{"id":3831,"date":"1946-07-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1946-07-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T15:02:37","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T15:02:37","slug":"july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women\/","title":{"rendered":"July 1946 &#8211; Vol. 27, No. 7 &#8211; Canadian Women"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">There can be no question of the                     importance of woman s position in today s world. It has to                     do with sociological as well as economic policies; it affects                     home life, and family life is the basis upon which democracies                     are built; it has to do with the future of the country&#8217;s population,                     both in numbers and quality. Business, political and social                     problems present themselves with bewildering rapidity these                     days, and they cannot be solved without the closest teamwork                     between women and men. It is practicable here to offer only                     an enumeration of the factors involved, without attempting                     to pronounce judgment or lay down infallible rules. Even in                     this modest enterprise, any writer is entering a domain already                     strewn with the wreckage of hypotheses, haunted by the ghosts                     of long-ago prejudices, and menaced by present-day                     biases.<\/p>\n<p> Detouring back through the old days when they used to give                     girls names like Patience and Prudence, it is interesting                     to read Lord Byron&#8217;s opinion of women&#8217;s place in the world:                     &#8220;They ought to mind home, and be well fed and clothed, but                     not mixed in society. Well educated, too, in religion, but                     to read neither poetry nor politics, nothing but books of                     piety and cookery.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In escaping from this, women passed through the industrial                     revolution, and though many denounce its defects and deplore                     its results, that revolution had a great deal to do with getting                     women into the world. The introduction of machinery, displacing                     hand skills formerly performed in the home, opened to women                     factory employment on a large scale. They expanded their ideas                     not only of what they themselves might be, but of what society                     could become. They grew in education, experience, and understanding                     of wide issues. It is true that industrialization posed new                     problems. Middle-class wives became &#8220;genteel&#8221;, which                     means that they had nothing to do but keep up appearances                     amid useless lives, and this went on until they revolted,                     as in Ibsen&#8217;s Doll&#8217;s House. Generally, however, industrialization                     meant emancipation from the routine of subsistence housewifery.<\/p>\n<p>Throughout all the economic changes which have taken place,                     there has run a deeper current. Women have not only widened                     their viewpoint, but they have become tired of &#8220;pulling the                     strings&#8221; unseen, and are fighting their way out into the open                     where they can act as themselves, and not through men. It                     has been a difficult task, but the attitude of society toward                     women&#8217;s education, capabilities, position and opportunities                     has undoubtedly changed in their favour. So long as women                     were tied down to one sphere no one had the opportunity to                     realize their possibilities for leadership, and though even                     today executives in all fields know the antagonism which is                     aroused by an attempt to place a woman in an important position                     hitherto held by a man, there are without doubt more chances                     open to women. The chief interest of the community is the                     carrying on of its life in the best way, and not in the maintenance                     of obsolete traditions, but the old ghosts are touchy, and                     may walk again if given provocation.<\/p>\n<p>Speaking on emancipation platforms, women have been heard                     to deplore the fact that they are merely &#8220;zeros&#8221; in the arithmetical                     scale of life, but they are not nonentities at census time.                     Canada&#8217;s census of 1941 recorded 1,328,489 single women 15                     years of age or over, and 2,292,478 married women. This was                     an increase from 765,092 and 1,247,761 in 1911. The excess                     of males over females in Canada is 2.56 in each 100 population.                     Only two countries have greater excess of males over females,                     while 21 of the 31 countries listed in Canada Year Book have                     an excess of women: in England and Wales this excess reaches                     4.22 women per hundred population. The birth-rate follows                     the same pattern. Canada, which stood 18th among the nations                     in crude birth-rate in 1943, has had an average male                     birth-rate of around 51 per cent and female 49 per cent                     since 1926. Just as another sidelight, it is interesting to                     note that whereas there were only 2,255 women divorced or                     legally separated in 1911, there were 51,399 in 1941, and                     widows had increased from 178,961 to 345,378.<\/p>\n<p>These statistics have, of course, much to do with consideration                     of the question whether women should work outside the home.                     Some of the prejudices are based upon the supposition that                     men are unalterably superior to women in every type of activity.                     It is particularly charged that the woman worker is less serious                     about working, less efficient, less business-like, less                     emotionally stable, and too likely to get married just as                     soon as she becomes useful in the factory, office or school.                     