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THE SUNDAY - NOTES OF ART AND ARTISTS Art Lovers Awaiting the Opening of the Centennial Exhibition of the National Academy of Design—Facts About the Acad- emy—Etchings on View— National Gallery's Exhibit. BY LEILA MECHLI | obtained ‘a room where they could 5 { study, and the Natlonal Academy of OT only all Washington art | ot (0 roimed.” lovers, but those in New | P e York. Philadelphia, Chicago | and other cities throughout | JT is auite the fashion now to f the United States, are eager- { + fault with the academy, to d; awaiting the opening of the can-|it out of date. The younser set arc nnial exhibition of the National|inciined to feel that the bridie which | {Boer Wi S ademy of Design, which will take | Mr. Blushfiold has. fn hix pletuve, |y S DUREDC. 1ee here in the (orcor: iallery of | P ced in “Academia ‘I\thl 15 |nn1‘ He 5.3 business t next Saturday evenini firmly held. But such will always be 't b 08 FIRNEEE Tn many respects this is the most|the struggic between vouth and ma- | FHF U8 wportant exhibition that has ever | turlty, hetw nized effort and en held in Washington, inasmuch ! the Indi\!uw The ac "\‘A”“, in it represents art in America dur- | cludes in its ranks today many of th 'r 11 Na 1l Gallery of Art has re the past hundred years. There younger men who show in their work coivad loan an_extremely in be approximately 400 works in- | marked individuality, who are in fact oocting painting of “The Annuneia- ed in the on, and these | leaders in the modern movement. Tt | g !0e BT O 0 0 e il be by ading American | does, however, uphold a standard and | {o"think is the work of Sabhating inters, s and etchers who | maintain its faith, not in one but|.cuainly of his school. It is a v ve been ed with the Na,|“many counscle The exhibition | 1,z canvas and was probably paint al Academy. The list includes | Which It twill set forth this week I of'for ‘ona of the Italian churches, The ich names as those of Abbey, Alex- | the Corcoran Gallery of Art promises | \oa G den 6Rlontens o the der, Allston, Cecllta Beaux, Frank |to evidence to all the strength not | et SLgiiit SEIGR B SRS 0 Eh0 n, Emil Carlsen, Kenyon Cox, | merely of the Institution, but of paint voung angel to the left, vank — Duveneck orge Fuller. sculpture und engraving in the SttanTiiin clatlon RIRE AL inslow Homer, deichers, Vio- e United rstnongn it . is delivering his mes- akley. | Hou Pyl . | headquarters has heen New York since tan e TIANSEDAY “hotield, Ellhu Vedder, Welr, nt, | the beginning, the academy s, scen throuzh Illashfield, Crowninshield, Augustus | name signifies. national in representa SRR .int Gaudens, Herbert Adams, Janet | tion. There will be works by artists unded Ly many udder and Hermon MacNeil, to me rom Culifornia, Massaehusetfs, Penn Spizitl deceends 4 only & few. There are a few |svivanin, Connecticut, Indfama, Colo Alove e Vi " ; also, among them . Van | rado, Virginiu, the District of Colup the figure B dhe nible, who has late! bia, Vermont. Illinois, Maine, New i lected by the National Gove: Hampshire, Ohio, Florida, > director ) design the American embas: New Jen nd eight foreign coun ontiquities of Italy e Tow tries was with the purposh of ‘e skt R s, phasizing its national sgope: thak the B . s et b e ademy of Design chose to -hold -its earstine sl MR, BLASHFIELD. now the presi | contennial exhibition fivet i the tXa i oc tha plotire; S10 4 for this exhibition i cautiful picture, an allegorical 1 Resler was born in ’\\ ber of t and has received several aw: {18 self-taught. M. Lindley was born in Indiana. | the National Academy of Design under William M sc and Frank rds. re nd his vacations A * = ari 4 The 1ol | the form of a0 de head. -To the le donar. Al are lifs oprado Ric vts and ctor of Milan, one of ti on Italiun art, 15 certainly Bolognese LH\V school whieh o general of pital, urished there fier the auunner of F and be- phic arts, Urited of Carraci co d. 1t s i, began ity that school 1 see in it Ty a ’ Minpe chers, ( - and ndley’ Hostord, which opened in the Y smithsoniun Building on October 3 and ma 1 will continue on view therein until the fills in | first of November. Tt vus an au amatic | cious beginning, for both Mr. 1 and Mr, Hostord are excelfent ot Mr. Resler is