znlr IilflCC(I I suspect you 8-"W6 lu.i:ir(i einpliasis to the label-"a int SECOND inot.lier." The cori- S'l'.iCllic way to tide children mm-igli the adjustment phase of alirzed relationships is not to labor i.:i' i.lll.'t), in emotional discourse. R. irr give them a. calm example of ..i'ri.ll.Z eliaiize in stride-since ';'c .l' best is always changing, one tat I”. another. -i S”i1llg wise woinan, given her ".;lcl's roiifidciice. ought to . to help tlizit child dispel a I)iiii iziic intent to run away-just 1) "ilklllg blunt common sense. ii: :n-,i.itiiciic vein. The fact that ;.m irri fearful and IIiIiL)I)f!fgll5I.Ed, ("i ;i'ctely intimidated by Mary .I-.. hzoabeating threat of suicide if "ii speak to her tatiier, su':- grmx that yoii've been liabitually 2 it ill I'FI.'illOl1 to her-too solicit- n indulgent, maybe. SIBLIC ROOTS OF THE STRUGGLE lri.s:iliicient iicquaiiitance with Ii'lll(l1SCipIllle in earlier years llll', be at the roots of Mary Jo's siri.-,:.e with her stepmother. The latims methods lllhy be unduly .viri'e, and yet may reflect a well IPIVIIL aitenipt to keep responsible FN:'r(il of R Jealous difficult young- .-ir- iizirlrnily the boy is not such ,i ii uhleiii. - 72 ilir city through which you more is it Family at Chil-' rl'.rn'.r. Service agency. Also, undcrl ti:1'r:eiit auspices, a Mental Hy-I an r Clinic staffed with psycho- -l i'iIli.1ii..hilIS. Mary .10 needs! -mirri guidance in this crisis. . ii to heal your uncertainty about vi: to do, my advice is to ap- iiral to relationship experts, who arr in a position to explore the iiwrir sim-y firsthand. M. H. unzv Haworth couiisels through lir- miiiinn, not by mail or per- suii :iiterview. Wi'ite her- in care nf The Guardian, Charlottetown. u::'r. (Continued from page 8) A country Garden I' liivit be they were eased. Wr rill-iw no harm to come of it; ll my be God is pleased. 1' -.5 planted in the garden in NW” places and pinchra oi the Wars are always taken whenever the gar-deiier is near. It is also lilmvirl in almost every bouquet of ituiit-2'5 made during the summer S0.'lS(Vll. Pm of the aromatic herbs are Mic loved than t southernwood 'Aiirl1ll5Ini'lI.)f0IRDUI11I with its ltrfli old names, "La.d'a Love", nirl Man," etc. It is a native oi "W Mediterranean, and it is gen- ”"HIl.V supposed 'to have been in- rmriiirrd into this country in the mireiith century, but qiiite'pos- WIV long before. It is mentioned tn the earliest herbnls. and on the "xmiinent it, has evidently been in Mmmnn use for centuries. Whlafrnd Nrabo. the German monk who I'.VI'fI in the ninth century, men- lions ii. amoniziit the healing hero: I" lf.'f'w in his ("Little Garden"). and nf it he says that its "hur- llc leaves" no good for fever: and "toads. and that the plant hn as "Mr virtues as leaves. "nil Wal'0f'lE of the cortical. shrubs "Wind hr the mum in the "I World. for it figures in the h 9' itnrden plants which the hi" New England colonists ti-led gn HOW. The list is pathetic read- 'ul- for many of the plank. ouch "n'P'9m8ry. lavender and south- mwod ,survlvcd the long In ”m:”'.l (It took three months in Ym'V”v.fl3.l'si but succumbed to the W "-5 M the New lmglaiid win- -Roiiihr-.-iiwond was valued not om. kg” for its pleasant invigorating Piiitirnrl above are Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Walsh and llieir attendants. The Fall vverlrling took pIllCE intuit-k's Church, Fort Augustus. with Rev. P. '1'. Butler officiating. in cupboards and drawers to keep away moths. In a recipe for sleep- lessiiesa . . clip four ounces oi the leaves fine and beat them in a. mortar with six ounces of leaf sugar till the whole is like a paste, then take the bigness of a nutmeg of this. It is pleasant and one thing in it in particular, it is a composer and always disposes per- sons to sleep. Next week we shall review more of this interesting book. I 0 0 It is pleasant when waikiiig a- round the garden to discover the Snowberry shrub covered with its snow white clusters of fruit that is very nice in the fail ai'raiigc- mcnt with green ivy leaves and barberry scarlet berries. It is now we see the small empty bird nests in the shrubs and trees . . . The energetic wliid has swept ilie ground, has plucked the bran- ches bare so we behold what summer kept well hidden and safeguarded there. The empty nests are all revealed! '11-iuniphantly. they seem to sway content that what they once con- cealed burst into song and flew awayl -Soluni These nests take us back to summer days in the garden when many birds were busy with their small tledglings and the many times we were so afraid the cats would find their nests, now we see how wonderfully they were made and .lI(IdOI'I away from these dangers! a lemon! It turns out NOT A LEMON J!llV spent. Just-squeezed lemon flavor without squeezing lemon pic filling you ever made - and so perfect to cut -it's guaranteed! From left to right are: Mr. In spring the orchard was heavy I with bloom; In summer its branches with leaves , were green; 1The fruitage of autumn lighted the gloom Of rows I never could see between. .But now I discover an empty nest in a network oi branches, like a . lyre, Anti silliriiietted against the west, Far in the dlSIfil'Iic a white church , spire. y -Thronton I LAKE VERDE W. I. Mrs. Owen Callaghan was hos- tess to ten nicinbcrs of the Lake iverde Wonieiils Institute for their inIIII.IiII meeting at her home on November 10, 1954, The meeting opened with the Creed and roll call was aiiswered by paying mem- bership fees. The financial report was read by Mrs. Harry Kelly, Treasurer. OI- fficers appointed for the next year are as follows: President. Mrs. Wil. liam Shea; Vice-Pvesideiit. Mrs. Owen Callaghan; Set-retai'y. Mrs. Joseph Shea; Treasurer, Mrs. Ray- mond Wood; Auditors. Mrs. Joseph Redmond, Mrs. John Boylan. The retiring president. Mrs. Mich- ail Dalton thanked the members for their kind co-operation during the past year. Mrs. Joseph Redmond kindly in- vited thc members for the Decem- ,ber meeting. Roll call is 1,, be answered with an exchange of Christmas gifts. The hostess serv- ed lunch as sted by Mrs, Ivan Redmond anti Mrs. Ira Redmond after which a social hour was 1955 soviet Galondar covers Multitude of Subjects MOSCOW. (AP) - The soviet Calendar for 1955 gives the people everything from historic dates to lessons on the evils of capitalism arid treating Snakebite with vodka. And all this for four rubles, 51 at the official rate. It comes in desk pad form which also can be affixed to a wall holder. On its smah pages. only a few inches square. you can read not only how a heroic soviet mllkmaid gets her cows to produce more, but a. Russian view that New York city treats its poor badly. The calendar is political instruc- tion for old and young in the best Marx-Leninist vein. true-life . even chess and checker: tips IIELPFUL HINTS It also has adventure stories and For all soviet citizeiis-peasants or city dwellers who queue to buy milk-there may be inspiration in the account contributed on a cal- endar page by s. champion milk- maid of the Moscow region. She says she increased production by improved feeding methods and iigiving much attention to the up- bringing of the young cows." There are dozens of articles tell- ing Russian children and adults how bad things are in the United States, and how much better they have it here in the Soviet Union. STORY FOR. CHILDREN For the children there is a story about New York which "gives facts regarding the city" from a book written by one V. Morev. It says, in part: ”New York is a city of striking contrasts-skyscrapers and miser- able slums. Into a fashionable res- taurant near Park avenue comes Mrs. Astor, heiress to American millions, leading a dog with a die. mond collar. The newspapers re. port with admiration that the dog's collar cost 550,000 . . . g"But into the central welfare of- fices comes an unemployed woman, She has four little children and a grandmother to support. she asks the chief at the welfare office to increase her dole. but he refuses. tWhat shall I do with the child- ren?' the woman asks. 