. Olure, ‘PAGE TWO Woman's Rea lm "I. Social and Personalfx. Fash Happenings Of The Week‘ Prime Minister Churchill brought his wife and youngest hte . wth when he arrived in Quebec Tuesday for a war strategy conference, and it. mark- ed the first time either had ac- companied him in one uf his war- time Atlantic crossings. Mrs. Churchill. the former Miss Clem- entine l-Iozier, is the daughter of the late Sir Henry Montagu l-loz- ler. She is a slender woman, formerly an excellent tennis play- er, and although her taste in clothing is not. extravagant. she is regarded as llCLlg among Bri- ttains well dressed women. Like the King and Queen. she and he; husband are credited with having done much to keep up the morale of Londoners during the blitz clays by their appearances in bombed areas and shelters. Con- sidered one of Britain's ablcst wo- men speakers, Mrs. Churchill of- ten hears her husband rehearse his speeches. This tryout is not bait for flattery. for Mrs. Chur- chill is one of his most observant critics in matters of oratory. Their daughter, Mary. now is a subaltern in the Auxiliary Terri- torial Service. She joined the service as a priyuLe in 1941 and saw action with anti-aircraft bat- teries during raids in July, 194?. She seldom goes to night clubs. doesn't smoke and has said that. she is not a good dancer. al- though she sings well enough. She has shown a lively interest in pub- lic affairs. members of her family say. since she was six years old. . - - Major and Mrs. Penibrooke of Ottawa are being cordially wel- comed on a visit. They are guests at the Charlottetown Hotrl. o c - This has been a giiy week with u great many more visitors at the Fair than for many years. - o - Mr. and Mrs. H. A. C, Scarth have as their welcome guest. Mrs. Scarths brother, Mr. Edmund Parker of Toronto. - t Mr. Malcolm Richardson, son of the late Mrs. H. A, Richardson. Toronto, is visiting his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mac- Donald in Georgetown. u o o Mrs. J. P. McNicol of Phila- delphia entertained at her beauti- ful summer home Road's End in honor of Miss Dorothy Kirwan of Washington who was the week- end guest of Senator cnd Mrs, Mc- Donald. Dainty refreshments were served on the lawn and a de- llghtful afternoon spent. Among the Guests were Dr. G. Monaghan of Oklohoma. Dr. and Mrs. Don- ahue and Mrs. O'Brien of Mon- treal. Mrs. Edwin Murphy, Mrs. D. J. Riley and Miss Mary Donu- hue. Mrs. McNlcol entertained again in the evening. Deepest sympathy goes cut to Mrs. A. G, Peake and family in their bereavement. a u c Mrs. Robert N.‘ MacNeill left yesterday on a holiday visit to her sister in Chester.‘ Nf. Mr. and Mrs. Frank MacKinnon are leaving this morning on re- turn to Ottawa having greatly enjoyed their holiday visit with Mr. MacKinnons mother, Murdock MBCKIDEIOIE. . Miss Edith Porter of Brookline, Mass, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. L. D, Murray, at St. An- drews-by-the-Sea. - - Miss Maisie Macleod of Ot- tawa. is spending her holidays with her sister, rs. (Major) A. S. Robertson and her mother, Mrs. MacLeod at Merrnald. . Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Strubel of Sydney, accompanied by Mr. H. B. Chaplin have arrived at their summer home_in. Bey Fortune. The sympathy of a. wide circle of friends throughout the Pro- vince goes out to Mrs. Lightizer and the family in the sudden pass- ing of Major J. Disht/ller- . My. Ralph Fales of Montreal is among the visitors here this week. c o n Miss Dorothy Kirwan who has been spending a. delightful vaca- tion at her home here spent a. few days in Summersi-le the guest of Mr, and Mrs. H. T. Holman. Miss Kirwan has left by plane on return to Washington. c - - Misc Winnie Irons of Halifax k flung friends in tlio city. Sqdn. Ldr. G. E, Hervey, D.S.O., of Montreal, now administrative officer in Moncton. has returned to his duties aver a two weeks holiday spent at. Stanhope. Mrs. Hervey who was with her husband returned to her home in Montreal. a e s Mrs. L. R. LaFleche. Ottawa, whose husband is Minister of National War Services. accom- panied by her sons Pierre. Paul and Jean and daughter Denise are spending a few weeks at Brackley " Beach- coo Mrs. Rodk. Cronsberry and Miss ' Alice of Ottawa, are guests of Mr. Ind Mrs. R. Mutfh. