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Show 1 Murray Eaule, Murray, Utah News Review of Current Events the World Over The United States Joins Great Britain ami France in Recognizing the New Spanish Repuhlic Hoover Upsets Coolidge Precedent. v k ernments to afford protection to the persons and property of their citizens, wherever they may be." This American doctrine Stimson now amends. American protection, Great Britain, France, and (several smaller republics of tlio world according t tie new new government at by the new policy, follows American citizens ashore, but not to the interior of Nicaragua. rebel-Infeste- Mndrid, headed by Nieeto Alcalu Za- interesting at this time HIGHLY announcement mora, formal recognition, Spain's republican existence lias come promptly Into being. President The recognition Zamora of the Spanish re public by the P.rltUh government served to clear the way for similar action by the United States. Secretary of State Henry L. Stiinson Instructed the American ambassador to Spain to advise the n republican government of the taken by Washington. Itecognitlon by the United States was said to have been hastened by the consideration, urged by President Zatnoiu, that a general recognition of the new government by the great powers will tend to strengthen a at home and enable it to maintain order. Although Ambassador Irwin 15. Liittghlhi Is to continue at .Madrid for the time being, bis permanent retention there will depend upon Ills acceptability to the republican 'here have been regovernment, ports that the ambassador, who Is u Pittsburgh steel millionaire, has publicly expressed a low opinion of the republicans forming the new government. Tramiiiillity appears to prevail practically everywhere In Spain, although banks arc under guard and a mob liberation of prisoners has occurred at Barcelona. Catalonia Is t remain part of the Spanish republic until the provincial parliament decides on some future form of government. The provisional government announced it would recogul.e all debts of the monarchy. This resulted In strengthening of slocks imd securities oil the exchange. that the Soviet government lias decided to adopt a new wage system, known as the "Khoxraschlot," which apparently changes the government's policy and amplifies the inauguration of piece work. It is to go into effect at once. The wages of workers, according to Soviet authorities, wilt not be based on the communistic theory of equal division, but on the capitalistic idea of rewarding Individual efforts In skill and ability. The word Khozraschlot literally means "economic accounting." It Is Interpreted In the decree to mean that each factory, plant, collective farm, mine, railroad nnd such henceforth must take the responsibility of fulfilling contracts and adjudging wages without interference from trade unions. Although certain elements among the disciples of Lenin view the innovation regretfully as a compromise with capitalism, the government hopes the system will speed Leaders affect to Up production. see the khozraschiot as tending to eliminate waste and lit responsibility for managers and workers. L 1 Kill 4 line of industry there tiresome concerns which, in March, showed nn Increase in earnings over February. What Is more Important, they showed an increase for this March over March of last year. Certain ef the railroads also have turned the corner," be said. Mr. Pahsoii has earned the right to be listened to when he ventures upon the thin ice of economic prognostication. Statistics being his daily diet, lie asks the country to observe the statistics of car loadings. These are steadily Increasing. They have always been ef When barometrical significance. freight is moving factories lire working and shipping, merchants are buying and customers are con- i- suming. mce-ag- e - States S 1 1 The 1 of d reorganiu-Ho- 4' t. message, government rantict undertake ef gen-et- Americans throughout that country w ith American forces. To do so would lead to dilllcultleS and commitments which this government doe not propose to undertake. Therefore, the department recommends to nil Americans Who do Hot feel secure Slider the protection Afforded them bv the Nharnguuii government through Ihe Nicarucuan National Guard to withdraw from the country, er nt leiiM to the coast towns whence they ran be protected or evacuated In cno of necessity. Those tthn remain do so nt their own risk and inift led rvpi-cAhioticnn forces to be sent Inland to their nld." Sit years ago Tab In Coolidge, then President, alhnued In nti address In New York what be culled the "distinct and binding obligation on the part ef self respecting gov t K - v parliamentary 1 it. I th.e I 1 surprise ,.f IUt2.lr"-s- jJt it llf h yT -- l'onald government out of oMice. wag defeated by a ma jority of M votes. Lloyd Heorge, whose Liberal following holds the balance of power in the bouse of commons, turned the tide to Macpoiiahl when be demotion nounced the Conservative as unfair. Of fiS Liberal votes, Maclioiuibl received .".I, Hie Conservatives only 10, the remainder not voting or absent. Ramsay MacDonald v Quite evidently tireat P.ritaln Is to politIt knows that ical spellbinding. none of the political leaders possesses a magic wand that can charm away the disastrous conseThe nation quences of the war. must climb a long and weary trail, and It Is prepared to do so. Iioubtlesn the Indian situation, wlilch has been one of the chief sloii In the causes for the Priilsh textile Industry because of the Indian boycott onP.i'itish goods, was nn Important consideration with the Liberals In supporting Mai I'onahl. - " ??v V si'r- fh& H i - In no mood to fall victim "V; histJo-- pointing By ELMO SCOTT WATSON NK ef the greatest American painTHK greatest American painter once placed on canvas a portrait which be called tersperhaps "Arrangement in flray and Muck." It was the portrait of an old woman, in a black gown and white ho e cap. a woman In the calm and serene dignity of age, sitting at case with quiet hands, thinking and waiting. It was the portrait of the I that the 4 painter's mo: her. jy:i.n: liition in This picture, known as "The .Mother," would Honduras Is relathave assured Its creator of immortality If he ed w ith operations Inn! lo ver painted another. More than five milf of the Insurgents If--'lion reproductions of It have been printed and ' under Augo-tin- u these prints have g..ne to f ery corner of the Satidino In earth. Universally the woman In this picture has gained Is the embodiment of motherhood. Mrs. Anna ground among obMcNeill Mathilda Whistler, the mother of servers of Central Jalnes McNeill Whistler, has come to be the American politics. It is pointed out mother of mankind, the symbol of nil mothers that (let). Ci'ogorio even where whose memory we honor on May head of b' Mother's day. F.lnsto the rev olntionary Put even though her picture has achieved Honmovement In D.ivila ty, the mother herself Is virtually duras, Is openly int. Nearly every one knows something opjiosed to I n.iti l Stall tioll ilelivi'ies. sli;:'-(l!ii bout the erratic who was her son. Put s.lll Views 111 this leg, lid. kte.vv much of anything about the woman a vear Icrttia was ill Mei gave him to the world. This, then. Is the ago. He is of Indian !!..'.! "and ' ry of Anna Mathilda McNeill Whistler. has a large following it.fiiS the It was In the year ITilit that a Scotch family laborers tl the luge t'i !. d S!ale banana plantations cf the liorlll nita. I M.Nciil came to America from the Isle coast of Honduras. if Skye. Long before J he Uevoliitioii one of the Mr. Jesus Ilanlnraii l.ne. McNeill, built n great brick mancharge d'a'Taires at Mevic.i City, sion en n plantation In ar the Cape I Var river who rccetiilv retuniid from a k,t In N. r'li Carolina and there the McNeills took to Tegiii ig.i'p i, said I'ri-- il.nt r.."t. Most of them were planters and physi il Mc.lia Col.n.li. s' r. to a Im.l l'i rrera inin Lis e.ih.in t w is tln ci.ii., educated at Princeton nnd In Scotland. Anna Mathilda McNeill was the oldest r five probable cause ef the levoluiion, lie Is conl'i. lent It will fa'.1, as the d. Mren In her father's family. Her mother d.i-- l President has nn influential backw!,,n she was n ung girl nnd she bad ing nnd n well trained army. maternal duties (I)ru-'- Upon her early when she M. Vicente ha l'r. Clpidies w.w became of the ancient house of McNeill n itni'd Presld. nt of oi,!iiia lii "f I'd ob n and three younger sisters and one the last dorCoii nnd was In.mg htothiT looked u for rare and guidance. Ma. lirated on I ct niary :t, l'i.