_ THE EXECUTIVE of the Wo He-Lo Club whoste 25th anni-| Lena Caroline McLure. Women's Editor. Phone 8508 6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed., Apr. 22, 1959. \ Members of the Branksome Hall Alumnae Association were the guests of Miss Edith M. Read at the Association’s annual din- ner meeting at the School on Ap- ril 18th. Mrs, Charles Powell, the president, officiated. Although this wasn’t the time of year for graduations, the as- ‘sociation acquired seven new members at the meeting. There are teachers at the School who are being given hon- orary memberships in recogni: tion of their service to Branksome Among. them is Miss Jennie Mac- Neill, the school’s new princ‘pal. The Alumnae presented Miss Read with a silver coffee urn for the school. The P.E.I. Duplicate Bridge League, played their weekly game at the Charlottetown Hotel, Mon- day evening, with eleven tables in play. The winners were North South, Dr. and Mrs. Dougas Mac- versary celebration took place at) left to right: Mrs: Fulton Pierce,| Gordon Lea, and Mrs. Norman |Donald, East, West, Mr. and Mrs the Y.M.C.A. this week. From| Mrs. James Montgomery, Mrs. j Stewart. _ Wo-He-Lo Club Hold Bridge; Celebrate 25th Anniversary é Amid beautiful decorations of silver, pink and white, the Wo-He Lo Club celebrated the 25th. year of their founding, at a mixed bridge in the Y.M.C.A. Social hall on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings’ of this week, with 25 couples in attendance each night. Pink and white tapers in silver - candelabra adorned the tea tab- le, and to complete the artistic decorations was the proverbial stork, representing the nursery... work for which this club is fam- ous. The guests were welcomed by Mrs. Fulton Pierce and Mrs. Gordon ‘Lea. The name Wo-He-Lo comes from Work-Love-Help, this club was organized 25 years ago by Mrs. Hooper Horne, the first meeting was held at her home with 11 members. The present club membership is limited to 24 members. The first president was Mrs. Ivan Horne. The pres- ent membership includes four charter members. They are: Mrs. G.J. Tweedy, Mrs. W.N. Wilson, Mrs. Evelyn Cudmore and Mrs. A. H. Duvar. The aims and purposes of the group are to maintain supplies for the nursery of the Prince Edward Island Hospital. Sewing is done by the members and other supplies are furnished . by the funds of the club. A special project on the 25th. anniversary year of the club will be to com- pletely furnish a semi-private room at the new wing of the Prince Edward Island Hospital. D. Gill. |) HAPPENINGS ae she. will represent the Island as Gulf; as a flower gifl: ~~ Mrs. J.E.P. Stewart and two children, Scott and Kent of Ber- muda, are spending a two month holiday in Charlottetown, the guests of Mrs. Stewart’s mother, Mrs. Parker Hooper, Euston St. Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Mac- Caull, Ellerslie, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johnson, Bedeque, left on Tuesday morning to attend the New Brunswick session of the L.O.A. and the L.O.B.A. to be held in Moncton on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. Mrs. MacCaull is Grand Mistress of the L.O.B.A. for P.E.I. and Mrs. Johnson is Director of Juvenile Work of the Order for this pro- vince. C.A.F..and Mrs. Green and their the Lady from the Garden of the| * rived from Winchester, -Mass. of the latter’s sister, Miss Annie cation in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. W.R. Tinney have returned to their home in Sum- Miss Beatrice Rankin R.N. of | | [ t Mr. and Mrs, Irving Mayer ar Bingo Party to be held Wednes- attend the funeral en Saturday | Colection amounted to $1.00. Campbell in O'Leary. = merside after spending holidays | of in Florida. w by . N. Mrs. Robert Schurman was hostess at bridge at her home in| Hockey brought the evening Summerside on Friday evening. | ¢ ‘The Small Cars With The Big Car Feel They clim> hills in third, corner with ease, seat 6 easily. Best of all they're easy on -the pocket book... up to. 35 miles per gallon. Own one of these money saving beauties for ‘es little as Meeting closed with the singing 1795. Take @ test drive to “Seeing Nellie Home”, Lunch day! ! as served by hostess, assisted \ Camp Hill Hospital, Halifax, spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rankin, Summerside. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Simmons | and son Steven of Halifax, N.S. | spent the weekend in Summer-) Cpl. Kenneth Green of the R.