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. MacArthur, Prince street, this week. Pilot Instructor Mac- R.C.A.F., and Mrs. Mao- Clurc of Monitor: M". J. A. Lawson. Jr.. left by pllnQ Thursday on return to Tor- onto, having spent three delight- ful months with Pilot Officer Law- my; parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lawson. I O B let atulations are be- ing fifty-Lag??? Mr. Jack Shado- low Ohand eldest son of Mrs I‘. B. Fitzroy street: whole marriage took lace in 8t. Duke's 1mg, m Saturday Church, Wimb edeii, Eng- le Hi to“? a n, secon aug r o eandellrs. O. L. Jones. Kenil- worth Avmuc. Wimbledon Park. II! ll!» Helm ' Mrs. I have as their guests _ Dr. and Mrs. G. W. O'Brien o! Amherst are among the visitors at Stanhopc Beach‘ Inn.‘ Miss Jessie C. MacGibbon. direc- tor of physical training at the Pro- testant Schools in Shawinigan I-‘alls, Ont. who has been visit- ing Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Taylor in Keppoch flew to Moncton this week to spend a few days with friends before going to her home, Moore's Mills. Charlotte County, where she will spend the remaind- er of her holidays with her par- ents. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Mac- Gibbon- . ‘ - Mrs. W. H. Worth of Halifax bu arrived home to visit 11W- enta Mr. and itlrs.‘ R.‘ I. ll - Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cameron and daughter Ann left on return home by plane Monday after a pleasant visit here the guests of Mrs. Cam- eron's sister. Mrs. Emest Lord and Mr. Lord. l O I Miss Constance MacFarlane en~ tertained at a most enjoyable mix- ed bridge on Wednesday evening honoring Mr. and Mrs. D. Ander- son who, with their daughter have been on a very pleasant holiday with their parents. Mr. and Mrs John Anderson and Mr. H. H. MacFarlane. The visitors left yes- terday for their home in Mon- treal West. accompanied by Miss MacFarlane. . 0 Mrs. M, P. Harrinvton, accom- ‘panied by Elsie Yetman. super- flntendant of the Dawson Mem- lorial Hospital, Bridgewater, N.S.. larrived Thursday evening and lplan on spending a vacation on t‘~- Island. a c c Mrs. A. R. Wise left yesterday morning on a visit to her daugh- ter Mrs. C. W. Donpierre in Saint John, NB, The tea hostesses at the Tennis Courts this afternoon will be Miss Margaret. Martin and Mrs. Mc- Lundie. O I I I Sergt. D. Ivan Sinclair and bride. the former Miss Marjory Read of Gagetown, N.B., returned to Saint John on Wednesday having spent their honeymoon at. Dalvay. The pretty wedding in Gagewwn the pre- vious week was attended by the groom's parents, Mr. end Mrs. A. c. Sinclair and sisters, Mrs. Gordon and Miss Ruth Sinclair. With the cordial welcome extended the happy young couple were hosts of good wishes. I I I Princess Irene of the Nether- lands. daughter of Princess Juliana and Prince Bernhard, was four years old last week. Born in the days when dark clouds were al- ready gathering over Europe, the babv princess was evacuated from Holland with her family after the invasion. when she was just ten months old. She was baptized in the chapel of Buckingham Palace. A Netherlands cruiser brought Crown Princess Juliana and her two children to Canada, where Ot- tawa has been their home ever since and the birthplace of a third little princess. The chil- dren are happy and healthy and too »_ be weighed down by the terrors of war. Canadian hos- pitality has done much to make the Dutch royal family as happy here as the circumstances allow. Princess Juliana and her daugh- ters are holidaying in the Lake of Bays district of Muakoka. TAM CROCHETED WITH RUG YARN DESIGN NO . 37$ This smart crocheted made of white ru brigh fclmpliimaiz mm bilfispfn" In 0. C n st-ructions. on comp tam To rd tte z , aria-it? all‘ d"; °’ '"“’ can ltllnfll to Needlework Malibu‘: Charlottetown Ou di Needlework psmfi"? Design No. 81) ljgjyr NAMI-—--__.____ t,‘ IMRBTADDRI ----- l Dorothy Dix‘ gays- WAR WORKERS MAY FIND_ sax N0 SUBSTITUTE FOR PROFICIENCY Meanwhile Tragedies, Heartaches 0f Wives At Home Continue As C0nflict’s Price .___i..