Women Anne Bond, Women’s Editor, Phone 4-8506 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Thurs., Apr. 5, 1962. 7 A. CECIL LADNER ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. | Coffin, Charlottetown, wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Lillian Ethel Mehatabel, RN, to Arthur | HAPPENINGS His Honor, Lt. Governor F. Walter and Mrs. Hyndman, and Chief Justice Thane A. and Mrs. Campbell attended the reception given by Mr. and Mrs. J. Wat- son MacNaught at the ‘‘Tartan’’ Saturday evening at the con- Cecil Ladner, son of Mrs. J. M: Ladner and the late Mr. adner. ee t place on May 5, 1962, at the | oe at ler Char- ottet sented to the bride, by Sandra Craig and Evelyn Bryanton The ribbons were cut by Norma | Craig and the yd cards were read by Nancy Mill ‘or the ladies. MARY HAWORTH “She Starves For Attention As Husband Ignores Her Dear Mary Haworth: I am the | Beat of four teen-age child- vice jren, ranging from 14 to 17 | years. My husband and I were | married very young and had our children immediately, so we | are still quite young. I feed that we've had a suc- | cessful marriage, in that we are | rear ing four well adjusted chil- dren who fill us with pride. As they became old enough to take some responsibility for them- selves ook a paid job to wage with a finances. I don’t mind working and have a sense of satisfaction : helping this wa My husband is a fine man with . gord moral values; he doesn’t drink or squander mon- ey and shows no interest in oth- er women; nor in me, for that matter. I am practically starv- ed for his companionship and attention: When I get home from work (he arrives 30 minutes earlier) he is asleep in the living room. I waken him for dinner, after which he returns to the divan and sleeps a while longer, then watches TV until bedtime. We never discuss the many little things that need to be dis- cussed. Efforts on my part to talk with him are met with a posal Can you offer me some ad- P. Dear J. P: The word for your burbs behavior is “‘reject- * It appears that his feelings seal been hurt, or his pride wounded, and he is salidiner His intent seems punitive, as if the aim is to hit back, without put- ting his care on the table about his grievan This oe of acting out a sense of injury usually is hand- ed down in family life, with a son or daughter aping a par ent’s example, on through suc- cessive generations. It isn’t her- editary, you understand; mere- ly ee Coen association in formative : It is odd that you don’t have a pretty clear idea about what touched off your husband's five- year-old pout. Lacking other rane. I would guess it has something to do with your tak- ing a paid job The fact that he beats home daily. drapes ae on the couch for a snooze, and per- sistently ignores you for the Mr. And Mrs. | the message in reverse, _” say- A effect: “You how | little you are missed.’ OF “How | ittle yeu count with me, a least.’ As for what to do, you can't inv ade his reserve by storming | the barricades. The better way is to stop beating against his resistance and turn your inter- est wholeheartedly in other directions. You may socialize with neigh- bors during evenings, when stays home by preference. A weekly bridge game with other wives, evening trips to the shop- ping center with women friends, * evening visits to church events with congenial neighbors would help to offset his moodiness. But to get to the heart of the matter and put things right, if | a theraputic inquiry precise meaning of his withdraw- al. In teamwork with a family relations adviser, you may de- | velop insight into the whys-and- | wherefores of his sulking thus determine whether coe revisions in your performance might heal the breach that is widening. M. H. Everett Wall Celebrate 50th Anniversary n almost inaudible monosyll- | able, a shrug or a lifted eye- brow. We have no social life, as he prefers to stay home. When I ask if anything both- ers him, he says ‘‘No.” And he | doesn’t seem depressed or un- happy, really. It is as if he were | a alone in a world that no ne can enter. This has been ae on bony five years and I am ata Our sex ite is almost non- existent; as with other things, he’s not interested. I love him and want to feel loved by him, | Helen, Mrs. Dickieson and fam- were unable to attend were their A delicious sii: was served | but we are growing farther and | ily of Howlan; farther apart and this frightens |W. Wal BALTIC — On Saturday March 31, Mr. and Mrs. Everett | | wall of Tolan’ River celebrat- | ed their golden wedding anni- versary at their home. During the afternoon and eve- ning friends called on Mr. and| | Mrs. Wall to extend their con-| | gratulations to the couple. A de- licious turkey dinner was held} for Mr. .and Mrs. Wall and the members of their family that were able to attend the affair. | ong those attending were: Harry Wall, Mrs. | elusion of the Dominion Drama Festival. Mr. MacNaught is regional ELLEN’S DIARY chairman thé: Dominion [Oe Drama Festival for Prince Ed- ward Island and one of the governors. The reception was in honor of Miss Norma Springford, | r of the dram festival, and was attended re “It’s only one team that