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Fdféigh Rigl';ts and Interests in China—Olive Schreiner’s Novel THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON. —Irvm Cobb Brmgs Out Another Volume of Short Stories—Other Offermgs. IDA' GILBERT MYERS. FOREIGN RIGHTS AND INT STS IN CHINA. By Westel W Willeughby. Baitimove: The Johns Hopkins Press. LECTRICAL science, like some gigantlc spider, has inclosed the | entire world in a_web of imme- | diate contac The whie e itself is now a single neis hood “where not so long' ago-natural | exclusions existed upon- s _surface | ssable separations. Nowhere | any more, therefore, is national i tion'a possibility, however desirable | to nationdls themselves may such'state | of self.restraint appear to be. Irrele- | vant*here would be any approach ever towsdrd consideration of the political | ethics gnd propriety of the laterday penetrations by Europe inte India and Chitg, info Africa north and south. | Lnouilt to state the fact that a shut in nation is of the past. The future | will deal u.rh a new, inteérnationalism, one born of the shrinkage of vast areas | fato hand's breadth of ¢ tion by virtue of tha maglc of applied science. Out of this gene: r stupendous and! %o sighif this study of China by loughby. The future lem into’whose ®olution must of Chitra’s pasts ~And this pas rates-intortwo great parts. One is con cernéd" 'with ancient strains of race and blond, ‘with the rise amd fall of | old civilizations, ‘witlr the potency of | religitht in determining’ the social and | politfeal fabric of the whole, with dy nastivs succeeding one another by way of warfare—a -long period of - seclu- sion, somewhat remote now, but deep- 1y ingrained in effects that must count in the new future of the country, The other part is concerned with the more recent period wherein the doors of | China, so sedulously closed and bar-| red, have been forced by Western en- terprise and ambition. Into the in volved problem facing this Oriental country must be cast both of these fac- | tors, each bearing strongly upon that | which China will finally come to be. As a contribution to the study of so vital a question, Mr. Willoughby offers these two volumes of authoritative substance. Here is the full body of official agreement between China and the outside world for the relatively | recent period of the open door. The bulk of these two volumes points upon the outstanding value of the study. ¥or, instead; of contlensing material in the intgrest, of brevity, this author has submitted. in full text the various treaties and other. documents of offi- cial or quasl-official * character that bear upoa thgsquestiort under consid- eration. The book sums, therefore, to an easily accessible source of knowl- edge, authentic in character and com- plete in scope, providing material for & survey of China in respect to foreign rights and interests in that country. And this chapter of international re- * Jationships is of more than commercial and political interest. To a certain extent it forecasts the future, not only of China itself, but of the intercourse of that country as well with other nations in the great commonwealth of the world. Westel W. Willoughby is professor of political science at John Hopkins. In 1916-17 he was the legal adviser o the Chinese Republic. In the con- ference on Limitation of Armament at ‘Washington he was the technical ex- pert to the Chinese delegation as he was also counselor and expert to the Chinese delegation to the International Opium Conference at Geneva. * K ok ¥ FROM MAN TO MAN. By Olive Schreiner, author of “The Story ~of an African Farm,” etc. New York: Harper & Bros. LIVE SCHREINER was one of the big women of the present, big in mind, free and independent. And, as a matter of course, her work partakes of that breadth and fearlessness. Nowhere do these gifts stand in clearer definition than in “From Man to Man.” Against the beloved South African background, vivid in detail and wide in sweep, with which her readers have become familiar, she here sets the story of two sisters. Such bare summary might suggest a tale of pastoral cast and content— ‘were its author not Olive Schreiner. As it is, this is the story of all the ‘women in the world gathered into two great classes—the weak women and the strong ones. Here is one, strong in love and intuition and in a stead- fast enduring. Here is the