Evening Star Newspaper, August 22, 1926, Page 64

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THE SU Stow of a H{storic Error Which Was Never Corrected—Some Phases of the Science of Aeronautics. Diplomacy’s Social Side. TDA GILBERT MYERS. A BEAUTIFUL BLU! liam E. Barton, author of Life of Abraham Lincoin.” trated. Indianapolis: The Bobbs- Merrfil Co. A true idealist, Woodrow Wilson is recognized also as master of i and heautiful medium for the expres- =ion of his own high visiom. Ytt when in the Mexican disturbadce of 1914 fonr United States marines were killed. President Wilson could finsd no more | fitting words of sympathy for the be- reft families of these hoy's than ihose written more than 50 vears Abreham Lincoln to a stricken mother of tae Civil War. Therefore, the Pres ident directed that copies of this letter be &rnt to the parents of the four ma rincs who had made the great sacrifice for country. This incident brings up af s wiich stands beside the Gettysburg ac -ess for vision and tenderness and wasdom. For more than half a cen “r8 have been s 3 for the letter sent by coln to Mrs. Lydia Bi Information, of rances, had come to th 5 t this mother had lost five sons in war. Thereupon Mr. Lincoln sent her the letter which has since be- ie famous In part by virtue of its h quality, in other part becaus ago by | the story of that famous letter, | of § the miere cadence of verse lulls one to ) indifference toward its substance. And sometimes the poct's dream is ! too diaphanous. too elusive, to be caught in any web of words. Some. times. too. the reader has neither gift | nor desire nor patience to learn the | ways of the poet. Because of all this | | poctry too often goes chanting its | way alone and unsaluted through a| busy and preoccupied world. Then upon a rave and beautiful day one | meets a song. The words of it seem to fall a only the cadence remain ing. It is as if this rvthmic bit of | truth were being born in one's own | hitherto tuneless heart, as if one had come into personal possession of | beautiful song. all his own. And this! ng is always big with life, not so | much with ohvious life as with life | Just over the border of things seen. | It is tinged always. with melanchol with the longings of a spirvit unsati fied. * 1t is haunting and illusive « ad and precious thinzs. Upon such L meeting one comes into the pres. | ence of poetry. real poetry. “Sanctu rv"" provides such’ a deeply personal ience. i rarely beautiful | of tender emotions. Sorrow, pain, loss, regret—vours and mine, those of the whole world itselt— yearn here in a piercing sadness that veaches out into illimitable spas Gloomy poet Not at _all glooms | Serious, rather as life itself is seriou and nobly beautiful as true wisdom has learned to construe it. Deeply | day meant for the growth of human vir- tues in the hearts of the women. Good stol Oh, ves, well developed along the chosen line. It is.the line that dampens enthusiasm. Margaret “Alabaster J. B. Lip. MADAME JUDAS, By Turnbull, author of Lamps.” Philadelphia pincott Co. A story of mystery whose novel features lie in the fact that here a AMme. Ferret, if you please, runs down the mystery of a man's death in the face of such an entanglement as would have made Sherlock Holmes K his thinzs awd go back home. A heautiful woman with a most appall ing past comes, in the odor of high | respectability, to be the wife of the enamored voung doctor of the town. | Thinzs begin to happen in no time at all. The women is a siren. Men to right of her and to left of her fall helpless and hesotted with her charms. Then the husband dies my teriously and suspicion slowly grows in the "direction of his wife. Her beauty, however, is of the innocent, fatal sort. As soon think evil of an angel. In such a circumatance jt is fortunate that # woman deteftive takes the case, for no man has the heart to lift a hand againat the object of a growing suspicion. A mystery tale of the usual sor ining its only touch of originality from the fact that the sex of the sleuth is on 1 Goat Song. Y47D- Verdl. Y47F-W495. Italian. Bontempelli, Massimo. La Donna. dei | Miei Sogni. Y35F-B645d. Giacomo, Conte. 