Evening Star Newspaper, November 26, 1922, Page 66

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) T g J, - THE. SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. seums In Cincinnati, Cleveland and| other citles, He is a member of the ‘Washington Water Color Club and the Soctety of Washington Artists, as well as of the New York Water Color Clul and other out-of-town organizations. His pictures are colorful and freshly palnted, and show an essentially artistic point of view. 1922_PART 2. L thereafter went into devising ways and means of preserving his own freedom against the conventional claims p¢ domesticity. In behalf of this sahe freedom he retreated se- cretly into another name, another RQusiness, another plage for periodical attentlon to the new life. Simply an- other refuge for himself within him- C. NOVEMBER 26 Reviews of New Books' of a terribly stricken France. The second part of the book, “After Two conskderable. Charles Evelyn, genius, is the outstanding figurc that maukes fair struggle to hide the bondage t] matrimony has set upon him. N much of a man, as men go. A charii« old men, bables and dogs against the juggernaut of a motor-mad world. Th:s story s a deligatful and capa- ble one. The plot has substance. The moverment is spirited. The Leo- ple are alive, up-and-doing folks. | ing and beguiling person The whole is a sparkle of «olor and |less, when one tukes hin:—not for swift change. The author, however, | man at ail. but for & wayward and u in likely to get credit for none of |accountable plece of speclal Inspirat! ity nevertlice Notes of Art and Artists THE BOOK OF WASHINGTON. By Robert Shackleton, author of “The * K ¥k g;"}';eflf-ysgfg':"'pfix‘f.‘defl:fi:‘-fl%gfl Y“;:;m‘;‘w:‘m:fifimfimd 'm‘;m;’; self. In this second role he ne | this, Why? Well, once the reader | RTHUR SPEAR, son of the late Elis | Ponn Publishing Company. e bes e e il exiats, In 2 Dopular playwright, mad catches sight of the glorious young | pany. A e: ’ ey found an Egeria, and op giant who dispenses-safety and well- Bpear, at orle ftmo commimsiones ot HI easy mannar of this book |EUrope. To this confusion the AUtROL Joory out inte ths Wide suaves of hia | bein to.the Bedcatris tain a c traces the misunderstandings 0 L 5 s | being | e pec patents, has been hulqmz an exhibition conceals, temporarily, the have risen among the allies, and de- demanding personality. Work is his | quarter of a certal i !ur! of paintings at the Guild of Boston Art- 3 e e o Toni® 1o thelr tnity and ospel. Freedom for work in his|.hat reader keeps within the shadow | 9 ista, Newbury sircet, Boston, which hna eeommons smiowst of work Jas S BERCLED MianySal ik sahos. AU crasion phise of tut jof 0 cemaek Blsvonsk s ol |} BATTERN DEADS v juired to cover, w! au- P €] 8 ldre ew | tively unmindful of other thi . been attracting considerable favorable e no tinge of a preachment about It. Be 1o be workers—instead of being just | come to pass within the limits of thority, nations a L3 - attention. both its general scope and urges upon all children—he became absorbed to a | this complctely modern and interest- | Call Mam 555 ! Its wealth of intimate detall. Keen toleration, a deeper determination to 4, in their 2 2 St ance come! 5 The art critic of the Boston Globe has - degree in their ambitions and cfforts. | ing sto:y. Yes, a romance comes the (FOUR FIVES sald: “Mr. Spear has a sort of musicar |to the viial fact that bulld.ngs and Jnite the world D Deace A eniving - The end of the story startles one for | way of ihe traffic man—a romance (Wl 3on me to Your Advamtage 5 imaginatlon und we should feel the|streets get their real significance.book of decp feeling and perfect {& minute. Then he pealizes thut this | rooted away off in Poland, borne to | beautiful color harmony of every one of | ¢ Ll {is simply the natural thing, the only | this side by a rolitical errand that | his pictures,” and declares “there is | {fOm the people who create and make simplicity. {thing for this particular man to d veriaxes the Polisn girl in a strange | something refined and chaste about his!use of them, this author has filled , THE UNDERWORLD; The Story of A remarkably sincere study i and. And this 1s 2 Kelly's | figures.” which Is, Indeed, high DraiSe |“The Book of (vashington~ with| Hobert Sisclair, Miner. By James|tuitlonal right seizure of the ssential | chance. A most story | ouTHLAND * % ¥k ok bl s Welsh. New York: Frederick ;genius of a bewilderingly complex | throughout. {‘ ) i notable men about whom everybody . Stokes Company. nature. { | QEVENTY-ONE miniaturcs by mem-|has a natural and justifiable curl-| I have tried to write,” says James! Two SHAI BORN. By Marie | CLAIR DE LUNE, bers of the American Soclety of fosity. It is this cholcely populated |C. Welsh, author of this book. “of the! = “Conway author of “Sliy author ofl “NHENLIAL | Minlature Palnters are now on view In|eftect, as Mr. Shackleton has re-;1ifo Iknow, the life I have lived. and| cGee,” etc York:oid, A e JATTERY ERV'CE i siory_of tury Company. DomlInick Kelly, political boss ives of the people whom, above created It, that glves to h.s book Lus | of) the Mves of Khe Benp N om T am | distinctive charm. Such emphasis of | so proud. My people have been min- the Corcoran Gallery of Art, giving an excellent {dea of the extent to which the The art of minfature painting has been car- | the human element, however, does:eérs for generations, and I myself be milljona‘re thereby, one day o xelus FREE L = rled In this country. This exhibit, whic™ | not mean that the city as such--a came a miner at the age of twelve.” | his son. Brian Kelly, out of the housc v de Ln DELIVERY iy Saic T o, antomg | B G hfsos and AvSau 8o, of & sk s Koo lefES e or Kod aad vt it e bl SOUTHLAND nyresmx to the specinl exl - | parks, of b i i 4! ge 0 i tivel . b = e | ., INC. cluudflsaa:l’:.deedh}:ll;)(l:leosr:ri‘i’::l:?:m!fi: Private ~hnsul:fcg‘:!nfgf&zg;m:fmm:u miner. In this dramatic story of one| PosIVCIV, o add a shade of gewi tlons, The b st ded Migrs. of Radio S the Work of Taara Coombs Hilla: s |all. Thess recelve fuil and Inform.man's life one stands face to face; 1o the ‘otfen rich house of Kelly b e N et Do Starting Batterien—z Years' Lralt of & YonE woman entitled |ing trentment from the standpoint'ith the ever-impending menace to|g MArFAES WA, elirmly Janct Wan |y L e Uncondi iuarantee e ing Auhooine woman engoca s liedtment from the Stindpolil.fhemen down lnthe mines Hegath- Wick Bontion is miade ot this epl-which, against an Busiili Uaikg . Miss Hills Is one of the foremost minla- ! But, for example, the story of the &ccount, the long and laborious days. | Cf %, |the most be- | me o ountle o ! B 4 d- | Puiling traffic cop—Private Brian | plexine pha The characters ture painters not only of this country. | White Howen ta 1t oriem any s’ He himself comes to feel the unend- | SUIIE trufic cop—brivate ' Friaw [plexine, phases, he CHOMCIC, o ing hours of darkness, away from, the sunlight that so upilt:s the body | 1 n 1 1 an. He comes close to and others. Again, the Capitol, pro i 214 P04 04 T liiiaica “men, close t0 Jected in lts wonder of form and| ,fering families. He sees the tyran- i eftect. 1s still the forum for Webster, | Sulfering famiijes Fe fect Ct . Calhoun and Clay as well as theperjors ‘Once In a while—once In a arcna of modern polities. “In_ pro- | PETIoTs,, Dnce 18 & WOISCON heer {portion to its populition Washington | 1978 While=a ne EOW, O e cove 1o the most classically bullt of thelered. specdily and forgotten, utterly, o vorld,” w io Treas- * this particu- the Patent Office and other|il,the Eencral gloom o = but of the present day. She has a style quite her own, which Is at time individual‘and engaging. presen iine A vear ahw Very different ‘in character but! equally important from the artistic istandpoint is the work of Marearet Foote Hawley. formerly of Washing- ton, whose miniatures have been glven place in the permanent collec- |tion of the Metropolitan Museum of 1 and changes, comes allve with strik- the same | ing personalitiecs—Jackson, Roosevelt he is a Art. Five examples of Miss Hawley's | !T¥, lar way of existence. A harrowing work_are inetvded In ‘hix exh bi ion, | PUlldings for sumples of the purely|giory—but if such conditions hold. all of exceptionally fine character. 