other, weak in beauty and loneliness, in de- sire and in yielding. So life—time and place and circumstances—has it out with these two, as it does with the rest of us. The story, always sincere and deeply understanding and piti- fully tender, moves forward relentless and gray. Nobly conceived and com- | pletely projected as the story itself | is, there is much else here beside the play hour of destiny with two help: less humans. Long pages of discus. sion obtrude upon the central line of narration. These project the themes dear to Olive Schreiner—the place of woman in the present scheme of ex- istence, the social outlook generally in its unequal and unfair alidtments | of opportunity and erideavor, the promise and unpromise of woman's | futu Here a woman—strong in intelligence, fearless in the face of custom and tradition, dauntless in the pursuit of better ideals and prac- tices—discusses such matters while the story itself waits by the wayside. A fault? It might be, if “From Man to | Man" had been designed for the éase- ment of leisure hours. But it was not so planned. Rather is it & noble story of tragic content over which | the author's passion for social justice apreads the faint promise of a better fulfillment some da: * % ok *x ENTLEMEN.: By author of “0ld Judge New York: , Cosmo Westel Wil- | of thix country is a syob- | all LADI AND G Irvin Cobb, Priest,” etc. politan Book JUST as hosts of readers arned to expect from Irvin Cobb, just 8o in this group of short storles does he live up to the mark set by him and for | him. The romance of every day, that i being alive in an amazing world, provides the literary stock in trade of this genial and poplfar writer. Therefore, in his stories there are no 1imalayas of human passion to climb, no Plutonian depths of human sin to plumb—never anything like that. For Irvin Cobb, with both feet set squarely down on the solid earth, walks about in the midst of the average doings of men and women. But—and this is the point—while his feet are engaged in the plain business of locomotion, a pair of keen eyes, a warm heart and a ready understanding are all busy with most puzzling and the most ab- sorbing fact in life—human nature it- #elf, peeping shyly out from its deep and’ jealously guarded hiding places in the secret life of every one. It is from such a source that “Ladies and Gen- tlemen™ comes to the surface and into hands of readers. The link that binds the members of this group into Zood unity is the general fact that Thigh courage, nobility of actlon, depth of understanding, are not exclusive possessions of the favored and fortu- ate children of men. These stories, ch in its own way, objectify the truth of this. And so, for instance, here is a “lady” who is clearly no | the soclal annals of the place. | thin; | kind, | sinister. | is turned habitually | songs them { those of di: | New | ticular adventure, | York, any more t { pride |in | life. | port | needs salt, lady in the scathing pronouncement ©of all the virtuous townspeople, but t “Sis” instead, with an occupa- on that falls away below grade in upon the occasion here brought | | into the light behaved to one old and in distress like an angel of light and leading. No, no preachment. Cobb never preaches. He simply smile: kind like, and with an understanding d or two goes on s way toward another point in the redemption sched- | ule of poor mortals. Often he laughs right out loud, and we laugh with him, but happily there is never any in that laughter but indulgence. tanding All o these s a fine kind. under ENOUGH ROPE. By Dorothy Parker New York: Boni & Liveright (GATHERED up out of “Lie Vanity Fair” and such, these poems by Dorothy Parker set up here in a modest establishment of their own A family of verse whose blood rela tionship is so clear as never at any point to hint even ard the bend A waywise and sophistic | family, besides, one whose eyes & clear of illusion, one whose single mind away from easy the heart of the| is not amelt toward too ympathies and too facile ac- | ceptances. But the family can sing not a doubt in the world about that— | sing in a low throaty contralto that in itself is beguiling. even though the | clves are, over and over llusionment. Pitched to of “You can't fool me any! here are little tunes disenchantment. In the spirit of “Who Cares.” the clever verses dart and fly and swim like a flying fish in ittering