Evening Star Newspaper, January 10, 1926, Page 44

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. @, JANUARY 10, 1926—PART *PORTRAIT ON EXHIBITION l REVIEWS OF WINTER BOOKS Unusual Exhibition of Paints at the Corcoran Gallery of Art. b “ : The Miracle of the Trust and a History Which Reads Like F; Portraits of Well Known Persons—Two Exhibitions at ) ek B Potuts Miat a0 "0 Fa;—}lioneilbs DS e 2 : Wik 3 P = (<] en- the Arts Club—Photographs on View. { i | ator“—Offerings From the Writers of Tales By LEILA MECHLIN alone rshal Muaig, of |Stefan Hirsch, Maurice Sterne. Wil . ol G ot ] of Clemenceau {am Zovwh, Fiske Bovd and Charles : i IDA GILBERT MYERS. | embittere mal antagonis these is 1o he count Lrap lemuth. Mr. Phillips has hunseif t : S O THE S g 2 the ot a novel that S ted head late President | written an_introduction to the cata: 8 THEI:UST‘(V;‘;“AS"{'”]"' :"I"\t‘“!";‘“ r,m) v N The e of the m haraeterful cue in order that the works set forth | X . COMPAN By Taa ar- | author’s ) Lhe cous and impressive portraits | may be more sympathetically viewed, bell, author of “Life of Abraham |theme is that divorce may be a matter v cit man that has | more fully understood. A fuller review Lincoln,” etc. New York: The |of dignity and self-respect. That it Dit | of this exhibition will be given in these | MacMillan Company not, invariably and unalterubly ir responsible and disreputable 1 hansen’s contribution to the | colimas later | 3 nsists of 19 pa and | * s | ; % T'S hard to keep up with|behavio hev compledent ' und |HE Washinston lan ey ibition | . ;i S e o o | Al02ie 7 S brigianl Gilent i SHElS Pais il e Y it meems, the press ' in its 15 [olloy Rroibenioaing Sha G e noand from. Al o) S A v by : blackest type proclaimed the rise of traditic as in her portrait | women's organizations will be the spe. | & " ¥ % a4 monster in the ranks “‘Eu'\'l“y‘.u'q\rl\f conrage iy man o |open ever 1dd—as this on did—that | | woman and ! I L o dans clal s \or. On the afternoor 9 5 an arch-enemy of the it « of Junuary 4 the Federation of Wom-| [ % ¥ 28 trust. And today the same press in {en's Clubs Washington was re print of the commonplice cords ceived. Mrs. Ellis Logan, chairman « Feaiu bl lsaning to)|cicatlinaustrial sne and reasonable atitudd to dir the art department of the Federation | combinations projected under the hysterical denunciation and self orcetul, |of Women's Clubs fn this district, gave | : e e conatituted authority | The latter way is the one taken ¥ expres-fa short introductive talk and mem ’ fntithe| mate of ieffclency, economy | Everage deserced wife wers of the subcommitices on minia By freneralsqiiity. It Basitakenyleasi| tHIS SOny 15 qf the other tures and silver we than @ full generation to work this| o0 Wik joveRx: guentions and fo miracle by way of which vice becomes | (58 F ARtion. [ :On, Jan virtue, by way of which a ruthless JipUH &0 f the Congressional Club w marauder becomes the peaceful dis- | 008 SRS 18 has been penser of common berefits. Tt s all | FF00 L0 true, nevertheless—so we are told Ul And in this telling an interesting | /== \i7i der<tiaith i comenlito, thel surface. Tt bty oS 15 easy to accept the fundamental ex- |} o, &% 0000 cellence of the trust. Combination, its Lt o {basic element and guiding principle, bt ldoes indubitably insure efficiency, |, life economies in many directions, a &en- | upon these two eral economy calculated in theo: to | with t 1 revert to the common good ¥ the business combination i< reproach, as many cases close at b | then, so the story runs, human na-fyou a e ture, given the chance, couldn’t resist | wha ol o Hps T A 4 PORTEAIT OF JACOB GOULD SCHURMAN n{“ . m"”"mwJ“""‘;‘:—”Z ;”x:‘r“myufl Hion portraits by the Countes 40 5 $ 'RMAN, ON EXHIBITION / s | through greed and outreaching and P iKorzyvbski wi ”, eld Yl 3 CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART. IT WA PA]NTE?)