PAGE TWO ‘____. 1,'}{P 'D-QQ'O§'UO{ ' ' ' ' Wom ‘kfitflfifififi 5 macro t OF THE ,.WEEK. wear-old Princess Ell!- . to the Throne. “'55 5° , _ ~ by 980101111111 during a tins patio nance of the play .‘ Rainbow Bids" front htr seat in the ti her clenched anger (l ii",ion Elie v.ll'.iin of the play aileniptlng io lurc a group to the dragon's den But. Si. George ap- (- nick of t.n‘.e and Ailfllilf‘; tune when u Aizlit Mu- rlt ' ex- ‘ .5 VCFSC n ‘God Save ' n sun: for the first znance The inc Lord Y‘ a '\._.~ c n ‘AIIHX . . spcak; , - \' we bl‘ . of the Empire use '1 cur battle cries; adorn dies. i. v; tn s .\I.ii'garet :0 attend the perfor- <e o.’ a slifnt cold. A I0 ‘tire theatre fl Priiictsn - b u‘. vlvct coat . ccgar and blue hat. mire a cherry red ivlth sable. . l5 aluwiys inter- "n object». and her ce and Corona- souverirs is a1- During a recent antique salon in the Queen chosel brooches, a pain- ir of the Cdromi- the King and two PfiflC/Cr-SGS, and ' . SZIllCK for the silver . in 1888 of King Edward 2 t! a: . (Queen Alexandra. n n - lugs, iantcrtained ._. at the tea houron w; on, who with Mr. AHMAD HAPPENINGS Rose. C I". Deacon onihe death of her EW- _ . i. brother it Kelston Park near l ' _ ‘ Bath, England. BrLgtidier-Gcizeral { Rev A.E. MacKenzzc. Mid MYS- Herbert Motitgomeijc-Canipbell c B l-facKenzie Sijfilli/ Christmas _ in C,_\[_G_ was m his 79111314“; Wesllville with Mr. Maclititizles o n - c . parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Dr. Jack Jenkins has joined his ifflcKenzie. ' an ’s Realm I" THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN cial and Persona a? l.’ Fntfii" Three squares unsweetened choco- lsts, 1 1-8 cups (1 can) sweetened condensed milk. 1-2 cup com syrup few pains salt, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Mrl. Ivan Home, was hostess 1-2 cup chopped nut meats (op- at a most attractively arranged tlonal). bridge party at her home last Melt chocolate in heavy shallow evening inviting friends in for, pafiik. sjfiteraeldi sgiéidetgiitll‘ m , , . {our tablet u u a v i slowly, ovar 10w heat, stirring cori- Mm, g, Elliott mill, entertained l stantly until firm ball forms when delightfully at a four table bridge | tested in cold water (approximately for her friends Wednesday after- 20 mlilztutesg Rertnove fgompfoire, izdtd noon at he; lmel- home 69 Upper vani a an nu mea s. ur n o Prince Street. y jbuiiwred Pa" i3 by 3 inches)- v v ' ' . l When cold remove from pan and Mrs. Cook of Toronto. Ls spend- cut into squares. ing Christmas and the New Year, _ with her dauchter, airs. J. Austen. ,‘ —‘** - . n - The t-iiristcxiiiig of ilie infant NUS- TW-L; PYim-‘P 111L119 P B: son of Mr. and Mrs. John Ausion ‘ 1- H°5P1ia1 15 difeply regretted h.‘ wok place at 5L 1331115 church her numerous friends. Sunday afternoon, Declnd. After ' ' ' ' .tlie creniony‘ the guests “we en- I Miss Mary Wade returned home Itertaiiietl at an afternoon tea, at fills ‘F9914 "Wk a 1111'"? mmims l "The Dundas Apia." by the baby's V151?» t0 1191‘ 111999. MY» B11199 lpaxenm Mari- in Montreal and nephew. i a - n - Rev. Robert Messervy and Mrs. l The many friends of Mr ‘Mrs. J. Auston sincerely regret _ their removal to Halifax. N.S., Prllwe-"ses 51115591“ and Mar‘ Mvhere they go in the interests oi _ S~1Y9§ R05}? him: Th?" 5i¢¢kin€i b!