Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1946 — Page 8

RE STR I TIRE Se

Theodore Roosevelt's adventurism

: FIRST READER . . .

Englishman Takes Look At Midwest and Proves He's a Diplomat Anyway

By HARRY HANSEN "MIDWEST AT NOON." By Graham Hutton, Chicago. Univer.

sity Press. $3.50. IT TAKES an intellige

things about Americans that Americans themselves /do

not know, Keen-witted,

Graham Hutton came to the during the war conducted] the Office of British Information in Chicago. He made a tour of the country, visit; ing all but two states. Then he wrote a book: “Midwest at Noon.” 1t 4s a fine, substantial analysis, though I wouldn't couple it with the works of De Tocqueville and James Bryce. Mr. Hutton, says his publisher, the University of Chicago Press, is “a modern Bryce.” Bryce or no Bryce; why can’t he pe Graham Hutton and stand on his own feet? The book has not the slightest relation to tne work of Bryce, save that it deals with Americans.

1t is, actually, an excellent region- ! thick and words break no hones.

a] study, dignified and Just. ” = " MR. HUTTON is an observing fellow; he discusses and analyzes, and his opinions crackle in every paragraph. He is neither the ungatisfied critic nor the visitor who repays his’ -host with flattering thank-you notes. . He cites the self-sufficiency of the Midwesterner, his distance from Europe and lack of interest in it. He mentions the fact that Midwestern immigrants looked on “the old country” as “penighted, slow and without a future.” But when lie says that the Midwest has always sat behind its tar{ff barriers, and has always advocated and supported tariffs, he forgets that tariff reform began when the farmers of the Midwest saw themselves hurt by the privileges tariffs gave to industry. :

s 8» = WHEN HE says of Midwesterners that “most of them distrusted

and manifest destiny,” he has been talking with the wrong people;

sympathetic and fascinated . by ‘American rigamarole of business, politics and education,

nt Englishman to find out

the"

#

BATA hae pa

Days Proves -

Exceptional

"THE CRYSTAL BOAT." A. novel. By Dorothy Erskine. New York, L. B. Fischer. $2.50. By HENRY BUTLER SOME OF US are apt to be bored in advance by a novel about’ medieval life. That's partly because many of the medieval stories

we've read (juvenile tales about Robin Hood or expurgated Arthurian legends) have struck us as too prettily fanciful, But “The Crystal Boat,” Dorothy Erskine's extraordinary blend of

United States in 1937, and

It is important to bear this in mind | when reading a paper, listening to| a speech; or taking part in a dis-| cussion in the Midwest,” says he. | As proof he points to the freedom | of speech and of the press, which he finds far greater in the Midwest than elsewhere in America. » » »

research and creativity, turns out

~ [to be highly readable and informa- | | tive,

» ” ” THE STORY is set in Scotland, | beginning in 1283, Janet MacConn- | la, orphaned daughter ot the best of the drunken, brawling, untidy | Mac Connla highland clan, comes | in childhood under the refining in- | fluence of Guibert, erstwhile monk. | Guibert, expelled from his order |

“MANY Midwesterners would like when he struck the Abbot, who was |

to have a satisfactory explanation|peating a child, has become a wanof the long continuance of these two|derer.

| He remains with the Mac

freedoms, of the crusades led by Connlas for some years, introduc- | noble-minded Midwestcrners in the|ing order and cleanliness inte the

press against graft, crime,

vice and| vast -cldy-and-wattles “castle,

and

rackets, and of the comparative lack! imparting some education to Janet.

of effect on bad politics, bad poli-| ticians, crime and vice syndicates | and racketeers. So would 1.”

He thinks everybody's hide is] But he is a diplomat when he writes “Only a few Midwest editors and their readers and only a few British editors and theirs, can adjust their thoughts and ideas to the ‘great revolutions of the world’ in our day.” How can we object when he rings in the British? » » » GRAHAM HUTTON sees the Midwest, young in years, reproducing many of the social patterns’ of older Europe. He has some specially pertinent observations on the growth of big business and the] jealousy of little business. Among little businessmen, employing 100 to 200 hands, he finds competition; the big fellows, to his mind, know better. He says of the little businessman: “They are riding the waves of a wake. They are living in the time lag.” He sees the social tensions from the perspective of a European.

| Patrick Hay, scion of a neighboring |

{her aunt Anna, prioress at Dun-|

x = HE HAS some

. o » SOUGHT in marriage by oafish clan, Janet seeks sanctuary with | fermline cloister. Her dread of life | at home and of Patrick's rude ad- | vances leads her to become a maid of honor to the queen at Edinburgh. She ultimately becomes the mistress of the king, Alexander III. And from then on, she is involved | in court intrigue leading to a series of tragedies. Though much of the book con- | cernis old, unhappy, far-off things, | in Wordsworth’s phrase, it's leav- | ened by humor and by a great fund of knowledge. » ” » { USING a deliberately archaic though smooth-flowing style some- | what suggestive of Malory, Miss| Erskine presents characters—good, bad and indifferent—through long stretches of indirect discourse. She catches what we may assume to have been the naivete of medieval people, She presents the medieval outlook, with its allegorical interpre-

» interesting con- | tation of things—the “virtues” and |

clusions about cities versus farms|"powers” of gems and animals, the | and the effect of population crowd-|

ing on Midwest fortunes.