1887. Y35P-L356.Et. Linati, Carlo. Storie di Bestie e di Fantasmi. Y35F-L63s. Papini, Giovanni, and Pancrazi. Pletro. eds. Poeti dOggi (1900-1920). Y35P-9P19. Sobrero. Marin. Y35F-So19p. TPoems. Pletro e Paolo. 1924. Norwegian. Ihsen, Henrfk. The Lady From the Sea. 1890, '51D-Xh‘vfr.E. Portuguese. Oxford Book of Y41P-20x2. The Verse. Portuguese Spanish. Alvanez Quintero, Serafin and Joaquin. Ta Flor de la Vida. Y40D-AISsf. | Blasco Tbanez, Vicente. Sete Cuentos. Y40F-B6178i Calderon de la Barca. Pedro. Life's a Dream. 1556, Y40D-C125v.E. | Cervantes Saavedra. Miguel de. Jour- ney to Parnassus. 1883. Y40P-Ca3. 7z Cano v Olmedilla, R. F. de la. Five Sainetes. Y40D-CS88. Garcilaso de la Vega. Works, Y40P-G16.E. Huyke, J. B Y40P-HY5. Martinez Sierra, Gregorio. de la Casa. Y40D-M365a. Palacio Valdes, Armando. 1919, Y40F-P178r. Yiddish. Bahya hen Joseph Duties of the Heart. Y61-B144. Jacob ben Wolf Kranz, of Dubno. The Parables of the Preacher of Dubno. 2 vols. Yiddish text. 1823, Rintas Tnfantiles. El Ama Riverita. Ibn Pakuda. Hebrew text. nounces. cursion steamers, Charles Macalester, members, thelr familics and visitinz inobles. A program of events ha prepared in which all ages ma including putting the shot One feature will be a baby Tn the afternoon a Charles ton contest for children will be held. | followed by one All the amusement I be at the disposal consisting of roller shooting gallery, ing, flying horses, with dancing after noon and evening. the wharf at t kinds, pitching. | contest. ladies. of the resort wi of the fraternity coaster, icipate, morning and tivities. The u bagket pienic. £ays the boats can trip _and ol charge of the services to be held at |dre the Masonic and Eastern Star Home this afternoon at vo, chaplain of the lodge the address. v lw will be furnished b; Stimson, Harry Stimson. 1 rowding. Hiram Lod; William M. vill deliver ‘e Roy there the in th at niformed 4 will ge, No. 3 N to convey~ local races of Boats will leave 10330 _o'clock 2:30, o’'clock in the afternoon. cert will be held on the boats leaving in the afternoon. which peated on the grounds. to the free amusements, and {ced drinks will be served without cost. present in regalia to aid in the fes Table accommodations have been provided for those who prefer a | Potentate Shackelford . Kimball Automobiles will NDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. AUGUST 22, 1926—-PART * FRATERNITIES MASONIC. Almas Temple will disport itself at Marshall Hall September 1, Hlustrious Potentate Charles D. Shackelford an-| wilyhe September 2 e has chartered two ex to make this the largest Odd Fellows | | Duckpin League in the country. ! | KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. { At the regular convention of Cen- tury-Decatur Lodge - Tuesday a com | mittee was appointed te arrange a program fe eptember 20, for the visitation of the grand chancellor and his associate officers to that ledge. This is the first lodge to appoint a | committee for an entertainment for | the Fall series of visitations. The first [ visitation will he to Mount \Vernon A general meeting of the tri-State , LOJES: No. & the home lodge of the ben | welcome committee held in the) SR T T par- (1. 0. O. F, auditorium of the temple | il S " 3 various |on Sevenfh strect last Wednesday.| ‘Washington Company. Ne. 1. Uni and queit | Grand Master Charles B. Schone, ac. | form Rank. has secured new uni companied - by the grand officers of | forms and will attend all of the grand | Maryland; Grand Master Edmund 1. | Visitations. Allen and the grand officers of Vir-| Rebert L. Slagel of Iloma Lodge. ginia_were present, in addition to the [ No. 31. was buricd Wednesday at Ar grand master and officers of this jur | lingten National Cemeters Isdiction and members of all the sub-| Calanthe Lodge, No. 11. will work committees. A general report was!the page rank at its next convention |had of all subcommittees relative to ! This lodge Is the home lodge of the the tri-State welcome to the new ! grand chancellor, Lee R. Fory: the crand sire, which will occur on Sgtur- | grand prelate, Tsrael Sommers, and day, September 25, in this city the grand keeper of records and seal The parade formation has heen de-| W. A. Kimmel. and is one of the maat cided upen and it is expected that the | flouriehing ledges in this grand do three jurisdiction will have over 10, main. 000 in line for the parade. Ad.