3K The splendid Union station|ganqas long as they hold, a harrow- * ¥ k % Washington's wor.hy trlumpnal) ing {s what is due to everybody who arch, comp irable in every way to tne triumphal arches of. European Gities. Lafayette Parl, with its border of ,1d homes, is a gem of reminiscence | and atmosphero Early Georgetown | is a joy. The wonderful trees of the capital have honorable place In this feomp ny. Soc ety is sketched, bril-| .iant with diplomats and the Army. There {s much clse of value and de- ‘ight here. The place for this book under one’s arm. Its uee fs to create adventure, to eend one forth| with it on an expedition of discovery i and verification. The sound and en- | northern sportsmen. is free to live on top of the ground, in sunlight and comparative safety. KASTLE KRAGS; A Story of Mys-| tery. Dy Absalom Martin. New, York: Duffield & Co. Florida I8 becoming the fashion as a background for the hidden-treasure yarn. Every week or so a new story on the old theme springs out from this curiously beautiful setting. The one in hand makes use of a fine and necluded old mansion, "Kgstle Krags he gathering point of a group o Porthern en. lured here by 'ARLOTTA SAINT-GAUDENS. daugh- ter-in-law of the late Augustus i Saint-Gaudens and wife of Homer ! Saint-Gaudens, now director of the art department of Carn:gle Institute. has contributed a minlature portrait of Theodore Roosevelt, one of Charles Wadsworth Camp and another of Madeline Camp. From Lucia Fairchild Fuller, whose work is always of the highest stan- Cold Weather Specials For Motorists dard, comes u minfature entitled | joyable substance of the book, as a | the promiss of game fishing and “Einatt book, Is greatly enhanced Ly the|shooting. Immediatels, however. ine > Pattee i eauty Sl e pate~ ippearance of ono an : : : e e ey ety el PEEsstivenes of ta| her of the wroup turns tho Pro- With the advent of cold weather the prudent motorist makes ready for the season well represented by a thre uarter- { ‘llus rations—initials tail pieces, full jected sport Into a strenuous man- with alcohol, hood covers, radiator covers, automobile robes, Weed chains and the length portrait of a lady in a green|pages—that say innumerabl Ve - gown holding a black fan. charming- | ing things. A eantiful and desirable |hunt. The Toot o ‘;“l‘d'lr‘fl“f:e;f;,f‘e‘ = A 55 = 5 1y rendercd, with almost perfaction of hbook. oo e L id as ine s many other winter motoring necessities. With complete new stocks we are in excel- etamisios of New mork - sucisomoi) NEIGHBORS ~HUNCEFORTH. By Soverer of e e Or e ia lent position to serve your every want at prices you will find as satisfactory, as the W e 58 megrong > « author of Al 1 a gift of. yarn-spinning. ! et mplete lack of n!f-cunscmus');}r“.k‘ s et LS AR Stralght Deal” cte New York:! e Martin turns out an ingenions | goods are dependable. DISTINGUISHED minfature | The Macmillun Company. and entertaining tale that combine: father and moth r. a | portraits of he i by Ernes i hingtonian, | POIFEC = o8 il This e < = = T “e e weshineton a Wit G The Cordorin sehnt of Ari | Sl a5 of Lare, | W, Sherman 1utte L, G e e Ty e Wister put oF | e backgrownd " this handts. breadth | Auto Robes Weed Chains Cly M. Tpsen fs of B D o A ton table contributions. as do also Alice two separate journcys lnt_i:h France , of Florida on lth gD fl‘:ge- L“'E“fl',‘mfi‘ Selected all 1Szotch plaids. Ver We h th de | 4 v <h descent, his father and , \fase., and s wow hving in New York, | Beckington. ria J. and through the war zone. The broad la specially artistic and beauti ected all-wool Scotch plaids. y o ioRbinhirs it L L e Yokl Strean. Sally . Willidm 4. Tués [Purnose of the book Is to render more | consideration. saal valiesinbast radepauto robes) e have the new de luxe cord type geact (g i 2 = i e ER and others. emphatic, espedially to Americans, the s o CE! va! 5 g ) SR o and bronght up in Massachusetts | (epns 2t er colors by Ed- | The . American miniature differs |truth embodied in its title, to restate | THE VOICE IN THE WILDERYESS. g Weed Chain in all sizes. Get them now ¢ his first instruction in artj | Y from the English miniature in being |the fact that an isolated nation is no| By Rlckard Blaker. —New ; | . Nye are occupying the cases at | ol Hhe o e more vivas ilonger a possbility. and to point out| George H. Doran Company. A (0] % for slippery pavements. or the Tiead of the staircase in the atrium | clous in aspeet. & little portrait lack- [that a world neighborhood implies| A study in genius. It is the story denciug more