1. . i i: . fl ., ""1112 corners and blend the color 4 .hueverr- -rngu-vanes-.-. «--.-u u. ‘xx! ..,r...... . _.. ,r .‘ .,. '__ A '-"' hkt ‘ — v . mart’-9 "-'Aa kA-._.sk-.A---ik II! V vv‘, vvv R -44. _‘ _vx.vv. v ..,_ A: i syausrwzm Iand .......‘“..:."‘.“...,’n.....' ' t -1.-vi '-lbhlfllh hearts are never 1) ---ulvik for the hash many uties, Active be,. then, while you may.” - . - Be strong to hope, 0 Beam. Though the day is bright. The stars can only shine In the dark night. Be strong, 0 heart of mine; look towards the light. »-A. Procter. ...t...... ‘U ....... PIEASING ‘ ‘Most arts require long study A and application. but the most use- »ful of all, that of pleasing, only 3 bIire.—Lord Chesterfield. ' wxsnoiu truly generous is the truly I .. wise; and he who loves not others lives unblest-—-Home. -l.ION'!lpA!l.T‘S BATTLE CRY . On the Royal Arms of Eng- land—l.he lion and 'unicorn—ap- .. pears the phrase "Dieu et man droit." . Know what it singifies? It means “God and my right." It was first used as a battle-cry by Richard the Lionheart. This was just before the battle of Giscrrs .when Richard was fighting the French. He used this cry to .,3diow the French that he was not , ,s.,.va.ssal of their country, but a. king by the grace of God and his . _own right. _ ' .. Picture the warrior king hurling himself into battle with that de- , Iiant cry, and you'll always re- . Rllnber what the phrase means. DID YOU KNOW? ‘,,'fha,t the was tree of the Malay Ind Philippine Island produces ' that most deadly of poisons known , as strychnine. The name is from a. Malay word meaning "poison." ‘That the Boer war cmt Great Iritain one million pounds per- _ week, this being the same amount ‘IS the Russians spent on the Rus- Iodapanese war. The great war oflt Great Britain £9,000,000,000 up ‘.0 INS. ‘ That Hr Walter Scott was given "I the title of "Wizard of the North" ‘utter he had published his Border "unwise mud rsoplo can loan mucaW"r'rL? happiness,’ their snemiu. ill‘. ': plant hindnaaa. Itisbsttertoaaynoilhiogthan. nothing worth while. Adversity is the true scale for tbe weighting. of friendship. The shortest distance between two ycints is seldom more than a block. A doctor data not necessarily havewbelliiiguiltwknowhis tongues. » Nobody can acquire a college education by reading the jokes in a college magazine. A woman's heart may be in the right place, but her mind soidorn is, especially in a bridge game. A mob is the more dangerous bocaus« it is usually composed of Persons who have little or no idea of what it is all about. NEW POINTS skirts: Tighter, shorter. l3 inches from the ground. Coats: Definitely waisted, basttued, with rounded edges, full and loose. Wrist length, with wide sleeves. er ‘ .. Padded upward in- stead of outward. Details: Moon-shaped patch pock- ets. Machine stitching. FOR. SPORTS WEAR Rough shantunga interpret many new sports fashions, along with cottons and linen. METAL CONTAINERS AFFECT BEVERAGES- Every beverage containing alco- hol has its own peculiar effect on diiferent metals and may be af- fected in color and flavor by metal containers, scientific research shows. During the past year an in- vestigation was made of the cor- rosion resistance of various metals in contract with spirituous liquors. fermented wines and malt brews, and of the amounts of metal these beverages can pick up without being harmed. The results have demonstrated not only that certain tpyes of metal containers are satis- factory but that of all the metals used either alone or in alloy form, ..._........ ' short and some are longer. Signi- - ficant developments in skirts show ' for evening the use of slits no ' niwelists. ' the world. niokle provides maximum protec- xunances. Incidentally he was one “on to the producg , or the hardest worker of all ..______.