T. R's greatest strength was Mid-

‘He describes the changes that

“significance” of the mystical num- | ber seven, The kind of notion that passed |

ew Novel on Medieval Life

Story of Early

LY

ders Racks

Hundreds of attractive new books, no time to read them . . . Miss

Isabel Russell, assistant in the b

ook-order department at Central

Public library, starts a few volumes on their trip through processing.

About 40,000 volumes annually go to circulation.

through the department en route

Life of Norman Anthony Is Lusty, Laugh-Packed Story

"HOW TO GROW OLD DISGRACEFULLY."

Norman

By

Anthony. New York, Duell, Sloan & Pearce, $2.75.

REMEMBER Ballyhoo? It was pression.

big-time national advertising.

the hilarious magazine of the 'de-

It spoofed a lot of matters hitherto untouchable, including lication just at the tine ol the

bi

STALIN 'BIOGRAPHY' MUSIC ON THE DISC—

ot

Trotsky Dead, Vocals Lead in Populari ty.

But Leaves ‘Time Bomb' | "STALIN." | New York, Harper.

9 | By HARRISON SALISBURY { United Press Staft Correspondent |

LEON TROTSKY has been dead for six years—lacking four months—but he left behind him a literary time bomb in the form of a “biography” of Josef Stalin. The bomb “exploded” with publication of the

book today. In the volume Trotsky charged

that Stalin may have provided poison to V. I. Lenin to enable the stricken leader of the Sovict revolution to end his life. He also

claimed that Stalin was instrumental in’ ordering the execution of Czar

(The author of this review of | Leon Trotsky’s “biography” of | Josef Stalin spent eight months | in Russia during the war and is | himself the author of “Russia on { the Way,” soon to be published.)

{Nicholas II and the imperisi family. Trotsky offered no evidence in support of either allegation. = »

= ¢ “THIS BOOK was ready for pub-

| Pearl Harbor disaster,” the pub-

Norman Anthony had the idea: George Delacorte had the money |lishers explained editorially. and the distributing system; by its fourth issue the magazine had| “Its appearance was then post-| “Begin the Beguine” and The Voice

1,000,000 circulation and by its sixtl wealth—at one time he had 20 treas-, ury certificates for $10,000 each, given him by the publisher. He kept a.chauffeur, sent a bootlegger | on special runs to Canada, bought three fur coats at a time and put his mother-in-law on the payroll. “1 was hot stuff,” says Anthony

in his “lusty, laugh-packed life,

1 2.000,000. Mr. Anthony rolled in

Defoe Expert

‘How to Grow Old Disgracefully.’”|

n n n | A SWELL line of illustrations from Ballyhoo and some of its | cracks appear in the book and indicate that much of its humor was of the razzberry flavor. Norman, who has been a resource ful fellow, one-time editor of Charles Dana Gibson's Life and of Judge and has even attempted to be both angel and producer, may have lost his money. But his zest, verve, bounce, comeback and | unpredictability seem as fresh as] ever. He loves to kid everything, including his own career. Norman had a wide acquaintance with the speakeasies of the dry era, but he can’t stomach the night clubs of the present. ” ” ”

Defoe expert . . . Dr. John R.

Moore.

War Aids |.U.

Professor in

His Research

THE WAR didn't often aid liter-

|poned by the publisher until after| {the end of the war. { “Now that hostilities are over, {Harper & Brothers feel that. this| biography, containing material of historical importance, shoul¢ be published in accordance with agreements previously made.” = » » | TROTSKY’S own account carried through 1917. The years of his deep {conflict with Stalin have largely| {been reconstructed by Malamuth {from Trotsky's notes and files. Trotsky alleged that just about a year before Lenin died in January, 1924, Stalin mentioned at a] meeting of the politburo — inner (circle of the Communist party cen-| ‘tral committee—that Lenin, who had been {ll for some months,

|called him in and asked Stalin to

| provide him with poison. | Lenin had suffered an attack of | arteriosclerosis on May 26, 1922. After improving for some time, | he suffered a second stroke in De- | cember, 1922, and at the time of

{the alleged incident reported by Trotsky—February, 1923—physicians were doubtful of his recovery. = »

» TROTSKY reported that Stalin

~ Record Sales Here Indicate .

