F" 1° t: :11 l< ,1: ti: B1 .111 >1» .-1_..,,__,.,‘ vs! .. v vicar“ n‘- Diff]? Y 1 “@Q"§QQ'QQQ.¢‘QQ¢@QQ'TT‘¢Q lVomank ."12Zalm'-;-- Social and 1hr CHARLOTTWN I Personal l' ' -:- Fashions -: . 4* rvOO - Literature *1 Mluzcnslwgv '1 soc .IIll'||lnv n. HOUSEWIFF and HER ACTIVITYES 1L'uIl.11irlk‘l_\. lhln llll up the centrd Mann so \\ ..> \\il.1O and IK-dkun < with (ldiillllg bLtni. 'l‘in.> providu- n» allot-git Llll ullnx-is \\...5 you \\.i.l ..l \ .c..zl:l buckgrollnd 1V4.‘- alhtuti lo H-UL‘ laznls ildlk- {for “illtldcl tit-vigil you may choose. The King- and Queen have appro- ved designs for four gowns and “my” “x0111 trains for the forthcoming Coron- The designs, by Reville. follow: m» .I'oln [By Llle \\'I|_\. do not ioigct that in Cour, Raw“ and mun for debutante '1“; cunt...“ ll‘.- o: wing. 1th» driflilh: nlllCii, _\'0l~r choice 0i of cloud white 511k tun with’ l....l..i.\ uuculA-w. rololn sllonu be tllLlllli’ as this Show" embrmdery m peaks and - 1 forms the biu-kcroulld for vlinltcver crystam com gown and “lam o; 'l’.\ltl.tlll) lcolotlls you may ch (no lu.cr f0!‘ delmumum blue 5mm T!“ o!“ To ilwkr u.» .1-- 411'- 1-11‘ unlit“ 1111111" "1 4111-" 1’11'-1' *1'11"1‘l°- shoulder deccilctuge. the brviicc and :n.o ‘)l\\l'| ll|\' 1 of a lulu nun; Frcnvh knots nro- particularly “am are hand embroidered m a » ' Al hF-l. n... .l 1.. _. an , ln..\'n; u-ritil tor lnml d1‘ huh. mvciully l feather degg“ U; crystal, and ti l. L, pros.» tvilrn lIl\‘_\ nuluiw tiny flowurs. pew-m The “amt 15 snclmled with > p ulld lill‘ L_\,<'\. .» .II\' Iktlxlnal) ll.\(’flll , a crystal and pen“ girdlm Own 11111111 1111111 1111' 1‘111‘1’1111‘11“-‘» “"191 l gown and train of pearl-pink silk v.1. 1>1= ~ 11 ‘1 I11“? 111111 1111‘ 1 chiffon, hand embroidered with -- ~ 1- -“~ 1 .1 ‘1‘ "'11 ~11 "11 1111111111’ l mother of pearl iridescent sequins. L-lnc dllkxnt‘: 11"‘ .1 -111d11 111-11». ~ l court sown of gold brocade, with I. M1‘ $111111‘; I " 1 cluster of cljvsinl flowers at til-z l11v1c 11m 1k um vole. CUIIONWPIlIN RED I.lI’.\"l'l('K decoiletagc. The train is of Bold uotM-cl swine.» unu pnnisitnt prune‘... ~ E\ 1 - c is nullklng sync a] cfforts sirwluciutzl: arrnn g for . fur swoon Tllc i" 1'11'11‘*‘ 11111114“ Worm)’ 111 0111711!" Mrs. Donald W. Ford. of Dutton. ' 1 lll do will lull l t1 .\1‘-11'- 11111 11 1" 1'1<1-"111110l1$ - Ont has evidence that Conservative mm y, rnlllllrlsi. nus rrczitcd fl new lip‘ tick ‘ l/‘a(!(\l' H,“ R B_ 30mm.“ does not 1n honour of it. which I mny add. ,1 foljgfh A5 pngt-ydcnt of m; Jumm- .. ,t wry ltottlillili! crnottt" l ‘Pith Conwrvntivea of Ontario. the form- biondlxs and brunollcs. cr lfiss Evelyn Duckworth sat- ircxi -~—- 1 to Mr. Bennett at sovcral political (‘llIl0l1Rl<‘l'|. (‘0.\"l‘1t.-\. dinners. rnri hc showed interest in brocade lined wrth gold lame. - o c o i \ii' \l'.\. lhi ..r putxlldy‘ for III .\"I'I~.D (l IlI‘.'\|.‘\‘ I’I.\'.\' 1 H. , . ‘V, 1", gm“. 1mm“? Not Illll‘. . t‘ lour t n .. thug hcr pending marriage to Mr. Ford. , , ,_,,, p m, K, |,.“- bl. lnutcrl ~ and lllnv. 15o mnpliv "When you gct married, I'll see you ,_-,,,l; U, “mm. m lllt“l(' on of oploslcs. Evcn- urta niro wedding present." Mr. |x10u w» - mi.- l‘~l'll lllll'I’\‘lllRI"l}’ Bcnnctt said. The former. Prime .1 h.» , 1 . . ‘ M nistcl- was on n world tour when l Slack black 111's _' (-0.11. modded ‘ the wedding was solemnlzed in to ihc fluurc llllfl (ll‘l‘l‘l‘(l with 1t-wo S<-|itcll:Irl-. Bu this week n lnrgr l)llll4‘1$ filling from it's ne-vkllnc. is j box ~41nf from Olinwn to Mr. Ford. to i ‘s <Ui‘(‘( uful l‘.\']‘l‘l'.ll\f‘1 ru ‘IIIIIC l(l£\'('l'l"I k,.,.,, a bmlp. purur rod by u swl-lnallu g_1ru.nd I in ("H11 of |ll‘i‘ illtlfcl‘. Mayor Ernest V, Mr 1,,“ m lt'll1Il|l l‘\»lllll‘.l vtmi ri gu- n t'll1"1)'i‘k\l\'f)f'lllOISLTIIUIIIIIK contain- ' i. xi u pl-r imp. on >111“ lhlltvrllvll with t‘lllll‘lllfill.