Thursday, Dec. 18, 1930 Dear W: We have seen the famous Taj! I was awfully afraid of being disapâ€" pointed in it, for from‘ the horrible little images thrust at us everywhere it was a very bald and plasterâ€"y lookâ€" ing thing. But the moment we alightâ€" ed from our cars and looked through the great red sandstone gates I knew that it was a thing of beauty after all. â€" The richness of the red walls, the brilliance of the lawns and beds of flowers, the symmetry of the mosques placed at some distance on either side, and perhaps more than all the dark green of the cedar trees lining the reâ€" flecting pools all give it the necessary dignity and mass. It is very lovely. As we sat on the lawn in the hush of the late afternoon we could imâ€" agine that we were back in the days of the great Emperor who built it, for there were almost no tourists about, only groups of brilliantly and richly dressed Hindus walking with their stately tread up and down the paths. Benares, the holy city of India, is incredible. I cannot try to describe to you the bathing of the pilgrims in the river Ganges, the most fanâ€" tastic scene I have ever witnessed, viewed by us from our barges on the river on which we sat in, I think, kitâ€" chen chairs. ~Delhi is very different. More Moâ€" hammedan than Hindu it seemed to us, and then, too, the cleansing hand of Great Britain is very apparent. New Delhi, the governmental city, is bouleâ€" varded and marble columned to suit any tasteâ€"except mine, which preâ€" ferred the first mosque in India datâ€" ing from 1166, a lovely old sandstone ruin, or the Kutab Minar tower, a slender minaret, from a slightly later date. As we left the latter we met a live Maharajah who saluted us gravely. Many notables of India are here for the horse races. When we returned to our hotel we found most of the notables there â€"principally English but some Hinâ€" dus, a few Hindu women unveiled with bobbed hair and very graceful "adaptâ€" ed" Hindu clothes; they were quite stunning. Tea on the terrace was a gala affair, and then the dinner at the hotel in the evening. When we tore ourselves away finalâ€" 4; to get down to our train we found that a whole city of shops had sprung up on the platform, the merchants squatting like old spiders waiting for their flies, the whole lighted by lurid: flaring lamps. One little boy attached himself to me, following me everyâ€" where saying with the most appealing look in his great liquid eyes, "You buy, mem sahib, they no buy so well today, you buy, mem sahib." When they wish to, these people have an appeal which would take the <coat from your back. Now we are traveling across India. The only bright spot in our leaving it is that we‘ll see all our friends again in Bombay where all the parties join together, and that ahead of us lie Singapore, Juva, Ceylon. ESTHER GOULD‘S , TKRKAVEL :: x CORNEL R . En route to Bombay. "A wWOMAN WITH WHITE EYES" By Mary Borden Doubleday Doran In "A Woman with White Eyes" Mary Borden has written an extraâ€" ordinarily cruel book. She has writâ€" ten from the head and not from the heart. Heaven forbid that we should ask for sentimentality, but a feeling sympathy. Her technique is perfectâ€" ed far beyond that of her other books; she writes with the assurance of the initiated. But it is almost as if that assurance had led her astray, given too sharp an edge to her dissecting knife, too great an arrogance to her use of it. The story is that of an old disilâ€" lusioned woman who has led a dissoâ€" lute, useless, mistaken life, and now is trying to recall itâ€"trying to unâ€" derstand it. "I don‘t want a promise of heaven, I want an explanation, a weapon." This old woman, retired to New England to do her remembering, forms the frame of the picture, her recalled past is the picture itself. Sometimes, as in the cleverest deâ€" vices, the frame becomes a little too heavy for the picture. The method chosen demands a great deal of skill to carry it through successfully, for the picture is done by a stroke here and a stroke there, until almost withâ€" out your knowing it, the whole thing }sttmds out clearly before you. That it is a gloomy picture of empty lives is not the author‘s fault, the only thing we could ask of her is a little more leavening of emotion. Legion Advised to See Postmasters About Jobs in Holidays for Buddies posts make proper contact with postâ€" masters throughout the country in seeking temporary postoffice employâ€" ment for exâ€"service men with familâ€" ies during the holidays, has been made by Walter F. Brown, postmaster genâ€" eral. The suggestion was contained in a letter received by Ralph T. O‘Neil, national commander of the Legion, which was an official reply to a teleâ€" gram â€" Commander O‘Neil recently sent to President Hoover. m’i"heâ€telemm sent by the national commander was to inform the Presiâ€" dent that the Legion‘s national emâ€" ployment commission had unanimâ€" ously adopted a resolution requesting an executive order be issued giving exâ€" service men with dependents preferâ€" ence in connection with holiday or seaâ€" sonal postoffice work. Such work had been provided in an executive order of Oct. 24 which excepted veterans from civil service examination for such temporary work. The New York Central railroad wants an increase of forty per cent in the fares for taking people in and out of New York City. Well it ought to be worth that to get out anyhow. A suggestion that American Legion MIND WITHOUT HEART THE PRESS Declares Advertising Will Boost Prosperity Advertising will start prosperity on its way back, Roger W. Babson, economist and statistician, is quoted as saying in an interview published in a recent edition of Editor and Pubâ€" lisher, ~dedicated to the "Power of Newspaper Advertising. "The tired consumer is getting ready now to put his money to work," Babson said. CRUISE TRALINS Cruise Trains carry you on to the Land of Astecs â€" Mexico. Here the treveler will have spread before him a land of romance and scenic beanty . . . a new world which can be visited in comfort on these special trains of ours. Three cruises in all . . . leaving San Antonic on January 25, February 8 and February 22 . . . spending two weeks in Mexico ... visiting Monterâ€" rey, Queretaro, Guanajuato, Guadalaâ€" jara, Mexico City,Guadalupeâ€"Hidalgo, Teotihuacan, Cnernavace, etc., etc. Other Land Cruises connect with the 8. 8. "Malolo" bound for Hawail. Mexico or Hawail Cruises may be taken separately or in conjunction with the regular Land Cruises to California, leaving January 16, 23; February 6, 20; March 6. Send for our booklet on Land Cruises BR AY MONDâ€" WHITCOMB 176 N. Michigan Ave. â€" State 8615 . .. then the lux» urious Land to San Antonio "And he has more money than he has ever had before, remember that. This Y |depression has had little effect on his earnings. But he has been holdâ€" ty |ing it back. Now he is ready to let n, | loose. Banks and industrial instituâ€" eq |tions are likewise approaching the eq| mood. where they will loosen the p. |strings around their idle funds. And of |so I see advertising as the means to od | start the ball rolling." A 43 NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD Highland Park Muintained by Morning Service 11 :00 a.m, Wednesday Evening Bervice 8 :00 You are cordially invited to visit the Reading Room, where the Bible, and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed, or purchased. First Church of Clrrist, Scientist of Highland Park 381 Hazel Avenue CHURCH SERVICES > Bunday School 9:80 a.m. HOURS: Week days, a.m. to 6 p.m Wednesday until 7:80 p.m. Sundays #:80 to 5:80 p.m. for reading only, COmE IN AND SEE US. WE CAN ARRANGE QUICK CASH LOANS ‘10 L +300 W I T HI N 24 H O UR S. SMALl MONTHLY PAYMENTS. 708 * EVANSITON, ILL+ * CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM ERSON A L FINANCGE 60. 2nd Floor, CHURCH STREET BLOG. FOR THE THINGS$ YOU NEE €HURCH $T+ PHONE: GREENLEAF 6081 41