TWO fo/tlw . r/c/I fogod/l-efs . KING cot correr.i VACUUM-PACKED Voice of the Young A business man re-turned home tired out from a hard day It the office to find his two (hll-l dawn rushing madly ntcut 1h? house and creating a g£neral dis- Wlbflitlne. He gave thcrm built a molding and sent t/hem ofi ‘t0 bed as soon as they had eaten their IUDPH‘. The next morning he found this note pinned to his bedroom door; "Be good to your children, and they wllil be good to you. Yours truly, 00d." i he's having!" ,"Now clear, pick ilightful day, the sun beaming in v mmOO-iOb-Q-IO? j aunt's nuuiv l l By An Island Farmer’: Wife Q>GM§4DWQVOW<€>@$'RWM'KQ At. this lhouse “in ‘llhe road" from Alderlea and nearer to the other farm, voices in spirited conversation, the cut for our ris- ing, led us off into this brand new day. “Is this the morning?" we overhead the younger lad question his father. "Yes," Rob replied rather sleopiily. "Then. let's get up!" was the suggestion. We found today. a second one that kc-pt Jamie home from school, that there is an affinity between the t\vo boys which makes them mostly companion- ablc and co-operative in their work or play. though a differ- ence in age of more than five ycars, puts Jamie in a respon- sible pOSlLIOH indeed as regards the care of the younger fellow as well as in the example he must set to this alert Lmitaltor. a a lt is surprising to note the dc-l grce of respect Jamie receives.‘ "Milk or water?" at a mealtime brought a glance at Jamie's glam! and the satisfied reply “Just what And towards duskl up your toys" brought no active response but a contented "Jamie's not picking up his!“ On tihe whole rt has been a de- c o brightly on many a project that servcd to keep thcm busy. “Give them something they like to do— but give them something!" has been a workable notion of James and ours through the years, be- lieving that a busy child is al- \\i'a_vs a happy one. Their cntcr- prises occupied much of the space in kitchen and pantry two rooms connected by a wide door- way. At times in our house-vzork and in these restricted quarters, we become entangled in yards of "lines" which provided imaginary power flor t-his or that venture: we stopped respectfully about and over structures fashioned \v.th tinker-top gearing, that were in- deed “fearfully and wonderfully made"; shins were barked on wheel-barrows and a kiddie car; we stepped and clipped upon chalks and crayons, pencils, and pieces of plasticine, aids to mod- ern education, that would have been n matter of envy to the children o-f our generation. And we sat. down to wipe ttlie perspira- tion ofif a brow that likes a nice measure of law and order in her surroundings, on a Christmas Continued on page 9 Ab: Mothers Sing the Praises of tllllitdlliwélllltl BUCKLEVS NEW coucii AND coin SYllllP FOR KIDDIES ONLY Herc’: grout new: for mothers —u grand Qogh and cold remedy ivil for the lifllc follu madc by tlie molten ol Buckley’: Mix- ture, Canada's mos! famous cough and cold remedy. JACK and JILL Cough Syrup with Vitamin C is NEW-—- D|FFERENT—— and l0 PLEASANT TASTING they'll i‘- ‘ lulu it with u smile. There’: no ”baflle of the bimle" when you give JACK and nu. At m» very first sneeze or sniflle give according to dirertiani for re- , lief that is PROMPT and $AFE. _ ' Be sure to get a bottle today and have it handy. CONTAINS VITAMlN "C" Al‘ All. DRUGGISYS ~ 50: ~~~~\~,K,$ \ géHouseliolcl Scrapbook 2 By Roberta Lee Puddings Boiled or steamed puddings are very liable to break if they are turned out as soon as taken from the saucepan. Allow them to stanrl for a few minutes to let some of the steam evaporate, and you will not experience this troulble. Suede Shoes Suede shoes and purses can be cleaned with a dry rubber sponge. This brushes off the dust and raises the nap of the material. mak- ing it look like nciw. Snlled Candle A candle that has become soiled can be cleaned by viiiping over lt with a cloth dampened witih alco- lhol. This will not harm the luster. 0man’s Realm/Social and Pers THE GUARDIAN. CHA RLOTTETOWN so % §DOROTIIY DIX SAYS- Childless Couple Does Fair's Lack Of Offspring Destroy Chance Of Happiness? ‘S. DEAR MISS DIX: We are a married couple in our 30's. Have a little home and farm which we have worked together and paid for. We are much devoted to each other and very happy. But we have no children and our friends and acquaintances continually tell us that our home can never be a real home and that we can never be happy without children. Now we like children, but we do not mlss them, and as God has not seen fit to send us any we are content and thought we were happy until people stirred us all up. Do you think it true that childless NOD18 Clinltflt be happy? . WORRIED ANSWER: What's the matter with your common sense that you have to let somebody on the outside tell you that. you are not happy when you are happy and get you all hot and bothered over lt? 1t is the silllest thing I ever heard of. For liow can any one else in the world know how you feel about things or what your desire Ol‘ what would make you happy? Taste is absolutely individual and the thing that one person enjoys bores another to tears and what one per- son yearns after most the other wouldn't have on a bet. Believe me, my dear lady, you will never be happy until you make up your mind that you are not going to lct what people say influence you one hair's breadth. As to whether a married couple are made unhappy or not by the lack of children, It depends entirely upon the individuals, There are some men and women who have the paternal and maternal instinct so highly developed in them that they are miserable without little arms around their necks, but there are plenty of other people who can take children or leave ‘em. so to speak, and be equally happy, and not a few couples who regard children as brats and nuisances. Many of the very happiest marriages are childless. If a man and woman lOVe each other, they are drawn closer together by the lack of children because they have only each other on whom to bestow their affection. They become better pals because, not having any children to take care of, the wife is free to give all of her time to her husband. So you see there is no reason to let your neighbors make you think that you are going to be unhappy because you haven't any chil- dren. Especially when you are not. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I am 22 years old and have been married three years to a rnan of the same age. We have a darling baby 2 years old, Ever since the baby came my husband goes out once ln a while and most always stays out all night, He seems m get n restless fit ever so often and then we start fighting, He snys he has never been with any girl since he met me, but while he ls out I keep thinking such awful things about him that it is driving m; mad, He says he loves me and he gives me all his money, but if he loved mo, would he go out, knowing how badly I feel about it? My parents are dead, but I could slay with my sister and try to find a position. She would mlnd my baby for me. C.C.L. ANSWER: Yours ls another of the tragedies of too-early mar- riage. When a boy of 19 gets married before he has had any play- UYYW. he 8111105! lflvfiflflbly "T95 0! the bflndflge of wedlock as soon as the novelty of it has worn off. He doesn't want to be tied down with a wife and baby: he wants to be out among other youngsters having a good time, It's n perfectly normal state of mind, It i5 lust because he is still a boy and craves the pleasures that belong to his time of life. If you are a very Wise young woman, you will try to renlizc that it ls not because your husband has ceased to lIJVc you that he wants (Continued on Page 3) N‘ I m \!\r "' A Country Garden By Mn. Gordon Macmillan The seed catalogues have ar- rived! and Spring seems nearer while we read and plan our gar- dens for the Summer. It is wiser to choose familiar plants and shrubs than too many new un- tried plants, but for interesting experiences it is necessary to have a num-ber of new seeds and bulbs. Beginning with the annuals, _l like the fragrant Sweet. Peas, and always choose the varieties listed with fragrance rather than size and this is what I like to order. Gigantic —- Five blooms to a spray are usual, while seven and even eights are not uncommon with Flowers are large, densely frill- ed and have a fragrance sweeter and more powerful than any oth- er variety we know. Fragrant Stocks I love but do not grow very well in the garden. l seem to have better Stocks in the garden room in the Winter, in other gardens I have seen some beautiful plants. The sweet scented mignonette is next on my order and it is sown for it's fragrance alone, as the plant docs not add very much to the garden picture. Nasturtiums follow and then the Sweet Alys- sum as a border edging for all the garden. Alyssum, the long lasting fragrant easily grown an- nual 1 like very much. The seed may be sown ‘early and late where it »is needed and it will last until heavy forst, A magazine conducted a report on the favorite annuals of it's read-ers, and Petunias led with scvcn out of ten, this is a won- derfiul record. Zinnias, Marigolds, Astcrs, Snapdragonsand Larkspur followed in the top six. T-he reason for the esteem of these annuals is first, their sum- mer long production of abundant bloom — even from late spring until frost, if you make repeat sowings of some of them. All are inexpensive and. easy to grow un- der a variety of garden condi- lions. All are adaptable