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4 THE SUNDAY ¥ AR, WASHINGTON, D. €, DECEMBER 27, 1925—PART PORTRAIT ON EXHIBITION An Exhibition of Ten Paintings by Bernard Karfiol at the Phil- lips Gallery—Pictures Added to the Gallery's Per- { manent Collection During the Past Year. f Brand Whitlgck Turns Out a Well Written Story of His Politi- cal Experiences Which Reads Like Fiction—The Life of Brigham Young, and a Ne.w Book by Cobb. ures new to the visit BY LEILA MECHLIN. |1 S ! r. though oneyis rendered with subtlety and exceed s not newly bought—The Scuiptor,” | ce fee THI Phillips Memorlal Gallery, | 5 295 Nevly boug he Sculptor,” | ingly nice feeling. v, as an illum- | and Supervigion of the High Sciwool { this | 1U83-J63. IDA GILBERT MYERS. | jected fully and fairl | inating chapter in the history o characteristic of ( If one would judge the quality of | 08 Twenty:first atreet, has been | o) igiihe JIEEY (GEBSANIGHE, Q7 I one would | FORTY YEARS OF IT. By Brand| Mating | | Joint Commiittee on Health Problems iyl Pkl e imazing master both of line and | cotemporary minfature painting it fs! e S | repubtic % i int Committec on Jiealth Problem hown for the past two weeks &| brugh. and “Seward Park.” n picturs| o stple matlor 16, compars it ot this| Whilocksiauthoe for SReletuvd] kik wix {""in Bancation. Health Tducatio® nard Karfiol, whose work fof lower New York of a Summer| with the works of the great min- | ote. ~ Preface by William Allen|paris:, ON PABADE"-By Robect| IRP-J66. s e night, by Jerome Myers, un Ameri- | jature painters—Malbone, Fraser, Cop- | WVhite. New Yorl VERIEto] | Forrest Wilson Kallen, H. M. Education, the Machine ity & e GEn gt painter. who, Hkelley and others., on in_the loan | Co. ! Warshawsk and the Worker. 12 of whom much has n by exponents of ment, Mr. Phillips himsclf has following to say | Daumiier. {around interested in the life | exhibition 2t the Natio Gallery of | m. the lite with which be S| Art. From these it will be seen that | iliar. Mr. Myers shows a flat| the rea! charm of mintature painting Daumier invarfably 50 | comes | Kilpatrick, W. H om | Method.. TP-K33 from |y vnch, I el FEducation. JKE-L933h passed into the perennial joke. | the old Paris=of history. Henry | inz the Child - HE “New Year resolution.'| fiobhs-Merrill Co. [ time-worn with defeat, hasi gy prnie oo o qivan | panor But has it in reality so passed?| . ton er, scornful o ; m eyquistte drawing and Louls i have pretty | 2 nder he has not been overlook able to present a unified impreseion. | whether put on with the point or the ceptance as occasion for a flippant wit | WL AT ONE SR Lere for the | Entramee Requiremen 1X3 1ge addicted to sensationalist To the left of the great Rencir now | side of the brush it will have the ap. | and the self-protective coloring that | Qurlsts 4% THE BWOE FEECE T0r L0 M216t, : Sirtuosity. He dled Paris and | hanzs o e by - Cezanme, | pearance of smoothness, and aliow the man—along with many other animals} A8 B0 AR B toric fact and | MeMurre, ¢ Practical Teaching I ept in touch with the modern | “Mc Victoire a typliwarm tnt of the fv to show! and certain plantg—takes on for the | tmplication fs guite all right for gen-| V-1 TP ut from a safe distance, | cal this leader of the through. There is pothing more de-| unmolested pursuit of himself in the | IMBlication fs aypS wo TERT T Ifight, | Mitler. I, and Hargreaves, It: 1 new tendencies with | modernists typographical kind of | lightrul th: a good miniature,| pattern of his best growth? Is it not| tral FeeliRE. UL L S b, Robert| The Directed Seho P 1 analytical interest very cleverly rendered In| nothing more satistying, for it not true that under the familiar badinage |\ CUC PG 50 Yiha growing con- | M613s . »m them hat key with certain decorative | only interprets personality, but has there does go on at this annual ve| o cnecs that there s « Paris of the | Millis, W H. H. The beginning the desire and the deter- mination in every man's heart to face | squarely about against tmskmn.)-_mu_.v iy . against that mistaken view? 1w )\‘t‘xf‘;: is, ‘f beliove, the common state of | Parls is kl!x-)finm',:xl\' i a0 mind fronting upon the New Year.|We. with thi: ey And into its sensitive and secret re. | Priests of the passing wodes, | folves help from the outside e [ course, we 5o to the Lutin Quarter- omes with special officacy. 1t is here |4 new Jook 1o i n this partpular || Public that the human adventure, narrowed | point of view—and ire W chool Subjec resent, one that sets up a keen| ohISe L \with the days from which this| IP-}626 g T o surely sprang. Since | Odell. C. . 