|_ The next convention of Amaranth vices |'nr¢\i'\?¢d from n(hm! jurisdictions | Lodge. No. 28, scheduled for Septem indicate a large gathering of delega- | ber 6. falls on Taber day, and the tions from all over the country who | ledge has decided to omit this con will come here fmmediately after the | vVention. At tha next convention of close of the Sovereign Grand Lodge the lodge, September 20. the knight | cession to he held in Philadelphia on | rank will be conferred on 4 large 20. Music has been pro- | saptemper: 20. class of candidates. Tt is expected a | cured for all divisions and reports|large number will be present on that have been received of numbers of Re- | occasion o witress €08 & ol uides bekah lodges and subordinate lodges | the direction of Dent M. Freeman. | entering the parade with interesting [ The ways.and means committee met have | floats I aturas remarding | tast night. and the committee on ex. T :,d ”‘22?::1 K I " | cursion to Chesapeake Beach and the | Ushers are being appointed for the | committee on theater entertainments reception which will he held in the | both made their final reports. i Washington Auditorium following the | iparade. A special program is heing {arranged for the reception, which will include distinguished and_prominent | members of the order on this particu- ]scr\‘h es at Temple Heights this after. noon. It is hoped that a large num ‘ ber will attend. i The first meéting of the chapter | | St. Johns and 0DD FELLOWS. | he evening for features dip, bowl- in the 6:30 and 7 A band con- will be re- n addition ice cream be | untts will | | 3.000 each no over- rry be (| 10, will | e oues Supreme Representatives Tamlin M. Vandervort and Ellery W. Heiss Will return from the biennial conven tion just concluded at Chicago the dle of the week, where they waged a strenuous fight to bring the su. The music Pauline C. and Jesse Irs. s o'clock, Shor* Treputy Perry. A th afi-r til One candidate \as obligated talks were made by State Buckler, . 1. Lacy. W. | I Mallowee and A. M. = which the counci! adjourned morrow night spite of rain and weather, Liberty Rell Conneil had a very good attendance last meeting. o witnese the inftiatoe work exemplified. Two candidate received the deg:ees of Virtue 1,ib and Patrfotism and two cymembar were reinstated. Vinton Lote of An napolis Council. No. 11, is confined 1n Casualty Hospital under the N his couneil bty America Jeffercan Canne to order hy Councilor Martin, Thy day evenin Ve oo ~xtrame rm weather, the attendanca te small. One application for me 1< received was called Capital Council. No. wan eallad to ovder Monday evening b Canneil L. €. W. Pote. The <everal actin committees of the council made v ports showing progress in their se eral lines of work. Rov O, Tra was obligated. his imitfation 1o bs held aver until the conlar Tall weatha One new application for megnbershin was received and turned ocer ta the investigating committea fo tlan The good of the ader committee re ports evervthinz In readiness far the 1 evening on_August 30 Star Spangled Banner Conncil. o ¢ met Friday eveninz and mitiated 11 1. Wallach v Jack and T 11 Adams in the degrees of Virtie ertv and Patrintism KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Thursday evening. September 2 Keane Council vill hald e'ection of officers the en vear, and State Den ity ¢ Drarr will make his report cil on the last Supreme Council se sien, held in Philaielnhie Auzust Tan the. feminine side. Beride the story of crime there is one of love also go- ing along as a part of the procedure | of finding the criminal, or criminals, | and brinzing them to’ the attention . strange disclosures. Copies of the letter are in existence. The story self forms the theme of A Beautiful snder.” meet the cars at Georgia avenue and |jar occhsion. Rittenhouse street from 2 to 245 p.m. | A grand ball will follow the recep- | All_ members of Hiram TLodge and |tion at the Auditorium. to which mem- their families are invited | bers of the order and their friends are Y61-J15. Kozinitz, Tsaac. Zwishn Weltn. dish text. Y61-K84: Pollack. Israel. Sifri. sincere