. -if .i ' :_ i l ' ~.;=.; v - . \ APRIL 30, 1929 __ . Tl-IE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAF. '“,. -; _“_ 4.1 if ,1../r - , - .,.. I 'c PAGE N1iv__r_ /I/W/‘i/fl/ii ihiiiliivwwv Q* __-i _ N \`__ ___ 2 W Style No. 882g 4.. _ iv, - 'with LIPPER HEEE it The iuii-fashioned hosiery that outseiis ali other; i Why? Because it is unsurpassed vaiuég in a lu"-loshi_on¢¢! ` pure silk stocking at' .,.` ~ .$1.50 . V an Newispring Shaclelfi 'A " '[cnE.4a`sK1N_~BARssxINl i Jw.1cil'sK1N aosssxrrr ramskrw svNsK1l~ r.‘4Ns1§zry srnzrvcrovg _ ‘ \ ni It ¥` v~] _ _ '~ ’ .;i..;..._._¢..a,-=~.=f;=»-if-1e»»’-_‘=-‘~"i 1 _ » ~_i “wi -..t';_.e up _ _ ., » ' . *_ v »~ 5, zv"‘;'; - 1;;-°...'._..""-f~.--:1 ._- ,» - W --Q* , _ i i I _ _ - /Ee ff? H.iie~~1..>z.1 Hints D motifs ~,,,._,,, _ OTO y lx e ef Ox "M What is this life if full of calc, _ '° Y 'eral Fee I Unhappy Victims of Free-Lunch Automobllists. msvac " P" “‘ ‘ ‘ : Woman Who Took a__Sorry Revenge Upon __ _ f If the for r°1'Sv1f°=i 1>°'_~d°=r we stockings \vith one part chlorinatedi Thelr Mother Happy, _ _ |one part powdered starch. Bathe the I Dear Miss Dix-Won't you please publish something about those people who own motorcars and who start out early on Sunday moming on a holiday And stare as long as sheep or cows. No time to see, wlien woods we pass,` No time to stand beneath the boughsf feet daily in cold wmen _ Crocheting _ with their whole family and with a friend or two thrown in for good mess- _ i me ban of mtwn in a_ bowl or urn ‘and ride ut to the country to sponge on any one whom they can stand up for a free feed? From the beginning of summer until the end of it I spend every Sunday and holiday in the kitchen cooking for unin- vited guests, who never seem to think that I might like a rest or to go out riding myself. Don’t you think people should wait until they are asked and not come unannounced, and what would you do about it? DISGUSTER READER. Answer: _ You have a very good idea about who these ac- quaintances are who sponge on you during the motor- i ing season. Drop them a little note right away, telling them that you don't feel financially able to run a free hotel and so you have decided to charge for your meals and that you will be glad if they will let you know when they are coming so that you can ta prepared for them. That will hold them, for they are deadbeats who have no idea of paying for their food if they can graft it od somebody else. ' We shed tears of pity over those unfortunates who are maimed and killed by automobiles, but li' we have any weeps left in our system we might well bestow them upon those other victims of the automobile, the people who live on motor roads, w`io have their pocketbooks flattened out and their priv- |aey slain and who are visited to death by automobiles who descend upon them without warning and eat them out of house and home. Every one _who lives in the country shares the same unhappy late and learns to shudder at the sound oi' an automobile horn as at the trump of doom. for well they know that in a few seconds a. ear will pull up at the door and from it will descend a. _low/Tal Clowd consisting of Jolly Nick and Susie' and the five little Nicks and Susies and a couple of friends .that they have brought along with their brat, and the whole crowd will proceed to make itself at home with loud cries of "On, how thirsty we are," and "My, what a. grand appetite motoring gives you!" _ And poor Mr. Householder and Mrs. Householder, who had finished 'noir own luncheon and were planning a ride themselves or were going to have a nice snooze or read a. book they had been longing to get at, have to rush and put fresh towels in the bothroom and then hle out to the kitchen and scram. ble together all the food or: the place. Then, after the motorists have left, the householders spend the rest of the evening washing the wishes and cleaning up after them and figuring up that they have spent all of the next week's market money on feeding a lot of people whom they don`t care for and who don't care for them and who have simply made goats out of them. It is a.queer thing what the automobile does io peoples manners and