w :1‘ cl; 0 l r L11 :l ~Q."U' J"‘-A4>q7-'IJO’” l r 4.111122%? in A ix n. p1 h. ‘i; F-FESPUFII MEI-fl l VAGI‘. mu 1 1 1 1:» {- _ r JAN umgwso. 1‘ "iII/omanb Realm -:- Socia A Li; vvwu vvvv 4‘v through his left eve or through his right eye. 'I‘1-ii1lii.o11 lllwkl}: has called for Kings iiiid Queens to alternate their proiili-s ull 51.111111.» and wins. ‘Phat ruli- held fut un- til the flCfflzmiUll n1 Edwtirri \'III. Ho liked his 11-11 profile betir-r than the right. 0O lii- tin-ed loll. evczi though Georgi: V tact-d lclt. they should hair: Gci-iui- VI far- ing left, on the 111.1113" that lid- warii sho-llri 11.1w I". or win-lint‘ Lit-inc»- ed lr-it. ln the var o1 stamps Lin-re are solxi griuiitrls for B1511- ment Fillllsi‘ \\i:_\, but with b01115 Hun are complzralions bin-muse Edzvard VIII ruins ire-re dc-igned tracing ll‘il.l 1111'. new-r issttcd. O I I I O11 \\'1-<l1-.1-s1l=.1y' afternoon Hujniiuiiil, unt- of tin- lln. H. l). lid; .o11ii. l1=:1.1' of Si. Poul.» Church, \\n.~. 11'. litnnc to the lactic-s Di the conpi-i-gution iit.d 11.111 rc- i- -n1,' with hi-r Mr.»- Cliilespie, .1.‘ Ili-v. H. ‘gt: (l :- who 111-111; ciirii: ‘.1 .. w-h iintl s11: (111-iv.- at 1 1' llnvli-i-s sliuiii-d . 11'. 111.11- W l-T hIdvflV 1-11- u (ltulgitllill lllilird ‘11'll'&l('l1\'t‘ Biighlon . it)’ 6‘\.'f‘ll:ll,'. U ~ v .\l:'-'. a =1 brztige-luiii-lir-iiii at tnc C1111- Hill-t’! Notional l-lotr-i 'l‘l1'1r.-.<lay 111 11.11".) 11:1 Yi-o enli-rbiined ll"'\l' n1 .\lis Alr-saiioii‘ l‘ItlF. Ailliur Allen Llflli Home n1 Sitin- 12-1 I O O I lord and Lady Baden-Powell and hi.» l-lcullii-r Badeii-Piiivell, sailed on January 8 lroui Eingiund in the liner Malina iur India. O l a I Mrs J. S. Li-tlivrll left yii-sirrda_v' by 1 i- 111i a short visit lu ii1~r old 11111111.- 111 Uttiitvii, . . 1. 1 hiss. C. ll. Bee-r was hostess zit 1 seizis of illxigr 1i.i1|.i-- tins uiek (‘llbtfdllllillg 111. 111 r 11111-111 11111111- ‘.177 Ki-ixt Strut-t <i1\_\\'1.-ii1:1-_.tliiy‘ 11nd Thursduv afternoon.» and oii 'l‘hur.s- day Plltfllllg 0 0 a c ‘Ii-we 111.1111. <o11.~.i-i-viiii'.e 1111.- hniuv 11e-11-1.1ii.11 lilt‘ iiiixv blui- 511.‘. -~\\ii; hi- .1» puptlliu‘ a. cvi-r 1111-11 Spring 11111.. "riiiind litnugh lnuiiv uunii-ii 111i: golill: 1o sti-p out ln 1111- liiiisti-i" piirilrii- 1.1111 111 s111-ll- 311111111; llflllil 11nd 1111:1111 piuld... o . - - Alix-i. Artliiir 11111-11 oi nuuumcr- szdi- i.< visi-iiig 111 1111- ('.. 1111- fillkfst 11f Air... Nliiiiiixit AhKaizii-wn, unit- liin 51111-1. U I I I Lorin). W1 wk. L‘ liVl-t-ks ii-lt Mrs. f on Thursday tiilcrnuun. - . u a Yesterday afternoon Mrs. George H. Bunralii was hosziss at a much residence rnjOyEd bridge at her 139 Rochiord Street. sun: The infant clinic-liter born to the T o | Duchc L1 of Kent on Christmas Day ‘ r will be chrLsti-ncd at Buukuisham =Palace 111 the si-cond trot-k at’ Feb- lruarv, ll. has v_1-_;rii1n 1111- RHLT Jordan, 1 1111- (‘llxlllfll of ' 11111111 ed. O O I O Mrs. J. I-libber! lloivatt, 45 Am- bilt-b Stri-i-l, was iiinong the pop- ular hostesses eiitortamznt at bridge for Iilfllltl.) 111st evening I Mr. 111111 1111s. F. G. Spencer, of 15.11111 J1~...11, 11.: lizi-sday for Day- 1io1ii1, Florida, w spend the re- 111i1.i1<lci' of the waiter, t I i O i 'I'l1i1 111.1111‘ lrii-nds of Miss Sic-um who is llallillg iltl‘ sister, Mrs. 11.1111’ Lliiniu wi.l regret to li-arn of iii-r llfuatiilt indisposition. - . . - Mrs. \V:1It1.-r Callback, Summer- siiiu liiiclc u pretty four lublc bridge at 111-r liouii- on Wcdniuday‘ ulter- 11111111 1111.11 Mrs. Sherman Mc- .~. -.j.' \\i.-11 111st prize and ll/Irs. Liollliiril Baht-r siiond. . 