Illinois News Index

Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 15 Jun 1923, p. 16

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16 yM;V:1vt? gwni?RNEWS. FRIDAY, iKM The World Cri.i. "THE WORLD CRISIS" By Winston S. Churchill. Out of the numerous post-mortems on the World War it would be dif- ficult to point to one which, for sheer brilliancy, fascination and vivid, pic- turesque language, could be compared with this book. And yet, withal, it is real history, "inside dope" of the very highest quality and permanent value. Furthermore, it is no apologia; errors of judgment are frankly ad- mitted. Indeed, not a few past "war leaders" have perhaps much more to apologize for than has Churchill, and his critics are only wise after the event. He gives away some interest- ing secrets and certainly kills the pet fiction of minor historians that Britain did not see the war coming and was consequently unprepared. If the Kaiser and Tirpitz thought they were stealing a march on Churchill and Lord Fisher, they were sadly mistaken. For three years before the great crash British statesmen had their eyes wide open and feverishly prepared for the inevitable after the failure of their "naval holiday" proposals to Germany. The prophetic soul and ruthless en- ergy of Fisher reVcreate>d Britain's naval might against the coming ordeal, aided enthusiastically by Churchill, then First Lord of the Admiralty. The letters exchanged between these two men make delightful reading: "My beloved Winston .. . . don't d^-^d^assr .â€";â€"r~Sixteeinnch pruns and speed are what we want! Don't make any mistake about big submarines being obligatory... For God's sake trample on and stamp out protected cruisers and hurry up avia- tion?" Churchill paints a thrilling panorama in bold, swift strokesâ€"from Agadir to Armageddon, ending with December, 1914, hence the Dardenelles tragedy is not dealt with in this volume. He reproduces a wonderful forecast of the battle of the Marne which he wrote in a State Paper in 1911: he gives intimate penportraits of Kitchener, Asquith, Lloyd George and Grey, pays generous tribute to the ill-used Prince Louis of Batteir-^f^lvould berg, depicts the romance of naval design and strategy with simplified -technicalities, tells the story of his Antwerp adventure and how he i wanted to be commander-in-chief; thp; struggle, fnr .th».. Channel Ports. MiM Window Talk* With You "PICTURE FRAMES" By Thyra Sampter Wmslow. If you enjoy short stories which are not just the stereotyped model stories by all means read "Picture Frames. The writer has technique and a sense of the things readers want. In ad- dition she is gifted with ^subtley, frankness and sympathetic insight, and succeeds in making her reader share in these attributes if only tem- porarily. It is as if she put her arm through yours and persuasively pull- ed you to a window to watch the passing individuals through her eyes. There are eleven "pictures" in "Pic- ture Frames." The girl stories, "Little Emma," "Mamine Carpenter" and A Love Affair," and "Birthday," are sympathetic and convincing, with none of the sentimentality usually forced upon old age in stories. Miss Winslow individualizes her old peo- ple. "A Cycle of Manhattan" belongs in a class, or a book, by itself. It is a modern saga worthy of place in courses on Americanization. It has the material of a "Forsythe Saga" compressed and selected and trimmed down to almost skeleton form. From the technical point of view two features of Miss Winslow's writ- ing should stand out clearly even to the reader who reads solely for amusementâ€"her remarkable develop- ment and use of "point of view"; and her snap and whiplike use of the short sentence at intervals in her writing. Hannah Mitchell. fhesubmarine dangers,' C&ronol and Falklands battles, besides a number of official documents. He puts no gloss on his undoubted interferences with naval and military authorities and experts and cheerfully shoulders Whatever blame may be due to him. |?uture historians are bound to take particular notice- of the light which is shed lavishly in this book. Not a Dull Line in Sight "FIERY PARTICLES" * By C. E. Montague. Concerning