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Reviews of New Boo FORTY YEARS YN WASHINGTON. workmanship here that is distinetly & g’nn‘flif \1 Barry. lilustrated. | refreshment to the reader: oston: Little, B . Co. e Wruwe & (e SIEGE, By Samuel Hopkins Adsms, IFTY years ago there came to| author of “Common Cause” €ic. Washington in the train of| New York: Boni & Liveright. the new scnator from Michi- g8, Isaac P. Chelstianey, s lit- | €ffect to this story of modern life. tle boy for whom the senator had se- | Mrs. Augusta Ruyland is the belated cured & piece as page in the Senate. |overlord of the situation. A despot— S S : enevolent ut times, but a despot al That was David 8. Barry. From page | o000 S0 HEER 0 sead of the to newspaper correspondent and then | gregt Ruyland business, dominates to the office’ of sergeant-at-arms In |its directorute. controls its policies IIea Eittes A and subjects it the United States Senate, Divid Barry | $18_subjecis ftz workmey to has gpent an almost unbroken fort: story s e breaking of yeor term at the Capital city, the|Ruvland—seventyyear-old watoorat Sl ; g |and rather splendid at that—ihrough larger part of that time with ‘hc:lht inexoruble force of the. new spirit Capitol itself. An exceptional oppor-|of the new time. Set off against this tunity, this, for gatheriug at first- |embodied tradition is a young woman, 2 who encroaches upon the royal de- band & 5tore of facte and impressions | mocy &G KUyt “Ruylang by the concerning one and another of the|simple process of falllng in love with of the Mr. Adems secures & clear ferdali orkmern to a strict | Augusta | THE SUNDAY : STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (., 'APRIL &, 1924—PART 1. —— e e e e A BOY SCOUTS 'THE PUBLIC LIBRARY ———— Recent acoessions gt the Publie Li- brary pud Lists of recommended read- Blair, Wilirid. The Life and Death of Mrs, Tidmass. YP-B574 L Blunt, W. S. _Poems. YP-Bf28a Bodenheim, Maxwell. Againet This Age. YP-BS32. Brown, Alice. [Ellen Prior, YP-BSlde. Life and Poems. YP- {Cather, W. §. April Twilights. YP- | C284m. Geoffren Belections frow er's Chaucer, Chesterton, | Burbard, | Childe, W. R. YP- C435g. Davis, Mre. F. S._Te Anucient Beauti- ful Thinge, YP-125a. Dobson, Austin. = 4n_ Anthology of Prose and Verse. YP-D&Gsa. Drinkwater. John. ¥reludes, Canterbury Tale: The Modern Read- Set. H YP-Cai28ba. The Gothic Rose. 1921~ The Bullad of £t. | | | Interest in the post trophy cup ad- vancement contest continues at fever beat. Troop 10 of the Ninth Street Christian Church is still in the lead and oaly one more month to go, but Troap 100 of the Boye" Y. M. C. A. is so close on its heels as to have all other troops guessing what the eut- ¢ome will be. A little more than six points is all that separates the leaders at the beginning of the final month, with all former records for advangement completely surpassed. During Murch both Troop 10 and Trodp 180 broke their former high records, points, respectively. For third place the contest is pear- ly as warm as that for the first, with six troops in the running and ouvly a few points separating them. Scores for all of the twenty leading troops having gained 31 gnd 29| | methods and stunts with the scout 12 of Sherwood Presbyterian Churchi is second, with #1.4 points. Twenty- five troops qualified by attaining the “standard” average in the first hulf of. the contest. At fhe opening semion of the aumual patrol and scribe training class, neld at Powell School last Saturday ovening, Lieut. Thomas L. Kirkpatrick addressed a record attendance of scouts for these classes. Col. E. L. Mattice, deputy commissioner of division 4, wel- comed the scouts, and outlined plans [ fdr the big eelebration of Forest Con- | servation week on April 2]. Three | “game" experts, Assistunt Executive EL. B. Hobreok, *Jim” Hall and Scout- master F. G. Stusrt, fustructed differant Eroups in how to play soout gumes. Next Saturday evening, April 12, Com- modore W. E. Longfellow of the Ameri- { neckerchief. Interest is growing in the forest pro- tection weeik celebration for Baster Mon- day, April 21. President Coolidge has accepted the invitation to review the parade, the congressional committee oi forest service