Show SUNDAY MORNING OCTOBER 21 MM Nation Meek To Stand For Crew rip-roari- ng anger that strikes terror to economic bunglers Anger that eases things for the great down trodden majority! New York's meekness is shown in subway Jams the complacency with which it accepts insults' from box office snips head-waite- rs and officious policemen Methpds at the movie house reveal how New Yorkers will suffer "themselves to be pushed about herded' behind tape and otherwise bullied STEWING IN JUICE No other nation I believe would stand for Huey Long's tergiversations Personally as things are I am now in favor of the citizens of 'Louisiana stewing in their own juice ' They saw fit to elect this blatant showoff to governorship and then to the United States senate All of which" is perfect example of the theory that citizens of a given poli tical unit get the quality of govern ment they deserve Until they arise and throw Long out there is a waste of sympathy for the state itself although one feels a twinge for: its people And there is the state &f Iowa keeping Smith W Brookhart in the United States senate That such clowns as- Long and Brookhart should occupy seats in our senate is a burning disgrace to American in - f tegrity child-lik- r sank The wreck of the Halsewell a tall East Indiaman on the Dorset coast of England on January 6 1766 is an instance of a right good captain who couldn't control the crew in a grave emergency' But' the captain knew his job so well that he carried on and saw to it that everyone was saved who could be saved in the circumstances He perished with his ship in the stern tradition of the days of sail HIS LAST VOYAGE : ill-fat- ed weak- faith e A - -- It is one of the American nesses to seek in THE captain The Halsewell was a shin of 758 tons burden and had been long in service She 'was commanded by Captain Richard Pierce who brought with him on this voyage from England to India his two young daughters and two nieces This was to be Captain Pierce's last voyage as he was to be retired for age upon his return to England and he hoped to make something of a gala affair of it by entertaining the young women on their first long voyage" i he Halsewell carried a valuable cargo and a consignment of soldiers being sent out to India for service She left Gravesend on New Year's day 1786 The passangers began getting settled for the lone vov- age but were no sooner ready for bed on the first night out than they were threatened with disaster A dead calm set in and clouds of evil portent began to aarsen tne norizonr Next day the ship proceeded through a snowstorm and high wind and that nieht she dropped anchor because she could not longer feel her way through the snow and darkness During the night the wind changed and began blowine a full gale toward the land and the Halsewell cut her anchor cables and made for the open sea 1 quicK-aciin- g j nostrum " wild-eye- 1 -- -- r- -- - j - r and say so Bunyon And Pilgri Honolulu will be the btesrest vara tion competitor of California and Florida this winter Publicity plus wura oi moutn advertising has done much for the Pacific paradise And did anyone ever think up calling the uussy nuia giris Honolulus? OOME books and some authors a man must know — uonn uunyan and his "Pilgrim's Progress" are Finest literature so often flowers among them Progress" was writteli by as m great anguish Oscar Wilde's "De humble a man "Pilgrim's as could have been found in all EngProfundis the greatest thing he land 300 years ago according to his own report of ever wrote came from his prison himself uavau tteune s meatiest philosophy Because of the author's obscurity and the was acrawied on a straw pallet of simplicity of his book its printer at first jxun wnen nis sight was just a published it only in cheap paper edition thinking- it meter Ana there's Milton's "Para- would be thought by those almost illiterate "the dise' Lost and essays the tubercular-wracke- d meanest sort only" Stevenson wrote in the a good copy of one of those penny editions South Seas Just recently Heywood of Today "Pilgrim's Progress" could not be bought for a xsroun pounaea out what many think thousand dollars U his supreme essay to catch an John Bunyan one of the most influential writers eaiuon a few hours after Ruth Hale that England has produced described himself thus: ni jormer wife and best friend "I was of a low and inconsiderable generation my pssea away father's house being of that rank that is meanest and most despised of all families For the catchiest mystery book I never went to school to Aristotle or Plato but was ww ex me season: "A Girl Died uiuugni up m my lainers nouse in a verv mpan ijRugningi" cuuuiuoa among a company oi poor countrymen weveruieiess x Diess uoa door He New York has seven nrnfptcinrio' Drougni me mio tne world tothat by this of PTrth partake tilt walkers who on stilts often ten xxxe mai is oy ' in Ills jurist Gospel feet nigh walk around with banners xTouae in nis me of Bunyan savs: or other For "This is the account given of himspif and n10 advertising so hazardoussomething a calling they are paid origin oy a man wnose writings have for two cenlittle The biggest wage is $8 for turies affected the spiritual opinions of thp Trnaiiev TT °aouz Gay an4 ranges down to race in every part of the world more powerfully than oi one nas ever met with seri any uuua or booss except tne Bible ous accident A man and a book of which this can ho eoir iViax CrOrdOn the hpnfol should be known to every intelligent child little East Side producer rrinmnh The deeply religious and moral teachings nf again by taking over the smaller of v6iwa nuuiu uuu iiuiuence moaern me i wo Kociceieller Center theatres as they influenced the g world ana presenting "The Great Waltz" in the days of Cromwell and afterwards It received a critical rave and a run The style of Bunyan's writings 'the seems assured Gordon was once a mixture simple of fanaticism faith in pod and fear strange of hell small-tim- e impresario with an office present a picture of other davs and other unoer nis nat His education was easily understood in this "sophisticated" age limited to a few Grammar erode xsunyans enlightens especially but he knows the theatre has an those that wonder whether man hats "a soui" mn- uncanny eye for beauty and ear for cealed about his material personality or is merely "the gcxn music product of evolution" on its way from the single-celle- d creature born in the ocean up through of omce jimmy Walker went- into vertebrates and "primates" and on to we know not exne Niamey sackett a hotel man- whatager is reputed to have the biggest Individual wardrobe in Manhattan "Pilgrim's Progress" tellinsr of the lournev rif Pun A feature writer credits him with yans hero Christian on his way "from the City of 11 evening suits and three to Mount Zion" is the outgrowth of Buncutaways Destruction outness suits and 10 overcoats yan s self -- accusations his wrestling with what he George Jean Nathan has 40 over believed to be his most wicked nature coats and Leo Reisman orchestra It iS a Step from Our dav nf thA wnrld nvoc leader changes his clothes six times everybody long a riving" our' period of indifference to a aay u nis press agent is to be religion and actual battle against religion to the day Aiu we &uuw now press when Bunyan could say of himself : sincerely agents are I offeDa the Lord that even in my vniy He didso scare and affright me with fearPolice dog owners simply will not ful dreams and me with drdfni obey the muzzling law On Central I have been in my bed greatly afflicted while asleep Park West and Riverside Drive - I J1 apprehensions of devils and wicked who ' counted more than a dozen roamtrien thought labored to drawspirits me f3 7t! away ing at large during a short drive with them-o- f whicri I could never I was afl Police dog owners reply to protest fliCted With thoughts Of the Dav nf Tudompnf rbhr that their charges are under perfect and day trembling at the thoughts of the fearful control imo ponce dog is under per-- J orments oi neii-rirfeet control They are killers of smaller and weaker animals—I've Bunyan was certain at one time that h had seen this with my own eyes— and I committed the could never be unpardonable sin — have records of more than 80 at- forgiven certain that hell was and him all yawninsr tacks for no reason at all on hu- seemed anxiously waiting Again he had aformad rrav- man beings by these savage crea- ing to commit sin life in Early tures in the United States 'during he abandoned every form of for soul's his pleasure the year 1933 salvation - - aj-i- u ouo civili-Eati- English-speakin- "soui-searchin- g" v the-lin- - - " did-terri- fv - be-ri-d e" I 1 that-unpardona- ble e on o'clock on the morning of January 6 she struck with such force that nearly everybody who was standing was thrown down and many were injured by being knocked against walls or decks f DICING WITH FATE j For some reason Captain Pierce had lost control of most of his" seamen when he had lost control of the ship These mutineers had refused duty at the pumps and had gone below to shake dice while the soldiers took their places When the ship struck these young men suddenly realized that they had been dicing with Fate and they rushed upon the deck asking excitedly what they could do The captain made no answer He called his passengers and officers into the round house and there injected what calm he could muster while waiting for daybreak The hulk eased off trig rock and came crashing back broadside on She then settled down on the rocksi a total wreck and began to gQ to pieces The scene of the wreck was about as desolate and forbidding as could have been found upon the whole coast of England The wreck lay at the bottom of a great steep cliff which was the Island of Purbeck on the Dorset coast not far from St Alban's Head It is a peculiarly inaccessible point and the situation was made worse by the circumstance that a' great