morals anyway. In town people don't invite themselves to your house for a meal, They wait until they are asked. Stlii less \?I.T.1d they think of Ioisting their children, and perfect strangers upon you. Nor wouldany stranger who had any decency whatever wish himself unasked o`n you' as a guest. But ' once let people get in an automobile and they throw all such social convic- tions to the wind and it is any free eating place where they can crash the gate. ' _ Perhaps it is because it costs so much to run an automobile that it makes people feel they have a sort of right to get it back any way they can and rob anybody who will stand for it. But why everybody who has a country place is supposed to run a free roadhouse nobody knows. Apparently, however, cutomobilists are under that irnpresslon. Also, that meals are at all hours and that the woman of the house asks nothing better than to spend a happy summer making sandwiches for people she hasn't seen for years, but who suddenly remembered how much they loved her as they were passing by. This is the reason that most country places are for sale. ' I-‘low the victoms of the automobile gratters are to protect themselves l don’t know unless they cultivate a nerve equal to that of their persecutors and shut their doors ln the face of their self-invited guests. DOROTHY DIX. j leeeeuus Dear Miss Dix-My wife and I are both well over 40 and will soon cele- brate our silver wedding. We love each other dearly and have had E ffiost happy married life. We have a family of f'our children of whom any parents might be proud and my wife has been a model wife and mother. But four years ago my wife had an affair with a doctor. She tells me she was not in love with him, but did this to pay me back because I admitted to her that l had not been a paragon before marriage. She cooly says that she is not sorry for what she has done1 that she has has had her lttle ding just as I had mine and is satisfied to stay by me from now on. I don‘t know what to do. I am passionately fond of my wife and feel like letting the thing go, for there is no doilht in nny mind that she is just as fond of me as ever and that she is sincere in her statement that she will never repeat her offense. It is four years since this happened and I have noticed no change in her attitude toward me. PERPLEXED. Answer: "Let him that is without sin among you cast the first stone." You have _sou not we to be visiting around and ay boar-tml; me wmns be stming in the words of the Great Teacher to direct you in dealing with your wife. _ If she forgave you, why should you not forgive her? Her offense against you is no worse than your offense against her. Her sin no blacker than yours. So wipe of! the slate and kiss and forget it. . Feeling as you do toward your wife, you would be ufhrly miserable apart from her. Furthermore, it would wreck your liic to break up your home and be parted from your children and to biacken their good name by bringing shame upon their mother. Nor is your wife a constitutionally immoral woman-, a woman without inherent principle whom you cannot trust and whose in- fluence would be bad upon your daughters, so you don't have to consider that side of the subject. , She has done a very foolish thing in paying you back in your own coin because two wrongs have never made a right, and I. think that she will find that revenge is always a boomerang that turns and renda the hand that throws it. She has had her ling, but I wonder if she really enjoyed it as much as she thought she would and if, when she looks at her little girls, she doesn’t wish that there was nothing in her life that she would be ashamed for than to know. She stabbed back N you and hurt you as much as you hurt her, but I wonder ifshe doesn’t` realise that her act kllled_something nne and sweet . between you that can never come to life again. DOROTHY DIX. O O U I I 0 O I Dear Dorothy Dix-Our mother is old and feeble. Bhs has worked hard all of her life and we boys want her to quit housekeeping and board with one of the neighbors. Don't you think this would be the best for her? she contact with other people more. We want her to enjoy the next Years as much as possible. A YOUNG MAN. -1--.ng .