to many gar- den uses, including fill in work among perennials, replacements, mass planting, borders —- even rock gardens and summer window boxes. Considered as a unit, they offer a choice of height from a (Continued on Page 3) xocxx I Beffer English By l). C. Wllllaml oconomlcull New Lu! is blown _' into birth-Powered concentrated soap . Iudlinltanlly- You 1£j',mi.Don‘y' Gels heavy dlri our lcshrl Suforl Jet blown for faster suds, through the heaviest wash. And all clothes and household linens last longer! New Lux washes everythinz. mm wervthinrl lunar for ruch- fi-orn high-power jets that burst into 40%moncoapfor cleaner rinsing. New Lux whizzea l . l ‘not 1/ 1 [W fifif/tffi/fl/VV mm 1m mews/ax: am)’ MIA’ No other wushdcy soup is more economical! o It's a brand new Lux with jet-blown power to take over your heaviest washday jobs! It washes overalls with the great/est of ease. No soap gets sheets and towels whiter, leaves colored wash brighter. And no washday soap is more economical. You get 40% more soap at no greater cost! Get New Jet-Blown Lux today in large or new giant size — for washing machine, dishes. Hggflylllflfumous for, the last in mps, could give you this grout new product! ‘That Body Of Your’ By James W. Barton, M.D. HEARING AIDS W“ Why w menu people are will- “18 l0 PM 0K1 classes to improve or correct vision and are unwilling to use “"15 1° improve Uhcir hearing is somewhat hard to undcrifayid, “TWMMUK once a hard-of-hear- l"! ‘F-‘fllvllil-lal has been suitcbli’ fitted with a hearing aid. he gm; s5 miwh more out of life that he be. comes willing to use his hear-y“; aid anywhere and alwnm Um "Yl-“nfffly. however when he pays 5 Qccd P1406 1'61‘ a hearing a‘d Which does not give satisfaction in “Pm/ins his herring. nor in the "@5881? wear and bear, he is apt to discard the hraring aid and nfivér try anoflber om», Just where the hfrnie rests lor lflck of satisfaction is haird to say. but persistence on the par-t of the patient is always needed, im¢ in @110 great majority o-f cases. q wen. filled hegirlflc aid that overcomes his hearing difficulty Maps out noise. is cwtnfortalble to wcar and mt tmoensive to maintain. ls ob- tainable by patience cn the par-t of ‘h! Physician and hearing expert m" u" ‘Datient himself. In "Annals of Ear, Nose, and Throat." Dr. Gordon Berry, w"- center. Mass. stir-ties that 5m“. “he illlérrlrltlle duis/lcesmdh pmduduon of - e ave a van slur-ply. With a well-fined lnstor: mm. a run of 4o to so decibels n now possible in contrast to 3o-deci. 5B1 improvement, considered excel. lent after an operation which pro- vides a new method oif sending the brain. A decibel lc the lml sound that. can be h Ivy the human ear. ‘ u" Because of the nolaec that occur l" W"? the Army has studied loss of hearing and beat methods or n} “Th3 l" 01‘ Dirt of It. They have been able to teach the management of l new hearing aid in four to alx "d" bv "my and VA methods. The owner ten-in to read up. and listens to instruments and the woken voice (with and Without! blviiround noise) qnd vole“ on the telephone. General conversa- tions we carried on during naive ‘IPOIM. social gamer-lugs m4 4.1m. ng. Civilian should have their heu- lhl fluted and can examined by a specialist who can than prtgcrlbe the type of hearing flr with m, 5mg fining of nld necessary ° to its beet ~ nun condition. n‘ p“ For those who want help in chwinc a. suitable no for meti- Particular needs, a self-addressed envelope should be my; in m, headquarters of American Hearing Aim: lon. m1 mmieemii sv... N. W.. aching-ton. D. O. IIOPIIUL 0F CURE l Twenty five years ago pgmlg. tour anaemia killed about 50,000 people a year ln the United States clone: new lclentlsts are exocri- mentlng with vlfamln B-ll. which they, lly ylll [In positive results. mm ~04» 1. Whait is wrong with this sen- tence? "This hat ts a new creation." 2. What is the correct pronunc- lotion of “handsome”? 3. Which one of these words ls misspelled? Ignominy, iccing, ll- legitimacy, illegible. 4. What does the word “absolve‘ mean? _5. What is l. word beginning with ho thait means "the killing of one human being by another"? ANSWERS 1. Omit new. Creation ls the presentation at a new conception." 2. Pronounce hen-sum, with the d being sllenit. 3. Icing. 4. To sot free. or release as fr in some obligation. uenccs of guilt. {run all blame ,5 \ % b .5 4' \\ 5'54 ' .1 . DIQIGN N0. I'M’ l 14's he diluent and lhavo o. Dewy Dwtuln parade amiss our tel towels ln simple stitches. Hot. iron (render pattern No. 11-549 contains ‘I motifs gbout 151/, by 1 Inches each with complete ‘instruc- tlom. To order. Send 20 cents ln coin to Needlework Bureau, Charlotte- wwn Guudlnn. Design No. M49 JANUARY s1. 1920 onal/Fashions/Literature 0A0 ti‘ "'>‘<>2'7171’X('>§’9 s- -=.