ni- 9 ‘ . l V i It; . .n ‘ ll ,- l6 d i p . 1 a]. m n; » 31 rr t fe N“. "l. d a . u _ \ . . ii ; 8 :1‘ . -. ' u, . u 1 i1 f ‘ Y. c 1 .. . _I i . ~i~ ‘v-v-g- fiQésm. 1-,.‘ _~..,___ PQQE TEN THE .diaigu>m.teul>l_fiue.aivi~v §4Q4A A‘; t oman’s Re oppenings Oi The .Week shipped off to New l‘.-' fare lviinr: abroad from . ' six in;iii.iit>a1i;iis to 'I".ie l filmed ml F.'i<hi<vi. -\vil iii Nstr w» meet the s (‘Diiifl b0 . i lil the group. a who lifts been ‘ia. I I .\l."ilif‘.<f\ll, Chief ‘ eoiiurutilhiled Hlllllg his 78th o c Dwri, if Prowse. whose en- .. to l)r. Ambrose J Deane 'l‘(I is iii-iii», plensantl_v dis- '\' (s!) "(ti iiuiiie liloi (‘l1’- Di" - iii-r J Dciiiic w hiiss "it Robert MacKay l? C A. M.. son of Rev. . R Taylor mid Mrs Tay- l u. vs“. cEi loci; place in HWY. House c ‘~ ‘l. '1‘. o_ on Monday". They p!‘ he the uuests of Mr. and Mrs. '1‘ \\' I. Prowse preceding the l ‘upv event next week_ Mrs. . . tcr. Mrs Finlayson of ..o their welcome house noon , Mr. . rs J. H. ucQuaid prior to marriage which is taking place near future to Dr. Joseph A. 31in of this city. ‘The bride- io-be i, a graduate of St. Francis ECavir-i" University. Autigonish, N. hfiand St. l\Ilchnel's Hospital school of Dietetics, Toronto. Dr. lfelfiilan has degrees from St. Dunstairs University. Charotte- zruvu. and St Francis Xavier Uni- \'l‘l. , and graduated in medicine i-om ueriiil University as Holmes Geld Nfedalis: in the class of '38. I I Mr. and Mrs. Erskine K. Mac- Nutt. Villa Street, have as their guests. Mrs MncNut-ts mother and sister Mrs. W_ Armstrong of Winnipr-si and Mrs E S Erzinger of Iifoutreal, who are being cordially vmlconwd. 6 3' s z :r :- m -. s: 7-17 3 z: 5-’ I I I I G. A. Goldie of Montreal entertained by her homc n honor of her recent mar- I I I I Last Saturday afternoon Miss Marjorie Stewart and Miss Dorothea Stewart had a smart tea and show- er for her at Miss Marjoriefls home. I I I Monday afternoon Mrs. Jack Hriiij had a preity tea for Mrs. Sciatic. and Mrs, George Tweedy ‘wad friends in for a social evening. Due . s ~ ‘Iii 30 itctioil was iiuneu , l Thursday afternoon Miss Olive lJohnstone wins hostess at a pretty '- ‘afternoon ten for Mrs. Goldie at- -l(‘lld€'d by old friends i v a a a Prior to lEflVlllq Montreal the staff of Si. lvlaruucritws Home, to \\'.ll('il Mrs Goldie was attached. honored her with a jolly tea arid hower and the staff of the Mont- cal Military Hospital also gave ier numerous lovely uifts at an af- ‘ttrnooii tea anti shower. Mrs R. lirucc Mari" of Montreal invited iiricnds for the tea hour in who is her Lleut. Ool, Lea Seaman of Hull- fai; has been spending a week here, inc uuests of his sisters the lvlisses tseainau. Roseneath Apartments. iCcl. seaman was combining busi- lness with pleasure and met many told friends (luring his visit. c t . - Mr. Bishop of Moncton who has lbecn spending a week with his son fr. D. Bryce Bishop and Mrs. l‘ Bishop is motoring home with them io-day. I I I I lvliss Doris M. Higgins who has been the center of many happy pro-nuptial gatherings, is leaving tomorrow morning for Saint John where her marriage to Mr. William y Dobson Lea. takes place that eve- ning. Miss Higgins will be accom-' iaanied by her imreiits, Mr. and Ali's. lvnliiice llivviiis, Ml‘. and 'Mrs. Wiliani R o and the groom's mother. A . Blanche Lord Lea I I I I Mrs Harry l-lodgson arrived by plane from New York on Tuesday and has gone to Malpeque to re- open her summer residence. I-Iodgson Haven. I I I I Mrs. Murdock MacKinrion is leaving this morning for Montreal where she will attend the McGiil convocation exercises. Her son Frank is a fourth _\'C!1l' student. i $1 t I Mrs Swcet-ivood of New York who spent a few days last week with her parents. Mr. and Mrs R. E Mulch has gone over to Halifax. I I I Miss Jacqueline Macdonaid and Miss Jennie Turner left by car Thursday morning for saint John where they will attend the Mari- time Art society annual meeting being held there and of which Miss Macdonald is a member of the executive. Mr J F. Macdonald wcnt as far as Moncton with his daughter, I I I I Mrs. MacKenna wife of Lieut Carlos MacKenna, came over from Halifax Tuesday, to spend a few weeks with her parents, Lt. Col. and Mrs. C. L. MacKay, before joining her husband recently