\ AT THE power which grew from these full-fed | Fahnesto residence BY JOHN C. JOHANSEN, N. A personal desires. And to for a long ets avenue, fron =l it time self had its way With the advar departure the wi h Mrs. Otto L. Veerh when Mis whose a appeared e sted in di n Federat f resu story founded upon tages 1yi within the concept Fabinations This is the P VIN( N £ - 1 n_the £ w2 n Al combinations in industry APPLYING OF THREE “R’s” TO LIFE |5 miies, b i i 3 s e industrial trust OF CO T Irl“r [T A < = the seduction of the ir t c s A most interesting study in psychc 1 hRMLD VITAL ogy here adds itself to the econc = content of the trust itself vt Enrichineg of Subj T - The story goes on 1o e | o A1 Enriching of Subjects Taught in Schools to Mean g, day of (s e, 0 50 S ) 2 >upil in Pursuit F ‘i . tervens between the people and big Tore 1o Pupil in Pursuit Following Education fervene between the people and, bl Y od i . when supervision and regulation and Is Favored in Authority. publicity are bringing the operitio; : = 16f the trust into the open, where it 3 human rapacity may be tempe IY SHOW AL S Jman hes his respousibility w _[the extent that a legitimate econo y t 21 plan may be encouraged in its origi hal good intent and in its sound prin- | ciples of development. Here at hand, however, is i con . 2 crete case upon this subject for the Arithmetic Unlimited. lise of the student. Here, spread out nulus and guidance | in detafl, is the hi most \ples” arfthmetie will | parfectly developed trust in existence.” | nathematical process | This is the history of the Standard the means of con- 10 Company—this the institution | exact knowledge of |which, in the words ot wuthor ent. the home and | “satisfies most nearly the trust idea . vomit . : pupils. History will | of entire control of the commodity in | 1 e THE P ed to un account of kings | which it deals.” And this is the point ot i THE PUBLIC LIBRARY tletans and swars, but will | where the whole controversy lies, thi - the youth with a devotion to|is the point where the dangers o tive processes of hyglene, | tire control” are set off : use of the sofl, u more |ultimate benefits appreciation of neighhorsand [ is the point whe : makes & happier and |steps in to mess up a pe legi! as well us for|mate concept of production and tions that build body, mind and | tribution. And iilae1. i65ey aenboll biosessl] MEOwevernece wa hare Mo iar L : Derself whether raiatiog school process. | pell'g study of & famous corporation— | i, iy A % BOOKS ON ANTIQUES hether relating to discipline or 0|5 hictory which glves itself up en QuT e made to con- | irely, or almost entirely. to the ev Kno ¥ Commu 1 rusness of | ganee tn the case. So many times has Sl el of “How I to earr i _auestions| e Standard Oil Compan How arn my living ?* and | nvegtigation that there has acc am 1 to serve my neighbors? sl thus have & new meaning lated around library of 8 eaning rooted D! stmple e testimony. It is upon th Lips . i fal re-| jonce that Miss Tarbell rel ——_ | useful & work on econom Would Enrich Subjects. ment and business histor possible to find. Indeed. there other cne comparable to it ir 1bility as to fact, in the scope of {ts investigations, in the admiirable con |G A B3Il L struction of a unit of history f MAKER Tuass of unco-ordinated A ¢ sweep of a theme present the Director of the Phislnsstokes Funa. consciousness of these com 'y essentials will inevitably re- his teaching to the common £ all classes of people were re My recommendations do not make | « revolution