1 - . Airs. A. S. .\Iut'Kfly, one of Si1111- 111\-rs1il1.*;~. popular hostesses e11- u-rtiiincd on two occasions this act-k at the tea hour. - - - - airs. H. G. lvluilart of Summer- s:rii>, gau- a verg; nice bridge party 111g which was much enjoyed. O O I 0 Mrs. J. J. MCKIIlIIOlI and ‘her di-lillillkl‘. Mrs. Borden, are leaving this morning 0n a visit to Boston and other. American cities, re- turning inter Lo Montreal. n O I - Lieutenant-Governor MacLai-en 1-11t1.-i1.ii11id 11L lllilCilLUll at Govern- |lif:llL llou.~.c ‘Tuesday 111 honor of his guest, Mr. George de Vvarfaz, ltiijl1d.(Z1tlOl' o1 the clltFllJS ln the New lifllllrllVildii and Prince Eduard Iriklllfl ii-gioiiiil Klffllllfl, festival. The 1111111- 1111-. centred with spring flow. 1-1‘ iirriiiigcii in a silver bowl, and IU‘.l'l'.\ \'\t‘l't‘ laid fur l0. The guest.» ‘acre 1\.i'. di- Wziriiiz, Colonel H, C. Osbiii-iiv, Ottawa, Brigiidicr and Airs. L. F. Page, Mayor 311d Mrs, D. l.. MtlcLarc-n, Miss Patricia Page, Aft-s Ji-iiii lvfcAi-‘ily- and Miss Mar- 1.,{il't.'L.\/If|(l.&ll'(‘ll. His Honor e11- ltzflilillfld also at dinner at Gov- i-riiiiit-iit I-liitt-c, Monday evening in 11111101" 01 his guest, when covers were 1.1111 for eight. The table had 1111‘ iiilorinnl-iit spring daffodils, 111.0.» mid niiri-issi. The gucsts were .‘\'lr. de Wariaz. Colonel Osborne, Mii1<ir 11nd Mrs, John P. Simon, ltiargiirl-t MiicLarcn, Mr. 011.11 s L. Jtlli-illls‘. Charlottetown, 11nd Lieiltenzint-Coinmandcr Paul B. Cross, A.l).C. DAFFODILS T Mbvlalr Needle-art ON CURTAINS OOAPPLIQUE Deugn No. 249 Yellow daffodils with 1111-1-11 lr-itvcs 31111111111011 on slicer scrim, net. voila or muslin curtains bflllflr. an air of kitchen. No honic "workshop" is tains that have bren rlz-liuhtfully spring 71nd fresh sunlight. into the quite complete, nowadays, u-llliciit cur- rlecked with hand embroidery. This dcsign is also ‘mi-iv L11- nprons. bedroom or bathroom curtains; runners, cushions, mwcls. l 1r- cutting parcm Send 20 C011’: Guardian Nordic-work Di-pnrtmcnt. To The Charlotte-town Guardian Nr-vdlowork Dr-pt. DI-TRNIN N0. 249 rlrv tings ctc., etc. ‘The pflttcrn contains -111111u1- motifs, and fL-Ffiillillilli! instrilctions. .. .»1:i1n11s or coin tCOlH prclerrcdi to The Charlottetown detail chart, ~,un¢____._ -...__._.__.___-______-— Street AIIIIITW< - - - _ _ _ _ _.. IJIty----_ -.___.___-_p|-gv|n“.____...__- been disclosed. The iyunng Pflllfflfia Will be sprinkled the , ‘the. name the i.n-. 1.. io tuinr 1111.. not been 1111-‘ i at 111-r home last. Saturday evalh‘ i 1 l and Pei-seal}: -."-'Fas'hions -'-'Lil‘¢rdfl1r ‘g’... 000.0100 ‘,7 vv ‘ _-c=“‘ HAPPENINGS 0F THE - .- - f1 foday‘: Short W0ve C f WEEK f, W“ PM"- c“ i; tfl Q; h Inn-l lamb! l, The General Post Office 111111 ' ' ° ' Royal Mint have a puzzle -u'he- Mrs. John Hcnme arranged a _, rsh d H ther George VI will look at tne pretty three table bridge at_ ha!’ SATURDAY, JANUARY 30 P1 e a~ world from stamps and coins Connaught Apartments for friends BOSTON 3 p nn-llfuropeau Pmt Box. W1- XAL. 35.6 m.. Il-N 1119i- GENEVA 5:30 p.m.-News irom the uague o! Nations Headquarters. BBL, 312 m» 9.65 mfg- LONDON 6180 p.m.-Scenes from “Charles the K1111,’ a play by Maurice Col- boume. GSD. 25 5 m.. 11,75 meg-i GSC, 31.3 m., 9.58 meg; GSB, 31.5 meg. BERLIN ‘rlilrd Reich. DJD, 25.4 n1., 11.77 meg. PARIS 8:15 p.m.-—Tlieatrical Broadcast- TPA-i. $3.6 m.. 11.72 mes. - LONDON 9 p m —'I‘lir G30, 81.3 In-.9.58111vg'.; GSBJILS m., 9.51 meg. OTTAWA 11 pm -'I‘he Nnthern Mes»: engewpersonal meseages m icsl dents in the far Northern outposts ‘of Canada. CJRO, 48.7 n1., 6.15 meg; CJX. 25.6 m., 11.72 met; PITISHIJIIGII 12 midutght-aldecsages to the Far North. W8X.K, 48.8 m., 6 l4 "lei SUNDAY1 JANFAIIY 3i BUDAPEST‘ l0 fl.lll~ (}_vp.