. ..._- -......‘ ....,_____’._-____ ..--... ~ _. as regards comfort, so do take the l.» a y e i 7 r ~ velour curtains, which could be f” those who wanttherlaahd it race axon’: a...- ‘AL.’ alums-v THE CHARLOTTE/TOWN consume Wiomank Realm -:- Sociol and Personal -:- NOVEMBER 16. 1935 l n. 116175.; WIFE fan rarsn ACTIWT-YES‘ The Christmas cards of the . Duke and Duchess of York are on- titled "Merrie England in Days of Old," and are painted by Gilbert l. Wright. The verse reeds: Well our sires of old Loved when the year its course had roll’d, » _ And brought blithe Ohriatm . back again, - Nithallitahosnitaifle train. . . . The hall was dreued with holly * 8N9!!- . Ibrth to the wood did merry men go To gather in the mistletoe . . . g England was marry litngland, when Old Christmas brought his sports again. —Scott. 1M9 card of the Duke and ‘Duchess of Kent is “A Breath of Bpring," painted by Stanislaus S. Longley, R. I. Sun by sun the ha??? days Desoend below the golden hills, With promise of s. morn as fair. —Tennyson. Mosthequentflauseofrire Fires in the hane are frequent- ly caused by poor wiring and in- correct heating systems. Electric switches and cords should be ex- amined and defective Ones repair- rd or renewed, and exposed or ooorly insulated wires replaced with new ones. Temporarily Stopped “If you discover a small hole or runner in the silk stockings you have just donned and have no ‘time to change them, paint the hole and around-it with liquid nail polish. It will stop the run from going further and mining the stockings. ~ Those Shlnylleads In these days of shiny, glisten- ing heads from pomade, it is wise to protect the wall paper over the top oi the box couch or day bed by placing tapestry or print over this place. They can be cleaned much more readily than greasy wall paper. WINTER- CODIFORT‘ It is the small thing in the home which make all iihe differ- ence in the world between comfort . and discomfort. It does not cost a great deal to have these. small comforts, for it is very_ often merely a question of thoughtful- ness on the part of the housewife. Let us examine the living room, for instance. With perhaps a little alteration in the arrangement of say, the settee and s, chair or two, how much more cosy it would be for the winter time. Then again are the curtains draught-proof?- an important point this. If not. perhaps you could run to a pair of drawn right over the net ones, thus making a cosy effect, in every way. Draughts are home wrecker-s ' precaution of excluding them with a few yards of draught excluder. You can buy this very cheaply in several colours. . _ A portable reading lamp is often a. boon in the winter, when one does not feel ‘ clirred to move too far from the fireside. Hot water ties should always be available is a wise plan to keep one or two spare washers at hand in case they get leaky, for there is nothing more annoying than a leaky hot water bottle on a cold night. Plenty of hot water is also an- other strong factor in the design for comfortable living in the winter, and there are manvmeans these days of ensuring this, storage heaters, geysers, instan- taneous heaters. coke heaters and others, provide us with a wide choice in this direction. WIGAN CHURCH BELLS The tower of Wigan Parish Church has recently suffered from the attacks of the death-watch beetle, and the timber frame which has hitherto supported the bells is to be substituted by‘ all‘ iron frame supported in steel gir- ders. The eight bells are being re- sist and two new treble bells are being added. At the Liverpool “Uonsistory courts: was. sis d that £920 has been received o- wards the ‘cost of £1,300. It was stated that the tower, which was one of the most im- wposing landmarks in Lancashire. l5 ‘now safe. _ - Italian Boob Russian boots are W861‘ Paris as a development of High ted in the rubber bootees, and considered Brown and black are still to com- prise the malority of shoes worn, but navy is now almost as classic as these two; some dark dull red will be smart for afternoon. BAD POSTURE The woman who slumps forward or, worse yet, forces her should backward until she has an ex- aggerated hollow-in the middle of her spinal column simply can't be truly beautiful. Shiny hair, clear skin and sparkling eyes are impor- tant, of course, but never for a minute lose sight of the fact that your posture has a great deal to do with the impression you make on others. You should practice posture ex- ercises to correct round shoulders, protruding stomach, often caused by a hollow in the back, and a. sagging chin. Lie flat on the floor with knees drawn up and weight of the legs on balls of the feet. Lift the tip of