Evening Star Newspaper, December 27, 1925, Page 11

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THE SUNDAY .STAR, WASHINGTON, D. /., DECEMBER 27, 1925—PART T — e e e e S T S N . I[]WNS WlN FAME COOLIDGE AMONG FIRST TOLD |YALE GIVES UP FALL |MINIATURE EXHIBIT CONTAINS |2 e e in tondon a o nes e ot tne nineiconn centues was a pupil of Trumbull. 1~ there for 40 years He invariably ’ 700 portraits in-eil, asrwel as mh‘\*’ OF PLAN FOR POLAR FLIGHT| TESTS FOR ENTRANCE| WORK OF CELEBRATED ARTISTS |giich fhe st of il | et Bty im0 E— —— - John Trumbull was a very preco. | wise became famous ' as a portrgt 2 I - . . . 3 cious child. He entered the junior | painter. He was the first vice pres Possibility of Discovery| Beginning in 1927, School Records | Special Collection at National Gallery Has Reproduc- year at Harvord ol the age of if and |dent of the National Academy ot De % J —-— P i i 3 - early wrecked his health with inces. | ‘ 1825. : I of New Land for U. S £ | and Reports Will Determine ' tions of Celebrated Figures in American His- sant study. Copley influenced him to| Among the English artists who z EE X study art, which he undertook short'y | adopted " America after the Tevolu Out-of-Way Places in Europe | Is Stressed. Fitness for Admission. tory Produced hy Great Enr]y Masters. before the Revolution. he war | tion may be mentioned William Birch Remembered for Delicacies AR Adoubtless changed the course of his|and Thomas Sully. Birch Inaugurated et later work, for he was a patrio. first | the art of enamel painting on lnpp;;- Ry the Associated Press. and an artist afterward, and consid- | in this country. Sully was a pupl! pf . NEW HAV Conn.. December 26, BY FLORENCE EVILLE 1in gold and set with precions flnnehi‘r'd that the painter’s greatest office | Doth Stuart and West and an ahic reparations of Other 4 September examinations for final BERRYMAN. The majority of them are painted on| was to depict historic events (which | successor to them for more than 30 They Introduced. : | candidates for admission o Yale Uni-| o vory’“which Succeeded the ' vellum | would ‘seem hetter wited to literary | vears H S C it . i | versity will iscontinued beginning first extensively used; a few are on!or poetic expreesion), and to paint the Not only will a visit to the min’; ations for Expf‘dllmns A l?:rTn" “‘rl’n]rr. dn,t. l (-umln.!(ha:“ which compose part of the special ex-| wood. porcelain, copper and other | portraits of persons notable in na- | ture exhibition bring one nearer (o S e e e e Also Cited man of the board of admissions. an- | hibition now at the National Gallery| materials. tfonal affairs, now considered his best | these immortal personalities, but It | HEAN | early American miniatures ; $ 3 s of aopiil e G 4 Fiahingto work. As a colonel in the Continental | also, will create a more profound a4 erecied 1o Mme. Marie Harel, creator ! Dnend ot e es of apll L A heankedby, the Wash axlon Panorama of Greatness. ArmS he was closely assoclated with | miration for our forefathers. i imembesticheese, at her Brittany | o ! their school records and confidential | points of interest, and as many phases| This exhibtion i« a minature pano-| George Washington, who posed for | realized the importance of art to lifs ge in Camembert, France, re- | ppe pyplication last week of Presi- | reports of their head masters and |of appeal to the public. rama of past greatness, including|him several times. 'Trumbull subse. | and made time for it in the midst or the United States Depart-|geni Coolidge's letter indorsing the y 4 the entranee examinations taken im-! This group, numbering more than many of the most notable men and | quently went to London to study art | their heroic activities to establish ut of Agriculture was surprised | o560 for an Arctic flisht next Spring | mediately at the close of the school | two hundred miniatures. is probably) women of the elghteenth and early | under Benjamin West. nation. se in the imports | pom pojnt Barrow to Spitzbergen, has | work, Prof. Corwin said. | the largest ever assembled. No one| nineteenth centuries. There are Was Student of West B R o Camembert cheese from France | .avealed that the President was one | 8 . “Under the present practice.” Prof.