13hr” '5 5,1953 our 0H'TOWN KINSMEN PM-2?PO G52-5'0 0HiTOWN FORUM Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. ' JUNE 4- 5 - 6 Annual Meeting No. llusiico C.W.L The annual meeting of the North Rustlco sub-division of the C.W.L. was held April 21 in the hall. The meeting opened with the League Prayer oflered by the pre- sident Mrs. M. J. Doyle. In the absence of the secretary, Mrs. Joseph Gaudin read tlie,minutea. The treasurer, Mrs. Joseph 1... Gallant in her annual report showed the grand receipts for the year amounted to 8914.40. Repo is were heard fromvdifIer- cnt co ittees. spiritual conven- er. Mrs. John L. Doiron gave a wonderful report of the year's work, mentioning that 60 women had attended the recital held in the parish. Entertainment convener Mrs. Leo R. Doiron reported that 3693.38 was realized during the year with plays. bingos, card par- ties. Social convener Mrs. Ed Gal- lant reported that quilts and mittens were made and given to needy families and seven baskets were distributed at Christmas to families in the parish. A com- mittee visited the sick and gave treats. Press convener, Mrs. R. G. Fleming attended to meeting re- ports. Education oonvener, Mrs. Jer- ome L. Gallant reported that dif- ferent classrooms in the school were visited on several occasions and that prizes were donated for school closing. Citizenship convener, Mrs. Jos- eph Gaudin reported that her committee assisted the blood don- ors clinic held in North Rustico during the year. The following slate of officers were elected for the ensuing year: President, Mrs. M. J. Doyle (re- elected); secretary, Mrs. Joseph Gaudln; treasurer, Mrs. Joseph L. Gallant (re-elected); councillors: Mrs. Charles MacNeill, Mrs. Stan- iey Doucette. Mrs. Ferdinand Doucctte. Mrs. Frances Doiron. Mrs. Stephen Peters, Mrs. Ruel Gauthier. and Mrs. Urban Doiron. The officers were installed fol- lowing completion of elections witif recital of the Act of Con- secration to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Director Rev. Fr. Robin in a few well chosen words thanked all and congratulated the officers on their leadership during the year. He expressed sincere thanks to the spiritual committee for the assistance they had rendered to make the retreat such a grand success. He encouraged all mem- bers to strive for even greater action during the coming year. Lunch was then served and meet- ing oolsed with prayer. CORNWALL W. M. 8. The regular monthly meeting of the Cornwall W. M. S. was held at the parsonage on May 15, and was well attended despite unfavourable weather. President Mrs. H. M. Hyde called the meeting to order by all repeat- ing the Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Wat- son conducted the worship and study period on the United Na- tions and Christian Missions. The hymns. "Zion's King Shall Reign" and "From Ocean Unto Ocean," were sung. Scripture from I Oor.: 12. was read by Mrs. Earl Moore and prayer offered by Mrs. Bruce Macxlnley. A special program leaflet was used and took the form of s. dia- logue. Those participating were Mrs. Bruce MacKinley, Mrs. Wat- son Livlngstone, Mrs. Stanley Murchison, Mrs. Reta MacPhail and Mrs. Reg. MacEwen. In this dlacuulon it was said that mission- aries have always been pioneers in mutual aid. As well, the United Nations by understanding and prayers. always keeping in sight the special contribution Christians must make to ensure that world reconstruction shall be on a spir- ltual level. The business period followed. It was found necessary to change the date for the Rally to July 2 or 3: Permanent Mission Band lead- era for the Cornwall group, Mrs. J. D. MacFarlane and Mrs. Stewart Drake. Several members contribut- ed to the birthday box. The president read an article on the life and work of Miss May Merriam, the group's adopted mis- sionary and is prayer was offered for the success of her undertak- ings by Mrs. MacFarlane. study topic for June is "Adven- turing in Bible Study" and w"' be led by Mrs. L. H. Drake. Roll call will be answered with a verse of Scripture starting with the letter H . ostesses will be Mrs. MacKin- ley, Mrs. W. Lcwther and Mrs. E. : Island Airmen ,,. ( the Mall to see the sights. Left Tl-IE GUARDIAN. See London homes, or CHARLO'I'TETOWN 18 Per Cent r 0f Households g Overcrowiled l OTTAWA, (CP)-Federal statis- ticians estimate that somc 641,820 18.8 per cent of all households in Canada, were "over- crowded" when the census-taker had a look at them in 1951. The bureau of statistics, in mak- ing this report public Friday, de- fined a crowded household as one in which the number of persons exceeds the number of rooms in the home. Neither the ages of the persons nor the size of the rooms are taken into account in the sur- vey. - The survey showed that Quebc had the most crowded homes with 216,955; Ontario. l5l.'730; Alberta, 56.300: Saskatchewan, 60,770; Brit- ish Columbia. 