your spinal column upward from the floor, meanwhile making the rest of the backbone fit snuslv asainst the hard sur- face. Keep shoulders and neck perfectly flat. Breathe deeply. drawing stomach in and up. This, of course, helps you to get your backbone flat. When you stand, you should maintain the position you were in on the floor. Stomach. should be drawn in, shoulders square, and the spine tilted forward so hips do not stick out. Whenever you walk. stand, dance or sit, imagine that the top of your head is being pulled straight upward by a heavy cord suspended from the ceiling. Make believe. that the cord lifts not only your head but your entire body. When you sit in a chair, see that the centre of your back and the lower end of your spine are flat against the chair. Don't press shoulders against it. Incidentally. legs look much more graceful when crossed above-not below- the knee. A tailored suit of lame or velvet can‘ be worn for most occasio between 5 o'clock and midnight. CRITICAL 0F LITTLE EXPENDED 0N ART SHEFFIELD-The time when television would possibly do away with the necessity to visit art galleries to see pictures was de- preceated by Lord Riverdale when he opened the annual exhibition of the Sheffield Society of Artists at the Graves Art Gallery, Shef- field, recently. That would be a. sad day, indeed, he said, because one of the greatest pleasures of visiting the different ‘art galleries was in comparing the different types and methods of painting shown there. If the in- vention of machinery and application of machinery to production was going to give more time for recreation, it was most important to develop those outside occupations among which art stood. high. Art was closely al- lied to industry, and there was room for much more oi’ it in in- dustry, in public life, and parti- cularly in education. A great deal could be done in educating people in what things were beautiful. He strongly ritlcized badly illustrated magazines and papers which he had seen children reading from time to time, saying that a child's mentality could be. influenced by showing it bad designs and mesa» zines. . He spoke of how little was being. spent on art by the Sheffield Cor- poration compared with Manches- ter. Birmingham, and Liverpool and suggested that this must be due to a want of conviction that good art paid and was of rich edu- cational value. - ransom Save all newspapers when you have read them. If you fold them. neatly you will find-they-snaloe» good stairpads~qulte equolto fiet" ones. They cost nothing, are easily renewed, and they will keep away moths. ‘CURIOUS om CUSTOM i“ » PREVAILS m osrrnm Because of a curious old custom Oakham Castle, Oakharn, EniL. lg hung with shoes from the horses‘ or nearly every English king and queen. The castle has the right to demand a. horshoe from ovary peer‘ who rides through the town, and if anyone refuses. the ridercanbetakenfromthohorse- George IV gave the castle I horse-shoe of bronze. seven 16% _ the castle. The Prince of Wales has also PM‘ ented one, but since the Kin! h" through the WW1! 0'5 a more elegant alternative for the woman who 0111 FOR afford trim. y go's-pouch, there is none from him. BUILDING VITALITY AND R E SISTANCE {TIRE BEVERAGE . and Co.. is now putting on an ex- -. is, ecoo » Powell, "a most interesting and in -f ocean's ., fairylandsnd oftbenilttrideof ' music plays a more significant part BOOKSJART; 1 MUSIC A non-fiction work first has beenhlghupontheiist ofbolt Stefan zwelrs "Mar! Queen of Scotland and the Isles.” As a bio- grapher, author of short stories. novels, travel boob, dramas, poems. as translator and critic of literat- ure and art, Stefan Zweig is one of the most famous and most widely read of European writers. ‘translations of some of his books have been made into twenty-two languages. i He was born in Vienna in i881. but since the war he settled in Salzburg with the serious intention of carrvlnaout a conscious literary program and he has been instru- mental in spreading the outstand- ing works of foreign authors as well as in advancing the literature of his own country. He lives in an ai- rnost inaccessible hill-side house. on Salzburgs Kapualnerberg, yet he is in no way a recluse. He reads, writes and travels extensiveur. His collection of manuscripts both mus- ical and literary is famous, and many o1 them are from the pens of writers whom he had encourag- ed long before the world acclaimed them. He has just completed a libretto for Richard Strauss, and for its theme he turned to Ben Jonson. "Mary, Queen of Scotland and the Isles’ is his latest biography. After that brief glimpse of Stefan Zweig's life it is ‘ necessary to say