Show F WHO'S I yI NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. F PARTON N NEW EW YORK As As Adre becomes an Immortal It would seem that there ought to be honorable mention or at least a simple garland But for lor Spouse Of some kind Maurois Might for Mme Mau Mau- rols lIere a afew Still Be Mortal few weeks ago he explained how his wife also a person of distinction learned typing and stenography to keep his script flowing smoothly and legibly to the publishers lie He writes only in long long- har harti harAl said to be quite as cramped and illegible as that of Horace Greeley and she alone of all mortals mortals mortals mor mor- can translate it Seat No 35 in the French academy might still be vacant but for Mme Maurois lie He was born bora Emile Herzoff lIeno In Rouen Ills literary divagation was th the first short cut to Immortality Immor In a line of ancestral woolen wool wool- en drapers reaching back to the year A. A D. D He De was a bachelor bache lor br of arts at 15 and a doctor of philosophy at 18 lie began work In to his fathers father's factory but got right on the Job as a philosopher philosopher pher and so when he was assigned to the British as asan asan asan an Interpreter In the World war he be could fill them In ID on Byron Shelley and Keats and did so Later he explained Disraeli to the English and around aroud the clubs dubs they bit their stems pipe and admitted that this French chap knew a lot of things they handt even suspected Ariel riel the Life Lite of Shelley put him In Inthe Inthe inthe the big literary tournament In 1923 where he has been ever since He is slight in stature dapper and fastidious with wilh his thinning gray hair deployed carefully left and right gesturing only c cautiously with the sensitive hands of an artist He has an acute skeptical mind in interested In in politics only in its historic historic his his- tone sweep sweep He weighs words like an apothecary and it is as a craftsman crafts man and finished wordsmith that he qualifies for the academy With keen Insight he has expert Id I'd America Amer ica on his numerous visits here clocking us through the valley of despond His latest appraisal found us moving out of national adolescence cence into fully rational adult state hood He hr es for the best but is not a fuzzy optimist The decline of the humane Mea ideal ideaL he thinks is the most disquieting trend of the modern world I R WALTON MOORE of the state J. J department who will be 81 years old next February like Mr Chips thinks the way ahead lies through the hu hu- R. R D W. W Moore 80 o i Mr It the Mr Chips Chip Chips showed Of 01 State Dept Depth he h was wa no fos fos' fos fossil sil sll when they tried to bench him and no more is Mr Moore Moore boarding boarding the Pan American clipper for Europe He lie Is amenable In old old-fash behavior a behavior a tall quiet gray courteous Southerner Southerner and and alertly adaptable to all new devices devices devices de de- de- de vices of living lie He Is keenly Interested Interested In lu In aviation having taken many airplane flights along the Coast and one on the German Germau dirigible Hinden burg The state departments department's participation In International arrangements ar at- for tor landing fields fillds and aud the like Uke has been In his hand In congress from 1919 to 1030 1930 from Virginia he was a colleague of Secretary Hull Hun President Roosevelt made him assistant secretary of state In 1933 and later counselor for forthe forthe forthe the department He is a bachelor driving 15 miles to his work from Fairfax Va He looks as if It he could end all war talk just by serving mint juleps all around I ERES ERE'S a general who has saved H HERES HERE'S more men than any single general gen eral oral ever killed He leads expeditionary forces against armies of june jun jun- gle gle germs Dr e i M Saving Life Late Not victor G. G Heis Heis- Taking It Forte er of the Rocke Rocke- General Central feller foundS Of 01 Thi This tion lie Is In Inthe the news newl with his report on food research research re reo search in India in which experiments ments in animal feeding suggest new access to health and well being for humans On May SI Sl 1889 his father sent him to the barn to turn tarn loose the horse bone with the Johnstown Johnstown Johns Johns- town flood rising lie He floated away on the barn his bis parents drowned and be kept on ou going going- through Jefferson Medical college col lege Ile 18 16 times around the world In his year 50 fight firM against dis dis- ease case Until 1914 he was with the U U. U S. S marine health service then with the Rockefeller foun dation Ills His fame blazed bland out three years lars ears ago ao with his book An American Doctors Doctor's Od Odys sey and later publications Consolidated Features Sero i |