'I don't care. You can kill them.' cynically replies this representative of the city authorities." The treatment recommended for snakebite says vodka. is "even better than boiling water for washing the wound. ,WEI-LAND. om. (CP) -- A sso 17111. accompanid by a slip of Paper on which was written "Con- 55'9"” .M0n9)'." was received in the mail at the customs office today. P. C. Oliver. collector. said it will be turned into federal gov- ernment coffcrs under the heading: "Sundry collections." CHELMSFORD, England (CF)- Tivo-way radio police cars, secret alarm systems and teams of train- ed dogs are among measures be. mg used to protect Essex turkey the smoothest, crcamicst Joll-O II I uglllnod l-ado mark owned and chicken farms against Christ- nirs l)O'lIIl'” thieves. So quickl Cooks over direct Iioatl No double boiler needed I Sun wean ovary firnol gxahdtl tag ml, ,"'"l its medicinal qualities. C ” " I (liwl herb In about By ELEANOR Pbr those who enjoy making Yuletide remembrances, here are suggestions for two delightful gift ideas --poinander balls and pot- pourrl. If roses are out of season in your: part of the country. herb stores: generally have dried rose petals in stock. Or perhaps your local flor- ist would save petals for you. Dry on Screen Set up a window screen on two chairs, and on this, dry the petals. preferably in the furnace room or some Iother warm. dry place. Shuffle the petals daily for even drying. When really dry, put in .1 closed container (not metali adding an ounce of powdered orris root (your druggiat has it) for each quart of petals. Stir daily with a wooden spoon for ten days. Then, in a gift container, alter- nate a layer of petals and a sprink- ling of a mixture made up of V. oz. mace, V: oz. each cinnamon. ground cloves, allsplce anti grated nutmeg. When jar is full, sprinkle on 2 or 3 drops of the essential oils of rose, orange flower and bitter ul- mond (drugstores stock these). Fin- isli with an oz. of your favorite Sweet Yuletide Gifts Can Be Made at Horn 3055 ' floral cologne. Do the jar up with ribbons, seals. maybe a gold star constellation, handpaiiited rosebuds or monogram, and ring the neck of the jar with tiny artmcial roses. Pommder Balls To make the pomander balls, use thin-skinned oranges or lemons. and with a skewer pierce fruit from top to bottom. Worlgng neat- ly, stud in even rows oi whole cloves. using a skewer to force iii the cloves wherever it is necessary. When the fruit is symmetrically studded, mil it on a mixture of 2 tbs. each, powdered orrls root, alum, mace and clnnamoii. Dry for half hour in a slow oven (300 degrees F.) Loop for Hanging Fold a yard of ribbon. pull cut ends through the fruit and knot at bot- tom, the loop, of course, to hang over hook or hanger. Bind fruit be- tween cloves with gift cord or rib- bon, bunching bows at the top. Then do a fancy wrap job, using bright cellophane; fine quality hat veiling or gift mesh. I The addition of a set of silk pad- .ded hangers makes this an elegant little gift combination. By PAULINE KENNEDY Canadian Press Staff Writer I TORONTO, (CF)-A packaging company executive from London,I Oiit., says labor-saving ideas in various kitchen products have be- come big business. His company produces packages for everything from eggs to eake-mixes. ”Thcse clays women just don't want to be bothered mixing up a cake or a batch of cookies, so pre- pared mixes arc a great seller- which makes us very happy," he, said at the annual packaging ex- pesitlon here. The executive also revealed some secrets of package advertising, now the "silent salesman" of the industry. SERVE TWO PURPOSES One trick is to design packages or containers for two-fold use Thus jam jars become measuring cups, drinking glasses or cookie Jars. Another important part of sell- ing strategy he said is to illus- Kitchen Products That are Labor Saving are Big Business . hate. or reduce to the most simple terms, directions on a can carton. Illustrations like down the side of a new spout-type milk carton appeal more to house- wives because they show by pic- ture series how the. carton opens. Women have more outside inter- ests and just dont have the time for liomeinakiniz the way grandma knew it, the executive said. METAL VS PLASTIC Another interesting sideliglit at” the packaging show was the polite war waged between metal cori- tainer nianufacturers and makers of plastic containers. More and more, womenls cosmet- ics. glue, shoe cream, shaving creaml and food products are being put. up in'plastic containers, which are easily squeezed and dint proof. Metal container men said plas- tics wouldn't interfere with their field and would develop an en- tirely new packaglng area of their own. The plastics men had a ”wait and sec" attitude. iNeill and Marilyn Laird, Ttlelday. rm. 2:. 