'Educational-Statistics i 1P0-0g23 “high | Patri, Angelo. School and Home nd, of | IKI-P2is. ter— | Pittenger, B. . An Introduction to Public’ School Finance. 1U33-Ph A.. and Allen, C. R. Vocs wtest enthusiaxm is for | @ . which finds its place and|an indmacy which the larg and for early Greek | Proves congenial when associated with | iy ofls tan never possess. ulpture To the first in W s of Monet and of our own ive indebted for his fine hu “htman and Ernest Lawson: a verent emotion and to t < which explains the intent of the r his extraordinary mode | modernists to render through sugges- ide figure in diffused light t r wer than ct, beauty of He is in love with the inner lite theme ith and the poetry of desten int Whit a diversity ar of taste these PAINTING by Charles R. Patter- son of United States frig; stitution,” Old Ironsides, has fatel been presented to the Museum of Fin Arts, Boston. This painting has lately | 1 catholicity RITE GERARD, BY €1t in the outlines of adolescence wi uired paint- | been reproduced In full color by the H him also on the high ing. tional Edu. on 1y vears he has spent his Sumn ing manife t valuable additions | Navy Department and di ited o4 to this mei or to that one in his own | i @8 up and down the town we 20 -Pa4sy. Ogunquit, Me., and his landsca they : unique and rapldly | every school throughout the United| time and place, serves one of jts best | g Gl UP SO0 wrer, touching , Firman. Souvenirs d'un S| vet subtle, q and increasing States in connection with & d for| m e5. There are thousands of tHe big pots of modern lure of Tran 1U39-R81 > curate i m » | funds to restore the old vessel, which! these adventures. But :1.w'(_~“("“‘, 0 e diidion: A gav and de-{ Sharlip, William, and Owens character of houses & S 2 was built in . and also with the {the abstract are feebler in effect than | the v. fresh in design apd| . Adult Iimmigrant Educatior ain and his drawing be Washinglon two new special ex-| Palntings and prints of ships, cspecial o | stunce of immediate and vital contuct. | MARE €08 RHEE By the book- | H. What is English? 1 | more sensitive and expressive of :vrxn::uw will be opensd, o ot Jor-| Iy fullrigged ships and shib< of ro- e i v | rnaker's craft—this is a most pleasing | btle shades of interpretation. ails und other paintings by Miss | mantic histor have become very 1. FRAGONARD “}ul;mm-\' Years of Tt.” by Brand | (hing, whose illustrations are all from | Hattie E. Burdette: the other of land- | popular of late and are beins both| PORTRAIT OF MARGU and whose| Politics and Government srit is like that of the prim 1 scapes by Ss Jhzabeth Sawtelle, - S 4 s ~p TR > “hi ! is a pri New Year tntings by Warshawsky th their fond and faithful record of | scapec by Miss Elioabeth Sawtelle. | painted and reproduced generously. | THE PHILLIPS CALLERY COLLECTION. MARGUERITE ven e dertats. | ot Tosturek i i bIOE watlh The | Bakiekice, - 5. Wi Rposnt Bl w’: ,yl.]l Y;I’"\';x‘\.(:;:‘ and b - ashington 4 - i { GERARD WAS FRAGONARD'S SISTER-IN-LAW. J the outset one is not quality of both these yvl'”lurm' and they ::n)u-_v of the United States. JUS3 o1 fiol's 1 5 Zes ¥ 1 S PR CNTC ¢ 1. — 7 o i T s ext itself 1 2083, S Sl e : LADYS BRANNIGAN. formesly of | trom st by Smigosaiblethi 3t af the e : 2 i e GROUP of miniatures by Mar-| \F this city, now of i - ’ g = D to be a °d, nor does it th v % o | Bradshaw, C. A, and Hornstein, 1. O ; ek marbles, but as a con- | A | ; ; ! s city o . has S e 5 " ) to be a § ; " ! e, C. A a ein, 1. R e of ol ok ot e \ vie Geim Qirs. Bustathopoulo) is | lately been awarded @ prize ot S”“}L()(;\RI\() PACT CALLED VICTORY |antloaie leave reality for pleas |..jppp; COMES THE BRIDE —and | Americanization Questionnaire State aubropitaon Standing | 0w on exhilition L e ,.--.r_g;,-‘i for & groun of ‘mm:ul“;;n\ xhibited | O iz ]‘1_‘)\ = ? =k = 2 ) Jant excursions nio the hlue e ad- | S Focth. By ”‘..