will cancel all other en- gagements to be present. Secretary of Agriculture Wallace, Chief Forester Greely, Colin H. Livingstone, the Boy Seout national president, and many othe: notables will take part in the pageant in.the Sylvan Theater. Will Hays, movic director general, has ordered his best ymen to fllm the affair and send it across the country to interest others in the wreventing of forest destruction. Thus Washington scouts will lead #zain. Through the forest service wrizes of radio sets, troop equipment, omd all sorts of interesting things are beting offered to the troops with the best slogans, signs, banners, floats, mul special troop features. No scout event of recent vears has aroused graater enthusiasm than this forest firq prevention carnival in excitement. can Red Cross, popularly known as “The Whale,” will demonstrate new first-aid Jlasistant Scoutmaster Beujamin —_—_— Tarshes reports good progress on the log cabin being buiit at their “Camp Nibowaka" near Chain 'Bridge. For next week, April 15, the troop has planned a boys' night celebration. when Robert Lawrence of community center singing fame wiil sing and d the troop in songs; and Scout Edward Eagleston of Troop 9, cham- pibn fire maker of the District,. will lemonstrate the bow and drill meth- 9d_of making fire without matches. Troop 70 is entertained each meet- ng night by a different patrol. Re- cently the Flying Exgles put on a ‘“Jaugh night” with minstrel show, epecial “tin-can orchestra" scout and saxophone solos, ete. It would -be dangerous to mention what events caused the most amusement. Scouts of the patrol giving the entertain- ment were Johm William, Robert Praetorius, T. White, Dorson Ullman and Johnson Heare. The word “laundry” comes from the Latin_ word “lavare,” meaning ““to wash o & WINS HARVARD AWARD. Californian Gets Indutrhl' Rela- tions Fellowship. CAMBRIDGE, Mass, April 6.—The Jacob- Wertheim Fellowship for the Betterment of Industrial Relation ships, available at Harvard Univer- sity this year for the first time, hae been awarded to John David Houser of San Francisco. Houser, ome of forty-three applicants, was gra: uated from Leland Stanford Univer- sity in 1910, and took his master of arts degree there in- 1812, During the world war he was 4 |captain on the peychology staff of t | A Yy and he is president of the bu Teay of management research of Sa Francisco, His research work, 1c be carried on during the next aca- demic year, will be on the business | executive and industrial relations outstanding figures that, within this|8 Dephew; who. thereafter, finds him- self between the devil of his august long period, earried forward the busi- | gur, "y SeR T EFH, Of S AUEUSE 1922, YP-D836p. Guiterman, Arthur. The Light Guitar. YP-Go48 i, are considerably in advance of these for the corresponding month of any other year this contest has been | ness and sustained the truditions of | the Senate of the United States. By way of “Forty Years In Washington" Mr. Barry permits us to sit in before | the long-moving picture of conspicu- ous and distinguished congry that carried on from the end of the Grant administration o 1920, the end of "Woodrow Wilson’s presidential in- ecumbency. This is a pleture of per. sons wnd personalities. Only 8o much of political event s is needed fo standing ground is offered. There is here no reaching for psychological foundations or political exposition. | Instead, just this senator or that one a8 Mr. Barry saw him at certain im- pressive moments of attitude and a tien The effect is immediate—thal of & brilliant procession of men and affairs. Aud ofter Mr. Barry renders wome point even more vivid und vita by slipping over into the pre contrast and comparison. - Speaking of the old duys of senatorial oratory for example: * nater Woleptt was wlmost the last of the real orators, because they are mow virtually an extinet bresd. The Colorado senator had & voice that was a veritable silves trumpet. It was full, musical, reso nant, and his reading was so wide, his mentality so active, his wit so raad that eloquence dropped from is 1ips as it does now from Semator orah’s “anot we come here into an finti- nate touch with & long line of im- ressive figures of whom