cavern had been hollowed out by the battering of waves through the ages "exactly opposite the rock upon which the Halsewell had broken herself to bits JUMP OVERBOARD cavern This immediately' becomes an isnDortant factor in this tale of disaster It was the only opening in the steep wall of limestone fronting the scene of disaster and many of the sailors who jumped overboard swam or were carried by the waves into it Many of the men in the cavern became exhausted during trie cold houfrs before dawn and slipped from their narrow ledges into the boiling waves below Those who remained realized that early in the morning the tide would turn and the rising water in the cave must sweep most of them from the walls But ouside the cave even if it could be reached was only the blank wall of the cliff and the roaring sea ' ISLANDERS AROUSED Three men offered to try to find a way out They crawled along the narrow ledges until ithey found one about three inches wide that turned the corner to the outside Along this they crawled and found themselves on the side of a sheer wall' facing the sea: two hundred feet high The quartermaster and the cook undertook to scale this wall and succeeded although it looked an impossible feat They aroused the inhabitants of the island and a stout rope was brought to the cliff Meriton the mate was near the top of the cliff but t paralyzed as to his fingers and toes- from exhaustion and cold when the rescue party threw a rope over to him and succeeded in pulling him to safety Ropes were let down to 'those who had come out of the cave and were clinging to the rocks below and some were pulled up while others slipped and fell into the sea while trying to grasp the ropes -f SEVENTY SAVED y y Y Later in the day rescuers were let down in loops and tied ropes about those who were able to round the corner of the cave on the narrow ledge and these men were mostly saved Finally someone devised a method of swinging the ends of the ropes inside the cavern where they might be grasped by those who were unable to get around the dangerous corner Thus the work went on all day and ' thus- the seventy t were saved Considering the desperate situation of the Halsewell when she struck it seems a miracle that any lives were saved But when men of the sea are placed in desperate situations they are apt to make every possible effort' to save themselves They vdo not give up easily in the face of superhuman oddsi (Copyright 1934 Charles B Driscoll) - t - 9 H - By jT rbgress S -- - rt ' calm set In the ship caused her to roll and labor so violently as a that the foretopmast was broken off and came crashpanacea for our troubles One of ing down upon the deck carrying most of t'e fore my earliest recollections was of sail with it This left the ship almost helpless in grandfather discussing the greentne trougn or tne sea back movement with General as candidate for President Weaver " By midnight the storm' had died down and tl)e Then came Populism with such wind had changed The weather was now clear arid ' d as SERIOUS LEAK SPRUNG Sockless experimenters favorable although the seas were running high The Next day the wind rose and blew directlv toward Jerry Simpson at the helm and this English coast was easily visible to the northeast was followed by Bryan's free silver the English coast and the vessei began drifting toPierce ordered Captain ward mainmast stepped in abortive land the and being somewhat unmanageable The cause diocy known as t for this state of affairs was found to be water in the place of the one that had gone by the board and p roniDition He announced that he Where is there the remotest rea hold The Halsewell had sprung a serious leak The had a new foresail bent would make for Portsmouth for repairs and the son for claiming that we did not lose soldiers were called to heln at the numns and thVfiv everything and gain nothing after 13 feet of water that flooded the ship in the morning worst that might be expected would be a week's delay years of pulling and hauling? The was somewnat reduced during the day The pasBATTERED BY STORM net result is a degree of lawlessness sengers including seven women" were aware tnat All next day the crew worked at the business of unprecedented by any other civil- me vessel was in danger of founderine or runnine repairing and pumping and by the ship was evening ization in the history of the world upon a rocky coast and took the situation calmly On the "inorning of the fourth of Jannarv thP ready to make tome little speed for the harbor of And yet we blunder blithely on I refuge But just then the weather became foul again high rocky shore loomed ahead and Captain Pierce and the crippled ship was battered by a new storm iThere is scant sympathy' for the tried to wear ship that is turn her about so as to Captain Pierce bent all his energies to keeping her run for the open sea The vessel did not answer hpr off the coast of producers that dramatic jquawk where the lights of the town of