Evening Star Newspaper, December 21, 1930, Page 100

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2 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, DECEMBER 21, 1930. - Sunday Morning Among the Cross-Words . ACROSS. 27. 1. Phrase used in 98 99. greeting. 100. 6. People in general. 101, 11. Joyful. 103. 16. Noel; abbr. 20. Agallocha wood. $1. Interpreter of the Talmud. . Member of a tribe of North Ameri- can Indians. Merit, Pack animals. God of the Phil- istines. Capsule. Cereal grass. Shepherd. Peals. Kind of tree. Thick. Kingdom in Asia. Pairs. Aeriform fluid. 104. 105. 106. 108. 110. 111. Pierce. Sheltered place. One of a Hamitio race. Comical, Kind of jacket. Pertaining to the 112. 114. 116. 119. 121. 125. 126. 127. 129. 130. nities. .Carnivor- ous worms. . Treasure. . Jewel weight. . Gaseous s u b- stance. . Spanish weight. . Substitute. . Distant. . Place in a row. . In harmony. . Curl. . Huge. . Flat - bottomed boat used on the Nile. . Aria, . Foot covering. . Cozy abudes. . To sing : with A small bed. Artless. Parents. Not many. Siamese coin. Sea of Russia. Drear. Brood of pheas- ants. Rods. L . Feminine adults. . Heron. . Musical instru- ment. . Build. .. . Obliterate. . Sinew. . Always. . Quiets. . Rigid. . Cornered; eoll, . Interpret. DOWN. . Deep sea fishing grounds of the Orkney Islands. 2. Otherwise. 3. Suffer defeat. 4. City in England. 5. Basis bone tissue. 6. Whim. 7. Persian poet. 8. Sound reasoning. 9. Father of Zeus. 10 11 12. Resount 3 23232827 S2EEsy srsssrspEEmEPEaR Eem K H 2 srspes . Crimson. goddess. . American os- triches. . To mind; poet. . Verily. . Closer. . One affected with a dreaded disease. 117. Worship. 118. Slabs of baked of Art and Artists of the park commission plan for the develop- ment of Washington, which he, in his official but so comprehensive a collection of her work has not been shown before. in the north room at the Mayflower from De- " eember 11 to 17, under the auspices of the Balzac Galleries, New York. Whatever Rodin’s influence may have been on contemporary , he was unquestion- York, has a number of Rodin’s works, = In Washington during the past week were @vn,zo.e\npwm_mmmvhubfih L bourg. Here, t00, was his striking “Cariatide au Vase” ¢ 122. An aromatic 123. Carried. riod. 181. Moist. — — Continued From Twenty-First Page Some of these bronges were little larger than a man’s hand, others almost life size, but they all had the unmistakable stamp of the master’s genius. WIL[B)LSAWYIR, formerly a member of the Society of Washington Artists and the Washington Water Color Club, but for some the time for the last five years in Spain, Mr. Sawyer painting there and in Madrid. His exhibition at the National was lfl'!oflsndefllm very favorably we- 7 he Sixteenth Christmas. By Joseph Auslander. The first December in the trenches! - That ghastly business of men and mud! The red sleet, the unspeakable stenches Of death, decay and recent blood! The screaming shell that wrecks and wrenches, The soft-nosed bullet, the sullen thud! That first grim Christmas m a world Blowing stself to a crimson hell . . . And now that the last shell has been hurled, So many Christmases after that shell, . What promise sleeps in the flags we furled? What hope ss hushed in the Christmas bell? Peace! Peace! we shout and shun our mesghbors! Good will! we cry—and distrust our friends! We purchase trinkets—and polish our sabers! We talk fraternity—there it ends! We have debts to collecti—reward for our labors! Christmas is here—and the whole world spends! O tragic bargain in blood and treasure! O horrible cost in the debris of dreams! (Hearts grow empty and gray past measure) But Christmas is here—and the. eagle screams! . Christmas ss here with gewgaws and pleasure! And yesterday’s nightmare is nothing, it seems! The tongue of the Pentecost drowns in our babel; The drama of that first December is sealed: Eternal Cain traps eternal Abel, W hile treaties are signed and ireaties repealed o o e " dnd still there is light in a Iittle stable . L B ot , And room for the whole earth to be healed. = &% L SO, g Wy friendly. Though and still belongs to, the old circle. Tnzsoam,ot'uhm.tonmumnwnm its fortieth annual exhibition of oil painte ings and sculpture, to be held at the National Gallery of Art, New National Museum, Tenth and B streets northwest, from February 1 to March 1, 1931. Entry cards and circulars may be obtained from Joseph C. Claghorn, secretary, Cabin John, Md. A i New Feeding Methods. THE drought conditions and .thg'n“fl surplus of wheat this year have tended.to revolutionize farm live stock feeding methods, In poultry yards, for instance, the grester’ paf tion of the feeding formerly was based on 6ofn because of its cheaper price, with wheat added as long as it was practical to stimulate egg production. Now, however, with corn prices high and the , crop somewhat shorter, farmers are finding it cheaper to feed wheat, - The Department of Agriculture, in an en- deavor to obtain information on feeding pro- grams, and just what might be expected in>the way of employment of the huge stocks of wheat, sent out 190,000 questionnaires to farmers and " 63,000 more to poultry raisers, elevator opera- tors and commercial feed mdhufacturers. or 10,000,000 tons, below last year, with the hay crop 13 per cent, or 15,000, tons, ’ The replies to the questionnaires indica intention of farmers and others 000,000 - bushels -of ‘wheat, weighing mately 4,000,000 tons, in feeding

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