--t. Tli's became Mai. Will am li.bbs Mr 1,., eii.ber last tdrlpiil flection - ii of Hie United Stales ariny- -n soldier In gave (he l.lli. ral p ii:v n n family of s Julius United the hist planters and physicians Siat. Lay, in Honduras, reported to the of 1" flail. State department that. In ,:s i..:a-h.!e he was a cadet at the I'nit.d Slates II. the revolt would "ti.'rlp M i.Viry academy lit West point he brought i. nt." He said tn linilTat-or polit-b'a- l le'tne Willi 1,1m, while on leave, H classmate Rgutes of ...i : ,. nj.ji.'ar lialird Ceorge Whistler. Washilig'on Thl (o be conne. ted w it. I'aljstO I !H il.l l tlio j "iloer and i iassi!,;,!,. cjuii,. of a f.t,i;iy with an cv en more than that of McNeills foreign n.tn'st. r of Ho- In". k. nnd i:iir.s'iiig ls consMore.l .y ATti.rioali 11 gi.in.ira'h.T wm t'.ipi. J, i,n Wlcsilor, born lii In i.in.J i f an old liiul sJi famiiy, wl;u riiti ii;t'lom.t ,t eg!, ft IK Will able to ile it w ,:b t! e nati-- n. liivay from home riiid end red the pa ltisli nriny He M AtmTi.a during Hie 1,'ev ol it i.. wi!, A STATI'MI A f the tro.js under ;':.-- out t' and was raptured 4 1 littifilde i f Ne , r 1. l y ii. e Atm-rivtot) mii" nt Nimtog.i. l!i furtig to ef Cleveland, fonier .. . t. .u v of I ti.' il d after the h.'Wa !:. harg-- d war, toward ta:k of I, is candid cy fr..ni the nrny, Ml in love with the .laughter of the I 'enio. r itlc noinaiat ion f.,r ..f b's fathers friend", ebipt'd Wi'h her nnd fie i ti e iicit'l-I'by lioij. i seeoiel ime to America. tt g I'l iatl" as di (, atiiiospl.ere. lbit.e I geis'own, M t, hi ITi'l be eiiiend Ihe A mer Imio! v W, p.. c.iigM-rnn it nn nrny, sern.l tai the fnuititr of the Oil li aibr. !il;i r a n'.i.t I icni.M r 'l rind r)t the outbreak- of H,e War of Confer, wi'h Mr. p. tk. r. t,e N. . t:l!einetif te.ti.:,!ij!,,! ',e isi; w with Cemr-i- l II ill's urmy st Jtetroit. secretary w,ll to.t it,. (inM',ji,g lo which was rapt. ;f, y ),. Pritisl, when Hull ol tain ll,e tiopiinai 01 tint .n vi'. tue'.. b's il i.r.ic fi;l irn n h.r. '. Wl 'tlef ' '"" J " ',," '' " i h.el the til 'i'l diMincUon of loiviiii ci , , n ine i 'i.ii!.ii ranc tniT"Hal cooven-fiel- l n I'r.tisti i.flo-- cupturel by the .Mnir cans and Is nnnble to ngrre on in y of thm n Am. r; am ft . er ruptured by e f'ritwh the ro'tivp caivl'.taie. Put Unit. John Whis'lcr'S gr.atel ilisi'ne. Imrirg H p t.,e !,V f..r dele. Catr fn te niliventiori Mr. P.tker In H e f n t this! be ti"ti ths r il "father will tiof ns,. tj, Iiifl,i,.t1en in hi half f tTli fit'..." f..r It wm be l,(i built tint Prf cf ttiy particular ramlidale. I'otl IvnrboMi In lso.1 st, ctMiiimdel the The stuteitieiit (i!oi "Ti e Iher tilitil ISM. II, eMe.t dnagtiirr wss Vltid C in.,,',) rt!.,ii,t New. riittiie! Sr.Mh Whis'br ar. l was tinrriel In Jsjij fon I'. Piker n n p !,le Ivft,,,. Chi-t- i cr itic rpndid.r f..f v p pi ei.;.-i- . j. tn Ji,t' e Al !)(. trnder, thus g .s Pl"t br'd". IPs rre r. rtairi'y gfiif ifj ifg son. n )o:-,t- ,,r Mr. Laker's fi Mt lfU:;,,r r!, p ,n liuMiraPr t.i ef t ti'r Hitee ). r.r. !,, t I I'll. In fi V i.illirre,!;.i-- t l orf l'enrb. rii, l t; rg WnsM'tion Mr Pakcr he i shown vitv Wh!"ier St I It Wil . ll the dhop , ,.f J at Jj ;,.),. 1'itPtct in !l,P I'.irtv's i.l.iifirm Igfitl that be grew to f!i;r!y boyhood. but lot piietit in .osi,!,, raldi-dat.-At the ege i f liinitc, n t e was gr a ; f r, ,t j, nml J ,),, n,.t f(H, t p..;,t, Wr ns n''g;,e t.t the nrtil!. rjhi f'TMer hanged lorj t,'1 for evcr;il t!.e ri.bWit." Tfi!" ha nlwnys been in ei'giri'i i rgiig,-yit.rt i e l i n.! t n g ..! te f.,f f nl t. gral hiixl tv.tk. A!. he nan "nn r , ( p. ntic.il ,r f, f aty t.el sml ..on s widower, but early In the .jr. '? I ft u 11 W t HI, t Sglln HiPt the tiiothefly older siler ,,f J,;, : v Men-ragu- s I j Ca-ir- o, s fa-.- t s br-fl- ier 1 r l. 1 1 pres-do'-c- . ' - ri.-- - 1 b.-e- r 1 . gi,f-rit.- .i ott-;;r.- i c 1 nite.J S:;i!i s Steel cofporntbm 'b'tde. n I ropos.., p..ii..i j tnn under whi.h J,,aie, A.Unirell. pr.-s- mil of censure, an open and heralded effort to drive the Mac .if'A s . dill iir,i,. ii set-hac- h.s-.a- la'-or- . UCI1 to I Stanley I'.ahhvln's motion , Columbia and seven special central Secretary div isiong c s t a I,, Do,ik lished to deal with the problems of var fad. . an lionm-e.y William N. I.ak sec- rotary of John 1!. Alpine of New York will bend the new setup, which hits Sym.iiu) of appropriation available for its work. Frauds I. Jon,. is to continue as director golietid, With supervision also over the "pedal mining and quarrying trade., division. "Ihe Veterans' placement service will lie maintained, nation-widin Its scope, nnd the farm employment serviii wlil .. ev p!in.e,. "The United States employment service litis divided." Secretary leak's sntiouni elm nt s.iid. "to open tip nt least one employment bureau in each of the states'nnd the I ef Columnia t ii co operate with slate and local mithoritles. "A service throughout the entire country will nnder I lii ti e rondeot sense (,t take take care of Intern i:e labor placerpci t In coepcrafon wiih snd m employee". thing rn 1..V , f ehl ft..m ,r.,,v u lied'i ibor t.iciny or nrd any kind .f o'rk." A I ; 1 IT II more VV ease than" he himself expected MacDonIlamsny ald comes safely through the tempest of a serious nan-Iste- IS re-el- w immm in.i!-.r;!v- . t i compulsory. In this class soon would fall E. 3, liuffiegton, president of Illinois Stetf,, Joshua A. Hatfield, president of American Itrldge; Ward B. Perley, president of Canadian Steel; J. S. Keefe. president of American Steel & Wire, and E. W. Pargny, president of American Sheet & Tin Plate. All these are subsidiaries. The retirements would fall between 111:13 ami PCS. It was pointed out that Mr. (iary as chairman of the board of directors worked at bis steel until be died ten years later than the proposed retirement plan would require. It may be that some other plan will affect Mr. I'lirrell that he, too, may carry on hut the pension plan says seventy. N- solving the problem of uiiemploy nn nt is seen in the com- wit It I satisfactory. There are others In the great United States Steel corporation who will retire If the plan Is adoptfor voed. It provides sixty-fivluntary retirement, and seventy for hi-- Impera- slate employment bureaus and one In the lMrb-ef lira fled by SecreSecretary tary Stiinson lifter Stimson lo bad talked t President Hoover was us follows: 'In view of outbreak of banditry In portions ef Nicaragua, hitherto free from such violence you will advise American citizens that this protection r.roiiNinoN the 'tive ofnecessity Service, warning Americans to get out ef the Interior of bandit-Infeste- n was a leader of those In favor of the new plan, pointing out that the old one had been un- inls-res- ef the United Stales employment tu s n n Nicaragua was sent to the American legation nt Managua and to the American eon-tu- t nt Ptuetlehts. sta- surer. plete of ef In every key Industry tistic show that one or two big firms have turned the corner, promising that smaller fry, too, are beaded out t the red. The lopart-nietiof Commerce makes the gratifying disclosure that our foreign trade last month for the lirst time In a considerable period evinced nu unmistakable upgrade. If the American people turn their gae from the "big board" In Wall Street to the bigger opportunities which await them In constructive d reel Ions of every sort, the upturn foreseen ty Mr. l'.abson will come all tin" sooner and nil the one-thir- IE 'piSecretary Ihe way. P.tislness, he Fnld, has turned the corner and now Is detinltely on the upgrade. "In almost every Roger W. Bahson federal farm board during TI1K week announced its decision ti offer for sale on the I'.uropean market as rapidly ns possible the huge suijiIiis tif wheat acquired under the wheat stabilization operations of l'.OIol. It has been estimated t tie surplus of sueli wheat controlled by the board will be approximately i.75.U0i.i,iHJU bushels by July 1. next. The board Is of the opinion that such sales can be made without depressing domestic wheat prices. The government purchases were made at an average price of about - cents n bushel, mid the estimate lias been made that the hoard might sutler