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" THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MARCH 1921—PART 1 | still it was powerless to atone for|service [EUGENE STEIN TO GIVE e | R LECTURE ON RUSSIAN ART (0L B et o ezt P ple which had provoked an ugly sur-|retary of the Navy: Thomas W custodian, antl Da laid PR RO UBOR had redressed a contemporary Wrong. | former service .men (Phone Franklin 5849)| Why Not Have the Best Dental Service— It Costs No More at DR. H. E. SMITH’S the dentist who takes per- sonal care not to hurt you— | puration, and that that soul could not ! lor, atien property healthy again unless|John Markey of Frederick, Md., the ulcer bu That is, in effect. | before the Postmaster General sev- what happoner Russia, and is still | eral specific cases of alleged discrim- giving the results of the successful |ination against former service mem | revolution a_sickly, pestilential and|Mr. Hays promised to have the cases lurid aspect.” investizated immediately, and as- p n\frnd the committee he was in full HAYS TO FAVOR YANKS. mpathy with the ldw directing of- Postmaster General Promises Pref- be strong and Seholar, Art Connoisseur and Dip- lomat Foresaw Soviet Regime. Announcement is made of an fl- lustrated tlecture on Russian art to be given by Eugene Stein the after- noon of April 13. at the residence | of Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1785 é s ficials of the postal service to con- sider time spent by employes in the military service on their postal record » gives you the Best Massachusetts avenue. Mrs. Biss is| 0 “I( £ De ".‘1 Work at ; s : . v in charge of the arrangements for| erence When Law Permits It. — o s i ; ‘ ¥ ' the affalr, tickets to which WIll be| 1ogimagter General Hays yesterdas ASSIGNED TO TEXAS. necessarily limited in number. Mr. Stein, who is known as a scholar, art authority and diplomat. is making his second visit to th country, and has recently been de-|of teeth free of charge. livering in_Hoston & course of Lew. | lemeat il Institute lectures on Russia. In |, DR. PIGEON, ' SEESER &y : P Sa . i g | e e 3 s v : 5 & et ot ° . moee s e} o g i | Special Window Shade S wremwwres DR. H. E. SMITH, MGR:s Sy S : : . - Foia einge thattme. Tn 1916 he Guaranteed Absclutely Perfect; Any Color oo somiane Eene i o B 35l by S 6la Regular. Special. from which he received his appolnt- | @ Best of Opaque Shades ........$1.50 $1.00 Lpower it 1a sated thac the Argen- |8 Best Oil Opaque Shades .......$1.75 $1.25 tine goverument continues to con- Best Oil Duplex Shades... . . 32.50 $l.50 Best Domestic Holland Shades. .$2.25 $1.50 Best Scotch Holland Shades .. ..$2.75 $1.75 Best Scotch Holland Green . . ... $3.25 $2.00 Best Cambrie Shades ..........$3.00 $2.00 sider that he fills that capacit | A vivid warning of the storm that | All Shades mounted on best Hartshorn rollers. We measure, make and hang all shades with best workman- was to break on Russia in 1917 came, ship free. hatred of thi: past was poisoning the | very reasonable prices—per- sonal advice about your committee of the he would ol as the letter | o preference to | duty at afternoon told a American Legion that serve the spirit as wel the law giving Maj. Frank W. Halliday, judge adv £ in this city, has been assigned to am Houston, Tex Fort ERRERRR | i recent Boston loctures. Leaving the opera one night, he sald, in attempt ing to gain the attention of a cab| driver, who could not hear his volce | owing to the din. he touched the! vouth lightly on the arm with his cane. The boy turned and shouted. furiously: “Do not dare to touch me, "roex those times have gone.” impressed.” the le turer added, for manifest some RRIRRIRIRIRIR Rl i R R Rl ) ) R R Rl ol o 830 13th St.2 Main 4874 % W. Stokex Sammon N We extend a cordial hand of welcone to those who have recently come and are now coming into Washington to tak: up their residence. to Mr. Stein soveral years before| whole soul of the boy. I began to! & that time, ho declared in one of his think that if the abolition of serfdom | SaRMERERRR] FRANK W. BENSON, NOW ON EXHIBITION AT THE CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART. 7/U. S. RED CROSS AIDS ! “SUMMER,” A PAINTING BY RERERR “Bayer” on Genuine Aspirin—say “Bayer” In many respects the exhibition of | }elinshof light and air. Hexhas gt;u;n nto his pictures the breeziness of the i | outdoor world. ply Work for the Idle | : , Warning! When you see the name | ache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Ear- N f A i d A T T . ... e o vataae o o e i Fozien: B, || INOFES @I AEE an Tt1StS | UNEMPLOYED IN AUSTRIA, o The New Washingionians you are getting the genuine Aspirin Lain- All druggists sell Bayer| eReT = = = e agid | —_— | B3R e ablets of Aspirin in handy tin Opens Shops