____ DEAR MISS DlX—-My hlllllnd works in l. defense lint and ha! been infatuated with a woman who works there, too. c have been mauled for several years and this is the first time he has aver been un- faithful to me. I love my husband and would hate to see an and to my marriage. but since he has met this girl he has been inoonaldei-ateof mo and has taken the attitude that if I don't. like it 1 know what. I can do. It seems to me a shame that all the good work that women are doing in the factories in taking the places of the men who had to c away t0 . ht, should be undone by just such slguations as . Surely we all know th now left in factories are married, and the women whomwork with them should conduct themselves w- cor E Y I realize that all the women who are working in factories are not out to have a good time with some other woman's , the one; who do are giving a bad name to all the women who work with em. _ u hgvhaé ghoulcl‘ I d3,‘ Miss Dix?" Sifwgllllu: Juit sit g an one . eav him and try to make a new life for IIe1Y:IBIf?get over or a o I e PUZZLED AND UNHAPPY WIFE. EVIL IVOMEN BEGIN STEALTHY SEARCH ANSWER-Isnt it tragic that good and evil are so inextricably mixed that it seems that we can never have the one without the other‘! One of the few glimpses of the silver lining of the black war cloud has been the chance it has aflorded so many women of breaking away from the narrow iife to which they were bound and striking out into a world that was full of opportunities for them. Women who had thought that they were doomed to a lifetime of household drudgery have found out that they have mechanical gifts they never suspected, and have been taught new skills. Women who had toiled for a meager wage fc-und themselves earning undreamed of salaries. Women who had never had a decent dress in their liws are able to buy importd finery. So many frustrated ambitions realized. So many iongings gratified. It seemed to many of them that they had entered a woman's Heaven on earth. so many men and women were thrown together. trouble began. The e 1 women. the man-hunters began their stealthy search for the men with the big pay envelopes. The wolves commenced prowling around among the lztnzus seeking whom they might devour. Good, domestic men began casting their eves on pretty little 1s who were half as old as their wives and xveighed two-thirds less. Good girls who meant no harm fell in iove with good-locking married men with a keen line. Women who “m mun v. 1th whom they worked who were so different from their prosaic had been faithful wives and good mothers were swept off of their feet by husbands. Arid homes are being broken u . And children half-orphaned. And i girls started on the downward pa h. And hearts broken. And lives wrvked And what seemed woman's opportunity. may be her undoing. And what's to be the end of it all, only God knows. Maybe the matter _will settle itself, as it seems to have done in iha many factories and businesses in which men and women have worked to- gether for years without any more than the usual amount of heart casu- alties. Maybe it is the newness cf men and women. who have never worked together before that makes them peculiarly attractive to eflflh other, as noveltv always is. and that when a pretty girl going to work beside a man is lust a matter of routine, he will be no more interested in her complexion and her figure than he would be in a boy helper. And mayte women will find out that in factories. as in offices. they cannot substitute sex for good work. and that it Pays better to know now to do ' their loos than it does to try to vamp their boxes. But in the meantime there are the tragedies like yours. uocir, bewild- ered, unha y wife. of having a good. reliable husband turn philanderer. , That is a eartache you will never get over. But my advice to you is to , be {iaticnt with him and wait for his infatuation for this girl to weer i- l sel out. as it almost surely will. He will soon find out that he has nothing in common with her and everything in common with you, and} come buck to you a chastened and repentant sinner. l’f you can. laugh the matter off. Pretend that you consider it a joke Don't cry. Do n . Don't reproach him. Just give him al chalice to come to his senses. DEAR DORiJTl-IY DIX-J am a young man in my early twenties, I