of the present school syste 1t for an enrichment of the dy incor- 20235 ; : Ciee ted in the school. It relieves the 3 Way ' M- | educator from the present necessity | 8r€at | man Adam N E DarEor . : ot ever adding new subjects and new | Fial, in the stol and George 4 & AIVOR oy st s departments to the school that does not will 5 Y i g L The educators’ perplexing K the uses of dramatic narration SHi " ; B e Tmmenset qpatk of | two volumes in hand are a repri THe ; . | s ing wi Knowledge is siocingeq | from the original issue of 20 ve o = 4 i < g tive basis which these|880. A third volume is on its way be Corcor. Sl A ¢ essentials offer. Guided|Tound up & story that from every evi 5 community “simples,” the | dence is_approaching conclusive i . aur “es- | teucher now may choose those ele. | Point. The author freely gives her N | > e | ments of krowledzge and those quali- | ©Wn opinions and judgments upon oc oted Dramati . e 7 3 - e f' personality hat are. mos sion, with perhaps too little consid- - Dramatist Hits o lsn @ 1 by students who are to per. | eration of the fact of the changing Vrone P eame b, T A fources of #n- | ticipate in iflia \Nife ths communitty)) (Eontof theNtrust Hpon the jEresteet »ng Pronunciation DRI, 3 sehold and | Thus the pupils will become witizery: | of its problems, upon the ethics of its e or Whatons lund education will be lf " | awn career, upon its duty to the world ' o r W0 8y (Copyright, 1926.) at large. And the trust is changing has 1 : Zor one reason or another, and that has been a lot of N 7 7 T must frankly be teken into account in | pypy vrominent ereons s o ONLY WAR OUTLAWRY CAN BRING |5 comruciive coniaerution ot e | ”') | subject. Sons s e e PEACE, NOTED EDUCATOR HOLDS G s TI ADVERTISING vine London paign for be kot AN OLD.FASHIONED SENATOR. Satiea BEr e o e deniiat oty G By Harris Dickson, author of “The | e aftor il Lok " Chs > in Atti S 2 . % Unpopular History of the United it Weork: effort. to” mimie “Oxford English” Change in Attitude of Peoples All Over the World Is| sttes otc. Tiustrated. New : vertising B b o ohs and actrcsces emit Greatest and Sole H . i | York: Frederick A. Stokes Com o nd “refained” for ‘vefime sreatest and Sole Hope, in Opinion of David | pany. . - WAR ABOLITION Oxford r ; | T¥ & man were to pick his own biog : ATION. i on Starr Jordan I : u Bu Nian ia colun ¢ by i : J . rapher, I doubt if one time in a ; : by i : | hundred he could make so good a choice as by pure accident came. 10 |, caleili BY DAVID STARK JORDAN. |Of all ways to settle dificulties, war |JODD, Sharp Willlams. ‘the old-fash RICAN VERSE. B 2 1 : ny actor g K him the Y s e el o o ;S;*:al:;nfltwlween s oo Hioe G psan infuriate e outlook in Europe was | ji* T eetes more ruscals than | o, gher and subject—bred throush Ghentan e e P t could be and would | “War swallows :;;‘ ll.le;n;uev;l_prioq\'e‘rb,‘“flhmng e ARt hatween matures Shaeetopnly year later 1|other, dating from Schiller. For one ”‘“5“.‘“1’k“"“1"f’d ‘]“"f‘:fz‘ e i like “wanhih 1 Gk Hins ted the s yphecy. | OPPression war may abate, it re.|DOrS, I8 8 keenly meloot e e e nearly A ithe leases a thousand move. - Tankues arg | holding itself to the broadly revealing points of ex-Senator Williams' public extrior s - here were | courts and covenants 1 2 = £ aawn. Of this, the late con. | comed for all they are worth. bat o | Service and of his private life us wel * VALUE ¢ Locarno, and the equally|final covenant must be in the hearty| And here, too, is the prime &tory Our Need of * | of humanity. The only hope for aup| teller who refuses to take away the Neihardi. B veh and of Chritian teac.