48,100; Manitoba, 39,675: Nova Scotla. 27,615: New Brunswick. 24,130; Newfoundland. 28,130; Prince Edward Island, 3,- 515. Crowded homes averaged 8.7 pci'sons,compareti with an average of 3.4 persons in uncrowded homes. In a London transformed for the Coronution of -'1 RI'at'lyllS QUCCH. lliree mcmbcrs of the RCAF contingent joined the festive ll'll'0ll;ZS in to right, arc: LAC. H. W. Acorn. Charlottetown, P. E. 1.; Cpl. R. Roberts. High Bank. P. E 1.; and Cpl.i P. A. King of Toronto.-(National Defence Photo). PHILADELPHIA. (AP)-Is Robin Roberts in the same class as H pitcher as Dizzy Dean and Carl Hubbell? Gus Mancuso. in his day one of the best catchers iii the National League, says "almost." Mancuso caught Dean and Hubbell in their prime. Maiicuso, a baseball analyst for a St. Louis radio station, was talk- ing in the Connie Mack Stadium press box Tuesday night after Roberts shut out St. Louis Card- inals 5-0 for his eight victory of the season. Gus cited the first inning when the Cards loaded the bases with one out and Roberts. brilliant Philadelphia Phillies righthander, appeared to be on the ropes. The old warhorse. Enos Slaugliter was at bat. Enos slashed is low liner that Lowther. The meeting closed with the Mizpah Benediction. followed lunch and a. social hour. by Roberts Is Rated Close To Dean And Hubbell Roberts leaned over and grabbed in his gloved hand. He threw to first baseman Earl Torgeson to double Stan Musial off first. "That's the kind of pitching that makes a guy great," said Mancuso. ”Did you see how calm and dell- berate he was pitching tn Enos? That's why he can't miss being great. That kid is going to be one of the greatest pitchers in base- ball. And right now he's almost in a class with the two greatest I ever caught, Carl Hubbell and Dizzy Dean." 15 Roberts the equal of Hubbell, Gus was asked. ”Not yet. but he has the same steel nerves and control.” 15 he as fast as Dean? ”He's not as 0V8l'riOWCl'll)f1lV fast RS Dir. was, but his control is better and. he has more to upset a bat- ter.' The Petitcodiiic river in New Brunswick was it favorite Indian route between the Cumberland re- gion imd Quebec. About 60 per cent of the over- ipopulated dwellings were occupied lby their owners. The average rent :for the crowded house was 328 a 'll'i0ntll. compared to 536 a month .foi' the uiicrowded household. 1 l3ut wliilc rents were lower for ',ci-owdcd homes, they generally had .1055 conveniences lllilll the un- icrowded ones. In 195l.for example, ,only 48.8 per cent of the crowded yllOm9S had a private flush toilet, llilllfl only 36.1 had a private bath or sliowcr. STANHOPE W. I. The monthly niccting of the Slzinliope Women's Institute was held on May 5th at the home of Mrs. Isaac Lawson. The president opened the meet- ing by the singing of "The More We Get Together”. followed by the Churchill Seeks ' Support For . Big Four Parley By ARTHUR GAVSHON LONDON, (AP)-Prime Minister Churchill will ask eight fellow Com- monwealth prime ministers here next week to back his project for an early east.-west parley. British sources say. - Churchill thus hopes to strengthen his hand. these informants say. at his June conference in Bermuda with President Eisenhower and the new. still-uncliosen premier of Frnnce. . Mrs. Louis Marshall klndl, in- vited the members for the June meeting. Roll call to be answered by making at donation to the Sal- vation Army Appeal. Collection amounted to 32.55. One member paid her fee. The singing of the Nationnll Anthem brought this part of the- meeting to a close. ' Mrs. Malcolm Machauclilaii then read :1 poem which she had com- posed. for Mrs J. E. Misener. W110 is leaving the district, and lnsecti, cooking. making and all household odors mnnh when you haven Utiliie Lamp. Tliix ziniuzing 3 purpose lamp posilively ilcsiroyx all insccii and odors in your home, Al the same time it provides you with an niirariixc lump liiat will enhance any room. 3:: ii at i'll'VPli.1nC!.l'IlIdWlfG. drug and (itparlmcnl sinres everywhere! UTIUTE CORPORATION 2013 Avenue Road Toronto. Conudl By His nmiien el llle Iameui D..rIy-Er Automatic insecticide Vqmlnr prcsriitiition of El. iiulltlilsfhzirtllvfl agnll. quilt followed. Two coiitcsts cnllcd,by "Buzz" and "Gossip" A fl0llClOllS lunch was rt:-ved the hostess. assisted by the followz-d,iluiich committec,and a social ham 3 iiliicli were enjoyed very much hyicnjoyecl. 