recital, "Beautiful Speech and the Art of Acting," at the .Skokié school, ýWinnetka, on the evening of Friday, March 27, at 8:30 o'clock. A nurnber of dinner parties will precede the lecture and Mr..and Mrs. Guy Stuart. Bailey: are giving a re-ý ception for Mrs. Campbell later in the evening.. Patrons and patronesses of the affair include theè following 1uorth shore people: D)r. and Mrs. Arthur Byfield, Mr. *and Mrs. B. P. .Affleck, Mr. and Mrs. Van. Wagenen Alling, Mr. "and Mrs. Sidney 'î. Bail, Mir. and Mrs. Laird Bell, Mr. and M4rs., Samuel T Chase, Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Cates, Mfr. and Mrs. Percy B. Eckhart, Mr. and Mrs.AlrtS Gardner' Mr. and Mrs. W. Sherman Hay, Mrs. W. G.,Hlbbard,, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hollowav, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mc- Pherson, Dr. and Mrs. Dwight C., Orcutt, Mr. and, Mrs. George J. 'Pope, Mr. and * Mrs. Rloland D. Whitman, Mr. and Mrs. Harry. L. Street. Mrs. Campbell hias for a generatioin * leen the acknowledged leader of the *British stage. She bas perhaps dis- played more*versatility thian any oth- * er ~ artist now before us, her- reper-. toire including practically ail of the great classic.. roles and ratnging.down: and through such modern plays and comedies as "The 'rhirteenth Chair,". "George Sand," "Bella Donna," etc. She has made, several tours oef the V nited States.>and is undoubtedly best remfilbei'ed here 'for ber Paula, in the Second Mrs. Tanqueray, and ber Eliza Doolittie ink Shaw's Pygmalion.. Perhaps the- outstanding professional tcvent In her long .and distingutshêd career was ,lie joint tour she and Sarah * Bernhardt iiiade in Maeterlinck's Pel- leas and Melisande. Mme. Bernhardt was appearing in London, and during * lier engagement invlfed Mrs. Caunpbell. to. enact the role of Melisande to lier Pelleas. They produced the play, Mrs. Campbell piaying in French for the first time in lher life, and enjoyed 'a sent- * sational, success. Mrs. Campbel's lest appearance on the London stage :was in a draniatliation of.,G. B. Stern's.The 'Mrs. Campbell stood stll: for her point was the scope of tone and diction to evoke. trait and mood and back- ground, to shade fineiy, beat high, sound deep the caste of tho.ught, the phases of emotion. (She recited the Twenty- third Psalm; ln her phrasing was the music. of the English Bible.), But over her. face. also ran the *quality, of the character, the course 'of the thought* the, play. of the emotioni And often enough, as lIn her acting of old, the mood. or the passion seemed a posses- sion, an, emanation, of her Whoie being. Two speeches and we listgeers heard the eagier beginnings, the despairi'ng enld, of the second life 0of. Paula Tan- queray.,A word. and a moment scratched out Hedda Gabler's contemptuous hard- ness. Verses of Juiet-in a tone silken wlth poetry, each phrase alight with' Young ardor or shadowed -Into Young reticenoqL On: the terra.ce or Iby the fountain, Melisande cpoke, .to Pelleas, aand another than Debussy was netting music to Maeterlinck's words, conjur- ing hie figures out 0f twllight.' (Often Mrs. Campbell 'returned to this play. The memory of It, first with Forbes- Robertson and Martin Hqrvey, theni with Sarah Bernhardt, she, evldently cherishes.) Haif a page frôm Lady Macbeth's sleep-walIking scene-and a t'one that was less the voice of human throat thali the4. wan echo of pha.ntom- * Sounds. At the opposite extreme, Shaw's Eliza Doolittle, squealing confusion and dlsmay from ber fiower-jgiri, guilet, or Anastasia, the 1Datriarch, at high tide. of ,exuberant -authoirity. -A career ln "Many peope have been aýbles-' CHANGE, by closing, th.fr reçsië WINTER moanths, and.maling thel, P. educational tour to .Washington, D. *Ç., and to historie spots in Mary- lanud, Virginia :and Pennsylvania are complète. F.. D.-Frisbie, New Trier f aculty member in charge of 'the, tour, stated.this week, that lie is trying to make arrangements for the group makcingthe trip to meet President Hoover. The tour. will be more than a trip to Washington, Mr: Frisbie said, for it will irnclude visîts 1.to practically ail of. the Places which stood *out ,prorniently in American historyof the colonial -and Civil war periods. Since the tour will be made by bus in à leisurely maniner- the party. will be able to? make a thorotigh study of the points visited. Anyone planning t o. go on the tour should. have bis, reservations in by Tuesday, March 24, Mr.. Frisbie stated. The Party will leave Chicago, March 27, returning' a. week later. Mrs. Louis Bruch, 1815 Chicago avenute, Rvaitstcsn, Ivas .hostess to members of her Drama Study club Thursdayý afternoon. The club is composed mostly -of Wilmette miem- bers. to combineý ECONOMY with a pleasant le nces on, the North Shore during, the r home: at the EDGEWATER, BEACH HOTEL 5300 BLOCK SHERIDAN ROAD - CHICAGO Marcb mnd April are, the months wlren our Iow.st rates are in efFect-We wilI be gIad of an opportunity to show you what we have to offer, and to quote rafes for the whole, or any part of thatf period. Telephone LONgboach 6000-Manager's Office.." * e * e e. A WELL known AUTHORITY recently STAýTED that. about 3.0001'000 accidents OCCUR annualty in UNITED States.aid. UPWARD of 30,000 DEATHS .acb yea.r. STATISTICS show THAT the. average o 0F accidents ,cared'f SUCH as scratches, BURNS, bruses,-stc, COST the accident COMPANIES on ýan AVERAGE of $400.C FOR *ach cas. ICARRY some o f this iINSURANCE yourseIf BY ke.ping your FIRST Aid Cabinet IFILLED. Marck I 5tk. TO -22nd, î$ FIRST Aid W.k.. TH-ROU$HO.UT the.' [.COU NTRY. Se.: OUR window-a FEW cents invest.d -IN First Aid Suippies MAY save a tif, or J UNIOS EUNIIS$[ INC.. ANID GIRLS. WEAR WILMETTE central_ tte Anues tte28 a" n the 4ot for - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -