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Very large size. Made by Gennarius Gagliano, with his label.

Exceptionally fine tone. Yellow varnish. In good condition.

Gennarius Gugliano was the best master of the Gagliano family.

This violin was one of two specially made to order for the Prince

of Filancieri. They are known as Gennarius Gugliano’s mas- ?

terpieces. The sister instrument may be seen in the Filancieri Museum in Naples.

OLD ITALIAN VIOLA : Very large size. Labeled: ‘‘Girolamo Trucco.’’ Excepty

ally fine tone. Yellow varnish. In good condition.

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Rome by à de frst Marl of rate >be. ‘sent th to É = Florence. secretly, contrary to the laws of | the Papal |

| | Government. He was arrested, but was soon liberated. : through the intervention of a Grand Duke of 7 Buse

Lord and Li Middleton fe mdr inl _ golden wedding-at Wollaton Hall, near Nottingham, | and they received a large number of presents, including gifts from the tenants on the Yorkshire, Warwickshire, Lincolnshire, Ross-shire, and Notts estates. There will

be festivities later on at Birdsall, the family place near J Malton. ‘The King and Queen visited Wollaton some iim

_ years ago. The handsome and picturesque house was }

built in 1588-90 for Sir Francis Willoughby by Thorpe, the architect of Burleigh and Longleat, and it 1s sur- rounded bya richly wooded deer park. There are several

fine portraits andsgome interesting Dutch pictures. Heads | of this family have been fortunate in marrying rich \@ heiresses. The peerage was conferred in 1711 on Sir &

Thomas Willoughby, who had sat in the House of

ao Commons in six - Parliaments. ce

MR OST Retina TPE UND

own. ni in oe Woodland oie "Dodditcton "Hall is Jas fa very handsome Elizabethan house, with a gabled + gatehouse, and much curious decoration. There are

# fine carvings and tapestry, and some valuable pictures in the gallery, including portraits by Lely, Reynolds,

D and other masters; and a, quaint portrait of Lord 4

si Fe who Was beheaded | by pes VI. in 1536.

ht ihe: numerous A rentals ste fatati-

D ties of last week one of the most tragic was the death of

D Mr. Percy Hughes Jones, a junior member of the staff of

| Trura, who had seen the war through, in one way and | another, from the first day to the last. He had been serving in the Queen’s Westminsters for a few months when the war broke out, and he went out with the

. regiment to France. two > months later, among the first of

nr CC m 5 have done s 80 unless ee

‘going concerns,’ for where the heart is there is good labour à also.

; THE HOUSE OF VAN DAMME. eee the exterior is unpromising enough. Even an architect would scarcely seek entrance had he not already , heard of its inner delights. By no manner of means is it a show É place. Indeed, in the writer's case it was only discovered by F accident and entered by guile. The street front is almost arrest- F ingly dull, rising a sheer white cliff of wall and shuttered window Firom a grass-grown pavement in Cassel-sur-Mont. -Opposite, cross the street, there is—nothing. Just a low quick-set hedge, then steeply falling fields giving a great window flanked by jostling p houses, through which one views and overlooks a lovely plain Éspread out below, A full-sized map; red ploughland, green _ . meadows, and an azure distance ; and that day over all a filmy veil | of mist turning the whole to the likeness of some great iridescent _ shell—lying there below, shot and illimined by a dimmed and F yellow sun. That is the west prospect. The eastern one is as yet hid from us by the house and its high flank walls—gaunt weather- | beaten white, like the building itself. Pulling at a rusty chain that .| hangs beside a long unpainted postern, a swinging bell clatters and É jangles within an echoing court. Sabots clack on cobbles, and the E door creaks open on complaining hinges. Knowing the lie of the land, you are prepared and braced for the gasp of pleasure that | the first view of the easterm prospect will give you. It is thus | that one steps through the archway into a common or kitchen f yard—dusthins, clothes-lines, and the like. . . . Bathos? Yes, Eten yards of it—but then! Twelve paces left incline and you f stand out on the terrace—the dropping lawn below you and the | wide champaign. beyond, as on the other side, but more treed and P chequered and lit in different fashion by reason of the aspect. f Some good two leagues away are the towers and spires of Haze-. : brouck—town of the plain—their topmost pinnacies below the F cellars of Cassel-on-the-Hill. Facing this view is the east facade—a stumpy portico with pediment. above, Napoleon’s wild-eyed eagle É done in plaster, filling the latter with its widespread wings, its ‘cruel claws clutching. the Imperial wreath, a tearing beak raised : insolently above. Again the gaunt white walls, the tier on tier of lifeless shuttered windows. The drooping concierge, galvanized - into momentary life and action by metallic contact, stands within the invitingly open door. | And now, on the threshold, a warning. This is a house of the Ef First Empire sure enough—but of the First Water, most emphati- à cally no. It is no Malmaison or Grand Trianon—it is their country f cousin and very poor relation. Figure to yourself the frieze of i the Parthenon done into gingerbread by a country-town con- E fectioner with ideas of his own and an uncertain though lively É touch. That is the “Van Dammerie’’—therein lies its fascination. | It is a far-away, uncertain echo of the fanciful elegances of the Court and capital—but by no méans a faint echo. Indeed, just