‘ Ward Pitfield and Co. of Montreal ., the flhimim e! Selidririsliem They have been greatly entertain- HQUSP- ed before their departure. l a - . and Alcsseriwi in Toronto. n - o a . Miss Agnes Paoll R.N. of New Miss army Miles, and Miss Szilly - York, spent ihc Christmas W991i" end with her father Mr. Simon Paoli, water Street. o lHilgilCb villi enter The Royal Vic-, i lorla Hospital, Alonzrcal for train- l ing earfy in the lfcw Year - . o‘ ¢ o o s - Mrs. E. W. McKinnon left yes- The many friends of Mrs. Hugh lENiBi‘ morning l0 Spend New UacKay will sincerely" sympathize ,Years with her son, Mr. Charles with her in the death of her fathtr, 4 3191451111011 in Xmmrffli- Sir Douglas Hazcu. ' ' ' ' o ~ - The young people have bren socially gay this week with a merry round of private dances, bridge, etc., while the more sedate are looking forward to the New‘ year eve festivities tonight. s n o a l The continued illness. of Colonel , A A. Peake is regretted by his imany friends. His son Arthur has . ireturned from Kings College Hal- l ‘fax to spend his holidays with his father and mother. I I Friends will sympathize with IVLi-s. Senaior J E. Snclair, celebrated his 58th birthday on Christmas family at Daytona Beach, Florida. for the winter. ' I Several pi-Qressivmi dinners have been planned for New Year's Eve. theguests going on toThe Legion Mrs. Jeffrey B. Macphail. Mon- treal, has returned after an alo- sence of fcur weeks, during ‘which time she motored to Mexico City and visited Baltimore, New 01'- 00o Dance in the Canadian National 18811-1 find NEW Yvfk- MYS- Anne HOteL Marie Zollinger, of Zurich, Switz- . 0 o o 0 erland, who has been Mrs. Mac- Lord and Lady Bessbomugh, phaills gitesf. and accompanied her Lady Dgnegal and the Canadian to Mexico. has now sailcd by the ' e31“; Chsrrglgzazluriaosti? v High Commissioner and Mrs. Vlh- Queen M311’ on her return w l?” f ~- . i‘: 1 . ." t".- y hcirte 2a Water Street yester- Cent Massey- vere Bm°11B_th° W0 siilf" “d _ _ _ d,“ hundred guests at the Hart House _ _ v 7‘ " o u o n String Quartet concert, held ‘un- MTS- Ari-hill‘ Lewls- “'95 h°~5t9¥5 ... . L, be 5 B05- der the auspices of the Canadian at a. 1011i’ bfidile P1111)’ lfP-eifYdlv *"' K _ _ V“? gm _e‘kc d w women-S Club 5n London, Eng- afternoon in hcnor of her sistsr p“ .nt(} o'e,f““ffl“i§ls;elgflrfl land Mrs. Howard and Mi~s Flora _~ tip-tit; l .1 t,’ 1 ' ' . _ ‘Th! pflrcnts‘ Mr. and M“ Jim t o o o ‘ Gordon. who 1s home from To , _ ML m4 MNL R_D_ 3,0419, 0g ronto, visiting her parents. Mr. and ' “mm” . . . . Montreal are spending the holl- Mrs. J- H cordon. . - _ day sea-on with their son-in-law _ ' ' ' ' 8.1g‘ 1:53:35, and daughter. Dr. J. P and Mrs. ‘ Miss Mary Stronu. of Bedcquc, , " the guest: of Mr. and Laniz- 358m” w the E1195} at My; F .W‘ 53”“? - _ 0 o a c Summer-Ale. fol he winter B Roy Human’ Tho present nzdispcsition of mflnihs. Desfcn Ne. 341 hours. ‘rho pattern contains two tr ahoim in illustration. complete lnstru ions s (lunttllzin Nvvilltuvork Dclmmnmfi? ['50 this cnupnn. To Thr- (‘hntloflcfown Guardian NfWlilflhllfk licpl. nIJr-lt .\' \|_I. I'll Attractive Embroidered Pillow Slips --»¢'/-ewe-_. scnPops lll a vsrietv oi moods have been used for these artisvc pillow Lace finishes the scallops of the first pair, button-hole stitch - will -r. . ‘The motifs iirc csrwcntimial iii treatment, very simple 1 nzil ‘t to wo z l‘ .tl dainty and most srtractlve when finished. type- of en-brniclcry is always entertaining and an ideal pastime for leisure ‘lent-t; used, nncl color suggestions. ‘ complete tint-tern and lnsiructions for all smut 110 coats ln slumps or coin (coin preferred) I I 0 The Misses Ber; and Dvryse Mac- Neill of Charlottetown. were guests for the Christmas holidwys of Mr. and Mrs. RB. Richardson. sum- merside. ivliiss Allison Tufts. Halifax. arrived last Friday to spend the Christmas vacation as the guest of Mrs. B. C. Prowse. Dorcheeter Street Miss Tufts is a student at Mount Saint Vincient College. I I o Miss Margaret Magrath, of Chi. cago is in Ottatva on n visit to her uncle and aiinl. tho Hon Mr. Justice and Mrs. .1. D.