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STAR, WASHINGTON, . D. ¢, FEBRUARY 14, 1926—PART o s An Important Addition to the Art Works ofWashington—Four Magnificent Mosaics by The Democratic Ideal in France and America, or the Plan for the Utopia—Some Inside Edwin H. Blashfield Are Placed in a Local Church—Exhibition Opening at the Arts Club Today—At Plu]ipps Memorial Gallery. By N EILA MECHLIN. has just otable nently addition to the art perm n Washington. In Matthew's Church, on hode Tsland avenue between Seven- th street and Connecticut avenue, magnificent mosaics by Edwin Rlashfield. president of the Na- tional ARademy of Desizn and one of our foremost mural painters. have ately been completed. The scaffold- g used the mosaic workers, which has prevented sizht of the works, was taken down less than 10 days ago, and the evening of Yebruary 5 a private view was given 10 members of the congrezation and a few invited guests. Both Mr. Biashfield and Mr. Lascari, who has had charge he making these mosaics, were present, as were Dr. and Miss lLee, represent family of the donors A few vears ago Mr. Blash commissioned to design mosaic de rations to go ov he high altar in this church. These take the form of a large upright panel representing St. Matthew seated withan open book his gospe with above a e lunette rey nting the symbols of the passion and a choir of an Th I s were rendered in mosaic by Miss Barnes, who was John La Farge's assistant. and the mosaic used was some which had b made in t ¥ him. There was 3 nough to do these two panels When the cor was later given Mr. Blashfield t the fc srent spandrels under the ¢ fiave just now heet decided that the B miportant made the ce painting is country for mission exccution was f Salvatore Las- p in our e and had the subject d is glast purpose Venice, an Americs made of m T mad fally for the Island of Murano. mous the world over for its e of plass lv In the ent time but sinee and before the days of the Re The spandrels four evangelist angel. Mark wit the bull and ch figure was Mr. Blashfield full size, and painted the color in which it was to be @uced. Then from these paintings the cartoons were made and the whole design was laid off in little sq each of which was to be eve reproduced, or replaced, bs speci. aic espec the the his with skerched by drawn, exact repro- represent ew with " and delivered in R ture was | reproduce a paper squares nin up the utr The pl: tng th of wet fieie wa conntry ith and - little cracks and vet e surface. paper is svaked 1s car spandrel two tons of these mosa reds and blues 1 just enou cinate the Agures a e, strongly drawn W the effect, even meen at such a great height, is impos They are masterly works, ren- h supreme skill Blashfield assistant: in Mr. Blashfie thew's ht found a svmpathetic and gifted decorator The work of des painting and ut consumed field h least twice during ecution to personally supervise the work. Mr. Lascari has given almost his entire time to it during that pe rlod. The makin these musaics has ser moreover, a double pur. o on watched with the e by other fellows in the academ) who have profited by the opportunity. They set a s ard in m making and an example in ecclesiastical decc Hereafter these mosaics & of the sights which those Washington will eag m wei approximatel to lend richnes the beholder tiall boldly modeied cning ral vears self has traveled the p cess of ex T sot tion ane visit out. Mr. BI hered, is t} the dome room of the Libra the Baltimore Cou ouse he painted that impressive panel, familiar through reproduction, “Washington Laying His Commission ns Commander-in-Chief at the Feet of Columbia.” For the S House in St. Paul, Minn., he panel representing Minnesota as Granary of the \World.” He has other mural paintings for the County Courthouse in Newark Appellate Conrt Yor hurch of the the State Capito Bank of Pittsburgh the Luzerne County Courthouse in Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; the Mahoning County Courthouse in Youngstown. Ohio. He is at pres- ent doing a series of mural decora tions for a great building in Chicago and an overlalta decoration for a church in Salisbury, Md Writing of Mr. Blashfield in the American Magazine of Art some time ago, Elisabeth Luther Cary, of the New York Times, spoke of his life being “saturated with culture, the fruitful culture gained by contact with art in a thousand places, with art that has thus become a par: of personal experience, emotional and intellectual, s0 