' ~.-’“"»~"f"/ e 4.. . “vie. "’.":.*r;1~;--.;.-,..-.... ems-us». - I .iit~lr‘4éffff".”"“' ._ ’ """"‘f"""£ "r 1- ‘w- t. nmnxk‘ ‘w: v v ti: The HOUSEWIFE and HER AC TTVIUES I l SNAW-DRAPS There's a patch o' bonnie blos- soms Deon by the giirdeu gate, It looks as ii a pickle snaw Had {WU}, or lingered late; But it's just a wee wheen snaw- draps Come oot to tell o‘ Spring— A3 the mavis in the tree abune That miracle was sing. It's braw to get a glimmer 0’ the sweet sun bre’kln through The. wuds will sune be buskit In their beauty a‘ a-new. when the snowdraps in the wun- ner O’ their glistfrin glory |taun’— The purity o’ Paradise Come back to bless the Ian’! HIGH WAISTED. Two of the newest looking mat jersey gowns are high waisted be- cause of the brasslere top with skirt fulness massed at centre front, starting just under the bust. FAITHFUL FRIEND The Kceshond is fast becoming one oi the most popular of long- halred clogs, both for show purpose and a5 a. domestic pet. He is a very, old breed. and wa; known in Ger- many in the sixtzenth century. He was, in fact, f;rst exhibited at a dog-show at Hamburg sixty years ago. The honour of introducing him to these imands belong to Mrs. Winfgield-Dlby, who, when a school-girl on a. yachting trip in Holland before the war, acquired two delightful puppies for a few shillings from a Dutch bargee. In those days the Kzeshond was fre- suently employed as a barge-dog on the Dutch inland waierways, but nowadays. strange to say. he is seldom seem on tbese vessels. The Keeshond is one cf the few dog; that have been adopted as the emblem of a po itlcal party. In the seventeenth century the Orange party in l-iollaru‘ adopted the Pug as their mascot. because a member of the brccd was said to have saved the king's life when he was in danger from a would-be as- sassins dagger Their blt‘cr op- ponents. the Republicans retorled ll‘l kind of adopting the Keeshond as a badge and it is claimed that the name itself is dzrived from 90111811115 (Kess for short) de Witt, a prominent. Republican leader Others claim, however. that the dogs were known as "K2es“ long bcfcrc their introduction to politics. and that in mediaeval Gcnnany term the was contemptuoualy :co.iiba1l2a§P cut to the . bestowed upon them in the same way as “plclog" or "pariah" are applied to-day in the East to the outcasts of the canine world. As far as his German ancestry is concerned, there s mention cf a dog answering his description as early as the year i552, and there lslittle doubt that dogs of the Keeshond ,ersuasion were com- mon throughout the Low Countries in those far-off days. Many of the recent importatlons have come to Britain direct from Germany. One of the Keesbonds chief rerommendatlons is that he wears well. Many breeds show signs of decrepitude in middle age. but the Keeshond usually maintains his vigour, alertness and good looks unimpaired until he is It least ten years old. 0N THE AIR. All the listeners to King Edward's broadcast will have noticed that I the King employed the word * "radi " in preference to "wireless." A detail, but one showing his per- sonal knowledge 01 things abroad. 1n the whole oi the American Con- tinent one never hears the Eingllsh noun, "wireless." An American, or a Canadian, would look at one , askance if one employed it This is hardly a case of what we I commonly call Americanism oi- |sla.ng; it is a difference oi langu- I aje, quite another matter says the London Evening News. YAWN GENEROUSLY . 