in Two Genters to Sip-| prescribed by physicians for twent ene years and proved 2, and in bottles of 24 and Aspirin_is the trade mark of es of | {paintings, etchings and drawings by 100. mil- fe by Yions. Take aspirin only as fold in | Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetic- |F728K W. Benson, which opened in |~ jore than this, he has rendered most Panat = z ; - . . the Bayer package for Colds, Head- | acidester of Salicylicacid. me SOt Ly (S D T G B S St One of the most important things you will have to do is to establish jhursday, isioneyaf the most eREAE-|ivyyne it N’ aiwhite flmy @own:| In! order 1o, relieve the ' clothing : - e 5 nt.” i i /ing “displays that his been héld '1h {gateq beneath an evergroen tree, ¢ | shortage m Vienna, said 1o be onre| || T€1ations with a bank, whether it is for a savings account,” a checking | this - ci jvaried in The. work is not only Las delightfully contrasted the tex- character, but interesting ture of her raiment with that of the follage of the tree. to laymen and artists. fresh, colorful | Mr, Benson is an ardent sportsman account, the renting of safety deposit boxes or for any other of the services of a modern bank. slightly less acute than the food | shortage. the American Red Cross has opened fifty-eight workshops in the and picturesque and at.the same time | and his pictures of wild birds in fHight [ A oiiion capital and in G PR B P e oy b 5 D s in figh ian capital and in Gratz to pro- T! ) == verybody technically individual.and_excellent. | 27¢ eXtraordinary. He shows in this work for unemployed womén and | his is the Bank of th: People—the bank for everybody Furthermore, it is a thought-provok-| scription, and a kreat mumber of im. [Sbe = and that means you. ing collection. It covers drawing: Seventeen andielgnt nd eteli- i congid- | pressive wash o . i’ i ) . 3 : - R | contradicts some of the theories thatJisia%; been able o portray t e | hat-stretchinz become ax com- uainted J jects accuratel:, both in his printings | pet-siretehing las become ax com qua . have come to be regarded almost as{~nd in his works in black an1 white. | ol 88 Shoe-repairing. = Still the na-| v b However he has mat o hiee 1 tive population is trying to turn ite axioms. Fand to o ‘ome the desperate con- o, - I self with merely decorative commosi it is common to}tions, he miven his subjects denth In the first place. iCitions that beset them, and the Red | Safe Deposit Boxes For Rent jconsider an a¥tist's werk insthe light |throuzh a clever use of perspective. |(rOSS [8 endeavoring to facilitate i e s are| T Attemnt to amalyz: or deserihe | NeI0 attempts, - Sav = Supposed (0 he his best’ i Bent [ NI, Bensor's cieh dni D16 oy onhe ahows that aver 150400 3% On gs Accounts son's art has not been all of one!lime would be idle. They require. as! e AL oven L0000 ans | ished articles of clothing were de iered by the tion. sort; its character has changed. but 'l WeFe. 2 chapter to themselves. in point of mérit he has not for at! least twenty years surpassed himself. | The four oldest paintings in this ex- 4% On Specia! Depaosits Monthly Statements On Commercial Accounts 2 workshons for distribu- | < * *x .* * A single shop in Gratz emplo: The Corcoran Ga'lery of Art has lately | 2000 worker: S aTonE (Lheyaupi ot L Peastye Al it ek ated during the month were hibition stand-out today in the mass | beorme o eomntmenor o) Tist'S | yards of cloth for children's ciotHes of newer works as masterpieces. He | nhotogranhs of paint: 116000 pounds of wool varn, 2.500 may have galned In skill and facility,, Kenyon Cox. i knitting needles and 870000 yards of but the thoughtful observer is bound | Mr. Cox is best known as a mural | thread. - to ask himself if even so the painter|painter, but his claim to distinetion | Red Cross chapter workers through- may not have lost in depth of in-|rests equallv upon his nortraits, the ma. | Out the United States gre mobilizing sight and power of conception. Love- ! fority of which are of his brother paint- ' {0 broduce or rebuild clothing for the Iy as dre his interpretations of out- |er« and are included in the permanent | dustitute children of central Europe door life, still lovelier are his pictures of- rollection of the National Academy of | Particularly babies. people painted indoors in the spirit of | Design. These portraits have, a cer. the older school. The joyousness of the | tain decorative quality and are extreme- | One Is ephemeral, the joyousness of.the | Iy individual. though at the same tim=| GOV. RUSSELL GIVEN POST. |Other is'perennial. The little boy in a |admirable as likenesses and intimately | Semsane blue smock, the two ladles in white | suggestive of the personality of the| GOV. Russ:ll of Mississippl has.ac- certed thg chairmanchip