D as the British warrior in the street without secks to din his meaning

| into foreign skulls by making certain sounds (stoutly affirmed to | be French) loudly instead of correctly, so did oid Van Damme’s : architect strive to make convincing show with the then fashionable | frills and flounces by doing whatever he did with such a show of f boldness, vigour, and initiative that he probably persuaded him- | self as well as his patron that his coarseness was vitality and his | lawless heterodoxy transcending imagination. Provincial Irench E with a Prussian accent would sum up the style not ineptly. Yet he clearly believed in himself and his ability, did this jolly pastry- F cook, and enjoyed himself prodigiously. There is an unmistakable E zest and gusto about the thing that is in itself attractive. The É door (a side one) leads into a tiny rotunda with all the proper | appurtenances up to the little dome with its triglyphed and metoped | frieze and lamp of bronze, hung by a triple chain. F It would be tempting to describe the place room by room and É feature by feature—to gloat over this and crow over that-—but f even of this piquant architectural gingerbread enough is as good Fas a feast. À door on your right takes you into a wonderful little | corner room with so much architecture to the square foot—-wallg and ceiling alike—that you feel as though a moment ago you f had been standing, say, under the dome of St. Peter's and that F suddenly the place had shrunk to a tiny fraction of its proper size | leaving you still as you were—a great hulking, preposterous being F utterly out of scale, a retriever puppy in a canary-cage. And that, of course, is a defect in the room. A dolls’ house in the grand & manner is only really satisfactory to the dolls. The pilasters and É panels, cornices, friezes, bas-reliefs, and the rest, may be in perfect | relative scale, but they are out of scale with man. The room is | É too much like an Itelian cabinet turned inside out to be good archi- J | tecture, but it is none the less a delightful joke. Unhappily it igg

à 7 c was

ae - = PSE eme La PRET

picked out in pink and white, which lays rather unkind stress on the general wedding-cakeism of the various embellishments. Crossing the adjoining room, which is comparatively unexciting, you are admitted to the staircase hall through a noble little portico of real veined marble. The distinct shock that you experience on tapping one of the columns, to find that it actually is what it appears to be—genuine undeniable marble—throws a lurid light S wpon the sublime depths to which 1800 so engagingly descended. k The staircase is itself another surprise. Instead of a fantastic

" Saat 2 sees penche eo or PERS moments

my

coiling thing precariously supported on nothing, with (probably) |

| brazen serpents writhing intricately by way of balusters, you “have a solid workaday wooden stair—positively stodgy in its plain

eommon-sense. A most humdrem, conscientious staircase. So | ordinary and unassuming is it indeed that it is probable that it y was only put in pending the production of something more festive @ and amusing and more in keeping with the gala atmosphere of the | rest of this frolicsome house. Unfortunately, however, the “star” À

staircase for some reason or other never appeared, and its plain though painstaking understudy still carries ploddingly on.

