PAGE TWO f ITHE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN _ Tdk‘? ‘WOW ‘filifi aunt's DIARY l By An Island Farmer's Wife Oiioosemwimg over a day that was aunlit and pleasant. Long blue shadows and dusky traceries like so much delicate lace, lay along the white of the snow. We recall now, that the crispness that had been about was disappearing, leaving a mildness in its place, which we might not have noted if the jays in the old orchard had not been chattering about it, when we were at our wood-getting, in the de- light of afternoon. Hearing, we fancied the forecast a present ending to the Coverlet, that lies white and only thinly now along -lhe fields. duo Beyond our window, is dim and we indeed found a suggestion of an impending thaw in the soft wind of dusk. James looks up as the fire crackles sud- denly in the silence sending a bright cascade of sparks, like a Winsome and miniature display of fireworks, dropping to the hearth. “I'm thinking. Ellen." he says over his glasses, "we sha'n't be doing much more at the wood this week. I believe we're going to get rain!" the night can ably in-to the depths of his old armchair and returns to his reading. And a one which one understand-s and, accepts and enjoys, fills the room.t The old clock on the shelf ticks away in a peaceful sound, ’as soothing as the familiar and mut- cd melody of the lullaby of the escaping pond-water through the gates on the dam on a still Sum- mer night. Then he offers: “It's the Chief of the MacLeans. that's to be the guest speaker this year at the Gaelic Mod, at St. Ann's. lt’s in a time when well likely be at the haying -— of course you never can tell how the season will ibe, but u'ouldn‘t it be nice to go? Oh well," he sighs, “perhaps another yeair we may." - a o We feel this is the same putting- olf that James is a party to, on those occasions when we come to- gether to a city shopping-counter. and the feminine eye is inclined Night's curtains are drawn now. He settles down more comfort-l companionablei silence, such as those~who have ives of radical and far-rf-‘Ilfilllllll muscles. so that when the electric- itravelled a lengthy highway to-tconscquence. And while tacticsI Hy causes u“. shock or convulsion gether year after year know —‘ must. be’ forthright, and sustained,” is no; in sufficient Strength w l é . l Modern Etiquette By Roberta Dee grim Body or Yours é By Jamel w. air-ton, iu.n. DOROTHY DIX SAYS- Q. Should a girl's mot-her- m.‘ PREVENTING INJURY m rar- - t t h h .32...i2€i‘.‘ .1: rn.:.:*"...:;i mm ghqrhnflfvo: the daughter's lrlvita-l Snow‘ TREATMENT tion is enough, and the easiest way‘ for her to do this ls to invite him! to dinner at her home. However. if‘ the man is inviting the glrl to his Just about the time that our mental institutions became so Tl crowded that extensive new build- tgs°mtfitghgffo “J1me “Mn his ‘Mme ings were becoming necessary, q p ' shock treatment was discovered — Q. Is it proper to thank a wait-' - ress every time she serves one a asrklfgckmggfitzgéntalm finally ' h? d!i_ No; but one shuuld acknowj Unfortunately in shock treat- ledge any spew“ service‘ such as nient, fracture of the bones occurs bringing an extra spoon or fork. l" 55'9"‘! @3595 5° that llle Pllyilfl- l ian. after giving the first shock. . Wh lle invit. s Q an a c0 go ma“ E may decide to discontinue shock a girl to a college week-end‘ who‘ _ Shoum pay for her hotel accommoh treatment rather than cripple the vdations and means white she jslpillicllll. However, the electric or “here? clectm-shock treatment has been E A_ The man should my the” so successful in curing mental pat- iexpgngeg, lents iii a matter of weeks or . months that physicians have been l, -—--———-— seeking a mctiioit of administeriirg ' clcctro-shock treatment with less c-‘iance of injury to the patient. g’. 