we get a resh highly interesting view The book, in addition to it full store of information, is a timely book, for we are at the moment needing re- freshment and restoration in respect in our confidence in the essential rightness of public men and affairs We are in debt to Mr. Barry for this particular contribution, for this par- tieular treatment of & matter that he 8o exceptionally qualified to pre- sent. SAM SLICK. Haliburton mer Baker, Ph. D., author of “A History of English-Canadian Lit- erature to the Confedcration,” ete. New York: George H. Doran Com- pany. Thomas Chandler Haliburton, “the father of American humor,” but for the war of independence would have been @ citlzen of the United States. Along with many other strong loy- alists, the family of Haliburton, after evolution, moved into Canada. as Haliburton was born in Nova In his youth he studied law, late in life a member of the Canadian legislature, finally Jjudge of the sypreme court. Some- what late in life he moved to Eng- iand, where hé died. His sketches of Nove Scotia life were widely read, especially in the United States, where, according to Willlam Dean Howells, Thomas Chandler Haliburton dominated for three gene rists of the United d the quaint character, who has not only served as & model for ether humorists, but whe | has contributed also to the gemeral stock of humorous sayings that have hal into the body of the English languag Here Dr. Baker most famous and the most’ char- erist examples of Mr, Halibur- ton 8 work through the various experiences of Sam Slick, Halibur- celebrated clockmaker. With :tions Dr. Baker has given ul survey of the work of this first book, “A General ova Seotia,” appear- ndred years ago. A most in- 1 biblivgraphy, indicating the i of 'this humorist's provided here by smen By Themas Chandler Thon ot c RALD (RANSTON’S LADY. By Tt author of “The Aliette Brunten.” he Century Ci Ma Ao much—, s & barguin—so much for vehemontly. denied and rej by romantic yeuth, untried in motrimony. Prosaie maturity, on ‘he contrary, out of it experiences, wenerally accepts this as fact. Sinee omantic youth passes inevitably nto sober there is a constant sinforcement of the iden of a mu- ual business ebligution within the sarital b ol un usband mouey -1 ersonality The lady is business gift, ius, & powerful 5 background. [ background, with | nothing to support it. They unite forces. Family line and influence are ner oontribution to the partnershi Material ease is his. The story is projected consistently and frankly under this initial impulse. Its real content, however, goes deepor than this mutual materiul advantage. The deeper story projucts the attitude and behavior of each in respact to the marriage that exists inside the externals that led to iL What {8 my part in the more intimate partner- +hip here? The story, while holding fast to the fact that it is a story mives in effect the contrast between these two in their selzure of this fundamental queston. It projeets, in substance, two standards of ethics applied_to the one question, two or- ders of personal meral obligation. .ady Cranston scoepts the business “ngagement and them proceeds to puncture it with all sorts of senmti- mental demands that have nething in the world to do -with the straight out-and-out eharacter of the matter. Sounds most familiar, this How- ever, apart from this touch of woma: psychclogy, the story, simply assuch, is dramatic and interesting. Its theme is a substantial one, The ac- | tion is promoted by the eharaoter themselves, out, of their own sur- | roundings, their own personal im- pulses They s-a of a quality to aking He ent for! So for one super-quality or | ®dited by Ray Pal-| * | venture Sam | ‘anxious lest offers | his wife's wholly ence. A under the pre poor sticks tha stand in the modern independ- ure, can find no place to hard impact between the older wavs of life and ‘the present ones. Mr. dams works oul a highly drumatic love story to keep step with the intensitied movement of the more comprehensive purpose that the story liolds as its real essence und its true gnificance. The whole is pitched to high key, which, almost at onee, tunes the réader to' a responsive und absorbed interest in its