\» l-li a silwr jmvol raw, Pnuravcd a ‘hill I1 ou-r tho‘ l- daisies. lllyal bluv rll-pc. with tln- h trio's Ilfllllf‘. the date 0f ., _.,,,.-,, mm u“. Ilcilosl-n tor u sllllllll‘ Dirk-floss dinner , hcr marrl 15,19. and the name of Mr. m.,.“ m , dross with unusual lflilg slw-ws um . Bcnnctt. ihc rt O O O O A Charloiictlnrn lady holidaying in Bermuda Imnpcncd to experience one of the pcrlodlc ccld spells L snmld ‘ii rflllilfl‘ not-kl‘ is .l..nnt ovcr- fslradolirll l.v n.- vouuullrvillu cont. ‘hrou(lshnultlcrorl. Widc sklftmd, and ‘ronnlo-cd "llill‘('l‘~‘ oi mill svquins, I \III'I OI" ('()I.l).\‘ \‘=l,\ li"-\ u» would dcvvlo» ._,. ., 3...... I ,,_ ,._ ,,,,,,,,,n_§ r-lnbrrlich-rcrl on silk. l whlchwrc Tourist bureau literature “Am m‘, h.“ d“). and Aflltm 13.,‘ 1m, vnblv billck and ‘ of the Island conveniently ignores. _ , ,,,_,,, ,,,,,,,,.,|,,,,,,]_,. V, \\§l.lf‘ .\t‘o!'<‘s n frrmcndous succes:s"I‘l1kcn by surprise the Charlotte- br-u and Pvlnnlnvd lhcro for [hp when shown in n whit" 112C‘) kd Lotvll Indy hrckc info [X19116 PFOLQSt- 1W. ,.,__. .,, H, ,h.‘n,l<n,g plrmvy Pvvlllll: lrrrk Wllflr? .\'||I‘ll1(‘5\ is wit] thr- rcsult. hrr effusion was cf harm _..,,,, ,.,,,,,,__. “Hm, and iif‘(‘t'-lll‘lii1((l l>_\' .1 blllrk cin- n: .11 mmbi-ttcd on thc front page 0f the I nm-v- A :,;,_,-,_.;,. __;,,,,,;d b, wk,“ coat. This is like a ln"!=.'s nulls-icon‘ . 101111 Gfllvttt‘. It FPfld at follows: Illllll1‘(ll.l'.t‘l,\' to rid tic body 0f 111' 111" 11/111! 11nd blllnws mrav fonn 1 O1 0111 39111111118 —5hllm8 011 I» much poison u.» possible. 11‘11(‘1111111‘1111L' 1111M“ 111 1111‘ 17'1"“ 1 You iguih Li 1 1d ‘at _ _ l ._ t e tuner, ou x1011 rm: (‘l|IlI\'l'\l\.\' PIAIVI‘ 1 "11" T" "U"? TOFFEE 1 ‘11’ . W11 came to brsk in old 891's rays. H“, m“. [flhlpqypnn ground And he's been hiding now for dxys. coflvl". hFl‘ n p ni rf frr1~hly holl- wl wulvt". [M- n pvrrnlntm‘ n flrc- . Q1 0111 pfflflr l;..,_._ ,.,- p" ....,.,_,,],~ ppm. H“. l '10 ruin us 4 crvffiw‘ in ‘his Pour on 91w frcshlv1 11101 “mo”. pans,‘ ,_..,.l,.,.‘ H, ,, ._.,¢,. “.,,]1_ BHmllThc "Afonarch" no mu- b-Hpnns W1; Con". mu‘ in Hlf‘ h"ll. and allow the coffce tn ' down“ . . . . . K . inn original stalk cvcn if y'u (I01 1" 1”" 1‘“1' 11' f‘ lt1""""~> flfrnln ~11" “"5 not rut u, cl wn 4nd this wily git-cs 1111"‘"".‘1 n WW In" slrruncr info a 110111111- trr‘ blunt. :1 fut o. 1W1 P"“"'"‘ not l’"'il tho nflk and svrvr- s/{nlrsrcly lll a julz. 1l'.\ni Tlu- lltllllsl"‘ill ‘I'll (limit ul l‘ wuv in l.I"l runull j1 illulsl - ‘~\,ll'lll flu-n b4 nl . .~0ul:.'l> l.l< dr .l should b‘: . (‘~11 ihc - mirth Bcrmudn-shunle on you hailstoncs. thatY-l too. 11nd l('<‘}l lilc plunl 1n Lil‘ pun t» n whilc. you have even ready‘ l‘ Win-n home-ward We have no "undic " which to wear, Sunny Bermuda. would you drrel To trvai. your gcrcl kind tourist s0? Al-olrt you nfr"i'l, in1'll up and go? r - a o WOOL IIROOCIIES wool bl-nvwm urt- hrvonnnc nll1 ih» ‘rnlzv and fl"1'.1.11l'-l '. ' can ho , k '. Ruth Simpson entertained at a vcry delightful ten table lsupper-bridgc at tho Canad‘nn National Hotel on Thursday evening for her numerous- friends. - - o . a ol . .. 1: a‘ 'l) Illilliy rl. __ All Hm! is l‘i't1tlv‘ll ill. u- ww- cf 111d d’ 11m Ql.I'l‘l'lfl1.~ . v a hlu s run-lulu r n! \h"'1t 2.1x!" inl-ltcs across n pin for tlo brooch. nnvl vnlonrvrl wonl. Ruttnillulln .\‘Ill!"