that vou think of it in its setting of ay and weather und light and mood.” T which she added “When he hegan to do mural decoration in pub lic_bulldings he was keen to show the public from generation to generation the strong beauty of its past. * . who riy seek mem. of shfield, &t will be 7 painter of the ceilir surmounting the reading of Congress. For His knowledge of the age of Europe | gave salience his ppreciation of the vouthfulness of his own country." With regard to his painting she said: *“Beautiful ffs abound in his com positions. lorious Venetian patterns hide away and reveal themselves in the stately folds of velvets and dam- asks or yread their amplitude of de- =ign frankly across the deep bosoms ~f emblematic ladies in regal cos: tume.” The same sculpturesque beauty which was noted in his painting of “*Academia. shown in the National Academy of Design’s centennial ex hibition. is found in these lately exe- cuted spandrels in mosaic, and equally that beauty of color, that splendor of the Renaissance of the painter’s be. loved Italy. * o ox ok PENING at the Arts Club today and continuing for a fartnight is an exhibition of oil paintings by three members of the Taos Soclety of Artists —W. Herbert Dunton, O. E. Berning- haus and E. Martin Hennings. This exhibition has been arranged for by Miss Catherine Carter Critchter of this city, who is herself a member of the Taos Soclety, the only woman member. | | art critic | | | | | and at the same time to On however for in resque inhat Mex h affords sting especially in- pictorial repre village ants, In t only andsc settir Dic w and its n An 1 in the & and u reg with the St the leading East Art Museum of ¥ the was pr Chicago a v Probabl n e satisfyin Technieal s subjectively, it i r the thi next will 1 interesting exhibition of Goldthwa »d chalk drawin; Anne fable plice has esse ate touch of the the sympathetic horn etcher, and he distinction HE exh Ga ion at nthorne er etch place which attention son's work note. A group in this instance nterest the I sporti have attracted such An exhibition of is invariably of his will lend rints rable Ben- of Mr. an event wat additional HE special exhil the Phillips Memorial lery is in- teresting not only because of its con- tent but as providing another chap- ter in the record of modern art which Mr. Phillips {s generously putting before the Washington public this season “The exhibi presiding _genius,” in this ion, Mr. Phillips himself says is Odilon Redon, whom he describes as “a painter of hvpnotic dreams about ancient gods and the brief flash of butterflies, one who waited ghost- ly apparitions, one who chrystallized the strange thoughts we associate Oriental religions’; Mr. Reden inly is one who does suggest not little in his painting “Mystery” the sketches made in the Orient by John La arge when he, too, was delving into mysticism. Augustus Vincent perhaps more than any other co- temporary painter has employed a new form of speech to render things of beauty, is represented in this ex hibition by “The Storm heautiful plece of color and imaginative com position: and a smaller “Lost Lake,” in the same vein. Rockwell Kent is also given place here by a characteristic little picture, boldly rendered, one might almost think, with chisel, rather than a brush—a *“Mountain Lake™ with snow- cowered peaks cutting clear against the sk Vincent Canade. who made his de- but in the January exhibition. is in- cluded in the present group ‘‘because of his affinity with painters of visions and emotional conceptions.” Of him Mr Phillips says: “He is a true prim- itive, isolated by his individuality from the subtle and sophisticated Tack, who inz work, {artists around him.” Eugene Speicher, though a “whole- some realist,” is given place here be- cause Mr. Phillips finds in his sculp- turesque head of a drowsy deflant girl “an epitome of elemental wom- an.” Among the less well known ex hibitors are Georgia O'Keefe, whose “clean edges and pure colors” have won admiration, and whose “rarefied art” is said to “burn with a hard, gem-like flame.” Hard it certainly s, the un- familiar eye drearily homely. Taos is a small city of New Mexico,! Karl Knaths' “Geranium in Win- { of the four beautiful mo colors | w's os placed in St Matth ‘.lv‘\\ charm 1sior worth the Tortrait ¢ has a certain of fand atmosphy and Hl.' 1 Mired Ma Max Weber's whi PROHIBITION UNRELATED. + new SAY Alcohol Is Not Foreign to Are—Two Problen BY DR. CARLTON SIMON. and dru from . Sprines the drunk: menta entally