On the other hand, it is argued that women have learned in                     a matter of a few years jobs which were in men&#8217;s private province                     for centuries. As to being unbusiness-like, Edith Efron                     says in a New York Times Magazine article: &#8220;If men want women                     to cut out their arch behavior between the hours of 9 and                     6, yet insist that they be cute little kittens mornings, evenings                     and week-ends, they will drive women workers into mass                     schizophrenia, or else they will browbeat the cultural cuteness                     out of them.&#8221; A director of women personnel remarked that                     women have made offices more habitable. Their instinctive                     reaction on entering the usual office is to put pictures on                     the walls and flowers on their desks, because they spend most                     of their days in this place, and see no reason why it should                     look like a penitentiary. &#8220;The woman worker,&#8221; says Miss Efron,                     &#8220;is scornful of the $50-a-week men who sneer at                     her attempts to prettify her surroundings, because she has                     noticed that the first thing a $50,000-a-year man                     does is to get himself a fancy office with rugs, wallpaper,                     flowers, pictures and a leather sofa.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Some objections to women workers go deeper than this. Lord                     Northcliffe declared in one of his frequent emphatic moments                     that women have no sense of responsibility unless you frighten                     them, and Field Marshal Montgomery refused to consider requests                     that he accredit English newspaperwomen to his armies on the                     Continent, though some of the best eyewitness accounts of                     conditions in released countries were being written by United                     States women journalists.<\/p>\n<p>This leads to consideration of the much-advertised                     &#8220;battle of the sexes,&#8221; in which men are exercised to prevent                     women getting between them and their base of operations, outreaching                     men by the very elements which are set down by philosophers                     as women&#8217;s weaknesses. Dr. Alice I. Bryan of Columbia University                     put her finger on an important factor in the battle when she                     told a McGill University audience: &#8220;Man is much less dependent                     than formerly for the satisfaction of his material needs and                     his physical welfare upon the acquisition of a wife and the                     establishment of a household. At the same time, woman is also                     far less dependent upon man for economic support and protection,                     because the forces that have deprived her of her dominant                     role in the home have also made it possible for her to find                     employment and subsistence outside the family circle.&#8221; It                     is not unusual, in battles, to find each side taking advantage                     of the other&#8217;s handicaps, and men&#8217;s greatest handicap seems                     to be tradition. It is not logical that an otherwise modern                     man-woman situation should be depicted as that of a medieval                     or even Victorian lady dependent for her sustenance and safety                     upon the favor of a chivalrous gentleman. On the other hand,                     is it logical to suppose, when men for centuries have taken                     toward women an attitude of chivalry, yielding them every,                     advantage and form of protection, that upon entering business                     women can at once lay aside the habit of expecting favours                     of men? One secretary when asked: &#8220;Do you mean to say that                     girls come into business demanding equality of opportunity,                     intellectual recognition and pay, and in addition requiring                     deference according to an old code?&#8221; answered without a trace                     of hesitation: &#8220;Surely, why not?&#8221; Contrariwise, some women                     enter business with a chip on their shoulders, suspecting                     little acts of chivalric intent and looking with a jaundiced                     eye on overtures for equality of work as either (1) activated                     by &#8220;ulterior motives&#8221;, or (2) prompted by an attempt to get                     more work out of them.<\/p>\n<p>Miss Byrne Hope Sanders sees no need for building barriers                     between men and women, but does stand up for wholesome co-operation.                     In an address at the annual meeting of the Y.W.C.A. in Montreal                     early this year she said: &#8220;It is only as partners that men                     and women can achieve anything stable for the national good.&#8221;                     Parenthetically, Miss Sanders pointed out that until the war                     women&#8217;s place in that partnership had been woefully weak due                     to their own apathy.<\/p>\n<p>It is indisputable that in whatever activity they engage,                     men need women alongside them. Take Polti&#8217;s 36 dramatic situations                     and their hundreds of variations covering every possibility                     for story, play and poem, stick a pin in a page at random,                     and the situation indicated is certain to have a woman in                     it. It was, to be sure, a cynic who once remarked that the                     road to success is filled with women, pushing their husbands                     in front of them. That may not be literally true, but it is                     known to everyone that the successful businessman, feted on                     his promotion, always rises to pass on the credit for his                     success to his wife. Woman brings to whatever work she does                     a sense of values that man rarely shows, and this sense of                     values makes woman revolt against anything that obstructs                     advancement. In short, women wish to progress in themselves                     and in their world; they realized long ago that in order to                     do so they must know more than just how to cook and sew and                     take care of babies and be tactful with their husbands; and                     today they are stepping out of their cloisters with a firm                     tread.