1n "The British Medical Jour- itnal." London. ltrs. P. D. W. Shep- (l- herd and II C. Watt report the re- (if l stills Cbltllllvtl in 50 patients whose RX physical wudltlvii islldvisd lllem unsuitable for ordinary electric convulsion or shock treatment. but in whmi electro-shock treatment PARTICULARLY CleWl‘. bfll- modified 0r controlled by curare tllant and creative talents may be was used. This drug, when injected considered rampant in a noble ef-l mm a wit; has the power to pre- lllll 1° Dlll Over Plalli 811d Oblecl" vent action or almost paralyze lfi l? The Stars Say-- By Genevieve Kembla \.\.\ ‘ For Saturday. January 21 it ls also imperative that the cle-fcauge me musmes to break a bone ment 0f 18¢!- dlplthmflcy Pllld Der-t m‘ bones yet in sufficient strength llIiDS BDPYBl-‘Bl 0f l-‘le Fllblle. lllllli tn shock the entire nervous sys- guing and shrewd be put on a firm-t mm ly practical basis. Long-range bem- 51,11 “other method M, prevent m5 delielld 0" POlICY- fractures during electro shock ls reported in the Swiss Medical Journal. by Dr. P. Plattner, who states that in 500 patients, 200 men Those whose birthday it i5. m8)‘ and 300 women, clectro-shook treat- be faced by the need 0f meeting; merit was given without any drug critical situations in which the‘ m prevent fractures. Fractures oc- denvllmellls may bl‘ Talllml and curred in 18.5 per cent of the men If It 1| Your Blrthday of far-reaching Sltlnlficalllle» "Pill and 7 per cent of the women. We“. Dlillfi- Pfllfllllm! 6'3"" 11D 101'; These physicians used mesantoin decisive and circumspect manipu- to prevent fractures. Beginning latte-n. perhaps qulckly. intensively-i with one tablet of o. I. gm. ctf mes- alt-‘iouzh with no rash liase in ahtoih twice daily. the dose 1s jumping at. conclusions. Tact. flrl- gradually increased upward within B556. dlDlQ-micy Blld DPYSOIllIllW, a week in women urp to four to six may be fiwwrs of lens-reuse tn- tablets. and in men up to six to fluence in eventual culmlnatlons. glght tabiets daily are given Unlque situations may materialize throughout the period treatment. A child born on this day ma? even on tho days on which electro- ‘to linger too long over making ‘a purchase. And James uneasy ll'l Continued on page 3 'Alovovhuh¢t .... 8...... NEW WAY 0F WASHING ENDS DIRTY SOAP SCUM hB-VB EXCEDl-lfllllllly _ original 0T| shock treatment is not given. No Unique lalellls. Bssllllllk ll 11 TlQVQl- fractures (ICClll'l'€d in 130 patients and exceptional career perhaps ln given this drug just before electro- A; \T llamas ) i Wife's Complaint Husband Spends Money On Everything But Home We live in a little town and belonl t0 l mlm‘ Both of us are popular. money for everything he DEAR MISS DIX: g ber of orders ln which we both hold 051C85- Now here is the trouble: My husband finds r r wants, but none for giving us a decent home. We still ive in the it- tle shack in which we moved when \Ve first came to U115 Plllce- The" is not-n window or door in it‘ that fits nor a modern convenience nor comfort‘ m,- have 1' a whole piece of furniture, I cannot entertain as the other women do and l am ashamed to ask anybody to my house, but when I talk about giving up my offices and break- lng away from the crowd my husband says I am crazy nnd am trying to ruln him. If we could not afford a better home, I would content myself with his, but we can. What can I do? i DOWNHEARTED ANSWER: Nothing. Unless you have the courage to go out and rent the kind of house that you know you can afford and buy the kind of furniture you need and also can afford and then tell your husband that. he can come along and live comfortably with you and pay for it, or else you will take in board- ers nnd pay for it yourself. ' I knew a woman who had a husband like yours and she followed this plan, and, after throwing n few fits, the husband went along meek- ly as llifarys little lamb, and was as proud us punch of his new home