L neve inebrin even nfirmed and ronic wreoti omes @ o dru he a sho In spite of increased ind enforcgmen n still remains a problen kard « who takes be for wl legal control ie addic that con International agreement in itation of the growth of narer ind their distribution may or 20 vears largely solve the et before that e methods my be used that will have greater influence. The great mass of drug addicts in the United State confirmed drug slaves of many vears' standing. | of these have tried to be cured. many | of them have been farced to secure a cure for their affliction and they have all failled to find relief. Only compar- | atively few escape from the maelstrom ot yndage. No cure has been discovered that acts without the help of the addict. The druz has entered to every recess of their being. They ontinue to cling to their drug, the i within roblem, AND USE OF DRUGS Must Be Dealt With § Most | Church, Washingt ibtedly with we mov is well to familiar this order, its gradual 1 follow ex- themselves, which they it ment in re in that to perin it husts Hil 1 Fet 1s one v a are ue. 1sorel Miss (1 PorTRAITS, be seen st her n artist She v an mode is well as perception 'S NOTED DOCTOR the Body, While Narcotics of Drink and “Dope™ eparately. makes rmal whose influence has their nervous neral ndi Their ver: suffering dreams mare nd in. 1and Ereat w very be done of an antidote and of the the will of the s Another of u ve ne lies In a cure a cure in has no n lies in substitute narcotic habit-forming quali s disc for the d which connection the discovery wil overy of an absolute cure o S to the realm of medicine. The chemist it present working toward producing drugs that are not habit 1ing and also trying to remove the habit-forming qualities in those nar- at are now in use, T'o strike at the heart menace. we must late our present of the nar- endeavor 1o 1so | addicts and by ed cation prevent new ones being created. Aleohol is manufactured normally from the food we eat and therefore is not foreign to the body. Narcotics are foreign to the body, vet produce an ever-ingreasing demand for more, with mental and physical changes far more deadly and destructive than those pro- duced by excessive alcohol indulgence. &rown in the wettest of wet countries. Prohibition has no connection with any increase of addiction, for this has £rown in the wettest of wet countries. (Covyright. 1026.) | Of Former Years . The cowboy and the large cattle | Fanch, long typical of the great “‘west. |ern empire,” are rapidly passing into { the limbo of extinction According to the California Develop- | ment Association in this State alone ranches have increased in number from 972 in 1850 to 117,570 in 1920 ue. huge ranches remain to this One holding in California com- 1,000,000 acres. But the dirt farmer is crowding back the cow rancher, water development makes possible intansive cultivation and high land prices make less profitable cow- raising But today there is no American ronti Rather there are two fron- tiers. pushing west from Kansas and east from California, Oregon and | Washington. No longer does the West | have the political significance of old. { Cattlemen often find themselves in difficult positions. They have traveled =0 long in 2 single deep rut that the: have difficulty reconciling themselves to cabbages and chickens. Such jobs as these are for women. The motion pictures have drawn any “punchers’” from the ranches, ad the rest would like to see their face on celluloid. Those who can't get a job on a movle lot sun them selves at rajlway stations, ranchers fay, and their employers look about for new help. Ranchers say labior problems are just “setting in” with them. as the cotton-raiser has had his troubles with seasonal help. Of the Western States, Nevada probably will be the last to fall before the subdivider. Oregon and Wash- ington offer more to small hom steaders than any Western State ex- cept populous California. Along with higher land prices has come & changed diet. When beef was just beginning to bring a good price, America suddenly began 1o eat | day. ) m Cow-Puncher and Big Cattle Ranches Are Passing in West | Poultry, eggs and milk, and these things do not grow on cattle ranches. It will be a long while before the large ranch-of the West finally disap- pears, but as the owners grow more W of shouldering a heavy eco- nomic load their immense open areas will break bhefore the tenderfoot's ad- London Going West. _London is following great American cities lfke