But before ascending by it the traveller should get a glimpse of

the long saloon with its bowed far end—a room of flat pilasters and long mirrors with an odd ceiling coffered in large point-ended

lozenges. The general tone of the room is ash-grey, the tympanum |g bas-reliefs over the doors and such-like being picked out in white; ff and very charming they are, these bas-reliefs and features which are | scattered through the house with a liberal though usually discerning jj

hand. There are spandrils and panels and friezes and pilaster and

plaques and so forth wherever a reasonable pretext for existing seems | to offer, and a generous overplus of the same that simply scorn | excuses. A whole mythology ef goddesses, leopards, griffins, f sphinxes, amorini, lion-heads, eagles, and whatnot just compla- ¢ eently smiles down on you à propos of nothing at all. But they do |

it very engagingly, and their frank and fearless attitude is quite

disarming. They seem to say; Yes, we know we necdn’t be here, |

but we like to do our bit—we volunteered without being asked.

Not at all; we find being lovely very enjoyable, and weare glad you

admire us.’’

Upstairs things are exactly as they should be, particularly the À great attic—the nursery—where beautiful little miniature beds | of glossy scrolling mahogany stand in the bays between the meagre jam wooden pillars that bear the vaulted ceiling. The bulk of the |

furniture clearly survives from the first furnishing of the house by

the gallant General’s lady, and very charming much of it is. A |

good array of prints and pictures portrays for us the several battles

that have given Cassel its place and fame in history, whilst the À ;

E General's refined and pleasant face looking frankly and genially

- down from a twilit corner makes one wonder whether the tales of his |

; coarse brutality can be true. Either the historian or the artist 5 must have lied, one ieels; probably the historian.

But the concierge has become devitalized; the galvanic effect ||

has worn off; he yawns audibly and jingles his keys of office, bored with our foolish enthusiasm. So let us depart, and let him shutter ep the house once more and leave it basking with closed eyes in the evening sun. And as we go we may picture Mr. Ruskin being eonducted round this most heretical house by a really appreciative showman—a latter-day post-decadent architect for preference. One fancies him eventually being earried out to the open air with foam at his lips, there, with loosened collar and watered brow, to be slowly restored to consciousness and denunciation. Every mortal ane of his “seven lamps” are here exultingly snuffed out with the utmost cheerfulness and good humour—architectural practical joking that it is hard to discountenance when practised with such wit and ingenuity. But then, he would very properly observe: One does not romp with a Muse.’’ Perhaps one shouldn’t—but it is such fun. C. W. E.

CORRESPONDENCE.

THE LIBERATION OF THE CZECHO-SLOVAKS. [To tHE Eprron or THE Sprecrator.’’] Sin,—An interesting feature of the Allied Note is the special place granted by the Entente Governments to the Czechs and

F Slovaks of Austria-Hungary, which is a sign that the Allies |

realize their importance in the future reconstruction of Europe.

The Czecho-Slovaks are the Western vanguard of the Slav race in Europe, inhabiting Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, and Slovakia {northern part of Hungary), an area four times as large as Belgium, which would occupy eighth place among the European

States (after the Kingdom of Poland) in the reconstructed Europe. The economic independence of these countries would be assured |

pe | rt nt nreeemormeamenneneneenmer reteormenere rp ne pu 3 } }

1

E owing to their natural resources supplying almost everything 3

except salt. They are called “‘ the pearl of Austria,” being the Brichest countries in the Monarchy, and are paying the greater part pe. the Austrian expenses. Their population is about thirteen

|

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By LA MARQUISE. DE FON TENOY.

a Lieutenant of the who has arrived in staying in New York, is eenth Earl of latter’s first

Lord Buyrghersi toyal British America, and ig the eldest son of the thirt Westmoreland, and of the Who died in 1919, end who was tha of the Earl of Rosslyn, of the Duchess of Sutherland, and Lord Burg- irved throughout the wer, engagement of five ee only deughter

Navy,

VW eee

wae wg si ster

Dev

VAZEr

Se

hersh, who ig a bachslor, his

to Miss

been brolrén off, ét to res Burghersh be- ss de Trafford c. Lord Wisst- ond time in late Ke.

LE V

es Cis,

Lord re ae ee

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ee difference

ne a Protestant

r 3@ S8CO the eldest ere of the ohn $. Beale

Lord Burghersh, Hoe8 looking, Yar frora rich, for his father is one lef the affluent sore of the Bot use of Lords, and during the pro- ceédings in court in involved during the Ufetime of, Ris first slag in connection with financial ciffti- . culties, he was cempelled to admit that the joint income of the late Lady West- moreland and of himself did not exceed

| $12,000 a year.