of the Mis- itizens Savings Bank < “Bank of the People” 1336 New York Avenue gowns and the little girl with a cat are | sitters. not merely paintings, they are spiritual | There are mural paintings by Mr. Cox 1 intes s<ippi division of the Southern » rpretations and they are rendered in the Lib: y of s i " d < with ‘Eire ‘nmghte et et the Libraw of Congress. His pore g The ) Sl Tt was maasumota Just Three Doors East of 14.h Street They are indeed symphonic poems, | the Metropolitan Museum, New Yor! last night. Final organization is |OI capable of arousing not mere enthuslasm : Among_othors whom he painted are but profound emotion. be completed carly in April. There is a group of figure paintin including the” ~Portrait- of & Lady, loaned by the Metropolitan Museum o, Art, and_“Autumn,” loaned by the Cly- cinnati Museum, ‘and a “Still Life, loaned by Duncan Philips of this ci * % % % which are strong in color, rich in tone, : i splendidly decorative, but of a very| The Pennsylvania Academy o’ the Fine | different” type from the reticent early ' Arts' one hundred and sixteen:h annual | works, more Impressive, to be sure, but | exhibition, which closes today, was one | more given to externals, material rather | of the best held by this great institu- | | than spiritual things. . Works, however, | tion for a_number of years. i Which if considered singly would in each | portrait of Carolus Duran, instance constitute wealth in owner- Maxfl=1d Parrish, Cass Gilbert, Augustus Lukeman and the late Samuel Isham. {Mr. Cox 'was a most excellent critic and writer and the author. of a number | f poems of a very extraordinary beauty | and significance. Sargent’s | the great Frerch rainter of whom Sargent was » ship affording untold resources of esthetic . pleasure, Contrasted with these in quite a different key are the outdoor picture: of which William Howe Downes, i pupil, had the plage of honor, which it well merited. 1t was worth a trip to Philadelphia to see this pain‘ing slone. | | "Quite a_number of Washington artists. r erstwh'le Washington artiste. were {his foreword to the catalogue of this'rcpresented In this exaibition. A paint- | collection, writes with enthusiasm. He | ing by Frank Niepo'd entitled, “The Red says:- 2 | Bridge” was admirably hung in thej i “The joy of life, felt by a healthy main gallery. Theodore J. Morgan, now | ard normal man; the poetry of youth of Provincetown, was represented by an | | Landscape.” Hobart Nicho's and the big, sunny, breezy world of ' “Autumn clear, : showed a picture of “A Sunny Brook, | outdoors; the beauty of pure, ©ool, sweet color—something of ali| Winter,” which took Its place among th Richard S. Mervman and Alex this Is the summing-up in one’s mem- | best. ory of the most habitual and charac- | ander R. James, membars of the faculty | teristic phase of Frank W. Benson's.of tae Corcoran School of Art, were both | art. Refreshing—that is the rightiadmirably represented, Mr. Meryman b word to deacribe the effect of his hap- | a landscape and & portralt, and Me py visions upon one’s spirit. He draws | James by a portrait of his wife. Felici You, too, Saide"(he ‘Curtafn. throws open ‘the | Saman bio o st A e mife, Felcis | ll k cars of the past—take a ride in the Lincoln. R e et e Wil Rnow " Whm you Those who have driven this car thousands of s [} miles will tell you that each succeeding ride rive one reveals a new measure of motoring satisfaGion To convince yourself of this fa&—that it was possible to improve upon even the finest rzotor and Turniture d Loom W Wickers Are First in Demand; 4 %mnggafirfichaflbyw The World’sFinest Carriage for the World’sFinest Baby! [f i i o mifany) b s o o Wi . It is the first teme an cxhibition of | | Many of these conceptions are flg- | thjs chatacter, works of co wmuora:y ures of young people in a landscape|artists, has been held in the Metropoli- setting and in full sunlight. This sort | ean Museum. As the new wing affords| {of motive makes formidable demands opportunity for exceptional setting, the, upon the tecinical resources of l"e'umbmon is one of extraordinary note. painter and, 80 far as that part of Ahein will continue until April 26, > peramental, and has no suggestion o v i the artificial gayety of lhe‘cornedl.ln (nor. vy -.”!