| who saw the .J. Plerpont Morgan col-| many aspects of George Washington, od ‘West. z . y mmediately er the World War. |of (he first Americans—outside the | i Corwin said, “most of those applicants | lection of miniatures at the Metropoll- by Birch, Field. Charles W. Peale, bert Stuart was a student of Eskimos Ship as Sailors. ion Wed that the A. E. [ jjttle circle of those who developed who are burdened with admi tan Museum a decade or so ago. will | Petticolas, Trumbull and an unknown | West at the same time. Though born | g, far & g S e old Crusaders TELUINING and financed the project—to be in-| conditions at the completion of ever forget It. But it was interna.|artist. |in Newport, R. 1., he had early gone | 4 00 fapiny o, 12 Ny record the - : lovs | | June examinations plunge veadlons | tional In scope, including large num- |~ Lafayette, loo, is here. surrounded | abroad, and played no part whatso. | nere erimc® €Ver o ship as sailar spices and silks of the East, | “ghortly after the proposal for the 3 into_tutoring schools in the hope of | bers of French. Iinglish and other|by the clouds of battle, the American | ever in the Revolution. But his pro- | Lep e Do L » lack irom France with a relish | wilkins expedition was launched in \ LRIt e A A DAE O | European examples, whereas the pres. | flag and other patriotic emblems; Mrs. | found admiration for George Wash. | (‘amaien setare i oy Northern amembert | Detrott, , Williana B. Muyo, general Hito iz ive them admiaston tn ent group ix composed wholly of the| Paul Revere, the second wife to cap- | ington brought him to. Americs | onsna’ with Ty e mumer. TN ally beet” was dr re to the | manager of the Ford Motor Co. and ey liter ¢ hem i a G Ehege a-| Work of native-born American artists | ture the heart of the great Boston fabout 1793, and he painted Washing. | Cronc: She sohnonen info fr douzhho craved A | ypresident of the Detroii Aviation So CAPT. WILKINS. tions, however, but a sms | or those temporarily resident in this | patriot, who fashioned the gold frame | ton from life three times, giving ts | Voo o DOTts When Spring comes Il the rest | ciety, wrote to Mr. Coolidge a letter. | — | of the total nufber of these eleventh. | country before 1340, which surrounds her little portralt;| our most famous conception of our | Nerth: The Tokioos reind Ty e souzht out | \which was signed jointl# by him and | HONE applicants can be sormitte | These tiny paintings are jewels of | Alexander Hamilton, as a lad of 16, national hero. Stuart painted very |won thets are mos: trib to Halita S Where he begged by the secretary of the sociely, Carlia submersed stream save a land mass | Uy, (G8IS (08 1 0Nl Lire sep. | color. Such minute art would seem to | in a blue coat and powdered wi.|few miniatures. Two in this exhibl. | b, (PSIT Arst time out of the Crigk e e K oy with | B Fritsche. The letter informed the|in the center of the Arctic Sea? | ember examinations of any applicant | requize exceptional skill; but the pro- | looking extremely young to have|tion, of Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel Manin. | “onciq Lhe,CaRtain said he probakly ¥ his search was rewarded with | president that the society was about| No one knows exactly what the [‘embe Gefelention are ‘v PDUCARE | bortion of excellence In this group is | played so dramtic a role just three| gauit, are hoth siened amd gamd ;x;d“ka\er h:e? un: ,1: to ;,al) on cheese. What could banish camp (o join in an attempt to explore the | Mackenzie does. But it has been | ti0H practieally no hope of admission | &reater than one will usually find in | vears later; Lighthorse Harry Lee,|which makes them exceptionally valu. four 1 k’?" »:f'(' ":d! e fact that the rations. monotony easier than Spicy: jce pack between Polnt Barrow and|proved that the polar sea, like all the| !eaYe bractically no hope of admission | BERT | 8T OO0 Fop DORRY 00 0| Rahdbome and Impressive in his mill. | able, sines: onty mbovt 1o ne treald-| Sxkimos signed on as sailors [ odored and spicy-flavored Camembert? | the ice