1954 The Guardian Pogo 9 LOOK SLIM. TRIM I So slimming - this paneled hip- ' line does as much for your figure as a diet! Designed to fit and flfatter shorter, fuller figures! Note novel iieckluie, soft bodice, graceful skirt. rayon crepe, faille, winter cotton or, soft wool. l4!-.. Size Pattern 4894: Half Sizes I6".-, lfll-.-, 1101:. 223:. 292. 16': takes -i':u yards 39-inch. This pattern easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. iias com- plete illustrated instructions. Send Thirty-Five Cents (Clot) in coins (stamps cannot be acceptedi for this pattern. Print plainly Sizc, Name, Address. Style Number. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, care The Guardian, 60 Front Street,, West, Toronto. FAIRVIEW W. M. S. I The W. M. S. of the Fairv:evi Baptist church, North Milton, iieidl, their annual mite-box opening, and bazaar, on November 10, at the: home of Mrs. Irving Laird. Thcl president, Mrs. Paige Nunn, pre- sided. The meeting opened by sing- !in;;. "Jesus Shall Reign." Prayers were offered by Miss M. C. Neill and Mrs. J. R. Neill. The hymn, "In Christ, there is no East or West," was sung. I The roll was called and 16 mem-I IIJCFS Feshondcd by repeating a versel yof scripture. and handed in their lmite-boxes. The devotional part was I 0? closed by repeating the Lord's Pray-I W059 er in unison. I The following programme was then carried out. Duet by Mrs. DJ Axwoitliy and Mrs. G. A. Home; Recitations by Gail McQuai-rie, Sandra Ford, Sheila Ford. Glenda duet by Mrs. Mrs. Eric Laird. The mite-boxes were then open- Preston Neill and Perfect for your favorite fabric I 0 4894 Q'&vM 14IlMv5 NV:-2416 AMONG CELEBIUTIFJ EDINBURGH, Scotland (Cl?) -- "rbnra Kelly of Vancouver, lo. and a five years a star in British Shfni ousiiicss. has been runiinated for the rectorship of Edinburgh Uni versity, an honorary office. Othei and the proceeds amounted to nominees include screen actor Ken. ed 535.60. The bazaar articles were neth More and author 501118152 capably auctioned off by Mr. Alder Mauzhan. Dickieson. The proceeds from these, were 350.30. The commission on cards sold was 513.70, a dainty, and' plentiful lunch was served by thel ladies. I The offering amounted to 313.71,: Total proceeds were sll3.3l. GREEK DEVICE The first hooked anchors for ships, replacing stones or sand- bags. were used by the ancient Greeks. f strayed FOUR FIRE VICTIMS HONG KONG (AP)-Four )1”! sons were killed and 300 huts do in a fire which racer. through a squatter village in the Taipo district of Kowloon Satur day. HISTORIC COASTS France has a coastline of l..':i'i4 miles on the Atlantic and 546 in the Mediterranean. IVIONCTON FOR CHRISTMAS CAIALIICUE SHCPPINC AT ITS BEST ITIS EATO N"S MAIL ORDER "GOODS SATISFACTORY If you have not received a copy of this Christ- mas Book, enquire at your nearest EATON ORDER OFFICE or mail coupon to: rt am Is. 0 LIMITED CA N A DA CHRISTMAS B WHICH IS NOW BEINC DELIVERED It's the biggest Christmas book we've ever had . . . 202 pages filled with suggestions for Christmas gift giving, including many pages of toys for the kiddies, decorutions.for the house and free, ribbons and fancy papers, gree ting cards . . . in fact, nearly everything that is needed for a Merry Christmas. Buy your needs from this new, larger Christmas book and enjoy the low EATON prices, the assortments, and best of all the confidence inspired by EATON'S FAMOUS GUARANTEE: OR MONEY REFUNDED" Smart Shopper: Will Start Their Christmas Sli apping Early REMEMBER, EATON'S Low Price Is the Delivered Price To Your Nearest Order Office -NO EXTRAS! O '1'. E6199. CS... uouevou Clllll r I I I I Please send me a copy of I I I Address ........................a...a-.-o the Christmas Book.