-_\' Band; Me=sages to I-Iiingiiriiins Abroad; Musical program. HAS-ii. 19.5 111., 15 87 meg. BERLIN 11:10 a.m.—S,\n1plionic Concert. DJD, 25 4 111.. 11.77 mfg PAPIS 1 p.m.-C.'1i1ccrt. m., 11.88 mcE: ROME 31,5 p m _ van”, Prngflm foam airy husband as long as she kept murlnuring 'how wontierlill: ' .» ltalan stations 2R0. 31.1 m , 963 mcg. , aosrorv l 6 p.m. -— The World's Week. l Volney D Hiird. WlXAL, 49.6 m.,; 6.04 meg. MOSCOW '7 p m.—A Literary Evening in a Workers‘ Club RAN, Ill 2 m., 9.6 meg. LONDON 1 7:20 p.m.-A Ballad Concert.‘ Al‘oe Lilley (Scprencl and Ema-st Iiargrreaves (Tenor). GSD, 25 5 11.75 meg; GWJ, 31.3 m. n1eg.; GSB, 3t 5 1n.. 9.51 mes. 1 HALIFAX 1 I0 p.in —Allanlic Zvlccturne. CJ- R-O. 48.7111 $6.15 meg; CJRX, 25 6 m., 11.72 meg. LONDON 10:05 Talks b1‘. re, s. English 11801716. GSD. 25 5 111.. 11.75 lIlET-I 05C, 313 m., 17.58 meg,‘ GSB, 31.5 m , 9.51 meg. Bread Baking; Made Easy KNEADING AND OVERNIGHT SETTING A THING OF TIIE PAST No longer is it necessary to knead the dough or set the siponge over- night when making bread or rolls. Because The Quaker‘ Oats Company have perfected a method that, when usad With Quaker Flour. climates this old fashioned way of baking. thus sav-fng hours and hours of needless labor. This method is also most econom- ical as it prevents expensive and ex- asperatlng baking failures. An illus- trated booklet has been prepared. "The Quaker Method of Easy Bread Baking which explains in de- tail tlrs time and money saving method of baking bread and rolls. You can get a copy of this booklet free by simply writing to The Quaker Oats Company, Saskatoon, Sask. FARM wane Pond-van CONCORD. Me. Jim. 28—(CPl-— Deon Arthur L. Dizeriilg of the college of agriculture has announ- ced the University of Maine's an- nual farm and home week program would start Mar. 29. Rural leaders will join with college professors and state agricultural officials to ex- ’ ll and 9. 7:30 p m —Four Yeais of the. BBC, Dance Or-I‘ chestra. GSD. 25.5 n1.,l1'75 mcg.:. 1 band does not want i111 into lectual a qual nor a wife with any lIldlVl— q-PA__3‘ 25,2 and reverence at his every proniinciiinicnto. Dorothy Dix ‘s Letter Box The Woman Who is Intellectual and Accom- to Face Many Problems in Holding the AffecF-"s of Her Husband “ Dear Mlu Dix-I have been married twelve you: and have two boyi- I am well educated, can cook, sew, do housework, am a good musician and an artist. I seem w please evcrybod except my husband. . ~ although I spend my life try 3 to cone-late him- He finds fault with everything I do from the p016 luseinflshillmupaxiddflvlw Hcdtiyilama failure as a wife and the mason iu-bucuuu I don't yes-yea him and agree m everything he iullqi about 0r reads about. trained t0 stand morally, and who tum into a Olillllng vluel husband of mine expects. He on her ovm feet, mentally and Yet this la what this; thinks 1 should agree I think even when he asks my Opinion. How can 1 guess a1 Wnat he ' Willi-Y "l9 l0 Ely? I can't even lie properly. 