intense dru- matic appeal. TDD & JUDD. By Nalbro Rartley, author of “Up and Coming.” New York: G. P. Putnam's Son. A common experience gives ground o this novel 1t is the usual thing. one takes | for engag peaple 10 st the program of arried life. Being equally ted and ambitiol r less tmbued with f new freedom, this partnership, and both more i the modern spirit program proj laughingly nair “Judd & Judd,” From this point on almost anybody with experience could finish the story ~though not with the skill and in- terest and sympathy of the author. As tp its rough outline, however, there is but a single line io follow— that of the gradual drift from the op- timistic “Judd & Judd” status to jthat of man und wife. His adven- tures continue fo be those of hustling in the opening. Hers gradvally | slipped into the less stirring business of keeping house. An old story re- | peating itself here in the acceptable ydress of fiction. As such it is most readable. It ends’ with a new start, | & readjustment that lifts the spirit of | the reader with hope. Away down j &t the bottom of the matter there is & long stretch of habit—about a mil- lion years long—convincing the reader { that if Judd had not found himself in | the tightest possible never have owned t soon a§ he c {Be will' conti | @5 both sides of the partnership of \*Judd & Judd.” That, however, hus ’n(llhlllf to do with the good qualit of this realistic and competent story even if one dues feel that at the end it veers toward the fairy-tale ending. AUDACITY. By Ben Ames William author ‘of ““Evered” ete. Ne York: E. P. Dutton & Co } A story culculated, clearly, to o {18 a uoreen atirmetion. berhans Loy |though. For the villain |i8 80 daring. ®o adroit and so ceasful—for &4 long time, wt leant-— that this, in connection with his en- | gaging personality, may mark hbn a8 a menace to the morals of youth. |ful male enlookers. a perverter of |youth generaily. The story ftaelf is ‘fuunfl'.:d on the familiar o ¢ of mis- {taken identity. The two, the man and his impersonator, provid |an entertainment so clever and spar- kling as to divide hor between {them for the entire succes: f the ad- Just a shade of differcn gives the final right _the maiter, much to the reader's relief, for he had become positively that audacious rupsasl- lion beat the real Pers Danton out of his birthright and his ladylove and everything. Onoce taken up the book will stick to your hand till it is fin- ished, bedtime or 1o bedtime. GOOD HUNTING. By Norman Davey, wuthor” of ““The Pilgrim of 4 Smile,” ete. New York: George H. Doran Company The indoor—and /outdcor—sport of man-hunting takes up the time and attention of this sprightly tale. The i hunters, of the female persuasion, are panoplied in the immemorial arts and | artifices of their kind. 1n turn here, chapter by chapter, cach uppears mar- shaling her et and deadl in a whole-hearted effort to reduceby one the score of 1,397.208 superfluous women in th ill-balanced world. Julian Carr is, like most voung ruen. more interested in idle dalliance or bland indifference than he is in lend- ing & hand of correction 1o one-sided census reports. Hach chapter pur- ports to be a study in the great game of man-hunting, according to special equipment and opportunity. This is, at its best, & slow and time-eating business. So it comes about that young Julian Carr, a personable fel- low at this distane is not getting uny younger and, by this token, not adding to his stock of charme. As u matter of fact, Julian Carr is failing off. This, of course, he does not suspect. They never do, And time is at her slow, and often clumsy, job of evening up thinge, The last’ moment finds Julian Carr, around fifty, secure (7) in the adora- tion of a beautifyl young girk. And the eyes of Julian Carr are holden, for he does not see the inevitable hatred of tnis girl for Julian Cerr in the role of husband. At the altar steps she is saying, “I bate him! Oh, I hate himi® He is driveling some- thing to the effsct that it frightens him, “positively frightens me—the way that child loves me.” Very well done, though it will be freely desig- nated as farcical and exiravagant. It would be, too, were not its essential psychology as sound as & eriép