New York and Chicago ina tumultuous struggle to expand and | get breathing space for its business districts. And in London the prob- lem is pressingly acute. The whole city” is wriggling to free itself from rchaic bonds, = particularly the cramped quarters mear the Bank of Ingland, where inches are worth thousands. As a result, many of the old city firms are barking defiance at tradition and going westward—to the “West End” district of shops and hotels and theaters. A new business London s entirely within the pos- sibilities of a decade. School for Gypsies. What is believed to be the first gvpsy school in England was opened recently at Albury, in Surrey. It is |for the children of itinerant gypsies who make Surrey thejr parade |ground, so that’ when mother and father are on the road the children may still go to school. The building is_in sections and portable. If the gypsy population leaves the neighborhood the school can be taken along. It was opened with great cere- mony, several thousand gypsies being in attendance. But the children were diffident and had to be cajoled into the classrooms by games, Political History of Theodore Roosevelt and His Times—Fas- cination of the Stars—The Latest Fiction. MYERS. The Democratic IDA GILBERT BEYOND' HATRED: Ideal in France and America. By Albert Guerard, author of “Refle tions on the holeonic end. New York: Cha Washington: Brentano's. EYOND HATRED.” points upon the idealistic theory of a pure democracy. The title connotes as well Utopia that remains un- realized in fact, and will so remain, as long as man—individual and collective man—is possessed of the hatreds and rivalries that have played so large a part in his march upon man's estate of superfority and power. As a dream democracy implies a commonwealth wherein the self-rule of each individ- ual sums, under the full play of every sort of human virtue, to a common wellbeing, equal for all in justice and opportunity. There have been many scattered and circumseribed experi- ments in democracy. But each of these, under the strain of human na ture, has falled. Out of these Utopian visions the only substance left to the present is the republic. with its some- what flamboyant claim to government by the people. And of this form of government France and America 144 shows sensitiveness | stand as notable, and generally noble, examples France and America come together here, each meusured in the light of a true democracy, each measured by the other, besides, in its interpretation of the democratic ideal. The author, chapter by chapter. reveals a strik ingly clear and definfte concept of the two democracies —that of his native France and that of his adopted Amer Ica—as this ideal is in each case em bodied in the basic nature of the gov ernment, in its purpose, in its form of projection, in the measure to which each does embrace the whole people as collective and individual agents of the government itself. A great fund of ready-to-hand information objecti fies and vitalizes this discussion. The politics and policies of the two coun tries stand clear in many a notable statesman and politician. Familiar rames come and go here, each in the content of its individual contribution to the state itself. Much more of general vision. much more of indi vidual Influence than is commonly known, rise to the sarface of this con sideration in a deeply interesting in- terpretation of these two governments by way of their potential human fac tors It soon appears, how that poli ties, that government even, is not the whole of this matter, nor even the most of it is the spirit of the whole peopie, instead, that stands par amount here. a spirit that is projected inar iterature, in industry, in lan guage 2l inst nts. if so un stood and so used—to promote the brotherhood that is. after all. the es sence of democracy This author is as independent thought and as frank of statement he is fully equipped with a | of information bearing upon this ex par oncent of the democratic ideal in ring_upon the development of nd nations. Tf one were inciined to cavil at all here it would with the lavish use of {lustr tion. However, this is a churlish thing to skay when apt and full illus trations are the very means by which we come into any sort of possession of the abstractions that underlie and direct commonwealths. An energetic ind spirited use of a rich store of ma- terial goes into this useful and absorb- ing study Tt of 18 nge its be peoples * ok ok ok NINGS WITH THE STARS. By Mary