__.._._ _ STABCHED COLLAR. BECOMING That the London zoo, which was popuLAn opened in the year 1827, contains the most varied collection of animals to be found anywhere in Increasing numbers of well- dressed man in metropolitan cir- cles arc seen in white laundered collars once more. The undeniable neatnesa and from appearance that these collars have make them an important part of any man's SKIRT LENGTIIB UNCHANGED Skirt. lengths are unchanged this spring. meaning that some are wardrobe. Colored starched collars. to match the shirts they are wron with, also have a crisp freshness that is very admirable, and these, too, are being wcm in great num- bers this spring. the comparative absence of trains and drapes showing the feet while in beach dresses and skirt knee length is stressed. TO APPLY LIPSTICK When applying lipstick, keep the lips apart and work from the centre ‘ outwards. Carry the color right to the corners if the mouth is small: if the mouth is large, stop shcrt of ell into the natural lips. 7 Your stun h--and your resistance to disease depend upon your lood. And your blood depends upon a full supply of iron if it is to keep you strong and well. When your blood hasn't enough iron you will feel rundown, have ' vno-onergyrbu-too-sadly tired, nervous, irritable, suffer from broken sleep or digestive troubles. . . . But give your bl6o&__$$]'§‘ofi‘glt necdsfsgid. the ailgicnia . causedbylackoiirdl. rdiuppen. : '- _ ‘ _ " To get iron into your blood safely and quickly, take Dr. t Williams’ Pink Pills because they supply iron in a form which you- readily assimilate. The moment this new " supply of iron gets into your blood your-health begins to ‘l Blood-rich in iron will flow through your veins, nourishin and strengthening your nerves, building up yourvl tyflanli reaiauneeyand maluagyou bright and _. . ,, _ , , , , ‘ oipsople of -an up iisva been inneaued ‘Dr’, Sill " Pills Iron n-uuswn. If by I *fT‘5'”‘” ,. M '5 -,.ar . . -.I . ‘ a. ._;.4A’._._- , g “BALL vvv v . AA~ .'.r n 4‘. A --.‘.l-f--- '5; * RA vv _ _ - i... _ V g.“ ’iVianaM aw ‘ .th‘-.lr1usta..c's_h uld N t’Sh' k .HielhR¢I;0f|Iib“itll!es —(i{e Sh0(:lld be" ' Able Meet Emergencies as They _ _, ., Arrive Do M. 1iIel frvili exry hardshi , picked up after 't.li°1:1l."::ikd or: them to do any lugs ahomeastheydid lgricrant of how toaiaifiam Now nu’ ma " ‘ofiiowtorunnn old whdn their wivll the is to utter machinery. stops and every , confusion, My daughter ed a man nrmempmorbsctuushtllunwboharllfiy t the house and when my dlulhter is 1 . hdkeeua things running Just like clockwork. More than that. he is a Brest help to liar when she is well. Pious warn other moth- ers against making the mistake that I did. nnansrmn. itflmliit. ' - hrllwer: . " ‘I my 1 ccntendodtiiat making a happy houew ‘$53.. two-handed Job that re- wluired the oo-operation of both the husband and the wife. that the reason that there were so few ideal homes was because men dumped all the responsibility and the work of making the homsonthewoman anditwaatoobigslob for her. At any rate, all of the really happy homes that 1 have known have been the cues in which the man of the house took an active interest in the proceedings. lie did-part of the smiling instead of expecting his wife to grin like a ohosnire out while he grouched and suited to a corner. The bills never got in a men because he helped wife run the budget. 