1 8m ffld 11D. but am w" tng to give l1. one more trial. (Jan you please mqlgg a donation? n M Q __._____._.. Answer: Banal-twang? ‘who. Having been a sturdy oak , - 1 l6‘ su e1 y ca ed upon totransfer herself into a clinging vine l; ‘lcflrwlnly 111 a hot spot. For 1t is easier for the leopard to change its 19°15 than it is for ilie woman who has made her own way in the world, .' who has been free and independent and who has mum 011181;,- w moon“, ‘a rubber-stamp wife who asks husband what, he think; 5116 {lungs and whether she may go to see llfamma today, and will he please g1", f,“ a i dime for carfare. herself upon which other: Yet this is one of tlie problems that multitudes o; modgm women "We w We. and ltmakes us wonder what is 201111; to be the outcome; whether men are gUllig to abandon the clinging vine as the ideal Lype oi are going to throw u itheii- "0115 a more on the inascilline breast. l J “d flop once ____..._. The situation is lull of portcliLs of is the modern girl, duality of her own. He wants a salve-spreader, an incense-burner a humble dtsclplc who will look ur to him as an oracle and gasp with diva A famous novelist said not long ago that any wife could get along with v 1 to even/- tuna he said and did. and 1o a large extent. this 1e true. No mgttgr how much men deny ll. wliat they want from their vrives is actuation. They Want agreement. They want 1o be yes-ycssed. They want their wivea to depend anthem, to ask their advice, to be clinging vines instead of strong, sturdy individuals who know just as much as they do and have Just as good Judgment. --. The reason so many men marry feminine £0015 is because they are trying to get wives ivho arc their mental interiors. I once heard a, very How can a. woman who has been i has managed an office for years 5 9011989» oll-wrd- 15 i" mrw ‘mmmes 1 -vvvv— r.- ovnwwnw BOOK$JARTI MUSIC Q 1.8.1,) ooao-owo-o-owoow ....3 pear-e edited by Professor Georgi: Lyman Klttredge of Harvard BP- pgafed lint yea: Just at the I110- ment that Professor Kim-edge re- tired from teachinl. and when Harvard was celebrating her three hundredth anniversary. The book has 1,561 pages and l5 shaped like the original quart-v editions of Shakespeare's llnsle- playg, All the plays including "Phi? Two Noble Rmsman" and all the poems, are in this volume. . "The New Temple BMRWPWW" ‘ edited by M. R. Ridley, of Balliol, Mm introduction, notes and 1105-. ntry to each play by the editor, and g wjm extract; from BRIEF)’ End dramatic criticism. 1m concluding volume 1s calls-ti Uwuuun ghalgespeare! aflomment- 1 dry" and Professor William Lyon‘ Phelps describes it as u. marvel all condensation — ‘K-WB h"? he" not only a history and a biography but a critical work on 811111159953"- much of which is n01; only penetrat- ing but chatter-zinc. . , -—-.- Pmfewor Phelps in recent artlclcs on the two Hamlets that have been playing in New York this season‘ says of Mr. Gieigudb Deffflfmalwllil "....Let it be said at once that. his acting juvtifled his reputation.‘ ire looked like Hamlet in age will 1n face and figure.... The only adverse criticism I would make 011 My, Qiaigucl‘; acting is that after he had made the speech to the; players, in which Shakespeare show- ed plainly his abhorrfltlfie 0f 751W, he did actually and more than once, mm; himself. Lillian Gish was the best Ophelia I ever new. It l5 a thankless part. but she made 01¢, magi, o; 11,,“ r have seen Hamlet on the Stage Dlayed by Edwin, 31mm, I}. S. Willard. Wilson; gqrygtt, rvirbes Robertson. Walterl mmpqen. E- n. soiliei-n. Jnlull Barrymore, George O. Miln. also by‘ a Frenchman in Purl-l Md by 11 German in Munich. Now I am awaiting the appearance of Leslie Howard." The Glelgud production of“Ham- let." now holds the record continu- on his tiptoes He wan-ed a So long, then, as men have this heail-of-the-house and superiority-to- women conipiex, wnar. are Lne wives who are clever themselves going m d0 IMO-ll it‘! bhlmd up wr their rich-s i111 lllQlVIdL!