‘ Hyndman. Miss Magrath is a I granddaughter of the late Sir Louis and Lady Davies of Otta- wa. Mr. F‘. H. Lawson, Oxford. Eng- land. who was tutor at Newton and Corpus Christie College during the term or Premier Campbell at Ox- ford University, arrived in Sum- mcrsitlc on Tuesday accompanied by Mrs. Lawson. They are remain- ing in Summerslde for a few days guests of the Premier and Mrs. Campbell. Miss Helen Holinaii left this week for Halifax to visit friends. Miss Janet. Horne. is visiting friends in Sydney, N.S.. for a few days. - . - - NEW YEARS DAY A1‘ THE (‘llIARLOWT-ITOWN POST OFF- ICE-New Years Day. Saturday January 1st.. i938, the following order of service will be rendered the public: wickets will be open from 8 sum. to l2 o'clock noon. and all malls for de=patch bv afternoon trains will be closed at the latter hour. There will be one complete delivery by letter carriers and the rural couriers will make their regular trips. I I I This amsfers for each of the three designs ctions for embroidery, details of var- of these designs. to The Charlottetown I Queen Elizabeth is a true house- wife and fakes a. personal in- forest in the supervision of her Palace and Castle homes. says a writer in the London Daily Ex- press. She has just brought an rttractive and practical overall ‘If is put on the Furs of an artists Print your name and address plainly. 531,", , _ ._ _ ___ _- 4- _ _ _. _ - - - - —— — smrrk. and slips on like a cent. being ‘oosc enough to wear, enm- Ftrvrt Athlrv-s — — — -— - -* — - " — - — ’ ' “ — _ _ " rorgnbly m" any d115,; m» wit; g m“, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ yrovm“ ._ _ _ _ _ - - - — Latin Quarter bow of black ribbon conform the kind A es and drawbacks as wives. ks what type of girl makes the best wife. ahsérymginltltisxl: ‘The Tired you prefer. Because a girl may have all the vh-we; under the sun and still be a washout a so. wife unless she 11m your fancy. Good wives In W391! a wit“! 0! let's begin with the business girl. I‘ i-l‘: ' fig; T, “‘ ‘ ‘¢¢‘ , 711E c0010.; l ..‘.‘::'.'.'. I - lift‘? ' BOOKS/ART, 1 I ¢ORNER $.35‘ Dorothy D“ nlmifli. i I M u SIC = ’ .07 I. I. I) ‘ MAGIC CHOCOLATE CARAMELS ' ~e ““ A Girl May Have All the Attributes Demanded and Still Not Be a “Best” Wife Unless She Can Fulfill All of Man’s Desires The personal taste. Of course, girls are mt standardized as merchandise 1s. You can't Inflrry a blflmie with the certainty that you will Bet a sweet. gentle. little yes-yeaser. Nor can you 651101156 a brunette with the assurance that she W111 be warm-hearted loving and vivacious, and keep you on your tlPY-Oes- 01R!!! i WPB d°°5 not run true to form. Nevertheless, girls do more or less i0 a. Pattern and 8 young man can get many valuable tips about of a. wife one will make by Studying it. garden. varieties of girls and their sill/ARUB- I/et us consider a few of the common. 01' Her selling points are that she has been trained to punctuality and won’t keep iher husband dangling around for thirty minutes waiting to keep an ap- , pointment. ‘ she knows how to run a budget and has the respect for i money that comes from having earned it. She will have more sympathy . for her husband because she knows from experience how nerve-wearing _ and exhausting the treadmill of business Ls and how, after a. hard day 1n the office, all one wants to do is to come home and collapse and be fed ; and not spoken to. 1 But the drawbacks to the business girl as a. wife are that she 1s sel- dom satisfied to work alone in her own kitchen after having worked in a cJowd in a store. Generally she has to lean: how to cook, and that is hard 0:1 her husband's stomach and pocketbook. She misses her pay fin- velope and is resentful about it. Andfiiabove all, she knows too much about nien. and no husband can put anyth Then there is the career girl. g over on her. He: assets are talent, a brilliant mind, fine education. companion to her husband, often good money-maker. Her drawbacks are that husband has to play second fiddle to her and is gen- erally‘ known as Mr. Mamie Smith. nannal home life. If she gives it up, she ina-Je. women are divorced. Thcn the home girl. Will like large family. the bills. husband. Mommas little helper. Advantages: how to cook