His impoverishment is due in the main te the terrible extravagance of his father, and to his own laudable ceter- mination to pay off his panantal cebts. He was Cane to sell his ancestral hom e, Apthorne Hall, in Northampton- sare” to" revn == SIC a ie and the treasures wh almost aS much more. But while the Sala rélieved him of certain heavy charges and expenses, it brought him

littie or no actual money, everything having been Be edie up to ee very hilt. it was a great wrench tting Apthorpe go.

1.23 Be en D We Let 459

least

s

at: mo

Dates as Far Back ase Henry HI,

For it was a grand old place, the property embracing an area of 10,000 acres, portions of the mansion dating as far back as Henry IIT, while the newer part of the building belongs. to the time of Queen Elizabeth. Tt was granted by Edward VI to oir Walter} Mildmay, founder of Emmanuel Col- lege, very

Mansion

anclent are family,

ar

Marriage, soon death. : Lord Westmoreland by his first wife, a widowed daughter whose husband, the eldest son and heir [of the very rich Lord Bariard. this dife for his country in the war, The others are Lord Burghersh, | se brother, John Fane, who ia à naval!

cadet, and a younger daughter ef the. ‘name of Lady Violet Fane,

agile: Westmoreland is the grandson j

_ eleventh Marl who achieved

a general, afterward as a!

Sid AS @ composer. Sa vpas- ford was he of music tha nbassader 2: vienne he created

enaons Gutery ritrasProtestan

ess a ingland by piaying the vio. tioncé!tis at orchestral mass in St Stephen’s Cathedral. Moreover, wher he went out riding or driving in th, i Prater he nade al point of being al aie by his private ser

ways accompanied by

4 Po WT.

J

a

=

which he became }

ich it contained for |

bord Westmore land 4 is the chief through | bank, er the Virgin Queen's ;=aiimly When she married the | Jersey.

{

has four children |

À

¢

|

gave } great;

Î

|

| i "

Wea imorela

FPertune,

rétary, Whose duty it was 10 transcribe Gn reaching heme the tunes and mele-

dies which ris chief had composed and

aummed or whistled while on horse- back or in the carriage.

it Was as an attache of his embassy at Vienna that Grenville V'urray : imprudent enough to-portrat him mo ; emusingly as ‘the Hari of Fiddle-dedes’ im à weekly paper then eaeppearing in London, and, of cours, this entailed the transfer and eventual removal from the ‘Aplomatic service of the brillant Gren- ville, à fellow attache of Henry bouchère, and who, it was gencrally un- Aerstood, was one of the numerous nat- ural eons of gay oid Lord Palmeraton, who died ag Premier of Great Britain.

Duke Ran Away With a Banker's

Daughter,

denied that the Harls et nd have sovehnt by every th 2¢lr power to better their

Is, the great-grandfather of tac pres Lord—hamely, the ténth Bari, finding his fi nances reduced to an extremely low ebb, determined to secure the hand of the greatest’ metress of the Ce y nat is to gay, Sarah, only Sang wor af Robert Child, the great 101607 banker.

Lord Westmoreland was dining one might « at the banker’s house, when he remarked to him, “If you were in love With a girl, Child, and her parents ‘would not let you marry her, whet would you do?”

! Ur. Why EWEY COUTsS Was rash hee who had no idea had any matrimonial aes daughter and heiress. : Lord Westmoreland act advice and went off on ey With Miss Sarah Chile

en Sie à

+ seh = pelle

fae

“de Cannot }

means in oY AE ont

vith peu

“an

aaah

the

: s s3ted Be or Wostmorsiena G's es one of his horses just ag he was catching up with the fugitive couple. Having sworn in-tis rage to disinherit his e:-+ fant daughter, Child, who was a great character, would not bresk the leitar of his vou, but modified its spirit by leaving his bank and all his vast far- tune to his favorite grandchild, the eidest daughter of Lord and Lady Westmoreland, on the condition pi gue should be christened Sarah an tak his name of Child. He was foun? dead, drowned in the lake at Os tetly Fark, but whether he committed sulcide in iy State of despondency or fell in by acel- dent, remaing a mystery to this day. _ When the eldest daughter of Lord Westmoreland grew Up she came into

Cambridge, and passed nee the; Pessession of Osterly Park, of ef) her ef which S'andfather’s great fortune, and of his

ef her father’s

fifth Lord

In fac 3, all the property, in-

Seas 18 Child's Bank, is to-day owned y the present Lord Jersey.