trans- ferred to Newfoundland. I Mrs. Harold smith is visiting in Halifax with her daughter Mrs. Dewar MacNeill and Mr. Mac- Neill and her new grandson, born last week. I I I Mrs, John Walker of Kelvin spent the week-end in Charlotte- town the guest of Mrs. Mary Mc- Lean. I I I I The London Dally Sketch pub- lished pictures of Viscount Dun- cannon and Miss Mary Churchill under the heading "Premier's Her Mjesty Queen liligetboth A new and charming portrait of Her Majesty, who has sent he; but wishes for the appeal of Tho Queen's Canadian Fund for Air Raid Victims. ‘Ihclr Maladies make a practice of arriving to glvc comfort and consolation Immediately after any urn his been bully raided, and the can oi tho victim h vary near tho Quoelfl hurt. __,__ > alm '1 Social -~nnnn=n Sweet Marie Month of May. It used to bo Spring Vacation flmg for m,‘ Three whole weeks of frggdom granted. Till the fields were seeded planted, Three whole weeks from school work free. "Sweet Marie, come to me, N“ “"1159 You are so fair, Love to sea Bu‘ became YOu are so sweet- Makes me tremble at your feel; Sweet Marie. Sweet Mai-re." And I yet can hear him singing While the whiffie tree ls swinging At the heels of "Jack" and "Sally", Hear him singing down the valley Springtime song of "Sweet Marie." Sweet Mar‘e"—I've often wondered wondered, wondered, often ponder- 6d, Wondered who was Sweet Marie? For though songs I've heard you see Nothing stayed like "sweet Marie" Aye. I yet can hear him singing ' Wglere the birds are hopping, wingfl 8 Where the buds through, Singing Springtime songs o! you Sweet Marie, Sweet Marie. —JBmes MacLean. are breaking mm‘; v DB-llkhter Engaged." Lord Dun- cflnnon. 28. is the son of the Earl of Bessborough. former Governor General of Canada. It is under- stood that arrangements have been made to announce the engagement but authoritative quarters describ- ed the Sketch! conclusion as "a little premature." No confirmation was available from any source. but it is known that Lord Duncannon and Miss Churchill have been friends for some time. Lord Dun- cannon is an aide de camp to Lt.- Gen. A.G.L. McNaughton. general officer commanding the Canadian Corps. and recently was promoted froiri 2nd Lieutenant to Captain. He paused in his duties today to tell uewspaperment “I have no statement to make." There was no comment in Downing Street and it i5 learned there will be no state- ment at least for the present. The Premier's youngest daughter is l8 and has been engaged in war work_ Recently she delivered her first public address, an appeal for sup- port of the wai- savings campaign. Her debut had been scheduled for this year but was called of! becflllfl of the war. {- DENMARK AWHEEL one third of Denmark's popula- tion owns bicycles. Periodic Distress "ma: °ii"“l‘.lt“.“.°if.‘li‘llt'.".fl‘.‘f..‘l'é‘i “I n‘ ' o flower-no hot drinks nor no ncud in llo inn. Throc lnrfldilllfl Elfin?" gtvapnuloc rollavc nlln FABTEIS. stimuli“ rvoc. NOW t'i“tf§'i»"€i‘n‘ii‘ini%"§a‘fhil‘;~i u done: m n ui drullllll- lvEilZmDLECRAFT For the Home Keep crisp and lovely all day long in hhis button-front house frock. Roomy ‘pockets, o. heart shaped yoke an slimming rin- cess lines are the distingu ing features of this practical house frock. Choose plain or checked cot- ton and add a narrow niffle of whltc at. the becoming neckline for tho fashionable feminine touch. Use this same pattern for other ver- sion with a zipper closing and rows of bright ric-rac. This frock is des- tined to be our favorite style all spring and limmer long. Style No. 2901 is designed for clues 12, i4, 16, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 36 requires it 8-4 yards of 99- inch fabric. Bend hnnty (20c) coin ll ferrcd, for Pattern. Write plainly your Name, Adiress and the It MOI l number. Bo cum so mu tho In: vou wls h 5W1! No. 2901 Bin ..............