e 2492 RSDAY, AP RI 19 m . ols " PMA LE I h* ntnpmt %mqm.m ready to burst upon the country, book, play and all. <"The Woman Tempted" ism:hdn‘afletf\\dtoannvnidou public. f f t Chicagoans will; be particularly inâ€" terested in Robert Horrick‘s "Chimes" which deals with a md"‘t‘z Uniâ€" versity generally suspected to be that of our own city. ; 16. "For taim years and more I hla planned to make Wn portrait Ab:l‘m’ u»d{ (T m'nm simply, Carl Sandberg opens e biography. And this m...% E the grateful keynote of his h%‘d Abraham < Lincoln. This it "would sketch the country lawyer and prairie politician who was intimate with the settlers of the Knox County neighborhood where I grew up as a boy, and where I heard the talk of men and women who had eaten with Lincoln, given him a bed overnight, heard his jokes and lingo, rememberâ€" ed his silence and his mobile face." In Lincoln‘s earlyâ€"years Mr. Sandâ€" burt'ln:lmwnn'y hq‘t;f !Qc;q.m‘ he n consequence given his uixt‘kni? fuller phy.»Dnrin*._'t& first mvux. years :l‘\d hmga spent in Kentucky t f of the Lincoln family into the wilds of Indiana, Mr. Sandburg‘s purpose has been to create for us what the boy Lincoln must have been and done anï¬somï¬mes. thought. In this Mr. Sandburg‘s poetical temperament oncé in a mh xetti‘tbe b:;.:twpï¬bi.ï¬ teeth goes . just a fast, so that we say, "Wait a momm You aren‘t creating a fictitious character, you are telling us about Abe Lincoln whose every outline is dear to us but mutbock.mtuhdn?cblwndvitb might have beens." But there is much which stands out with conviction, parâ€" ticularly the understanding that "Siâ€" lence found him, he met silence. In the making of him as. he was, the element of silencée was immense," to make, his contacts with the world. R_nnniu\iferty{mpthc(mlofly- er and a flat ‘down the Mississâ€" ippi® he met rs, < traders, and "movers," who began to contribute to that background <¢f his ;bd | which like a vast blackboard on which the ‘marks were the few simple lines that Nature and the wilderness life ad made, not the confused scrawling : newspapers, movies, indiscrimâ€" inate reading make during those same years on our own. So Lincoln, when he came to learn about the world was old enough to sort out, to organize, to evaluate his facts. And all his life this was what he did, he kept his mind in order. [ \ (L4bel THURSDAY, APRIL 22, The years went on ‘and the boy brought up in the wilderness began It is this clarity, this mathematical Bureness of thinking, which result at last in ©Lincoln, the w.rlncninq. defining the issues of a nation as no one else in that nation: could or dared defthe them. "A house divided against itself cannot stand," across nm years the words of that great ring with as majestic a truth as they did when they set a country on fire. lï¬v{rthhchrlbofnind‘wm made Lincoln demand from Douglas PRESS WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Ceroeietsâ€"JUV4 AULIEL AM LINCOLN, THE x +5 %mmu "A JUST PARAGRAPHS Carl Sandburg yA niiat.| Purer Because Carbonated Full Quart 50c : Grape Pineapple "the naked truth," pushing ‘aside all personal petty considerations to go straight to the core no matter: how bitter it might be. It was this clarity Mr. Sandburg has done admirably in creating . the national background for Lincoln, the immense economic power of the cottonâ€"growing south which for ‘ thirty years had its strangle hold on Washington, the growing imwm'ul the vast Midâ€" dle West, the ng onward to the Pacific Coast with its problem of railâ€" way transportation, all the stupendâ€" ous issues of a growing nation. which united and divided the minds of the country. â€" But out of all the issues, as from the flames of some of our old 4th of â€"July fireworks a figure would arise, comes the figure of Lincoln, and the flames die down, while he by his sheer power dominates the scene. of :mind which made Lincoln ‘score President Polk, as with the most fiery words at his command, "He is a beâ€" wildered, confounded and miserably perplexed man." 5 . The effect of Mr. Sandburg‘s book is cumulative, every page gives us a little better understanding of Lincoln, lawyer, investerate storyâ€"teller, friend of children and the weak of all kinds, man among men, politician, it is like Lincoln himself in that it "keeps on mwinz.