poetry. What more can be 1 said for “Sanctuary preme headquarters of the order to Washington, but the Supreme Lodge decided to postpona dafinite until its next biennfal conv, and 5. Totomae Council will meet row avening at & o'clock to neminar ite officers for the ensuing vear Yid- THE SOCIAT OI' DIPLO- Yiddish text. William 'E. Barton, who has spent many vears fn pursuit of every aspect ~¢ the life of Lincaln, has drawn from » body of his work the storw of the by letter. The title exactly fits the atents, of the matter. for through me blindering in the use of war rec i« and hearsay itself it turns out at Mrs. Bixbv @id nct lose five ons the war. Moreover. icates that Mrs this mistalie and in the ontributions more substanti mere halo. did not correct the e wayv of which she had come into t with the President of the rited States himself througl his ‘mpathy for her great loss. . Mr. Barton’s little book is given up part to an investigation of the whole Bixby tribe of New England uch study is a wistake. In other part the book is truly amazing study of the mind o man under certain stresses of circum- tance. The author pursues it in a tindly and amusing humor that at no oint takes away from the thorough wesx of the investigation. at no point Jiverts him feom his quest for the th of the matter. The search un avers essential dislovalty. lyving and, 1pon the whole, no great merit from 1y point of view. Yet of the jncident Ir. Barton : “Yes, it-was n beau ful blunder. 1 am glad that it oc curred.” It would to high com- :dv. and. in fact. goes. notwithstand ing the tragic BetUNE of ¢ ivil war that furrounds it. The high moment consideration here is that where the author with intuition and insight won ders what Abraham Lincoln would say if he were here now and could look back upon this matier—upon de smertion as well as upon death that did ¢ m two of the: boys. Wha would he say about the mother, known to have been lukewarm toward the Tion. protesting against her boys as enldiers, vet enough to make an adjutant genel 2k her the most patriotic of women. thrifty enough to capit the The warming and &tory lies right here would say. e would T think that it T ht mother to lose even tyvo sens on the hartieficld. to sy nothing of those sad der loxses which came to Mrs. Bixby through her widowhood and the w He would have heen chavitable toward her memory. So we can afford to be, Having found out tha whole truth, he would have looked upon th “with malice toward nope, v 1ty toward all.” “In | we think of all who were = this beautiful blunde:” that in a eatly troubled time on the one hand -asned virtue to hreaing and on the athar brought out s mueh of under atanding and =y mp. n what doubtless thing for a i TREE AND CAPTIVE BALLOONS v Ralph H. Upson and (havles 4a Forest Chandlers Ronal mautic Library. New Ronald Fress Co text of =& volume is designed as a on the special department @e. nauties indicated by its title a tcit book should be. this one sourced in hizh authority. Its thars are recognized experts in fie!d of asronautics, com ! activity in the W Anees experience and oflic - minca that event. Az . hock capacity this vol: s& may be from teci i& also condensed a sams and other ntages. The first part of Ralph H. Upson. is de ssion of free balloons mental structure and _fication of this b requirements of the balloon may Je. The art of ballooning itself eve described from the prepara- nflation to the actual taking reription that covers directions iloting. “ie second part of the study. | Carl ¢, de Forest Chandler. .leals the captive balloon of military ser~‘ce. giving its characteristics and the modification of these o special tvpes for special service » o and accessories are named and de. scrihed. The materials and proc-sses of manufacture are given in good de- taik The third part, also by Col. Chan dler. takes into consideration the fah r ed for the gas envelopes and the methnds emg.oved to rubbe these for the used to which they are here Apvendives. half a dozen of ateral fuc sub upon the general is au. the in their in s of stantial bdaring theme itself “Free and Captive Balloons™ like the other volumes of the Ronald Aero nautic Library., represents direct and practical