perhaps th ile of the two, and his prints Lces not TE division of States Natior uf print of hand | ] 1M hih [ t school tively o him than to tint liy years 1 et thro line river. ite clouds, w thunder b space and lends a d : monumental compositior L will be represented by one lis most famous works: Miss Wertheimer, 1 a portice the sky acy th gh which may sabt 1l m between nd works n in It painting brother — of young man in the painted sky t hers. ver ection of wide s found by present service of the “CALM OF THE EVENING.” AN ETCHING BY GEORGE E. R the title * ontie,” which, be- | variety of subjects. but also displ intery means “Under Full | considerable versatility in sty I"—u masterpiece indeed | manner. He thows landscapes, figure | The committee has chosen as rep- |subjects, architectural themes, genre; aentative of the work of Winslow |und he is not one but many etche Yomer picture entitled “Eight [according as the spirit moves him Bells.” one of his most famous works | Here and there among his prints o and one never before exhibited in this | finds a tra am>ron, a sug clty {of Whistler, a note Almost all of the pic Hayden. and then exhibition by deceusse suddenly on a work quite have been lent either by of the extreme mode: : private art coll it - of simples HIS hich the i rmin n transit is enormous \"H AT is the of De some ma Jdest organization in the nposed € ApDroXi when that service in Ita it one day in Florence op, purchased it at a he lost in i nomir lin the ion. He wrote his sis 3 s prize. and it was th d and claimed it is still in the original least in o frame age w res in this wademicians U mnusenins ind the in in the painting i3 unimy . un for but rather But the the whole the 1 the Narions s excellent monious. for of the galle e \where it the wail present on . in does chiefly Pell i< made architec ctehers The Wing have repeate keen apprecia and the hip up o d engravers, i Its first president w . Morse, a dium it painter, better known, how-|jy yot only trained perception but in s the inventor of the telegraph. | yerently the artist’s touch—that touch wing which Mr. which 1ot only enlivens but beautitie: 1 Hall of !‘("1 - € | und has the power to thrill. DO O Mr. Hosford's showing is not so ex ction offthe Corcoran (Gellery of ] oiie o iy braces only 27 prints Art. In the Metropolitan Museum, [[ERSIVC ey New York, and other art institutions | 2S¢ - § e example: e iture, Peter iguml W most engraver of b s of the academy’s founders gl All these hur something has, 1l about his etching of “Lyme 1 New Yor hus held annual ex-fof “A Barway” in the cor hibitfons. has, in short, been the | hroad pusture; of his Mile | better pa rdian of art in America during this | Bridge” und “The Haunt of the|sets forth Tong period of development, holding | Heron.” He has a nice sense of spa- | with aloft the torch which has lighted | ciousness in his work and he knowsjed must many along the rather rugged path | where to lay emphasis. Mrs, W and Jed not @ few to the sumrit of her's | collec possibil- | E | THE Wishi tunate in being able to inaugurate current exhibit 1y od a display 1t noted ine these st Sunday of paintings by May Wescott. Instantly in i th ung one ed colorful charm, compe- ing { i on Arts Club was for ts n season st | columns 1. n g wi vie, e ‘in i room pic L n seem on There mante olden hair Chur di skill in the of a|ture Iy . ha does one than this The way the right flowing sleeves, is paint: zive the initiated delight ott’s flower paintings also dling of tex Tt He is 2 mem- | He Hosford | Je studied at | od | the | owners—a | Rod | STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, OCTOBER May Be the Work of Sabbatini “THE ANNUNCIATION,” WHICH HAS BEEN LOANED TO TH NATIONAL GILLERY OF ART. ART CRITICS ARE INCLINE tane » windering why, when she o farther a bril hie but s too does not t ¢ paintings revresen e | IWORLD'S NARCOTIC PRODUCTIO 11, F D ually | ) duy, | od | with | | TEN TIMES LEGITIMATE NEEDS| i"li(‘it Use of Drugs Has Spread Rapidly Since World He | and found great delight | service. 