\,,“T Cobl, authios [ Iy E Thertiabe o in the present exhibition is one | Shop, 1637 Connecticu we. Thelat the State Fair at Phoenix, Ariz N N (8] | venture bezins plain colors of | ¢’ yjjaS Ben ‘Albf” ete. 1 . he Faith of a LI the fnest “achievements of the | putater; who o vesides in New York. Mis. Brannigan at one time did pen FOR GERMANY BY TED EDITC R,i‘::llfl'-l) and today ~though thi ves York: George H. Doran €o. isHE 2 American painters and would | is a ormerly | and-ink drawings for The Star. Re s : iterday was somethinz over 30 years F. has been coming ever since Solicies : o {n any”compans studled with Misg Ca ne (‘rx:c:ex-)gpr[rlng to these she ras in a recent| |ag "““;’”'}”““,‘;"?;’h"‘fi:,::r;’e"t"""’ S i e 1R i i This is certalnly high praise. but ail {and other locul artists. She fncludes| letter: “I used to think the inter-| ey, i e C sratian’an b = s - japects clsnclls i S s g hinself, not desirous—one i : like. That Karfiol's works {1 4 double portrait of | minable penandink drawings made Po icy of Co-Operation™ in European Affairs ('""‘“';" e "',":“"'f‘“fib"h 3 o B ois i T e e . but to| sco and her chill, and|as newspaper illustrations would ruin| . e & bit at Orst ta find the,place that fits < momentous bride busi = of the East. JU6 ; ih work her well known people.{ my color and tizhten my line, but I, Iv Aided by Treaty Which But Recentls tabxly nis chzagiue gL Newspapt Sgrh o o P Ll H 1 dis- | < ) dleasing in the en:| think now the discipline was good for | < B 'l B s ng, Sher ““‘ jex. o M1y, vol o 3 ble 1o sober | ® Immigration fror t and unapi g 1n ction is a_portrait of an elder-{ me.” It is a fact that the majority | o tc inge. SRl e L eorrigible humo And 1 the West Indie c There are beautiful passages |ly luc Miw. Dickinson, which is| of artists who have attained distinc ctamer o ang s JDNCB 1B the sum of thimrec R e thes e I of the nude, 1o which | larger” than is customary for minfa-| tion have served some such similarl mm ————— sl S L ver the portentious implica Viscount, Tents | rs, and, be it said to| tures, aliaost a full length, seated, and | apprenticeship. | 4 3 Fae ¥alous nosu . honeyers bl * within the famiiiar nuptial | i T ; : =5 : ithin th JUs ¥ no sugxestion of H ruous editor uho uwriies | natlon are achieved only when il s e gl s ent. By the tme the wed-| ; he head in s way Ly that iae hoen the | Droved that tl run parailel with he render. Tt was the young | pronouncerent. BY the time the bl e body | R s 5 || WHiowe af oubOAToE nations. Theret vo. nd the voung lawyer, how. |ding business is well under way matrl- T America: h wh feless and coid. | " % Ras been an ardent they ssed the importance of show 1o found the people—the great (n v a 1tion has been pr ¥ itizenship - 83 2 GIE Sityao Miolcts 4va cid Bive X ligral poiitics thit ; Importancesof sh etermining the work of | well wrung i hung on the line H. W." The Usages of the rira dies of har. | Sy [ P A he terms of th B 5 I e S O O e e o pcaitiontof Htiprom American Constitution. JTs3-HI89u rtul: the indi are a ‘ant! woul i that v o the rest of his lif ra g L re eh ed i | Rece St ALiGke Tacts 160 hat Whicii centers upen the inalien. |is neertain fulfills for' the |Joad, . Fo. M. Introduction to Moderr e et i pay w ”""’- SF PSR TACS d te CNb L at e man to life and | casual character of undertaking | P« ".! ,'\ eory. JAJ-J57 orL thot el aval 5 < el & provided 3 s = =8 re he reach. | und its sequence of instability. All in]K : A Hatvany, Antonis discern their spiritual qu i it ymic | iiberty and hapnine e L o o, /Then BRl| | PrOtboaiGe) ¥ o ¢ Rettlemen: the spark, no doubt, but ettled dist in capital pun i sl be tuken ¢ nds of | @d the 1 1 N 08 ol nterna sputes in Rel v buried deep in a great deal of | /| BY DR. GEORG .ltr,l:\ll\lfl)‘ |t er e s }“ ops |1shment and many another established | Cobh 1nove is dim atmo r‘ .f" ‘r‘n: | Dispu 1;. !“ n | Eaorin oot . Vossischen Zeitung, | (REICEMEn Wi P | wickedness of tiie old hasbeens that | phere hel IXAR-K296; i 3 s can be said praise of “In 4 2 ooy b Aiaiter A 4 AR-K290 1 v aid in pra Iy ! } e - “part earryiie: ddt. 1] susmtn erv tutes. H ges | Miller. D. H. The Geneva Protoé 3 i lat et ir t £HAT egt i o rOT) [ the under dog. applied to the ssor of | 1 like, but lackin, 1 i ' : ' = g o Germa 1: il conditionbgn g fendalis ess —a broad ¢ i ""»"fi"‘ Shlmr:n.— ich real primitive S a e JaiB 4 : D {110 of 36 vears ago. Here document, this last. Approp e 2 5. « rather inabili ) ic in; i ! made her 1th | o riter d g upon. gome kin- | closes th experie and | The Governmental 3 531 5 f % hoped that, “findlly. I Sreq wpitie — Clarenoe Dt a2 s—| - of P JT98-S ; ved an § e by all parties | (CO0 b TSOLy il L EE hiis d of murd g t he does | pendence, iR so Ge! e, beca he | test oo BoRgI g sen 0w S «imply becan c S0 m 1t is un ¢ requircments f Germany L £ nce depend murdered outside the | g its . — s tha feebic is offe hea his ed doubt poll na econa agree- |1 n't overcome hatred b im = v mder then econ. | MY hatred love alone.” he says, in | reach | Italian News Venders German bus s ERS . here and there