'tCollect" repeated in unison. Sev- entcen members answered the roll call. by exchanging a plant 1) or seeds. Ten visitors were welcomed. The minutes of the last meeting were read, approved and signed. Sick committee reported on calls made. and the school committee reported there was nothing need- ed. New committees were appoint- ed as follows:- School. Ml'S. Louis sick. Mrs Herb Kielly James MacLauchlan'. lunch. Mrs. Horace Marshall and Mrs. Reg Ross; program, Mrs. James Mac- Lauchlan and Mrs. Malcolm Mac- Lnuchlaii. Correspondence was read and discussed. and it was ( to pay one third of the account for the hall curtains. A committee was appointed to make the neces- sary ziiraiigcmciits for us to have some entertainment at the hall, those appointed being: Mrs. Mary MacLnuchlaii, Mrs. Horace Marsh- all, and Mrs. Alvi. txuchlan, An auction sale of miscellaneous articles to be held that night, with members donating the articles. Mrs. Malcolm MacLauchlan was appointed to act as secretary for Larsliallz and Mrs. is to be sent to the Red Cross. gruelling road test. when car entered driving crews were changed. sedan. Also in 2-door and convertible At Goodwood Race Track. England, 10,000 miles non-atop proved that the Morris Minor is built to last . . . built for trouble free driving. At the end of a 9 day, 8 hour tesi: - the moat test ever made - engineers checked every part. They found: the car ran as Mobile Dry Dock was specifically buill lor non-slop dock both vehicles ,nchronlzed their speeds. workmen lueled and serviced test car while ILLUSTRATED: Morris Minor I-door liniils llll ill Wllllll lllllll Only car on the road over to aehleve10.000 miles non-stop. Road test of Morris Mlnor's'new overhead valve engine proves economy . . . efficiency. a New Overhead Valve new 4-cylinder engine is a iilmoothly as the day it came off the assembly H19. During 2534 hours of continuous turns on the circular track (turns requircrl extra power equal to climbing 66 miles) gas consumption averaged 43 miles per gallon! Mmnvs. Engine has mixture control and throttle interlocked - gives iasier slarls, even in coldest weather. .,. Engine was used in test car. The standard leatuve of all new Morris the balance of the year. One quilt l l cereals. Compare botli lioncst food value . Mother, compare NABISCO SHREDDED WHEAT with other and price. You'll hnd that no other ready-to-eat cereal gives you more NABISCO SHREDDED hV'iiEAT is made fmrn pure l(l(l'7r1i'holc wheat. Even contains the bran and wheat germ. Yet ounce for ounce, Ibir great noiirislimcnt . . because More Nourishment lllllll Milli MAKES NABISCO SHREDDED AWIIEAT TDDAWS BEST CEREAL BUY! Why can we keep the price of NABISCO SHREDDED WHEAT down? Because it's the largest-selling whole wheat cereal . . . enjoyed daily by 5 (8.373 Canadians! Tomorrow, scric (lCllCltlll.S. ccon0mica1NABISCO Si-lRliDl)liD WHEAT - and start say ing rm! money on breakfasts! '-TD Prrfcr .1 Zn)! cereal? just pour on" nmdrls; Illovrisoxlnrd 4-door action and Msrru Oxford Station Wagon. Auailslvlc in aunmiro new colour: . . . the latest our! White sidewall tire: options! at an-s-coil. boiling niiicr, drain off quickly and serve! 50 delicious, so easyll Camu-firm cereal costs less (ban any FEATURING - ON THE STAGE LE8 BARKER CARTOONIST EXTRAVAGANZA The Originator 01' Bugs Bunny other ready-to-eat cereal! ""”"TTT'TT-”---------1 FOOD ESSENTIALS II 4p IIAIISCD SHREDDED WIIIAT CAREOHYDIATES-for food energy PROTEIN - to help develop muscle! and other tissues FAT - essential to I Will- Iliviau IUILY -- sun 79 LAIV See him do his famous cartoon act-projected on the giant screen. SUPPORT THE KINSMEN DRAWING ' lat PRIZE-Your Choice: (a) Firestone Television fitytz (b) Firestone Dee Freeze; (c) woo gals. Brad- i..i......i am i 5 K88: (d) 8800. ash. . neon- ii I I l 2nd PRIZE-nun”. organ” amen wuoh. uuws vmv vowu. WANTAMOIIII i" "'u'"':';:'" . "mun 3RD PRIZE-Boy's or GlI'l'I 31670” CALCIUM s enormous- tsr normal bones and teeth VITAMIN II - contributes to the maintenance of normal appetite Ieenem w Vou get up to 50 miles per gallon Wlflt i.0W OCTA EGAS, in the Morris Minor. Comfort and Convenience - Morris Oxfords are on conditioned. Parks front tint where other can don't fit. ringer-light steering makes driving a pleasure. 4 Confidence-Morris front wheel springing with torsion 3 that uspension means a smoother ride. longer car lile. ions-place." ellsteel mono-construction assures body gsmngittend safety. ' l GAMES -- GAMES - GAMES Canteen. Car shew, Full Pantry. Home Cooking Dolls Wheel, Chocolate wneei. etc. BINGO EVERY NIGHT SPECIAL DOOR PRIZES Admission: Children 10c, Adults 15c. I IIALIRI - PAIVI AK IKVIGI PROM COAST TO COAST meow: iammgrmvlrvo unwas- see VOUR MOBQIS DEALER 7oa4r,I Wei 90-1" MacKAY MOTORS, 59 St. Peters Road . ----.....,.......-.....a. SW-IISIA