and the standing it gave him in the community. HARD TO UNDERSTAND I can never understand a man not wanting to own his own home and not taking an interest in making it as comfortable and beautiful and attractive as he can. To own your own home is the outward and visible sign of success. It ls a badge of good citizenship rind it brings some of the purest happiness that the human heart ever knows. And to a woman her home means even more than it does to a man. Its four walls make her world. There her llfe works itself out. It is the scene of her activities. It encompasses her desires and aspira- tions. It is strange but true that men do not realize how much a wo- man's home means to her, nor do they realize the value that a wo- man sets on her belongings, nor how her happiness is bound up in chairs and rugs and draperies. If they did, they would not be, as they so often are, so nlggardly about buying new furniture. DEAR MISS DIX: f aniilfhfgh-school graduate and have been graduated ln a stenographic course, but by the looks of my typing you would think I nod never seen a typewriter before. My mother pesters me because I haven't got a job and all my other friends have. What do you think I should do? DUMBBELL ANSWER: In my oplnlon, typewriters are the most tempera- mental animals there are, and, if you haven't an affinity for one, there is no use in monkcylng with it. So pass up stenography as a career, ll; is not for you. Turn your attention to something for which you have an aptitude. : Perhaps you have no marked talent. Not very many persons are born geniuses, but there ls some one thing for which all of us have a particular turn and the thing to do ls to find out what that ls. Th9 b“! W5! l5 liking. What do you like to do? What do you enjoy doing? By this I don't mean what you would like to do, but what you actually do like to do. D0 you like to cook? If you do, go and take a course in do- the public service. shook treatment. pass.“ even when drie urFgels clollies . . . “Fresh-oir-resh" '- . (Continued "on Page 3) * How Can I!!! By Anne Ashley sac/earn > vv~ Q. How should silks be dered? A. Wuh lig-ht colored silks with pure white soap. as ordinary wash- ing soaps will cause them to turn yellow. Silk should not be wrung. but should be hung .1oosely to dry, allowing the water to drip. Always dry silks in the shade. Q. How can I keep lacquered copper tn good condition? A. Rub it occasionally with a cloth wet tn kerosene. . How can I make n good sandwich fllltng, using salmon? A. Mix flaked salmon and chop- ped cucumber pickles moistened wlth mayonnaise. laun- (7‘(".\?c<x~ Better English By D. C. Wllllama ¢\I\J\-\»\1\é§ ‘é~\.c 1. what is wrong with this sen- tence? "They say that over a hund- red men were present." 2. What 1s the correct pronunc iatton of "cafe”7 3. Which one of these words ls misspelled? Cullnery, mllllnery. scenery, mercenary. 4. What does the word "in- cense" (verb) mean? What ls s word beginning with dl that means "reduction"? AN SWEBS l. Bay. "more than a hundred men."_2. Pronounce ka-fa. first a as in ask (not as in at). second a as in fate accent second syllable. l. Culinary. f. To inflame with anger. "The people were incensed against hlm." o. Dtmlnutlon. d indoors! , ,, l Woman's Realm/Social and Personal/Poshions/Literature 0'0 \~~ l Strange Marriage By F. H. MacArthur Klondike Kate is how living in retirement with her third hus- band, W. L. van Buren, 12 miles south of Salem, Oregon, near the busy Pacific highway. True, it is a far cry from the call of the wild in the days when Kate Rockwell dazzled bearded prospectors and earned a lasting reputation as the "Belle of the f‘ *7 INGREDIENTS ORDINARY CLEAN "SURF-CLEAN" Soap new "teen" iflrl one 8w! nan no utnn, mu out gnaw hits fabrics, nlflou any coup new M! hula oarflor Mn: no Niay ivoar ovf norm! If can‘! of! b0 rfnnd evl, oven In b00009 