ripe apple. Its surface is comedy of the open-work sort, ner he would and that, as however, | to the e HART QUITS FILMERS. To Produce Own Dramas Indepent- 1y, Following Dispute. NEW YORK, April 5—William B. Hart, motion picture acter. announoced vesterday he would hereafter prodnce his film dramas independently follow- ing his refusal to remew a contraet with the Famous Players Lasky Com- pany after thres month#’ negotia- tions. Centraot renewal negotiations fell command atten ‘on. Their level of ., life is attractive. Besides these in- | herent dramatic values thers is,| alearly, a sincerity and finish of through, it was said, when the com- any refused to permit Hart to cast is own companies and seleet his own stories for screening. “One of the most valuable a good deal of easy charm. He has to draw, for as page boy in the Senal iy to observe the inner workiags ng’ a i | 8o well does he wri a mere compilation of political remi . $3.50 ot all | Baston LITTLE, BROWN tunj tast affairs that has appeared in a Ln' time.” . —The Philadelphia Public Ledger | FORTY YEARS IN WASHINGTON Sergeant-at-Arms, United States Senate The New York Times saws: “Mr. Barry writas with authority and and last of all as Sergeant-at-Arms in the Senate, he has had every oppor. He records what he has eeen and heard and succeeds in cture of the striking figures and events of his era. of manners and customs that his book is more than iums of Washington & rich store of recollection on which te, later as newspaper correspondent, of the wheels at Washington for the Booksellers & COMPANY Publishers poor stick, who glves way | the fute of all |y, ! Linds: real | ., | Rankin, turn | masculine | Heyward, Du Bois and Allen, Hervey. Carolina Chansons. = YP-H5l4e. Leigh, Poetical Works. YP- 1917 N.V. Collectexl Poems. YP- L5486, ’ Malloch, Douglas. YE-M284c, Come on Home. Masefield, John, e- M3T4dr. V. The Harp-Weaver, The Dream. Millay, E. St. and other poems. YP-N(612h. Miller, Jonquin. The Poetical Works of Josquin Miller. YP-M616. Milton, John. Selections from the Prose and Poetry. YP-M6dad. Morgan, Angels. Because of Beanty. YP-M82b K. D. A Gate of Cedlar. YP- YP-R548u Suntayans, George. Poems. YP-Sa57 ;S»r\'n K. W. Songs of a Sourdough, [ . YP-Seé ) Stattery 3 Sypirit { France. YP-Sl17e | Squire, American Poems, others., YP-Sqb7am. | Thomas, ¥dward. Collected Poems. | 1821 YP-T363 Untermeyer, Louis. Roast Leviathan. YP-Un83r. Weaver, J. V. A. Finders. YP-W37sf. White, C. A, Stray Sweepin's. YP- Wis4s, Wylie, Elinor. W76, The of « and Black Armour. ¥P- Poetry. Anthologies. The Auss. Schonl Assoc., com: Poetry, Second s 6a Americun Poetry. Ault, Poet's Life of 17" Christ Carnegie Libi Christmas in | ries. yp-sce | De Milie, A. B YP-9D304 M H. C., eds Victorian and Stearns, from the Voets. YP-0F! Georgian _ Poetry, 1 Y P-9G298d. Gordon, Margery M. B, YP! and King, our duy 9GE53V | Gorman, 4. W Peterborousgh Massinghum, H. L. ed 17 Birds. YP-9Mi188p. ) ! Morris, Joseph und Adams, St. Clai comps. The Bovk of Baby Verse YP-9MB24b Morris. Joseph and Adams, St conips. Songs for Fishermen aME4E The YP- and H. 8. comps Anthology Poems About Clair, YEo | oxford Poetr: | Pertwee, E. C., N | in Verse, 19! YP-9P4%%n | | On Writing. { Boughton. J. A. The Question Book. ZC George and Others 3w, Writers' ‘ | Carver Writing and Rewriting. ZB-( | Hoffman, A S Fict | * Fietign Writing. _ Z( The Method and Prac Exposition, 1817, 4B | Riéém ' g | Usegll T. a1 Narrative Techn { Widtsoe, [ Efte 1 The Newspaper. Atwood, M. M Newspaper. Gibbs. Sir P. H. nalism, ZCJ-C Nevins, Allan. The 19: ZCI-NAVde, Selmon, L. M. Th the Historian. Z Villard, O. G. Some Newspaper-men The Co AL96. Adventures in van z Jour- Evening Post Newspaper wnd 36n. New J- | MANUEL HERRICK SEEKS | CONGRESS SEAT AGAIN “Twe Years Congress Through Hell and Back,” Title of First Campaign Speech. By the Associated Press. PERRY, Okla., Aprfl 5.