| two children, Linda and Carl.) poigay side, guests of the former's par- | ents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Sim-| | mons. i Mrs. Nelson Compton returned | to her home in St. Eleanors on} after being a patient in| Mrs. Finley MacLeod, Mrs. Alex Matheson, Mrs. Ronald Norman, Mrs. George Peake, Mrs. Harold Shaw, Mrs. Le. Baron Tait, Mrs. Gordon White, Mrs. George Wood. Miss Ethel Birt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Birt, 321 Fit- zroy St, City, left Monday for Toronto to attend the Canadian National Home League Congress tage LaPrairie, Manitoba for the| past four years, are visiting and Mrs. Otto Doull, Central Be- deque, prior to leaving for Ger- who have been stationed at Por-/the Prince County Hospital. Mr. John F. Taylor of Sum- with Mrs. Green’s parents, Mr.|merside, accompanied his daugh- ter, Mrs. Audrey Parlee on her | return to Saint John, N.B. i MOORE &McLEOD LTD. ~ SUGGEST! | YOU CHOOSE FROM THE LARGEST SELECTION OF FOUNDATION GARMENTS IN THE CITY. DAISY FRESH — SARONG, NU-BUCK ENHANCE, GOTHIC MOORE & McLEOD LTD. . The members are grateful for the support the public has given | to the various cake sales and bridge parties held by the Wo-He- Lo Club. The Executive of the club are the following: Honorary Presi- dent, Mrs. Lois MacDonald; Pres- ident, Mrs. Fulton Pierce; Vice- President, Mrs. James Mont- gomery; Secretary, Mrs. Nor- man Stewart; Treasurer, Mrs. Gordon Lea. The members of the club are: Mrs. James Cerry, Mrs. A. Cutcliffe, Mrs. Eric | Found, Mrs. Tudor Gencheff, Mrs. Gilbert Houston, Mrs. Walter Hyndman, Mrs. Harry Hynd- man, Mrs. Lemuel MacDougall, IDA BAILEY ALLEN Schedule Picnic Supper For Spring C By IDA BAILEY ALLEN Have you recently checked your home for safety? Now is a good time when spring house- cleaning is at hand. It’s not too difficult with family cooperation. Be sure the stepladder is secure. Repair frayed electric wiring and broken plugs. Give the heating unit a good going. over. Check hanging fixtures for mirrors, pic- tures and kitchen utensils: some- times they pull loose. It’s a good idea to plan just what is to be done in each room before starting to clean it. Send curtains, drapes and furniture covers to the cleaners or launder them at home. CONCENTRATE ENERGIES Concentrate on one room at a time. Get Father and the older boys and girls busy with paint brush as needed. They can help n windows and the glass fronis of pictures, vacuum, clean woodwork, wipe floors ready for re-waxing, shampoo furniture. The kitchen needs special at- tention. Banish window curtains if they are likely to blow over the range and catch fire. Repair or discard worn-out floor ‘over- ings. Arranze knives in a special rack so nobody can grab them and get cut. Throw out all uten- sils with insecure handles and all enamelware pots. with broken ename!; they are not safe to use. Your reward will be a house that is safe to live in. “If you keep good-natured, all this is \possible,"’ the Chef ob- served. ‘Try to finish each day’s work before everybody gets too tired, then wind up the evening with a substantial picnic-type sup- per. They should be very hungry, so I suggest plenty of ‘franks, hamburgers-on-buns, cole slaw or eaning Day salad and B-1-G ice cream sun- days.” TOMORROW’S DINNER Stewed Tomato in Small Bowls Croutons Pork Chop Casserole Noodles Polonaise Beet-Cabbage Relish on Lettuce Elberta Peaches in Orange Gel Coffee Tea Milk Measurements are level; reci- pes for 6. Pork Chop Casserole: Heat 1% tbsp. salad oil. Add 6 pork chops about 34”" thick, the fat removed. Saute over medium heat until browned on both sides. Arrange in.a shallow 3-pt. casserole. Combine 1 (8-0z.) can tomato sauce, 42 c. water, 2 small sec- tions peeled, crushed garlic, % tsp. crushed caraway seeds, % tsp. powdered oregano, % tsp. crushed rosemary leaves, 1 tsp. onion salt, and % tsp. pepper. Spread over pork chops. Cover; bake 1% hrs., in a mod. oven, 350 degrees F. Beet-Cabbage Relish: To pre- pare: Combine 1 qt. chopped, cooked beets, 2 c. packed, chopped raw'‘cabbage, 1 chopped seeded green pepper, %2 c. pre- pared horseradish, % c. minced peeled onion, % tsp. black pep- per, % tsp. cayenne or Tabasco and 1% tsp. salt. Cover with cold cider vinegar. Closely cov- ered in glass jar and roejiriger- ated, this keeps indefinite!y. Sweet-Sour Beet-Cabbage\ Rel- ish: Follow the preceding recipe, but add % ¢. sugar. CHEF’S NOODLES POLONAISE Top drained cooked nocdles with sauce Polonaise. To make, just brown 1 c. soft white bread crumbs in 1-3 c. melted butter. Add % tbsp. lemon juice and 1 tbsp. minced parsley. ELLEN’S DIARY Sleepy Cat And Sleepy. Boy Show Longer Days So cold today’s wind was. We eame indoors to the warmth gratefully from our choring, which is of course now mostly nominal. The black cat was out attendant this morning when we trundied the fireood in the small . barrow from the woodshed across the yard to the box on the back verandah. He was, we fancied, a bit sleepy because of a night-stroll which as we had noted earlier, =Feturned him to us in the fresh of i“ the new day