{1 flu‘ rinq round Mrs. Ralph B. Mnrrry loft this week on a visit to Boston. - ¢ ¢ - Mrs. McCrcady was nostcs‘ for fhc Thin" dwy afternoon Bridge rll-b at "t‘*r1-I-lousc-nff-tho-Rond" on Longworth Avr-nun. 1 t . a o s-a ~ ._ - . .1 CHILD'S KNI COA'I'__ Mrs /\l‘|lfl"'12\ Tuner tvlto has been ill for thc past fivc weeks is THE COOK 'S CORNER s AJBI a“: IIrQAwII n3 Prdpured by the Milk Ut.llzat.on Service. Dairy and Cold Storage urunch Dsmnron Dopartlnent of Agriculture-each recipe is prrpar- ed for l2 servings. Fruit Bavarian 1 l-2 tablespoon granulated gela- Line l-4 cup cold water 3 eggs yolks 1-2 cup sugar Pinch of salt 1 l-2 cups hot milk 3 eggs whites 1.1-2 cups whipped cream l teaspoon vanilla 1-2 teaspoon almond extract 1 cup chapped red and green ' cherries of 1 cup candied fruits. Soak gelntlne in cold water. Beat egg yolks and combine with sugar and salt. Gradually add the hot milk mid cook in top of double boiler, stlrrina consumtly. until mixture thickens. Add gclatiw Cool. and when m‘xturc is p~rtiall3 set. fold in 5tl"fly beaten om; whites crcam, whipped until stiff. -fru1' and flavouring. Ncsaclrode Pudding I teaspoon granulated gclntina I tablespoon cold water 3-4 cup sugar i-3' cup water 2 egg whitu i l-2 teaspoons vanilla P‘nch of salt i-2 pint fl l-4 cup) whipping cream I-4 cup marashchlno cherries l-4 cup candied fruits i-4 cup Sultana raisins 1-4 clvp brnlu-n nut meats-mm- fearably French chesimits S"nk lzolnflno in co‘d wafer. Boil sugar and water urtil it spws a ' thread. Dissolve lzelatlne in hot syrup. Pour syrup slowly into rectum 8'1"‘ uwffin. When cold. fold In swfflv whinoed crram. salt. vanilla. fruit: and nuts. Place in frecwnq trnvs of rcfrivernlor and freeze 3 to 4 hours or nut in n mould cover with button-r! TYIDPT nml Iiflhhflfl- ._ Mr ‘c Nordic-art Design No. 235 I:l:lr' VIII“ adorn knit mats Thev arr warm and neat and become _ morv pupuhw ('\'I‘I‘V yw-ur. Mukc one in colors for achool o‘r play and an all wllltv on!‘ for (lrv-ss-up nu-ilsirvns Ulvcly when worn over first Spring frocks. The unrmrnt is made of sloclflni-stllfih nn lnrgg ncsdlcp; using bcurv yarn and trlmmv-d urn send stitch iluzdera The mite-m can be obtained in sizes 4 d. B. t0 Each pattern includes a tissue pow-m for blocking the garment afu-r it 1h knit, casy-to-follow working instructions without abbreviations, assembling chart and a sam- ple of yarn used for the original model. - For complete patterns and instructions for all of these dosimb. send 20 cents fn stamps or coin fcoin preferred: to The Charlottetown fiunrdinn Needlework Department. Use this coupon Print your name and address pllinly to The Charlottetown Guardian Vecdlework Dom. DESIGN N0. 2J5 N,,n..____..__...._l___...____......__--.; Strut Address — — — — - — — - - ¢ — — ~ — - —- — — — — ~ Irw Mvnr 1m» ""1"" 1n 1p- “d "no '6 Wrts iv" lo f nart suit). Let ~_——_ --_—__-__[|Qy_“_--_—___ awnd.hshoula aticn courts at Buckingham Palace and the Palace of Holyrcod House. HADDENIILJGS or / WEEK f. lday evening for five ‘Bridge and again on Wednesday THE now convalescing nicely at the P. E. 1. Hospital. O O O O Very charming is the description which has appeared of the Duches of Kent's bedroom. It has pale blue satin curtain; and palest blue walls; the curtains of British satin have a quilted design in a silver thread, and the wall panelling of pale blue is picked out in silver. The floor is covered by a dark brown carpet with one or two sheepkin rugs. An alcove panelled in looking-glass is the background for a dressing table with toilette bottles of pale 111119 Ilass. A neglige is of pale blue velvet lined with peach. An- 1 other has l. three-colour scheme. combining petunia with pale blue and lavender. O O/ O On On Washington! Birthday l fancy dress ball was given by the management of the Central Hotel, St. Petereburg, Florida, at which Miss Ethel Hodgwon. representing "Britannia", won first prize. Miss Hodgson. with her aunt Miss Mulrhead, am spending