ruln! wlhlnplTabrki stay wrong! Warhol an with", brighter. SWEET!" . {- "Surf-shun!" ‘monomers: \ Want the whitest, brightest wash you've ever seen? A wash that: you know is really, deep-down sweet- clean? You can have it-with Surf. You, "Surf-clean" clothes have that won- derful blown-in-the-sun sweetnas, that flesh air, outdoor freshness- own when dried indoors. They're sweeter 3 wave. Here's how: l. Surf dluolvn clinging, greasy dirt- floch It out In a flqh. i 2. Surf banlahu dirty soap mam. 8. Sui! vomovn germ: . . . doodorlaon. Surf bursts into instants, long lasting sudsevenincoolwatier; ..does3 times the work of leading wasliday sows-in harden water! Beat of‘ all-it's a wonder for an. your waehables from the grimleot, heaviest work clothes to the aheerest silk and nylon undies, printed dresses . : . sheets, fine linens, woolens disheoi-eterytliina. Try Surf, today. It's in the attrac- tive blue box at your groom's. Use it in your washing machine. Use it for ovary single household washing job! gHousehold Scrapbook; l; n; 110mm Leo Bllhlg Bllculfl It to not generally a good idea to use a very deep pan when baking biscuits. as this tends to prevent them from browning evenly on the sides as well as on the tops. An inch-deep pan usually suffices, un- less one intends to bake those very high southern biscuits. The Plano If one desires greater volume from the piano, then there should be no carpet under the instrument. In a. small room a rug under the piano will soften its tone and pre- vent it from being too loud. l Ihraftuo Polfah An excellent furniture polish that can also b0 used on floors and woodwork fl made from one part. of beeswax mixed with two part: Y iikon Washington, judge. ing. Once in the Yukon, "Klondike Kate" ‘i ouay joined a vaudeville troupeand soon became the undisputed queen of the place. Men paid a dollar a diance, the girls getting twenty-five cents on the dollar plus the price of the drinks. Kate always drank iced tea, wore high-necked shirtwaists and lonig skirts. The Yukon proved to be a bonanza for the girl with the lrish smile and golden locks, and she became a success right from the start. O Now in the “big money," she financed Alexander Pantages‘ first venture in the theatre business. and for a time performed in his first vaudeville show. Kate's money put Pantagcs on his feet so that afterward he became a successful West Coast theatre owner and producer. The star's first love affair was with handsome Floyd Warner, a cowboy whom she got to know by correspondence. For some reason or other, the couple couldn't make a go of marriage, and Kate di- vorced him after they'd been mar- ricd a shiort time. In those days Dawson was a little world of its own, a law unto itself, a to\vn where tragedy and joy walked hand in hand. Gambling flourished openly. Money was tossed about with reckless abandon. People were drunk with pleasure and riotous livin-g. That's a picture of the gold city in the year i698. Meas- ured by any standard, it was the fastest city on the American con- tinent. Housing conditions were a scri- ous problcm and thousands of persons spent the winter of '98 under tents. Foods of all kinds were sky-high. Take, for in- stance, beef, which sold for one dollar per pound on the hoof. U I I The men who trekked to the Land of Promise encountered un- told hardship; and for the one who found the rainbows end and the pot of gold, a hundred loft the digglngs poorer than when they had arrived. But the curse of the yellow metal got into people's blood, and you might just as wcll place a branch in the path o! an approaching hurricane as try to stem the swelling tide of gold-seekers. Klondike Kate was a witness tn much of this misery. She livcd in the Yukon long enough to get a first-hand picture of all that want. on. _ “I could tell you many tragic |) §$O-§-O-§#O§-§-O4-O§§4fi4 O4 00% Don't Just Say "AN APPLE PIE PLEASE!