than uaual talent and e G T TGN ot e lona- | In the prettiness of the afd-fashioncd itew nationul obileutions of "reci- |of Charlen Petrie, eauipped, lije the " U desiring to make art his profession. | 4 < ' ainting on Ivory bi taini he |Procity. e first journey follows “in |average. with a business of his own Hood d R d C De ed A h l i piis s chlortal and pieasiug note (0. the puinting of dyory but retaining the Jo cteps of the Hun' with the |and a family of his own but a man | an adiator Covers natur cono ey spect of the big gallery. Many of - author looking, listening, recording, |so far apart, withal, from the com-{ cnter th £t here uiato® I oe aeound Wakhe *kxa along the way, for the sake of a true | ~nn compromises ~nd accentanres o’ { FOR 180 Proof—S5-Gallon Lots e, it e e avever werame T is interesting to note that both |picture of the havoc and desolation |life as to stand alome—an almost Dodge, Durant, Buick, Ford, Chevrolet L : | or They are of | Richard Meryman and Bertis WrCUENt By Germany ubon (Erance; fautastlc figute of aloof, lronic pro- (All Models) Special Price per Gallon, 60c A ey ST This is vivid stuff, gathered from |t-st Awav hack. in one of thns r L > d than any work tha' | Baker, instructors in the Corcoran |peasant and poilu. from Tommy and | vouthful emotional stresses that - | Price subject to change without -t produced, and would School of Art, are represented in the:!‘oughboy, from anybody who has a|die men with wives and women with $3.50 to $9.00 ined thus rility. His i E e, in_most en good, and the themes pictorial appeal. * k% ifferent character are the sketches made in Italy by Ward Brown, which are on view in the Pen- <nin ¢ 1304 G street. Mr. Brown an architect and during his recent arn in Italy he made a number of | studics of architeetural sub-’ tehing, however, with the free- | pidnter rather than that of { ural draftsman. His sub- i most_parf arc lovely bits | d in V Rome, Sienna d weleeme in any of . <hibitiot = 1 i e's = first-hand accounting to deliver. It |husbands Charles Petrie had taken shibitiens pecause of theirChicago Art Institute’s thirty-Afth ymo—by Incident and episode and [on & wife and later had achieved notice. e VA e }a j annual exhibition of American paint- wayside talks—to a poignant picture 'children. Much of his ingenuity | = “has Iiga and seulpline, WEIGH 12 inowin — = Install a Boyce Motor Meter and prevent progress. Mr. Meryman shows a por- trait and Mr. Baker two figurs studies, “The Black Mantilla” and an nterior With Figure. - I trouble. We sell all types. SPECIAL OFFER is out of order, we will exchange it for a new one and ailow our cld one. YOUR MOTOR KNOWS —The va'ue of absolutely pure gasoline and oils. Make sure of purity by using only our trip'e filtered gasolire and genuine motor oils. Now is the time to change from summer oils to winte- oils. Ask for our SPE- CIAL LUBRICATION BOOKLET, which contains a fund of knowledge on lubrication. CRANK CASES DRAINED AND CLEANID WITHOUT CHARGE From one of the great European capitals to the crumbling remains of what was one of the proudest cities of Asia journeyed Father-Zahm—and he takes you over every step of the memorable trip, in this, the finest of his books. FROM TO AN Berlin-Bagdad-Bab;lon 1f your motor me one-half list price of 3 OF quite d TRADE SCHOOL | AUTO INDUSTRY | < ntimate LARGEST SCHOOL IN THE EAST | Couses for Gaingo Owners, Galesmen. | Electricians, Mecha: Vulcanizers, Efe. Dar_ and Escning Classes. American Motor School ! 10100 %2 Yo St Phone Noith 10400. n et for hat b ather Italian cities and are ren- jdored i enier o’ ey aper Oné| UILT TIRES By Rev. J. A. ZAHM, C.S. C,, Ph.D., LL.D. paint- ade, which | tion of the pleasure that the 21f found in the original and on to the observer his personal enthusiasm. They are well . worth seeing. trait of hter of WASHINGTON ACCESSORIES CO. Here is the romantic story of that portion of the world which has seen the greatest changes in humanity’s development. Reading it is like passing through a vast museum, showing at every turmn something rare and Main 1394 ERE f TTHEO J. MORGAN s exhibiting al 17th and L Sts. N.W. much of n tha ~n fed with piement. Tt is in group of landscape paintings in oil | enthralling. The countries, the people, the mingling of n