| Cixilzation ifestth tha ‘outlewry: fon| lvInE| (andl 1ovebla Jquslities oF TG mitian X Minburah and of Christian teach | war and all its sanctions, statutes and | friend for the sake of setting & greal | THE AMERICAN PULP. give us clear basis| machinery. and immobile figure up on a high =t o and the professional diplo. (Copyright. 1926.) [peaosmL & 1 o have not experienced 3 B A genfal man, this biographer, with s und actresses in Bulgaria are | . 5 i istry of en. Here Iguria are srea nge of heart in fiv a peculiar artistry of his own \ asing & Dard strugele. The state: | Seuesor In toh ¥ i, ive|Stockholm Also Runs | 525 Fown tesiae bin comrade o LT IbER U ving 1 ed, | hehind them ¥ 8 d their he old Yazoo country and subtly dis s of Whom Ay Ce Ddplaere Qutiiten Sl s e Its Opi‘l‘a at Loss | {5 from him the heady brew of John | dited by Charles PORTRAIT OF EVELYN JOHNSON. PAINTED BY M. JEAN MACLANE, |ment in a small privace theates maios; |1V for what it is. They have come to | Sharp Willlams' gocd patriotisn PR R ONVIB W AT GOR COR ARG SR (0% SR NE, [ ment in o smill priviie theater which | realize that sectirity rosts with them, | Stockholm, like Chicago, finds grana | 5003 Scholarship, ose fellowshin certiury - —— — R e lEny ohir eale: o et o jand Wit e e They 1"-l'uunflze operaexpensive, but enjovable. The mem othelx;‘ sgur-vC:’.uln o fepiale) el ; 115 Fictne aaversi el A D that in Europe there 18 no security for, po.. v o - ut none the les b de- | JOANNA 38 L. Gute ithor of abroad. | g adversity. 1t directors are | one nation without security for ail; o | Roval Opera is one of the features of | picta the distinguished public service | “Mystery of tho e Dismond inted mostly abroad | bankrupt, but thes, have shown an | Drosperity for one unless the continent | Stockholm life. Tt has produced some | O the Senator at ofe o another criti N Hares & FIODIING Btie. snads ooy | dperativelioting Deeit ch ot ira o2 lisharesiit & They, see tha. | milltiey; sunremsjaxtinta: cal point in the affairs of the coun- gy THE NORTHLAND: and DS of IEht) anatat ||oiate it the s sais hee y momithel poyer dbssindt brlng secirity. Mooy [N elENo pantteromben . |try. He portrays the man. a plc Poems 1 Frederi mosphere e e ure drefsers, Nas a share in | realize the truth expressed by Profif, .. 1 the middle of Sep-|turesque and outstanding figure in & Charles Miiler. Boston: Miss Sawtelle, it will be recalled, is | > Paying its way with fiont Vies | Ruyssen that “fear proyokes great ember until the middle of June. Last |generally serious and prosaic legisla stratford Co L pupil of Mr. Woodbury, and has ing 0 was WIth Hent Vien | rmments; great armaments provoke| ear it gave 271 porformances, having | 118, 2003 the wit and eloquence of { s FOSSIL FERN: and Other Poem Bt ihieen o hione ity ot Toay ikt oo and plays by | fear; the circle infernal.” To live and | an average af . “the oldfashioned Senator” and his | A TOSTIL FHRN: fnd Ohor Bocis cent works wtion of a turn nations. War-making, direct or in-|$600,000. Two-thirds ngly off- @ “hicl o o g . ohlora i SoE. le Shidy Ensl: | Girect, is the very opposite of patriot. | went fn’ salarios to tae Ctiei® (SUM | ofthand at all, save as the best of|A SOUL SET FREE. By may progress and whick Swedes Study English. [ism. The chief preoccupation of most | Iy all the operas 20 artista. Near |art always presents such easy seem Rude (Bessie Mundles ! } { of Burape is not how shall we defend | sented are old classics. The chatses| Mefhars Bor ret's what eervrods |FRER NEGRO OWNEL | i FUNDAMENTALISM VERSUS MOD. RNISM. A Layman's Viewpoir 3y Jumes W, Johnsc New Yor Century Co. n. remembered, ! weighty world meetings of teachers < it muy, none cux ourselves, but how shall we repudi-| fo; b Perhaps. But that's what everyhody | FREE ~ NEGRO F s S or hongst debts respectably. Most .f‘m\l";‘("‘.