along the w = it names Wi cofrect was | of his w ; p Badgered by Fascisti T e o vie statesmen { “Golden Rule o< is’ another | T BLACK TURRET. By Patrick s ot e t leinzatiist ac ' i appeal to |friend of this adventur and so is Wynnton. Indianapolis: The Bobbs 1 i | eentua re v and polifical intelligence ; Tom Johnsdn, great mayers of Ohio Merrill ¢ TCT e } carded 1 1 rINer opponents ) rities both the record runs 111 3 n & S myste ces one . a 0 thei ul promul h a distinet p 3 S m have {milleg L o D s . German dotent Proved, »'hmx et Rl e T to the X where any their copies of opposition | ated agamst ¢ and that no s Hfe, in which this unassuming youns | i 13 I {it must be carried out, paragraph by .. Fhe Dawes plau and the Locarnofmafl, setting a little older™m: Vears, | thing may happen: ba et Hie @01 with tlre remark, “Amen paragraph. like 4 don: Y i confirm the fuct that Germany]but not. in purpose. identifiee Rimecif | of pure saelodre e et The papers are But finally the endeavors of a large | I ried 0ot the {orm of all the {and his work with poor fOlk times before uced this region of | ither torn up or burned in the street part of the German people, under the nt terms of the Versallles | criminals. and the untaught, a table principalit " | Gonfiscation squads leadershin of the Conservative parties, | Therefore the assumption was { unknowing, and the bewildered and unbe 2 5 e elzing o i ol iwride ' public | that the alleviations and changes | the misdoing. Probably the real res o daman : L fl‘n’;‘” 5o runeceni) v odern movement’ i ail o ot the " Tho ¥ without laying | Any 0 these things— princess, held from Der righttul do. e b D Mihedinstvses 1 ¢ vosition s statesinen standing for fulfilliment of open to the: re. | hand over there, u vision in that clear | Main by the machinations of potice | 005 "0 Unempliiniiey e f icetpirteaan Rl the treaty” had a a the attitud abandoned - or | direction, a sense of the ill balance of | {00% b v |ReaiY Ber newspapers Enetahedr ool liant artists now living have chosen | from the very beginning that u formal S treaty. Ger.|life. & good energy of pursuit. an apt | GeVisis a6 oete : o et e i Ao e idioms of expression and t in hange In tho text of the V tlles now has freedom of |device fur betterment. That's all. |mand; tu upen the prinesss in | her swinging cluba <t ang curses ine migst of much that 1se and | treaty was mot possible. They saw | uction once more. She is bound | Read tha book now. . It is a hupeful | €& « » reverberating, and finally platoons of Such is the m uthor creates mo. | Police with —dra e18a repellent we nccasionally come "imes are growing better. The | (he of subtle or strik- ithat the treaty was th t as | ter o ymise by | by the new pact in peaceful agree |book. T mp swords or fixed With it the passing show of city and field, of festival davs upon creations ful s | lies; so that no part of it. could | ment with Lngland, Belgium and | n is feeling more and doing m il r horror, seconds | bayonets proaching to clear the ity Nothing sensational and | ed without serfous reactions | France. At the sime time, Germany | companionable book, as well— | ments of halrraising horror, <sconds; o 00" GPEGACTOR 0 ST Ll nothing coarse will be found in our terests of all parties. They | established friendly relations with hey | rtists and writers and honest, | Of supposed escape. instants 6f NOPET | ot impartially tn thase who de ’ » wish to show + 3o = e : fore, that a change ot sian nelghbors thro e 1 entious reformer: n fh the | all In " el bapers lmp X fofdindee Who dc MME. CUNIBERTI OF THIRTY-FIRST AND § STREETS. GEORCE- | S0l hever o brought abot, bat onte | pae sereomnt . oSl the Ra- L re Seve and there A tre ac. | ! narrowing loopholes « wand them. Now (he news vende: TOWN, AND HER TWO SONS. A GROUP BY MME. ELENA ZE. [."chanze in actual interpretation.| The opponents of the Locarne pact | 0UBl, MOt pointed upen.Teform i Gl isciet papers prominentl: LEZNY. WHO RECENTLY WAS A GUEST OF MRS. CAROL HOWE | They staod for the view that Germany | in Germany maintaim that Germany (4DF Sense, Dut mighty good for vour | i reaching this “last® th: : e minent FOSTER OF WASHINGTON. MME. ZELEZNY. THE SCULPTRESS, | should show by actually carrving out | partly surrenders herself to the weat. | N VeaT resolutions” all the sume, | Wonderment a< to what i tempr or pe W AS BORN IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA. AND HAS SPENT MUCH OF the economic paragraphs that ihe © e and that by joining the e AR, stion of their licenses B iamiang sel : : HER TIME IN FRANCE AND ITALY. SHE PLANS AN EXHIBL fect injure the economic inter. | League of Natlons she Wil be drawn | JAPAN 1x AR . 