<\/p>\n<p>Consequent upon their growing sense of their value and importance,                     women are urging that they should have equality with men in                     both opportunity and reward. A sub-commission on the                     status of women told the United Nations Economic and Social                     Council in May that equality with men in all fields of human                     enterprise &#8211; political, civil, educational, social and economic                     &#8211; should be sought simultaneously. There is a growing conviction                     in democratic countries today that the only test in employing                     people on any work should be their efficiency.<\/p>\n<p>Many women&#8217;s organizations subscribe to the principle that                     wage rates for women should be the same as for men, including                     the entrance rate, and reason that it is basically unfair                     to pay one worker a lower wage than another for substantially                     the same work. Against this it is said that men&#8217;s wages are                     higher because they support families, but today a large percentage                     of employed women also support dependents; in fact, the young                     unmarried man usually assumes less financial responsibility                     for the home than does his sister. Since the basis of payment                     in this country is not a. &#8220;family wage&#8221; but a wage for the                     work done, it is argued that injecting difference of sex to                     justify lower scales is illogical.<\/p>\n<p>The war gave women their first chance on a large scale to                     demonstrate dexterity at jobs which had always been considered                     &#8220;men&#8217;s jobs.&#8221; They used latent abilities and learned new skills.                     Colonel Margaret C. Eaton, O.B.E., Director-General of                     the Canadian Women&#8217;s Army Corps, told the Canadian Manufacturers&#8217;                     Association annual meeting last year of the work her girls                     did at home and abroad. Many officers in Sicily and Italy                     viewed arrival of the Army women with grave doubts, said Colonel                     Eaton, but &#8220;the girls proved in a very short time that they                     could dig in and do a job.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Now that the world is back to peace, what is the position                     of women? Between November 1945 and February 1946, the number                     of women in the Canadian labour force fell by 136,000, indicative                     of the retirement of women from the labour market on a fairly                     large scale. At the same time, the male labour force grew                     by about 125,000. There were, in spring this year, 3,309,000                     women, 14 years and over, who were tabulated as &#8220;non-workers&#8221;                     by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. Of these, 2,731,000                     were keeping house, 311,000 were going to school, 132,000                     were permanently unable or too old to work, and 125,000 were                     retired or voluntarily idle.<\/p>\n<p>A list of occupations open to women includes nearly the                     whole alphabet from accountancy to zoology. The United States                     Department of Labor has listed 1,050 industrial occupations                     out of 1,500 as suitable for women, and an additional 350                     as &#8220;practically suitable.&#8221; Much of the change in acceptability                     of women in industry is due to wise management, which is concentrating                     on fitting conditions of work to the needs of the workers,                     and is realizing more and more that deftness in execution                     may more than make up for lack of strength.<\/p>\n<p>The influx of women into office occupations during the last                     few decades was one of the most phenomenal of the economic                     changes transforming the lives of women during that period.                     There are in Canada today 80,000 women stenographers and typists,                     who are taking an increasing part of the responsibility in                     business. But the importance of office occupations is not                     to be rated in numerical terms only. They have a strong social                     significance because of the psychological connotations which                     have come to be attached to them. They are accompanied by                     freedom of association and conversation with men co-workers                     and with executives, and they provide the opportunity to learn                     at first-hand about the broad lines of the economic and                     social system which could never be adequately assimilated                     second or third hand.<\/p>\n<p>Teaching in the public schools has become essentially a                     woman&#8217;s vocation. Out of 74,000 teachers in Canadian public                     and high schools in 1943, 79 per cent were women. Similar                     progress has not been made in universities, where the proportion                     of women teachers is only 14 per cent in a total of 6,800.                     However, staid old Vassar broke precedent this spring when                     Sarah Gibson Blanding was named president.<\/p>\n<p>Though women constitute the majority of all workers in the                     health and medical fields, among physicians they are relatively                     few. The 1941 Census recorded only 142 women physicians and                     surgeons in Canada. The effects of the war, which increased                     the demand for women physicians, have not yet projected far                     enough into peace to give an indication of their permanency.                     Nursing, of course, has no near rival as the largest single                     occupation for women in the health and medical services. Nurses                     with specialized training, such as in anesthesia, have commanded                     premium salaries, and specialization also leads to higher                     remuneration in private practice. Although there seems to                     be no obvious reason for their scarcity, women dentists are                     relatively few, but some have specialized in the care of children&#8217;s                     teeth, in orthodontics, and in public health work.