"r ""*\'-- .. i’i“fff~f§'\.1';‘. M." “l: ma; “u... "fr, --=.-'-x a». .'._ r»:- .- 5D"! ‘i; -- ,-\ THE GUARDIA , CHARDOTTETOWN. DECEMBER 24. 1949 ‘ _ dllappenings of The Week iContinued from page 14) w; T. J. Klokham, M.P., Otta- wa has arrived to spend Christ- ’ 1, hi; home in Sourls. ~ iiias L _ __ , UL pnmthy C. Bentley of Mont- rgai is spending the Christmas hoittittys with her parents. Mr. and “m w, E, Bentley, 17 Water Street. . . . Mrs‘ W. H. V.'Dunbar. Fitzroy 5mm left for Halifax by plane on Thursday to spend Christmas with iier brother, Dr. Stanley Bag- nBiL ll,D.S., Dean of Dentistry at Dalhotisle. I I I \v_ B. Asbury and little Judy left last week to iflill ili‘l‘ liushand Flying Officer '.\shiir_v who was transferred to spnifillifl, Ontario, after finishing m, priufSE in Summcrside. ‘ . I I I Mrs. daughirl‘ l-‘i-iciids are sorry to lcarn that. Mrs. A. K. lifacPhe-e, Prince Street. ha. iirokcn her arm. I I I Eiflili members of the Edgehiil school who were in the cast of the Christmas Cantata which was per- ln Christ Church, Wind- ,.t,i-, NS. nn Sunday have arrived to srifiilli Christmas at their homes. -, Mary Beth Harris, Jean gt‘, nan. Anne Horne, Nancy iiyniiiiirin, Suzanne Palmer, Helen llalniin, Anne Stewart of "Strath- zm-tttay" and Elizabeth MacEach- erii of Mermaid. . . .\i:- filifl ‘Mrs. William Rcddln and h,i._\- titillfllliCl‘ lcft. on Wednesday U, "fiflllil Christmas in Moncton. I I I iwivarsity students spending (pruning at their homes are Mr. iviitiaiti Shcrren. who is doing wit: urlifitliliv work in science at llliii .ir~, Mr. Douglas Pierce who it attending ‘Vt-stern Univcrsltv, l.i'il'li'lttll. Ontario, Mr. Malcolm Jtiyi-t- from Mount Allison. and Mr. llarrv Sear, Jr.. who is a student tit iill‘ Vniversity of King's Col- pqn, llalifax. I liii. and Mrs, R. C, Parent en- teri-iincti at "Ravcnwood" for the members of the Experimental Farm staff this week at a buffet supper and dance». The reception rooms at "Ravenyvood" were beautifully riot-orflicfi with Christmas ever- greens. I I I Miss Helen Bailey, Fredericton. N. 13., is spending Christmas with iiir. and Mrs. R. C‘. Parent. I I Vtcnds of Mr, and Mrs. Keith liters, frirmcriy nf Victoria, P. E. l. and now of Charlottetown will he interested to know that they have moved to their new home at 94 Upper Hillsborough Street. I I I hii- Douglas R. Rustin of Port Arthur, Ontario, arrived by plane on Wednesday tn spend the holi- rlai" season with Mr. and Mrs. Ron- iiiti Parker. Mrs. Fred A. Bustln of Saint John will arrive this track-end to visit for a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Parker. o c o iifr. and Mrs. Sheldon Cameron left this week for New York where they will spend Christmas. I I I l-fr. Lloyd lnmsn and his moth- er, Mrs. T. \V. Inman returned from Halifax on Sunday evening Where they visited his wife who is ii patient in the Victoria General Hospital. I I Miss Alberta lifacFarlane. Educa- tional Director of the National Restaurant Association. with head- quarters in Chicago, Illinois, sr- ‘The ilaw improved REGAI. Flllllll rived by plane this week to spend the Yuletide season with her mother, Mrs. N. A. MacFarlane, and sisters, the Misses Martha and Enid, Summerside. - I I I Mrs. James Hill and Mrs. W. P. Callaghan, as co-hostesses, enter- tained the East End Bridge Club at the former’: home on Monday evening. I I I Miss Annabelle Allen arrived from Boston, Massachusetts, on Thursday evening where she is a student at the Forsythe Dental In- firmary, to spend the Christmas season with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Allen. Summerslde. I I I Mrs. Clare Tanton returned to her home in Summerside on Sat- urday after an enjoyable two weeks visit in New York City and Mont- real. ' I I I Mrs. C. H. Stewart. Summerslds. entertained a number of friends at bridge at her home on Monday evening. ~ I I I Mrs. A. B. L. Horne left Sum- merside by plane for Sydney, NS. where she will spend tho holiday season with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. RalPil Parker. . I I Miss Audrey Macmillan has ar- rived from MacDonald College, St. Anne do Beaupre, Quebec. to spend the Christmas holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allison Mac- milian. I I I Miss June Ramsay, A. T. C. M. Music Graduate in Pedagogy, As- sistant