Proctor. F. R. A R Met. §., author of “Stories of Star land." ete. Illustrated. New York tarper and Brothers, JIERE is the chance to go out for a i dozen evenings under the stars with the daughter of a great astrono mer from whom she herself caught the fire of interest that, in turn. made of her an absorbed and illuminating star gazer. It's a puzzling business— that of the heavens. Withouts some really inspired guide one can make nothing at all of that black and jeweled dome. And all the inspiration that the guide needs is that of being definite and simple, in order that out of the wealth of knowledge at hand he may be able to draw in simple lines that needed for the untaught star guzer. And here is that kind of guide. Simply set s0 b EV she outlines a_constellation gh above us. Patiently she goes over it again till its form steps out from the surroundings of other stars. And within the borders of the selected group she goes over the in dividuals composing it. over and over again. We are getting acquainted getting to know the name of this star and that one, to realize its place in the home constellation. And some of these stars have stories—legen myths—born ages ago when men lived jout under the widespread heavens and at night, watching the swinging groups, made stories about the bright- est ones, those that seemed to be lead- ing the rest. Such is the method of this book. From group to group we go. Their shifting movements are becom- ing plain, their orderly beauty is grow- ing to be a thing of delight. And here are pictures, so many, to help along in these star-gazing adventures— charts and photographs to bring a nearer reassurance to the shining pan- orama of the distant heavens. The book itself is a clear inducement to learn a new and enchanting lesson. * R X ¥ RELEASED FOR PUBLICATION: Some Inside Political History of Theodore Roosevelt and His Times; 1898.1918. By Oscar King Davis. Tllustrated. Boston: Houghton Mifiin Company. As a release of inside political his- tory the book is an anticlimax. As a deeply appreciative consideration of the character and public service of Theodore Roosevelt from a fresh angle of intimate approach It is an absorb- ing and inspiring story. The ins and outs, the ups and downs, of the poli- tics of the Roosevelt period have passed into the rear ranks to make way for the importances of each suc- ceeding present of the 30 intervening years. Therefore, from its political significance this book is inconsider- able, while at the same time it 1s high- ly interesting, since every capable and clever newspaper man is a mine of unreleased astonishments. As a close range study of one of the great Americans, however, the book is distinctly considerable. Greatness has many approaches. It is the small and careful man that has but one entrance to his personal domain. Theodore Roosevelt had all sides open to the winds of heaven and from all direc- tions_there came to him admiration and fealty. And there came, too, the withholding of the cautious and not over daring. Here, however, is a man of the press who holds back nothing of affection and praise from this truly electrifying _ American, Theodore Roosevelt. From his many points of advantage he reveals some new turn, some hitherto undiscovered moment in the life of Roosevelt during the greatly active period of his life. Where 80 much is genuinely due the man it seems a pity that Mr. Davis will con- cede nothing elsewhere, provided this concession may cast even a shadow over the subject of his allegiance. However, this is a highly interesting 'book of incidents which, now no longer vital, must take their place as the best nd highest grade of gossip, useful nd informing gossip, about a most dramatic personality, who made high drama of his time also Mr. Davis has this thing to sayv—a thing of current interest to a tion of the momen Yy s : tions have been made for memorfals to Theodore Roosevelt. None that has ome to my notice seems, to me, to disclose consideration of a factor that is fundamental and should be con trolling. That is, whether or not they represent anything in which Col Roosevelt was actively interested: whether their central idea is one to which he was sympathetic; whether in fact they are really representative of the force and spirit they are, or should be, designed to keep alive.” ‘Then, paying scant respect to the proposed ineptitudes of public parks. monuments in brick and stgne, the naming of parks and such other “waste and rubbish,” Mr. Davis says: “Why not