have a good job with good pay now. but. I am not sure whether I will have it after the war is over because I think that the returning soldiers will get all the jobs. I am engaged to a. very sweet girl whom I love very much. and she loves me, but I am afraid to marry on account of the uncertainty of the future. though she thinks this is silly. I know that if I once took the step everything would work out alright but I seem to lack something that. would enable me to go through with it. Can you izive me any en- couragenient? I-IESITANT. ANSWER-Evidently what. you lack is backbone. Perhaps your girl can supply that if you marry her. A lot of men are dependent on their wives for their courage. Many a coward is bucked part in the world by a brave wife. So if the girl is wlllin to take chance on you. you had better grab her and rush with her the altar. lf you are waiting to make any move until you are sure what is gging to happen in the future. you will never get. anywhere. because no- dy can foresee what is going to take place tomorrow. We have to lake a chance on that. If you are doing a good .iob in your present work. it is not likely that your employer will liquidate you at the end c1 (he war. Anyway. many of the men who went to the wai- will never come back and many who dc come back will have nearned new skill and will not‘ want. to go back to their old Jobs. And, too. there is always plenty of work for men who want to work and who are proficient. IIALTH. .1..3..AGV$ °T_ ‘Jllfhll-A a cattle and that one-third 0! ghénfieafl-Ls lrom tuberculosis in children under 5 years of age we" due to the bovine ortilnian. This meant 2.000 deaths annually, and there was additionally a larsv per- centage of invalidism and crippling. Another disease of the cow trans- mitted tn man was contagious abor- tion (which cauaea undulant fever in l. and then there were the ordinary infections which might be transmitted, usually by contamin- ation of the milk by the milkcr. All bacteria concerned in these cue‘: en coupon. . August 13 -Thm is no serious dif erence in the medi- cal professlon on the qlmsi-RJ“ °1 pastieurimtion, the British minister of food was told by a high will!‘ gentative of the British Medical As- sociation. when a. delodfl-UQH "Ti"!- enmp tion cf milk in the United Kingdom. The distin- guished deputation which WEI“?! on m . . . . , _\ Mr" ofethe National Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, the Prit- ish Paediatric Association, the Peo- ple's league for Health, and other And then the serpent crept into this Eden in the guise of sex. Wherf . v THE (THARLOITETOWN GUARDIAN Hands, Strong, skillful. honest hands; , Hands that toil, ‘Bronzed and calloused hands- ll-Iands that grasp the plow 01' W01 or net, _ And wrest a livelihood from earth. Hands. Pale, graceful, fragrant hands; Hands of one's beloved. Soft and tapering hands. Hands that twine like ivy in a lover's hair, And promise sweet fulfill-Herit- Hands. Sure. brave. steady hands; Hands of succor, Cool and firm. Hands whose cupped palms offer water. And say. "Ye that thirst, drink . , , drink." Hands, _ Kind, gracious, soothing hands; Hands cf mercy, _ Unselfish. understanding. Hands that soothe the aching brcw, ease the tortured limb, Whose tireless. rhythmic gesture say, "Rest . . rest." Hands. Tlendcr, loving, sorrowful hands; Hands yet damp with tears, Grave and ministering. Hands reluctant lay away a friend within his tomb, And. trembling make the sign of. Peace . . . peace." The ministry of hands! HINTS ON ETIQUETTE Listening in on a telephone con- versations is very ill-mannered. LOOK WELL OVER EVERYTHING EDICT The new fur coat this year will v in length, but it must lock wel over everything. Like the woman who wears it. today's fur coat must be right for a nutrition classvolunteer war work, or a late evening. Its beauty must be matched by lie versatility. FURS ARE SCABDEB IS WORD FROM EAST Almost all furs are scarce!‘ this year. This is the word from trade headquarters. Among those st!