ENGLISH SUFFRAGETTE HITS AMERICAN SUFFRAGISTS. ^Poe.^B
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
* ' **'" %, f ?¦ . \ terial prosperity that has followed his wise British male, fatuously pitying the "poor Henriques. The question of his canonisa¬ pose of emphasising light, but he has landling and effective treatment. The BOOK REVIEWS. system of Internal development, the finan¬ little woman-how she loves me." the Work of an American tion never even reached the Congrega¬ proved beyond question the enduring-vir¬ >ose and coloring are unusually pictur¬ cial soundness resulting from the honesty woman dreading: the curbing: of her lib¬ tion of Rites, which Is the first step. tue of honest work and true Interpreta¬ esque and even though incomplete the of his dealings with other nations, the ra¬ erty. The story is not a pleasant one. The Knights of Columbus will have to tion. Painting more often what he saw irork is full of Interest. BOHEMIA IN LOTOON. By Arthur cial characteristics of the inhabitants nor are the men Crowned by French Academy, fouls of and women worth re-j wait a long time for their saint." Mian felt he has manifested anew the * Ransome, author of "The manners and social customs, facilities oi membertng. There is some vividness in Mr. Vignaud*s studies of fact that nothing Is commonplace, and * * 'the Streets." etc. With Illustrations hotel accommodations, the of Special Correspondence of The Star." Columbus New York: Dodd. transportation. presentation the seamy side of and his estimate of the character of the shown patently that art Is not a negative An effort is being made to incorporate hy Fred Taylor. game, pleasure resorts, engineering enter- lif.\ and' some realism in the a 1908. man are all the more be¬ Mead & Co. Washington: Bren- conditions study of PARIS. January 1. Interesting quantity. the Arts and Crafts School, which waa prises, mineral resources, the woman who is undeniably one of a type. cause of the fact that It was a feeling ¦ * tano's. in the various the topics Bui not even the VIGNAUD, the venerable of started this fall under the direction of provinces.all somewhat idyllic figure first profound admiration for the discov¬ * ? Surely a gallant adventurer and keen- that the historian, geographlst, possible of young: Ashley can prevent the book secretary of the United States erer of America, based upon what he had Thirteen portraits, chiefly of women, Mrs. Anna B. Slosne. in order that it Investor, or mere traveler would desire to from a HENRY at now to eyed. this latest one. who has Journeyed leaving: bad taste in the mouth. embassy Paris, is putting up that time read about him, that Mr. Emll Fuchs were nay enlarge its scope and usefulness. know are comprised in the two volumes the touches to the led him to take up the subject. painted by placed to the coasts of Bohemia, has sojourned The is an SUSAN finishing second series on exhibition in the lower 1°*° Opened only three months ago. this that compose the book. result fLECG AND A MAN IN THE of his monumental Stud¬ today there his day. and has returned to tell Illuminating one to the reader who has HOUSE. By Anne Warner. Author work. "Critical room at the Corcoran Gallery. Mr. Fuchs ichool has a fair enrollment of pupils of this ies of the Life of ind has awakened enouah outside the rest of the world what it is like. been content with half-knowledge of "Susan Clegg and Her Friend, Columbus." His first Is a Viennese birth, but for the past inter- of the I nlted States. Mrs. etc. series has been ART NOTES. by sat to vindicate ita establishment. It is Whether he tells of his own youthiui important neighbor Lathrop," Illustrated from Just "crowned" by the ten or twelve he has made his hoai* The publication is a handsome one. the drawing's by Alice Barber This is the years not a private enterprise, but a work of companions or of the great vanished ones and It is Stephens- academy. highest form of A In London. He first gave his attention large potentiality and should meet with Chelsea, a illustrations many interesting. Boston: Little, Brown & Co. special exhibition of paintings by Mr. who have found a garret in In all an volume and appreciation that France can bestow, and won some distinction as liberal support. a dinner In a respects important In Susan Edmund C. Tarbell of Boston was to sculpture and publisher in Fleet street, written in a and Clegg's latest adventures her no other recognition elsewhere is held in opened * a breath of fuller graphic sympathetic In the of Art Wednes¬ a medalHst and maker of small placques. Soho restaurant and manner. trials with a boarder, young Elijah Doxey, such