from the direction of the mill and dam. We heaped the woodbox. We - knew when some item of the farming may require that a night-fire be | kept. (“Keep your woodbox full, and , the kettle, and a house,keeper is “for every emergency!” | an oldish friend of ours was wont say with a young chuckle as brought in sticks to hers set- down big and sturdy to the rear of her high-ovened pioncer stove.) For her convenience there were then no shining faucets in the RES _ kitchen at which to fill her kettle sizable pucket let down and lifted with a rattle and a creak by a windlass to the dug well in the yard: supplied the needs of that home. We tecall however that if one were brave enough to lean over and look down into its cool depth one could find intrig- uing mirrorings there. She is gone, that woman of our young years—long gone, as has since so many of those years, both kin and friend. A merry heart she had. Many a fire that iron kettle knew. Many a steam- ing cup of tea was brewed in that quaint earthern pot. May they in that far strange bourne whence no traveller returns find a con- tinuation of that happiness they most loved here. With the black cat eyeirg our efforts from a safe distance we made kindling from a round dry stick. Quietly he regarded our in- terest lifting his head only we no- ticed when a. sparrow’s shadow darkened for a fleeting second the bright of the woodshed- door. He grinned James, neither idle these days nor yet busy looked in at our pastim=>.\ “Set your stick square on block, Ellen’’ he advised. ‘‘And watch out that axe is pretty sharp! And” he offered with a chuckle after regarding us for a moment “don't jump like that when you go to ‘strike’—keep both feet on the ground.” And this day so chilly saw the | first of the troutir_. We suspect that when Mack looks back to | the years of his childhood all of | its chill will have vanished from his recollections. He will remem- | ber only of it that in a mother- | son pact long planned and cem- | ented in recent days, he rose at | five and joined by Jeanie, the! two went down to the stream and first fishin’. If strangely enough | there were no takings from the| clean wind-rippled water there | was good promise later catches in the nibbles they got. | “Now, next word! “Pumping” | we said a while ago when he! brought his spelling-lesscn by. “*P-u-m-p-k.”” **Ah.ah!” “*P-u-m-p-k.”” “But there’s no ‘“K"’ in pump-| img!"’ we said. ia “Well,” he offered weary we} knew from his long day, ‘“‘why isn’t there! There is I’m sure in “‘Pumpkin’. Oh ” he yawned “I guess we'd better leave her for tonight. It will all come right in the morning.” We smiled. Yes, for tired little boys—for everyone. With the en- couraging freshness of a brand new day, “It would all come right in the morning.” Until tomorrow—Diary—Good- night. GLENWOOD W. I. The Glenwood Women’s Insti- tute met at he home of Mrs:.El- bert Betts on Monday/ evening, March 30th wit president Mrs. Elmer tts presiding. | Meeting opened with the Institute | Ode and the Mary Stewart Col-| lect in unison. i Rolf. call was answered by eight members. Minutes of last meeting were read and approv- | ed. Correspondence “was read-; and discussed. Committees gave | their reports and new ones ap- pointed. It was decided to make candy to be sold at the Charles Case- ley show held in O'Leary. Next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Harry Gorrill. Meeting adjourned with the National Anthem. Launch was served by the hostess assisted by the committee in charge follow- ed by a social chat. | j ' COVEHEAD ROAD W.I. The Covehead Road W.I. held | their April meeting at the home| of Mrs. Harry Birt, with five! members, and one visitor pres- | ent, The meeting opened by sing- ing ‘‘O Canada”. Roll call was answered with grab bag. Com- mittee gave their reports and a bill pertaining to a sick visit was paid. i Correspondence was read ond | discussed. The quesionnaire on | Heme Economics was filled out, | and $1.00 is to be sent to the Home Ecomomics fund. The seretary | reported sending $2.00 member- ship free to the Drama Festival. It was decided to sponsor a Varity Concert or play in the Juliana 3.98 \ are cool and enchanting for summer wear. Tailored designs. $3.98 Wash ‘n’ Wear cotton pyjamas little or no ironing. Styled in Butcher Boy or length pants—colorful patterns in ground with floral and stripes. Sizes 32 - 40. the season’s most wonderful buy! socrisp...sofresh. . . so easy to launder...» | be smartly dressed . . . HOLMAN'S have a host | of charming and adorable styles . . . you can start wearing them now and right on through the | summer, helen morgan soe As illustrated . . . Casual frocks of great charm... 3. button front with turn over ballet skirt . 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