“ reasonably a-vailabl an Persia Lmib, Alaska sealskin, mink, skunk, silver _ox, and opossum. Beaverpmuskrat, nutria. lynx. leopard, ooelot are less plentiful even than before. HAVE ADVANTAGE In the basement of one of mn- don’; ancestral homes in the heart of Mayfair, a doughnut school has been set up. Here pretty girls. new- ly arrived from the United Stain. learn how to turn out doughnuts for troops at the rate of about 840 an hour. They wear white overalls and are easily the loveliest nrmy that has ever visited England. There tare nearly 500 American girl; now wo g for the American Red Cross, which run the doughnut school. ‘They are helped by more than 6.000 British volunteers. There are no beauty bans in this service, and all the girls look glamorous with their silk stockings, vamfshed OVAL. may urve. Somali these are not all-for there's practically no limit to jobs available. And remember that you will be four weeks‘ training course n a Basic and Advanced Trainin Center to qualify you for the work of your choice . . . There's axing-a now why YOU should not sigaand lead the coupon. t CHOOSE YOUR CAREER: OOOOvv ions v. Literature You'll Be Taught hLqyy! 00K on: the lln of’ occupations in which members cf the in; to ml: cverybcd . . . Bu: W! AUGUST 14.19.; u: ____$w ,1 given I Living €o° Leisure The Woman's Realm ‘MALL DAUGHTER. h NEEDS MUCH CARE The nnfifflgfi up-to-date young mother realizes that. it's largely up to her -now, while her daughter is little —whether the child grows up to be attractive and contented with her appearance. However. too few mothers know that Llie job is not done wlvn the youngster is trained to wash ner face and comb her hair pretiily . . . that, for instance. something like the way she reads the funnies may be a sizable factor in her health and beauty years hence. Dr. Frederick A Woll. Columbia University expert ‘on eyes. says that the American child's favourite fun- mes-reading position _ with head] (on Can Get Slim Again by Lcw-Calory Dieting Yes, getting fatter and fatter! Last year‘| suit won't go on unlesi u lot of weight comes off. "But dieting takes lo much will power!" No, it doesn't — not these days, with modern low-calcry diet: of three square meals a day with desserts! Just see the tasty lunch we've pictured. On your diet you can u: such lunches and still loan twu pounds _| week . . for thwy My: few of those fat-maki mimics. Consomme, a delicious chicken sandwich. berries with wcarr. add up to only 8B0. , You have only to keep away from high-calory dinhco. Imagine if you ate for lunch a club cand- wich, oozing fattening mayonnaise. Why, that alone amounts to 609 calories. ~ Be lylphlikc again! Our 32-pin booklet given cnlory duct and 42 tuty reducing menu: brad III healthful protective foods. In a 3-day liquid dict to liart you off. Tells how to lain. Sflld i5 cents in coins for your copy of The New Way to A Youth- 'I’vc 10st two horses, but. u it ain't 1 llodiul - ugfillllmum i111Z$111—1 ruin vol» - cum mygaéml now 1o must I s r ._ "i: l rrnyegia ;.':'::..".=.a::::.:. a:::.~:::... l ..:..“°"...:::" I Omar" tl:.-:*:r.-...' "zi- “u. | In u Switchboard niallthiccou n. fins. Recruiting gall Oplmnn I ups. n n. us. m cwnc. booklet. I Tallotunl Tsllgnllonc i "u" *=u_ I Vlaitlunes V15: e19. I Sh“, Tn“- i ‘12111111111’ han“ down -ls ‘“ for I great deal of IIQDJ-Blfll tedness. That defect may have to be corrected by spectacles which, while no beauty bugaboo ms they used tc be before the glass was shaped to become the face, certainly are not inviting. Healthy Eye: Besides, a good keen, healthy eye is a pretty one; the charac- teristic of health will make up for an absence of the fashionable col- our and contour of eye beauty; and seeing properly is one of the least- appreciated, really important spurs to good grooming. Harnessing young children that they cannot get. to close their work or pleasure-reading has proved effect-lye -but a little dras- tic. says Dr. Woll. He suggests that the child have large print. in- stead, so she will naturally hold it away in order to be able to take in several words at a glance. He suggests, too. making sure that. youngsters without complete- ly developed brows and lashes wear eye-shading brlms when perambu- iatln! or toddling in tiie sunshine. Candlelight. which flickers, and flrelight. the red of which is irritat- ing should be avoided. And for the sake of the sight of youngsters who stand