0E AUDIENCE WILL WASHINGTON, March 27——(CP) -’I‘.'mely tips on public speak- ing are being passed out to wives of democratic legislators, attending a “campai: n class" at the Women's National Democrat Club Here are some ways to train ior the speaking platform: To relax the voice-hum through the nose. To perfect diction-speak with a piece of wood in the mouth. To banish stage fright-yawn gene- rously ‘ To improve posture - rest the jawbone on the two palms and rotate the skull gently on the top vertebra conoizarlolv STYLE MAY BRING BACK MODES FOR LONG TRESSES London hairdresers are anticl- patlng a new fad for long hair, particularly among young peel-es- ses who will attend the Coronation of King Edward VIII in West- minster Hal next year. The farewell to bobbed hair will Yvv w? v;v vAAAmlAAAAAg xmxngmnknnxknnn ‘*H%$¢ l Dorothy not Letter Box“ Marriage Is More Than Just a Business Con- tract + If You Cannot Put Love and Af- fection Into It, Then It Is Better Never To Go To The Altar Dear Dorothy Dix-Is marriage simply an economic arrangement? Is a man u good husband if he is a good provider? Bhou‘d his wife be Sut- lsilecl if he has given her a comfortable home, food and 41103168. and suf- ficient amusement and recreation? Likewise, is a woman a good wife Just because she is a good housekeeper and cook and has kept I man's home clean and livable? If marriwfle is nothing but a business proposition, why should a man marry‘? He can provide for his physical needs much more easily and cheap- ly by living at a club or hotel and not be bothered by the idiosytwrfl-iifls oi a woman. These questions arise to perplex a man who has tried to be something more than 8- good provider. He married a woman because he loved her and desired her love, and he would receive much joy from nllillfiLérlng to her soul and having some real companion- ship ‘with her. But she regards him appar- ently only as a breadwinner and feels that by being a good housekeeper. This letter middle-aged men whose wives believe but whose husbands look upon them A PUZILLED MAN. i» __ . she has done her full duty might have been written by many that they are odels of perfection, as failures. Answer: Man does not live by bread alone, Any marriage is a failure that lacks the spiritual element and that is Just a bargain by which a woman gets a home and the man gets a homemaker. If a man only wants some one to make him physically comfortable he can get that far cheaper in a club than he can by supporting a home. And if a woman wants merely a meal ticket she is a poor trader if Shc doesn't look out for one who will provide her with caviar and champagne instead of corned beef and cabbage. ° I do not think that many men marry because they want a- Servant, 0r that many women marry to get some one to support them. They marry because they crave love, because they want understanding, because they want sympathy and affection, and because they want somebody out of all the world to belong to them, to be their very own. And. having married for these thinKS. the tragedy is that they forget them and mrike the bringing home oi the bacon and the frying of it “'1 of marriage. They are so concerned with paying the electric light, bill that they let the sacred flame burn out. on their altar for want of r6116“- lshing the oil. They are so busy making money and cleaning the house that they never have time to sit down by the hearthstone and really talk to each other. ' The average man considers himself a good husband if he provides his wife with a nice home and- pretty clothes and a QOOd car. and if he is reasonably easy to get along with. And if these are not cncullh to make her happy he shrugs his shoulders and says that women are queer crea- tures and nobody can understand them and there 1s no satisfyin! mem- For the life of him he can't see why a woman who is fed on fl‘ct mlg- , nen should complain because shc is heart hungry, or why one who has a ‘ mink coat should still long for a. little warm affection from her husband and be slowly freezing to death without it. And many women consider that they are good wives when they B-rfl merely good housekeepers. In those sad cases in whch middle-aged huS- bands forsake their wives for “the other woman" the deserted wife al- ways calls upon Heaven to witness how well shc did her duty; how She pinched pennies and