armor. credulities, just a the key mory By_the time his, Shivering And he vow: Infinite, undying— Lady. make a note of this One of you 18 lying u swear you're sighing. lads. thould you mer whose_ways a who_ m One who keeps That he never was ur | Never loved another one . . . Lady. lady. better run! A ke | THE SILVER CORD. Agnew Chamberlain, Chrough Stained New York: G. P. Putnam’s So GOOD mystery tale, a fine adven- ture of the flesh and a finer one of the spirit, good look-in upon the social comedy turned off here in terms of high romance—of high fin s well—such is “The Silver Cord. stole the Liberty bonds and who mur- dered the rich man’s son, Julian Det- wetter? So much for the send-off upon the mystery whose solution proves that circumstantial evidence may be wholly flimsy evidence, upon whose lack of weight, nevertheless, many an innocent man has been condemned. It chanced that just then a boy, born and’ brought up in the town, disap- peared. Of course, he was the guilty one, and the chase was set up around him. So much for the detective story. Down in Haiti, where he went for reasons of his own, purely innocent reasons, this boy was remade both in body and spirit through the skill and wisdom of a wise old voodoo chief. So much for the story of one's re. making—and this Is by far the most important part of the whole matter, as well as the most interesting. Made over in appearance, in name, in capa- bility, the young man returned to the old ‘home, there to pursus the real murderer and thief. In such pursuit he succeeded in opening up the poli- tics of the small town and many an- other of the untoward handicaps of the civic situation. An ambitious pro- gram? An over-burdened hero of the Herculean brand”? It does look so, doesn’t it? But the proof of the mat- ter is in the reading, and here you will find an adventure so well Knit, one whose many interests are inter- locked naturally and plausibly. Bet- ter even than this, here you will come upon a tale of substantfal significance set against a background that is_here picturesque with the scenery of the island of Haiti, that is saturated with its strange superstititions and, on the | other hand, a background that is a: familiar as that of any small inland | town. Out of it all stands the fact that life, “the silver cord on which each of us strings his beads, is no | one’s private property.” A strong and significant romarnce from every point | of view. | * ok k% NEW YORK. By Morris | Markey and Johan Bull. New | York: ~ Macy-Masius, Publishers. PPUT the salt shaker on the arm of your chair. Now you are ready to read “That's New York!"—a very | sprightly adventure around the big | town by a competent pair of young | men, ore to make copy and the othe: | to m:.\kt» picture: A couple, equally gifted in pen on the one hand and pencil on the other and both possessed of that flair for exaggeration and slight dis- tortion that bespeaks a knowing and | waywise attitude toward this frail anc | faulty world. Stories and pictures of York, here and there and over yonder, are the harvest of this par- harvest that turns over to the reader a good hour of en- tertainment wherein facts and near- facts and truth hobnob together most mpanionably, certainly most amus- ingly. Right here is the time for a sprinkling of salt—for this is not New By George of THA or South Bend or Danville. Nor is it the whole of New York itself in any- thing . like a fair About as'much the whole town as the blinking Broadway lights are. Noth- ing here to indicate the metropolis— only “a near view of its gangs and s and tongs, of its black bottom entricities, of i and divorces and so on. But arourd I these is a big city whose civic d vanity are conspicuous Rotarfans and ~Kiwanians and up- lifters and purity leagues and, besides. an amazing and And all the little towns—\Veed and South Bend—are merely pocket editions of New York itself. Shake hard right here. for a lot of it. Oh, No fault o8, —no end. 1 with GO GROCE Yet | it, of | . n it is Weedsport | representation. | revels and crimes | in | stable industrial | this book | enter- | save that the gesture of the title a false one, one too exuberant on the part of youthful enthusiasm. Fine | newspaper stuff, though of the "hu man interest” stripe. BOOKS RECEIVED THE FAMINE IN SOVIET RUSSIA, 3; The Operations of the Relief _Administration Fisher, Chief of the His- American