the winter ln Florida. _ O O O O The passing of Mis» Rosa De- Brisay is deeply regretted by a wide circle of fricnd . O O O O Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Murray loft Thursday morning for Halifax from which Port they sail today on a vagabond trip to the West Indies. - 1 . - Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Falter on their 25th wedding nnniverszlry: en- tertained at a delightful dinner pllrty at their honlc last Saturday flight to cdebrate the happy occ- asion. O O O O Mr. G. W. McPhec and Mrs. Mc- Phce. Ottawa entertained at dinner prior to the reception given by the Wivo" of the Cabinet Ministers last week at which over 1000 guests were present. O I O I A 2.000 square yard carpet which will cover the floor oi Westmlnisler Abbey when King George and Queen Elizabeth are crowned in May, 1s being woven by 200 workers. The carpet-really nine in one --will cot $50,000. Because of its size it will be shipped to Lon- don by sea instead of by rail. o ¢ t - Mrs. J. A. Rodd of Ottawa i: vis- iting in New York. a a - n Mrs. R. Harold Jenkins,‘ of Cal- gary. AltZL, is expected ill Ottawa this week to x1isit her son. Mr. Lloyd H. Jenkins and Mrs. Jenkins. O O O O The Anglican Church Diocesan Society which met in the city this wcck brought many visitors from different pr-rt‘ of the Province who renewed friendships at this annual gathering of church workers. O O O O Mr. and Mrs. Erskine McNutl. were visiting in Snmmcrside this WPCk the guests of the Misses Hunt. Mrs. L. Gorril. of Sunnnersldc wa one of the hostesses this tveck entertaining for friends giving a four table Bridge on Tuesday and four on Thursday. t t - a Mrs. John S. Wright and Miss Glen Williams were joint hostesses on Wedneiduy evening for n charm- ingly arranged Bridge of eight tables at the Mawley House, Summerside. O O O O Mrs. W. A. Currie, Summersidc gave a pretty Bridge of three tnble‘ on Friday evening for intimate friends. O O O O Mrs. (Judge) Inman and Mrss. T. Todd were joint hostesses on Tues- tnbles of evening. at Mrs. Todd's lovely home on Central Street. Summcrside. o - - - The Queen has changed her style of hair-dressing. Vfitors to the Exhibition of the National Society of Painters, Sculptors, Engravers, and Potters vlfll be reminded by a portrait sketch there of the days when her fringe set a fashion in coiffure". For Coronation year the Queen has decided on a colffl-rc of simple dignity. The famou" fringe was banished some time are as be- ing too youthful. At the moment the Queen's hair is parted over the left temple and carried away from the face in flrt waves that Just conceal the ears. She wears it low in the nape of the neck. A Morning-smile NEVER AGAIN “Why won't you advertise?" asked the representative of a news- paperofamaninasmsllwalyof business 1n a small town. “Because I'm ngln’ advertisin,‘ the man answered. "But why an you walnut it?" “It don't leave a man no time." was the reply. "I advertised wunsi last summer and the consequence wuz I wua so busy I didn't have time to go fishing the whole aeu- . onI" NOT QUITE SURE It was in Glasgow, and he ar- rived home very late. He rang the bell. and the wife popped her head out of the bedroom window. asking who it was. "ftsh me." wa: the reply. "Well. who brought you home?" "I don't really know. It was elthr-r a tall fellow with a sporrnn, or s. |hort fellow with s. beard.’ ‘ 000 ‘ Dorothy Dix '2 Letter BOX Young Men Who Are Short on Cash Can Go a - Long Way in Life and Love by Develop- ing Those Traits That Make The!" Outstanding 1n Any Group Dear Miss Dix-How in the world is a young man to be P00111111 V1111 , Ilrla if he doesn't have moncl! 