-\~ i ORIENTAL SPICE CARI NEW — DELICIOUS Al’ 1 éhmnninkun' this vigorous growing new variety.‘ Your Grocer’: ZOi 5 ) l l lincll? v _ A when a piece of linen is scorched while ironing, make a paste of raw starch and water im- mediately. cover the 5601011811 place with this paste. and Place ill the sun for about two hours. Q. How can l use HIbOWI ball the amount‘. of sugar when stlewms fruits? A. By svrcetenlng the fruit after it has been cocked, rather than during the cocking process. ‘ Q. How can I clean satin s11?‘ pers? A. Put three or four dnops of lemon juice in a little alcohol. and apply f5 the slippers with a. soft white cloth. Cook's Corner 9x MINCEMIJAT FRUIT BARS v-~¢ 9 1 cup minccmeab ‘g cup granulated sugar 1 egg. beaten 1 cup all-purpose flour 11;, teaspoons baking powder 1:_. teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cuip chopped nutsoptional Beat sugar into well beaten egg. Sift and measure flour; sift. again ivith baking powder and salt. Add slfited dry ingredients to egg mixture. alternately with milk. to ln mlncemeat and nuts. flake in well greased shallow 9 x 9 inch pain at 350i‘ for 30 mln- ulcs. ». i 5 amwowsmvrmcatrxsavozs o.» y y The Sfars Say -.- By Genevieve Kumblc »‘.'9‘é‘o\¥\b‘§vo For Wednesday, February 1 THE auguries for this day point lo 5 spectacular and dramatic crisis, which may teach "new highs" ln the recognition or prac- tical demonstration of some spe- clal skill, ingenuity, novelty. or other event in w-hioh exceptional talents. hard work, and study fl- nally come up for public notice and rewards. There may be hid- den dangers and crafty dtsigrs on sui-li efforts. unless special warlnew be directed at eowplng intrigue and particular enmltles. However, a ambitious efforts. For the Birthday Those whose birthday it ls may look for a. year of sensational ud- ve-nitures, or experiences, in which rewards for ingenuity, exception- al skills, discoveries in new fields. A WONDERFUL WASBABLE All the things you like in n. wash- aible! Youthful styling. Easy-exit shoulder biittionlng. Convenient patch pockets. And. best of all, a very simple style to sew! No. 2488 la out ln sizes 12, l4. 16. 1B 20, 36, $ and 4o. Sire 16. 3% yards 35-inch. Send 25 cent: for each Pattern which includes complete sowing guide, Print your Name. Address and style lmmber pltlnly. Be cure to state size you want. Include postal unit, or zone ntmrber ln your ‘ddress. _ Address Pattern The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 2488 Name Addrul City ONLY ONE VOLCANO California's Lassen only active United States volcano Nlmc Don't rams: blncltheidc - dlnnlv! them. er two ouncu of peroillnc ‘ from any drug mm and lPPlY Addrm ntl with wet. hot cloth over Q"! ‘mince lack ends, They llmply dlllolvt ‘ ,, by tliln nle simple m: l 1/ 1/ How Can I ! l ! Modern Efiqueffe é By Anne Ashley l f) "y ‘when; L“ if y) ‘R - _s-\w\xx:rs.vo{v\ig,€;i Q- He i .§.'...“‘il,.-§§ii.“ which vanilla has been added. Fbld Stroke of good luck may solidify all ‘ Department Province Peak ls the BLACKHEADS another person‘? A. She must be sure to giw her mother's name, saying. “’l‘h..» is my mc-ther. Mrs. Jones." so that lna other person will kn-ait" “llilil tn call her in speaking to her. Q. What refreshments should he served at a reception that follows the christening cf a child‘? A The menu is the usual one, fOr an afternoon informal uh. \\'llh refreshments served in buffet stile. Q. Is a girl ever privileged to announce her own engagmicnt? A. Only to her family and so friends. Public BHIIOUIHTLHOII- ls made by her parents or cloiest relatives. ' ‘ a wealth of Dwtlrfisive ideas or’ techniques may arouse public in- fares/ts and rewards. At the srinl. time. such will arouse enniity. cratft and the attention of dflSlglh" lng and intriguing persons intend- ing to undermine, divert or mini-__ mine these brilliant efionts. so bo- on guard and a stroke of good for-- lune may crown all worthyi efforts; bringing personal joy and reward: ln their train It is a period of ell-w matte rewards for merit and sin- : oerlty. '. A child born on this day is en-j (lowed wltlh exceptional creative " ideas and skill, and while assured pulblic support, private gain and happiness. should also be on guard against duplicity, and secret, iii- tacks. Come Out from Under the Shadow of Try DOLClN Tablets for prompt relief fromARTHRlTlC and unau- MATIC pain . . .Try DOLClN get n bottle of 100 or 500 tulilvtl from your drugglst TODAY and join the thousands of relieved sufferers who by taking DOLCW have come out from under ll" shadow of Pain . .. ’Mosl druggista carry DOLCIN- lf your: does not, write direct t0 , ll noiciuuiiuti. \ Toronto l0 . (llllllll ___-€———‘ eadlecraft- — FOR THE HOME - .....s-_ ,, l8&%5Wp%*f 2488 simmer