Portland "critics on important papers are can helm- The water was eainine on the numns and were seen before the snow shut out the sight He ning all their plays Not more than now showed seven feet in the hold Captain Pierce hoped to make Studland bay for shelter even in the mizzen-matwo or three premieres hate received ordered the st cut away but even after height of the storm 100 per cent praise Nothing else so getting rid of this weight the vessel drifted steadily But the Halsewell steered -crazily She was alestablishes th critical honesty )f toward shore and refused to obey her helm most out of control and no wonder for she was leakthe majority of men who review the MAINMAST FALLS the ing and badly again of masts arid arrangement The mainmast was cut awav next and as it- saus was plays Their jobs and professional iar irom her normal equipment '! careers depend upon the survival of crashed with all its tophamper five men were When the caught weather moderated near midagain l the theatre 'during a most difficult in the rigging and carried overboard to death night the towering cliff of St Alban's That night the water In th hnid 'appeared year They would eagerly no doubt a mile and a half to leeward ThereHead was no seize the slightest shimmer of light downto five feet again by heroic work at the pumps now to attempt to wear ship An anchor was time dropalong the theatrical horizon for a and the ship was brought about into the wind But ped then a sheet anchor was rainbow of huzzahs But being ne water in the hold and the unbalanced rigging of continued to drive toward theput out 'Still the ship i magnificently honest rocky shore At two they cant see tt some Who's Nuts On B C Driscoll by Some found refuge upon the narrow shelves of rock around the interior of the cave and congratulated themselves upon their apparent luck But these ledges of rock were very! narrow and uncomfortable perches for half -- exhausted men Those who perched upon them had to cling with their fingers to the ledges or irregularities in the cavern wall and roof above or below them and were obliged to maintain awkward stooping postures for hours without food or drink Of course there was no possibility of attracting the attention of anyont who might be abroad on the hillsides far above The wreck itself was so close to the cliff that persons passing above would not be able to see it since the cliff overhung the water and the wreck FIRST MATE JOLLY Meriton the first mate' was the jolly spirit of the round house party Toward morning he found the captain sitting dejectedly on a cot with a daughter on each side of him and the other women sitting about him on the floor One of the ladies was enjoying a violent fit of hysteria on the floor and nobody was paying any attention to her Meriton brought a basket of oranges for the ladies and spoke bravely of waiting until dawn to devise means of getting everybody ashore But the hysterical woman annoyed him so much that he went out of the round house and jumped into the surf He was carried into the cave and dashed against the wall A survivor who had a footing several feet above "the waves lent a hand and pulled Meriton to He wasn't exactly comfortable immediate safety but nobody was having hysterics except the sea and Meriton was used to that He was fairly content up near the roof of the resounding cavern WOMEN DROWNED Before daylight a heavy wave broke clear over the wreck and washed the round house and all its The women were all drowned occupants overboard almost instantly as was Captain Pierce i Some of the officers jumped overboard when they saw the great wave coming and two of them landed on a high rock at the entrance to the cave Twenty-seve- n men were clinging to this rock All made an effort to gain the comparative safety of the cave but only six? including two officers succeeded The others were drowned - a ed ' of a ship is usually a responsible sort of person or he wouldn't be captain He does not always "command a right jood crew" as did the famous Captain of the Pinafore- It is the job of the captain to get along with such seamen as his owners will permit him to employ and owners were never very anxious to spend money on pay for crew The consequence has often been disastrous when an emergency has arisen There is little doubt in my mind that the Morro Castle affair would havehad a different complexion if the captain of the ship had not died just before the fire broke out FIRST MATE RATTLED The first mate who took command upon the death of his chief was to say the least rattled He had been without sleep for 36 hours before the outbreak of the fire according to some stories and certainly had been stunned by the captain's sudden death He apparently didn't know whether he was on a camel or a horse when he faced the final tragedy of the fire And the crew took to the boats leaving the passengers to sink or swim All too many of them ' O BITNTYEE By America in general and New York la particular has