7| Tt 18 estimated that 744,000,000 pe ap-| aint- | s i< in excellent condi- | ired. | 50| the on by | notes extra. | ment for leprosy have extend come across | in painiing | element arm, | War, Figures Gathered by League of Nations Committee Show. ¥ 1ons ‘show d in quar in i drinking opium are inju by drugs 1ssed ommittee given | { Could | the whole heartbreaking up to God. | nationg, | where certainly such matters belong. vere it League Nations estimuted umount_of opium und erude needed for medicul and scie poses Ly the part of the we tion that {s within r Four hundred | Erams of raw opium and of cocaine is allotted for e thie nufac jed at tio nents the well patrolied. for re few and the governn e to find them h person | prompily set up their lares and st medi the ceds, an h s vit rge | 8600 | g ured the n of| trade | essence the rents Cure for Leprosy by Use of Radium Reported l;)' Doctor T seful of lepr will result Law of s on those dread disease, is | H. Neil and R ! Kalinl Leper Ie Honolulu. - So far as 1 this is the first v treatment of ollowing a sey surgeons announce cases treated with rad rous nodules dfs: { that, by the pers may b Iw sue us radium i cither n s of from to the 1 and @ ha ient whicir, in the tion th ing fr Loped 1hollshme of t is in 5 suff report 1 In all ca is said ules di of i from 1 i +dium 1 + in nasal co < the ne In three e it . | hacteria adium in | oo tate. | L0l showed no ¢ It is the £ this din nence of its effect asaum, rinz up the n converted fro ¥ " : zeneral ition emitting millions of | FER I nouses, to persons not E » public health and thus in need of gregation,” « red the o | in and the the inves dung {no 1 they asseri. Lxperiments with the radium treat- a over tudy be use of the reference to lesions of the viod of six months, the concentrated on the with _espectal of ley SE TIONS THE RESPONDE ROOSEV CABO FROM AND | 1581-1918. stment havin, ase: nodules in the : treated by the insertion of ¢ real disti AT Curi old in Iirst Arad- | as follows: morning 100 oung artists 1 ugly wooden street, New d the door at locked, and to diss Janitor of no sympathy with artists. e Washing- ecord had got | over which ; guardian- er by ghe Fine A, | fon—a the an- the crisp Autun two eager raced up the steps o bullding in Chan York City. They the head of the their enth pointment. ‘The « the building had the ambition was. 4 veter ton's army. him his jo he exercised | “ship had been Americun Acad the It housed a small art col gallery of statues, a saloon o tique, upen to students between hours of 6 and 9 in the morning. Per- | mission to draw from the c rep- resented the institution's sole conces- slon to tha desfre of the city's vouth | for an art -ducation. But the janitor | did_not sympathize with this spirit of lberalit Despite the clamor of the vouths, the door was unopened. Protest was made to the directors t William Dunlap, then one of the cf leading painters, to whom the boys | made complaint. Duniap took the | matter personally t John Trum bull, then presic iy that same pictures | But he. tary exy tc urned remember that beggars cannot choosers.” Within a month the ‘heg- \rs" formed thelr own assoclation, A, WHIC oo H WIL CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF DESIGN, ANATOMY OF THE tion of the Parts! QUT OF THE NIGHT. By Rida John- A h f ady of the Law. Fristioe Li T NTAR; A Dag i Novthwest. iy Yo By of Story NE in : George anil Ot) Cortes Haoll 1. Doran ¢ n T ARY LA By 1 By Jes ranslated from the s Galantie New Putnam’s & TITUTION e Analysis v Henr A Margs A Wiishin authors. AND . Whe < New * Publishing Co, NIBS. By Win ithor of | the PURLIC LAW, of the the Write HIS ROYAL Eaton Itee ete THE WOM Isabelly OF THE BIBLE. teid Buchanan, ad Gieneral Clubs, etc. ton & Co. the Loveliest Thing. y Rlack. New Yorl Federation New York: D. A or s By~ Con per & Bros BUSINESS LAW. By Alfred E professor of commercial AT ONTAINED IN THE Atment | mosphere is that of many strange and lition, | Ancient customs, to extend the scopo | Present out of a long past Russian Iiren York: | Yo “Cattl S " New York: W. 7. ‘Watt & Co.