and keep house. Has been Won't expect much of a husband, except DEW-ilk Used to being bossed by Mother and will If wife follows a career, there 1s no she 1s always bewailfng the sacrifice Awful warning conveyed in the fact that nearly all career Knows kgpt unspotted from the world. submit humbly to The drawbacks to the home girl are that she always smells of brerd and butter and her society has the same unexciting flavor. No pep to her and husband ls liable to lose his taste for her. she is fed up on the kitchen and will man-led. Then there are the rich girl and Also, swell chance that never enter it again after she is the poor girl types. The rich girl's asset. is that she can help her husband financially and save him from a life of toil and drudgery. The poor girl's asset is that she knows how to work and is not accustomed to luxuries. Their drawbacks are that the rich girl's husband loses his independ- ence and becomes a parastc upon her. tiocis because she wants him to play with her instead of work. Nearly always she kills his ambi- And the poor girl's drawback is that having always been denied the things she wanted she goes wild over going places and having things and ruins her husband with her extravagance, if he has any money at all. $2500 salary looks like the wealth of Henry Fprd. To her a inexhaustible. DOROTHY DIX. Pirates In Fact And Fiction Wafers Where N (Author of “Pirate Cruise", By CAPTAIN PATRICK CLIFFORD. 0 Vessel ls Safe “Men Without Fear", etc.) Works on Lhe automatic prin- I was standing on. Inside the lift the detective saw ‘no buttons or a lever of any kiiit Puzzled he closed the doors and learned the secret of the lift. as the cage shot downwards in re- sponse to his action. Only a. Chinamari would build 8 lift like that. he grinned, but, his grip on his gun tightened as the cage neared its destination. He estimated it must have dropped about fifty feet when it came to a. sudden stop. It was a desperate moment. If there were man wait- ing for those doors to open, he might be cut down like a dog. His face a mask. his gun thrust men- scingly forward, he saw the gates shoot back. Next moment his mouth opened 1n astonishment as his gaze fell on a great concrete cave. the walls of which were lin- ed with chests. banels, bales and cases. for all the world like some great warehouse. That om glance was sufficient to show him the steel-bound chests stolen from the Gigantic My heaven, he partied. I've found the Black Plratxs storehouse. The first shock of his astonish- ing discovery over, Clancy began to take stock of his position. There ' were three doors in sight, each of which appeared to be fitted with an ordinary lock. He glanced at. the nearest and crossed to it. The door responded easily to his touch. He looked into a. well-furnished room. 0n the floors were costly rugs. rare pictures adorned the ivails. Clancy's gaze swept the room over the sights of his levelled gun. There was no one in sight. The" he @8118!"- llBht of another door and at the same time heard a man's hard. cruel voice- So you would betray me. 11c hen-rd, in tones so biting and men- acing that even Clancy could not repress a. audder. Well, you ghm die at the hands of Wong _do you EMORY-pr the last victim of his skill Olga Burnlow shieked. Oh Gad. not that-shoot me-— fortune m0, but not Wong —not Wong. l But yes. my den-r. mocked the stranger's voice. Why-you limo fool. . . . His last words were drowned 1n the roar of a. gun and mingled with the sound was a. woma ‘s fastens it at a513, um; is one button half-way down the front. All the edses including those of ths two large pockdg, are finished with green binding: the overall is made of painted linen figured, and has a gay put- torlal design "after William Morris" in red, green, blue brown and white. death cry. Then the man called ciple, I imagine, he murmured and out again. Clancy set his