n loss as high us M per cent In sales n this wheat if made in Europe at the present time. Advice to farmers to store their grain on the farm Is extended. It will cost about ef the regular carrying charges. If the wheat Is stored en the farm Itself. The attempted solution of the problem so far as the board has vvoihed It out appears to be that the board Is going to try to unload Its surplus when and where It can. so far as it can without bringing about ton great a stump In the market. The farmer Is then to be asked to help carry the load of the coming crop mill the board will offer li i (it a (dilative promise ef aid throns.ii suggesting un additional Incentive to the farmer to Join a James S. Stone, chairman ef the board, announced that the government had sold 7.0xi.iKl bushels of wheat n broad recently nt n figure above the world price decrease of fetlperlnr product. In place the list of en couraging c o laments on the business situation Is accorded that of linger W. P.abson, the trade prophet, who told President Hoover that better times are on RKs"fcs im Mr. Farrell i e By EDWARD V. PICKARD WITH Stthen teg, Hie Stort of aFamous MOTHER Idcnt, and for several years a lending figure In the steel industry, would automatically retire en reaching the age of seventy, or in " rt, i , ol- tli5 Mother classmate. William Gibbs McNeill, and married her. In ls3.'l be resigned from the army and the next year to George Washington Whistler and Anna Mathilda McNeill Whistler was born a son to whom was given the name .Tames Abbott McNeill Whistler, thus perpetuating the name of his uncle, James Abbott, as well as bis paternal and maternal families, the McNeills and the Whistlers. After Whistler's resignation from the army he rose to eminence as an engineer and In be went to ltussia to enter the service of the czar In the construction of the railroad from St. Petersburg to Moscow, winning for himself from Czar Nicholas the decoration of the Order of St. Aline. To Hussia with bltu went his wife and their two sons, one ef them a slender, weak hid. affectionately known to bis mother as "Jamie." And "Jamie" be was to her to the end of her days, even when be became a painter. For the close tie between the mother and the son who was to Immortalize her nn rnnvns began during this Itusslan experience. She nursed him during those bitter years and when they were ended In the death of Major Whistler and when the widow and her two sons were reduced to poverty, she brought them out of the land of snows back to her sunny North Carolina. When "Jamie" gn vv up he decided to follow ihe profession i f his father and become a soldier. He secured an appointment to West Point In 1SVJ, but his career there was a short one. In fact. It lasted only two years. After leaving West Point Whistler resolved to go in for a career as a painter. So he went to Paris where be studied f..r two years and then proceeded lo startle Ihe International world of art by breaking away from tradition, by be longing to in school but bis own an by being an experimentiilist and an eclectic. Next be went to nnd In lsV.i began to exhibit In the lloyal academy. He achieved fame as an etcher and a lithographer, perhaps even greater than as a worker In oils. In fact, during bis lifetime he was more noted as a wr.ter, a caustic wit and a persuasive critic than us a painter. His great est fame as ihe latter came after bis death. I'lirit g these years be was rising to fame his mother was In Lurope. l.ii, with hini hI In rase be shonl.) have need ways, but of her. per somehow la r liitle "Jamie" never In grow lip enough to be v(hout Ills mother. Li lsiji WhMler b ft London for three years more of Mu.ty m par.s in,, I bis mother returned io America f..r a last visit u hh her In North Carolina, per W,!tter bad never tn return In his native land to live. So bis poller was going to wind u; what f,,' .irta.rs 'he bad th. re and Ih.