‘ '11-.» Try to educate tiieii- iiusbunus up i0 a new stimuaid for uuvbs! 11, can be flung, 11, jg 59mg done. And perhaps our gmat-great-great granddaughters may have hlll- IJHIILLS who will regard 111L111 as equals and not expect to be kowwwed to. but that g ad day 15 a long time on". The caste-t way is the old ilnmenlorial way o! the wife who never lets her httsband find our. 110w smart she is; who asks his HOW-e and wen goes along and does the way she had determined to do anyway, and who never wcaries in exclaiming: "How wonderful!” 8 8 l >1 $ t Dear Dorothy Dix-I, a divorcee, have read your advice to W0men m 100K DQ111111 l-llBy leave tlicir illllibflllf-Ifi and not 1o leap from the frying pan into tlic lire, but l misc my voice loutny to those wives who are miserably gel. itivorces before it. is too late for peace and happiness. I-Iciii" mo, you poor creatures. 1f your skirts are vzoun your standing in a community Mil. not suiier from a divorce, You will also find to your surprise that. a single uioinon is moicm demand than p, wretched wife. Don't be stupid or cruel enough, if you have children, 1.0 think any kind of a father is better than none. ‘rhere is nothing so harmful 1b a child as a bad parent. Nothing so 500d for a cnild as a happy, pc-actlul hbine. bout be utraid to gnc up your caviar c.1111 arti- chokes 1f you have to. You don't know hcw gcou plain bread and butter tastes if you are happy. so I say to you w.c.ci1c1.i wivcs who have truly lived up v0 your niariuiigc vows: 1.1681) 1,0 safety and iiappuiessl A DIVORCEE. Answer: No one will deny that there are many cases in which divorce is a sur- geons 1111.111 that cuts away the cancer that is eating out a. woman's 1110. but no one would be foolish enough no contend that every little pimple or abrasion on the skin required a. IIIDJOI‘ ODCYBHDH, or that an arm 511011141 be amputated because of a pin prick on the finger. And that is lust about what happens in the xreat majority of divorce cases. Bo many wlvcs get. tired of their husbands or get bored with them. They sigh for their lost freedom and imagine if they were divorced thfly would somehow get buck tliclr girlhood and be attractive to men and nwkc a better second marriage. Orthay think that they "J1 ha" "W" cake and c-at it too by forcing their husbands to give them enough alimony to live on, yet not be bothered with having a man about the l-Ol-Be- 8° they make no effort to get along with their husbands or placate them, and they make mountains out of mole hills of every fault. It is these wives, and they make up the great. majority of dlvorcees. who would be well advised to stop, look and listen and then g0 back home from the lawyer's office before thallium 111W dllmmm 1‘ B- Wwm“ h“ come to lii-itc her husband, or if he is a brute who abuses liar, she in 1n- deed happier without him even though she has nothing but. braid Ind peace. But divorce is no panacea for jealulll)’. n01‘ 1°!‘ 5 m1"- hn". m" Im- many of the sorrows b woman has to bear whose marriage r1006 I10!- eouie up lo her ideals. And, when such c. woman Walks up b6!