'rhe house was well furnished because husband was artistic in his taste and- liked beautiful surroundings. There was always good food on the table ‘ ‘ was an epicure and proud of his salad dressings. That is‘ as it should be. Every husband should be not only wining, but also able to help his wife out in a domestic emergency, and it is a. I111 and a shame that mothers do not prepare their sons to be real nellrlneets to the women they marry. They rarely do, however. At home the avfllie boy is treated as if he was the Grand Sultan. Mother waits on him hand and foot. She picks up the clothes that he scatters from one and of the house to the other. she cleans up the bathroom after he has 1616 it looking as if a. cyclone had passed through it. If he comes in late she rushes to the kitchen to heat up his dinner for him. Even the husk)’ isds who have to play ball in the afternoons for exercise are not mulllrcd to do any chores around the house. . Mothers don't deal so tenderly by their daughters. Girls who hive stood on their feet all-day behind a counter or worklnz in a. factory or pounding a typewriter are expected to help get the dinner and clean UP when they set home and to assist with the many sewins. but not the boys, though why, goodness only knows, when the boys are for at-mnier and better able to do extra work than the girls.» And it isn't because there is learn that ‘keeps mothers from teaching them how to make bread and sweep in room. The greatest chefs in tlie world are men. No house is ever as tidy as men keep a ship. And, moreover, men nus to cook and get a kick out of it, as is witnessed by the way they brag about mm per- mrmanoes when they go camping. I have never known but one woman who took a sane view of boys’ position in the home. She had sons and nq daughters, and she taught her boys to help her with the housework Just as if they had been girls. She taught them to make a. bed as neatly as a, West Point cadet does, to vireep their things in order. and how to cook and serve an elaborate din- net, and it not only saved her from working herself to death setvg my. who were far better able to work than she -was, but it gave a skill and knowledae that will be useful to them as long as they me. To many a nervous. womout. overworked woman, crazy with a sick headache, a husband who knew how to fix the baby's bottle and who could go out into the kitchen and got a good meal would look like an answer to prayer and a minister-ins’ angel, and have all the romantic heroes in the world backed off the board. U 0 O I 0 Dear Dorothy Dix—1t. amuaes me the way you champion the men on that old. old question, whether or not a married man should have a night out. I have been married more than four years and it has been my experience, as well as that oi my married friends, that if you give a man an inch he will take an ell. When they get'a night out they not only stay out until ear.y morn but come home drunk as well. can you defend this? snows arm. Answer: _ I can't defend a man getting drunk under any circumstances, but it is ly that he is rarely able toslip it even for a single evening, It mags; 1; an occasion to celebratewith whoopee and without regard to in. con- sequences which he knows he will have to buffer, anyway. But I deny that‘every man gets drunk whenever he steps out of an evening or that he goes on an orgy if his wife‘: on an’: upon mm, ay the time a man in 014 mourn to be married his character and inmtisn formed and he has worked out his own code of conduct. If he is torn- perate; if he ismoral: ifhc isthesortofa manyoursapsctgngu-gym. ing to marry, marriage does not change him so completely that h; can’: botigulsitedto behave himselfifhegouout fcralinglsnight, Q can’ ave as demoralizing an" effect as mat. on mm. mm other wives seem to think that it does. Y“ you I“ Y ....___.__. Anyway, you miss the point in my a mom, no 9, h|,|gbg,nd' off. It is mu: That the fundamental Elan aria:-y human 1:93;‘? 