below the level of the lampshade. be sure that lights are shielded from below by white shades or opaque bulbs, OTTAWA, Aug. l2--icP)-La- bor Miistcr Mitchell and Munitions Minister Howe announced in a joint statement tonight that the National War Labor Board has l) m this region. The answers arc pio- A Job Only You Can Do _y Price Control Questions And Aruwcra Questions and Answers on rnu Control will appear in The Guani- iun as a feature each day The queltlonl arc those which have reached the Wartime Prices and Trude Board from housewives in vided by the Board Readers. Per soiu who have intelligent Question: to ask on price control are invited to lend them in writing to tho Women's Regional Advisory Com- mittee 0f the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. Q. Is it pennissable for stores to raise the price of unrationed meats? A. No, it is definitely not per- miscable. If you know of any actual increase; in price of unratioiied meats and can confirm them . . . please advise the Wartime Priced and Trade Board office immedi- ately. Q. Would you list the meats that no not rationed A. Uni-attuned meats include fancy meats such as heart, tongue, liver, brains, sweetbiiceds and kid- neys . . . cooked sausage su<li as bologna and weiners . .. and cuts containing more than hall bone, sucli as spareribs, oxtails and pig's ee agreed to review the of cost-of-living bonus adJustments for employees of three strike- hound Montreal aircraft plants, and to receive a formal application from the workers for such a review after the men on strike have re- turned to their Jobs A liming Sic WHICH? An old farmer of a Worcester- shire village fell asleep in his wag- on, and two other farm hands thought they would play a prank on the wagon and took them home. Upon awakening some hours after- wards, rubbing his eyes and looking around the farmer said: ‘Well, if my name be John Jones. him. and unhitched his horses from in! ms cook's com/an CARROT CHOWDER. 2 teaspoons fat. l medium onion, minced. 2 cups diced potato. 2 cups diced carrot. 2 cups boiling water. l 1-2 teaspoons salt 1-4 teaspoon pepper. 1-4 teaspoon paprika. 1-4 teaspoon celery salt. 1 tablespoon flour.. l tr“ r on fat, melted. 3 cups hot milk. Melt fat in soup kettle, add onion and cook 5 minutes without brown- . Add potatoes, carrots and water cook uii vegetables are tender. add seasonings. Blend flour with melted fat, add hot milk. Add to W?" tables and cook 3 minutm 1on8" 0! until slightly thickened. Garnlfih have found a cart." -!lxchange. JACKET ‘N’ SKIRT Favorite with the Young Crowd Make this for that discriminating younfl person to wear as a two- piece or as separates; for the au- spendei- nun pail’! off nicely with a ml: blouses. and the Jacket. nukes a mighty handy topper. In seersucker, it. BBYVQQ as m outm complete in itself. Out-out design for the not? pplique is included in tcp-by- te instruction. a I p Bend twenty cents for pattern. mules. °°““‘ l” “fmw” “Y "w" II°""‘" '°'. "Pm" “"1"- °' m" nu m» m o. on lttctcwn Wm your m» w: a l Th, mmmfl.’ h, “pm “p; m, lint dflar a chaste timzkhmfalteviéizn; acacdltea- milk. l-fe preferred the (- Roma c, P13 t’ _ B. n". w ‘m 1:819; Government had an obligation to ‘all; d n° 1’ l ° “Tthuk muk- m 3 ‘l’ sure to write plainly your name, gd- wish. assure a safe milk supply, or other- "l » h m W’ 6 m"? ""1"" “PM” m‘ dress and the name of booklet. m” w mam,“ the people how m” Dr. Alan Moncrieff, said c i I fccti . might ohm“ a reasonable. mufley specialists were concerned about the nail; and elegant footwear. The Name 1n mm‘ comumpflorh He “id h, possibilities of infections of the all- British A. T)‘: W A. A. It's and NI-Im w“ “muslin; the snumon_ mfililbl/lgnlrllcil due i tgondnngerfi W. B. 1:. N. a appear drab in com- m.“ Add!" Pr“) L P_ Gama mfomed ‘he m _ y pas cur at gave purilon with their khaki, sir force 5",,“ Adan" mm" m" tubemflmh w” de- ‘guai-axgeeg‘ la-Idwisffornc said the] 5% “mglymasemrvicad bluff m“ ‘wit: Britt h ' - 5 I . a 0H. _ 9mm“ °°mm°n “mo” s public was misled by such terms as make-up and no mil varnish. o ty _ c“, “ma” TILLIE THE roman - A JOB T0 nan LIKING ‘ p, wens-rm; eedlecraft For The Home with chopped parsley if deslNd- Scrves 6. 4 _\