‘ “WW often her last e state is worse than her first. DOR-UTHY DIX- vfrllaln nerves-t methods‘ in farming. via)“ bk“ GETTING 7 A iooni 1 YOUR BABY must "get a tooth". Bu! he need not get a fever with it. If Baby's mother is wise hc won‘t. Here is what one wise mother, Mrs. B-—-, of Consccon, has to say. "We iiavc not lost one night's rut through irething as I always use m" old stand- by, Baby's Own Tablets. ‘flicy are worth their wcighLin gold." And hits. I"——, (II Glcnalmond, Qua, says: “My baby has five teeth and has ncvcr IIPNI sick since his birth, thanks to Baby's Own Tablets." Give those safe, little tablets at the first sign of Icvcr. Sivrcl-tnsfiniz, casy in take, prompt in their artlnn and can he given to the most delicate baby. Analyst's ccrtli‘. .111! on every package. Equally effective in other of Baby's ailments. Constipation, Simple Fever, Diarrhoea, Upset Stomach, Colic, Simple Croup and Fn-tfulni-ss all re- spond promptly to Baby's Own Tablets. Z5 cents a hnx. Your money bark from your druggist if mulu don't utbfy you. 1syn1p,1-Icup water, Lteaspoon m: cooxs l CORNER ___ uomssua oooiuas QIQUmNII)—EVOW time I 100k It i .-____ you, Mrs. Patrick. I 1:01 I'm ddlll 1.4 mp gym-mung, 1-4 cup brown the Govemment out of the enter- sugar, l-4 cup molasses. 1 088- W811 talnmfilt- 7-"- beaten, 1-2 teat-POOH salt. 1 W1- bpoon ground ginger, l-2 wast-loll" ground nutmeg. 2 i-2 cups flow 2 I-2 teaspoons baking powdvl‘. 1-4 cup milk. Method: Crcvn ahortcnlng and gugur, add molasses 1nd Q83. 8.11. ' dry ingredients and add altei-natcly with the milk. Mixture should be soft dough. Puwdo not roll-to - bnc-half inch thiolmess and out; with a round cutter dipped in flour. - Place on a slightly greased baking, sheet and bake in a. slow oven,‘ 325 doc. F. A few raisins may bc - stuck in the top if desired. TAFFY APIWES AMomingsmill oonscuimca In‘ WORK. (concludlnc an v5”, but, you mgllali no blow.‘ exclaimed an American at a 14m- ilon performance of "Rmnec and Julllat." "f gun; I saw thin iden- tlcal time on of sub-stint 1n New York wall ovu- um your: 1110-" buttm, 1-2 teaspoon lemon extract. Method: Put a sharp stick 4 to 5 inches long in the centre oi each washed apple. Oook together the sugar, syrup and water until a lit- tle dropped in cold v-atcr lawns a. ffrm ball, or 200 deg F. Remove from the heat. add bum: and ex- tract and dip nipples into the syrup while lt is piping hot. Ttltn the apples until they are well coated. then place on waxed paper or a 4 m 6 firm red apples, 2 cups ' brown sugar. 1-2 teaspoon corn oua run of that play 1n New York, and Mr. Gielgud himself 1s supreme in the number of consecutive per- formances as Hamlet. or unite Howard's Hamlet, Pro- fessor Phelps writes- "John Gielgudb impersonation of the melancholy prince is more im- preailve than that by Leslie How- ard, but the Leslie Howard produc- tion. taken as a whole, is more 1m- preesiva than the other. The scenic effects are superb; and it is just possible that i1 they had been less superb, Mr. Howard's Hamlet might have been more individually effec- tive. He is so slight in physical proportions, his voice is so quiet and even thin in quality, his long years of under-acting (so effective in drawing room comedies’) all tend to self-effacement, so that his prince does not dominate the stage. He is however, always interesting and in the conservation scenes with Horatio, with Rosancrantl and Guildenstem, with the play- cra, he ls perfect... Modem stage productions, with improved socnory, lighting, etc, are so far superior to those of ten or fifteen years ago that spectators who have not seen Shakespeare on the contemporary stage have little conception of how magnificently his plays can be givenw. In these two productions of Hunlet it is immensley inter- esting and profitable to compare not only the two Hamlets, but the two yoloniuses, Ophelies, Heretics, and even the two Osrics And now I am prepared to see Walter Huston as Othello," Miss Patricia Bradley. writer for “5tage" is far