can | all fees taking part in the fes- | win the cup,” Mack commented | tival.entries and others who this morning. “Last year, we, worked and helped in the ar-|had our turn. Maybe, next year esyancan? for the three-even-|. . .who knows?” Ing ev | He had come by on his way | school to take care of any Mrs. Arthur G. Bruce had | conan of this house. Mrs. William A. Ready left) letters to post? Want anything | yesterday for Montreal, from| from the store? Yeast, tea, soap- where they will sail on the! Hn ae ee things, for I won't | Empress of Britain, on a visit | be able too much along | to England and the Continent. | with my hao in the carrier on While in England they will be | my bicycle. And ‘with a smile” would there be any ‘canine. Ready and Mrs. Nancy Beer) and family. They| He sat a minute to talk of the | expect to be away from the|hockey season now over province for three months. | him. It had given him and oth- schoolboys some pleasant Lieutenant Audrey Miller of outtnes through the winter, tau- the Canadian Forces Hospital | them we suspect more than in Kingston, Ontario, is holiday- Sue lesson of the game and a at her home in West Royal-|now in a pleasant finale, the ete wan was to ler th So 7 junior and senior teams, as a Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hender- | cae of its esteem. a banquet gon, 95 Rochford St., Charlotte- lin the hall. . .This gy not in town, are celebrating their 35th | the district, ‘in’ which Mack wedding anniversary today. goes to school and where this arm sits, but in that where Mr. Paul Murphy. who is with | Rob’s and other fields of the youth with all its wenter nal warble, in ~~ meadows and the Provincial Bank of Canada | name wander happily. excitement, be lost to them. | hedgerows ther SPILLVILLE MUSIC in Summerside, has been trans-| fyen as we chatted, we could May their memaries of this Soft-footed, a ithe velvet of ferred to the bank's Charlotte- picture the mothers there stop night be good! w said. | kittens’ paws, t goes. Composer Anton Dvorak put town branch, He will begin his |, ponder, “Now what shall I “Let's com ** Alex invited at out through the star- the Iowa town of Spillville anv duties in Charlottetown next! make for it?”. And straight- | this nerhoes. And we came sh its 363 population on the map | week. way turn to the cookery with with him where the spring-sun- Unill tomorrow — — Diary—-| by writing - part his New a wish and a prayer-could see shine was falling brilliantly |Good-night. World symphony there in 1893 A successful pot luck supper ae Banquet At Season’s End Is A Gala Event For Youth |too the tables of the evening, ‘actually groaning with the con- tributions from the rural hom- |Brown and the presentation of | es there. Turkey, dressing sal- ads, relishes - How the salive glands fretted, just to think of jit! Rolls, biscuits, pies in a var- “Any y | iet * e dainty decorated shortbread, the frosted cakes, the delectable squares, how roy- ally the lads of the teams and | their coaches would be treated. ES ll be there?’ we said. f all on et with me to- day,” he s So it was ‘hat we watched him and another lad of the road set out from here on fodt in the afterlight to attend this gala event in their young lives. They walk w by the wood- lands across the road from Al- derlea, And above the dark of the tree tops there, the rose of the the day’s fading sunset was "s\a he [it dissolving into the _ twilight’s on Up the rise of t they went, and we lost | om there on the next dip of way. So soon, it oa to mind, their teens would pass, and a Ramsay of Moncton; and her husband W.H. Bro wn | and family of Kensington; George and Mrs. Wall of Mar- | from Mr. and Mrs. Leith Owen gate; James and Mrs. Wall and | | ead Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Hunt- family of Saint John, N.B.; Goldie, Mrs Rix and family of | congratulations ar- | from Orville Phillips, MP, Kensington; Mr. an rs, old Bryenton and family of Mal. Pi Following the dinner an ad-, dress was read by Mrs. W. H | about, shrinking the drifts, giving us to walk on baring pat- | ches of yard, showing us the crystal flow of thawing stream- lets - and the a bud- ded pe up through the damp a ne owen border! | Today was sun, and loveli- ness, and a gentle haze banding the far spring-time hills. W | caught in the calls of the crows and their smaller kin the pre- lude to the time of the singing birds, which will before long be d. oe “When the robins come-theirs is a nice song, Ellen,” James said today, listening to see if he might catch a broken trill bout. lis the fields. — back in a ia quiet, when I’m with "the horse : the seater, that’s where you hear them 1 and their daughter Cathy/|don, Ont.; Saint Joha, N.B.; Stella, Mrs. Lois | Keir Brown of Streetsville, Ont. “It’s good to waken to| And you hear it at its best | f visiting his mother in Montreai, | a television a from the family was made to Mr. and Mrs. Wall. The ria. children presented | Mr. and rs. Wall with chrome set ‘and the great-grand-| children presented the couple | with a wedding cake. Rev. E. Bean also briefly ' addressed the couple. Several other individual gifts were received and those includ- | ed a lamp from the members of | the Baltic Women’s Institute. | Members of their family that son Harold and family of Lon- Eva. Mrs. Brown, ie Grimsby, Ont., and Rosie, During the evening congratul- atory telegrams were received 2 r of Toronto; and a letter was received in Ottawa. The evening’s entertainment | was provided by Miss Helen |Brown of Kensington and Mrs. Harold Bryenton showed sever- al interesting films. BURTON Bennett Howard, Glengarry, | has returned home from Char-| lottetown Hospital where he re | ceived treatment. | of Mrs. Thomas Stewart, RCAF Station, Summerside, recently visited her mother, Mrs. Eva Dalton, Burton. Victor Cooke, Cape Wolfe, has returned home O’Leary Community Hospital where he |underwent major surgery. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Costain | and family, Mimminegash, were | recent visitors at the home of | Mrs. Costain’s parents, Mr. and) Perry, Burton. } . Frank Stevens (Sr.) who was | |Mrs. Arthur has returned to his home in| Campbellton. irs. |ther at the army compound the Middle E Mrs, Fred a ae yar MEDICAL PHARMACY | of the branch, said that all t to serve you used clothing for all an roe of the day or night. | tries. In Charlottetown wool ani SORTING AND MENDING DAY IS FRIDAY Clothing For Needy Nations | Packed By Ch’town USC BY JEAN MACISSAC Guardian-Patriot Staff Writer Ss 'patterns may be obtained by anyone wishing to knit for the Every Friday afternoon is organization at the home of sorting and mending day for the | Mrs. Jack Rawek. The wool is ladies of the Charlottetown | donated by a local Nova Scotia lottetown branch she said ft was difficult to make an esti- mate, a the membership con- sists not only of individuals, but | oF groups, and anyone who does | work for the organization auto- matically becomes a member. Anyone interested in or wish- ing to know more about the Unitarian Service Committee may attend the annual meeting which is being held at 2 p.m. on Friday, April 6 in board room of the Building, she said, the film Dominiog H. BENNETT CARR Insurance Counselling Dist. Supr Sun Life of Canad: Phune 4-8817 — 4-5435 Charlotietown = P.E.1, Branch of the Unitarian Service | firm, and the patterns come Committee. It is on this after- | from e: national headquarters noon every week that they ga- | | in Ottaw Packa vert of mended clothing Brighton Road to repair and on knitting are sent to the package clothing to be sent to! Unitarian Service Committee of needy countries. ada in Ottawa. Local firms A branch of the Unitarian Ser- here give the use of their deliv- vice Committee of Canada, the ery trucks to transport parcels Charlottetown group was begun to the airport, from where they three years ago, and through are sent free of charge by MCA the work and effort of its mem- | and TCA. bers, is now recognized as a'* The president said that she is branch in its own right. always h welcome new The work of the committee'| members to the organization, consists primarily in mending | and that they may contact her clothes and doing knitting. On| at the Friday afternoon work the day the above picture was sessions. Looking for FASHIONS in exciting oe lection of new § Spring styles for daytime and _ late- day wear. taken, the members were pre-| When asked how many mem- paring packages of used cloth-| bers are included in the Char- | sizes ing to be sent to such points as 1414-2614 Korea, Hong oe Greece, and bers of the family is accepted, o long as it is clean, and ha t least ‘six months wear. The oo then take care of any re- pairs that are necessary. Members of the Unitarian Service Committee also knit CALL 4-6623 for 24 hour service MEDICAL PHARMACY rner of Pown priced from 10.95 - 29.95 GLORIA | Ladies’ Wear 55 Gt. George St. 1 Charlottetown articles to be sent to other coun- eee St. foe, id | Moore & McLeod Ltd. | A New Season - A was held by the Kensington Lionettes on Thursday evening at the Canadian Legion Home with approximately seventy at sons in attendance. After the meal had been «e-| joyed ‘the tables were removed and dancing to records com- | pleted the evening. The spot- | light dance was won by Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Drummond who re- ceived a box of chocolates Members of the committee ar- ranging the event — Lionet- P. chairman), | Georgie MacLeod ig Nora Mc- Carville. Pink and white streamers de- corated the Women’s Institute | Room at Malpeque for a show- | er on Wednesday evening for | aa ee Bryanton in honor | of h pproaching marriage To t an tre strains of “the Bridal For Mother . . mart shoes for the lady of Sates. patterns @ Savage, @ brid the seat of honor by Mrs. Gor- jampion. | The gifts were carried in and | also arranged after being pre- | | For Father... Mrs, T. L. Cook Is For the diver of the car, smart styles by Honored On Her Sacer gioraheim om rr 90th Birthday Mrs, T.L. Cook, Murray Riv- @r, celebrated her 90th Potts at recently th heights colors by famous names 28 @ Vitality, = Naturalizer, @ Fiancee, Sapphires. PRICED FROM 9.95 to 15. PRICED FROM 6.95 to 26.95 LePage Shoe Co. Ltd. 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