Re- Lecturer in New n Y . torical Department, lief Administration; History. Stanford University. York: The Macmillan Co. FOR PETROVA and Other ms. By Edith Burrows. Bos- ! The Four Seas Co. HEIM, Dorothy Disney | and Milton Mackaye. Introduction by Nunnally Johnson. New York: Albert & Clarkes Boni. TH \Il By Clara D. Pi Three Little Miller: York: E. P. Dutton & LOWER SHOW. By 1. Boston: Houghton | fin Co. | SHADOW Smith. Co. PINAFORES AND PANTALETTES; or, The Big k House. By Ade Claire Darby. Mlustrated by Billie Chapman. Boston: L. C. Page & Denis Mif- RIVER. Boston By Houghton Mifflin NGLOME. F ton: Four PROGR! Ronald Erl Little. s Co. 5 OF DRAMA THROUGH THE CENTURIES. By Ruth M. Stauffer, B. Mount Holyoke; M. A., University of Cali- fornia. New York: The Macmillan | C | DRIFTWOOD: Being Papers on_Old- | Time American Towns and Some Old People. By Walter Gaston Shotwell, author of “The Life of Charles Sumner,” ete. New York: | Longmans, Green & C | THE MATING CALL. By Rex Beach. New York: Harper & Bro. | THE ADAM CHASERS. By B. M. Fower. Boston: Little, Brown & Co. DETOURS. By Octavus Roy Boston: Little, Brown & Co. | THE WOMEN AT POINT SUR. By Robinson Jeffers. New York: Boni & Liveright. ANCHES TO THE SKY: y Sylvia Bateman. Stratford Co. THE EIGHT-BARRED GATE. By Dayton Thomas Gould. Boston The Stratford Co. FOR YOU. By Jennie M. Tabb. ton: The Stratford Co. WHAT TREE IS THAT? B G. Cheyney Illustrated by D. George. New York: D. Appleton & Co. NATURE TRAILS. By Dietrich Lange. Illustrated with many pho- tographs by the author. New York: D. Appleton & Co. THE INNER WORLD OF CHILD. HOOD; A Study in Analytical Psy- chology. By Frances G. Wickes. With an_introduction by Carl G. Jung. New York: D. Appleton & Co. CHINESE POLITICAL THOUGHT; A Study Based Upon the Theories of the Principal Thinkers of the Chou Period. By Elbert Duncan Thomas, A. B., Ph. D., Professor of Political Science, University of Utah. Foreword by Edward Thomas Williams, M. A., LL.D., Agassiz Professor of Orlental Languages and Literature, University of Cali- ;’urniu. New York: Prentice-Hall, ne. THE STORY OF CIVIL LIBERTY IN THE UNITED STATES. By Leon Whipple. New York: Van guard Press, PROFITS OF RELIGION; An Essay in Economic Interpretation. By Upton Sinclair. New York: Vanguard Press. Cohen. BR. Poems. Bos- TH | WHERE IS CIVILIZATION GOING By Scott Nearing, author of *“Tr Next Step,” etc. New York: Van guard Press. WHAT'S SO AND WHAT I8 V. John M. Work, author of '\\h) Things Happen to Happen,” etc. New York: Vanguard Press. THE PUBLIC LIBRARY Recent accessions at the Public Li brary and lists of recommended read ing will appear in this column each Sunday. IN THE INDUSTRIAL DIVISION. Baldwin, H. G. Accounting for Value as Well as Original Cost. HKB-B 199, A Useful Hand Book. Butterick l‘uh Co. Lim. terick Dressmaker. Campbell, E. G. comp. BElementar Agricultural Botany. RHBC | carey Selected Recipes for | sions. RZ-C 188. | Chamber of Commerce of the U, 8. A. Doing Export Business. HK83-C356. Church, H. F. Organizing the Draft. ing Department. SAB-C477o. Dealer's Book of Hom WIM-D345. Farrington, E. H. A Guide to Quality in D(ur' Products. RN-F244g. (-r-’fl\‘r}, Mathematical Analysi; Heller, The New But- TTC-BISTnb. 874m, 3. and Co., Chicago. uide for Cream Makers, RZE-H36 It inter- ® ested in Genealogy: your family history, our pri talogue listing over enealogical books for sale by us will be mailed to you for 10c Goodspeed’s Book Shop 9A Ashburton Place Boston, Mass. AND 'l‘l'lE RYMAN The New Novel by HAROLD BELL WRIGH‘I‘ Is God being crowded out of American life? Every tnan lndwmn.wmmddd.mllwmtwrad!huqflndfl a powerful successor to Harold Bell Wright's two vldzlyrndandpeldylavedmvek “THE SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS” and “THE CALLING OF DAN MATTHEWS™ $2.00 at Booksellers everywhere. This is an Appleton Bosh. D, APPLETON AND COMPANY, Publishers 38 West 32ad Street Now York Gty b Walton Hall| Boston: The | , R. J. The Manufacture and Use of Small Dimension. TLA-HS5. Knights, C. C. The Technique of Sales- manship. HKF-KT744t. Lubbock, A. B. The Western Ocean Packets. 