C. E. Montague we feel rather guilty. We had never read any of his things before, and when we found that "Fiery Particles" was a book of short stories-JWC-_ratheE shied -off* Then we read the first taleâ€"its title is "Another Temple Gone" and then we sat back and hove a sigh and grinned happily. We knew we were in for a pleasant eveningâ€"several of them, in fact, for we drew the reading of the rest of the book out as long as possible. It was not till the last story had been read that we began to feel guilty. The attack of con- science was obviously because we hadn't read any of his other books. Particularly during the past season of bad weather and worse reading. C. E. Montague would have been a great help during the period when we were alternately wondering whether ever be warm enough to change into light-weights and suffer- ing dully under an infiction of novels of the worse sort. Yes, we have been shamefully remiss. The sixth sense, which all reviewers have, should have told us that here was an author who would p/case as few modern writers can. 'We can only apologize and try to make up for our laxness by prais- ing "Fiery articles" as one of the most genuine bits we have tackled in lo these many moons* If you don't like "Fiery Particles" there is no health in you. Oh, by the way; several of the tales are told in dialect conversation issw wllysjcnig^m^ stassm SALES-ROOM 1JM0 SHERMAN AVE. Phone Rv«naton 14© F. O. B. Toledo $525,00 C.H. BRIGGS SERVICE-STATION 1324.26 SHERMAN AVE. Phone Sfranston 745 Itlttfi! FILLING iiwnether your needs are one Ipoad or a hundred, f^ If^Cpow fin a position tc» p|il^aprompt time for the lawn EDINGER&SONS Dealers in All Kinds of Building Materials W$£fi&t% ill mMmmk IBIIII^^ between a cockney, a Yorkshircman, and an Irishman. These three _are soldiers. Anyont who says "Ahâ€" Kipling!" will be summarily hanged by the neck until he sees the light which is that because Turner painted sunsets it does not necessarily foHow that no other painter shall portray the orb of day rather than four-thirty P M., daylight saving time. F. Gregory Hartswick. Copyright 1923, tfoward H. Seward. Rkyd the Wanf Ad* THE WEARING OF f GLASSES DENOTES SI INTELLIGENCE Age has nothing to do wira it, but common sense has. fg® A child of five may neea glasses just as badly as an adult of sixty. Perfect sight should be your first consideration and glasses worn if found necessary. An Accurate Examination Will Determine the Matter Conclusively. Our examinations are thor- ough. 13 years of success- ful practice. Dr.OH.BERSCH Optometrist â-  Fo*merty;\Ms^"0«!*;'l!eiW.^^ C. Di Peacock* Inc. 1177 WUmette Ave. For Appointment Phone Wil. 2766 or Residence Wilmette ' 07 m4'm â-  fell! '"" l ....."â- â- "-'â- "'"" i*i*«Bi^aB*., ":^P5%:S A (cccf fcciccr* 'mm lite srexvsrtbte iKxTY<j io 43ail with that unsightly, old wooden shingle roof is to put Rex FUNTKOTE Strip Shingles right over them. It's an expensive proposition: Tearing the old shingles off arid then re-shinglingâ€"-expensive and altogether unnecessaryâ€"not to mention the litter and dirt that goes withtherwork, and the possibility, too, that between the tearing off of the old and the putting on of the new shingles, a sudden rain^tonnjrughtj^u^ damageT Leave the old wooden shingles on, but put Rex FLINTKOTE Strip Shingles right over them and save time, money and trouble. increase your property^jJuejndjdecrcaseyourinsurance rate witha nreproofrooT r, .... *§t§i§ â- i North Shore Roof Grafters 3201 Emenon St., EVANSTON, ILI» PHONE EVAN8TON TO2«i 342 Park Ave., GLENCOE, ILL- PHONE CiLENCOE 1«6 â- w0b SERViqE BEFORE SALES HE problem confronting the local automobile Aaler today is not one of merely selling automobiles, but operation, service, and atten|jgi|jtq the fast increasing number of ite owners. When anyca^bws^LBQdS^ WWffis^amte Claire automobil^harll he gets a iood car plus abipdant par? manent local respdh^ibility for its pe^ â- ;'formance^;"y^.::'.' '-^ v:^Sf|0^#?v^ mfm 'â- ^Mma m ;.fl wmmM â- W â- 1 • %i Lincoln St. WINNETKA Dodge, Bro||iers m Motor Wffls Samite Claire ffloitcwnolnlii rStomge^Shi^ .%$£&,

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