less appreciative of Mr. Howard's Hamlet than i: Pro- fessor Phelps- ".... It was un- fortunate that Mr. Howard was forced to choose i936 as the year in which he brought Hamlet to Broadway. comparison was inevit- able, and Mr. Howard suffered dis- mally. The truth is that. Mr. Howard was not used to the exacting pace of a classical drama, having been all his life a matinee idol; and his Hamlet is aimed whether IIIIAXXIIOD- ally or not at the matrona in the orchestra. That is not to may that Mr. Howard does not rend his lines with thought and polish; it is merely to say that he does not add anything to the interpretation of this role that 1i so tradition cram- med." ‘ But on the play "St. Helena" by R. C. Shot-rift (author of Journey's End") and Jeanne do Oiualls they apparently agree. Miss Bradley says of ib-"An un- usual vivid. moving. psychological story of the lute, years of u. great man, it still reirlalrm dull, u dull as Napoleon's last years on 5t. Helena must have‘. been for the Little Corporal. but it is still the best of all as far as I am concern- 0d. topping even was Hayes’: Victoria." (_(_':on__r_111ed on Page 14) A ompvulume Edith!!! OI m9, complete works of William Shakes- 1 1 HER AC TEARS AND LAUGHTEII not feel? Bwggse we laugh, you say we cow‘ W110 Laugh the deeper, feel the deeper. to. - What use 1- 7 An we“ a balm to heal ‘l; Alwyn, , Tears am me gentle dew. l l o; ,,we¢i, sc11-,1.ty; taught»: is the song 1 Of those who lace the film. W319 aid and save. Tears for the weaklind- lwlhifll‘ 1°!‘ tho stwna: I Tenn for the coward. l-llllhlfl‘ for , thn brave: 5y Arthur Gultorn-ian 331.11 advice rwver #110115- A man with a long head is worth two with a long time. ‘ “guy g Mute" child ‘IWQI all, but its parents w“ PW‘- , 1 The pedestrian has the right-u.- way as long as he is able to dodxfi. Ask some friend w (n38 310"!‘ part and he will taikc evervthlnl you have. I Faith in our fellow man is lalie- 1 ly dependcnt upon our knvwledfle , of ourselves. a dimefls worth of flatMYY Offer} breaks dgwn a millzon dollars worth of opposition. The difference between genius 1111a Illlent is 111.11 talent sole Mid every Saturday night. The speculalor who gets a straight tip often finds that there is something crooked about it. ,- One o: the odditlw of life is that every eenteniiiilan has either used whiskey moat of his 1116 .01‘ 16$ W» alone. NOVEL COCKTAIL NAPKIN! “Sign”; have let their ilmlli-M" lions run wild when ll» 09M“ u‘ cocktail and tel. party IWPIIIN- on one sot there is a different 1 poker hand embroidered 0n each napkin. another civic-principally for the guest who mistake! hi5 for his handkerchief-is one with the inscription. "Mtum to Babs and Bob,‘ or whatever the names of the owners may be- 9m- broidered in 0R9 00m"- i -———- I Vwmgm equipment; hu been 111-l 80M! month ago, Min Inna 11* was wish n that l!!! could find some way o Increasing he!’ weight to normal and lmprcvinl her health. Her happy-lath! till! how she did this: “I gtarted to take Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills u few months ago. I am now taking my fifth Dlik‘ age and during this tlmn I have 1111111111 io pound! of inn w! health." Another young woniun. Min Jean B——* was worried about her failllm health und_loil 0f weight. .But after taking DI. Williams’ Pink Piih she wrttcll “About sight mouth! 