—“Two Years } in Congress, or Through Hell and Back { Aguin,” will be the subject of the ! opening campaign speech of Manuel ! Herrick, who has announced his can- didacy for another term in Congress and as & representative of the eighth Oklahoma district. Herrick formerly. seryed a tempestuous term in Con- gress, during which he conferred on {nimself the title of “aerial dare-devil’ At his first _speech, to be delivered here April 12, he has promised “sen- sational reveiations.” in or is of importance totvery Ameri- ! « OF THENILE - Soveeps all books on Egypt in nofiraplu‘pepuhr quality iscon. ian mummy rise up and i mqbufi to marvel : York Té:: Blngrated Price, $3.00 By HERBERT QUICK Agthor of The Hewkeye THE REAL TROUBLE WiTH THE FARMERS The most serious aspect of our national condition made clear, Projects for agrieultural relief tested and found wanting. A solution offered that discards po- litical bunks and seeks the heart of the problem. Price, $2.00 | | | i | || Octave: ‘Cloth | leading, held. ~ “They gre ars follows: 124.147; 100, 117.951; 70, ; 11, 42,819; 44, 12, 34.36 21018 64, 20. 5 73, 11.9: 40, Clareace Stauffer of Troop 19 mow leads {n indjvidual standing, with 180 Points to his eredit. Kenneth Stubbs of 70 is second, with 165 points, and Robert Praetorius, Troop 70, third, with 156 points. Then fol- low in order C. Ackerman, Troop 10, | 135 points; points; M. pointe, ¥, points; H. points; R. points: H. points: ¥ E. Dawson., Troop 10, Dorsey, Troop 10, Whitney, Troop 10, Wertz, Troop 11, Hubbard, Troop 19, Hoffman, Troop 10, Whitney, Troop 10, points, D, Stubbs Troop 7 points; W, Ackerman, Troop points Tolson, Troop 67, L. Adams, Troop 100, Denslow. 'Troop 10, Smith, Troop 10, 90 points: A. Huise, Troop 10, 75 points: A. Claxten, Troop 0. 75 peints; H. Rbind, Troop 10, 70 points; 1. Johnson, Troop 29, 60 points; C. Jumper, Troop 64, 60 points; 3. Marguis, Troop 100, 60 points. Possession of the Star trophy eup for the coming year will be deter- mined by a series of inspections dur- iy the next two months. the first of which will be held next Friday night 125 120 120 120 115 115 110 190, 119 100 points; A points: W This contest is for the greatest all- | round efficiency on the basis of those accomplishments that enter into what scout headquarters consider & “stand- wrd” troop. Two series of inspection: are held each year, and the custedy of The Star cup is iven to the troop making the highest spections. At present Troop 100 is with 928 points, and Troop “oughs, Colds and Grip. "Tonic Tablets (24) tFor General Debility, Weakness, Lassitude, Want of Strength, Tired Fegeling. Induces Repose Refreshing Sleep. Price, Nos. 24, 40 and 77—30c euch At Drag Stores. or went on remittance Risk) or C. 0. D Tarm Homes. 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This modern stove speeds up kitchen work and takes much of Lfii drudgery out of housework. Here is how it works Just touch a match to the Asbestos Kindler. In a few moments there is an intensely hot blue flame close up under the cooking. A turn of the lever regulades the heat to any degree. You can cook every dish on a Florence, frém soup to dessert, quickly and well. The vapor from kerosene is what burns. It is a gas flame, not a wick flanze such as you see FLORENCE STOVE COMPANY, Garoser, up to start your in the ordinary oil lamp. Kerosene is a cheap and plentiful fuel. The Florence not only is a great convenience, but it cuts fuel bills sharply. You use it only when actually cook- ing. And it means a cooler, cleaner kitchen. A sturdy beauty Notice the quality of the en- amel in a Florence Range. Observe that the oil reservoir is light but very durable. If you want an oven, see how the Florence is modeled on the old Dutch oven, and with our patented heat distributor assures even cooking. There are refinements about the Florence that willappeal toyou theminute yousee them. Just look in at a store and convinee yourself. Florence products are sold by live hard- ware, department, and furniture stores. Massacuuszrrs FIORENCE OIL RANGE During the past 34 years we have handled the Florence Products. We now always have a full stock of this best make Automatic Stove. Trade supplied. C. A MUDDIMAN e G and 11tk Sts. s NOW IN PROGRESS—DEMONSTRATION OF FLORENCE OIL RANGES AND OVENS The only Department Store in Washington carrying a complete line of Florence Qil Ranges. 1 termg if desired. » Service and Courtesy ON SALE—PALAIS ROYAL—#OURTH FLOOR CO., 709 13th St. ‘One, Door Above G’ St—Phone Main 140 Established 1877