<\/p>\n<p>Domestic service was, not so long ago, looked upon as the                     natural position of women seeking work. This spring, thousands                     of advertisements carried in Canadian newspapers offered wages                     ranging from $40 to $70 monthly. Because this is smaller than                     girls earned in war plants, and because the hours are longer,                     the displaced women workers are looking for industrial jobs.<\/p>\n<p>Farm women hold a position of first importance, based upon                     the significance of agriculture in the economy of the country.                     Under war conditions young women left the farms, and the older                     women have been bearing intolerable burdens. There are, on                     Canadian farms, 800,000 women between 14 and 64 years of age,                     and many organizations are seeking ways of making life easier                     for them. The principal needs are: electrification, water                     supply, communications, improved housing, health service,                     education, remunerative enterprises, and recreation.<\/p>\n<p>Homemakers are in a peculiar position. They contribute so                     much to the family, community and state, yet are classed roughly                     as non-workers because they appear in a column of statistics                     headed &#8220;not in gainful occupations.&#8221; One homemaker has kept                     a scientific record for 15 years. She has proved to her own                     satisfaction that the average woman who prepares meals, cans,                     preserves, bakes, and launders at home, for her own family,                     produces substantially the equal value of the man&#8217;s economic                     contribution in industry. Men who think back over the past                     six years will realize the wonderful job their womenfolk have                     done in spreading thin and making ends meet.<\/p>\n<p>The responsibilities of women as contributors to the family                     exchequer are considerably larger than many persons have realized.                     The idea with regard to employment of women most frequently                     expressed by women workers is that jobs should be distributed                     on the basis of need, but this raises the intricate problem                     of determining what is need. Single women who live with their                     families, or live alone, have obvious obligations. Many single                     women must provide for aged parents and young brothers and                     sisters. Many older women, widowed or divorced, work to support                     themselves, because they refuse to become dependent upon grown                     up children who have responsibilities of their own.<\/p>\n<p>Married women working outside the home form a comparatively                     small group, but it is the centre of never-ending controversy.                     Grace L. Coyle, of Columbia University, said in an article                     in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social                     Science some years ago: &#8220;Unmarried women in the offices regard                     them as unfair competitors who should leave the field to the                     girl who has no other support.&#8221; A director of women personnel                     was quite definite in stating that married women cannot be                     depended upon in the same way as unmarried workers. They are                     more independent in their attitudes, less friendly with their                     fellow workers, more quick to show strain, and less punctual.                     It is, therefore, possible that what a married woman worker                     thinks of as discrimination because of her marriage is really                     her inability to hold a job due to softening of her keenness,                     closed personality, or other cause affecting her work.<\/p>\n<p>The situation in regard to continued employment of women,                     now that the wartime crisis has passed, was summed up by the                     Department of Labour in a survey report in December: &#8220;Women                     plan to withdraw from the labour force in large part only                     if their husbands secure relatively high incomes.&#8221; On the                     other hand, many have a toe-hold which they are reluctant                     to relinquish, particularly since they see, as never before,                     women reaching heights formerly thought unattainable for the                     sex. Man may have invented the wheel, the plumb line, and                     the first cutting edge of metal, but we may be sure it was                     woman who saw to it that these discoveries were turned to                     civilized uses. Every mother knows how her son, playing with                     gadgets, is satisfied when something &#8220;works&#8221; and drops it                     for a new project, without applying it.<\/p>\n<p>Good as her record has been, woman cannot sit back placidly                     and depend upon laws or upon forces already in motion to carry                     her to any desired goal. This is pertinently illustrated by                     the situation in Montreal last March, when there were 8,000                     jobs open for women and 4,000 women drawing unemployment insurance                     benefits. The newspaper report said: &#8220;Many of the 200 work-seekers                     who daily visit the National Employment Service Women&#8217;s Division                     want only office jobs, yet they have not the education to                     fit them for such positions.&#8221; Parents have to bear a certain                     part of the responsibility for such a situation, because they                     have failed to persuade their daughters to obtain the right                     kind of education. When a gainful occupation is regarded as                     a temporary experience, or as a fill-in between school                     and marriage, the tendency is to take anything that offers                     itself, without wasting time or money in learning. Marly girls                     are in search of romance mixed with a minimum of work, like                     the sisters in Eve Langley&#8217;s &#8220;Not Yet the Moon.&#8221; But life                     persists in insisting upon choices between this and that,                     and the sense of frustration besetting women-and men                     &#8211; is brought about not because the world is discriminating                     against them, but because they chose something else instead                     of education and preparation.