esteem, as the men who confer Corcqran, Gallery * ? air at the author is equallj high and will' 29th of The medal of the Amerlcan-Hlspanlo So¬ Hampstcad. are narrated. "Elijah." says Susan, "is it are ail savants of the order. day continue until the Pictures Intended for the twelfth snnual alive to the significance of the life and LETITIA» Corps. U.13.A. By specialist This consists ciety he designed and modeled. There is Nursery so smart that he'll be offered a It is a January. exhibition aof exhibition of the Washington Water Color ablo to make it live again for his read- George Madden Martin, author of place distinction rarely given to foreign¬ the little in Mr. Fuchs' paintings, however, crs. The Mc- 0:1 one of the biggest city in a ers, and Mr. thirty-one pictures painted during Club must be delivered at the New York . , "Eminy Lou." New York: papers Vignaud is the first Ameri¬ a book that would past years, which have been to suggest familiarity with sculptural "I wanted to write Clure Company. Washington. little while, but in the meantime he's can to receive it. eighteen of avenue entrance of the Corcoran Oalley make real on the strange, tense, loaned by Institutions and methods.no great show of strength paper Woodward & Lothrop. ju*t lost the place that he did have on During the thirty-two years that he has public private next Wednesday between the hours of 9 joyful and despairing, hopeful and sordid collectors, and is set forth in the first manifest directness. If anything they m. snd 4 m. art¬ In the six stories that exploit the vari¬ on*? of the smallest." Elijah's original resided in Paris Mr. has devoted a. p. The exhibition will open life that is lived in London by young Vignaud room to the right of the staircase leading are over-smooth and superficial. They Co the public on January 23. a prlvaate the author. "'1 ous adventures and reflections of Letitia. ideas on running a a all his leisure ists and writers." says hey village newspaper, time to historical studies, from the hall to are, to be sure, well drawn ana view being given on the previous evening. are conscious of the larger life of the the life in and the characteris¬ visit Susan sculpture the picture gal¬ fairly army posts >by Clcgg to the club woman's and for the most part with reference to leries. Mr. Tarbell is ranked the but not vital. IjEIX+A. MECHLIN. town, of the struggling millions earning tics of the various species of mammas, biennial, her views on the democratic and Columbus. In hunting up Information among skillfully colored.pictorial." their weekly wages, of the thousands ot about foremost American ngure and In The most- pleasing of all is undoubtedly the real virtues of "strikers," and the republican parties, a disastrous celebra¬ him from all sorts of musty records painters the abyss who earn no wages and drift and he has displayed Infinite pains and pa¬ this particular field he has made large the one of Miss Marjorle Gould, whlcn from shelter to shelter till they die; they subtleties in the relations of Coma, tion of Independence day, are amont the THE PUBLIC LIBRARY an tience. He verifies everything. His first contribution. Born at West Groton, has a certain simplicity and charm which Letitia is chief in the ¦ know that there is a mysterious East non-coms, are included. happenings book. These series, as is generally known, showed that Girl" full of crowded, ill-conditioned life; attractive and earnest little events are all duly narrated, in Susan's the Mass., in 1962 he early displayed artistic cannot escape attention. "A Little End. real Columbus bore little resemblance ' they know that there is a West End. ot experiences in life are of a somew hat^tan-tan characteristic style, to her patient neigh¬ to the heroic figure of legend and tradl- proclivities. After receiving a common likewise shows nice reeling In handling, NEW BOOKS IK LITERATURE, a more elaborate exist¬ nature, to the fact that her bor. Mrs. The book is full of In the line houses and gled owing not I^athrop. t on who has been enshrined for centu¬ schodl education he served an apprentice¬ and one or two others exhibit ence! have a confused knowledge ot lovely mamma and Lieut. Papa are the quiet, unforced humor which the pub¬ ries in the THE DRAMA AND they of has to popular imagination. In fact, ship to a company, of lithographers and treatment of textures, the arrangement POETRY, the whole, but only a part becomes alive completely ideal in the role parents, lic grown expect when Anne War¬ he has to be a deal of a technical two ''Com and ner and Susan proved good then began the study Of art In all earnest of draperies, facility.