11111<1 '1 v"? n1‘ 111111;“ dbaiiiffflflfi £1": ‘ a bole. nor n bad dancer. As long 11-! 1 115119 9 P‘ ‘ 5:3 h mé 1 rate first place. but when I am short o ca-sshm boys with autos and money put me m the 8- Wliat do girls admire in W119i "W". BIWWIT? l AIISWBI’: 1 n depends on we ztrl ‘mire m Plenty °1 girls with the 30161-111889!‘ who 14min’ nobhinl so much about a mm u his Ptwkfl-bfnkm- | they are for sale to the hlilhflit blddfl‘ B1141 9 l man WlhO has the finest 051'. W11" "-11 “k9 911°!" | to the SWIIDKIBSL night clubs and who can mllw ‘ them me h“: presents, lets them. . ———r——- You can see these zlrls out 111111 I111 °1d 111°" | who are their Sugar Daddies or with the 111N111 y sons of rich fathers or with any married man who Wm buy mam a dumen No pool‘ youngman can compete withthem, no matter how good-looking, not how mtelllgcilt nor how interesting and fascinating he may bfl- , It is folly, of course, to deny that money helps b10118 any 31011116; 111111-115 popularity with girls. Being iulman, every girl‘ wolui rather ride titan wulk and she would rather ride in a fine car than a shabby 01w AlW; being young and humnii, every girl likes to be taken out for a good time. she would rather ‘have a good seat than a. bad one in a theatre; $119 would rather be taken to a. restaurant where the food ls sul>¢1"@XB911°111 thnn to a cafeteria; she would rather go where the lishts are bright Mid the music gay than to some shabby place where one dances to the rfldw- Moncy gllds everything. A nice boy with a nice cnr and a nice bunk- roll (loos have an edge on the nice boy without. " But thvrc are plenty of girls who put the eanphasia on ‘the “nice instead of on the money. ‘Phey prefer a smart, keen. intelligent chap without a ccnt in his pocket to a dullurd, no mutter how much he can spend on them. They can have more _iu.n out of a beér-and-sandwlch supper on lhc kitchen table at home with an interesting boy w talk 1K1 than they could out of a champagne feast with a bore. After nil, what girls admire most in men are brflins and Chllrflfllh A girl may not be overly brilliant herself, but she rewtltlizes imellmnw in lnen and pays her tribute to it. You never hoard of a Kiri who WBSIW proud L0 bc seen out with a clever man, no-matter whether he was P001‘ or rich. Girls like strength in a. man. They like a man who can stand on his own feet and make his own way in the world; who knows when: he is going and IS on his way. They know that that is the way 90 per writ of the men who are the big shots in every line started and they are al- ways willing to take a gamble on that. sort of a lad. They know that most of the women who are riding in limousines today are the wives of the men who took their sweethearts to parties on the street cars when they were courting them. , Girls like boys who can entertain them, who have a line and who don‘t sit up like dummies while the girls they are with mil like .00aI- hcuveis to keep the conversation going. And they like boys who have good manners, who are courteous and chivairous with them and who man them feel MMIICIIOW that they wou.d make the kind of husbands who would be tender and understanding toward their wives. Money is a good thing to have, but it isn't necessary to have it to nlalke you pollular. One of the things that but sold over the counter is love. O t6 O O O Dear Dorothy Dix—'f‘ilis is my first year in college and I can't decide whether to continue my education or get. married. My girl friend writes me such pathetic lcttcrs that 1 cannot concentrate on my studies and have almost dccided to forcgo school for marriage. But I hesitate be- cause the difficulty is that I have no way of supporting a wife and my home town affords little opportunity for a future. Please