worked to help her husband get. a start; what a. good cook she was; what a thrifty manager; how tightly shc kept his buttons on and how neatly she darned his socks. be more of a necessity than Con. formlty with a new fashion mode, "my Explain. for the coronets which must be wom at the crown- inz of a new monarch are not adapted to hobbed hair. The coronets, costing $90 and $100, rest on top of coiled-up hair. ‘If worn with bobbed hair they're likely to fall out of place and grergble down over the wearer's Boys Like Patterns in the Guardian WoncPer Package The designs shown in illustration will delight any little boy and this s only one-half of the large sheets in the Guardian Wonder Package. On this half sheet there are 36 designs and the size oi this is i8 by 24 inches, each of the large sheets, as you know, measur- ing 24 by 36 inches. The designs shown here have a great many uses, embroiderlng rompers, sailor suits, scarfs and decorating racks, chests, book ends, etc. They also can be trumferred to the leaves of I scrap book and used for "mlfly day" painting. More Juvenile Patterns This is only one of the groups of iuvlle patterns found in this Wonder Pee . There are others m! , with ‘designs of blrdsflkh. butter- ‘vfliu boot-l. locomotive, automobile. *0 . w tie apt to run short of a design for any requirement. If you have not already become acquainted with the Guardian Wonder Package, you may be in- terested to know that there are over 800 transfer patterns on the 12 large sheets contained in it, but inasmuch as each pattern may be transferred l0 or i2 times, there are really several thousand designs. Ideal Method of Trnufer Do not use a hot iron to transfer these patterns, but just a little water and asllght rubbing with the bowl of a spoon. The children will derive as much pleasure and use of the package as the older mem- hers of the family. The price. considering all you receive is ridiculously low, being 55c ii you wish to have it sent by mail, and only 44c if you would lihgtn coll for it. You may obtain than‘ mi love . With, mm groups ofdesigru one i|_lit- it‘ at the Charlottetown Gun-dun. ‘I'll CIAIIDTIITOWI ooalnux lnciaudplusenndmtorwhlch I wish youwwld and mu the Guardian Wonder Package of over 800 transfer land ‘i Holmium” "oorilollbcnulm But she never tells of giving him any spiritual sustenance. She never tells of how hard she tried to understand him; to cntcr into all of his hopes and plans; of her studying and reading to make herself littered-lull to him; of her being gay and tender and loving. Maybe the reason She doesn't, is because the woman who feed their husbands on the brczid 01 life don't lose them. Maybe it. is only after men have Starved along 0n husks that they jump the bars and go out hunting forbidden fruit. Of course, in one sense marriage is a. business proposition because l! is a partnership in which a man and woman invest their al, and it 1S bound to be a failure if the man is not a good provider and the woman i5 not a good housewife. But it has to have something more than that W make it a success. It has to have love and SymPB-thy 11nd undersimd‘ ing and comradeship. It has to have angel's food as well as bread Mid butter. I I I I I I Dear Dorothy Dix-My sweetheart told me two days before the cere- mony that we would have to wait a little while; that she couldn't, marry me Just then. Now she tells me that I must wait a YSHr and then PBThBDS she will give me "no" for an answer. She gave no reason for this de-‘ay. and I have tried in vain to get to the bottom of the whole thing. It isn't her parents’ objection. It isn't money. So what on earth could it be She will not tell me, but told me to shut up and quit harping on the subiccl- Isn't it natural for a man to want to know why his sweetheart can't marry him? Should I submit in silence on the sublect. o!