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Show ' '' i WHO NEW THi: WEE By LEMUEL F. PAm (Consolidated Features tyN(j NEW YORK.-This war 1 has lacked bands and t and all other such tradic citements and John Mase' " Official Artist ,note 'e ten Of Present War about t: Has Experience one 'e hot t British traditionalism 8k vails. Sir Muirhead Bone' 11 artist of the World war ;c officially appointed as the 'e the navy, and it is underset he also will render the grj ords of the conflict on land f Sir Muirhead, 64 years P Scottish birth, is one of the n most distinguished etcher; e also a painter, but in the L, tween the big wars he h more to etching. That is "a: trend of the times, as a !01 war is decidedly an etche-Jg Skeleton trees on a blasted n zig-zag trenches, the splinter, of peasants' huts, the an: SC namics of war machinery" themselves to Sir Muirhead dr lative drypoint. There fa: e ' of the painter's mass and , w an up-to-date war no ga; bright uniforms and snort S 0 horses. There are, instead. e : len monochromes of desoh 1 Inert black and white o! ise-jraven ise-jraven ruin. There were plenty ol l playing when Sir Muirk e appointed official war if e 1916. He painted bo;hce etched deeply his picfc-jftei the war museum, for n:L later became trustee. Mil made, not only of the imp- P. of a minutely observed p fsidi record of the war, but f". availability of so great ajfs u to render its full aesthetic j's This time, there is a pse. tory announcement, only) fa, lines, of Sir Muirhead's j,th v, ment. Not even in the nern arts is war getting its th of tomed fanfare. n Clc This writer remembers fr's Muirhead's masterful drsncy the "international studio" Native lier and happier day me.fte s tectural studies, or placid jj deal in English byways wher;ilted raid siren ever sounded AH the son of a Glasgow j P the studying art at a night s:j friei was in 1901 that he wenlf elei land, to become an honc1 of tor of letters at Oxford a;,e Ty! the most famous artists State land. He has exhibited e tha York several times and b: the thusiastic following amor..3ed ir and the American art pu':wife, died JN 1937. Rep. John E. Arkansas made his as ' for the United States sd j against the "New Deal ,ate g Arkansas Senator per w; Is Ardent Foe of cha.s Revised Hatch ActJ who Bailey, had the active s.J thl his "organization of 5,000 1 0 1 ployees," and of various Lanot of the New Deal cabine: W: sentative Miller, running r113 b dependent against "mac:. Was ucians," achieved a senss::""11'1 tory, as he won the seat c mcf Joe T. Robinson. He was ' h independent elected to a r f, " litical office in Arkansas ; e se early reconstruction days. 18.35 cess was acclaimed as sF in t over patronage politics. ?nIy ha Today, by one of those r,lefd reversals of political forrfr Droke make news. Senator JI'e art3 the most conspicuous o: p- of the extension and slnf" Ight.s i"g of the Hatch law, 'id c against political job-hold. minis1 i"ff in politics. He ff Los' I only block its extension tthe car state job-holders suppi'Rights part by federal funds, L. Wh would repeal section niwdent am bars frovcriimenlal ctni The f from political activity. Med C The loan, bcspcctaclwf0" for Miller is somewhat appearance, and, hidden: e influ Kraduatcd from Cape i'o ha Teachers' college, in V. Martii I"d. However, lie later fTs, the law mid has boon a r'abUt h attorney in Searcy, Ark., s electi He was prosecuting atK'1 for county judge before his oJ'lor 1, the house in 1930. He isf. 1 viCe Stoddard Counlv, Mo. jil Was a Mater. t IN THE light of not ( ffronch 1 history, it is quite el f t0 ninl why Francis 1. Sayro i,esidon.e oiiKht to Ret rid of the l'ty, t Our high commissioner u'cn Wc "f the Grand Cross of '" h'S ra Elephant. Less portiiu'r'j" beliov, tetvstinj: is the faet HJ',C niH is a luiif:ht commander o!,1:l"iier t( Krom Kliiv, and a , s tit Malri. 'viuse tj(.s vrf '"'Coss bestowed on him by l!' i,1'" "Ol Siain. when, in the cai'h Pv deej, Ka.vre- was advisor to H" 1;,rl'ise, iilod in ,;,,, v ti-ealv (1'Hi Con |