advise me as 1 1 BOOKS/LIT: MU$IC qmnn ALALA lodly’: Short Wave ladle Program 13 i l I11 i W. B. Yeats in his incrochntim to his choice o! poems fa the new "Oxiurd Book of Modem Van‘ W: f I-— _ “I think 821311.114 has bad are go». p...» suns} B00 to the p‘!!! day than during any period o! Lb: same length ‘since Lb: curly sewn- teentn century. Then are no pre- 1 dominant figures, no Brownuw, no Tennyson. no Swinburne, but more than I have found mom 1w bu: written two. three. or hat! s 6mm lyricst-lmtmaqbe- nunent. . -" Two recent publications 0t the Ryerson Press ue, “Clp and Bells" an anthology 0t llaht Vern by Canadian poets chosen by John W. Garvin, with a foreflni by lame Pierce and a. biozraphical index giving brief sketches d the authors repne enfed. And, the sioond, “Selected Poems of Sir Charles G. D. Ba&'ts" with poems chosen by the poet himself from ten vdrumes, cove-log the years from 1800 to 1934. Lady Willison of the Toronto Saturmy Night writes of this book-“A con- siderable and beam ul achievement which can be left with ccnfidalce to the final judge, time. One reads again with recurrini pleasure Sonnets of Canadian Life and Landscape and, such outstanding verses as the lovely final poem, ‘Presence’. Any Canadian must be proud to own this book.’ “The Fifty Books of the year" are at present on display in the New York Public Library. The books do not represent the reading taste of the public, they are not judged by their literary content, but for excellence o! book- making. This the fourteenth annual Il- hibition of the kind sponsored by the American Institute of Graphic art and it has become a notable event for the artist, the publisher, the bookseller and the fry cm- notsaeur of bookmstdng. and for the general public as well. The Fifty Booksshowtscomposed of books for everybody-some are popular titles. some are limited editions on handmade paper, some fifty-cent paper bound volumes, but all of them are examples of “the highest artistic and technical ex- cellence" among books published in the last year. The prhnary eon- sideration is the books fitnsu for the us: for which It Is intended. but such details as colour of hind- izig, styles of type. texture and tint of paper. and well-designed lay-out are all important. Books of poetry, children's books, fiction, non-fiction and text books all have special pmblams and must to which course I should follow. BROWNIE. _ Answcr: Unless you have s0 littie brains that. a college education would be xvnlsled on you. lzccp on with your schooling. Do not rush into a mar- nltwit who cvidczltly has no more judgment than you have. Cunt you sec that such a marriage is bound to bring disaster upon you both? Surely even a freshman‘ can't, be so utterly lacking in all worldly wisdom us not to know that when two children marry they fire simply flouting fate and asking forthe punlshmcnt they almost. invarinldy get. Thclr tnsics change as they grow up, they got tired of each other and sick oi thrnresponsibiiitics with which thcy have burdened them- sc vcs, and by the time they are old enough to know what luvc really means nine times out of ten they have fallen in love with somebody else. 