Teadher to Mrs. Margaret Parsons Poole, Head of the Music Department in Western U iversity, London, Ontario, arrived n Mon- duy evening at her home in Suin- merside to spend the Yuletide season. I I I Among the students who arriv- ed this week in Summerside to spend the Christmas holidays were: Isabel Howatt, Nancy Mac- Farlane, Virginia Campbell, Paula Schurman, D. R. Morriso . Gard- iner Dalzell, Alan Stewar , David Estey, Alan Lecky, from Acadia University; Mary Palmer, Robert Roncke from McGill University; Lowell Allen, Howard MacFarlanc. Dalhoullo University; Janet Baker from University ‘of ‘Toronto. Miss Wllna Monkley, student nurse in Prince County Hospital. left on Wednesday morning for Newton Centre, Massachusetts to spend her vacation with her mother, MrsuLena. Monkley. I Min Dorothy Callback, teacher in Branksome Hall, Toronto, ar- rived home on Sunday evening to spend the Yuletide Season with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Callbeck, Summerside. o - o Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Ellis enter- tained a Mixed Bridge Club on Wednesday evening at their home in Summerside. I I I Mrs, J. LeRoy Holman is leav- ing Summerside today by plane for Halifax. N. 5., where she will spend the Christmas holidays with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ted ‘Crfasf. Miss Barbara Currie. Labora- tory Technician student, in’ the Saint John General Hospital. is expected this afternoon to spend the Christmas week end with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Currie. Summersfde.‘ Miss Patricia Saunders, teacher of music in the Summersido High School. left on Thursday morning for her home in Alma, N. B., to spend the Christmas holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clark left. Summerlids on Thursday for Ches- ter, N.S., to spend the Christmas holidays with Mrs. Clark's brother. Mr. Gerald Zlzicl: and Mrs. Zlnck. On Wednesday afternoon the teachers of the Summersido Aca- demy and High School had a de- lightful Christmas party in the Teachers‘ Room with Santa Claus presenting gifts after which re- freshments were served. Dorothy Ilix Says — (Continued from Page Four \\I)llfi!‘l‘ his strained nerves snapped, and that in s moment of madness lift 5lli‘i'lL?(‘(l the quarrcling that had driven him crazy. REGARD 1'1‘ LIGHTLY There is nothing else so strange as that intelligent men and wo- "P" TPl-Zard the family spat in the light they do. ix srimctliing trivial, innocuous, something not to be They look upon it taken seriously. ll"! that is lust an inevitable part of marriage, like paying the grocery hill or having the baby come down with a cold. they say casually. and go at it hammer and 1n many households tho breakfast tabla row is just as much Die can't always agree," ‘was. I Dart of the menu as tbs food and £0 prevent a scrimmage that invariably ends by s man's furiously "Of course, two peo- nobody makes the slightest effort Gill-gluing, [anally [an and looou-llmoanrholhlags a Christmas l0 null; 01-- Toyounmndyounmnd )'0ll—-fl Happy Hollrloy with all the lrlmmlnp lo nacho. ll par/m! (FARTER 8i 00., LTD Wholesale Btatlonero -»-. _¢.--.J Llttla Lancer- "' Ymllll’ Andrew Lawson Johnson, son of Lord and hdy Luke. i. i. tabloid edition of I British lancer as he compares his uniform with that of Sgt. r. T. O'Con- ;‘ ncll of the 91h. Queen's Royal Lan- l cers. Master John- son and another lad. dressed ln minis- tura unlformmwere pages at the recent London wedding of Mo]. David Laurie. K. (3.. and Theresa Anne Gil- PG L banging the door behind him and that leaves the woman sniffling be- hind the coffee pot. It is undeniable that married people quarrel because they enjoy it. For there is not one family row in a million that either one of tho belligerents could not have prevented by tlie use of tltt- sliyrhtcst lat-t. and self-control if he or she has so desired. They could huvc avoided the topics that they knew they differed upon. They could have side- stepped each others little prejudices. They could have given the soft answer that turns away wrath. but instead of doing so they deliber- ately dragged out on the carpet the subjects on which they knew beforehand that they would go to the mat. Thcy taunted each other Viiifih their peculiarities and they hurled the fighting word at each o