2 . i : TION OF HER WORK 1N WASHINGTON IN THE SPRING. ests of | fos themclvs. therebs | nto-ar anii 1t Jlicy. led by Eng- sridge ihor of . : X R : — —— et s ol land. is Incorvect. The | fornia Tra New Chemists Not at Ypres. trea 2 «t would also be 4 h the locarne and | The Maemi! pa \f TR T P <O\ A searible fo rmans pallo agreements is not that G Raeard s A s e )s Memorial llery has l\ I)h I }*R ’”:\\T" ] RISOI\ TEK S Party Called Slave. ny is bound again: ‘.m .'.m, 1»':” IT : ““‘(‘ "( the ‘-';"“1{" ol | t t the Public| Resolutions passed by the American R0 Aot e rnent Golection LA S . e A » nationalist agitators called t ai she now the possl- | =, T°St Of the world. that he gets|y recommended | Chemical Society in convention at Lo number of exceedingly notubie FOR ALL (;RI‘IF\AL ADVOCATED | parts th- aves of the entamta bility to fulfill her bis mission | YWhat S G R O reading will appear this column | Angeles condemn the action of the sintings during the past few montl e murder of Erzberger and Rathe-|in Europe—namely. to build the | C15¢ the history of a place. of jeach Sunday Geneva conference in placing a ban Ihese recent acquisitions are to be e { nau is directly attributable to their in. | bridge between west and east. Ger. | 118 CUstoms. of its people and it to 2 on chemical warfare; in barring poi- ARGy he main gallery, open | c.. _ ) 2 stigation. In reality this party falled | Many's existence without economie co. | 11is Knowle he add insight and Social Problems. 'n zas from the conflicta of the o the public, by the var, it will be| Sing Sing Warden Sees Fallacy in System of Deter-|necause not only was weak Germany | operation with Russia for «ny length | 5Pty why, then the place irselt e ke ture. In this action, and a similar e on Wineadhy: S Cuptayang A Ahead H L 'I “-.'“ Tak [in no position to preak the treaty of | of time is unthinkable. Since time i [o0 Lo MM many @ secret that \ial Science, Philadelphia e o uRIER R el AN Jay’ afternoons. mining Ahead w o e { Versailles by force, hut also because | Immemorial many Germans have done | J DeIoW the surface, as far down tee 1h GHuTY - |sturdy chemists see an effort of the ¢ the door, or even sooner, 1 = L o ong It 1 ake to after the World War government by | business in Russia, and It is hoped | 35 the ."“""‘T“'y*"“" ‘[\‘l““‘l‘ upon \\“‘-;», | pacifists to weaken the defenses of <6r a glimpse of the gallery is ha L SRR force could find no echo in the civilized | that for the future reconstructio | Which Its present clvilization fo| Am3in. o LS on and turn war back sgaim O iLc openiidoor latithe cleat Punish Man for Offense. 4 | Russia. the foroes of Gevman bucimeny | Teared. Such a traveler Trowbridge | Beman, L. T comp. Selected Articles| 0%k brutal business of bullet and o5 eve nstantly <l b, e parties ked for {and sclence will be called upon. Not, | 1121l appears to be, giving out to | i e : - wWel bayonet. In brief, an abandonment of ew of the great paint owned patriotic motives and with an eve to | however. against the west, but in eo. | [rAders by way of these sketches of Work. TAS: humane methods of warfare iis gallery, whaich during the past BY LEWIS E. LAWES who, in thelthe needs of their own natio i Japan that which lies back the strarce t there were few chemists in that r k . . but |operation with the west » Jjudgment of prison officials, should be | they also knew that the aims of cuch | o with the aver-|Tetalned in prison for their uatural - 1 day <olution for its com-|lives, and men are being detained and religious ceremonial m‘_ this of that :';:*:"i::f,,."::.,iz‘;‘."5?;”:,‘.'::.”:{;::";‘,::;,-:;“;:*;.:;:::&:;:“"‘Chilc s Volunteer Firemen in 1860 o e ol deh Parole offers a greater oppe unity ! = cate toucl hroughout. a shadowy 5 | Made Up of Gaudy-Garbed Notable | shattered Canadian line at Ypres, tha the Court, | Basped and groveled and died miser |ably, when Germans first loosed the e, F. A. Ele. |lethal fumes to add to the agony of ern Bufiding and | War. And there are walking wrecks TH.Co4T0n today, gray-faced husks of the men Jphyv of Fire |Who were, before they breathed the poison that let them live, unhapp: or more have become famil ng Sing P (Copyright. 19 templé and shrine. o mp! chief trea Phillips has long lately succeeded in entitied “‘Dairy prasents a broad view of ith u group of trees and ments of the Mo Loan Associatio Dean, A. F. ‘he Philo: Insurance. 