| THE MARRIAGE GUEST., at Honolulu | t reu iIf to aved, | ases the | from either of the parental sources. rea | ork to determine the perma- Y Teet of | omage of the native Aleut. And this on the patient’: zators ! COR- OF THEODORE RY | 1 LAW; A jolph New n & Co. of the fus icla v Coe- | ench AT Al With | B. D, o . ot TH I | | itred | By visor of thd biblical Mterature for the T! of Women's pple- : Henry THE | Sources | Thomas | SIMILE! w. law, 1925—PART 2. REVIEWS OF AUTUMN BOOKS Interesting Fiction From the Publishers—One Joyous Story of Ad- venture—Mysteries and Romance Along an Ancient Highway. The Detective Is Prominent in Fall Affair rises out of its author's art of vivid| IDA GILBERT MYERS. THE CHICKEN WAGON FAMILY. portrayal on the one hand and on the | little Addie loved the chicken wagon | And upon them you will find other hand out of his seizure of the atmosphere coupled with the power | to transmit this to the consciousne: of the reader. Within such setting the author has | developed a romance of modern cast, | nothing more than the business ad- | venture of a young woman who owns | |and manages a fox farm. Here you have the past in its implications and | atmospheres closely welded to an en- terprise of the immediate present You will like that young woman. | And you, modern advocate of the rights of animals, will approve whole- heartedly her methods that so def nitaly put to shame the barbarity of the trappers of the fur regions. There {6 a love story going along with the rest of thik good action, one whose viciasitudes rest upon a throw-back to primitive strains on the part of one of the eujtors. With the lovers and the fox farm and the elements and the life of the lonely islands you will find yourself involved in a stirring and picturesque tale—one that is already on its way to the screen. AFTERWARD! Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, author of “Jane Ogland. er,” etc. New York: Doubleday, Page & ( ES. BELLOC LOWNDES' latest | novel presents an aftermath of the new freedom acquired in war time. This achievement definitely sets the Youth of the present off from their immediate elders. Especially did the yourg women either openly declare ther independence or secretly secure it by a mastery of the arts of decep: tion. The motement started at that time is still 2 robust and active one. | The story itself has to do with Lon- doners of the “Lady" and “Sir"” class. | ! Off against these stands one man of | | quite another sort, equipped by per- sonal charm and an entire lack of {honor to take advantage of the new spirit of adventure possessing the young women around him. A mother and daughter are outstanding figures | here, the former fixed in the tradi.| | tional behaviors of her class, the lat. | iter bent upon personal liberty, an | adept in the practices of deceit calcu- {lated to gain this. By Barry Benefleld. New Yor The Century Co. CHARMING and joyous story of adventure. And these amazeng happenings to the Fippany family would never have been, save for the am- bition of that masterful woman, Mre. Fippany. Fippany himself and their life. Who wouldn't? All day riding round the country gathering up chickens and eggs for the town mar- Kets, paying for them in ofls ani liniments and gewgaws and things. All night sleeping under the stars with other happy, homeless things. But Mrs. Iippany was that too com- | mon invention, the restless woman. When a woman is that way the rest may as well give up; she keeps o eternally at it. So Fippany gave up. And that ia how t happen to be on the trail from as to New York in the chicken wagon drawn by a peir of trim little ules that know as much as some whole families. Fippany aid that if Josephine wanted & town he'd see to it that she had the biggest one there wss. When they were about to set out Jim Plckett came | along. This was the way of it with Jim. Here was a college man, with all out-of-doors in his heart and in his head no real call for the tradi- tional uses of scholarship. And one night out under the full moon Jim talked the matter over to himself. ked himeelf where a young of arts should o, since he ree and poor and young and The, answer was - that he rolled up his blanket and set out long the road that looked the jongest id had the most moonlight on it Then Jim fell fn with the chicken wagen family. He would. That was written in the stars, as they say. For his keep along the grest trek Jim taught Addie spelling and the multi- plication table, foretaste of the “ad vantages” upon which Josephine had barped hen trying to pry Fippany loose from his chosen chicken busi- nes: Leautiful and _ enviable agraney, that journey to New Yorlk. An’ uprouriously amusing, and touch. ing, entrunce to the big town did this astonishing familv make. You'll love it and vou'll go right along with them | " In general the story progresses by up to that inspired find, a condemned | way of the unchaperoned and uncon engine house, where, under the Kind- | ventional adventures of a group of Iy blindness of the precinct man, they | young society folks whose leader is | Kitty Fleming, helress and leader of | | the London smart set. The real busi- | ness of the matter, however, is the as. | | sault upon Miss Kitty's hy @ plausible and ingratiating scamp, se- | adventure, this. And you must|ecretly incumbered al th one through officlous tattling. be perfectly iegal wife of his own. The ated of your ful criginal | husiness rises to the height—or f ste of ensuing events. Jim I'ickert | to the depth—of a murder and 4 m the sor rs i tery, whose solution by good frie of this adventurous vou. oman stitutes both climax of trle and | | personal deliverance of 1l her- | self. A couple of good men carry on | & reasons for feeling low in here in the interests of women who. mind, and these he gives in a upon the whole, are hardly worth the | of trustful confidence that no-|lovalty expended upon them. That is, the world could resist. You'll | the women run thin—all of them— about that luter. In ti which, maybe, is exact what they ou will, eve « lare intended to do, considering the forget your eympathy for Jim Piek-|atmosphere and the circumstances in ett in the abrorbing life of Fippany | which their lines are cast. If the and the little girl and Mme. Fip-|&tory is a warning, in intent, &s one | pany. You'll like Fippany—an aston- | judges it to be, it is bound for th Ling fellow, even in New York. a|regard of all youth for all warnings. | Lit of a scamp maybe, good nev- | If it {s merely a picture of the new | less. If you have any d freedom confined with smember the night before the |limits, then it is of u q tle mules were to be sold Fippany,|eral acceptance and el th them down In the stable, PUtling |THE ANCIENT HIGHWAY. By James Olfver Curwood, author of “Kazan," etc. Tlustrated by Walt Louderback. New York: Cosmo- politan Book Corporation. 18 the one that 300 vears ago was set in the rude tralls of French explorer and voy-. ageur and priest and trader. It is the old Quebec way leading from the river north into the back lands of Canada. Along this road the author sets the feet of Clifton Brant looking for the | ©old home from which exile and report- | {ed death in China have separated him. And as Brant retraces the famili land beloved trails he recreates them [both in their natural beauty and in lonely islands offshore from Alaska. [the atmosbhere with the French \iving |Eettiers so indelibly nnpressed them, | Aleuts and certain | The whole story is udventure pitched | descendants of those Russians who |0 the key of that old past. Tts scovered and settied these islands. |Fiediate object is rov quite i Thooe have Produced a new blend of |the manner of older tales of romance | e . g —revenge against the man who plan. | btlood in a sightly different strain ..y prant's death off in China for the | sake of taking over the rich lumber country standing as Bran lawtul heritage. Collateral objects join this initial one, for Ivan Hurd is many kinds of 2 villain, Inviting the chivalrous Brant to include within his own revenge sharp punishment for Hurd's dishon- est dealings with the helpless French folks fallen victim to this rapacious land dealer. Among these is a beauti ful French girl—and there begins a ro- mance \\'hgfle glamour at many points €0es back 300 years to the herolc days of the French explorers, and comes on down into the present through the picturesque pathway of the French oc- cupation. A story of romantic love, a story of big business, a story of the triumph of righteousness, this. But above all is it & romance of the big, unbroken reaches of a new country, & romance that gathers its best rich- ness from the great outside which aft- er these long 300 years is still new in its unexplored stretches of forest and| untraveled miles of wild waters. { MRS. FULLER. 