purpose to put in the hande of students such @ body of au thoritative knowledge « of aeronautics as ha ent! time been discovered and organ ized into a working program NCTUARY. B Tendon: Arthur Sometimes, like a croening lullahy MOTOR CO. Conoeniently Located ar Fourteenth Street 1333-37 14th St. fortification agairst | of | <ituation. | nlaz part of the | Lincoln ’ As | oted 10 a | such | form as spe- | the subject | 1o the pres- | iflm 5130‘ Maude Parker Indianapolis: MATIC LIFE hild Tlustrated The Bobbs-Merriil Co. wife of ths former Ambassa- | by way of this book. gives | side of the business of | ¥. As active and important | part upon t surface as that | aved by the Ambassador himself, so seems. And no doubt this is ex- | actly the truth of the matter In 1 happy spirit of seeing what there is| . of doing what there is to do Mrs. Child transfers her own active and usetul diplomatic service in FEu- rope to these pages with what ap pears to be but little loss to the actual experience ftself. From many points of view does she give the duties and pleasures and %®xations that belong to the business of helping represent one’s country at a foreign capital. | Social functions and official programs move along together here in illustrat- 8 ns Personalities, hun dreds of them. vitalize the: pages Americans without number appear to have left America for good and all to live in the c-sier atmosphere of so. phisticate and waywise Europe. Bits of harmless gossip skip along here in | a mood of irrepressible ; interesting, all informing gree useful. One takes it that it i.«'i useful to know the fine art of enter- taining. Cerf nly useful to those he ing it to do. The most interesting part | of this book, however, is the writer of it. *"The Tmportance of o heads one of these ¢ | human™ constitutes the charm of this writer A kind nd unde anding woman who laughs and never snarls over the things that she sees. It is | hard to recall boolk of this natyre | free from pettiness. so filled with | kindly and intelligent commient, as is Mrs., Child’s “Social Side of Diplo matic Life.” i | | FLAPPER ANNE. By Co author of “As a Woman Thir etc. Boston: Houghton. -Mifflin Co. 5 It is not altogether easy to conjure | up a village quite so remote from | flapperdom «s is this one of Milledge. nor a flapper quite so overflowing | with her_special cult Flapper | Anne. Yet. having achieved this state of credulity, as one would under the lead of Corra Harris, the reader is thereafter borne along on the cur- rent of this writer's humor and prac- tical sense and special brand of pithy be sure, Anne shocks evervhody in Milledge. That is what she was meant to do. Maybe she now and then overreaches the heights of even the flapper. Hardly that, though. < to say that Anne is, after perfectly all right, just as the ks of Milledge are themselves all Mrs. Harris avouldn’t accept | other basic situation than this So. after playing the surface along in the genuine Hari the author dips down far enough to bring out the genuine ‘qualities of both Anne and the vil- lagers. Like many of us, this writer { < Anne and believes in her. So | the story runs along this line of ulti- {mate affection and approval. Just | another story of the usual kind by this advocate of good sense and fair | dealing and real decency all project ed in a spirit of understanding and | 1aughte: one. mattes mann. | COMMON OF ANGELS. By Dorothy Beckett Terrell, author of “La s Ne of this novel is to dra imatize a_good woman, good in a sense commonly accepted not So many years ago. Here is a woman, a girl. who likes 2 home nest, likes to rustle faround in it keeping it sweet and She vearns toward children, unspoken needs, giv- and happiness. A pleas- gir!. not ‘ming, not - intelligent, like so many nowadays. Trouble only will bring this girl into her real do- . sefulness. ‘Trouble comes wlong in the person of the young man Whom she thinks she is going to he finds a con ist world. So, he the new girl and casts off the old one. The Very thing for the development of the disappointed voung woman. With good deeds and a new grasp of religion. she makes a garden spot around herself for the neglected and forlorn. Does she get her reward? She does. The yvoung