erect a memorial to him through which his shining soul would go on. for all time, illuminating the path that he, more than any one else {opened between the East and the | West? We know that he regarded the Panama Canal as his greatest achieve nient; why not set, at each end of the canal, a great pair of Roosevelt lights, marking and safeguarding the pathway for that everincreasing com- merce between the nations and that growing contact between the peoples of the world which steadily advance civilization, promote peace, and inure to the lasting benefit of all humanitv? Theodore Roosevelt’s vision and deci- slon made the Panama Canal a mod- ern fact out of un agelong dream. How appropriate such a memorial would be, how representative of what he was, and how symbolic to all the world! RED EAGLE ISLAND. aveon Kempton George Avison Century Company HE fact that a dog and a and u little hoat are active from end to end of this sea story indicates that this is a juvenile affair. Not at all. The boy is in his te The dog is equal to half a dozen grown folks. The boat is as smart, < size, as any craft that eve Besides, in a background so imme-| | dtate as frequently to push up into! the immediate and active foreground are men and a real plot with villainy in it. There is. too. the fisherman, giving the tang of al | danger to every day's undertakings. There is a serious misunderstanding which, unhappily, does not get straightened out at all, since one of the two suffering under the mistake has gone where mistakes are forgotten —at any rate we hope they are. That one fact leaves a little regret that lingers quite a while after the story is over. And this says some thing for the quality of the story itself. It does sound like life itself the whole story does. That's wh |care ahout that unhappy misunder standing between the boy and the old {man. But, meanwhile. there is such a seagoing as al never was |Stormis! Near ones t you vourself jare in. And a wr And escapes as to be only a hair's breadth vay from final disaster. d the ingriest and most fearsome of waters |greedy for victims, most awfully |ing of the nerve of the heleag A remarkable er | for its life and for its power to take one along the thrillir crowd fast. events that is such a clean, straight By Kenneth | Tlustrated by New York: The is th: on the whole | story. Only one little touch of vil lainy, just to give point to many of the daring acts. The island? It plavs its part in the plot so weil that up on the coast of Maine next Summer vou will be looking: for “Red Eagle Island.” But is not down on any | map, true places never are’—so w are told in “Moby Dick.” Read this good story and let the island go. * x % % THREE FARMS. By ley, author of “'Popr York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. HE ftresh attraction of this novel lies in the distinct flavors and general atmosphere of its South African setting. Those who rejoice in new places more than in the aver- age run of the love tangles of men and women will declare with enthusi asm for the re-created scenes drawn | from the lonely distances of this re. glon, and for the lifelike besetments of those who are marooned away from the rest of the world on South African farms. It was this loneliness, no doubt, that raised all the trouble among the three sets of English living in 2 neighborhood of otherwise unin habited miles of lonelin . And of their criss-crossed affections this author makes a believable storv. one that is easily conceivable as an out come of these particular circum- jstances. A tragic storv. in places. but one that, upon the whole, is capa- ble of making a decent business of the matter of living. Two people, out of the five, are especially calculated to engage the interest of readers to guch an extent that their very real troubles become the reader’s own, that their final rescue to understanding and hap- piness is a matter of distinct personal gratification. Yet. after all. it is the African country that brings out the best of this writer's art of re.creation. BOOKS RECEIVED THE NEW VOCAL ART. By P. Mario Marafioti, M. D., author of “Caruso’s Method of Voice Produc- tion and the Scientific Culture of the Voice.” New York: Boni & Liveright. THE GREAT ADVENTURE. By Kendall Banning. New York: The | Marchbanks Press. it | THE ENEMY'S GATES. By Rich-{ mond Brooks Barrett. New York: Boni & Liveright. SMALL PLAYS FOR SMALL CASTS By Elizabeth Hall Yates. Phila- delphia: The Penn Publishing Co. THE SOUTH AMERICAN HAND- BOOK, 