3v. IIF-D342 O e e D tures the chemists should scan before Macfadden, B. A. The Truth About they prate of humane methods. °s among ) exan of the ‘criminals’ in ¥ r requirinz come form of withholding flick of humor, a sense 1 lives; ster i X ctives; spank tlon by the offender. This should of the inner meaning of each of (i pak e national characteristics— P o o|enter more into our judicial proce- | i nders and put them -to . working together, provide a dure and practice than has been the 2 But today some of us recognize|custom in the past, and it is possible B sDoupiof] gat plet iDERexDostgnce Soryscad. and Weslex, I3 1%, Social | Invalids. These are part of the pic Farm,” an Chile’s “fire fans” are unlike those [dreds of lives were lost French col in the middle Gistance. O ‘lx.p‘.:-_n» that not only are individuals respon- | to do this under the broader applica- |in the United States. ~ Nowhere in |the leading . ooy o BautAzoimet| emafofidapan InyENholetle! 1™ Tobaceo. ICIS-M16 | But there are other phases of this Lo e e hite, Tow MOUSCRbie th sociaty. hut that there exists | ton and use of the indeterminate | North America does one find volunteer | A7 o(ed t) creanize a fire company | = | i, ed. Birh Control, IAR- |panorama of poison: pictures still un Eures and o cow: to the right the | &rave reciprocal responsibility. on |sentence ’\m\xd g)unu.». Restitution in | fiy@ departments that purchase high-|The first comp. outfitted ‘1&21( f\-x’u{ BRIGHAM YOUNG. By M. R. Wer- painted in the ghastly studio of war “line s unobstricted and the hori- | the t of soclety to the individual | Many cases can bhe made a prere-|priced motor equipment and dig into |ladders, pails, hitchets and ages. 1i| ner. author of “Barnum.’ Iilus- 1 Probation Association. Com-|end yet so possible that the mind's seems remote. It IS # cite | In numerous instances the crime {s|duisite of earlier relcase; it can be an|their own peckets when necessary to |was made up of member of the first| _trated. New York: Harcourt Treatment, of Delinquency. |6¥e may see them clearly. This slink but the natural result 16 ing weapon they champion lends itsel the environ- [ active factor in the conditions to be make up deficits in operating ex- |families, whe went in for snappy uni-| Brace & Co. i Les hold ment in which the offender was|Met during parole. Confinement for|penses. Nor does one find volunteer |forms, and a corts al ‘presti S Unit 5 M. H. Trend of Wage|to warfure on populations, as well as Ao e e {& definite period tends to create in(fire companies purchasing the prop. |was thus establiched ‘"‘,’("‘;{ln“:fi‘l“‘fg }":h ‘,“"““‘ o = pEgg g Earners' Savings in Philadelphia. |armies. In it is the threat of whole < through: ad-| - Crime is result soclal and | the minds of most offenders the fulse |ertles whereln~ their equipment s [this day. especially in Sanuago. ang Fshscel ot o S neiinents IiL.Seh63. jcitles devastated, whole countrysides 5 economic conditions roots deeper | :‘:‘"’:h;‘“‘\'ré'r““ d“'h‘!mll? :é'(!vl;.\' moldleg»t housed or taking lu:‘nfl g= duty. Yet | Valparaiso. 5 i :‘h‘":““:‘? R e e :"‘;:",\“ Terpenning. W. Sacial Organiza- -3\'«'-"‘. f";":;”vflanfl h-'e|l’;*~‘15- There are his hangs sortrait | than punishment can hope to_cure. > wronged vidual, is paid in{all of these interesting detalls ave to | The idéa of v or e ke £ a8 no ony tions Working with Rural People. | Possibilities that would have justified ! e lver thoush e comin Littatn’ the Ntulliby thelimbrissnment, {be found in every Chilean city, large 1.;,‘;-»;..1_”&,:‘.,:3.‘:",’“,,"‘ ‘.’{;fi&,""‘g‘;“.“;’* created but has also sustained for L P fthe action of the Geneva conference. e ainting of & | muximunt cfliciency of 100 per cent| All good cltizens are ihterested in for small. 1ot the Caanions Sanes DBRvING e siderable period communities | SF% (L0 o6 the Bad [even had there been no memories of ever sea, spirited | parc success in men discharged | enforcement of laws that will speedily | The origin of the Chilean :system is |never been a fire department in the | CLicctiyIng the ideal of political or U L Ypres, and the added horrors that had b . the | from prison, we would still have the|#nd Justly punish the guilty, and|interesting. According to the accepted |United States having sich expensive | [Cl8i0us perfection. None of thesc Seggars of Life. IG-|their genesis there.—St. Louis Post % < lnd 5 finiched |annual cron of first offenders to deal| there” Is " no place in “any ' com.