1925. SO-LS6w. Manisera, I. G. Birds and Pets. RKU- M31. McLellan, C. and Balancing the Trotier. M: Mellon, M. G. Chemical Publications. LO-M485. Moore, H. F., 1d Kommers, J. B. The Fatigue of Metals, SCM-M7Sf. Nolan, A. W, Case Method in Agricul- ture. RGA-NT13c. Olney, L. A. _Elementary Organic Chemistry. LQ-O1 63. Oxweld Acetylene Company, N. Y. The Oxwelder's Manual. “TJDP-OxS. Rehwald, elix. arch - making. RQKD-R26.E. Sadtler, 8. P., and Matos, L. T. trial Organic Chemistry. RQ-Sa 13a. Sarton, George. Tntroduction to t History of Science. v. 1. LA-4 Schotz, S. P. Synthetic Rubber. Schb. Sommerfeld. A. J. Atomic Physics. LHP: Stanley Rule_and Level P How to Work With Wood. TLN-St26. Stone, Herbert. The Timbens of Com- merce and Their Idemstification. 1924 RJIX-St73 Stone, J. C. A Ke ematic LB-St Stoner, B. ( Structure Sullivan, J. W. Gallio: or anny of Science. LA-Suig. C. E. Vacuum-energy. Wiy United THotel Standard HKB-Un32. ', §. Dept. of Comm. Building Code Comm. Minimum Live Loads Al lowable for Use in Design of Build- ings. 1 SEA-Un33m. S. Dept. of Comme; Building Code Comm. Recommended Mini mum Requirements for Masonry Wall Construction. SDJ-Un32. S, Dept. of Commerc Code Comm. Recommended | tice for Arrangement of Building Codes, 1925 SEA-Un33rp, Wiley, C. C. Highw: Engineering. STA-W64. IN THE PEDAGOGICAL ROOM. Briggs, T. H., and McKinney, I A Second Book of Comp: High Schools. 1919. ZB-B764s. Brubacher, A. R. Teaching. IQT- BS32t. Cubberley, E, P. Stat TK83-C J. istration. Edmonson, B., and Othe A. The Art of Shoeing RK. Indus. 1923 TO- Tools and to the New Math 3na. TF 3. he Tyr- LY America. Manual Company of Accounting 1bel. school Admin- The 1924, Ferr 2 . ‘The Rural High School. 1 TUS3-Fal4r. zpatrick, . A. _The Schol Teachers in Secondary IQ-F58, May, M. A Schools. How to Study at Home. NEW CH “RED-HEAD Three Lectures on | Magnetism and Atomic | Building | sition for | Daily Schedule in the High School. | Spe D. €. JULY 31, MARINE CORPS NOTES Maj. Gen. John A. Lejeune, com- mandant of the corps, who i3 now at | Harmony Villa, Jamestown, | will return about August 5 | quarters. Brig. \'1||<| inspector, has returned to head- | quariers and is now acting comman ! dant. Brig. Gen. Dion Williams, assistant to the major general commandant, |at Wakefield, M supervising the to head respectivel | national m | tember. s ic. M. . in their training for th t at Camp Perry in S . Joseph Jackson, U, and Capt. Jacob Lienhard, are the coaches for the rifie and ns, respectively. Gen. Wil | liams is expected to return to Wash | ington on August 6. | "Maj. Joseph C. Fagan, assistant ad jutant and inspector, in charge of re | cruiting throughout the country, in spected the stations at Fairmount, W. Va.; Cumberland, Md., and the | headquarters district” of | which is in ¢ ze of Capt. Samuel W. | Freeny, on July 29 and 30. | Lieut. Col. Presiey M. Rixey, has been taking a course at the | War College, Newport, R. I, has been | ordered to the serving in Haiti, and to proceed not {later than August 10. The following commissioned officers, | attached to the aviation section of the | corps, haev been ordered detached from permanent stationsin the United States and assigned indefinite field | duty with Observation Squadron auty in Nicar Ro: | Rowell, Cap! | Archibald loug who R. | H. McCul- 1 Henkle, Sec- | ond Lie A. Thoma and J. . Harmon and Marine Gunner W. Wodarezylk. | First Lieut. H. D. Bowen, who has heen on temporary duty in Nicaragua, has been orde 1cks, Quant Lieut | orderea from Marine Barracks, Naval National Committee on Research in | Secondary Education. An Outline | of Methods of Research. IP-N216o. O'Keefe, J. A., and Guidon, F comps. Junfor' High School Poetry. Manual Arts in the High School. 1924. IRT- Schorling, Ral fonal Junior ors. In- LD- . and Oth ts in Algebra. The T ing of Col- ZB-St46t. dt, N. T IR-¢ Stevens, D. H. Composition. 3 nd Engel United | Manual of Edu RYSLER » ENGINE x 1, Gen. Rufus H. Lane, adjutant | is | | Marine Corps rifle and pistol teams, | Baltimore, | t Brigade of Marines, | 1'to return to Marine | E 4 s been | Smal!l Junior | - . 