1: for personal liberty. It is the mind we flxht for and die for, and whan you title it may from men and womln you have takan sway from them the greatest source of happiness in life, and you put yam-ggif m an ‘-01. of a. tyrant and, oppressor. Whatweam freetodo fta , tl gbou minute we are forbidden to d:.Ir‘I)ythrilii|ci.trb01I§;!I.e| the c.1°nsd3ii‘:g' greagh that we are bound todo.We would try tobr-ash out of aiail even though it wlashsaain padcmir and we were fed on nijhtingglgy wngugg, gm '9 won a ouris no.mattsshowkmdhg 1; , 9,”, facts that every wife should bear in mice. or G "I And '" Itistlibettinthhhand gm“... n’ r v t t 9 us walls. It ' , Leave the door open and he will sit by‘ his of will climb out or the window. no wife over yet not ‘whet bv‘WI'-chins‘h1m- 'I'hnt la a. mafia: of his own volition. Not of surveillance. . ,.. .t .. , .~‘ .._..-. o_,q,.,U -,0 _ j Dear‘ Dix-#I-m.ve.a fv dttractfvs sister who isnow a wi arts n or seemed ifiteresfecifiy man. untu new. when she nu {gflgfi head over heels in love with a man who has no Job. no on no no home N man no cnildran. no rust wife ouumiluos bststah\‘in:uf‘r;i;.a’f‘fam wiihthslr naxvdoor neighbor. say mm of I. socraeyaboutnimthat ecannot on knows when he is every minute. '1’ N’ °' ‘M’ bud woman, but she wants to marry him. ‘What can I do’) V ' . — -:A woman) 3 o .- 5... I . , 4.‘ *‘':‘._Av _a--A A Perso V '..Lvv , it. Two-liandedfiilob in shielded than . never asked abouttiia houu. Asarerult they grow up as married and can't afford to have servants, so “ sick the houaah anything occult about cooking or cleaning or disnwaahiug that boys can't ‘ easy to explain why he does it if his wife keeps him on the leash so ti¢ht- ‘ Ihs,sven knows he is going with t cinch infatuated with a man site 6 cvanmiw .4.‘ yww .w.. r...'.'. .. ALLA ... . .. £‘¢‘vwv vw it Ed \ chic - ‘L. ‘- A‘ wv vy no -:-_Lt' -- 4 IA? — M A-nee».-ouaoeoo-OH-OOOOI-aeeo I AA 4. A v . vvwvv,~vv v~ re est-elooleee-sq “ lH¢Pn.¢;ning8 son John ,'..... her daughter. Miss Anne aucinp. or tor of His Excellency & a C ' of Canada, um .g|-fly. m Canada by thebucbess of Adwll on Buturdliu April 3. will spend some time at In Ottawa, with Their moul- lanciea. . . . | Colors returned to British fash- ions Wednesdai. following - tion of oiflcial mourning for Gocrgs V on Monday. naval Court. however, will conun- ue in full mourning until Septem- ber at and then will chsa-vs iiaif mourning until -‘tobor 21.-llsck vests and black arm bands for men are still stricti correct - with full evening dress or formal din- crs. vae a senator .1. A. MacDonald of Car- digan celebrated his and birthday in: IImdlY- . _ _ Hon. Adrien 1'. Arsenault of sum- mcraide oeiau-and his 17th birth- day last Sunday. I O t Miss miaabeth Mlchlillan, who is leaving shortly for st. Johns. Nfld, where she takes up her new position on May lat, was the guest of her bridge club Tuesday evening at I dinner bridge at the Canad- ian National Hotel. A lovely gift from the club members mauled the happy occasion. Miss M.IoMills.n's departure is generally regretted by her numerous Manda. 0 U 0 The Llout. Governor and Mrs. Denlois entertained at a smart dance for their daughter Miss Helen and son Bob on Tuesday evening. me young people return Monday to resume their studies in Bishop's College, Toronto, and Kings Colleg- iate school. Windsor, after a much onl°VOd holiday. . A cordial welcome is being ex- tended to Miss Mary Houlc and Miss Harriet Gibbs who arrived home Wednesday after spending the winter months in Cambridge, I O 0 Miss Constance Hyndman left on Friday morning on return to Edge- hili, Windsor, accompanied by her school friend. Miss Margaret Will- son of Vera Cruz. Mexico, after spending an enioytblc Easter holiday with her father, Mr. J. 0. Hyndman. Miss Willaon has spent several holiday seasons in Chan- lottelnwn and has made many warm friends. I O 0 Mr. Harry Hyndman. of Edmon- ton. who is attending Trinif/y Col- loge School. Port Hope, spent the acotland.