Xs Conclusion I may mention that tha present Lord Westmoreland was on one occasion the object of a very odd iawauit im London, which might have conveyed the impression that the barter and sale Of human beings still survived in Grea | Britain. For à Mr. De Beer, a lawyer, who used to make à practice of acting RS peer broker to company promoeters-- nat is to say, undertaking to secure

nd furnish. the services and names of

cers of the roalm to figure as directors

n the boards of joint stock compant

red à company promoter of the name

Gavin for the amount due to Sim for

Wing ‘sold’ Lord Westmoreland to

mi for director in one of his companies.

te courts Gecided in favor of the plain-

i, thus giving legal sanction te the

eier and sale of peers of the realm.

Which passed out

eS; am oo

eS ee

“From? a “Special Correspondent of. TH : _PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. $1 —In ad: istering a 34—0 defeat to Virginia |

Baturday the Tigers gave every ‘indics- ;

tion that Princeton will meet Harv

J next Saturday with an attack oe fence that will be somewhat. of à su | prise to those who witnessed the ou 8: | and Black's two defeats at the hand: Chicago and the Navy. During the °:

half, when the Tiger’s first string fi: “were in the game, Princeton's offe tooked better than at.any time this ss gon. Playing without Lourie, and Gee rity calling signals in his absence, - Tigers launched an attack that re to be denied.

Of all the improvements noted in. Fixe play of last Saturday, ebove all others. uid Chicago games

The Tigers in the ele ieee

shin signals as delay iad time los: tween play 5 marred hele football. bs

Garrity a wuwer, 80 aS

Jooked like a real football team {2 first time since the Colgate games _fliger line with substitute guards, vccmb. and Von. Schilling. eee.

: Per

pos in For style,

Cee to finish the game Ge to. ‘another touchdown to the Orange | A Black total. and Ken Smith. saved. th

ffigers from’ the disgrace of a “shut. out goals.

by booting two beautiful field "This fact seems to. show that. oper’ gubstitutese are not much to boast about, at least as a team The Tigers have several good substitute backs who. are giving promise in practice scrimmages but against Virginia they lacked suffi cient drive to put the ball over. | The great running of Cleaves and th dropkicking by Smith served as th lbright spots of the day’s encounte: «leaves, always one of, if not the hardes running back in Princeton, ee good in there es. to

“<= + + +3 inst diarvara xt Saturday

Sag + fas ZTE RSS PSS TR er ie

HAS

eon. The Tiger : offs that were. easy re put trie the was lucky enough to recover,

Ww hen Frank Murrey was declared in.

f elt that the Tigers would have to 00! | gar and wide before they could uncos

» toe artist of Murrey’s standard, Hov ever, in the game against Virginia K

Smith. loomed up as a possible succ sor

to Murrey’s glory. Smith, kicking tv field goals as calmly as a veteran fror the 42 and 30 yard marks, establish

himself as a fleld goal artist well wor watching. While Smith is not certaii ¢o start against either Harvard or Yald vet his performance against. Virgini makes it a pretty safe bet. that he wi be called upon in at least one of th “big games for a try at a goal from tk Meld. Smith’s drop kicking Re

_ something that per is sure to use

ndvantage. ; |

one stood outs

tive oe nt may ae eed: on

this, and possibly. with | George Owen and Fitts and one or two others in the] fight the result might have been differ- | |. ent. But the final score is the answer. a and the team that Har- | : vard men believed powerful enough to

0. everything, a

bent Centre fell down on tis job ater

AS the game in the historic Cambridge | tadium was played on Saturday there.

an be no dispute as to the better team.

erhaps if some Harvard forward had |

t been offside in the last flitting mo- sents of the Fama: 2 ard might

su oui AS = HOT . E a The Crimson ave won then, and indeed it probably

uld have won. is like an error in baseball.

th ae

It is

entable, often the result of over|

nxiety on the part of some boy, but it appens, and like every otner error must e penalized. A

o Harvard men who fideked to Cam- |

dge to see the Crimson in its final |

St game for the Princeton Tiger on. t Saturday, the game was positively

depressing. If it be true that no varsity | Bombination is stronger than its sub- |

ae then Harvard is not over pow- rful

might |

Off side play in foot-

In one period, the second, Har- |

comm velop 4

thing

have EL Ge. |

vulne]