~ ", Answer: Yourmotlisr is a lucky woman to have such good sons who are so sollol~ tous for hq-happiness. Without doubt your pin i! the rational one for Her. but you have to make old people happy intluir own ww. IM you must ie- meiaberthhy induetrybeeomeu habit spd meta woman wnohuwofkco as long as your mother has would iindjit absolute torture to have nothing to do. grass. No time to see. in broad daylight, night. No time to turn at Beauty‘s glance, And watch her feet, how they can dance. No time to walt till her mouth can Eurichthat smile her eyes began. A poor life this if, full of care, A Morning Smile Streams full of stars. like stars at We have no time to stand and stare' -William Henry Davies. A Scotsman was persuaded by his minister to become an elder. The new‘l official was doubtful of his ability to Where squirrels hide their nuts ni* Keel] iteacup when crochetlng_ and it will; - prevent the necessity of crawling on' the floor alter it at frequent intervals. Cake Pans if Dredge the cake pans with flour to prevent the cake from sticking to the pans. .l.i_.i-il- produce that extempore praycr which is sometimes called for. _ . To make sure he would never bc’ caught unawares, he pasted a praycr_ in his tall hat. _ . i The call'came' at a funeral souiei 'days later, when, as the parson liadi not arrived. the elder was asked for; “a few words." t He went into the hall for his hat, He bowed over it rcvcrenily, as uid his little audience. To their aston- ishment tlie new eltlcl' cried out in all agitated voice: ‘*fiuldnc:s, this is no] » my l\at,’ . took away her daily task. Furihermor e, an old womans home is not just ri i --_ . _..._ _ . .. . -_> __@-. 5 Delighffuiiy soft _ _ r Husband. _ Sons Who Want to Make we have so time ill sons .md n...e.‘,,m,_ one pm p,.,p,,,,,,` c,,a,k_ and. the m°5t c°mf0ftabl¢ napklniwef mad” . ' =-.-. ' -f-» ss: _=.-; -.n-‘:==-:s§:=.._ ,- -,:»-=»».-:-,.:.;._~:. :\~-..-;-- .-_.eel-.;. _»:»:-@.'s.61f-:.>.g-..:_ ‘ -=.-;~?:;j:f=e§§;;;;§ecl» , _ ` - _ V: _-sl =.. \{ -_,nn-<.;:;\z%;§,,§§§;=,..¢--.~ - ;--..-.~,;..+.--: -vig: 5.. ,-'_,.-5_____,,'-_, , _ ., ._ , ` ' '-'~-'-_=-_=»_=-*€.-:--:_ -ff" _-.».. ="f‘=9rgrs¢i;;§;f".c:e.=f . »-1.~- ».»» .-x . _ .>*;"~ . - ~.f'l'»1;I_=`= '- si- _ i .._».:.,.. .-._.-,._. _.;:,_ .\.. _,,, ,, .;. .;..-.- -:,'.~.»': .=‘.-=-.=_ -er _-me--_‘>. . ., ._ ._ Q, ., _:___ .___ _ ‘c _ ¢ ` `§€ . Z;-,_ "=:-'fi . ' \ ° ; ~"` i"_` ""` ‘ . 's' i' »~_ » ¢ ` D vlgg ° * ."' so asap' _ Made in Canada . . . 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DOROTHY Dlx. i . . -__._ss...,.__ . _ 1;;;r‘ _il at little expcnff \i t.__tf_ _ _! _ _ ~ _ ,gl 7 - T ` 1 |\=.k~_?;#L /5-` '».<_ ' - -_ .. ~ it fr' #"5 -Pi 5 \\ M ’// ,_ j ff’ Q @ gg ~/ff \ J” -L~.~.~i£,-:~ ‘1'~\f’l';% 5' i 0° $` su-a \ /lb [Q \ ii sz without denying youzarellfot/zertlzi/fgf i With beautiful low-priced Congoleum Cold Seal _ Rugs on the floors of the home . . . even the I most meagre budget or "just-married” income ' can afford many other articles of house- furnisbings. ‘ Unparalleled pattern beauty is possible in these __ ..,, i 1 I is 4¢'t__- ,/ i '/'””//I///////f modern rugs at a fraction of the cost of such ,,- charm in~any other type of iloor-coverings . . . the "M\1lticote” longer-wearingsurfacc ensures ~.». lr 1/ “c ~ '= ` " " 4"'£-TL';;T""*.“:~¢»_`» ` q'_"=“’_}§’T'."`~ -' gf' . . :eat e; W*'».-,=l.'f==ir';.¢:~.>‘+f-W-1_?“¢_» ‘ ‘ i .._ i ‘ ~' _.~._" snr/ f'/ » » ' ~ i- -f “wfy” @°~=°'=“"‘ ‘/5' ~ i K -G¢1as.f.m..gN».aos Q-,,,/`/_ _-_ if _ H 1-»~»-mf- ' - i fi 5555 _ ‘ ff Q, sv' ' Have Beautiful Floors i Wi..~..e\i Q I , ' Cl” 5~.r¢ ‘ or g. ¢ f m ~ \¢ t ,ai W C.,ss°;°,f‘ \>\“‘_°_.\,\,sc¢ ff,`,¢a:§,;| i-rev* _ l'“ A ,`\¢._ “ral Vw, al- __, many years of _ pleasing service and freedom ~ ' from tiresome housework. 5, ‘__ L,;,l~¢3,e;;§_p,,::\_._“§,_ G In ' x *thi “° ' l_ <__°§,>,;\\v.eo ________...»-* _“J“‘,.\‘_ _ . s-»= """" A °°‘” Roos e _ i _ sans ._ w ~ . ~ CONGOLEUM CANADA LIMITED 2 MONTREAL i _ ' ,,,__| _ 1 p "_ " "f"`“‘""`“` ~=;. _ is ri » _ `°7‘.~ _',_.€` | _ifii/'~ `.. 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