lost capacity for indignation That is the blood-shot-ey- 11 Captain Jumps in Ocean When Woman Gets Hysterical State Stewing In Its Own Juice Declares Mclntyre 4 - -"- Huey Belief & Wild Ylfkffl- Storm- Wrecks Shin - - - G r5thJh I115 is 34 Arthur Brisbane Games? Rogers Will Ask 'Diz" Will Talks To BotH Ball Players About Kicks " At Third Base By WILL ROGERS Well all I know is just what I? read In the papers' or what I see here- - and there I have found out this in the last couple of weeks there is nothing in the world that people listen to I mean as many people as the World Series A football game is mostly sectional and there is generally twenty big ones on in one afternoon but the old World Series only comes once a year and there is nothing to interfere with it Knowing that I attended most of the games Thats all I have been asked since the thing was over "Say tell us about that riot in the last game" "Is Diz really as hot as they say he is?" "Did Joe Brown shake hands with one of those big pitchers and squeeze it so hard the guys hands were -- crushed?" "What made Frankie Frisch put Dean in as a runner for anyhow? He is a pitcher" And these go on for hours YOU THATjS "NUTS?" Well it ' is a lot different to be there and see it and then just hear it But it is surprising not only surprising but absolutely amazing how different people see different plays and hear em describe em afterwards Well maby its you thats "nuts" and not them but anyhow one of you are out of step Now for instance take the famous play where the kicking and attempted spiking was done Now I sit right over about half way between home plate and third base in MrnEdsel and Henry Ford's" box and from where we sit we certainly had that particular play right in our lap Now here is a peculiar thing and I havent heard anybody else say it I don't think there was a play made there with the ball at all The throw was cut off by the second baseman or shortstop It was a three base hit and Medwick had his head down and naturally was expecting the throw to be made so he dived into the bag feet first as Now Owen was right there was to he take 'the going though throw but knew it wasent coming Now I would like to hear from that Was I trying to tell Mr Ford how to run his business when this play come up or am I right? I say the ball dident come to third base at all that the coacher at triirdT could have told him heneedent slide and that Owen in that case dident have to try to block his path In that case th3re - would have been no trouble at all But Owen still held the Une and Medwick dived into him and they both went downthey molayed piled up for just-ment and then is when Medwick suddenly "made a quick kick kin der up and out at him but with no chance of reaching him It looked" like a kind of a quick afterthought with no idea of really kick ing him a TALKED TO BOTH I talked with both of em in their dressing rooms right after and Medwick said he really dident mean anything and he dont know why he really did it and that he offered to shake hands when they got up I do know he felt terribly bad about it Owen was very nice in his explanation of it He said he fell across him reaching for the ball Well then there must have been there- and he ought to know B ut by golly I just dident see the ball come ' clear to him I got to ask old "Diz" about that He knows everything Well its all over and I enjoyed' every minute of it In my early ' t vaudeville days I used to get out and see a lot of ball games or see ( ii seekin? t ?hristiai1 Journey describes etrnal salvation on life's difficult sold widely in Scotland all over England and in innumerable monsters and evil be- - many foreign lands mgs besieging the virtuous "seeker" Bunyan's characters include besides Christian Christian's wife and And when Bunyan died and was buried innum children giants and their wives men and women erable Protestants full of contempt for Catholic ven bearing names revealing their characteristics moral eration Of the bodies of saints requested with their character or the lack of it: "Mr Pliable Mr Obstidying breath that they might be buried as close as Dissenters in England of the Cromwellian school nate The Interpreterj Hopeful Mr to which Bunyan belonged possible to the body of the "Saint" John Bunyan believing that God's chief Mr Feeble Mind" This is duplicated in modern times with Russia was employment hell as punishing sinners There Was "Giant Despair" one of Christian's where the ridicule of dead saints is combined with of em (Depending when I was uncomfortable as possible for them making that worst enemies a most unpleasant giant Bunyan inreverance for the embalmed body of "Saint part deepest on the wickedness and witchcraft surrounded thought bill) Then they were great them everydicating that "despair" is the worst enemy of man by Lenin" where Froude writes: theatre goer' They-- always come that name to an evil giant' giving to the not leading vaudeville theatre "They only believed