Crimg : 50 Ve

that H tucky {rom “Wher stood

ee d clearly and decisively outplayed 6

he Colonels, but with the goal line only

ae “two vars. distant, the Crimson

: 1m à d the Pau on. the. ‘ten it failed to rush,

March 25,192] ne. E SPE H

and inatrention: a ‘Marie cAutotaette? in 1780. ae is a pretty, precious little toy, showing formal architecture as à. || plaything for the boudoir, where indeed it very soon sir | i = wards expired.. The Queen’s own architectural tastes being, ! however, reflected in the romantic whimwhams of the Trianon | Farm, it.is to-be doubted whether she ever took much heed of. À it save, perhaps, as.a glittering and festive-looking ornament.” |} The miniatures, mostly. of royal and historic personages, both § French and English, are of a high order, the renowned Fete ‘4 and his school being particularly well represented. | When the demands of a luxurious society are met with a @

artistry and happy invention as is displayed in the Jones % collection, it is difficult not to regard the age of patrons with. Go | some indulgence and to wonder whether superfluous riches” | à have often been spent as well. EL

s ~ nee CE SE 7 à

or A T 0 ate = = _ [March 2 25, 1922

B swort s with him i in his dinars in ton instances. For ae [that “a dentist, a shopkeeper or a clerk can never be a gentle- Iman, except by courtesy.” Mr. Mencken is twenty years behind the times ; to go no further, the present writer can think lof acquaintance in eh of these positions whose gentility

Ris questioned by nobody. His list of American euphemis ns is | charming. “Undertaker: mortician. The barber's shop: Bionsorial parlour. Shopwalker: aisle manager. Pawnshop: Floan-office. Underclothes: B.V.D.s.’ ‘The heads of busi- ‘nesses are called presidents (I know af: one president whose staff Aconsists of two typists)’ Again: “I wandered into a uni- versity knowing rase À and casually. asked for the Dean, and

y somebody asked, *‘ Which Dean ?’”

Perhaps I reached the extreme at a theatre in Boston: Ww ne AT wanted something, I forget what, and was told that I must apply to the chief of the ushers. He was a mild little man, who |

had SEES to. a with people ee into tir sos caldl ane oe =

F ag à Pr . © nt en LT ES kor as SEs a. as ' VE Po Py Sees < a e ESC ETS ACTE ~ Sex oi ee SR ans A 2 5 ee Pee es co ‘e Sig eines; fi See oS COM, Ma (pene : > ; k sag ES = ; is oe D Ps, . Be i ie Nase = me Lt , a S @ s ja à 3 : SEE D he vue

Methven Castle, near Perth, ee heats Lot tee Colonel David Smythe to Mr. Ernest Cox, of Dundee, along

with a part of the estate, which had been owned by : the Smythe family since the: reign of Charles FE “the à | Castle is à picturesque and interesting old house, has pensent gardens and a well- wooded park. “Que. À

Bee M arg aret, widow of James IT., resided for some time %

a TT M fethven. Ther e is excel en ] Ow er ound sh co ting q over the estate, which compr ises altogether, mS out 6. 000

: acres. The Methven Bey is noted | in the as Zz

A free PE of PEPSODENT, the No 2e dehtifags al be be À |

40, Holborn Francs London, E, C, 1.

gent upon application to Dept. 154a, THE PEPSODENT GOMPA ANY, ee |

ee ——— RE ome, SEE LAS

The: Buiset ie not be. on until ies ‘Dawes People who are talking about a 2s. reduction in the _income-tax would do well to moderate their expecta- _ tions. Itis by no means certain that even Is. reduction © will be possible. The Cabinet have been considering a eee for capitalising our war pension Rates

Sr pe RSS RR SEE SE SS.

ee Donald Miucloan staal on the ‘Chas

the Exchequer that no demand has been ade) by the ae

oe Jnited States Government for the payment of intei est in

D this year on the British debt to that ‘country. By Li | F arrangement with Washington the payment of interest

| f was suspended : in 1919, 1920, and 1991. AS the suspense a

| peered ue this week (on March 31), Sir Robert :

FD

F FT a : 4

| THE JONES COLLECTION AT SOUrH KINSINGTON, Me. Jonx Joxes (1800-1882) must obviously have been

extremely successful as tailor and army clothier, which wes his business, before ever he won more general and enduring fame by

F | making the great collection of objets d'art that was his pleasure.