that the biography of Mary of Scotland has been written with authority, un tending and a keen sense of the ’ tic. This is by no means a review, "Mary Queen of Scotland and the Isles" is too lengthy a book to be more than touched on in these book notes, but, in three excellent reviews that have appeared recent- ly, two of them do not altogether agree with Zweig’s decided conclus- ions concerning the Casket Letters. He thinks them genuine and his arguments are certainly convincing. He paves the way for all of his prob! in a manner that brinas the reader to his point of view be- fore he even presents them-one good reason for reading a hook which puts forth the opposite sup- position, and 1 think there has been published dately a book about Mary Stuart, by Andrew Bakers, "blob does contain evidence again. the Casket Letters. Itwould be inter- estlng to read it also, because when one reads Zweig, one believes Zwelg. Stefan Zwelg is also convinced that in "MacBeth" Shakes Mary Stuart-"When in Holinshedb ‘Chronicles’ the dramatist came to read the stcry of the ‘Ihnue of Cawdor who slew Duncan and us- urped the crown of Scotland. ma! we not suppose that hc interwove his memories of the tmgical fate of Mary into the substance of his drama? . . . This much. however, is certain, that only those who have studied and understood the psychology of Lady MacIBeth after the murder of Duncan will be able fully to understand the moods and the actions of Mary Stuart during those dark days at Holyrood . . . The most amazing part of the re- semblance between the two traged- ies, that conceived by the play- wright and that recorded by bis- torlans, is the resemblance in the changes which took place in Mary Stuart and in Lady MacBeth after theorimehadbeencommitted. . ." _an interesting conjecture and a ‘vs: presenttai , to say the least Finely Zweig rzccomplishes the remarkable feat o: making us be- lieve in Mary's guilt, yet retain our admiration and pit-y for her to the end. This fall, Shakespearean revivals are taking ‘place in several ways, in new editions of his works, in plays, ‘in the fiirns-Hollywoodghas "gone ‘Shakespeare much to London's distress. ' Tho publishing firm, E. P. Dutton tenslve- advertising campai - for the New Temple Shakespeare, of which there are already thirty vol- umes, and is adding “A Winter's Tale," “King John," “Much Ado About Nothing’ and "Oymbeline." The tragedies "MseBeth" and "Othello" have been presented in Torontc, Montreal and New York this fall with the famous players Gladys Cooper and Philip Merivale. T In New York the Alfred Lilllfr Lynne Fontanne production of “The Taming of the Shrew" is still run- ning and there have been recent revivals. of "Romeo and Juliet" with Katharine Cornell. and “Ram- let’ with Leslie Howard. Max Rsinhardtazcreen version . of “A-Midsummer Night's Dream." < which has- been showing in Mont- real- rdins-te-S. Marlen- some ways a most beautiful "achievement! Reinhardt has taken immortal comedy oraied on its scenic. comic and spectacular possibilities. His imag- inative conception of the world of ,Tlhnlltllflufi fairies gnomes‘ through-woodland gladn lsofanetqshfte beauty doubtless never presented on the emulators, pier the production of "A Mid- ~ summer Nishifs Dream" in which sellers for_ the past few months is . aims in her life. pears was drarrtatizlnc the tragedy of" The Great Economy Tea MORSE-‘S BLUENOSE TEA is a good flavoury package tea at the price of ordinary bulk teas. 0niy_23 cents per half pound paclragm-but thoroughly dependable, with the guarantee of Canada's oldest tea firm. m Dorothy Dix Letter Box Herefs That Old Controversy of Career or Motherhood Bobbing Up Again Dear Miss Dix-Why do you thin‘; 1t 1,; w terrible 1°,- g m“ to w‘ I Wflmlm w 8W9 up her career when he marries her? Certainly being a wife and mother and homemaker is a career in itself, and a man-size 10b if one is to be successful. I am a stenc- sfflpher and I would be glad enough to give up my career for a husband, but Perhaps 1 was born just “thirty years too late." LONESOME FOR. A HOME, Answer: You read me wrong, daughter, Never have I said it was terrible for a man to ask a woman to give up her career when she marries. On the contrary, 1 thin]; j; 1g just fiXwi/ll’ What a woman should do when aha marries. provided her career involves work that takes her outside oi her own home, and it i8 Whit she mun do if she is a uocessful wife and mother and home-maker, You cannot serve two masters. You cannot do two things at the same time. To have a successful career a woman must give ic it the best that is in her; her thoughts, her time, her energies, her ambitions. It must come before