("’d two yznrlrnl‘lk. andy His ,art is spontaneous, natural and figure for “The Supreme Saerifice® me- ifull ‘of the saving mrace of whole- | Morial | someness. Its extérnals are entirely | {in harmony with its inner nature of ‘The Architectural League of New York | contentment and serenity. His touch | s holding its annual exhibition this vear {15 light, he never labors his point, his| n the new wing of the Metropo.itan * k k% style [s sententious and pithy, in;3Museum of Art. This exhibition com- S : & every stroke he s significant,” but!prises not merely architectural drawings, and enj nothing is there for show. e | plans and models, but painuings, scui g Joyment They wfll also tell you that the in-built stamina of the Lincoln insures a constancy of perform- ance now realized for the first time. It’s such a beautiful carriage—so smoothly, evenly woven; so perfectly designed; so carefully finished— what a joy it is to know that it’s a comfortable car- riage, too—generous, roomy, the springs scientifically Flaced for support and easy riding. Baby wants a Lloyd! And you’ll be glad you chose it too. Easy to handle—in the house, on the stairs, on the crowded street. And at such reasonable prices! It was Marshall B. Lloyd who invented the method |90 the werien of landscapes witn | and loom which produce these Baby Carriages and {fgures. ‘or. rather, figures in land;| The Aaueduct bridee fa azin open V1 1 1 1 Ing—i e T to vehlcular traffic. e southern ap- Wicker Furniture thirty times faster and finer than the Loty IntaFiance— the PreAnio ra-|proxch at Rosslyn hafl to he recon:| old hand woven products. These inventions cut labor {lationship that exists be’:‘w;e? the structed to permit onerations on the 3 2 i 5 e w Ke, at tha costs enabling Mr. Lloyd to weave the finest wickers, T e L S e SRR S 5 use the best materials, employ the most skilled work- | the feelinaNthalithol lnudscovelwith ewor(ysalsht | houss iwerclinxat | for g . = th es, or e figures withou n e new Aqueduct bridge ap- men, add the latest refinements and still sell his wicker fhe landscape, would bo unthinkable brocthe and the. work, which Shvolucd products at remarkable prices. That's the power of [ subject is_concerned, it is ‘enough to ETLA MECHLIN. say that Mr. Bénson has repeatedly’ LEIS MEcHLIN, come off with fving colors. victorious {over 4ll the intricate culties ln-[ {Vorved in ‘the proviem. what s more| AQUEDUCT BRIDGE OPEM. j to the polnt, hie never lets us feel that — — it is aceompHshed with a great effort. I The apparent egse of the achieyement iis one of, its chatms. We will welcome an opportunity to demonstrate the prowess of the Lincoln. Reconstruction Completed and Ve- hicles Once More Can Use Span. The figure in-a Benson outdoor Pic-lthe installation of an entirely new 2 ture is bathed, as it were, in the ac-|girder, was completed on schedule, sngention. {tual and comfortable sunlight, cares-| despite the heavy fall of rain which o { sed by the balmy summer breeézes, lnd‘ e!lllled during its progress.’ { sea by , pr css. ;en thousand dealers sell Lloyd Loom Woven becomes an inhérent part o;[ll\a apen- | . roducts. If your dealer doesn't hase them, write air scene, a tangible and indispensable e M - .ord Reading, the new Viceroy of 20 s for wame of nearest one who does. aaset In the plctortel e e ore of | India; relinquisiied n privata law prac- Toss - Buctensful - pletures of girts in|tice worth $150.000 a year to enter loyd Manufacturing C S SR S THE BARTRAM MOTORS CO .TheLloy nufacturing Company {numliant” DUt has sy ane sver given | e : p Oominee, M]ghix‘n 80 much radlant luminosity and sen- |I- s 5 Dept: N Mew 5 it light, o much 1204-8 New Hampshire Avenue Phone West 458 rurer thing, the magical welding of the two together, the sunlight and the sible warmth to the i : {grade and human genuineness to the | maidens, not to speak of that still || of girl? For, after all, the one exists lnrl | the other, nor is one more important H an the other. - i : A Of _cougse, ‘our artist makes other | 1ana- || il by | kinds _of pictures-interiors, scapes, hunting seerfes, marines, por- ||| traits—but the same spirit animatés }them all. It is a spirit in which man- | liness_and delicacy are mingled in an | uncommon fashion. Only in the Amer- | ican atmosphere would it be at home, ; || and only here, perhaps, would it be apprecinted and valued as 1t is.” H 1 | | NANNA MATTHEWS | - BRYANT Opening March 29 at the ! Arts Club of | 7 s Lloyd Mfg. Co. / Menomines Michigan /” Please send me your booklet “Mothers 7 of the World” which tells the interesting and doubtedly the visitor to this ex- | | nibition, which will contfnue until! {April 13, will find special interest in!|| identifying ;the same modcls In sev- !} eral of the paintings. Mr. Benson has ||| painted his own daughters many ||| times, not perhaps because they were || mcst accessible, but because they spe- -ially served his purpose. His pictures | re not of his children, but embodi- | |/ ments of the spiFit of childhood and youth, visions which have come be- fore him, seized as obportunity of- fered.- He has delighted in the ‘prob- story cof the Lloyd inventions and illus- Yyies dficrent atyles of Baby Carriages Washington 2017 I Street NW. Sate _____ Exhibition Dally, 10 A.M. te 6 P.M.