pole, that they hoped to “climb | other seas, is the plaything of the | X8 It 15 unnecessary to requive | { it With a bit of Camembert wrapped in | the North Pole by air,” and to dem-| moon. It has td tides. Moreove: any candidate whose deficienci i ‘ 2D- | the voyage dow in| many different artists. tary uniform: Daniel Webster. with| proximately 800 portraits by Stuart | yage down. tinfoil there must be purchased in|ongtrate the existence of a short com: | these tides have heen observed, timed | nmany American delicatessens today | piercial air route over the dome of and measured at many points around | June are insignificant. The few hectic | Derivation of Word. the massive forehead which added to|are thus identified. memories of friendly folk in deep- | {ha globe. the polar circle, | They have heen | the late Summer months, usually un ne a J 1 his reputation for scholarliness:| The Peale family is uni est £ 15 « 1 e | am is unique in the e e e urliE | The word “miniature” in derived,| Dolly Madiaon, in one of her famons | anniis of Auneeian art. "Charles Wil 2 airey a coaching not from the Latin word “minus’ | iurbans; John Randolph of Roanoke, <on Deale and his younger brother roofed Norman cottages The Mayo-Fritsche letter went on (0| studied by many scientists jter the Jirection of & coaching Staff.| umall) au Is generally supposed, but| looking very gentla to have HaA &|Tames wers ot anéer brother | REAL ESTATE S point_out_ that Aretie airplane expe verdrup, the explorer, observed the | L § UGN, ane BT B SRR [ from “minium,” a ‘red mineral color | repntation for bitter and xarcastic dis- | {ion and painters of marked Aty LOANS MADE AND SOLD ditions were helngz arzanized I other| tides himself and concluded that asy oy " "This discontinuance is in ac. | \13ed for initial letters and decorative | position: Charles Francis Adams. sr..| Charles had several sons (all named | e Nt iia v | countries, and to tell the story of &ir | far as they were concerned he could} T TUR MICOnCALAnte i In B0 | headings in the illumined parchment | descendant of two Presidents: Thomas | ror oid masters). whe also ersived | J. LEO KoLB Camembert, 30 miles south of > Y- | John Franklin, the British explorer.|afely say that no land exists between | g i manuscripts of the Middle Ages. The | Jefferson, the familiar profile with . : codt ith| painting. Rembrandi Peale (1 hand- . : sort Deauville, was the way 10 con- | (ho yppeared before the British cabi-| Alaska and the mathematical pole. H Kdure. small portraits and fancy heads| the piquant, tip-tilted nose eI e Ty e | ot O3 NEW YORK AV. MAIN 8027 trol a certain mold.” says a hulletin | o iy 1845 o urge the Britlsh gov-| findings are disputed by Rollin A painted into the initial letters were the | Jiam Aiken’ of South Carolina. SINE-| jainied e his Unele James of the National Geozraphic Society < ernment to support his plans for an | Harrit. the American oceanographer, | ancestors of the miniature as we|wlarly eare-fees In apDearance for one| b icd DY his “Uncle James, from its Washington, D ., headquar- | ¢ pdition which would search for the | who believes he has proved that land| ESCAPED 12 YEARS AGO. |incw'lr® Minfature painting rapidly | oy oare e I e o rone them, and his artistic ability was i ters on the foreign 1 northwest passage. They related oes exist = < and achieved lofty expression under n‘.y‘\: he ban! of the Revolution, and his| haritad by his daughter Rosalba. An domestic cheeses. he Camembe at the British cabinet members| ‘“Since Nansen's discovery of ocean i i Holbein. court painter to Henry VIII|.yife, and Martha Washington, an un-{, . Charles’ sons. Raphael lRON culture can now he secured from €on- | thumbed maps and discussed details | deptha along the track of the Fram,” | MAan -Held in Slaying May Be| 00 Co i B the opinion of | et HaleipEetation: Y6 dimun o 0o th| eotte 9f8 Charl ons, Raphael, cerns who make it a business 10 grow | ,n4 eyentualities until late into the | ¢uvs Harris. “it has been quite gen i Former Convict. | many connoissen no orie has ever| perry, looking every inch a hero, and| james peale distinguished himself in