1927—PART Training Station at Newport, to duty as assistant to the commanding officer, son, Portsmouth, N. H. rat Lieut. W. H. Doyle was de- tached July from duty at the Naval Prison, Portsmouth, N. H., and ordered to duty in Haltl with the gendarmerie of that country, which is under the supervision orps officers Col. Macker Bahb, who served many throughout the world, the retired list July Licut. Col. James K. -, hereto- fore commanding the Central Recruit- ing Division, with headquarters at Chies n ordered detached {on Aug ithorized to delay 1 route until September 8, then eport to the commanding general | Bastern Expeditionary Base, Quan- tico, Va. Lieut. detached Puget Sound, port to Brig. commanding Ma | Maj. Harold L. Parsons, attached {to the Paris Island training base, reported to headquarters during the week. | With the exc and enlisted men who hi was placed on Col. B. from v 8. Berry was ordered Marine racks ash., Ju to re: n. Lol nd, rines in ve recently completed tours of foreign service or | service, of the enlisted are due for d als will be made from Brig. | Logan Feland’s command, now duty in Nicaragua, At no time in the recent histor the corps has it been put to meet such problems a have required the | forwarding of such large expedition- forces as have been sent to Chin& and Nicaragua recently and | shoula other like sitiiations arise the “orps would be hard put at present to inm»z such calls for more expeditions. | Although Congress has heretofore au- thorized a maximum strength of 7.000 men, the appropriations have been cut to allow only the actual en- | listment of 20,500 men. An attempt is being made to have the commandant of the corps recom- mend to the Secretary of the Navy | that the ne « in_amendment to the effect " |that all Fleet R s, heretofore sferred to the retired list, or who be so transferred in the future, and will have ant_ officer’s retired pay that they have hgretofore or ed in a commissioned for us during the World ‘\\';n' xisting legislation covering respectively, or in the personnel, men harge, no with fes who draw will shall the lmm the retirements among personnel of the Army embraces this | feature, but the status of the Fleet Reservists have been included in the legislation heretofore { enacted by Congre: Manhattan College, rect a $400,000 chapel. The region of space that man fis ble to penetrate is a sphere 140,000,- 1000 light years in radiu ew York, will ANNOUNCEMENT of the great new Chrys- ler “62” a few weeks ago was a trumpet call that roused people all over America to a of Marine | years in the corps at various stations | to | ption of those officers | <t naval appropriation bill | been entitled to ! the enlisted | held not to be | e GreatAew The Chrysler “Red - Head” high- compression engine is the first en- gine offering the fullest advantages of extra speed, acceleration and hill- climbing ability inherentin modern high - compression gas. Standard eqm ment on roadsters and also able for all other body types of dunew"62" Forareasonablecharge it can be applied to “60”,“70" and Imperial “80” models now in use. 1095 101295 F. 0. B. DETROIT sense of its splendidly new and immensely " higher six-cylinder values. | Washington now has more tel phones than many entire countries, a cording to a report just issued by off cials of the telephone company. With | 139,000 telephonas. 28 for each 100 peo- | ple, this city has more phones than Brazil. Mexico, Spain, Poland, Peru | or Greece, the report say: Because of the time t from more distant countries given out by the company ased on figures of January I, 6. On that date the United State had more than half the phones of the | world, 1 918 out of 27,783.963. Eu- ope had 7,479.690 phones, or 27 pe |cent of the world's total. During the ear the number of telephones in the world increased by 6 per cent. The increase, 1. was more than the | total number of phones in the world {in 19600, In the United ¢ telephones tes there are 14.8 for every 100 population, n to secure | District Telephone Users Outnumber Subscribers in Many Foreign Countries as compared to 1.5 per aa h per 100 | New Zealand, 92 way, 6.3, and Australia, 6.1 Germany |ranks next to the United States in | the actual number of phones, having 2,588,016, but only 4.1 per 100 popula- | tion. In South 100 in Europ Denmark ar Sweden, 7.2; Nor America Argentina led in levelopment during the year, but th | development in South Americ: | only one-third of in_ Eurc | which in tu tenth t | the United States. The report of the t in the United States, v the de ligil At es are this way the mo: than ltwice as many as B Community Centers The openair concerts, which have proved a success this Summer in the stadium of the East Washington Com- munity Center, Seventeenth and E: Capitol streets, this weck with a concert by the Wash- ington Doys' Independent Band, J. L. | Kidwell, conduete Tue: ay evening. evening | dances have been discontinued ui October 