1 ant, author of Marriage,"” ete. | field & Co. ITH only now and then an excep- | tion to stress the rule every de- tective story begins with the corpse — with the sudden discovery of some {one violently and foully done to death. i This story of crime follows the rule. | [ It is the stmultancous finding of the | victtm by a man and a woman, | strangers to each other, that sets the mystery on its way. A mystery here that from this point of double discov- ery becomes involved in a clearly geo- metrical ratio of complexity. The whole matter takes its color from an incldent 8o implausible as to rank with impossible things. For not even the impetuous ardor of the most reck- less girl in the world would impel her | to declare herself the wife of an utter | stranger through an over-generous | desire to streen an obviously fright- ened and overwrought young ma. who suddenly finds himself minus a memory. It is immediately plain that neither one of these {s guilty of the murder—that is, plain to the reader, who {s, in a sense, behind the scenes. Both, however, are involved in sus- picion. And the business of the story 18 to clear up this false trall, in part through the recovery of the lost mem- ory and in other part through the usual and regular measures for pick- {ink out criminals among a host of | honest and innocent men. The re- {covery of the affiicted man by way | | | | bled the mules in a good corner herwise settled themselves to nieking of u home. Aly the heginning of the entran: th e York by t when Jim has taken ¢ < and a deal of melancho good job at newspaper wor his iust Jim's story would be a sad one— were ft not for subsequent even: and were it not for the whole joy« that appears impervious to any sadness. A beaytiful hour for vou, reader, lies in this cleverly con- ceived bit of originality that is dressed in the very garments of fit- ting romance. ROCKING MOON. By loughby, author o Sun Swings Nortl Putnam’ 'HIS adventure takes you-—<quite literally takes you—to 4 groum of Barrett Wil “Where the New York. both the origin A wild place, whose wildness takes hold of you. A place, t0o, whose at- melting into the religious ceremonial and propitiatory Jdien atmosphere soaks into your feelings. Indeed, the very clear dis- tinction of this romance of the North Northwestern University School of Commerce; author of “American Commerclal Law Serfes.”” etc. Re- vised editlon. New York: The MacMillan Company. EDGAR SALTUS, THE MAN. By Marfe Saltus. Chicago: Pascal Cov W, J. Watt S. By ithor of “One.Way Street.” New York: Brentano's. TING AND HEALTH. By James Walsh. M. D.. Ph. D., Sc. D, ete. ton: The Stratford Co. DOCTOR TRANSIT. By I York: Boni & Liveright. THE SONG OF THE INDIAN WARS. By John G. Nefhardt. Illusirated by Allen True, New York: The MacMillan Compan:; RACE OR _NATION; s Conflict of Divided Loyalfies.” By Gino Sper- an Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill o SONGS OF THE ROYAL WAY. By Richard Arnold Greene. Boston: The Stratford ('o. WALLS OF FIRE. By Mare Worth. New York: Cosmopolitun Publish- ing Co. THE REAL BOY; and the New School. By A. . Hamilton, M. A. New York: Bonj & Liveright. son Young. New Yor & Co. THE GOAT WITHOUT HOR) eale Davi By Margaret Bry- “A Courageous New York: Duf- | 8. New | | By Kon- New York: Boni I | rad Bercovicl. & Liveright. 'HE GRACE OF LAMBS. By Man- uel Komroff. New York: Boni & Liveright. DARK LAUGHTER. Anderson. New York: Liveright. ALABASTER IAMPS. By Margaret Turnbull, author of “Classmates,” etc. Chicago: R & Lee Co. and Their Use. By Gren ville Klejser, auithor of “Training for Authe New Yor By Sherwood Boni & | ! of the devotion of the woman claim- ling to be his wife is a clear romance of rather unusual pattern. The dis covery of the murderer belongs to g the vsual procedure. Tf one can get| iunk & \ over the initial leap of that ivl into ANTHONY AND ANNA; a Comedy | pseudo-matrimony with a stranger, he in Three Acts. By St. John G.