‘ mother and sis-V ms. of the’Weah Miss wumlmu s. mcuod. home for burial, is the gueshof Mr. and r. s. Ohao¢i.ler.. my I t. in-. Ralfih Murray. accountant of the ma sank of omuu. ulna: the week-and in New oiassow. N. at, mu: his parents. Mr. and im. 3. mo. Murray. in was mom- Enisd by his son yfdraca. Mrs. tufly visitingm New York Ind notion. ' O00 Mi‘. Ffdnk Mcxlnnon, has 1'0- Tht turned from a ten dlira VIE“ With his uncle. Mr. R. N. Taylor. WM- mount, P.Q. . I Mr. and Mrs. R. Don acott spent last week-end in Amherst with Mr. ‘loott! mother. Mrs. Ray Scott. 0 O 0 Mr. J. A. Webs‘ hasbeon con- fined to his room for the Pm week with the prevailing cold. 3 O C Mrs. atsv.) Carlyle Webster and Mrs. Mary Hanan. who were in Truro this wool: attending an im- portant mosting of the Eastern Division of the W.M.I.. rd/umed home Wednesday evening. 0 0 Miss llffle Macxay and Miss Myrtle Momr, students at Mt. Al- lison University spent the Easter vacation with Miss Effie‘! ilrents. Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Macias’. Bum- msi-aide. - I 0 0 Hon. L. R. and Mrs. Allen. Bum- mofside, returned wednesdly nlaht from I short trip to Mommi- Mr. and Mrs. Ifeber urge. Miss Katherine Mscliean and M18 G1'|°9 Mugford, motored to Halifax for the holidays. . . am. w. A. Cutollffe. Brtchton. was lwoefus at a delightful bridge party at her attractive Home Friday evening. spring flowers in delight- ful profusion added a pretty touch Betrrothsl news was rvvcaled at I. Monopoly Party of about fifty guests at 265 North Alta. Villa street. Monrovia. oelifornia. when Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Van Kellen In- nounced the.enn¢°m¢'|'|"- 01 me" daughter. Katherine. to Mr. W- uster Fraser of Inglewood. Cali- fornia. The wedding to tote P1303 in early July. Guests wm #95911" from Monrovia. llodondo. EH10 nook, Inglewood. and ms Anaem- Dfiintly mu hments were served in the form of floral vases with a cox-sage of -panaies for each Kim‘- The tables were beautifully amm- ed with I. must cott-I-B0 in the center of a. nrden of mine fl°‘W' era.M:r.!raser.whoiahos.dbook- keeper of the Inglewood branch of Easter holidays in Ottawa with his uncle and aunt. Mr. Justice and Mrs. J. D. Hynldman. O O 0 His Excellency the Governor Omani is to give an address an afternoon next, at the in Knox church of the Provincial Women's Missionary so- OMV of the Presbyterian Church in Ottawa. Their llixcailmciu mu 1‘. ceivo the dalegltos, ioliowing the . meeting. Mrs. touclas, wife of Premier Dysert of New Brunswick, spent nus: in Glace Bay with their father. Mr. J. 4- M¢D°WIl1..Bn.:ok.side street. The mole my bridge club had A who supper bridoe at the Qugdn Hotel on 'mesday. 0 O O Mm Beniamln hours left Mon- day on a visit to Montreal. 0 C 0 Mrs. Marcus Calder and son Ralph have returned from a visit to Moncton the sums of Dr. and am. Donalds. O O 0 Thu younaer pooplc thorwghly alloyed the different dances ar- flnled for Easter Monday even- lnl and many new and pretty divans made their first appearance. I O I From Paris comes news of more Ghlrmlns designs than over for dainty handimchisfs. m evening wear there are chlffons with Pats. icy designs and large coin discs. emphasising stained gllss colour- inta. on black or while grounds. Linen and batlste for everyday handkerchief: bear motifs picked out from the Beauvais tapestries an. Versailles. while others offer all- UNT 0011*-1'9-Bllread of pansy, mar- tuofm. and briar-rose on grounds of pink, green. red. and brown. There are also ‘ ‘it designs in fuchsia nudes, delphiflium puma and blues. tulips, petunlas. and anemones. O O 0 Mrs. Nelson rnttonburv. Halifax, spent tutor at the Admiral heattv Hotel, saint John. with her fath- Nothing. when m woman is that m , is «at to reuoruIId,ilI_re is no use u arguing win: her. It is a pity er’ °'°'“." .5".“m‘ fl106Il'|l.b¢i0¢kM1|DIlnu1‘lec0md§bh0r'8d'l‘|lfl. M. mm: mm“ “,0 “com. notlormr our. mod the remains of her sum, T pl‘: ,o,roues arm» A mi. Oslsillia as abortion all '0!