'I‘llink it ovcr. How would you support a wife? You huvcift learned any trade or profession. You would be lucky to get a job that paid you $10 a week. I-Iow would you feed and clothe a wife and children on that? Are you planning. if you leave school to marry, to take your wife home for your father to support, or are you contemplating living on her-people? Don't you think that would be playing it pretty lowdown on the parents in either case? How do you think you would like having to go shabby and never having the price of even a ticket to a football game; never being able to do any of the pleasant things the other young folks are doing because every cent you made hnd to go for supporting your wife? How do you think she would like that kind of a life? I-low long do you think it would be before she would quit? Marriage la hard enough on grownups who know what love really is and the kind of husbands and wives they want. and who have some way of making a living. It slay: children. Don't be moved by the pathetic letters the girl writes you. she doesn't, mean a word of them and she isn't weeping over your absence. she Is having a grnnd time with the other young folks. Al girls write meim- choly heart-breaking letters because they think it is romantic. Discount them 99 per cent. Don't marry until you are grown up and can t "if . u w e O O O O O O Dear Miss Dix—I have been going steady with a young man with whom I was in love. He would slap me any time I did or said anything he disliked. He never told me he loved me. I just wok it for granted. I introduced him to a girl friend of mine and he has married her. Do you think I will ever love again? PUZZLEQ Answer: ' If you can love a man who beat you up when you peeved him, and mourn his loss, I should say that your capacity for love was so great that nothing could stop you from loving any man who came along. DOROTHY DIX. "lheu have qiven me more qncrqg . 1 and a Grand Complexion! when they continue the treatment with Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. All of which proves that good looks, plenty of peg and normal weight are largely ependent upon the body's condition. Then lose no time In buildln| HERE'S s young lady who think: she is the luckiest non allvel And if you will read er letter, you may find the way to share her luck. Miss Boasts W——' lays: "I am going to continue taking your remedy because It bu helped mc more than any other medicine I have taken. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills have nude my nerves much better Ind helped me keep free from colds. They have given me more energy and a grand complexion.” Many a sallow, lifeless complexion has become rndiantly full of color and life, after Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills have helped to restore health, strength and vitality. Girl! wrltl In to say that pImpIy outbrulu on the back and face disappear ‘ Nuns mu request. yourself up with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. A Canadian physldnn originated this remedy over 40 year: ago. It definitely the blood with Iron and ,. Increased vitality. Take them for a few weeks and note the dlfler- enca they will make In Improv- Ing health, Increasing vigor and weight and toning up the com- plexion. Prloe 50¢. Talia Dr. Wlllllmu’ Pink H"! I rIy for s whllnmld If you Jon’! liar, ulrrmler Ind healthier. your money will bu rammed to you. l l'l.'li;(3—~f0l' which neither one of you Ls prepared-with a little femlnlnof have appropriate tmatmen m the words of Henry W. Kent, presi- dent of the Institute-J _ . Knowledge and taste make a good n This year the exhibition is to be shipped in duplicate for mowing , throughout the United States, and l also in Europe. When Professor Walter Abell, l‘ President of the Maritime Art A sociaticil. gave his lecture in l Charlottetown last winter. he pa:- t-icularly mentioned a young Marl- iimcr. Jack Humphrey whose work. though little known was well worth watching. Mr. Humphrey has recently ex. hibited his paintings in Toronto. and a Toronto art critic writes:- "MP- Humphrey is a native of Saint John, N. 8.. and a pom-toy d di tinction. of whom for too little is heard. His work is delicate and poetic and" like that of Vulllsrd. is so retiring. that its subtlety is got 1:119“ evade one. Though Ir. SATURDAY. MAICI 6 BOSTON 9:00 tum-moorland Post Box WIXAL. no.4 m., 11.10 meg, GENEVA 5:!) gran-News from the Leaght d Nit-ions Headquarters. HBL, 31g m., 1Q meg. BORE 6:00 p.m.