|is on his way to fair enjoyment of a Ervine. New York: The Mac)Millan | somewhat hectic romance and a de Company. tective story” of regulation design. | Baretto de Souza, | Wei, W. L.. and Leung, L. | Barbeau, C. MYSTERY IN RED. llams, author of “In the Tenth Moon,” ete. Philadelphia: The Penn Publishing Company. IT would have been better, one he lieves, if this adventure of myve tery had had more room—say. a_#iz able place like Madagascar or New Zealand, instead of the little ialand of Nyart, somewhere off the New Ene nd coast. As it fs. the action i crowded. sosmany things of divers: character are ket to take place on this hand's breadth of soil that they tread Upon one another's heols In a con fusion of evil designs and dark deeds that make for a parallel bewilderment in the inind of the reader. A red tri angle painted, indiscriminately it seems to the puzzled reader, upon this, that and the other surface, be comes a kind of guide through thix tangled maze of villainy that fncludes murder, kinaping, plracy and othe unlawful procedures. The story larke organization and coherence. The au thor 1s too good a provider. Half the material would have served him and the reader better. The two men anc the two girls whose fortunes are fore most here would have been more ef tectual in their fourply role of her tsm by land and sea and afr £ jus about half the demands mads upnr them DLad been thrown away. Ther the real clue to a plausible myster might have had a chance for its Iife where here it dodges about in smother of illogical hazards events. THE PUBLIC LIBRARY tecent accessions at the Public L brary and lists of recommended rei ing ppeur in this column e Sundar By Sidney Wil w Athletic and Recreative Arts 2 Mental Agili Book. 1 J. P of Equitation. VJH-BZ33. Bloem, W. 5. The Soul of the Movir Pic VUW-B523s. Burchenal, Elizabeth, ed. Nation Dances of Ireland. VQ-BS3in. Burt. L. R. Muke Your Bazar The (Great V-DB3%m. Umbrel, VUP-C38 Chase, [ us. The Elements o NC-DS96. Hunting on Kenai Pe VE-Ed20h. Adventures W Rod and Harpoon Along the F ida K VIEnz4 Base D F33, Prinetple Pu E. Decisiun: Hartman, Jong, V H'Doubler, M H339 Heilbron “tandardized Mz The Dance. \'t er's Year Book, Majo: s, 1925, VKB-H304) A._The Truth About 1 VUW-HSTt. How to Coach and Pl 1 VKE-J Track and Field. ies. Jones, . 11 Ball. 3 5) & . A. L. Vaudeville Varieties f e. VUDK 15y Lyons, Jimmy. Encyclopedia of Staz Material. ~ VU or Pierr facMillan, M. L VUP-M226p. Mayer, Charles. Jungle Beasts Have Captured. VAZ-M4565. Mulholland, John, and Smith, M. ./ Magic in the Making. VR-M895 Official Rules for Ice Hockey. VHII 24, Outdoor _Sports VDA-Ous7. Stoddard, J. L. The Passion Pla 1897, ' VUAT.St6, Taussig, C. W., and Meyer, T. A. TL Book of liobbies. V.T 197. Tilden, W. T. The Common Sense « Tennis. VKT-T4S4c. Wallander, A. W. Ph Manual, ~ VS-Wi56p, Wegener. A. Church and Comu nlty Recreation, V-W424, an the Year ‘'Rouns sical Train: IS VNM-W and Reute: the T v of Mah-Jong. 2. tich, W creises W7sSe. Music. Adami, Giuseppe. Il Tabarro. VYOL-Ad 13. Bachmann, A. A of the Violin. VXU-BIZ. M., and Sapir, Edw eds. Tolk Songs of French Canad:. VY82-B23. Deethoven, Ludwig V'YO-B393fa. Davidson, Gladys. More Stories Fro: the Operas. VVlo-D283m. De Bekker, L. J. Music and Mus clans. Ref. VV-5D353m. Dossert, F. G. 1Mass in B Mino: VYRM-D747. Dyson, George. DT, Forzano, Gloachino. 1918, VYOL- Forzano, Gioachino. 1918. VYOL-F77s. Hadow. Str W. H. M Hill, E. B. Modern VV39-H55 An Encveloped van. Fidelir The New Music. \'\ anni Schicel " Suor Angelica ic. VVI-H11 French Music Ukranian Folk 46, Landows £ Past. VI-L235.E Rogers, Mrs. C. K. Your Voice and You. VXVA-R63y. Van Vechten, L Musical Subjec Venezucla. Ofrenda VZVCD v Music of the Drama Alde o Berman, M. A Shakespeare Han YD-s7zal Henry. The Fathers. 1922 y[) suttertield, \Walton. Tl Ou. YD-B9iTn. Chapman, George. Bussy d’Ambois and the Revenge of Bussy d'Am bois. 1905. YD-C365b. Clarke, C. and Mrs Shakespeare K ST5e. Davies, W. 0. YD-D2sst. Doyle, Sir A. €., and Gillette, W. H. Sherlock Holmes. 1922, ¥D- D7768h. Ferber, Edna, and Kaufman, G. & Old ‘Man Minick. YD-F374m Griston, H. J. Shaking the Dust From Shakespeare. YD-87M3g. Indiana Prize Plays. YD-9InZ5. Kemble, Mrs. Fs A. Plays. YD-K312. La Fontaine,-Jean de. Forty-twe Fa- bles. YH-L 135tm.E. Marquis, Don. The Dark Hours. YD-M344d. Marriott, J. W., comp. One-Act Plays of Today. YD-9M3ds. Mayer, E. J. The Firebrand. YD- s M455¢. Middleton, Thomas. Works. 18856 YD-M583ab. O'Nelll, E. G. Desire Under the Elms. YD-On2dd. Price, 0. M. ican Histor kespeare, William. Venice YD M3sy Sheridan, R. . B. The Rivals. Shidra. Zangwill, Israel. Too Much Money YDZ 164t Faith of th i ext Step True Travelers. i 1863. ™ Short Plays From Amor- YD-1'933s, Merchant of YD