everything else with her. To be a successful wife and mother and home-maker, 5m; must give u, her task her thoughts, her time, her energies, her ambitions. It must come first with her. And no sophistries can reconcile the two Opposing The woman lecturer must be away from home much of the time So must the actress. So must the woman who follows any public careeoThe woman doctor must be at the beck of every paticn; Th, woman iflwyu- must be absorbed in her cases. ‘The business woman must havo 11er- thoughts on ner job and not give it one lobe of her brain while the bill. ance of her mind is‘ wondering if little Johnny's fever has gone down, or the cook has remembered ic order the roast for dinner. No man's idea of a home is a place run by servants and go whim g wifo comes too tired and nerve-exhausted after a hard day's work in an vfllca to even sneak amla-bly. He wants toso at night to a some that has been made by the loving bands of a wife and not by the hired hands of servants, and where a woman, whose object in life Lg to make mm 118D!!!- has catered to all his whims and tastes and loved doing it. And nobody on earth can take a mother's place to no; drudnm No. To End Cough, Mix This Recipe, at Home Bi‘ loving! NoCoohllql So Iasyl Here is the well known olri recipe which thousands at housewives have flound a. be a dependable meanusmof es to pre and com little, bugrit up?’ glgtrqualck relief. om a a ounce bottle of this inc a 16 ouncebottleandiillthebottiswith Trip, made with} cup p water, s a i dissolved. docking needed-it's easy. Thus snake 10 ounces of a very eiiic eat semedy,and ouietdourtinesasmuclr cough medic e or your money. It never ils and childre No n love its taste. ome mixture soothes the irri- tated throat membranes with surpris- ing ease. loosens the phlegm and easfis the soreness in a way that is sea y Pine: is a compound containing Non -way Pine in a concentrated ‘form, a well known and reliable soothing agent for winter coughs. Money refunded ifitdoeanotplesloyouineverr war. THE COOK'S . CORNER "Fashions -:- Literature fiflappcnmgs; f ofilso nay Tweedsmuir, Governor-General, has accepted the office of grand patronell es the Canadian National ' roppy cam- paign, it is announced in Ottawa. In so doing, Her Excellency follows the- precedence of the Countess of Bessboroug and Lady Willingdon. O O Scottish folks are predicting a lucky life for tho little Prince Di- wani of Kent. His first journey was taken upstairs to his Belgrave Square nursery on the third floor from the Duchess! room below on the second, (says a London writer.) Thereisanold NorthOoun y sup- erstition that this brings good luck to mother and child in years. I remember hearing that the Countess of Btrathmere insisted on the baby Princess Margaret and her daughter, the Duchess of York. going up a few stairs when her Royal Highness first left her mom at Glamis Castle after the little‘ Princess's birth. Mrs. P. N. Gullison entertained very delightfully ‘Thursday after- noon at her home in "The Hill" apartments, Euston street, in honor of Mrs. Pierce who with Dr. Pierce have returned to their native pro- vince irom Morgantown. West Vir- CHOCDLATE DROP 000K155 2 squares chocolate, melted ‘A cup butter 1 cup brown sugar 1 egg 1% cups flour t6 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon baking powder ‘A cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup chopped nuts Method: Cream buter and sugar. add melted chocolate. Add well beaten egg. Add sifted dry ingre- dients alternately with the milk. Add vanilla and lastly the nuts. Drop from a teaspoon onto a greas- ed cookie sheet and bake 15-30 minutes in a hot (400 degrees F.) oven. OOCOANUT PUFFS 2 cups shredded cocoanut l cup icing sugar 2 tablespoons flour 2 egg whites . Method: Mix the cocoanut, icing sugar and dour thoroughly together. Beat egg whites until very stiff and dry, and gradually add oocoanut mixture. Stir wall and drop by small spoonfuls on buttered paper. Bake in a moderate (375 degrees F.) oven until firm. Do not try to 1e- mcve from paper until cold. REFRIGERATOR COOKIE 2 cups brown sugar, ti cup short.- ening, 2 eggs, i teaspoon salt, 4 cups flour, l teaspoon ‘ Jrr, l teaspoon soda. u teaspoon cream of tartar- Method-Cream sugar and short- ening, add well-beaten eggs. Sift flour with soda, salt (if unsalted shortening is used). cinnamon and body but a mother has the infinite ti , th d with a little child and guide its feet 11111120 (atrllrierigni; figuiémmm‘ w dell That it is a great sacriilco for the woman who has some especm 1,31. ant for the career she has espoused and for which she has spent years and years in preparation, togive it up when she marries, no one will deny. That many women are forced to keep on with their work after mar. riage becaiése of iilnangial necgsisity is also true, but the fact remains that careers an marr age o no fo ma , d tha m ' undertakes both mus between trio §..