|version a fire broke out in one of San- [and showy uniforms a8 one ey 1g | 1% 80 Picturesque nor in essence so B i French imwith Reliah'e figures ifdicate that|MUNILY for any one who condones|tiago’s churches in the '60s and hun-|Chile on fiestas and holiday ecepeione | PErmanent as the chapter in our his- States Children’s Bureau. — flavo il at the same | less than 19 ner cent of those in this| CFiMe or-attempts to make heroes of - e [[OOryshint ewibodle i sHie: dbctainesoF cenile Courts at Work. 1FX- . z Lo D e pinals. But, what shall It bee— 5 | Mormonism, propounded ‘by Joseph | Juveni : ! Literary Lights Gather. K of the sume wall [prelended na punished, and untilj Bunishiment suffering and tear or) 100th Anniversary Totor Car Industry | Brisham Young. To effect thia s 3 | Willousliby. W. W. Opfum e e P acquired Constable, | this fundamental weakness is reme- o > Lrg 8 hope? Why E J et 5 A ; S International Problem. ICIO-W67. 5 o i ; : Zongt ! g CaKness 's. Teme- ! ling to-the idea that severe punish. | B noe. F history of Mormonism. In design it [, ' = serconnl . | . First nights at the quaint litule Lyric : “.’_A“‘j‘lh’\:‘t‘\;lfi motem gled o M_N\:;; :::;f‘-:fi? = o‘:\:\n;{ I“"‘"‘ Willieure crimo. whes the cen- | Of Omnibus Obst‘fled. Growmg in Cermany is the story of the life of Brigham 4"2‘"";:""“} ”L_Z]":‘m Berson: Theater in Hammersmith have become Iy id on and then ! rially weakened turfes have proven otherwise i - \"-‘vuhm;q D{lel(ace% l;g)'hn sk§}011 of -{}g frea‘l “;'F‘:‘x‘s:u‘m:l\u‘ 1]«_“']ulrlnb!ly1 Mlsam i na s i o i ~Na e e 5 seph Smith. righam Young, the Ston most of rary lights of London e and_Jufcy in SR e In Nantes the people have fust]. Tmy yerished outcasts of the Ger-| jeader aud statesman, is the man Schools and Education | Beceutly when Migel Dlagtat. oo e e e e { cclebrated the 100th anniversary of |jhan iniddle classes have been driven | presented here under the deliberate . and Davidson. Isobel. |duced “And That's the Truth,” Arnold koo o ] e o v s |the omnibus. Strictly speaking, : ranks of the proletariat. But|ang extended researches of this ding Objectives. II-An24r. | Bennett occupled a box and smied sun a work which must not|the paroled men, are judged by those Exh: . Vel | jonly in one respect is the employment A dy ch: ter to wh Anderson, C. d oth Visiting | down benignly upon H. G. Wells, e exatnined too closely, but which at [among them who fafl. The public | xhaustion of Miners |omnibusses were known in the days | outlook ~ Improved—in mate anls lit: ~s§urd" S obat s el Pihe Deatliat teXVOR STPkhaay. | satin ondiotiine Stlls ook g Vo AR Eor b ingly fmpressive: does not hear of the hundreds whol 55 of Louls XV, when some enterpris. | Many Germans drive thelr own_cars, | D¢ Roormcism an Yon extraoonitont | Andersor W, M. A Manual for School | than ever. A fow seate amay in foe » seen after alare quietly succeeding and does mot| oo : : |ing Frenchmen ‘bought Cardinal {even when they employ chauffeurs, | 3f Mormonism as ‘an extraordinary Anderson, W. e A Manual for S 2 S pots Anay Ind e which essen- | realize that for each backsliding first oW & pinch of salt in the drinking | Ngzarin's coaches and started a serv- | nd the number of motor taxicabs 1§ | S°QUOMIC organization. e Ny eRade 1t | Lo WaTls Das dately aubmSled oL ! 8 e progenitor | offender paroled three or four are|Water prevents the exhaustion of |ice between the gates and the main | increasing rapidly. But taxi drivers |, IT h;esn‘??f'n:l!:tg::tngfi et B s mtasy Ao e e L el o our landscapists of today. It|making good. y workers in hot coal ‘mines and steel | shopping centers of Parls. This |80 particularly in demand as private [ YFRRR" 00 VS M incident and plan | B3om, i3 |romance, “The Wonderful _Visit.” uld e interesting ta know the hs | "The avers g6, Cittzen, bas 110 or|plants was {014 before the In.| service did mot last lon, however.-‘,:’:‘“’gf,‘,“‘;:fi‘“‘r“i‘:"d‘r’f"fj;':i‘féhe 018} 4nd circumstance which prove him | Bodley, H. S. The Fourth R. 1323, |The two inaintained a cold indifference ol ot 8 A8, d - ® [no regard for the del E - % r—] vi rive . B 3 A o] v (Onsider it a finished work, or, 1eav- | tence. amd parsle. and practically | Stitute of Mining Engineers in London ?:t.?:pye\-efi»“fifl‘.:“.’f: e manteg | Their places aro belng filled, (o o great | 10 have been a man of practicall IKR-BE3. : .y |22ch sat through the evening with. fng it unfinished, dia he “bulld bet-{ averv prisoner abhors 1t; yet the in- | DY Sif Joslas Court recently. A simi-| o ce?f TUF LU0 SO SR8 WABLES | ixtent, from the impoverished