"t;alies" an art of acti g that was I1C X1UiIovel, n.CIUYUfor the book is a prose narra- genune..Sheas suprb carac ofgraphic arts in the north galleries tive o elbat ihcaatr cbracon the first floor of the Art intit- o elbat ihcaatr genuie.Sh Shewasa was suprbalso a writer , o ahndhaction out of real life portrayed Cauds p Stationery ter woman. of geniuine ability, and had many motim cratbo. ceboksfrthefor in a plot. It niay properly be called . bocks and short staries to hr etiprat hereic ok r a *yoiing" novel because ail the ac- SERVICEin. loaned by the New- tion of the story occurs in, the year the Eook% Yom fBey credit. Her husband. Walter Hale,,,on exhibition, th. ýBOOk§ Yom Kent who died ini 1917, was a most gifted: berry library of.Chicago and Lessing ýHepatica, Hawks, itsý heroine, is fii- Seoéhù Statlonery amd'Party Cards artist, andînade~ illustrations. for, bis oewl fPiaepi.teen. It will be iked by youing ,people 724 Oruingfon A%;e.- Gi.. 0227 wife's books.- Husband and wife had Block' books were printed from aând many older on es as. weil. Omntnton Hotol dg.. Evanston a great deal of fun taking jaunts to- blocks -of wood uponl which both. the, Hepaia'wswstebgduh

-gether through New. England or Vir- ilsrto n.t~twr cut by ter of Hallelujah Hawks, the giant ginia and writing and drawing their band. They made their appearance in Joshuaý Polloc-k's Xorld Famous ,impressions of the counitryside. in the Netherlands. and lower, Rhine IFreaks: and Fandangos-*'You could-ý Mrs. -Hale had given a niagnificent district aftier the Middle ai the fif- n't éfind a more decent: first-class 'set perormnceof hegradmoherinteentb Century simultaneou sly wt of freaks anywhere," Joshua boasted Zona iGale's "Miss -Lulu Bett." Just the early books printed from metal ion ail occasions. "Nor a kin der set HýTH-EFARM" recently,,and just prior. to lier 4eath type. ofSanJo." j people," Jashua P .oll ck might seappeared in._ a film- with Kay The "Apocalypse ofSitJh,.lhave added. racsand Walter' Huston-au old pobabiy the eariiest of these block1 W he the story pn i r n By Louis .BromIbeId lady part as usual,. the type of part books, was done .in Germany about1 terested. in their celebration of Hepa- for wbich Hollywood used her. In 1470. It is the history af Saint John' tica's .birthday. Hepatica herseif isî "Letty Lynton" with , the Evangelist and bis apocalyptic moved b.y a cherry tree in blossom, T'he aufhor of The Green Mrs. Hale gave one of her best per- vision tdinpcuewihbri ex- the spring, and ail the exnotionai ex- ByTre formances, as she did with Mrineplainatory text* ,Before printing be-i perience*of a sensitive girl of filteen. Dietrich in "Shanghai Express. camne general, few cauid read and who is, living on the outskîrts oi Gyracious, interesting. aàmusing.'ai- books were likecire'ilutte normal.lf ihatruei hc wavs intenseiy alive, NMrs. Haie was books of today. she -has grow n'up, but where ie is, one oi the %world's finest! ôAceoransg'Bible hecomi>ng.* impossible to lier. She can't $2-50 to \VWilliam Rose Benet of the 'Sat- The Bbi Pauperuni" or Poor bear anyv longer ta be a spectacle. urday Re.view." a' il.isapcuebo of the and she longs for a 'friend w\ho kj" lMea'iblhrisawict rpecbsoor pe.fot a f reak, lofi Crs wt r. ce o r- She hag her .wish «when Tony fgurations trom the Oid Testament. Quinn. ýa b right boy of. about her CEIANDLEIR'S Read Own Poems at Thougli called the Poor 'Man's Bible Century of rriess it is perhaps rnuch more likelv that> vn. age but a rascal, joins. the Foumiain Square Evanson troupe. And when liheleeshi Mis HrretMoro.w1-non it is ictures, texts. and reter- ' riendship has served oni ta remind editor af Poetry magazine and a dis- ences, it served as a reminder and eptcHhtteesest en -tinguîshed poet herself, read some otf.furnxshed suggestions for sermons pac forherintheevsery-dav orld.n her own poe.try at a prograni giVen for the "Poor Preacher" than that itplacetingrthîrnhaptthe t-a%'roup. in the auditoriumi of ýthe Illinois Hast %vas intended, for the poor lavrnan Hepatîca continues to use her iovely building at -A Century oi, Progres's who was unable to read and t0oopoor singing voice behind the scenes 'toa Aýugust Il.:MI'ss M\o-nroe read ber ta buv such a book. hl iai rp nbrat n poem~oumbin '*Te Od~" wich The *'Ars M.\oriendi" or "Art af th at leads ta tonetrno1h she wrote at the time oi the Worid's :Dying,'- was one oi the most popu" ?oad where flepatica finds after al Columbian exposition, and read be-1ar and widely distributed ai thet early a place in the worid really big enough t ore an audienceai over 100,000 per- block books. One ai the 'chief mis- ftor ler. sons. during the dedicatory cere- sions of the éarlv churcli was to These are the, bare outiines f manies af the building for mani- teach men how ta die. Froni this'i- tr hic'h hasaseildic ufacturers and liberai arts. The toriai presentation ai lessons in spir- and lovelîness.Agodtryiitef lyric pssges,.%%ere set ta music by itual fortitude ta ,resist temptation. ý for grown-ups, it might stan d also as' Georgé W Chadwick ai, Boston and mani might learti how to die without à:sj.mbol aio those yer -hen 't he sung by a chorus a .0 ocs instructions from tepretveirtoarut-o sciul rnt reaches out alter. beauty; is fhe in the sme orPu Eger The -'Hand Wjth the Mirror ai hispom,'Aeria emebesSalvation" the earliest block book with vearnings; is troubled bv mi- whchwote 10 piz ofeedbywoodcut bearing an .engraved date: agined, if not real, oddity. and has t FmidgyClnbeaiThicaomthrough-"factum anno 1466;" only three cap- littie or no peace. "Hepatica Havks" Poery agzin.hispocu aS e-ies oai which are known. is also an has na trace of a morbid quality, is lected as being the most interpreta- ve..ie rn snietit.ad is

the young city had a -population af tuUe," continues ta hide away%from RICESTFAMLY N U S. les than eight tbousand, agile pigs i dirr hs upstate (New Accordiitg tô Harvey O'Connor's had jugt been banisbed from- the York) fan. new book, "MeIlon's Millions," the streets as "a menace to lufe and 11mb," I Mellons are now the ricbest faznily and roai and board -in a first-class, LONG NOVEL in,3America, with a private fortune of botel could be had for seventy-A-ve, MVargaret Ayer Barnes' new bock. ES about $25S00,O,OOO. centsa.day. will be 200,000 words long.