er WINNETKA TALK April 16, 1927 rist ird Cabin ~ ke rs "Europ Economy plus travel comfort far surpassing our expectations. Round trip fares from 170 to $190. From Montreal or Quebec you will sail down the beautiful St. Law- rence--the mighty water boulevard to Europe --then only 4 days open sea. Direct services to Liverpool, Southampton, Glasgow, Belfast, Cherbourg, Antwerp, Hamburg. Collegiate Tours to Europe Summer Season--1927 37 days, $385--all expenses--personally England, France, Holland," Belgium. Most itinerary with maximum benefits. Cabin and Empress Tours, $850 and up. Always carry Canadian Pacific Travellers' Cheques, negotiable everywhere. ee escorted-- complete Express Company's Full information and sailing dates from local steamship agents, or R. S. Elworthy, Steamship General Agent, 71 E. phone Wabosh 1904, Chicago, Ill Jackson Blvd., Tele- For Freight apply to W. A. Kitter- master, General Western Freight Agent, 940 The Rookery, Chicago, Ill. adian Pacific World's Greatest Travel System | Speaker Pays High "Tribute to Little Theater Groups Here Paying high tribute to the work of | little theater groups in Evanston and | along the north shore, Mrs. Anthony | French Merrill, speaking on dramatic literature at the Evanston Country club Wednesday morning, April 6, | spoke most encouragingly of the fu- | ture influence of the neighborhood group, or the "art" group, upon the commercial stage. Taking for her subject "New Honors for the Stage," Mrs. Merrill discours- ed informatively and inspiringly upon current drama and contemporary dra- matic literature. "Everyone," she said in part, "owes a certain service to every great art and has an obligation to give it a cer- tain amount of study for its intelli- gent understanding." Theater Is Significant The advance of merit in the theater of the last few years which has re- | deemed the drama from its position as a negligible art among the English- speaking people and put it in its pro- per place alongside music, painting, sculpture and other fine arts, has nade the theater significant in the pursuit of cultural gain, she believes. Introducing her remarks Mrs. Mer- rill drew distinction between the thea- trical and the dramatic--the one a matter of stage mechanics, the other a "great art worthy of the finest con- sideration." The dominant quality of the poly- glot mass of Americans is not the dramatic quality of other races, she reminded. By temperament we are, as a nation, opposed to the popular idea of the stage. It is the first "vice" to be renounced by Puritan inheri- tance, and the history of the drama 100-704 Washinston Quality Work --Day " EVAN Phone WILMETTE 145 In Sunday and Day EASTER The thought of Easter creates a beautiful picture in our mind ....chimes ringing... .church steps, the scenes of smartly dressed people. . . .the advent of Spring. . . .the official opening of a season we so eagerly look forward to. And, indeed, this joyous season ushers in so many activities that an abundance of Time is neces- sary to enjoy them. Time is what we sell; and Time is the reason why 3,000 house- wives give the weekly wash to Bill the Washington Laundry Man. "University 5900" will bring him to your home, too. v . Out in English is peculiarly different from that in other languages. It has only recently been looked up to as an art. The theatrical she defined as "the producing of a studied effect by stu- died, if insincere means--a conspicu- ous and noticeable aim at prominence on the part of the actor and distaste- ful to the appreciation of true art. Sincerity, fairness and truth are nec- essary to the real drama--no calculat- ed effect for a purpose. Dramatic art is the power of life itself carried by natural feeling and emotion." She cited an interesting illustration in the variance of the one from the other in that portion of Edna Ferber's "Show Boat," in which Magnolia, grown and observing the sophisticated New York stage, contrasts its artifi- ciality with the genuineness of emo- tion that characterized the river boat playing. Brander Matthews, author of "Rip Van Winkle Goes to the Play"--a volume recording impressions of the country's most scholarly dramatic critic viewing his field after an inter- val away from it,--has been for years, she opinioned, America's leading critic and teacher in the field of the drama. No one, she stated, has done more to raise the level of criticism and to de- velop a better standard among audi- ences. She reviewed other books of the drama and several outstanding New York plays, contrasting their salient characteristics and qualify in illustra- tion of new modes and manners in the theater. She paid enthusiastic tribute to the Goodman Memorial theater, the theater at Yale, to Sidney Howard and other significant high spots in contemporary drama. Yesterday morning, Mrs. Merrill discussed "Keystones," the last of the series which she has delivered under auspices of the Evanston Wells Col- lege club, and which have been among important cultural occasions of the Lenten season. ANNOUNCE EASTER SERVICE This evening "The Crucifixion" will be sung at the Church of the Holy Comforter. Sunday there will be two celebrations of the Holy Communion, one at 8 o'clock and one at 11 o'clock A large choir is expected at the later service and there will be a violinist. Nauvoo, Ill. is claimed to be the most prosperous town of comparable size in the United States. Its 972 inhabitants have more than $2,000,000 in the town's two banks. Stomach Disorders A large percentage of body disorders may be attributed to Acidosis. Much discomfort and frequently serious de- velopments result from this condition. Don't let your ailments be- come chronie--relleve the acid condition be- fore it does damage. Mountain Valley Min- eral Water from Hot Springs, Arkansas, contains alkaline min. erals which tend to neutralize the excess acid in the body. Drink this pleasant mineral water just as you drink ordinary water and note the relieved feeling It brings. 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