‘ Shvllld I dfimflnd the explanation I feel is due? TAIL-SPIN. . (initiator-carom: scanning 60-0 90'“ 4 AAA‘; xxxxxxxox xxx x x wvvw vvv Happenings O0 l I OOOOQO-IO-OQOQO-O-IQI-OQOO Reyalme-Sogial and Personal -.-- Fashions -.-- Lite nxxnknxxxmnx of the Week in the Iondon Dirk: and open spaces and last week's sunshine took her out soon after lunch for a pleasant drive round Batter-sea Park. This AIVQTSIGB pelt is sur- prisingly large. and possesses an old-English garden and sub-tropical garden. It also has a. large ex- panse of water, a reminder of the time, less than a century ago, when this South London beauty spot was a vast marsh, (says the London Daily» Telegraph). . o The Queen Mary Needlework Guild were invited to take their sewing to Government House yes- terday aiternoon,_ the gracious chateaine, Mrs. DsBloh being Honorary President. I I I Hon. Dr. W. J. P. McMillan was receiving the congratulations of his friends Tuesday on the occas- ion of his 55th birthday. I I I Mrs. T. B. Woodman who has been spending the past month in Ottawa with her daughter, Mrs. H. R. Stewart, Mr. Stewart and fam- ily, has returned home. I I I Miss Mary Brown, Prince Street, entertained a number of friends at a. prettlly arranged luncheon bridge at the Canadian National Hotel on Tuesday. I I I Many home friends will be inter- ested to know that Rev. Dr. John Howie and Mrs. Howie, formerly Miss Jean Henderson, daughter of Mr. and Mm. G. E. Henderson of this city, who have been located at Jobat, Central India, where Dr. Howie has done outstanding work in the hospital there, leit, early in February on their way- home to Canada and are expected late in April. Dr. and Mrs. Howie are ex- tending their trip, going over the ground covered by Mr. H. . Morton and made so familiar to the reading public in his book “In The Steps of the Master." I I I Mourning tones are not usually expected to act as relief from drearixiess, yet it was the half- mournlng tones, it is related, which gave the only note of colour on a recent rainy day in London. Um- brellas of sliver-grey and pale mauve are among the accessories being used. The mauve umbrellas. toning with the nosegays of panma violets which are worn in many black and grey ensembles brought some measure of relief to a. very drab day. I I I The study Lovers Club had an intcratlng meeting at Mrs. I... D. Murray's home yesterday after- noon. I I I Mrs. (Dr.) gC. H. Beer entertain- ed at a jolly two table pirate bridge Wednesday evening which afforded pleasant entertainment for ‘her guests. ‘ I I I The suggestion has been made in London that in place of the royal courts customarily held in April, May and June two royal garden parties may be held in the autumn. The royal courts were cancelled this year owing to the death of King George At the proposed gar- den parties debutantes would be presented wearing half mourning- pale mauve, grey, white or black, relieved by touches of color. I I I Miss Elna Clark and her friend Miss Dorothy Morrell of Montreal spent the wcek-end in Ottawa with Miss Clark's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Sherwood. I I I Rev. Robert B. Messervy and Mrs. (Continued on Page 9) hurt-bunny, yurueculllwll noonhuyio Iron um there, "m", mwitbdaftnueleolornldenlmburmy g Queen Mary is always interested‘ The young couple however. will b: ‘ u, of Toronto. entertained Sunday at a very pleasant tea pany in moor oi Rev. Dr. J. S. Bonneli of 111th Avenue Presby- terian Church, New York, end Mrs. Bonnell. formerly» of Charlotte- town. who were returning home on Wednesday. I Mrs. Water Wilson, i-Iillsbomi street, wag among the bridge host- esses entertaining on Readily‘ evening. ' . ' Hines Edward. the infant son of the Duke and Duchess of Kent, is continuing to make good prone-BB. and is said to be rather over nor- mal weight and height. He is with his parent; at Adsem House, near Chichester, which has been placed at the disposal of their Royal l-Iighnessm by Lord and Lady Louis Mountbatten. In the meantime. gggd progress with their new country home at Iver Heath. n98!