‘ man as the an to within . in wonder than _ (m.>r.norol:enuu1im-V“‘° IiswrMfI.A.A-D!IIr$.ofBIuo- the security First National Bank is the son of Mr. Elliot Placer. formerly of Mgntgmf. P-I-1- rbrmal snjartslninz by I NW1‘ bar of the novel family 1-. 01 course, out of the question at the present time. but the Duchess 0! Gloucester is winning golden omn- ions in a quiet way. she has receiv- ed several of the Duhe's brother of- ficers and their wives at the flfiyll Pavilion. 1-row ions the Dim “*4 Duchess will be mylns It their nt residence is not known- the generll hope is betnr expressed that they will be there even after he has completed hk .3609“ °°““° at the Staff collele. THE COOK'S CORNER "AiVIomingSmile A éitkin olub had repinmi 1;. HQ* _ " IIIIO with young Mo ‘xii! III“ “X, pretty wan. ‘V day a who had been of 'n'm'.s J1‘ f:i;“iunc°ll1l.mge “' . Mi )1 mn.ouvo~su_mu. 1-..n.'°..";f,‘,’.,;‘_“ "oh..ii'm airs replied rath migma new the old ...u.,°,§ "HIM work never killed anybody ~ said the father. ‘ "’i'hst’s just the trouble, dad," ,9, turned the son. "I want to engage 3,, ‘mm W something that has the spice of ma-s,bo mum inteiiitlblo to I ““¢°1"_'}“- fury audience the . church. tin Inquisition and the . . 3!!“ '-“'7 '3 tenth year as a star and her mm, as an aclroas-manager. A decade Q Ii“ '58 Ifllll in “The Green ii-'7 ‘"39! then she has won par. Willill‘ “£119 in "Th! 3Bi‘l‘cttl. oi Wmifipoia direct" and "Romeo and John E. Webber had a very in- “mime article in the Torumc Saturday Night some time lign Wu“ "1435! HIVO the Stage" 1.; which he man" notable actress. ss—-nineteen of them--and perform- ances of the present any in Amcrl. ca. And even then he has not com. plow tho lam list which inrludl-s the Canadian Florence McGee, "h‘mnI from the slrawlzmry patches of Oakville, Ontario,“ who mode "The Children's 'Hour" lhe dramatic sensation of the ‘year, and Beatrice Lillie. who “is very much‘ if not altogether, ‘At Home Abroad'’' in which she sings nl.-my of her inimitable songs. ' Mi‘. Webber writes: “To name all would be to count the stars in the milky way. But do not ask who hfidl "18 “St. W0 W3!“ W die 1]] peace . .. . Miss Cornell is prob. ably the richeat in colour and pas. lion. In Le Oalilenna the most excitingly exotic. Lynn Fontaun. the most translucent. Ina claim the moat exquisite in comedy. Jud- ith Anderson the most flexible. versatile and fluent in gc.stul'<- oi thstrialscenearesaid cat and most sincere lines ever written by 000110 nornard Bhlfl. v beautiful speech of peat bagng shut away "from the light of the sky am: the I1Ih°..°f W fields and flowers." There is plenty of typical Shav- lsn wit too. in the play. and admit criticisms and antith- ccunceiles: "put the torture is customlfy-" . ndvenu (diuusted): want to torture the girl niere pleasure of it?" Courccilsa (bewildered): "But it is not a pleasure. It is the law. It is customary. It is always done-" "Thou are a rare noodle. Master. 150 what was done last time is thy rule. eh?" The play ends with an epilogue which one critic says mieht W911 hgvg come gttllght from not George Bernard Shaw WIS prepared for the critics. In his pnofoce he writes: “As to the epi- logue. I could hardly be 981330“: fife‘-;9al“g. WW}; ‘3',°““'fg,‘;‘¢¢,';‘,‘,‘°d all. And so on ad llbltum . . _ None “nmpwy W‘ hat uwmmh m_ great, but all greatly talented and Wm 01 bmmmg mm‘ It was with youth and the future on the '5'” by Mokoremok to mow side of most. The past _ , m, the cangnised Joan as well as the g,‘§m",::;" 33%“ ft 9”“ °rH‘\"‘ , _ . you i'r, “‘°‘““h:‘“d°t“l::§u‘1;"bu":;;'y,,y‘“';:_ wherein stars like Hanan. T[‘ll\, ht,“ ml“, mm,“ “M m_ Dusa. Bernhardt and Mrs. M ‘° V " “‘ " shone with the lonely brilliant-.