1 because of the hi Registration for the new classes in swimming instruction will be held Tuesday at Central Community Cen- . ‘Thirteenth and Clifton _streets. These classes are for children in the afternoon and women and girls in the evening, and the class finishing thi | month has been one of the most popu- lar features of the Summer season. Following is the schedule of the regular activities going on at the Cen- tral and Dunbar High Centers Central. — Tennis every week from 5 p.m. until dark, except Satur- day, when the hours are from 1 p.m. until dark. General swimming for boy and girls under high school age every Tuesday to Friday, inclusive, from 2:10 to 3:30, and for women and girls of high school age on Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 8:30. Mixed swimming is on Tuesday and Thurs- day evenings at 9:30 and on Friday starting at 7:30 p.m. Class in Esper- anto, Tuesday evenings at 7:30; Na- tional -Capital rifle team, Tuesday at p.m.; Capital Athletic Girls, Tues- and Thursday, 6 pm.; track nts for boys of all ages, directed day b 5 1 are to be continued | day | by John Paul Collin | each week, 6 o'clock until d Dunbar High Community Center, rst and N streets: Swim - For 1 Tuesday, nesday and y 3 to 4 p.m.; for boys, Monday, day, Wednesday and Friday f p.m.: for women and girls, ening from 6 for F Mon: ng Thurs men and tnclusive, | Monday, | afternoons; to Friday, inc urday at 3 p.m j afternoon at 3 | every afternoon High Mark in Arnold Career One of the high spots in the ca of Benedict Arnold came at ond battle of Sarat Arnold de | spised Gen. Horatio ( and d | not hide his contempt. tes p him under arrest for insubordinatior and he was confined in a small room of a farmhouse behind the American lines in charge of a sentry. When the battle broke out Arnc scented the situation and evaded h guard, leaped upon a horse and led the attack that carrled the British en- trenchments. The field of Saratoga is well marked, and where Arnold pene. trated Burgoyne's trenches stands a gray granite monument. On it is carved a cavalryman's jackboot, with the spur broken off. The marker bears no comment and no name, but it points the high-water level of Arnold’s career. zarten ics, Mor 4:30 p.m, junior base ball, or the ates, So merica —~ Great new®62 astounds with quality and value never heretofore dreamed of in its field ability, luxury, comfort and safety far beyond the reach of any other Six in this price-class. Ridingand driving this greatnew 62", people are positively amazed at its unique combina- tion of so many ultra-modern features pre- viously found only in the Today the public is aware that Chrysler’s newest creation achieves new triumphs for Standardized Quality, resulting in a new kind and degreeofperformance, handlingease, road- Sensational Features Six cylinder motor— 7-bearing crankshaft— 62 and more miles an hour with exceptional smoothness—22 miles to the gallon—Invar-strut pistons—Qil Filter— Air Cleaner—Impulse neutralizer—Thermostatic heat radiator—Crankcase ventilation Engine mounted in rubber— Long, roomy bodies— Low-swung grace—Alluring tolms-—Mwmmun driving vision—Saddle-spring seat cushions—Fine mobair up- bolstering—Artistic mstmmmtpaml indirectly lighted —Light conml on steering wheel— Hydraulic ,-wbnl control—Cellular t; type brakes—Road levelizers fron: Great New Chrysler “62” All against theft of the Fedco t and rear, etc., etc. $1095; 2-door Sedan, $1145; seat}, $1175; Coupe {with rumble seat}, $1245; g¢-door Sedan, $1245; Landau Sedan, 3129;, f. 0. b. De- troit, mbpd to curvent Federal excise tax— CIn)Jler dealers are in a position to extend the convensence of time payments. Ask about Chrysler’s attractive plan— sler cars have the additional protection most expensive sixes. Come and inspectit, test t, see for yourselfhow completely the great new Chrysler “62” dom- inates by virtue of new quality and new value. of Quality and Value ] prices — Touring car, Roadster {with rumble System of numbering. H. B. LEARY, JR,, & BROS., Distributors xecutive O!fices and Service, 1612.22 You Street N.W. Salesrooms—1612-22 You St. N.W., Connecticut Ave. and Que St. N.-W. Branch Salesrooms, E. R. Keenan, Tenth and Eye Sts. N.W. Used Car Salesrooms, 1321-23 Fourteenth Street N.W. and 1612-22 You Street N.W. Wm. G. Meirs, 1014 H St. N. CHRYSLER D E L N UMBERS MEAN Skinker Motor Co., 1216 20th St. N.W. MiI LE S