%1§’.° n an t e womm WM O O O O O O Dear Miss Dix-My husband and I have had ton your g 10,-; u; MPPIHQB! 1108801181‘. the only shadow on our sunshine tom; tlfo fir; that we had no en. Now comes the catastrophe. While away from home and while intoxicated, my husband was unfaithful to me and, mo girl he was with is soon to be a mother. I have seen her. She is only 20 years old and I am positive she is a good girl and is the victim of just a, moment of madness. She is willing to give us the child. but even though I would love it I could not bear the strain. I am divorcing my husband so that no elm rectify-his wrong, but he is franctic for he still adores me. 1 gm crushed broken, but am doing what I think to be the right thing for u; n11, 1n m5 eyes of God she is more his wife than I am because I have born; mm no children. What do you say? A mMqq-IQ wiuvu Answer: I do not presume to speak for God, but I cannot think that, Almighty Wisdom sees something more sacred in the chance relationship of a drunken man and woman than there is in the pure, deep love oi a hus- band and wife that has lasted for ten years. ‘Ihero is a spiritual bond between a man and a woman who have lived long together that mm]; them to each other far more anduringiy than any tie of the flesh. It is mutual affection. ‘ "dine. sympathy and companionship um make a husband and wife one. Not children. - I think you have lost your sense of proportion and m“ yqu u, mg. ing a maudlinly sentimental view of this unhappy situation. Moreover, "l6 WHY You are trying to settle it sounds like an old-fashioned melodrama instead of modern sanity. Try to look at the “ dlspassionstely and you will see that you are making a bad matter worse by the way you are dealing with it. - For you are dooming three people to lifelong misery if you force your husband w many this sin with whom he has not even acqualntaucashlp. He will hate her as the price he has to pay for his wrong-doing, and in his chagrin over the mess he has mada of his life and his despair at 105- ing you he will probably go to pieces and sink into the gutter. The girl will be miserable because no woman is more wretched than the unwanted wife. And your own life will be blasted. The sensible thing for you to d ill b to f h his sin, which, after all, was one of) 51S holly anlimrirht dfutfhe airld committed when he was stupeficd by drink. You want a child, so adopt the baby, who is the real victim in this‘ tragedy, and give it a name and a home and a place in society. Taking the child will also mks 1|; sure;- for the girl to come back, and perhaps marry some man who mu 19v; My and want her and with whom she will be hall}!!- W n. vgillbtialke a broad mind and a great heart“ w enable you w do in“, nae u rouuoo m1 ‘ n] ~ _ self hdppiness um wiyiihzivrorvtliszfiigé o y m m’ ma‘ bu“ m W" _ You may think that you can l nu _ minder of your husband's unfaithfhelllgssfblitfiyeruc will 21;: {B} {fig A baby's hands work miracles and you will soon love it as if it were your very own. . O O O O O O Dear Miss Dim-How much mon t insists that $35 a week is enough, ha’; gfiyilh? ‘Eights modern girl is not foolish enough tc believe that love alone can sumoo m“ Mimi home every day, economising, counting every penny magi 1w Monmou- Hvv mum do you think is trio minimum on which it u safe for a young couple to marry? , “an! Answer . That- depends lliogetner on what they are accustomed to having What would seem riches to one would be Blinding poverty a» anon-m, 1 lsrwwlthvwthatsmsrrhseisverv likelytcgooatberocbifayoung couple must deny themselves even the common comforts of life. And there are always the unexpected expenses, such as slob!!! for which one must provide. But you don't need riches. I would sa that O0 a week would be a very moderate allowance on which m “m “gym; works of Felix Mendelssohn. enteen years old, Tm; comm-o u - than in any previous picture, the ~Iumpean .