painter | at the Vearhoff galleries, mostly land- the past and the present, all are described in Father scapes, though in one or two instances Zahm's delightfully flowing style, and the work is a monument to its distinguished author. freedom of strok teehnioue he pictures of boats and of the sea. Mr. Morgan W © extent he therefore, Y- ~\=" N Q | = raordinary. ad. p % $5.00 at all dooksellers en | . persistence and indu e > o o - | izht betry, and has progress during the past few * o t > | et 5 [ vears [ mely marked. Some | b]l T ; : and it | sears has b o Bt it e ee ire Co. | }| D. APPLETON & COMPANY, 35 West 32d St., N. Y. Provine town hecoming a mem- INC. | oppasita the | ber of the Beachcombers, but by special 1623 14th St. N.W. i Shdewe T In lower | iDVitation he has exhibited in the mu- ¢ of Mrs the wife - other of a “big little , Wik r ho'h extr mo 3 forth with fresh charm =nA color. Mr. Ipsen nate in hi ms to be verv fortu- | portraits of men. such as of Hulbert. profescor of thematic John Hopkins Uni- . lovned by the university for exhibitio the portrait of v fer., the landscane of Poul ‘A Rochester. Col Arthur Lynch and Charles Ashby, all 1 ded in this exhibition. his f JIa“n Lane, the Hritish vublisher, the Proctor prize 15 awarded the National Acad- = It »f D-sign a year or more ago. Mr. Ipsen since 1910 has been living nd inds in New York and he QLI HER Y the metropolis _inspiration gement. He has steadily ¥ and recosnition until he a place among the fore- i et il i he does not confine himself who'ly to portraiture. however. is indicated by the two marine paintings contribut @ to ‘iz evhibi ™ th are necturnes, both give the impres- sion of the breadth and subtle beauty of the sea not along shore but in mid- Like all Danes, he has an In- of the sea. and these plc- tures he painted for the pleasure the painting_gave him. They are very true and_very beautiful and recail just a little the marines of Emil Carlson. who. likewise, it will be re- membered, Is a Dane. Mr. Ipsen Las spent in his lifetime only four or five davs In Paris, visi*- ing the city as any traveler might, and there is not in his work one trace of French influence. Perhaps it is this which makes it different from the work of the majority of American painters. for it is in the Paris atel that American painters have received their training. Portrait painting is not at a great height just now, and for this very reason work of the type which Mr. Ipsen produces is the more gratifying and significant. The exhibition continues to the end of the month. * % k¥ N the lower gallery of theArts Club, Gladys Brannigan is showing a col- Jection of water colors recently painted which 1t only does her real credit, but is @ delight to behold. Rarely will one come across fresher, more attractive little plctures rendered with greater simplicity, sincerity and skill. They are almost without exception frank sketches obviousiy made out of doors in the face of nature, and they show not only skill in rendering. but discriminating taste n selection. And they are marked by what might be termed an American spirit, freshness of vision. courage. con- working IS THE CAR WITH LIGHTNING = You can tell the LIGHTNING driven car by the purr of its motor— by its ability to .brush by the other car on the toughest hills. The car that travels on LIGHTNING MOTOR FUEL tllv‘flll free of carbon and the many annoyances that come from having the wrong fuel in the tank. The car that travels on LIGHTNING, whether it be flivver or five- figure bus, is a good car to drive and a good car to ride in because it lu_:II powgfi, starts promptly, picks up with pep and does its work wi a will. LINCOLN Get Behind the Wheel The ease of mind and sense of security in driving a Lincoln endures from the minute you open-the_throttle until you inder motor—cylinder blocks set at an included 60°, the refinements of which show the greatest skill in the motor ‘car industry, gives to the plant ever developed. i fiw Sedan 4900 F.O. B. Detroit Ten Body Types ES N No matter how long you leave your car out in the cold, it will start promptly with LIGHTNING. Ve enn Oil Company Telephone West 166 The. angle Ask Any Authorized Washington Lincoln and Ford Dealer. : Readya Visgmin

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