1926; A Guide to the Coun- tries and Resources of Latin On Exhibition Etchings and Water Colors Frank W. Benson Gordon Dunthorne 1205 Connecticut thia Stock New salled. | life of the! Avenue America, Inclusive of South and Central Ameri Mexico and Cuba dited by J. A. Hunter. London South American Publications, Ltd THE ALTAR OF THE LEGION. By Farham _Bishop and Arthur Gil christ Brodeur. Tlustrated by Henry Pltz. Boston Little, Brown & Co. PRIZE STORIES OF 1925; 0. Henry Memorial Award. Chosen by the Society of Arts and Sciences. In troduction by Blanche Colton Wil Uams, author of “A Handbook on HTIR present Of great vali in view controversy: acute crit cism in defence of the tradition: view of the gospel's authorship and authority Holland Sermons of terpreting the modern minds modern con Ilingworth. Chr Character Tl 646¢. N¢ recent but unique for its value timate connection hetwee tian faith and Christiar Inge. Personal Religion and the Life of Devotion. CK-Inddp. Vers and b and nd Life. CZ-HTIR g ability in Christian faith and applylng it ditions n sk Doubleday, Page & Co TRAITORS TO THE CHURCH. By Albert Perkins Langtry. Boston: The Stratford Co. THE BEST HUMOR OF 1925 by than Haskell Dole and old 'S. Dole. Boston: The ford € THE COLLEGE PRESIDENT Charles_Franklin Thwing, I.L. Litt D., president emeritus Western Reserve University Adelbert College. New York Macmillan Co. RANCH TION. By Charles iman pe Ingrar Ind7s. mons, and answers given Lyttelton The Facu ion. A restrained plea for the tice of cor the unse Christian McNeile. The In M233. De QUES: nd methad Lr Col- | girong 1 poit Ims, author of “The nal Bud- | o oo Christ a ¥ get System and American| "If,'f."‘,"' I8k ang ithe. Finance.” New York: The Mac 5] A short, devout millan C o ues STATESMEN OF THE OLD SOUTH; | Royden ! Or, From Radical | %18 tive Revolt. By Willlam E. : Ph. D., professor of Americ t ‘me history in the University of Chi et g0, author of “The Life of Na-| ¢l thaniel Macon,” etc. New York:| The MacMillan Co T LOOK AT LIFF ries of Love, Marriage, Divorce Fortune, Adventure and Heal By 14 famous men and women have lived and felt the strange ex- | perfences they tell. Intro by Ray Long. New York politan Press. Edited Har Strat By . of | and The | possibility ious comr world n th easa of G with the iritual BANKING i Wali Chura, me personal re blems Simpeon. of Christ trustworthy trast between the Modernisr CE AS Intima Smyth. A Pec CGQ-SMITp vout smo- | Smyth THE PUBLIC LIBRARY Studdert-Ke: Work BOOKS SUITABLE FOR LENTEN READING. The following books have been select- ed and the notes prepared by the | Right Rev. Philip M. Rhinelander, DD The library has books listed them shortly compiled wright, ADl, ing traditional light of modern kn Personal Religic Fellowship. ve belief in the and all the secure week a list Rev. John L. Cart D.. of Patrick ear in this column ists will be avail t the librar: on of the| B S Xhaustive ordinarily | Waggett The | Religion not as but_hoy Next vet & to L Thouless Introduction ology of Religior Reprints of ble for e n St and hology. CEWF-B278 and suggestive exposi epistle to the Ephes ing on modern social and spiritual | problems. | Beibitz. What T Believe Believe It. CE-B3%w. truths of Chri: simple, te nd Barr al Von Hu, Addresses on t Religior a little ¢ ght and Why 1 2 The pri e Written ve of micet a untechni Creation. BS-B415 \eaning of creat wledge in The Christian in view Whitehe typical of r Some of Tts DI [ three ctica and books are plain and 1 real spiritual First-Han CIMY-C363. The simple, nature of personal religion ten out of deep experience and with real ability. Charnwood. According to Saint holarly, fair-minded written _with the tomed lite Chesterton. TFS46c. A popular sket insight_and true perspec Chesterton. The Everlasting BS.C428. Clever and cism of so recent view tion and compar Gore. The Deity of Chi plaining the origin and meant: the central church Gore. The Church Erea know vietion Gore. The CIEM-G86 account of feilow ship. Gore: The Sermon on the Mount CBUM-G66. An admirable ount of the social teacing of the sermon. ; the Herman. The Secret Garden of the| O Soul. CK-H4Ys. The reality and| meaning of Christian mysticism: | plain and reasonavie. | Holland. The Fourth Gospel. CBUZ- | Chandler. pathy and CONGRESS, THE .. CONSTITUTION AND . 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HEARTS OF HICKORY is a Now in its Second Hundred Thousand THE BACHELOR by Anne Parrish ten- COKBSBURY PRESS Naskrrilio, Teanesses.