~ "Do you for the to the drawing room fireplace. but getting ctnonizcd is a different mat- ter. and a more important one. so a Venue in the westcrlng sky . . Mrs. Pat Campbell, for in-.t...».. still comes occasionally in l‘( .11 1 am afraid my eoiloauo must ‘WW, modern audiences what acting u when tho ihefltre was a catlwfm our own Lucille whtson, too . . Meanwhile the ladies have the Stile:-iii America. at least. \\'llClc man are men and all arts ":~i.ssy"—- outnumbering, and. we fear. out- ulenting. with a. few nolablr ox- captions. the male rteprescntattw.-5 four to one. Them we import." In May V. Baclrvilie-West is pub- lishing a new biography of Joan called "Saint Joan of In the production of "Saint Joan" now being shown in New York. Katharine Cornell plus the part of Joan and her performance ma;-kg the high point, to dlfie, 0! I fine career. The critics seem to be unanimous in her praices. Last year Katherine 0011!!!! Ind Elisabeth Dorgner were rated as the theatres two outstanding act- resses, aud it is indirectly due to Elizabeth Bergner that Katharine Cornell is now acting in saw- "Saint Joan." Learning thlt Mill Cornell had long wanted to act the part of Joan, the Austrian sctrus urged hertodosc and offeredto _. ‘: -— making the screen ver- sion of “saint Joan." because while the stage helps the screen. the screen does not return the coin- plinunt. This year marks Miss ocrnell's .. ‘lilo .*' New ea-we orce a grandma lresps_ feeling 4: b using Dr. ocd. leeplessnral Ind Zia: as neuntla and r sums disappear before this restorative treatment. DI.0heae's . NERVE FOOD unusual. ‘full-‘Ls This surprise trifle has s 810801‘ flavor. soak some sponge finest: in ain- ger wine, arrange them in a bowl, than cover with a dissolved lemon Jelly. Leave to set. Cover with 96 pint cultlrd. 110001‘- ate with shredded preserved tinler. whipped » cream and chopped blanched almonds. HUI‘ SNAP! Ginger snaps make a change among the more usual biscuits. Try this easy recipe. Ingredients: 0 or. plain dour, I pinch of salt, 3 or. butter, 4 or. deal- erara sugar, 2 teaspoons groun smut. it teaspoon of spice a cinnamon. 1 tablespoon syrup. Glove the flour. salt and spices to. gather. Cream the butter and sugar with a wooden spoon. on stir in the dry ingredients, is , lastly, the warmed syrup. man into a stiff pasta, roll out on a floured board, and cut into small rounds. Place on a greased tin.andba'aein s moderateovcn for is mlnum. sum in an airtight tin when cold. ’ Chan 4 ca. dried ca. Weiflvd sinus’ and add the grated rind and inlet of 2 lemons. PAITNIIING FIG Ancth wi 0'1‘-“”u““‘ 0 lainflaur, awe ' ’ Imflthav ofaaitaudlos. sour. our in man”, zhintbumen mlistoioun Prfiihemhiunm gnu“ bas|n.iie_downand 3:; far] Spring Fashions For Home Dress-Making Ivory mother likes to sea her children smartly and appropriately dressed. The sailor costume is ms type that will always be popular for childnh. Doth small [iris and boys lock de- lightful in sailor toga. _ are is something so neat and trim about them. . Today‘: models are particularly likable. Brother's blouse has a yoke to match dam-‘s dress The sailor - collar is small and comfortable. They are so any to make. No alcoves to not inl Iohernaa in white cotton as broad- cloth, pique, linen-like weaves, etc.. with navy blue or in navy with white are most favored. Pastel cot- tons are also suiiabil. Style No. me il dawned for air- es2,4and0years.8i.se4roquires’ H6 ‘flail! of 30-inch material with 5 ylrdl of lrliiflnl for drab. Boy's suit to-‘Nina 194 Ilrds of 30-inch material mu: 1 yards of binding. Psmrn includes moth model! in turns viii h m to on to be ordered and will colt lie each. Price of°:='1'I'l.'.RN is cams in fllllllllor ( Ir erred. wrsocotpcvatfiin "W ) —...—..I_'._i._—..a-a-eq--v r0: "IQ an --n‘suuoM'usausa "-9- smot Mean _ , . u .