â€â€˜ 4 / tan ... By ANITA LOOSâ€" The best book of humor in years "th large edition $1.175 $2.00 A swucgerlng Houghton tale of hobo Mifflin Co. $ life. THE SUNGAZERS Boni & Liveright is the rate at which lovers of humor are buying SPECIAL Between two layers of VANILLA ICE CREAM EITTLE, BROWN & CO. Publishers, Boston GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDS This Week 500 a day Brick RULE In spite of theâ€" mod: tion of elothing and social in Turkey and the near east, ancient hatreds still rulé between the various ‘races, and must be reckoned with in the efforts toward world peace, acco to Mrs. Marguerite Harrison, ~ A can ‘auâ€" thor: and traveler, who ; just reâ€" turned from a study of Near East Relief work in Greece, 8 and Tur. key. "The .f:n-khnlc mo t is ‘not really ous, because are : too many rivalries to any <real union against the Christian forces," declared Mrs. Harrison. |"The people hate each other too cordially to unite in any strong mov t. . But the mandatory powers in 8 and Palesâ€" tine must coâ€"operate to produce peaceâ€" ful conditions; In "In the meantime, Am is giving the world a real lesson in constructive charity. A true picture of the Near East would be a nm#on of snapâ€" shots of war refugees, with America alleviating. stuffering on tz“lvi«'lupmud scale and offering education and trainâ€" ing to the childen." $2 y Lady Surma is a very oldâ€"fashioned princess,â€"a slight haired womâ€" an of sixty, wearing who travels: without any p or attendâ€" ants, although her 1 line is perâ€" haps the most ancient in the world today. Eorhertrlptofthonewmfl she wears a small b hat and a plain suit such as she has worn for miq her work with the Near East Lady Surma Mar Shimun, mmm Regent of Assyria, is in "the Unité{ States to appeal for help to 30,000 Assyrian refugees stranded in Mesopotamia. _ 1he mm ert es I The throne of which she is the ofâ€" ficial regent is that of the patriarch of the Assyrians, occupant, Mar Thsai Shimun, is a boy of sixteen, who received his elementary education in the Anerican schools in Persia and is now completing schooling in E'nsw He is an t devotee of M s 8 + PRINCESS OF MOS& : "~ANCIENT LINE HERE EXHAUSTIVE S'I:F'DY . OF MEAT BUSINESS An exhaustive lmmt the retail meat trade of the U States has just been completed, says the National Live Stock and Meat Board which coâ€" operated with the U. 8. Department of Agriculture in the work, The study has. consumed two years‘ time and it is said that ahï¬nflg’:‘ compiled not only will be of infinite value to the meat retailers, but will benefit all branches of the liveâ€"stock and meat industry and the consuming public as well. _ Subjects ut::"up were: methods and practice, ins and exâ€" penses, and consnmotil' demand. ; THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND«PARK, ILLINOIS Spite of wm . Many Lines, Old \ Quarrels Last seam is visible. each lensâ€"yet no line or Two ranges of vision in In Although : conditions in â€" Dan | are so precarious that mï¬â€˜:’: ernment has warned all foreign resiâ€" dents to leaye the city, and 7000 tourâ€" ists have been denied per: to vigit that part of the country, a relief ;ï¬lt of five American girls continues i work among the refugees in the Damascus district. t Two of the Near East Relief workâ€" ers, Miss Agnes Evon of Pittsheld, Mass.; and Miss Belle Bass of New York, narrowly escaped death a few days ago when their train was stopped by a Druse attack. The rebels opened fire on the train, many bullets passâ€" ing through the windows and woundâ€" ing several passengers. A few days later, a man was killed beside them in a Damascus street. t Relief «Workers In Syrian War | Every State Represented In the ~‘ Region Continue Work: ° | Third Annual Essay Compeâ€" Under Fire â€" |. _ _ tition, Report AMERICAN: GIRLS IN . DAMASCUS FIRE ZONE Permanent M;jwl : a Specialty _ m&nmhfl# i 18 North Sheridan Rd. Tel. . 080 THE SUPERIORITY of our foods and the excellence of, our cooking and service has (been demonstrated beyond peradvenâ€" ture. â€" You will find in this resâ€" taurant the mealtime ha your appetite craves. . _ . \~Get" acquainted with our "Bill O‘Fare" â€" _ BLACK CAT SHOPPE I.h-a'ldflhw‘ HAIRDRESSING 59 S. ST, JOHNS AVENUE ZIP Treatments given Phone H. P. 249 mmmuw-â€"-z by the national board as a feature its program of education on ‘the subâ€" ject of meat. Its success is attrib uted to wide coâ€"operation accorded by high school home economics teachers through whom the contest is carried on. More than 10,000 ‘high . school girls are enrolled to date in competition for university scholarships and> cash prizes offered in connection with the third : National Meat Story contest, says the National Live Stock and Meat Board, contest sponsor, Every state is represented, it is said. j MANY GIRLS ENTER . > MEAT STORY CONTEST We‘ll install your heating plan And you‘ll save some money, â€"â€"from the proverbs of Mr. Quick. LISTEN to our advice and get more heat for less money. Talk your plumbing problems over with us and get our estimate. WE (MAKE only one bid.for public fawr..wï¬".'pmm to place in your home or in your place of business high character serve you in a satisfactory manâ€" ner. We promise you that we will serve you well in a repair capacity â€" and we‘ll . answer phone H. P.. 201 promptly. T. H. DECKER&CO. PLUMBING & HEATING 1t t 15 8. St. Johns Ave. Phone Highland Park 201 New Fl REP Hi_ AND SERVICE SEATION KLENZO Dental » KLENZO â€"and a KLENZO Brush | The KLENZO TREATMENT -uttuhnl.‘ ‘&wnd mouth. 9;;.:‘ thy teath .ofl: m heln inta in healthy body. e Use the Klenzo treatilent daily. Robert W. Pease Vcryuwwn- and Guaranteed Satiglaction ons P ikye Opp. N Depot HIGHLAND P ILL. Telephone DRUGCG STORE AND sUuAFracep Râ€" raAgED to LkE !