—Newb in 31.1 m., 9.03 meg. LONDON p m.—"SUBg69tl0!lA for your Book in." 68B, 25} m., 1L7 1:13.; 08C. 31.3 m., 9.58 meg; fi. 3i. m., 9 51' meg. English. 2R0, 6:56 aimulv 8:30 p.m —-'O these Women!" DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. LONDON 10:20 p.m.—-'I‘he Royal Navy v The Anny. GSD. 25.5 m_, 111 meg; GSC. 31.3 m., 9.58 meg.; GSB. 31.5 m., 9 51 meg. PITTSBURGH I! mldfliilh‘ 5468541895 t0 the Pa: NDfih. WQXK, 48 8 m., 6.14 meg LEITIIBRIDGE 12:30 a.m.—-The Sport Week CJRO, 48.7 m . 66.15 meg; 0.1m; 25.§_m.,_1l.7‘2 meg ;~;.;~_————; Humphrey has an apparent weak- ness which prevents him from pushirg his work to full realization, his colour is often very lovely, and his use of paint. both holiest and individual. Ills drawings have a nervous strength that makes them slight as they are, highly dL-"turb- mg. At present in ‘Ibronto the 1n- ternational society o! Women Pain- ters and Sculptors has an interest- ing exhibit on view. It lncluden work by women artists of eight nations and is representative of the hobbyist. the amateur and the pro- fessional. G. Campbell Mctmiir of the ‘Imonto Saturday Night writes of I10 eiihibitlon- "....lhopcId:-slnothl accused of when I any that the Canadians come out bQt. Thhlsdue partly mam: predominance in the sculpture field —Eltabeth Wyn Wood's ‘Mm and Wanton‘ is ls good as anything in the room-and partly to the he! that they know what they want. They are more sturdy and advent- urous, less femhrine, even-it moi h a compliment." The official celebrations for In seventleth birthday anniversary of the well loved "Blue Danube" began 1n Vlerml. on February 14th with I concert by the Johann Btraus: Society. and the conductors. Felix Weingarten, Pmfessor Fbrdinand Grmsman and the grandson o! thc Oofnposer, another Johann Strauss ‘Hie waltz Is being hem-d all mo! Vienna, mmning. noon and night Herbert P. Peyser writ/es to the Times from Vlenna—“ . . . For the Viennese really love the Imnaorrtal waltz with an abiding affection and regard it as ‘their true civic ant-hem - . . » About the only locality 1 have nothcard it in some form o1 other is in, the neighborhood of the house in the Leopoldstadt, when the waltz king actually composed it. This house-an nndiwtingulshed looking middle nineteenth century building bear."- s memorial tablet w the effect that the ‘folk hymn of all Viennese’ was written there Pflblbly not one tourist in a thous- and ever finds this house. though it is only a few minutes‘ walk from the Wuerstelprater and the big rim-y Wheel ." mil xou can .ni.s sheer m" blue diml dress right thrown the spring and summer. This quaint pctumaque , t fashion occupies first place in the heart of every yolmger fmhiomble. The all amund skirt fulnal is so flattering to the youthful figure. The shoulders pulfed out, mlnlmm the waistline. The little girl collar and cuffs are of snowy white piqm. The Self-material ruffle is pleat» edged. ever so quilt to sew. Style No. M15 ts drained sins l2, i4, i6. ll. m yuan, 80. aLloandsl-imlaeoblutflhatfl inquires 4 3-5 ylnh ol fl-incb tor-ill with [-2 yard at 89-inch - trusting and I l-lyllfid Id! edging for collu- md cuffs. Price of potter-n ll cont! It lumps or coin (coin C (#00010 [IUD]- style N0. M16815 . . . . .... lllml enrichel Strut Minn City lib CIDONS IOI ‘IIADI INEKWOOD, “m., (OP) -All enterprising g-rooeryman here has installed aloud sputum Manure and when Business is dull b8 mono to Minot oustnnll. Fashions’ Latest For Chic Dressers