it. Camembert and allied varieties | nish( and that finally Sir John, bans-| erally assumed that deep water covers r s surpassed the great German in this|a romantic one, his handsome face |’ i iiive painting (having heen sur ELECTR]CALLY like Brie are cured widely throughout |ing his fist on the table, shouted all o nearly all of the unknown Arctic | RICHMOND, Va.. December 26 (). | falq of art | sparkling with animation. « dimple in| 5 03" ¢ TECCHES TIAEITE O his northern France. American produc- yme one is going to discover the | parritory i orth of known land | —C. N. Walker, thought 1o be the Rut that a number of our earlv|one cheek, and his black hair touseled: | D45 R ons e e ‘-',1 tion now shares the United States jassage; it might as well | o > R is ot the case |man under arrest in Somersel County | American: bainters eaualed him i | Uresident Toier. Stonewal] Jacison. | held Among all our early artists). and market. Camembert differs from most | he pinzland! can he conclusively proven. But there | Md., in connection with, the slaying |{heir hest work isx apparent through in his Confederate uniform, : fo. SR ATSUE "1”\‘ shveh Skl = Cheeses in that the mold forming on | Leeat i difficulty in showing with certainty | st Thanksgiving day of John Ster- | o' K80 WOUE Lo 0P8t a1 garetia snd Sarah, followed in his the extoilor mellows the icore: When Land Really Expected. Whether land or very shallow water | InE at Crisfield, escaped from the Vir the cheese is ripe the interior is a Mr. Maye and Mr. Fritsche then in-|is responsible for certain observed |<inia State pr arm in Goochlan - k 3 creamery blob inclosed in a SUff, dis- [ ¢onte N30 SRl do T IRAC in o far a8 | phenomena.’” County on June 20. 1913 18 months| Jimost wholly portraits) lead to the | painted by Juhn Smibert, an artist of | 5t miniature Em:v:u{ achieved pre and Less colored sheath the possible discovery of new lands in{ In this connection Harris made the | after "|" had been gencanced <o 1oy | conviction that these must have been | early Colonial day e L coen vems {00 iR So siender is the path the world | pe "rctic ix concerned. the Detroit | point that the fide streams at Point | Years' imprisonment for the murder | (\cellant likenesses, in most instances e g before bis thirtiet Birenday 2 makes fo the historic homes of famous | yyjation Society felt. that *it might| Barrow should come from the north "'\‘\: e ot e | de.| Miniature painting enjoved exception Had Unusual Career. the age of 16 he painted his first miri. cheeses. that one often must g0 10 |, ywell be the United States."” it there is deep water and no land | Rk er wraasconyioted of second ds popularity during the period of the| Benjamin West, our first zreat ure, which displayed unusual talent Raedeker for the sign posts. Camem- Some scientiste here helieve that | due north ‘But.” he wrote, ..'h’!gre! murder. and when he enter ‘I.‘h.fi‘l!rw-lul) n .and for a generation painter, had a sensational career A jand evoked words of encouragement bert is on few maps: Cheddar, Which | ty0 Detroic expedition will add a new | Point Barrow flood streams come ®thereafter (indeed, until the invention |Quaker lad, born near Philadelphia in | {rom the British consul at Providence. You' cantbuy # fine Electric supplies the technical title for Ameri- | . inent 1o the territory of the from the west instead of the north.” of Daguerre), so it is no wonder the 1738, he early began to paint, using The iad devoted the next vear to in- * can or ‘rat trap’ cheese, is 13 miles| y;pjieq States—a_continent with an artistx attained to a hizh degree of |brushes made of hairs from his pet | tensive study and practice, and at the [| Iron that we guar- southeast of Bristol, England: SUllon | 563 of perhaps 500,000 square miles . Some Long Distance 1l All of our first great painters,|cat, Jt ix said, and crude colors ob.