‘ Windsor Castle, is being made. special nurseries are being arm"!- ed here for Prince Edward. These will be on the most up-tO-dflto limi- ov o u , V, The indispositlon oi Mrs. Arthur G. Bruce is regretted by her num- erous friends. I The continued illness of Miss Marion Shaw, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. R. H. Shaw is much re- gretted. Miss Shaw entered‘ the P. E. I. Hospital for observation on Tuesday and it is b09911 5m wlllsoon regain her health. I00 Garden lovers m; well represent- ed in our Royal Family today, and they include enthusiasts of all ages. . The question may well be asked‘ which member oi the Royal Family j owns the best gardens? A stronz claim could be made for the King's grounds at Fort Belvedere. but this, might with justice be challenged by] the Duke of York, whose gardens at I: Royal Lodge presented a wonder- ful appearance last summer. When. the Duke and Duches of Kent‘ take over their new country home’ at Iver in Buckinghamshire they. will come into possession of the: beautiful gardens which were for; several years the great joy of Prin-I cess Victoria. The Princess passed. many happy hours among her: flowers. The gardens at Harewood‘ House are among the finest in the north of England. while the gardens oi Windsor Castle and Sandrlngham draw visitors from all over the world. New hostesses of 1938 are help- ing to bring back the old-fashicnedi sit-down luncheon party, Last year's favourite forms of cntertalning_ the fork lunch and cocktail party -—are in abeyanoe at the nioment. They surgest large numbers and festivity, both out of keeping with the mood of the social world. The Duchess of Roxburghe is among the brides of last autumn who have adopted the plan oi a series of small luncheons or dinner parties in Preferericte to the cocktail party. She and the Duke of Roxburghe have taken a house for their first season in Great Cumberland Place, where their neighbours include Lord and Lady Airlie. Sir Victor and Lady Warrender. and Lady North- brook. The Duchess bag not w; a great deal bf space for entertaining. “On the move" as the Duke is in the Royal Horse Guards. Plans for a town house of their own are not practicable at the moment. The wonderful collection of wedding presents received by the Duke and Duchess has been sent north w their Scottish home, moor; came, EASTER CARDS AARE NQVEL, SMART AND SIMPLE “M-“M-eueeew s- l. o MARCH 28,1936 “ ivv v They tried bribing . . . They tried coaxing . . . But the child still refuses. Now they're going to make him take hi: laxative “even i! it‘ takes all day." And that’: the big miltske. Doctor: any that the nervous strain a child undergoes when forced to take l nasty-tasting laxative can throw hi: entire system out of‘ order. Millions of mothers have learned an any way to avoid this hazard. They give a laxative all children love to take . . . Caatoria. Do you know that: Cautoria is made especially for children? It has no harsh, purging drugs that: ra ta re What mistake is this young ¢oup|e about to make? 0 wool some adult laxatives contain. It won't “cmlh" its way through n child‘! delicate system. .\ \ ./ Cntoria in n ufe laxative time gently utimulltea the muscles in the lower bowel. It helps the system throw oil‘ body wanes, And it does its job thoroughly. Never use any laxative but Cutorin for your baby. If‘ you have several children, we suggest you buy the Family Size Bottle. It luau longer-in more econom- icol. CASTORIA The Children's Laxative from babyhood to ll yen-l ~ v0 J-O-Qvfvrvvwvvv BOOKSJART/ MUSIV , (BylRH-l, ,-' Q-O-O-QQ-GO-OQ-Ie "The Inquisitor" by liugh Wal- pole is another story of the Cath- edral town of Polchester. the scene of his former novels "The Cathed- ral," "Harmer John" and “Th8 Old Ladies," but it is not depend- ent, on them. ' In his prefatory