¢M4 mucosa-marinate" hnasmuuannuswlasrm l‘ Mendelssohn composed his over- "most original u; p; h1g4“, m4 Midnuomer nisbvs meefui beauty sad fl ~h IQoIsnbswssesvn-nselirharessesslsst, ’ i cream of tartar. Mix well and form into rolls 1 inch in diameter. Let stand in refrigerator several hours or overnight. Slice thin and bake about 10 minutes in a hot (400 deg. F.) oven. These can be sliced and baked as desired, or this can be done in one operation. If stored in a stone jar, they will in a few days become soft and waxy. SOUR CREAM CAKE 1 BEE 1 cup thick, sour cream l teaspoon vanilla 1 teaspoon nutmeg l teaspoon soda Put all ingredients together into a bowl and beat vigorously for live minutes. This beating must not be siighted or the cake will be coarse- grained. Pour into a pan that has been lined with waxed paper. and bake for 30 minutes in a moderate (350 degrees 1".) oven. n1 rsx voun no on nnsr, mourn Before You Give Your Child on Unknown Remedy to Toke E d . thi ‘ , ih talrflhe iragvicgllaf unqua illednpgrsoenr: —instead of their doctore’-—on remedies for their children. If ti: knew what the scientists know, ey would never take this chance. Doctors Say rnmars’ ‘ For Your Child O grrudzlficmgéu - the safe remedy your slavish‘ child AbolnTablotFcraas tiéihwti‘ an ginia, to take up their residence in Charlottetown. During the after- noon the rooms, gay with bright lights and exquisitely ‘ ’ chry- sa ‘hemums were pleasantly crowd- ed, the guests being ushered in by Mrs. Walter Wilson. Receiving with Mrs. Gulllson and Mrs. Pierce, who was very cordially welcomed, was Mrs. Pieroe's mother, Mrs. Austin Judson, Mrs. Ruth Simpson and Mrs. Gay Judson presided over the dainty tea table and were assisted in dispensing hospitality by Min Helen Judson, Mrs. Ivan Horn. Mrs. George Johnston. Mrs. Walter Heartz, Mrs. Wendal Mutch. O O O Mrs. A. E. Morrison was hostess‘ for the Thirrsday afternoon Bridge Club this week. O O O Ilurewelis were said this week to Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Grady who left Thursday to spend the winter in St. Petersburg, Florida. O O O Mrs. George J. Rogers and child- ren and Mrs. (D11) Seaman and son motored over to Amherst for the Horse Show. O O O Mrs. J. J. ‘Pralnor was hostess Thursday evening at a four table Here ls the first picture taken of the baby of the Duke and Duchess HEFETFLW"- .-'*'"I "m For wear in school. hcre is a do- lightful style in checked woolen. If, however. it is not school weer which is required. other materials will render the model suitable for various occasions. For instance, velveteen or novelty crepe silks would be most attractive for it. Washing materials arc lovely too, as dark ground cottons, “ prints in rayops, wool chaills prints, a c. ltlsaeeasyasoanbetomake this smart little dress, that's so practical and so different. Style No. i502 is designed for sisal B, i0, 12 and 14 years. Bile I requires 2% yards of 39-inch material with '6 yard of 35-inch contrasting. Price of PATTERN 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. - _ No- 592- s!” nueeuunnusun » nun-noun" . .o.. nuances...” v OOOIOOOOOO'lOlee‘sos-IOOIOOOOOOOIOII ieolalCOOOI'IoOlaeOeaOOOuOIIoaao use wife of the bridge very pleasantly god for her friends at her horns ej Prince Street. ' , e e e m. and like. .7. L. Ourrsn are spending the week-end in Truro the guest of 1'08; (PL) Fulton. m. and Mrs. B. Roy Holman, the Mislm Horne and Mrs. I. J. You motmod over to Monctcn Tumday on a brie! holiday. ' ‘ Ohurah tel-l. salu- card parties and hospital chain bridges and toss continue with unabated 7M1 hoetessesfindlngllttle time just now for private entertainment. O O Mrs. J. C. Montgomery was host. ess at five tables 0f bridge at her Rose putty nits apartment on Thursday cvsning in honor of her friends, _._..._ The decision of the Duke of Glou- cester and hLs future Duchess not to acquires Ilondon residence at presents-His Rnyal Hlshness will be at the staff College at Camber- ley-means that they will stay at Buckingham Palace when in town This is an interesting departum from precedent, and some little re- arrangement of the present suite! at the Yalaoe will be necessary. The Duke of Glouoesteru present apart- ments will have one or two adjoin- ing rooms added. ‘These will be re- decorated and much of the furni- ture now in them will be removed in order to make room for many of the pieces that His Royal High- ness has collected. AMorningSmllc JUST WOB-l I1‘ OFF He was a braldman on a railroad in the far west. who yam aso had lost the index finger‘ on his right hand. One day a lady 9055611881‘. who had been much interested in the wonderful works of nature the brakeman had pointed Out t0 h" along the road, noticed the stub ringer. When the conductor came through the car she said to him: “Excuse me, sir, but can you tell me how tho brakernan lost his fore finger? He seemsto be such an ae- cornmodating fellow." “Yes, mum, that's just it- He is so accommodating that he wore that linger off pointing out the scenery along the line." said the conductor. by his nurse from Belgrave Saul" t0 Buckingham Palace for an alrinl SMART aromas FOR THE HOME onsssluaxgg t-vlaayrrrmz‘ ‘ anti