0 o I wu ' feeling half lick- Ill "l. ' Nun n main. 1.1 ooono-ocn-OO-btan- - i. 11.1. HOUSEWIFE antff 77W77ES ; vented to withdraw the a. c: geceptaclfiS in which frut. m vegetables are calmed at 110111: Lb", out: Mutants Will rcniaiii .11 130m condition for years. . -. LACE CURTAINS Alli: - 0N0: MORE Poirot/111 um uni-talus 5m agalin at 1,», windows. In delicate und\ c1112., eaves, they come in palest 1nd. n“ bgige, pink and yellow. n3. "1931 as in white, off-white, eciii 1mg jyqyy, T11511- patterns are all ll e1- dam“ u; geometric 1111111 nov 31'1- pgttgfng, and noveliy- nit-she. of great; variety, A150, tilt ~i11ne 111,-; 3nd laces. in s1 ghtly hei we. 1m u“! bright. colors, fit in 11 mom‘: 111M101 decoration sche ii-a "rumi- od laces are nevuvriil-i b. 11...». 1-1-1» catching colors in higlic-s i \'-.\1'. V; POPULAR COMBINA us Blaicik and gold is used e11 sidqw ably for cocktail, dinner and viz-ic- ins wear. “CALOT" 11.1%.. BAG The fashion of the calot lsmfh 133p) umpires a designer to 11011-1111 g mung] handbag with a cal ct ghflpbd top. which may be undc m like an ordinary fir-l)- WOMAN asLEur 20 YEARS SHOWS sluxs 01-" WAKINU A pretty $0111.11 African brunt-tug 1mm, swancpqi, o.‘ Lichtciibiirtr, Tfgyuvfla], was in love with a. young (“mgr 1n 1910, but 1101- piirentu disapproved of the proposed lllulCil. Ho! lover killed himself. and Allilé... m hearing the news, collapsed and] unk into a sleep which lasted Itu: OVBIKUWP-fli-Y W811‘- Nmfm m9 Transvaal Pmvzm- “in Roma, where she 1's still 0 patient. she shown B18115 111M- ti!" effec-‘is b1 her sleep are at 1M ds- . g/ppegying, she sleeps even; n 111i . and wukens like a normal person, and aha eats regular meals. Anna. first awoke in 1021-1111»: aho had slept for eleven years. Dutj noon afterwards she fell asleep again and sometimes did not stir for months at a time. "I have gained l0 lbs of Pep and Health! time. No pep. Warcnntin- ualiy losing weight. I had my blood tested and was tnlrl I “TH anaemic. So I started to talc‘- Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. I!._\i.1= the turning point for n10 a1- fllht. l have continucd tilt‘- treatment and I am now IISCIIIII-l lite la worth living 885m" There are hundreds of other let- ters like these which testify to the value of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Take them yourself to build up your health, give you moi-c viiiil- ty and help you gain solid flesh if ou are under normal ivciight. P cc 50c. 1 , 1'1 nma‘ Pink Pills redu- ltwlerrlvxhiiln; and i! 70" 11M" "d “pm, gpmnger and healthier. 9°"? i will b0 returned to you. ..1 auk} >- Fashions ’ Latest For Chic Dressers still miothar new and lovely drill for home wcar is todly‘! 101W"- It is cut on vary 11111110 1W4‘ Wm‘ a new and most. ltucottv! collfl‘. sleeve 11nd 900k" ‘rim- Tlm white contrasting linlcrlfi u-im i; charming against. the bright mvy ground collar of the dffl printed in white pin dots. myoa you'd prefer u. platded N‘ checked wool finished cotton‘ 1h“ cream a spoil-y effect with leh till" and vivid bias binds? ' Or how about a ebtntz comm in yellow. bmwn and orange with ci-liiu of plum ysllw- "W" °' orange? Itfl uomondoualy smart! It's a0 anally mac. you'll vlnt t» maike all time. ' Bi/yie No. 16$ h doll!!!“ I01’ blues m. ll. 30 you-l. 34. 86. 3i. 40 in and M-inolm bum. Sin 36 re- quires 3 3-4 yards of 38-inch ml- ierial with 1 ytrd OI Il-lmh 00"‘ trusting. Price 111 Pattern 16 cent-v In stamp: oi- 00in (coin Profound) wrap coin carefully Midi-nu to Charlottetown Guardian giving- arm 110.1000 a1u....... Si-NQt Addnll ‘ IND VEIL! all: vaaifn Veils 11.11: generally p091! If. 80ml- tlmea bordering the aides and lndi of small ham. and unmet-tines Hil- C"! linitwicaaiabwiumm black voila with colored ostrich ntluadl. in; brims. Ono milllner embroider: