ree ( i ee ot MR. AND MRS. HARRY WEEKS Oth Anniversary Marked By Fredericton Couple Anniversary Observed The home of Mr. and Mrs. iller Weeks, Pleasant Valley, as the scene of a: happy gather- es on November 10th, when re- tives and friends assembled honor Mr. and Mrs. Harry eeks, Fredericton, on the oc- asion of their 50th Wedding Anniversary. + The couple were married by late Rev. L. J, Leard at the me of Mrs. Week's parents, ' the late Mr. and Mrs. Issac Sharpe, ‘Pleasant Valley. Their attendants were Leslie Weeks and the late Agnes Sharpe. Mr. Mrs. Weeks retired from ing at Elliottes Mills, 15 ars ago and moved to Freder- ton where they are enjoy- ing good health-and'take an ac- tive part in church and com- unity affairs. They have a mily ofr” four children,” Miller; @f Pleasant Valley, Lewis of Bunter River, Reginald of Syd- wey, N.S. and Eileen (Mrs. Ro- Hert Shaw) _ Summerside, and they also have five grandchild- fen. = Rev William E. Hare spoke an behalf of the congregation of the Pleasant Valley United Church and called on Mrs. Frank Cutcliffe who read an \@ddress anda gift was present- by Donald Barlow. Present- ions were also made from the raswell and Mrs. Milner Hill and from the Church Choir by Mrs. William Stevenson and Milton Weeks. The couple were a School by Mrs. Wendall | resented with a gift from the |befell gesidents of Fredericton Com- unity by remembered them on this happy occasion. The dining room was fittingly decorated and the table cen- tered with a three-tiered anniv- ersary cake. The guests were received by their daughter, Ei- leen, and Mrs. Lewis Weeks. Pouring tea in the afternoon were Mrs. Leslie Weeks and Mrs. Rufus Stevenson, while Mrs. Reginald Weeks and Mrs. Hyatt Haslam served. In the evening Mrs. Annie Sharpe and Mrs. Jennie Sharman presided over the tea cups, with grand- daughters Nadine and Marilyn Weeks serving. Mrs. Miller Weeks replenished, assisted by Mrs. Roy Weeks, Mrs. George Smith, Mrs. Edna Haslam, Mrs Harold Sharpe, Mrs. Frank Weeks, Mrs- Knud Jorgenson and Mrs. Melville Weeks. The following -day~-a family dinner was held at Svend’s Inn, Kensington. | ELLEN’S DIARY Rain washed down a window, worried by a passing when we came to the dawn's light today...It would seem there is no tain more sober than that es oEate z eee days. However ft is starlight we now have, and the moonglow so pretty over the farmlands. And lights blossoming across thé fields from homes up the valley and‘ afar. And indoors, here by The Short Days Soeed | Quickly On Their Way breeze |“‘Peter grinned" Do vou know, lets fall. ‘Would it be that we- micht have some wooly white | kittens some day?” he queried. | I've been wondering about that | jmyself! We just never can tell | he smiled. to He across | though -ooner or later | again. Life to us, remindful of a road we some- walk alone in our when returning from | was then a lonely by | d. nevertheless a verv lovely and quiet way. Its course ran. (and runs) where ‘‘back forties | of lengthy farms meet, where for a distance no dwel'ings are | lin sight. Woodlands attended ft | jin places. and road-ide trees, often leafy strewed that sum-| mery way with fetchings de-| ISLANDERS: Grandson Wed A honeymoon trip to Willow- dale, Ontario, to visit groom's parents and other re latives, followed the recent wed- ding of Beryl Anne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Meeres, of Courtenay, and LAC Joseph Niall Hunter, RCAF Station Co- mox,..son..of..Mr...and..Mrs..J....T. |6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tyes., Nov. 16, 1965. Islanders’ Grandson Wed Recently At Comox, B. C. the fireside, there is silence. It ic broken only by the rustle of the farm-paper, James reads, the crakle of the burning sticks on the hearth, the tick of the old clock on the shelf and the sleepy purr of the white kitten’ on the couch. } “I'm wondering...“Alex star- | ted a train of thought, today, ey- ing this eame kit-cat with some speculation. “What?” Peter questioned, all ears to catch the words this elder brother of his a of sun and shade, At) 3 hed 3 g a® ar. So it has been since and will ever be: The of the fair times. with hearts high, and then rei: $d i deferred, Hu i ti é a massed cloud. to |. How & shape up. f $ ! § rE ad § Es ard today greeted in sight at the “I’m not Alex-he’s in I’m Peter” he grinned. James looks up, smiles, and returns to his reading. For the time our shadows flee. And sun- shine over all, we see. Until tomorrow .. . Diary :°. i : Alpha York WI Officers Elected ‘ The poem ‘‘In’Flanders Field” ‘opened the November meeting of Alpha York WI held in York Hall on November 3rd. Rol! call |was answered by paying fees and each member* gave toward a layette for USC. ‘It was also decided to buy cutlery for the church hall kitchen. (Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Whitlock, all of Charlottetown. . \* Rev. William J. Lunny offic- iated at the ceremony in St. John’s Anglican Church in Cour- tenay. walked whollv in sha- | , when high branches over- m which we came to} eunlight of a sum-| Winter's face we | Kingwood, West. Virginia of wheat Festival, they were fet- wood. Mr, Sheldow ie a native School con- | are you?” a! Yellow and brown clirysan- themums and Thanks¢ivir~ Four members plan to attend a dership course in Parkdale lea Hall and Mrs. Randolph Murray i shadows of disappointment of sadness | During a recent visit to Governor and Mrs. Hulett C. Smith in connection with the MONTAGUE SUMMER RESIDENTS the Preston ed at a reception by Mr. and HAPPENINGS Audrey Jenkins, Women's Editer, Phone 4-8506 cently fot Boston, Mase., where | she will visit with relatives. Tommy Grant, one of the fore- | man with Pigott Construction Company, during the construc- Beryl Vessey, student of Dal- |housie University, Halifax, spent the weekend with her parents, \Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vessey, lens Mrs. C.H. Weeks left. Alberton jon Saturday to spend the winter jwith her néphew, Henry Clarke jin . They have taken lup residence at 68 Water Street. Mr. and Mrs. Colin Love, Bor- iden, recently returned home aft- er visiting friends in Toronto, Ontario. é |’ Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ves- isey, York, spent the weekend iwith their daughter, Mrs. Lynn \Ernst and Mr. Ernst, Barring- \ton, N.S. Lynn. was: transferred Family pews were {Hunter of Willowdale, and grand- | - white satin ribbon bows. son of Mrs. J.M. Hunter and ‘Career Wom MARY HAWORTH The bride given in marriage by her father, wore a floor leneth gown of veau de soie ove taffeta designed with long slee- ves, a. rounded neckline and symbols decorated aa reonsented to help with a 4+H-gar---from- the -Bank-~- of Commerce, iment club. Charlottetown, to the Barring- | ‘The officers elected for the |ton branch, where he bec ame lcoming year ere: president, manager. Mrs. Randolph Murray: vice. \president, Mrs. Peter Proud; see-' Mrs. Edwin Cram, Mill River, jretary, Mrs. Jean Bruce; press has left to spend the winter in jsecretary,—Mrs. Clifford Chap- | an.ls Upset By Extravagant Friend Dear Mary Haworth: I am 3 have been courting a man, 40, for nearly five yeats. We to wait until he finished marrying. Financial hardships On completing the course he Mrs. Aubrey Cut-| sre no more the answer to his iffe and Mrs. Herbert Bucha- bought a car for $5,000. Now he jr And many gifts were re- ived from their family and Pee. Mr. Weeks, on behalf his wife, expressed deep ap- int eeeaen wa inter ‘was oughtfulness to ali those who 7 ‘ SANE OE NLS SMIRK > oo meme RENT by frre Halon ‘HALF-SIZE TRIO New! Versatile vest turns a ssic shirt and slim skirt into costume— good news for now 1966. Easy to sew. Printed Pattern 4928: Half Si- 12%, 14%, 16%, 18%, 0%, te. Size 16% skirt, vest 1% 54-inch; shirt takes 2 38-inch. FIFTY CENTS (50 cents) in (no stamps, please) for Ontario residents Pattern | 1, is considering the purchase of expensiv-eboat. We were \planning to marry next month |boat would leave us no money to jlive ‘on decently. We would be existing hand-to-mouth for the next three years. - I have some savings which he intersted in investment property at present; -perhaps--a small four-unit building where SIZES 32 TO 4 for sports. , casual wear. Jumbo-Knit! Use big jon Sayelle or wool. Pattern 7146: sies 32-34; 36-98; 42; 44-46. for each pattern 6 Front St.: W. cent sales tax. Print plainly pat. og #4 we could live and have addition- al income. I’ve been behind for years, fi- nancially, because of him, and are no more the answer to his again. I feel some _ planning ahead fs necessary, especially in our case, as we would be start- ing marriage a little late: also, becatise of his uncertain health and his child by a former mar- riage. 5 Yet he is obsessed with obtain- ‘ing a boat, even though he is ff- mancially strapped from one payday to the next. In addition to his material selfishness, he is a problem so- .cially. He insults my friend-, ob- jects to my telephone conversa-' front. applique of lace. The skirt fell to a slight train: Her . wed- ding veil was shoulder and held by a dainty cluster of blossoms. The bride wore a heart - shaped locket given her as a child by her parents | and carried a bouquet of red roses and stephanotis. Mrs Arthur Pratt, sister of the bride. was matron of honor in a sheath of rich Tose colored chiffon over taffeta with long cuffed sleeves of the sheer. She carried white carnations. Carol Piercy and Gwen La- Forge were bridesmaids in sim, ilarly styled blue chiffon over taffeta frocks and carried blue carnations. | The flowergirl, Debbie Full- erton, wore a deep pink frock and carried a basket of pink flowers. Winston MacLennan was best |tions, feels it's wrong for me to|man, and ushers were Joseph itake vacations with my friends |Kucinski, Kenneth Page and jor visit my relatives. He also |James Meeres, brother of the \thinks I should discuss my de- |bride. jsire to change job: with him,| For the reception held at the \though ‘we are in quite different [Comox Legion Hall the bride’s Unrivaled for pure warmth, deep, rich luxury. Knit jacket |\down to a peaceful teamwork: | professions. | At first I was humble and imeek. Now I find myself talking, igiving him my views, which he iconsiders “‘having too much lip.”’ iI have broken off with him at \times and I can see why. Yet each time I change my mind. By nature I am easv- going; but now I feel completely locked- in, continuing this relation- ship. I have loved him and feel } } ~ |hew difficult it would be to start jover with someone else. I need your advice.—S.C. Dear S.C.: In a nutshell, you lare addicted, as it were, to a jman whom you recognize to be 'a total liability,.who takes with- lout giving, relationship- wise, jand is a compulsive spendthrift financially. ; | In looking for light. on how to jcope, you've consulted the jclergy, you say, which your ifiance wouldn’t do. And you ‘won't try family service agency counselling, because you say, jthese counsellors don’t respect the principle of confidentiality, .|in_your town at least. | You know this because you work with them. So, what next? Well, how about gathering strength and purpose iby facing facts? | One fact is that, at age 38, you jane qltite young enough to profit {is from your misadventure with this phony fellow, rally your \forces, and find a worthwhile |man, with much less effort than jyou are throwing away in pursu- jing this mistake, and settle type of marriage, long before jyou reach middie age. needles, 2 strands knitting worsted; Or-| A second fact is that in re- l-strand jiffy- spect to Mr. X, your current ifiance, you've been trying to make something of fothing, more or less. I’m sure you THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins) \weren't sold on him, as is, when jit (no stamps, you met him. So, foolishly, you ‘sion please) to Alice Brooks, care of undertook to try to reconstruct |at t - Patriot on him into a social shape that jserve. would do, as af: approximate Ontario residents add one |answer te your heart’s desire. Hence, a third fact, I’m sure, ‘term umber, name, address. is that Mr, X, in taking from you |in care of The oan 5 gene, ene ~ = he ne ie i ep ss 5 lc cl ae Alana et mt me me fm ea oy eran mother received wearing a deep i accessories. Silver candlesticks, a deep- sake of the brides maternal grandmother held pink ‘tapers as they stood on either side of the three tiered wedding cake made by the bride's sister. Conp- oral Robert Fullerton, Victoria. was master of. ceremonies and called on David Jones to pro- pose a toast to the bride. Leaving on their honeymoon to Ontario, Mrs. Hunter donned a grey wool suit worn, with blue accessories. She wore a silver cross and chain and matching earrings, gifts from the groom. Jimmy. Meeres, the bride’s brother, had charge of the. guest book. 5 The newlyweds are living in Ste. No. 62, Garden Park Apart- ments, in Courtenay. has. been tacitly aware of your. and investment type purpose has been slyly, maliciously thwarting it, for mixed reasons. “sents . The solution to lis obvious, if you Admit defeat; accept es; break off with him fo other: $ Le Mary H through her or personal interview Guardian tite Splee: cnnne meahecmmancem. tm i nae lt tt sl Bn edt AEA AEE EA jpell; treasurer, | Watts; |Vessey and Mrs. Richard Mrs. Arthur i lillies and miniature orange /johnstone and Mrs. R ay mond Chester, Mass. Vessey; agriculture, Mrs. Ray-| mond Vessey; education, Mrs. | Wm. Crockett; arts and litera- | ture, Mrs. Frank Lewis; citizen- | ship, Mrs. Arthur Johnstone; | health and welfare, Mrs. Lowell | Watts; home economics, Mrs. | |Leagh Vessey and United Na-| tions and letter friends, Mrs. | Donald Crockett. Frank, Thomas Wi “who will. visit arre: sit '™m Ves- oie |Kensi and Mrs. William Warren in Hilda Dixon, student at Dal- housie University, spent the weekend at home with her par- Clyde River Mr. and Mrs. George McMil lan, Stanhope, left recently for an extended visit with their dau- ghter, Mrs. Darell Dickieson and Mr. Dickieson of Toronto, Ont. The latter is a patient in a Toronto Hospital where he is un- dergo! ing surgery. Fourth year student et PWC Willard Moase, spent last week- —— his parents at Kel- n. Mr. and Mrs. Ambrovre Jesso. Albion, Lot 59, received word that their son, Cst. William V. Jesso, RCMP, has been promot- led to Corvoral. He is stationed at North Sydney, C.B. Donna Deighan and Gail Ray- nor, forrth yer stndent> »+ PVC spent the weekend in Summer- ition to the Le course, at 7:3. P.M. Nov. 19, in Zion Church, and urged that the pre- sidents make an effort to attend. May 14th, 1966 and the annual \Presbyterial in Montague in July. The meeting closed with the Mizpah Benediction. Mrs. Hardy conveyed the apprecia tion of those in attendance to the Zion Auxiliary for refresh- ments served at its close. { side, guests of their parents. aod Mrs. Saturday | Mrs, Henry’ week tion phase of Gulf Garden "ovds Limited Plant, left last week for Fredericton, N.B.,. where he will continue his employmest with Piggott’ Construction Co. Mrs. Grant and family, will remain | in Georgetown for a time before | joining Mr. Grant in Frederic- | ton. | Eliabeth Grant of George- | town and Mrs. Helen Wilson of | Cardigan motored to Halifax, | NS. during the past weekend, | ‘where they visited with friends | and relatives. i Constable Mark Murphy of the | RCMP stationed at Cornerbrook. | Nfld., was the weekend guest of Charles Hansen left last week by car for Boston, Mass., and on his return he was accommanied Gina, who had been visiting Mrs. Hansen's parents in Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gardin- er and family of Camp Gage- town, N.B., motored to George- town, where they were guests of Mrs. Gardiner’s parents, Mr. Mrs. James Publicover. y , lett Last for Boston, Mass., where she will visit with relatives. HOUSEHOLD HINTS Most cuticle removers will also remove gardening stains, carbon paper stains and nico- GEORGETOWN Meets At Zion A meeting “of the executive of ; the P.E.f. Presbyterial, of the WMS of the Presbyterian! Church in Canada was held re- | cently in the ladies parlor, Zion | ened the meeting with scripture | reading, basing her chosen med- | itation on the theme. The World’, The minutes of the | last meeting were read by the | recording secretary, Mrs. A.J. | Murchison, Parkdale, and the | roll call was answered by re- | presentatives from auxiliaries | near and far. In her report, the president made particular reference to the Annual meeting of the Pres- byterial (E.D.) at Westminist- er Church, New Glasgow N. S. to the theme: ‘‘The Whole Ar- jmorer of God’’; to the Chris- and was Island had a fine representation there. A project the Presbyterial is accenting is the Centenary Me- , She expres- on behalf of Hugh , Marshfield, chairman Camp Keir committee, interest the various aux- taken in this 1065 | asked for their con- qj f grudge itinued support. Interesting and encouraging | reports were received from | the treasurer, Mrs. Stanley De- po vou GASP ron BREATH, WHEEZE, COUGH? news! Thou is of Canadians use of RAZ-MAH capsules each from their rt es quickly. Try Templet ° lo pleton’s RAZMAH Capsules today—only 85e $1.65 at drug counters TES steam aoe 0c ot drog “ou tnt th, en Be — _neaestnngsnmecnasintatisef P.E.I, Presbyterial Executive — Church > secretary. Marion Hardy, Char- |lottetown home mission secre- tary reported increased givings to Camp Keir. Mrs. Francis Murray, ‘London, litera- town, girls’ work secretary re- Mrs. Angus Brown, Wood Is- lands, childrens’ work secre- tary, in her report called atten- 20 % DIA Carmelita Soloman, student at Notre Dame Academy, was a recent . visitor to _Summerside, where she was the guest of Pat Steele. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Soloman O AND: * {bridges in those days. tine stains from nails and finger- tips. Blankets should be soaked | and agitated as little as possible when washed to preserve their RECALLS OLD CAR FORT WILLIAM, Ont. (CP)— Bert McGugan recently found the licence plates of his first car in his attic here. With a right-hand drive, the 1910 model could go at 35 m.p.h. At 74 the oldest resident of Paiponge township, Bert recalls that there were few roads and no BAA ee RINGS | __ WATCHES "113 KENT STREET << | ee CHARLOTTETOWN E etn hpi a ee ee ee County Buck- home on Beverly Hill, King- Millview. He left the Island for the States in the and is now president and Mrs, Sheidow sum-> , mer residents of Montague, where they have a cottage on the River. Above, from left are Russell Sheidow, Mrs. Sheidow, Mrs. Hulett Smith )- and Gov. Hulett Smith. ? yoo ee 5 AON RIYCHEN 7 Festive Fare * ‘Round the Bureau Kitchen we've been thinking 6f Christmas for some time now. For Dairy Foods lend them- selves naturally to festive 3 i att fli agtigiss > Prepared by the Home Economists of THE CANADIAN DAIRY FOODS SERVICE BUREAU 30 Egiimton Ave. E_, Toronto 72. Ont. ‘ Mew