‘ INSIST 0N A “LOCAL“ BAKED APPLE > PIE ‘ ‘*‘_OQO§OQOOO Wham you fnalat on "Local" Baked Broad, Plea and Past» rloa, ya are “m... ‘ ' , w the a ady high rah of auady employment enjoyed by this city. It la the duty of every good clflaen of a coinmunlty to support those 4 who contribute to their lup- port. This ad Inserted for the benefit of all "Local" Baker- lea b! Sizwart Bakeries Lliiiltatl Kate's 'fiather was a Spokane, The glamor- ous adventuress got into the North Country disguised in boy's cloth- she » to stats size you want. E x . ‘l Name Chick's Corner BAKED MXNCEMEAT PUDDING lli cups all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder ‘A teaspoon salt Vi cup granulated sugar ‘.6 cup mitt l cuip minoemeat ‘f: cup brown sugar 1 cup boiling water 1 tablespoon lemon juice 2 teaspoons butter Sift. flour once, measure; again with baking powder, and granulated sugar. Add and nilnccmeat and combine Place tn buttered baking dish. Ccm-bine brown sugar_ boiling water. lemon juice and butter to form sauce and pour over unbaked pudding. Bake for 1 hour in mod- erate oven (350K) lift salt milk well, stories," said the lady sourdough. "And most of them were the re- sult of the sin and corruption that lay all about the city. took plenty of guts to fight against those evils." The Pantages Theatre was a1- ways the scene of much activity. When one-half of the population was out digging for cold, the oth- er half was whooping it up. The bar was never without its line of patrons. Sidebyside, could be seen miners fresh from the diggings, the smell of powder and carth still clinging to their tat- tered garments, while another group — the kings of the Klon- dike — stood hard by, drinking their liquor in unison with the others. As the star performer. Kate re- ceived some large tips. One guy who struck it rich gave her a thousand dollars just for singing a special song number. Tips of one hundred dollars were often received by the dancing girls. 0 O I Among the hundreds who came nightly to the theatre was one named Jonny Mattson, a shy handsome youth who never drank. JANUARY 2o. 1950 'moo61’@ . i S TN! RIGHT’ Morning Smile é AFRAID "My wife says that if I died she would remain a. widow." “Evidently she thlniu tharfl not another man lilac you." "No, she's aifrald then la.‘ QUIET Wife: "Dld you get any ap- plauso?” Actor: "Yes. It sounded llka a caterpillar. wearing rubber ahoea. crawling over o. Persian canpet." he would flee from a woman ll though she were some kind of plague. "There was something about Jonny Mattson," Kate told mo, "that made him stand out fn any group of men. I liked him. very much. Never for a moment did I realize at that time that he was (Continued on Page 8) For Quick Relief Beyond Belief. . . From the pain of ARTHRITIS. RHEUMATISM, NEURITIS, or sci- ATICA . . .gel a bottle of DOLClN tablets today. DOLClN has ro- lieved the pains of thousands of sufferers. DOLCIN tablets an no! harmful, easy-to-take, rear sonable in cost-IOO tablets for $2.39; the large economy-sin bottle of 500 tablets, $10. I] m. Jruggln um.“ "P!!! noLcII I?!“ I —I__I_IIQIIIIiE““JL‘IDI smoked or gambled. While Jonny enjoyed the songs and dancing, Dtllfilll Llllllll) 'T0l'0lI!0 l0 -0|hri| YOUTHFUL LINES Something different ln the way of a washable! Youthfully styled . with the easy back-wrap clos- ing. cixnfortablo kimono sleeves. Newest pocket detail at the hfp- ‘line. 18. 20. 36. 38. 40, 42, 44. Sine 18, 41h’. yards 35-inch. Send 25 cents for each Pattern which includes complete sowing guide. Print your Name. Address and Style Number plainly. Bo If!!! Include postal unit, or zone number in your address. Address Pattern Department The Charlottetown Guardian. Pltkm N0. H13 .- No. 2906 ls cut ln sizes 12. 14. 10, . Needlecraft- —- FOR THE HOME — Address ‘ 1mm sr. mono zit of turpentine. . OkOvwv v IA BUCKLEYS MIXTURE