|age of 19 had u well established repu- [} antee for as little - is 65 miles directly north of London: | |, " ice"ine size of Texas. Benjamin West, John X Copley,| tained from clay and other natural | tation in Boston. In 1500 he went to (| - A »rgonzola is in Italy, close to Milan:| opp o 1od heen a great deal of dis B Parma, one of the largest of (he| yasion in official Government circles | ChEese " towny, “ 15 the i« S bar | here during the past few days as to Lombardy that gives its name to’Par i gl msin i st o g oot ! new-found love | formed of the plan painted very creditable miniatur £o hack more than a century bevond o ] ity of expressions, features, and | (hese. Lord Baltimore, as a child. one | ""l{‘*::l‘;'-! B It Is Eas | facial contours (for the minitures are of the most attractive portraits | 4 3 Malhone. srea penitentiary here on January 12 was 53 vears of age. Sets Form of “Land.” Having arrived at this conclusion atiar 80 : Harris made his mathematical formula .| Charles Willson Peale, John Trum-| sources, the secrets of which were im. | Charleston, " and then abroad | carry him on to the point where he | Lulu "m‘vjh"MF) 1t ";;‘ you ;‘*"“" bull and Gilbert Stuart e repre| parted by Indians, Eventually he es. | with Washington Allston, & friend and || . + colicets could write: :In‘nes = s, ||hn- ;«(fl fln‘m y(” ! | sented, as well ax most of those who | tablished himself in London and en- | fellow-artist Benjamin West urged | B o ee aucalicancR From various indications it will be | 1 m’“ 'r" p: ]"::" ‘(;(‘_"luc;'“'_:‘", G carried on thefr traditions in the pe-| joved the patronage of the King and );.m- ne to remain in London hhvu he of Lamps and Shades, vou see mesan; Swiss cheese is more proper o Bt e body | ASsumed that land in question x| o riod of the early republic, Edward| nobility and the friendship of Ity. | chose to return 1o America, where he | T el S les ey Emmental. for the Valley of Emmen | Wilkins expedition of some large body | hesaidal in form and eontains near- | . G. Malbone, Charles Fraser. Thomas | nolMs, Gainshorough and the rest »f | =pent his last few vears painting min. ([ the choi ceample N Thal, near Bern: Munster, in Ger- | of _:-nd :H ll"‘h—\";';';w-‘p‘jl:‘“ N Cihaq |1V half a million square miles. One | One Womanly Way. Sully, Charles Loring Elliott, Henry that great coterie of British masters, litures in all the principal cities can be assembled. and find the Fiany,!/saw fihe sbirfheior) Munsteni| RENIAIC Ay OEALIS ORS00, corner of it is northward of Point Bar s o ST K Inman and numerous members of the in association with whom he founded While in « leston Malbone in prices surprisingly reasonable. cheese; red and yellow Edam cheese| Such land exlsts. Elaborate Argu |ow, another northward of Bennett | Rose—Claude savs he worships the | poiie” family. *More than 50 khown | the Royal Academy and hecame its | duced a promising voung artist, || wo S balls are still colorful ornaments to| ments are built up on the somewhal jgjund. Its coast 1o the east could he | VerY &round I stand on | painters are represented. and in ad- second president Charles Fraser. to devote all his time 9&70/’7}6% ihe lidam market, near Amstérdam:| fragmentary scientific evidence which | traced in nearly to Banks Land, thus | Madge—I don't blame him. A farm | oo, "fhore are about 35 anonymous| John Singleton Copley, who was ex- | to painting, and Fraser subsequentiy L d Neufchatel, on the Dieppe-Paris rail [has been gathered in the Far North. | forming the northern boundary of the | ©f that size is not to be sneered at. | 0l "(Uhich, could the artiats be | ceedingly handsome (to judge from s | approached Malhone's high standard e T the object of German drives| Most of the latter-day explorers who | Beaufort Sea. Another torner would — . | known. mizght raise their number to miniature of himself in a frame set | not only in quality hut in number of Joseph D. Campbell for far other purposes than to get | skirted the unexplored ice cap which |be found northwest of Grant Land. as| 2 Fanniebell Southerland. mem- | 60 or more with dfamonds), enjoyed Boston’s most | miniatures produced 517 10th St Main 6549 soft cream cheese; Limhours. the | Capt. Wilkins is planninz to study | indicated by the discovery of Peary’s ber n old Southern family, & a| Many of the miniatures are in the aristocratic patronage for about 20| Charles Lorinz Elliott. a native of town made mous by an odor, lles | from an airplane, have carried deep- | Crocker Land.” P"olice Court judge In Paris. Ky orm of brooches, lockets, ete., framed vears prior to the Revolution. Being ' New York State. who lived during the near Liege, where Belgium haled the | water sounding machines on their | Harris' calculation have been as {nvaders: and. finally. there ix Roque.