wife runs away from her husband and he, to be sure. runs back to the zirl who is bent to the work of the helping hand. No. they are not mar ant, pre of the law. BOOKS RECEIVED THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THOUGHT: | Approached Through Studies of Sleeping and Dreaming. By H. 1. Hollingworth, Ph.D., author of “‘Psychology of Functional Neu s." etc. New York: D. Apple- OVERHEARD. By Ruby M. Avres New York: George H. Doran Co. THE FLAG OF THE - UNITED STATES. By Hon dericl C Hicks. Third Fdition. Washing- ton: Published by Mrs. Hick: HISTORY OF THE DE GRAFFEN- RIED FAMILY: From 1191 to 1975, Ry Thomas P. de Graffenried. New York: Published hy the auth, THE 2 HANDBOOK By Grantland_Rice Clare Briggs ew York: Macmillan Company. KING OF DREAMS: A Romance of the Days of The Christ. By G., R. Warmington. New York: George 11, Doran Co - PROSE AND CONS. By Irvin 6. Cobb. New York: George H. Doran Co. AN AN EVOLUTIONIST BE A CHRISTTAN? By W. Lee Rector. A. M., Professor of Psvchology. Oklahoma Baptist University. Bos: ton: The Stratford Co. JESUS HIMSELF DREW NEAR. By Carrie Adams Berry. Boston: The tratford Co. BUT IN OUR LIVES: A Novel. Sir_Francls Younghusband. York: D. Appleton & Co. CODE OF MEN: A Western Story. By Homer King Fordon. Frontis- piece by H. L. Iastings., New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co. THE WRITING OF HISTORY. By Jean Jiles Jusserand, Former Am- bassador from France; Wilbur Cor- tez Abbott, Professor of History at rd University: Charles T and John Spencer Bassett Secretary of the American Histori- cal Association. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. THE PILGRIM'S PROGR By John Bunyan. Arranged by Jean Marian Matthew. Illustrated by H. J. Ford. New York: The Mac- millan Co. TOTO AND and The By New THE GIFT. By Kath- erine Adams. Frontispiece and Decorations by Eric Pape. New York: The Macmilian Co. MEN CALL IT LOVE. By Inez Sa- hastian. New York: The Macaulay Co. HONEYMOON'S END. By Howard Rockey, author of “Daughters of Luxury,” etc. Frontispiece by A. C. Lehman. New York: The Mac- ORIGINS OF THE CZECHOSLOVAK STATE. By Thomas Capek, jr., M. A, J. S. D. New York: The Revell Press. THE OLD SERGEANT'S STORY: Winning the West from the In: dians and Bad Men in 1870 to 1876. By Capt. Robert G. Carter, U. §. ., retired, late 4th-U. S. Cavalry, New York: Frederick H. Hitchcock RANCHING WITH ROOSEVELT. By Lincoln A. Lang, a Companion Rancher. Tllustrated. Philadel- phia: J. B. Lippincott Co. WINNOWED WISDOM: A New Book of Humor. By Stephen Leacock. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co. THE PUBLIC LIBRARY Recent accessions at the Public Library and lists of recommended reading will appear in this colunin each Sunday. LITERATURE. German. Brant, Sebastian. The Ship of Fools. 2 v. 1874, Y47P-BT35.E. Mann, Heinrich. Der Kopf. M314k. Mann, Thomas. Der Zauberberg. Y4TF-M315: Sealsfield, Charles. Nathan. der Squatter-Regulator. Y47F-Seldn. Toller, Ern: Das Schwalbenbuch. Y4TP-T5Ts. Wassermann, R ¢ W2 Y4TF- 2 V. Jakob. 1. Faber. 1024, ried vet, for there are difficulties. legal vou know. But their marriage is only two book 1hout this obably such E Strngs foa Stick When you insist upon, getting Ebonite, you are buying gear lubrication § purposely made for the gears of your motor car or truck. g At dealers in five-ponnd cana. and serviee stations from the Checkerboard pump enlx. (ITS SHREDDED OIL ) BAYERSON OIL WORKS QLUMBIA 3228 '\ ages beyvond the end of ! men are | few times each season i OF «.for DUCO: when it begins to dull The rich DUCO finish will alwa; look its best ... and wear longer, if cleaned a Y61-P7 Rappaport, Aaron. Durch Felerwent. | Yiddishgtext. Y61P-Risd. Raskin, Saul. Erez Isroel in Wort un Bild. Yiddish text. Y61-R186 Rogoff, Hillel. Di Geschicte Fun di Fareinigte Staten. v. Yiddish text. Y61-R626g Rosebury. Aaron. A Short History of the British Labor Movement. 1924, Yiddish text. Y61-R722g. Rosenfeld. Jonah. Gesamelte Shriften. 6 v. 1924, Yiddish text. Y61. R725. Sahath, A. M. Di Licht Strahlen Fun Talmud. V. 1. Yiddish text. Y61-Sal. Schwartz, Jacob. The Black Spot of The - Jewish Neighborhood. Yid- dish text. Y61-Sch3b. Shapiro, T. P. Meshal Ha-Kadmonl. Yiddish text. Y61-Schim. Tomaroff, Manuel. and Hirsch, jamin. Hashahar. Yiddish Y61-T592h. Tomaroff, Manuel, and Higsch, jamin. Shaharith. 