“?““l“”‘ low, a front row | . hsfnl‘ not so much of a partisan s o e i £t £ 1 of them can never be paid. That we |less than $5. performance costing | thjs Harris Dickson, that he makes ATES 1N Togetlier With vic an. perhiaps mid ,{',,;‘ durin the Great \\.l Now Baelis oo S BaE Hos cnn v st that |ered only 1;);0\:]‘(91\:‘“(1\6\1;)1{! Tfm cov- | anvthing but @ man out of one whoin g Guwicabip of Slareail e & lor, with that | lish is more popular. It is the first|fact to 3 ual satisfactio = 3 mefourth the total | gverybody know: e 2 he United Stat » 1830, Com- P suggestion of limitless space that hin: | forelgn langunge taught in. Sweden's | toptor s nitoee 1;-11‘.\“."1117){‘(”m“““' But the Royal Opera House | or tont i'““u“ 1t e (n(r M SR L ) restless motion and weight of | public schos Every week English|we. " tha e must, ercet o temple | Lo Other sources of revenue. It ro- e ti.e 1tz aniadialiatls D T e e ETCHIN ind most allur when, as in this |is the only language so taught. At oF peac he smoking rulns | gating about $50,000 a year. consideration of a nationally known Editor The Journal ef Newro e [eiths oulylanc usesisnita At “h‘J of war. We have made a hopetul be- | Sermitted to hold on am::um.]mx':r;g and respected statesman. History Washington ssc e R B ¢, : ent olm church cor inning, not alo ovenants o . 3 St N oer es and Charleston, S in & cany a | for another { English, the America E ftis = <. ! s d " pu slicists s <4 as an income from r V! ND'S o sk e s desy . | Englisly, the American and British ple. Historians and publicists still |and interests, and from a share oFt8|GERTRUDE = HAVILAND'S DI | FREE NEGRO HESDS OF T frocnar Juf . 1 ' mi ajority of the | wrangle over degrces of “war gullt,” | pleastre awe e[ VORCE. By Inez Haynes Irwin.| Irips 15 THE UNITED s Ewi conference. This nct of courfesy was |but the very deeds that all now ve- = New York: Harper & Bros. N 500 Together With Briat ALFRED HUTTY s in g A\ ; ‘ m‘ n \‘y‘ ntir . 1 1ne | greatly ‘nvmn ated. ; Oceasionally, | hemently disclaim were everywhere HE sequence used to be marriage Freatm e N B scarcely known in this city A e B L e S e e e Reward Inventors. “till death do us part.” Rut now- Carter (. Woods of on exhibition ungil Leing held o little gallery at the | » ents. Sl oS el 7 | adays separation so frequently inter. Negro Orators und Their Ora 23rd January at gings vstal | Phillips Memorial Gallery Janu 1] e ol S “,“'_"‘ S =i | venes to break this stable order of tions,” etc. Washington: The As : There is a 1 trait {to 31. Sixteen paintings Bomprise ihis Miss Edith M. ) onE \Chi o e na- tussian railroad employes who in- | the past that divorce, like marriuge | sociation for the Study of Negro of Premicr Oelasdo of Ttaly in’his | xnitition it | e T e head stat-) tions which they lead to ruln, The|vent devices that effect savings in theiteelf, is fast becoming un institu vl Litg/un Tiisory. o GORDON DUNTHORNE <tudy at Rome. And then there are |are Preston Dickinson, Charles Shee- the only member of her sex to hold |a figve! abel o theicost of rallrcad operation are to be It deservea, therefore, a consideration FLORIDA. OLL ANI ¢ e = b - x fcki , Charles She y er sex to hold | aby have opened the eyes of hu-|rews % L d A 3 i .onfDA. OLL AND NEW e & the larger We-size studies of the|ler, Vincent Canade, Nilgs Spencer, such a position, manity. It must never happen lnex"oemdedo‘g“h “anny eq:;;;]ent ) m‘;:domm:mmmw%n:irme. (‘;:I‘:;xd‘nwxll‘vur:’ 1‘;“'\\“1' i e again, the annual savings, hang : Rufus R. Wilson. the super! German was the 1most pop: is exhibition— | eign Janguage in Stoc before

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