middle political nbm(%""lt:;llver:hhyl: rellglul:s Comtort, W, ¥ ao'u:c Choice of a Col- {out recognizing the other’s presence. ter than he knew?" \n | determinate sentence and the devel. | 2T discovery was made by Prof. |.goidiers, saslors, workmen and other | CIas8: Of the 700 chauffeurs who have | Snthusiasm. Within the larger sct- | lege THCI82 o @ i ¥ Next the Constable to the TEDt|opment of the modern principles of | Brveieghiey te foand oere Y of | members of the lower classes” were |1¢ft the “schools” since January 1, 90| Ung of the Uni ul : “nit Costs of Higher Eauca- | 181 Land O Exiled hangs a lately purchased El Greco— | o ha pav, 4 Birmingham. He found miners who fex per cent were hourgeols, and included | Period of the rise’of thls cult, about sion. Unit Costs of Higher Educa- n 'wners f.xiled. y 7 | parole have been the great forward | il Sehen ettt compelled to get out ae soon as a |F - 2 clu o e e . Trts mds i hrist in the House of Mary and | 5 3 4 : succumbed rapidly when working in a = ‘doctors” of all kinds, engineers, mer- | 1830, the author gives, step by step, ion. I3 u. | z sual work for this{StePs in our penoldgy today. temperature of about 100 degrees | distinguished person, such as an “of- 1 stud bai s oer | the lines of its growth, the obstacles | Edwards, A.-S. The Psychology of | ha,” an unusual work for this is Dbetter protected by the | vere able t d it bett hen | ficer, nobleman or priest” had a fancy | (hants. students, bank employes and Taat 16 Un CAtions Blementary Educati 1K [-Ed96p. Dispatches from Minsk regarding preat Spanish master, who, however, | o f the offender, and it | cre able to endure etter when | feeh: O S B 'vehicl Tt | former professional officers. The school | 86t up again: 8 turns Iy caton: Sl | s iRtceB er otin (DL BT e o il lLore the name of “The Greek™; a | e e e e deor | thelr drinking water contained even | o ride In those public vehicles. Ttiio,chers consider these bourgeois their | Of persistency, its defeats, its ulti- | Foster, C. R. Extra-Curricular Act h » former lan R D O L o] aifficult, if not impossible, for | one-fitth of 1 per cent of salt was only 100 years later that a mer- | |GeREP ARSI 00 bOUTEeols thelr | 1 ote effects.. “It.is not my Inten- | ties in' the High School. TUS3- | OWners to be exiled to Siberia from I rien 1',.",’ ';;i‘ll:"{!;; gospel story in | (he judze to know in advance how|. pp j. B. s, Haldane, an English [chant in Nantes acquired a number | 1O BT (0iq” 00t the ,“;m;"‘fei_ tion to expose Mormonism. My con- Fs13e. . \_thwnus;m state that 94 of the fami s of the painter's day. The fig. | lons a time will be required for sueh | physiologist, explains that during [Of coaches from an impoverished | o jence of a modern taxi ¢hauffeur ig | viction is that Mormonism is a per- | Gavit, J. P. College. IX-G244. el D e of Christ is reverently and charm. | Sockal tment. To determine |work at a high temperature the hody | debtor. = He concelved the idea of|jymense, fect.example.of religion carried to its | Heinmilier, L. B. A First Book in | Were Latvian. 10 M ussians and painted: the figures of Ma s in advance is to close one's | gives off much perspiration and with | starting a bus service, which became | e = & <1 fogical conclusions, and that s Education. IP-H384f | TRy o U erenty nadlonatities i partientarly the bustling. Martlia, | oY¢ to ihe fact that there is a erimi- [it a large amount of salt; to this de.| 8o popular that the city of Paris in-{ ;i - what makes it more fascinating (and | Hood, W. R.. comp. Important State | —— O o e curicusiy drawn., The whole is|Dal as well as a crime. Acts may be | pletion of salt the physical exhaustion | vited him to come to the capital and | "Woman suffrage is about 100 per| more useful) than most of the dis- Laws Relating to Education :En- | Amoug the fishermen of- Brittany vely in tons and richer in calor than |alike, but men never. \ _|ls partly due. The addition of salt to [organize a regular service for gov-|cent in effect in the office of Sir Wil-| senting sects in- the religious his- | acted in 1927 and 1923, IK83- | midens, wives and widows have Sl R U All sentences shouid be completely | their drinking water makes up for the | ernment employes who lived far from |llam Pryke, lord mayor-elect of Lop: | tory of the United States. An ex-| H762i each their .own distinctive color ef e S am are two ple-1and entirely indeterminate. Men are ' losa. their offices. . don. ceedingly Interesting :tudy, pro-' Johnson. F. W. The Administration | shawl - ) 4