that there had been a in bunches and I would-knowitch at Endor but they believed that there were for He had felt that despair in his youth groping success his owed In and usefulness life generally Bunyan and salvation light to witches in their own villages who had made comthe fact that he was thrown into prison and kept they were there and generThe wife of ' "Giant Despair" was named "Diffikid about them from the stage there twelve for occasional with with brief moments ally the devil himself pacts years believed that the dence" of times I would be stoplots of and devil still literally walked theThey He have been if he free liberty might promised earth like a roaring When Christian and his brother Hopeful capsame hotel They are at the not to lion that he and the evil ane-eibut "If me let ping you always replied preach tured by the Giant Despair were thrown into the out V a bunch to will great laboring today I preach again tomorrow" destroy the souls of men and that God dungeon of his residence "Doubting Castle" the on a uniform ' was equally busy overthrowing the devil's have giant had I Then His was a horror and dungeon compared with it work and followed the advice of his wife Diffidence who "coun"the worst prison now to be found would be called and "shagged" flys at practice in Dringing sin and crimes to eventual punishment" seled arose him when he in that the he -f morning the mornings with the home team a palace" Tr f self accusing consciences of men drove them should beat them without any mercy Detroit was the town I remember : Worse from as than his was irresistibly istold in the suffering imprisonment of one repentant Giant Despair took the advice "He falls upon poor sinner v who 'repented even to story his doing that in I knew all the old about wife and worry children Bunyan'a the extent of getting them and beats them fearfully so that they were one helpless blind child a little girl that players George Moriarity the great himself hanged The story of one is told not able to help themselves or to turn ' them upon the especially wnue he was in jail third baseman of those days was tnus: cued to me about it at the game to Thanks to "°ne °f them which had deeply impressed the floor" talking write imprisonment Bunyan began The killed have would them later but old run giant was He no batting em to me He Evof the Midland counties was the story of being longer able to work at his tinker's trade Imagination sometimes had had fits "in sunshiny weathDespair me George Old Tod Boy his Honey father the tinker owning his own ragged This man came one into court in er" Sunshine sometimes drives out despair within Fortunately ' the Summer Assizes at Bedford 'allday little cottage could send his boy to school which the ans Was another comedian that us- a dung sweat' us in to demand justice upon himself as a felon No one average member of the hereditary tinker's trade could ed to go out for morning practice One of these saved Christian fits and his brother ao and John Bunyan learned to read and write with em The old Philadelphia Nanot had accused him but God's judgment was hot to be Hopeful wad ne not written "Pilgrim's Progress" Bunyan tional league boys was another I escaped and he to accuse himself 'My to Christian's took BeauHouse travels him the of Lord said Old Tod to the messing around with in wouio suu oe Known as one of the world's great remember ' judge 'I have been a tiful and the Delectable Mountains the Enchanted writers That was back in the mornings thief from my childhood I have Decause oi nis book "The Holy War been a' thief ever Ground From then on I had got That book according to Froude "would have en since There has not been a robbery committed these out of to country ways and was a titled my many years within so many miles of this town but masters the Bunyan of En place among So goes the story and you should read enough to too lish get up and practice ac-in I have been privy to it!' lazy That "holy war" was a war to de- of it especially enough about Bunyan's life to know iend literature" I was a "regular" the or tne mornings Man "The judge after a conference agreed to indict one Soul" "City of men most the and books tor interesting then developed mm of certain felonies which he had by mat cuyt use tne head of man in which the by the Protestant Puritanical movement STAGE IN PARKS soul dwells He pleaded guiltyimplicating his wife acknowledged had five which could be gates only with him lived to acalong admiration Bunyan summer and enjoy great One overcome and forced by the demons of sin if those they turned all the and they were both hanged" claim Millions of copies of his book were sold ininto ball open air summer within the gates allowed it The gates were Eargate parks an to would put in a much his sale enormous' cluding vaudeville in delight New They vinere sm entered oy spoiten word) Eyegate Mouth "Pilgrim's Progress" telling the story of the good England among American Puritans ' where home