- I69 l/IREF lfifll/IFR KS“ I701! -$4VEk- GLASSES AND SILVERWARE S%RKLE WITH N0 POLISHING. NE BEEN ‘DUNN FAR LONGER THAN ‘THAT. I'LL BET’ I SPEND A MINUTE ON EVERY GLASS. BROKEN EGGS - DAMAGED I FRUIT DELAY MILITARY MAIL _‘. Damaged fruit, broken glass jars which had contained maple sYTuD and cartons of fresh e895. Ell bmk‘ on, causing damage to the SUI- roundlng malls, are being removed from parcels addressed t0 Our Overseas Troops at the Base Post Office, Ottawa. Canadian Postal Corps officials have reported to Hon. William P. Mulock, K. c., Postmaster General, that last; week l6 parcels in one bag of army mail mssccl a des- patch. because they required re- packing, as a result of the break- age of a glass jar of maple syrup in one parcel. Fresh 6885 iltat had been enclosed without ivrapplng, along with two tins of maple syrup, in another parcel had also broken and spread. Five bananas with out a single paper cover and two thin cartons of eggs merely wrapped in paper were removed from other packages. The above examples illustrate the folly of sending perishable or fra- gile articles through the mails to our 'n-oops, especially in view of the long Journey by land and sea under war time conditions. Par- cels containing perishable goods likely to spoil within the time re- quired for transportation and deliv- ery, or wh‘ch contain articles to te- come damaged in transit, are not acceptable for mailing. If a parcel is worth mailing it is worfn care in packing. All parcels should be fully prepaid, securclyl packed in strong containers. wrap- ped in several layers of thick paper and tied w’th strong twiue. A slip containing the address of the sold- ier and the return address of the sender should be enclosed with the contents. The sender's address should appear on the cover. Com- pleted Customs Declaration forms are required on all parcels for our Troops abroad. Parcels for Over- seas should be addressed as follows: Regimental Number. Rank and Name, Name and Details of Unit (to. Company or Section. squad- ron, Battery, Holding Unit, etc.) Name of Regiment or Brancn of Service, Canadian Army Overseas. Turpentine will remove stains on hearth tiles quite easily- arld Personal TO SPEND FIDDLING WITH OLIPSWLE B ~ R SOAP. RINSE AND NOT WIPE AT ALL- ALTOGETHER, I'M DONE IN fill!‘ 77/5 HMS DYI l3 057970 ./ . BY 'l'llE TIME AN f/h and Inc/Ml “)4 4y firs. J-i 07/100, MY! AND THAT r Fashions I 'I'llE CLO {IIIII ll .- cu-| saw: nan! D WORK TIIE OXYDDI- WAY” ldwrflfil/A‘, Oils-aye) "iY 23. r141 .._ \g_§ ‘Literature don't have. When to add soap. You zip r TODAY'S rich, loapy OXY- DOL contains an extra spe- cial ingredient that most soaps ou try it tomorrow, look for t ese things: More Sud: —up to 3 time: ihc suds of many soaps by volume measure! Lust- ing Suds-so rich you won't have What Oxydol’: extra ingredi- ent does to grease in water is a perfect wonder to sec. don't work with flat suds and reasy dishwafer. You fairly brough the dishes. New the quick, easy way if waslics_nmi scours greasy cooking things. lhc dish- almcsf at a _touc — over polishing! lie through so swell for hands. dust than today's Oxyd QUIT-HI“, we [lllllfl washing efficiency Nor: the time you can nve in drying. Glasse: Chllll cpuklo With its exiraingredienf O - do! is mild as ever. Try it. cu ll fast you'll say n’! “Vandal-fully free from sueezy too-but with no 1m in seas/ring performance. No granu- lritedsoapismore“sneeze-proof" ol. More im- L-cn no coarsening of pro no loss of sudsing speed, of IIIADI IN OANIDA SEE FOR YOURSELF IIOW MARVEIDUS AOXYDDI- IS FOR REMOVING GREASE no OVER-Hilda mec there's duct or mildaess. MZTA 09 70.1‘; M’ 500.5106 SHE), UNI/INF EFF/C!!!” 9k For Friday, May 23 MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries) ._You may feel "left. cut" today, but you must bring yourself to realize that if on such days as these we do make an extra effort to be better and do better our achievement is finer and more last- Lng. Investigate new propositions. APR-IL 2i t0 MAY 2a) (Taurllfi- Be discreet with family and loved ones, also employer and assoczatcs -—this may be someones else “off” day and you'll prevent needless un- pleasant disputes by being the tact- , fui one. Stay close to business and obligations. MAY 21 to JUNE 2i (Gemini)- Sevezul good opportunities here to advance your interests for next week and the future but you'll have to uncover them. Also, some new leads that won't materialize n:w but if you will work on those that look good to your efforts will prove more satisfactory later. JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancers- Watch the budget, don't spend for the wrong things and overlock buys of value. And don't be influenced" by well sounding but not well mean- ing schemcrs - there are plenty around. JULY 24 to AUGUST 22 (Lem- You, like Cancer natives, should be especially careful of your income today. Worthy causes and char?