er. Now if husbands and wives get more fun out of scratching out each other's eyes and biting and clawing than they do out of billing and cooing. they have a right to take their pleasure as they find it so long as there are no children. But when there are children whose lives are wrecked by their quarreling and \Vll0 have lo Spcnfl the balance of their lives paying for their father's and mother's dcvil dance. it is a different matter. Then the parents‘ quarreling becomes a crime. DOES PERMANENT HARM For it wrecks the children, mind and body. It kills all the care- free joy of childhood and makes ‘them brooding and pessimistic and cynical. It forces them to grow up in an atmosphere of liatc that is more deadly and poisonous than any mlasma. It makes iil( m neurotic and warps their characters. It slays their respect for their parents and causes them to leave home at the earliest possible moment. And in thousands upon thousands of cases it keeps them from marrying because their remembrance of their parents’ squabbles makes them believe that marriage turns husbands and wives into enemies who are not even ladies and gentlemen in their dealings with each other, Of what; children suffer through the quarreling of their parents I can myself speak, for I get hundreds_of pathetic letters from girls and boys asking what they can do to make their parents quit fight- ing with each othcr. These children tell how wretched they are and how unhappy their homes are and that they have got so nervous that they can't study. "They say such terrible things to each other and they accuse each other of such awful things and there is nothing ever pleasant in our house. We have a nice home and a car and everything to make us happy if only our father and mother didn't quarrel all the time about nothing and ruin it all." wall these young- sters. Surely if men and women would consider the effect of wrangling on their children they would, in pity, stop it. their DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally to readers, hul; will answer problems of general interest through her column. 600D CHEER May your every Christ- mas wish come true and your New Your be lull o} happiness! ‘.11. l Anonymous Letter Causes Political Controversy In ll. K. By Alan Harvey LONDON, Dec. 22 —(OP) _An anonymous letter on Junior Carl- ton Club stationery has created bad feeling between Socialists and Conservatives. The letter. addressed ‘to Sir Sta-fwd Crisps as Chancellor oi the Exchequer. was mad at a political meeting 11y Hamid wit. son. president or the Board of Trade. It said: “I refuse good business every day—s0od United States business-because it is not worth the trouble and. expense and risk. So until you learn that All Work and no play makes Jack a du-ll boy. I will ; continue to refuse business." l I The Carlton Club. an excluslvei organization with 2.000 mom-bersl is associated with the Conservat-' lve Party. The club's chairman, Sir Ernest Cooper, issued a state- ment dissociating memibers 1mm the view expressed in the unsign. ed letter. But socialists insisted that many British business men are refusing North American orders strictly out of spite against the Labor Government. Conservatives on the other hand were incensed that a Government Minister would draw public attention, for political pur- poses. to an anonymous letter. The controversy also led to fresh charges by representatives: of British business that the Gov- ernment ploces too many obSiflcles in the path of companies export- ing to dollar countries. Protest To Russia Re German Prisoners BERLIN, Dec. 22——(AP)—— The West Berlin City Council accused Russia tonight of holding more than 1.000.000 German war pris- oners she has repeatedly promised to return. The Western occupation powers may send a strong allied note to Moscow and other East- ern capitals demanding the re- ‘. ‘K1 i‘. -{=_ (‘QWK t0 GRUGKETT and STOREY Ltd. ‘r 4411-4-32 _.-w a...- By a cheery fireside . . . Santa ends his night- A momenfs pause to rest a while, ere he takes his flight! He has been a busy elf all this passing year iilaking Christmas. bright and ga '; brimful of good cheer. filers-u? lilerru Christnsus. lease of the prisoners, a spokes- man for the British High Com- mission at Bonn said. S. A. McDONALD .-..\ t.- "acetates-tea A-Jiolhxll mo.” 1.1. .4