about " movable stage gate Nosegate and Feelgate greatis and nlata they A giant named Diabolus at the sueeestlon of Luci be held would show the and fer the chief devil attacked the City of Man Soul lights on was booked I Well rieht there disguised as a snake The city was defended by Cap- - the and the circuit whole Pittsburg lain Kesistance Lord Innocent and Lord Will Be Red Sox park in Boston and Phil Will as we only showed at night Other characters were Mr Incredulity Mr Haugh- adelphia but to do all we had nothing Ernest Fienc was born in Ger- - spiration' His: identification with ty Mr Squaring Mr Hard Heart also the Messrs be around with the ball day craftsman with a warmth of color Pitiless players Fury No Truth False Peace Drunkenness then get my pony out at night and many studied in Paris and paints the Woodstock group of ariists has and a fine technique free from all Atheism— a long list Cheating the American scene Ids Paris given J3uck McKee who rode him for me ? tricks and mannerisms vallandscape many painting "Pilgrim's Progress" should be in every' house to an run him oy and l wouio rope museum The New York was an Whitney interlude in his Amer- uable records of the Hudson river study adults as to the strange working of relig- him And it was great to get to Phillips Memorial Gallery Wash- enlighten ican life for he came to this coun- scenery and the Catskills ion in the human and should be read by chil- do it on the ground and not on ington— Boston Museum of Fine dren for its effect mind try as a child All of his early art on the He paints everything equally well Arts" imagination taking care a stage we had so much more room Fogg Museum— the Newark however to tell the experiences and impulses sprang however—nudes still life and land- Museum young minds that' a Merciful outdoors I liked that work but the are among the leading gal- God from the American background scapes And when he paints the leries has not probably arranged to burn any of his thing dident go so good and of owning his pictures - which own creatures which he has interpreted so sin- American scene it is the present are forever course all of us acts were just trans- also prized in the most importcerely not the dated past of period dwell- ant private erred back into the theatres instead Eiberfeld in the Rhineland was ings such as Hopper and Burch-fiel- d lives with collections Ernest Fiene but I met and become acquainted wife wicked his at the called upon Deeply religious Bunyan Southbury the first scene upon which he onen- have recorded His pictures Connecticut swal- - with many a fine fellow And lots to a never consider the devout takes hen that ed his eyes November 2 1894" are —f living glimpses of to low of water without lifting her head to thank God of em I saw at the games Everymey were exceedingly observing day pulsating his stimulating pictures Among for His goodness He died at peace with the world body ought to see em It keeps you PROTEST COAL BUYING eyes which soon beean recordine of New York life are his "Forty-nint- h honored young and interested with himself and his idea of God his adopted country on paper Even TILTONVILLE-0—NRA His last words were: "Take me for Ihighly 1934 By tne mcn augnt his and Street" ( Copyright picbridge (UP) come to as a budding American felt the tures Two paintings of more coal code offiicals here have de- His death at 60 years of age was caused by aThee" Syndicate inc) cold real spirit of the newer land His combrK feelings which reflect his clared they will break a contract — a a ride reconcile to father in rain the long iirst continued study was as a pupil own sensitive reactions are "Dyck-ma- n by which local schools are buying following to his son whom he had threatened to disinherit UMW FOUNDER DEAD of the National Academv of Design Street Church" and ''Spring coal at a mine hi sight of three of O (UP) — Michael I are ATHENS beautiful editions of Progress" Many "Pilgrim's and the Art Students' league Al- Evening" His bathing nudes are the schools for $205 a ton ' Messrs A L Burt of New York have 83 aided in organizawho Collins available pubThey though New York in its manv in paint and his sensuous claim the schools must pay $2J0 lished an edition interestingly illustrated with an tion of the United Mine Workers rhythm ' phases absorbed his attention the interpretation of flesh radiates the NRA price with or without the excellent brief life of Bunyan by James Anthony of America is dead He formerly country always has been his in glowing reality He is an excellent contract ' served as a federal mine inspector ARTHUR BRISBANE Froude helping8other Pbovs to 'rte? th? J?S AfU?r he had " —-rK5 wv ne uui icaiat going - now and then to the tower doorwuiu to look on and listenbut he feared at last that the steeple fall upon might him and kill him" - j r j Facing-both-wa- ys j s j - self-accus- er i : was-force- d 1905-67- -8 i im WHO'S WHO R AM ERIC AN puin - - ART : ' i r - v - j -- I 1 I |