2 v. text. Y61-T592s, Winograd. M. N. Melne Yorn. Yid- dish text. Y61-W736m. Wit and Humor. S. Many Laughs for Many Days. YW-C633m. Downey, Fairfax. When We Were Rather Older. YW-D756w. Hamilton. G. R., comp. The Soul of Ben text. Ben- Yiddish Cobb, 1. Comic Poems. 1576, Lear, Edward. The Complete Non- sense Book. 1923. YW-ILd7c. Ward. Toasts, Roasts and Funny Stories. YW-M8 Posner, G. A., comp. The World's Best Humor. YW-P846w. Christopher. Foolish Fiction. American Limericks. ——— MACDONAVLD AT PAIIKATY | FOR “JIMMY” SEXTON, 70 e i ‘We Ain't Going to Stgike No| More,” Labor Member of Com- mons Sings at Dinner. By the Aseociated Press. August 21.—A dinner Sexton. ""—on his seventieth birthday by his friends and colleagues at the House of Commons was marked by Ben Tillet singing a new labor an- them, a parody of a popular ditty, It went: e ain't going to strike no more. no more. We ain't going to strike no_more. But how in the world can the bosses tell We ain’t xolng to strike no more. The diners were greatly amused. Former Premier Ramsay MacDonald laugh®d more heartily than any one else over the song. SCULPTOR ENDS EXILE. Alfred Gilbert, 74, Back in Londen After 20 Years Away. LONDON, August 31 UP)—Alfred Gilbert, the sculptor, who created Eros, the statue in Picddilly Circu which culniinated in a controversy | that caused Gilbert to leave the coun- try, has returned to Britain, after an | absence of 20 vears. | Mr. Gilbert, now 74, came back to | complete the tomb of the Duke of Clarence, brother of King George, in the Albert Memorial Chapel at Wind- sor. The commission to do this work was given by King Edward VII to Mr. Gllbert, who returned because King George wished him to complete the work. Mr. Gilbert was formerly professor of sculpture in the Roval Academy. . He was elected to the academy in 1802, but resigned in @enealogy: If isterested in your ++4444404+ fumily History, our priced Caifogue listiag nearly 5000 | generlogical books for sle by us wilt be muiled to you for 1oc. in stamps. + GOORSPEED'S BOOK-SHOP o Ashburton Place. Boston, Mass. with Common Sense. a fact proved year after year by thousands of car owners. And due to the common sense formula and purpose of this sclentific Cleanser. Which is to act, not disfiguring the finish, but solely upon the dull, m that coats over th: To keep your car beautiful. inteh. safely, from year toyear, usenothing onit but the approved Cleanser for DUCO an From your nearest dealer . 50c—31.00 PMMORESEN Avuro Pouisa THE GRIASHLESS all fine finishes i CLEANSER These Washington Jobbers Can Supply You F P MAY HARDWARE a EOUTHERN AUTO §UPPLY 0O, the F: t a a EASTERN STAR No. 24, Order of | Will hold its 1926-19 ipvited at Temfle Heights this tethany Ch: tern he services fternoon at re urged to The members of Ruth have been apter tar. i 4 a'clock. be present. invited invited. The 0dd Fellows which will occur in Detreoit in 1 ague | JR.0.U. A M. nization | meeting at Odd Fellows Temple at 7:46 o'clock Monday evening, August | Andrew Jackson Council, No. 6, met 23. A representative from every lodze | Monday night with Councilor €. T |and ‘encampment is desired and ex- [Smith presiding. Due to the warm | pected. Lodges in nearby Virginia [weather, the council is simply obligat- ipter. No. land Maryland have been invited 1o !ing new members at this time and will to attend the ' join this league, as it is the intention | hold a class initiation in the earlv Fall | owling ‘o attend All members following the business mecting will he held in the emall chamber. the members will atten: “grand radio dance” n the auditorin, of the Knights of Columbus Hal Music for this occasion will be preo vided by “Schaefer's Harmony Fove and bits of novelty entertalnment (©ontinued on Eleventh Page) w Dopee BROTHERS DE LUXE SEDAN People select motor cars by differeht standards, Some desire hixury and ostentation. Others, utility and economy alone. Dodge Brothers De Luxe Sedan strikes a fine and distinguished balance—both in appearance and price—between these two extremes. 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