teeth stepped inside. Probably controll- and crept forward. His eyes con- ed by depressing one of the stones tracted towards the narrow slit or the partly opened door. There was a. living woman— or a. dead one- and a man in the room -and the man was the Black Pirate. INSTALMENT 1!. The woman on the floor was 013a. Burnlow, and the other wo- man was huddled on a settee, a re- volver danglfng from her shaking 1n a hlghpltched. hysterical way. Clanw could not see her faco or any 101N111! by which to identify er. It was the man, however, who entirely absorbed him. Tall, and dflfised in a. pcrfectly fitting suit of Palm Beach grey, his face was covered with a black mask. even the hair being concealed. His eyes, which may have given some clue w Ylfltionfl-llly. were covered by dark 8088195. placed over the s‘its i" the mB-ik. and Clancy could see nothing of them. The grim 11g- urea hands were draped in tight- fitting black silk gloves. He was Ewstmphlsing the weeping wo- man. “"1955 0f V011. my dear, he said in the same cruel tones. I had selected a. far more interesting 10b for Olga. You. my dag-ling, W114 have watched her, as We tri - Ded that lovely flesh frg’: a hi: Mdy- I "w!" YOU. she would l; adJy have seen him priicflcg on you. The woman seamed not to hear him and continued to _ weep. 91mins: Me plied ls ho listen- ed to the man. What monster or cruelty was this creature. who would calmly condemn a woman u, tortures inoonceivably horrible? Bally naval, and that unhappy Gnnbr sirl. were in this friend's Dower. The detectives finger tight- emd “m” we W888i‘ and the glack Pirate was very close to eath. But Clancy paused, The min was more useful llfvo than dead. for he might lead fhg 4e. teotin to the women ho had vowed to save from the clutches of (mg q] the foulest criminals in history. silmi-JY he 899mm! back into the other room and sought about for a. suitable hiding-place. 3° f“ h“ luck had been phenomlrul, but “M1191 will!!! was taking no chances. A big curtain caught his 9Y9 and 118 fll-Wed behind If». It W" BPPBNIII-ly used to screen a small but well-bound library of books. The detective waited, aid from tho other room. He was obviously talking into I telephone. and Clancy recalled seeing an in- strument near the piano. A system of lnfornal communloatlon was very essential to this house of horror "ran-r “Mel's. She was sobbing bitterly _T Presently heard the voice of the‘ Black Pirate. who had stepped in . To start the New Year we miihl snmlno the 1M °1 5 Fiction which made up n new‘: of the Model Home Librl-f! l‘ k "out 300g pair 1n New Yor . A ‘sod foundation for any “W” 41W many of these well knvwn books do we own? How many M" we read? Austen. ~75!" “um” “m n . » Pfijfiufi c, H o n o r e de-"PBP Goriot" ,. aisninnoie. R- D- " mm“ Doone" BMW aQorge-"hvenlfl" ,_ Bronte.’ Charlotte J1me B?" Bunyan, John —“P11€Y1m'5 Pm‘ fitter. Samuel QT“ w“ °' All Flesh" u Cable, oeorae W- °id °"°°‘° Days" , oervantes—"D0fl Qfllhwte’ ., Conrad. Joseph -‘ 1W1 J"? cooper, JamesnFenriimoi-e - The lxst of the M0 tens’ ,_ Crane. CSWPhEI}, - The Rm Badge of ours! ~ Dickens. Charles -"'!‘he 0MP’... mas Carol." ‘David Coppemen’ . Pickwick Papers" _, Dostoevsky. 5rd" M- “ crime and Punlshmm " Dumas, Alexandre —"The 001m‘ of Monte cum." ‘The Th” Muteteers" m Manner. Georae —“P=W' 1°" betson" Eggleston. EdWB-Yd "Mme Hoosier schoolmaster" Eliot, oeome-"Adv-m Bede“ Fielding, Henry-‘Tmn Jones" GOldslnlth, Olfver-"lhe V1081‘ 9‘ Wakefield" Haggard, Rider men's Mines" Hardy, Thomas —“The Return 0i’ the Native" Ham, Bret —"I‘he buck of Roaring Camp" . , Hawthorne, N ath an ie l-“T _"King Solo- House of Seven Gables," "The Scarlet Letter" liar-try, Q-"Selected Stories from O. Henry" Howells. William, Dean - ‘The Rise of Silas Lapham" Hudson W. H. -"Green Man- sfons" Hugo, Vlctor- "Les Miserables" James. Henry —"'I‘he Portrait of a. Lady" Kingsley, Charles —"Westward 1-10.!" Kipling, Rudyard —“Kim" Maupassant, Guy de -—"Best Short Stories" Melville, ‘Herman —“Moby Dick," Mededith, George-“The Ordeal of Richard Fbverel" Merejkoivski. Dmitri -“The R0- mance of Leonardo da Vlnci" Mitchell, S. Weir —“Hugh Wynne" Poe, Edgar Allan —"Tsles" Proust, Marcel —“Swan’s Way” Reade, Charles-“The Cloister. and the Hearth" Scott, Sir Walter-"Qu entin Durward" Slenkiewlcz, Henry-"Quo Vadis" Sterne, Lawrence — “Trish-am Shandy" _ » StevensouR. L. -“Kidnapped," “Treasure Island" Stockton, Frank R. -"The Cast- ing Away of Mrs. Leeks and Mrs. Aleshlne” ‘Thackeray. William Makopiece — "Vanity Pair" Iblstoy. Count Leo Karenina" Trollope, Anthony, - Barchester owers" Twain, Mark — "Huckleberry Finn." ‘Tom Sawyer’! Wallace, 142w —"Ben Hut." -"Anna from a survey made recently of The Housewife And Her Activities DE JJZ37 .1‘ “—~—-‘l , ns .1. Literature wmauauas, THEDAILYIOUND Berghgmgwofkfliop wheroftofl Tlllhoul and hands are vellnllh went; Out on the mod where the dust and soil ' R11 thick on garments worn and mat; Or 1n the kitchen where I bake The broad the little children oat, Ho comes, His hand of strength I take. And every lonely task gmws sweet. OTHERS Bdoro we can bring happiness to others; we first must be happy ourselves; nor will happiness abide within us ulness we confer 1t on oilmers.-Mneterllnck. LITTLE MINDS [little mYiids are too much wounded by little things; great minds see all and are not even hurt. , —-La. Roche. KIND WORDS Kind words are the music of the world. ‘Ihoy have a power which seems to be beyond natural causes. —F. W. Faber. FRIENDS The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, grapple the-m to thy soul with hoops of steel. —Wm. Shakespeare . worm‘ TIJIBSMSEHOtJ/viir wonbtitdoft we. HAPPINESS Happiness is the natural flower of duty. 110MB 'I‘here is no sanctuary o4 virtue like the home. ‘ SERVING Loving and serving, serving and IOVIHBI nmhing else can bring true happiness. Love is the key that un- locks the heart of stone, and melts the coldest natures. It softens and silbdiles. sweetens‘ and ennobles our lives, and brings us into sympamey and humour with the whole created world. loving eyes over seek for the good, the true, and the beautiful; loving hands soothe the aching head, and smooth the rumpled pillow, and never weary of tender ministrations; loving feet are swift to bear good tidings and from morning until night are walking in ways of kindness, pianists of Summer-side, have re- cently had a Foxtrot Song, "Oh, Suzannei", published by Peter Derek Ltd. in London, England. Both the words and music of this catchy and clever number have been written by Mrs. MacArthur and Mrs. Schurman. "Oh, Suz- annei" has already been featured by Joe Kay and his Burlington Gardens Club Orchestra in Lon- don; and it will be heard on New Year's Eve at the Canadian Leg- ion Ball at the Canadaln National Hotel in Charlottetown. SPECIAL 0N P E R M A N E N TS $1.75 — $3.50 — $5.00 Shampoo, Wave and Manicure all for 81.00 Empress Beauty Parlor 29 Kin; Square Phone 1604 film-book tie ups, Will H. Hays, president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of Am- 1 erlbl». disclosed that "tho fountain ~ of literary classics and tho stream of biographical stories will con- tinue to run strongly. Among forth coming productions of this char- acter will be: "Pride and Preju- dice" based on Jane Austen's great I novel: "Wuthering Heights," a screen treatment of Emily I Brontes work; "Tom Sawyer" . Mark Twain's Classic of boyhood to be done in colour; "Kim," Kip- lings story of India. featuring Freddie Batholomew; “The Gambi- ers," a Max Reinhardt production based on the novel of Dostoievsky; “The Great Garrick" a romance founded on the. life of the great. actor: "Conquest" the love story of "apoleon and Mario ‘Walewsks, with Charles Bovyer and Garbo in the leading roles; ‘Marco Polo" the life and adventures of the famous traveller; "Personal His- tory" based on Vincent Shaun's story; "Madame Curie," the story of the famous ' " who was the tic-discoverer of radium: "Maris Antoinette?’ starring Norma Shearer; ‘Rebecca of Bunny bmoke Farm" a dramatization of this sentimental classic; "Ebb Tide" Stevenson's story of the South Seas, to be made with col- our. "In the field of the legendary," Mr. Hays added, "will be such out. standing pictures as “frhe Adven- tures of Robin Hood" s screen original done 1n colour. and ‘Arabian Nights’ a dramatization of the famous classic. ‘Mimic. both classical and popu- lar, will be a prominent feature on the screen in fort!‘ ‘ ., pic- tures. Among the outstanding films in this category. are ‘The Great Waltz’ based on ' ‘- nn Strauss‘ “Waltus in Vienna‘; ‘Chopin’ which will contain many of the great composer's works; ‘The Life of Beethoven‘ which will lnterweave the master's music as an integral part of his llfo story.’ Mrs. Muriel Leo MacArthur and Mn. IMII lohurlnsn, both tlien‘ ‘ rssmox nsanag Nightgown and 1 nym and new w? 1am,“ can as the most glamorous we. H1118 Bvwn or smartest tailored street dress. Unusual lingerie highlights. One a fitted bodice, ‘mi’ h“ wlde flowih 5k pockets and narrow gfoméff,‘ straps. Shirred vul lace form m, bodice and cap cleaves 0g Q awn gown. styled in the Directoire man. ner, A MorningSmile mm SW10 — Mr. Jones left his umbrella again. I do bellevg he would lose his head i! it were loose.” Second Steno -_'I dare say you are right. I heard ‘him say only yesterday that he was gclng u, Colorado for his lungs.‘ -_-_i_ @1145.‘ Make Your Party Hum WM Lively Games l l . ! l .< The perfect ice-breaker! “Han Me-Down Hats" provoke howls d laughter-and increase your popu- larity as a hostess. ‘Ask each guest to bring an old hm —the more ancient and grotesque the better. To a lively tuna 1h: guests briskly pass their hats in pa- per bags to each other around l cir- cle. The music stops! Each peeks in his bag. If the hat lults him, hl gaily carries it out of the circle. The music resumes. Unsatisfied custo- mers pass hats again. At the fifth stop of the.music each guest puts on —lu the dark-the hat he holds. Tho funniest gets a prize. Our SZ-page booklet is chockful of comical stunts, guessing games, for- tunes, charades. For jollier partiel and lively acclaim as a hostess, take the tips of this helpful booklet. Send 20c in coins for ycur oops of Grown-Up Party Rm to The Guardian Home Service, Address. Be sure to write plainly your Nfimt Address. and the Name of booklet. _____________ Name and? LEAF- FASHION GUIDES » FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER A smart casual figure-fitting dress of inexpensive rich colorful rayon print crepe. You'll enjoy sewing it... . practically only shhp- ed some to Join.....finlsh it in a jiffy.....and at a sweet low price that Wm amply amaze you. The buttonad-down-the-front detail is V"! fllluie flattering to both young and more mature figures. Nate thg 547G100 is fitted to "nip in" at thg waistlfneumslxtem pores gm- msts the slim skirt. With bright colored woolen the pet of the sea- wn. you'll want to make another in lovely aqua, slate, gold, 1-059, shfldfi. etc... .with detflchgblg While Pique collar. ' l son m. ma is designed m! sizes 14. 16. 1B , 20 years, 32, 94, 3g, i 38. 40 and {fl-inches bust‘ size 1c "quires 4 3-8 yards of 39-inch ms- terial with 1-3 ygfd of 35-inch con- trusting, I 86nd fifteen cents (Ibo) m film!» or coin (coin preferred! "in coin carefully, lddrau to charlottr-tovim Guardian glvlngg__ Style No. 2029 Size. “IMO Street Address o"! Province __i__-__.__~ YARMOUTH, N. S.—(CP)-Beav. era in Nova Bcotiu are increasing. rapidly, it was reported- to the Yar- mouth County Fish and Game As- sociation. Members believe an Open season will soon be required to keep the number down. colors m -