letter, Mr. Wal- pole says: “These four novels of mine are, of deliberate purpose, novels of event, There are in the course of them murders, suicides, abductions, riots . . . I do not de- fend melodrama nor do I think that these cathedral novels of mine are melodramatic. but their viol- ences are deliberate. and the scenes at the close of this present novel are true history." He prepares us anyway, and if "The Inquisitor" is not melodram- atic it is decidedly dramatic and the tense atmosphere is heightened by touches of the supernatural-the spiritual world intmding on the material world and resulting in a general disorder. As one reviewer remarked-"Even the cats are drawn into the task." The murder in this story is logi- cal and is due to the influence of the forces of evil on a -weak and frustrated character, and the In- quisiitor of the Cathedral. a vague phantom of whom only a few are conscious. ‘ identified with the ghost of the urdered man which is revealed to many of the souls of Polchester. "Th8 Inqlli-Bwf" is a book of var- ‘ied appeal, with the power of the Cathedral dominant throughout. It is well written of course, and in- teresting w the very end but comi- how falls far short of Mr. Walpole‘! "Harries Saga." (Continued from March 21st) George Gershwin. composer, was born at Brooklyn, New Yolk, Hep- tember 25, 1098. He has studied piano with Charles I-Iunbitser And harmony with Edward Kfenyi and Rubin Goldman. He has compos- “Oh Kay," "runny Pace." "Rosalie," "Strike up The "show Girl." Sing" and "Let Tim met Cake," famous "l! psody in Blue." the "not symphonic piece "An Amen- novel by Dune» Hayward. Qfiwte Gershwin did not in hi0 ed many musical comedies such as Blind.” "Of Theo I and orchestral works such as the Plano concerto in "I" and the bril- can in Perla." His infest work is his opera "Porgy and Bus," the libretto of which is taken from I and Dorothy 'l'oday's Short Wave Radio Program (All timq in Intern Standard) THE INTERNATIONAL S-W STAGE ALL TIME IS EASTERN STAND- ARD SATURDAY, MARCH 2| New York 1:45 p- m. —Metropolitan opera. Milton J- Cmss. Narrator. WZXAF, Schenectady, 31.4 m., 9.55 meg.. and. WEXAD, 195 m., 15.4 meg. Geneva 5:30 p. m.- League oi Nations discussions, l-IBL, 31.2 m., 9.65 meg. London 6:30 p. m. -"Peacock Paradise." An Indian motif, compiled from the works of Rablndranath Tagore, with music. GSD, 25.5 m. 11.75 meg., GBC, 31.3 m.. 9.58 meg. 06B. 31.5 m., meg., or GSA. 49.5 m., 6.05 meg. Berlin 7:30 p m. --Peter Pan. A popular fairy tale set as Musical Melo- drama" DJC, 98.9 m., 6.02 meg. Boston 8:15 p. m. -Boston Symphony Orchesra. WBXK, Pittsburgh, 25.2 m., 11.87 meg. Census _ 8:15 p. m-—Venezuelan Song contest. YVZRC, 51.7‘ m.. 5.90 meg. Madrid 8:30 p. m. --.Popular songs of Argentina. EAQ. 30.5 m., 9.87 mefl- New York 9 p m. - Rubinoff. WZXAF. Schenectady, 31.4 m., 9.53 meg. t Pittsburgh 12 a. m. —-Messages to the Far North. WBXK, 48.9 m., 5. l4 meg. SUNDAY. MARCH H ' Budapest 9 s. m. - Maygar Orchestra- HAB-ii, 19.5 m., 15.3’! meg- Moscow 11:35 a. m.-Opere from 50181101 ‘theatre: explanations in English. an, as m., l2 meg. Bolton 8:80 p. m. -R.ebromcests for European listener; of special sub- jects selected from WIXAL week- night academic series. WIXAIa 35.4 m., 11.79 meg. Purl: 0:15 p. lIL-OOIIGQ-fl from Radio- Paris FYA, mam. 11.12 meg. 33%;”; Nottingham GED, 9H m., 11.75 meg. m., 9M meg, or GSA. 40.5 m., Netherlands ‘i p. nn-Qpeoifl loudly ovoninl mu! stood that orchestration" was not mum, m _ t, m, 3mm "MP1 P°""- t" “m! “am gum from the Ietluriends. no. a previous works having been u, m“ "m n,‘ 0M b! hil musical collaborators. “m; But for "Porgy and Bus“ he dil- h” 9,1“, .433“ by [flu-inc m"? "We W11 and am of u» s. .4. mo. m m.. wmtehlsowninltrum Iltlomdc- ammo; _ v tothetemlthnsilnm . . Van (in: '_ “Wt M4110 We ma! In can w 11:80 p. air-Broadcast dedicated 8 mu oo the 0pm. N! hi» I) ville, ll. b, 001030.11 inn. -