à still survives intact as a monument to his public spirit and nnoisseurship and as a perpetual delight to all those who loye __

a ne ES

à fine craftsmanship. In rooms 65-69 of | the Victoria and Albert

Museum, which were reopened to the public on Saturday

| the collection has been effectively rearranged after a old » retirement i } exhibits consist chiefly of French work of the eighteenth century.

66

a place of safety against air risks.” The

| ; —furniture, metalwork, ceramics, sculpture, pictures and minia.- . | tures—almost all of outstanding merit,and showing that Jones

a | me de his selections with a skill and judgment that areeven more

F rare than the possession of the means necessary for such an S enterprise. Most prized by their collector were certain { armoires by Boule, but I doubt whether to-day we see very à much beyond consummate craftsmanship in their claborate ; arabesques, though fifty years ago such work was at à high premium, resulting in that flood of bastard imitations which is

no doubt largely responsible for our present reaction pes

D even the very best authentic examples,

Characteristic of the ancien régime is the ue little.

# model in gold and lapis lazuli of the five orders of erchi. tecture on a porphyry base made for the amusement

PDO duUub LU CARD Dies 2 NN up ee mation was the failure of the expedition anit the loss of about 890 British soldiers (including Tollemache himself), who were killed during the attack. The betrayal was evidently known in | the time of Macaulay and Thackeray, as they both allude to the sub ject. À am, Sir, &c., S. H. ToLLEMACcKE.

SL

DIR, —ÂÀ earlier statement of this position thar any of those which you have EE is to be found in Aristotle’s Ethics, Book X., Chapter 7. Aristotle is maintaining that intellectual activity is higher than moral or practical activities, | | because intellect or mind (,65) is the highest part of man. 4 He says: “It is this, indeed, which each man really is, since |:

ait is the ruling oat better part of. him,” and later, The intellectual life is highest and most pleasurable since this, .e.,

mind,is in a special sense the man ”’ (elrep rotro pddora dvOpwrros).

on | am, Sir, &c., | H. it

THE YOUNG CITIZEN SERIES. [To tae Epiror or THE Specraror.’’]

_ Sir,—You have been among the forces making for good citizen- | ship and Empire in the sense of international brotherhood as |} distinguished from the militant anarchy and bitter class feeling taught in a certain type of Sunday School. Possibly | you will kindly allow us to make known through this letter one of the many efforts to counteract the negative and destructive propaganda by inspiring young people at the most

+ A : ai: : kes

. bof ne we ork by eR Ac

a ? ÿ D meer will b e 0 flere d next Tuesda lay rhe 5 3 lots,

+

sr

oh Aes es supposed that Pr was Jane te Mansfield Park. The manor was” owned- for many centuries by the Brodwes family. Thomas E Brod- + nax, builder of the house, changed his name to. \ ay + on succeeding to a’ ‘large estate in Hampshire, and à a _ the name of Knight : in. 1738, when he inherited | an estate ea Sussex, His son Thomas, who died childless in 1 ee Godmersham to his cousin, » Edward Austen, rother

5 Pe

ee

ae : = - = ET = 3 2S oe ; ~ ~ pgs = ees E SERRES

there in the a

The es of York and Prince RE were > previdesly D | | | on a short visit to Lord and Lady Leicester at Hotithain eo . Hall, where the West Norfolk Hunt Ball took place _ during their stay.. The splendid Palladian house at D Holkham, built by. Kent in 1744- 46, is admirably Î=

adapted for a ball, the hall (surrounded by a gallery on &

D three sides), the great drawing-room, and the saloon jj a being fine spacious apartments, in addition to which |

4 there are two large dining-rooms. The house is full of §

pictures and old drawings and ch principally Ee D bought in Italy i in the eighteenth century. The famous : parse of Diana i in the ane! was. ‘une for £T, 900 ab. =

x 2 f

he well-known Secretary of is leaving London next mont

ted

Se.