<\/p>\n<p>All of this has been about women in everyday work. There                     is a wider field in which women are pressing forward. Support                     of the women of the world is essential to success of the United                     Nations, and recognition of this fact is being called for.                     In May, a message was presented to the secretary-general                     of the United Nations by Mrs. Merrill Denison and Mme. Jan                     Papanek, in which it was said: &#8220;the importance of women as                     the molders of public opinion in every country is not yet                     taken sufficiently into account by the man-made committees                     of international organizations.&#8221; In her presidential address                     at the annual meeting of the National Council of Women of                     Canada last year, Mrs. Edgar D. Hardy, C.B.E., declared: &#8220;Who                     in the main carries out all programs dealing with health,                     social welfare, nutrition, etc., but women; at least all man-made                     legislation on these questions would go pretty well by the                     board unless energetic women saw to it that such legislation                     is carried out.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In his &#8220;Republic&#8221; Plato remarks: &#8220;Woman has all the talents                     man has, and should share the same offices,&#8221; but women won                     the vote in the Dominion in 1918, and has woman achieved all                     she hoped for in these 28 years? Dr. Charlotte Whitton points                     out, in an article in Saturday Night, that it is on the home                     front of the municipality, where Britain&#8217;s elected women number                     thousands, that &#8220;Canadian women exhibit their gravest indolence                     and impotence.&#8221; After tabulating the small numbers of women                     engaged in municipal governments and councils, Dr. Whitton                     adds: &#8220;Canadian women could be lifted out of the cellar position                     they now occupy in western democracy within 24 months, were                     even a small group of determined, informed women to assume                     responsibility for mobilizing and training a few &#8216;commandos&#8217;.&#8221;                     Most people would be heartily in favor if women, exercising                     their political power (51 per cent of those eligible to vote                     in Canada are women) can end the wandering amid alarms and                     unrest in the world. After all, women are given credit for                     the founding of Rome, where it is said they burned the ships                     in which they were tired of wandering, and sought to keep                     the men ashore to build a city.<\/p>\n<p>People have a persistent habit of differing in their opinion                     of what is best. Some women like things exactly as they are,                     and want to keep them that way: they think that the male of                     the species has the problems well in hand. Others wish to                     leap the whole gap of milleniums in the space of a few years.                     Whatever opinion is held, this seems to be a good time to                     take stock. What have women gained as individuals by the social,                     economic, educational and political changes which have resulted                     from new education, new freedoms and new opportunities? Has                     the modern woman kept her sense of balance and proportion?                     The whole question seems to boil down to one very simple query:                     Have things been managed so that the woman of today knows                     how to be happier than her mother and her grandmother?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[26],"class_list":["post-3831","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-26"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v26.7 (Yoast SEO v26.8) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>July 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 7 - Canadian Women - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"July 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 7 - Canadian Women - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"There can be no question of the importance of woman s position in today s world. It has to do with sociological as well as economic policies; it affects home life, and family life is the basis upon which democracies are built; it has to do with the future of the country&#8217;s population, both in [&hellip;]\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2022-11-28T15:02:37+00:00\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"17 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women\/\",\"name\":\"July 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 7 - Canadian Women - RBC\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/#website\"},\"datePublished\":\"1946-07-01T01:00:00+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2022-11-28T15:02:37+00:00\",\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"ReadAction\",\"target\":[\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women\/\"]}]},{\"@type\":\"WebSite\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/#website\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/\",\"name\":\"RBC\",\"description\":\"\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"SearchAction\",\"target\":{\"@type\":\"EntryPoint\",\"urlTemplate\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/?s={search_term_string}\"},\"query-input\":{\"@type\":\"PropertyValueSpecification\",\"valueRequired\":true,\"valueName\":\"search_term_string\"}}],\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\"}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO Premium plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"July 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 7 - Canadian Women - RBC","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1946-vol-27-no-7-canadian-women\/","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"July 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 7 - Canadian Women - RBC","og_description":"There can be no question of the importance of woman s position in today s world. 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