- tie: deserve attention. out be SURE of their worth. And give close personal attention to your busness aifair-s. AUGUST 23 to SEPTEAEBER 23 (Virgo) — Check articularly on matters that will nvolve money, time or your reputation Be tactful in your criticisms. Born after sep- tember 6 Harmony and pleasant conversation at home important. SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23 (Libra) — There's always satis- Your Individual H O R O S C O P E --——- By Frances Drake ——-—— faction in work or any activity well clone, and even il othcis d.n't seem to appremaie wivhat you do today you will be doing yourself a big favor by carrying on in your natuialy culpable way. OCTOBER. 24 to NOVEMBER 22 (Scorpio) - Some unusual n-ieans and methods can hen; be introduc- ed to advance your interests. G;ii-. fer with people of authoixty and high intelligence whenever possible. Down jealousy. NOVEMBER 23 t0 DECEMBER 22 (Sagittarius) - Heart affairs, dzmestic and confidential issues re- quire particular care and thought- fulness now. Don't permit private matters to interfere wALi other im- portant activlties that call for im- mediate and thorough nandling. DECEJIVIBER 23 to JANUARY 2i (Capricorn) - Start; early to be on the alert for deception. intrigue and misguided intentiom. Have none of these in your schedule Take one problem at a time, and act with Capriczrnks characteristic rugged determination. JANUARY 22 to FEBRUARY 20 (Aquarium-Let no shadows spread over your horizon this. trcky but still interesting and useful per rd. There is much good you can do, should do. And difficulties wil dfcninish under the rielpfuiness of steady effort. FEBRUARY 2i to MARCH 20 (Phces) _ Prflixrnaries often are as important as the matters they precede. Be careful in them today lest you get off on the wrong track. Don't. let someone else do your tasks for you. Gain mcmcntum as you go. A CHILD BORN ON THIS DAY bright unlnd, probably quick in di- rect answers. Not ieamus, but scme- times may be pet y. tlccds relgicn and self-mastery to guide it along the right road. Tremendous energy. VEN when you combine Robin Hood Flour with richly flavoured ingredients and date filling you'll recognize the full, natural flavour of high-grade, sun-ripened wheat in every tempting cookie. “Robin Hood Flour is not only a prize flour, but it brings prizes to me when I enter baking at the Exhibition. It is Robin Hood that I recommend to friends when they ask what flour I prefer," says Mrs. H. E. Brodie, of Fredericton, N.B. Pinwheel Coakiz::—4 cups Robin Hood Flour, l6 _ 1 tsp. soda, 1i tsp. salt, 2 cups brown sugar, M cup shoriemnll (hi1! buffer), 2 eggs, i tsp. vanilla. Me!bad:—l.Sif: dry iugtcdienls together. 2. Cream shorfeuirlflv sugar and eggs. Add vanilla. 5. Add 4. Cu: dough into five pieces. Roll each cool place overnight. 6. Mn. H. E. Brodie cl Pruitt/clan, Mk. S read a dale l0 to l5 minutes. “l make bread with the overnight method," my: Mrs. Ifrorlie- easily and quickly Robin Hood Flour, whenty flavour that is everywhere. _ Sincerely, noiuii BAKING suivlCl ROBIN HOOD noun mus ll.\flTED TILLIE THE TOILER - “SAUOE FOR THE GANDER.” Fri-us susmess HAS some BETTE? TELL THE BOY: m-m‘ rr wAS “BIRDS 0F A FEATHER?’ YOU'RE R\G'H'I'_\'M 112E CLAY CAN TAKE THE JOKE: BUT I'M AFRAIDPMC. \S GOiNG ‘TO BE SOEE mum ma." n.- FAR ENOUGH-JMFD DEMAND AN APOLOGY You HAD NO RlGHT TZYFLAerA F-RAAIK m- VOLVNG vw Anrecriosss Line "fl-wk: l/M soson R Q1 { HIKDY’ JOKER WH TRiflKS iii is sea no REASON ‘I'D APbLOfiilE TO A i one on. omen?‘ TAKE A 30K; on CLAY, THESE You've 601" ~rouR new FEAvIAugPlQ/ttil“ w\T\-\ MY AFFECTIONS cue THAT-T‘) OF Act. ‘THE MBONA-OWDOWN l” PEO LE been _ oug soar tsp. cream of tartar. flour mixture, until stiff. out, as needed. filling over each and roll like a ielly roll. 7. Slice when requu’ with sharp knife and bake in hot oven whcn made with and has u lieucr flavour." Robin Hood Flour has a nth delicious. (lrfifl Robin Hood Flour and enjoy new huh"! thrills. Robin Hood is sold by deb" 5. Put in "it rises MM. Mn-f