gland wil

la

| Baynards Dates in ‘Suntey, eh has 1 bac privately | :

ee oS of old, “was an ancient Royal hunting g seat, and was a part 1 : ot the dower of Katherine Parr when. she marri ied 4 SS a He nry VIII. A statue of Edw ard VI. Was once: dis L Se covered in the house carefully walled up. A part of the 2

a house is pure Tudor, with a 8 ate house, and a part. rood |

ae _Eliz abethan, but much of it is shades” The front an d à fee the oriels are very admir able, and the interior has hand- 4g eg : some rooms and a | fine staircase. a Che man or rh

EE the ie le Ey ve deni ns, RE Mo on Lae gue es, ae: ‘the | : _ : Onslowe Le and. fr r om = 832 until 1 888 it Was. ne. by 4

- ANCINDELS OF EC Lu: rl ow family, ve ~The house contains À . ¢t ne eee ome Scheie chest i in which Sir Thom: as More’s À

Bee he ea d w as kept by his gra andd aughter, Eliz ab eth Roper, j

ady Bray. The head was subsequently buried in the 4

eee f amily vault of the Roper ers. s under 8 t. D: uns stan’ s Chure ch, | se UT a ee

ffered Durham. I Le ref used the see oi Lleref ord "Wise DL + ish BEBOP > P ercivall r retired. He was for eight yea ars oe oo :

4 tf tn y un a ee a n a cc ep table : man si = ed . . Ë i on 1 N corth 3. Er n el a aa “The re a re now three sees ‘vacant Se 4 Durh am, Carlisle, and Ri pon. Canon C arne gie and oe aE m Dr. 8 David are talked of as like ly men to be p r omot ed. Se | | Dr. I a D David has Ss. vel use ed thre ee b ish ro a nd one > de ar . ry ye ee

- ae : ee to : avera age £25 35, 000 ; ae : Ve 5. Lhe Dean | F gar. nered i in £ 9 00 Oa year, and of t en held what was the e en =

ë z aT irde d. as à pe poor bi ishop Fic” oS well. E a ch 0 f te A ty rel re : prebe pads aries drew from £4,500 to £ 5,0 0, an d = Bof ten t. ere were lar gow win ndf alls i in fines of various classes. | AS Se cael ee he OCC E ant of. a ‘golden =

à 519 Be

) for its fine old timber. Ti Gs close to the picturesque

g glen through which the Almond flows, and Lord Mans- oo > _# _field’s celebrated Logiealmond grouse moors are In the is oN 1 À

À _neighbourhood, also the Lynedoch woods, planted - by

D General Thomas Graham, a P eninsula hero 0, who took oe

ve : ae

his title f fro om 1 this ‘Place.

oe LE. à re in “Dublin is an act as flat bo

oe _ and after this almost anything ee happen, though one} eae hopes it will not. The House of Lords has passed the | ey Free State Bill, but what is Treland going to do with the ] = Beace. ‘Treaty in its present pontition | 2 What. sort of |

pod a elect ion can n be held j in a a state of anarchy} 2.

There : is, L dent. no Fond tor the rumour es © hat Harewood House is to be placed at the disposal, EE of nes Mary and Lord Lascelles. They will have | D as their country residence Goldsborough Hall, which & ET been rented for the last twenty-five years by Mr. W.R. Lamb, who leaves on April 30. Itisa rectangu- Ee

D lar brick. house, with- ‘stone dressings, and some fine à

D moulded Dons. in the principal rooms, and. it stands

Pin a small well-wooded park. The house was rebuilt |

| in 1625-26, and was altered and enlarged. in 1767 br. 4 the Brothers feet, builders of Harewood House.

3 . . sl \ à x DC ENS IE TI a SAG ASSIA STB eG APE ZEST

: Pince Heu | had a aoe Ss. ae eat meee with

ne abe: Grafton pack. Captain Drummond, Of. Pittora À Hall, who has been the host of the Prince of Wales and D his brothers during the last year when they were visit- | | ing the Shires, has undergone an operation, having

been suddenly taken ill when hunting near Melton

| | oe Mrs. ‘Proummond has also been ne ill. J

SUNBEAM CAR.- xD h. bp. Lan duuteite: ne new, POO,

BE ~ condition ; inspection invited by appointment ; exceptional offer, se

| _ DENVER, 10, es Place, N. W. 1.

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