-- return to buidoti, where they would live on. Ihe scant means w hi. h Ihe son roiihl provide. While she was vis.tiig In Cumberland uud I'.laibti iioiiiti.s In .North Caioiina i,p fil,rHl f the Cvi War broke, Conimuniciiiloii willi her became more ami more d.ibcull as the Union blockade of (be Confederate M,ri, Helmed, I'ltially esrly l:i isi'.j ,!,,,. W(,r,j fr,)m M,f nn t)Jlt be bad relumed lo L"lilol) nnd ctiil.i.sho.l jin. sel (hire. So sin- - announced .r Intention of .tilling lein. H.r relatives tried lo eer her It would be lm.o"ii ip her to g. now, ihej . told H.r only reply Wa the ( aim slate, n.ent that b. r "Jaime" i,oe,.-- , M.r vviili him and i lint she was going. Soii.elow r, nrranged ( ,,;,,,,;,, the Conrc lerate hi .elude runner, Ihe Advance, whi.h was pre ur.iig p. Wilmington, N. taking 2,'") bales of cotton (o the rotKm mills In Utifhiiv.l If ihe Advance cuhl get through the blmk i le. Am ther nMngrr on the same h'p wns William Uurie Hilt, going on a mis :..t1 front Ihe Cot(ff.,t,erate government lo Iui doii. He knew ,Ht be was taking n long chiincp ef If'ttine Ihroilth Sliie, (i.;l !,e uigon.y t,f lir",on permit led ll.l delay, The f jnle ,ji ,nr,r l. ght under the cover ef darktu ss. Outside wn flts-S l.f l."d Uni.tll Ve.sols, Colleril. ttn'ed giint the last surviving port of the Cot ,fe . i ,p.y, whi.h was guarded by Port 1 ish i it. All i' .' i but well bad not the gmi i f Pert Fisher opened up f,n g Kdernt gillihonl whi.h fn! teMurr.l itl,lti range of Ihe forts gins. The fli-- h of hce gum r.veale, sails of the tdotksde runner lo (he PHerals. mPW 1S-1- world-famou- s i,t relu-live- fr h.-r- (,p .ne -- A!mt. ll.te t b.-i- t, Immediately the entire Union fleet opened up tn the fugitive ship. As for the conduct of this heroic mother during the time when at any moment a shell might have blasted out her life or sent her to a watery grave, a member of the Advance's crew Ui this to say: "While the Yankees were ch tb lug us, she didn't do nothin" but stand st wh'r. Fmlled port and look at "em. She sort of one shell landed In the rlggln' and said tin' she knew nothin' was goln' to harm us and were goln" to get through all right. Thst Hill, he was sort of fidgety, but she wtunX And get through they did, for by some mlrscl the Advance made her escape and arrlveJ saWj tn England. "It was In this fashion that Mrs. Aims thllda McNeill Whistler, at once the most crlr brated and the most obscure woman of Amtr b an birth, took leave of her native shores f"f the last time," writes lien Mxon McNeill In uV New York llernld Tribune Magnr.lne. 'Tier U glimpse of the mouth of (iipe Fear river, side which she was born, was lighted by t! l; glare of the Federal fleet In 1V when, she ran the gamut of ibsilh through the M"1 nde to a curious srt of anonymous liumortnlltj "It Is n curious sort of Immortality to whirt this mother went through (he concent rated fuf of IN) ships of tnr. She was not In seMr h " any sort of fame, any sort of Immortality. wns simply that beyond the ring of ships tti death was her boy Jamie, who needed her." The Immortality which was to come In Is was to nime not through this feat but thread ef the work of her nrtlst son. In Ihe portrait of her. And even this palming hnd v unusual career In keeping, perhaps, with I stormy career of Hie man who pnlnted lb " was r. fused at the Koyal academy In 1 failed of a purchaser at an absurdly lo rf" ' when exhibited In America, but finally swarded n gold medal In the snlon of 14 r'J was purchase. by the French government f' Ihe Luxembourg gallery In isfl. The art nr nsiimed that It wns destined for Ihe I'i art honor In the world, that of being hung In ' be Louvre, and when Whistler died In P happy In the belief (hat his memorial l mother who bad been Ihe greatest force In M life ns lo be the first example of American to pass the portnls of the great tintlonsl mil"" on the hnnki of the Seine. Fortunately b cerf1 ser-ni- nt know bovr long It was (o be before Imnor should mme to his palming and I" miither whom be bn I lmniortallsel. For It not until l:Jd, after many rulihgs by (he Ft"1" ct.ntioIscurs and (he French government t!j his pnlnling was "not )e ready for the l.ouff (lint the iiltltinile boimr riime to It. Perbr thitugh, this honor Is but Insignificant In parlson to the greater honor sreorded H W those who nre art rmtnotaaeurs the cet mon people a)) over the world who lock nt' t as the perpetual symbol of universal met4 hood, Nt-r4 Sr 1'nlst.l til Wta t ' j |