| sledzes and probed the sea beneath |sailed. But to some scientists they re From the American Mutual Magazin the Detroit Aviation Soclety will ten- the caverns of Roquefort have cured| c E Ster dlse |8 3 he cavern a Cape Tsachen, but deep water else- | ol 1 “tne Unived Stateg a new Aloshn checses. Roquefort has w natural| where. Leffinwell and Mikkelsen re. | iro wil o tore, (aies & new i fort, in ihe Auvergne Plateau of ren-| them. Their records show that al-|main the bedrock of a conviction that tral France most everywhere they traveled the [an undiscovered continent walts to be z polar ocean was a well-like basin, de. [found. somewhere heyond the “far Queen of Roman Cheese. void of any sheals which might indi- |thest north” of the whalers and ex. | “Could a senator of ancient Rome cate the presence of land he[\\ven‘l'l"""”‘ who have tried to follow the . shop with his wife in modern met- | Point Barrow and the undiscovered |nieridians which lead northward from | ropolitan delicatessen. he would cer-| jce pole. Nansen drifted around the [10int Parrow i tainly come out the door with a pack-| unexplored area on the Siberia-Franz | If Capt. Wilkins succeeds in follow- aze of Roguefort. for (wo reasons:| Joseph Land side. He reported depths [IN& 0ne of these meridians to the ice First. becayse it would he one of the | of from 3,400 to 3,600 meters as he |Pole he will be in Harris' area of | fen comestibles With which he was| moved from the eightieth to sighty. |POtential land after Ms plane has been | < * tamiliar: second. because Roquefort| fitih parallels of florth latitude, |1 the 2ir only an hour dnd a, half. | was prized beyond all cheeses in| paary found deep water just south | Lf Harris is right, if thereis a trape- Rome | of the mathematical pole, Stefansson |Z0Mal continent up there “nearly a “IFor more than two thousand vears | Yound i o I e "o | half a million square miles in area, monopoly. because nowhere else do 1 UG 5P LT 000 feet shen | | = o 3 om_ at 24 |1sles taken together. nearly twice Nature and man combine the same | oTLEC B DOSLOM B SN e aska & v twice elements. In the limestone rock are |large as Texas and something like 10 3 (] numerous linked caves in which there Peary Thought He Saw Land. |lmes larger than the State of New : B e, N e we| Between them. these explorers | (Coprright. 1025, by Narth American News. e hvors Above freezing and an | touched bottom on all sides of the | vaner Alllance ) atmosphere sdturated with molisiure— | Unexplored region which has the ice | . perfect conditions to faver the Roque. | Pole as its center. Nowhere distant | The Southern Mammy. t mold and discourage growth of | from known land—save at one place |y ., the pittabursh Chronicle-Telegraph fort v m‘.-u; na discqurage gFowth of | (X0 KOME g e el hid they taburg icle-Telegraph The Duchess of T¢ 2 o o | On _the rocks ahove the hillsmen | find the sea floor sloping upward 2nd ; stk Tudonla, abaut dy n s depart for Rome. sajd at a farewell tend 430,000 sheep. a special breed in | hinting of an unfound continent on | GEiilL (PR (O ) which the requirements for wool and | or near the eighty-fourth parallel. | " ippeoperg thing. I'm proud of as for meat have been sacrificed for the| Yet, Peary attempting to reach the |.n “American girl and that's our maximum supply of milk. ‘}r‘\ean’ of :}\e l:‘:lnh; md 1906, t'hn_u:l’;‘ outhern cooking. the cooking of our 1efort culture speres are prop- e saw “Crocker Lan in latitnde gear old Southern mammies—fried - e 83 north. longitude 105 west. Mac- in special bread. which is chicken. Marvland biscuit, candied dried, ground and mixed into the! Millan reported t he drove his|gweet potatoes. Sally Lunn. The sheep-milk cheese. Before the cheese | dogs to this position veral vears |<outhern mammy can more than hold goes to the caverns the makers per- later an;l saw no land ok e her own with any chef or cordon blue. forate the cylinders with a skewer to| Several persons associated with the Onee at luncheon. when I was a admit air. Skewer marks may he | Detroit Arctic expedition have of- iittle girl. I sopped up with my d H : traced In the slender lines of green|fered an idea which, If it could ‘he|bread fhe deliciols gravy that went When Do ge Brothers Starthng new prices are mold found in all Roquefort cheese. | proved sound. would disclose why the | with our Southern mammy’s stewed “America’s contributions to - the | Arctic Sea might be very deep off chicken. Amercrs” Contrbitons o “The | Arrle S et b very deen of hicen T e M made known on January 7th, the full amount of @ entific production, larze scale output | Peagy’s route, and vet how it mi that,’ said my governess. ‘It's bad | o e T o et i) the reductions will be refunded immediately to all some other cream cheeses are new. | theory would make the very deepne: . In that fresh curd is used. hut the | of the sea in the explored areas a - ans are agitating for a i i i texture links them to the Neufehatel | proof that land exists between the n.‘,"fi,’,’,f,””:,” ,:,?I,v,,s““t{‘x:::"’m(r’;m‘ purChascrs since mldnlght’ December 15th. r meridains which inclose Capt. WL | (e Ttk the ‘tree port which o = 6 : . kins' proposed line of flight. =iy, hos Wasa oot . Wisconsin Outstrips Switzerland. | " A great. river, the Mackenzie, flows | -~ e 8 onstruct at Wy ot e gl S, o | Ll This means that you can buy your Dodge Brothers more than twice as much cheese a€|gex. 1Is it not possible, thev ask - . . . . Switzerland. Yet Wisconsin owes an |tha s of this river, work: i el i atons o [ AL Ot T, O | Gy Eutablshed 1843 Motor Car today, enjoy its immediate use,and still er cheese industry was built up in{ier of the polar pack, is deflected . art by Swiss immizrants. Still ear-|ung divided? Is i 0ss a et oy st S eur | ana diviaed? "Iy i¢"not’ponsibie that z benefit fully by the savings yet to be announced. making was transplanted to New | s (nifted around beneath the polar | 1 Amsterdam, and cheese-making cen-| 1 "'\ the east and north (Peary s ters still mark the westward march | Dodge Brothers product today is better than n and parts of Wisconsin Lefingwell and Mikkelsen's routes)? Piamas Solit Diect from the Fflclu" ever fore Loaf cheese. wrapped in tn foll, | soq anat. 1t i askod et We Invite You te Visit qur iv striotly a Yankee invention and a i Eooa"one. Becaine ' Sice e the” S|~ —— | New Warerooms of a piece of bread. and hecause dry- |affects the flavor. this was impr;n‘n_v’\_v | . = . P e e e o e Ll e, W Price reductions are made possible by the com- i et o fon bis desk. It M inpurt that ae (EOSERISE20AR 0N R LA pletion of a $10,000,000 expansion program that Emnloves in m.m] ".\".wyh}v‘:"t'lnn ?lr\‘wv.-,\’_ or. more l\u:.pc;\n. hw,he‘ SQuyEmyinq U\UflEfEflf i 2 A o stood r Iy o do < hid =. | bellows, 3 = ra by e e | Tt b M B T D e ; will practically double production. their head: |as yeast does bread. Further, that | ‘% 3 i i empiyes soon’found. this et A eI i 5 7 ¢ The savings effected through this enormous in- no jokinz matter. This famens man, | ‘¥The Department of Azriculture not | lL_n appear when he can e 4 ows Swigs ] se. b als = H H 3 i e i s e e e crease in output are being passed directly on to and business, is absorbed in his big| A visitor to the dairy division can farm. A problem had en in the|see ‘most any day a pint bottle with S5 DR ia e weims v © Mot . Deal Exiade :’e dl‘)tlilyerl_“;' SORRERE. W Tige Hiwkis aditiona 1CY. Salesmen A Wanted . SEMMES MOTOR COMPANY A local builder is opening Raphael Semmes, President his own sales department ' for the sale of his own = : Mai LEAN and PRESS - ik S : 8 Dupont Gircle ain 6660 houses. And 1707 14th St. N.W ALL and DELIVER A splendid opportunity n SPECIAL THIS WEEK ONLY §| 5 DoD EE— BROTHER 5 LADIES’ CLOTH COATS $7 .75 [g8 xeptics scricty consen- CLEANED and P RESSED, g fia];\ddrg::rrg)écelss-n : | M DT D R CA R 5

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