- By DONNA MIKELS ‘The warblers were .ahead by a tonsil as local record shops tabulated

their top selling platters today.

In the top five range are:

All the top and near top discs were By Leon Trotsky. |vocals, with few instrumentals even on the fringe. Novelties, enjoying ' a flash of popularity lately, are closely paced by some new ballads,

“Gypsy,” a dreamy ballad, by the Ink Spots (Decca).

“Shoo Fly Pie,” a melodic doubletalk ditty by Dinah Shore, (Columbia). : “Laughing on the Outside,” by Dinah Shore (Columbia). “Sioux City Sue,” semi-corn by Tony Pastor (Cosmo). “Atlanta, Ga.,” a top novelty fune by Sammy Kaye (Victor). » - ” THE “GYPSY” ballad just was released a week or so ago but it's shot to top place locally. The Ink Spots platter is topping all others except a platter by Miss Shore, which has another top tune, “Laugh-~ ing on the Outside,” on the flipover. The way Miss Shore drawls her drawl on the already drawly “Shoo Fly Pie” seems to have pushed the tune way up in record sales. Stan Kenton’s waxing also is a top seller. The “Sioux City” and “Atlanta” tunes both should be on the wane by now but they're still moving steadily across the record counters. The Pastor “Sioux City” platter, incidentally, pulled ahead locally only after Crosby's Decca waxing had sold out.

” » » ON THE FRINGE this week are such up and coming discs as Freddie Martin's “Bumble Boogie,” just what it sounds like, Maurice Rocco's top dgawer interpretation of

on “Full Moon and Empty Arms.” # » » Comers among the new releases: CAPITOL—Put your “sure fire favorite” money on a Freddie SlackElla Mae Morse hoogie-woogie number “House of Blue Lights.” starts with a conversational bit, then into a vocal background with Slack’s keyboard gymnastics. The eight-beat rhythm riot is backed by a bluesie bit “Hey Mr. Postman,” featuring Morse vocal and an instrumental duet by Slack and George + Van Eps on guitar. , .. Another dilly by Cap is a blues combination by Margaret Whiting, “Come Rain or Come Shine” and “Can't Help Lovin’, Dat Man.” “Come Rain” was written by the Johnn¥ Mercer-Harold Arlen combo. . +. On the croon side is Andy Russell's version of “Laughing. on the Outside” backed by the latest Irving Berlin ballad “They Say It's Wonderful.” Instrumentally, Cap offers Stan Kenton in “Painted Rhythm” a field day for his brass section and featuring Vido Musso on tenor sax. ” ” = COLUMBIA—Here's another blues

{combo by the Herman Herd. Woody |

sings “You've Got Me Crying

It,

{ { {

TODAY'S STACKUP—

Best-Selling -

Ratings -

Ayres’, Block's, Capital, Meigs, Meridian, Sears and

titles current best-selling ratings: NONFICTION “The Egg and 1.” By Betty MacDonald. “Starling of the White House” By Edmund Starling. Autobiography of William Allen White. “This House Against This House.” By Vincent Sheean, “Burma Surgeon Returns.” Dr. Gordon S. Seagrave, “One World or None.” Edited by Derter Masters and Katharine Way. “Peace of Mind” By Joshua Liebman, “General Wainwright.” By Robert Considine. “The Anatomy of Peace” Emery Reves. “Top Secret.” By Ralph Inger soll. : “The Farmer Takes a Wife,” By John Gould. FICTION “The Black Rose.” Costain. “David the King.” Schmitt. “The Crystal Boat.” By Dorothy Erskine, “The Wake of the Red Witch.” By Garland Roark. “Star of the Unborn.” By Frans Werfel. ""“I Love Miss Tilli Bean.” By Ilka Chase. : “Forever Amber.” Winsor. “The King’s General.” By Daphne du Maurier. “Written On the Wind.” By Robert Wilder. “This Side of Innocence.” Taylor Caldwell.

By

By

By Thomas

By Gladys

By Kathleen

By

|

| |

“The Snake Pit.” By Mary Jane Ward. “Proving

Ground.” By Leone Lowden, ’

Designer Writes

Indianapolis’ :

s

Stewart's give the following

El i i, S

LD

DON'T

PSO

starts w, Dry scily skin us

: If you are discou

disease, here is | found relief with works quickly to move Psoriasis sc cess— guard agair greasy; will not s the 60c. Triak.size $1.50 and $3.00 you te not satish today at H Michel or a drug store.

Get a jc new kind fo-ease n infection Impetigo, ternally when use new M

mentioned the poison request to the Again.” The flip over “Panacea” | politburo “after the departure ofa), features Woody on the voon1 | BOOK of Poems ; But indirectly it did help Dr. |the secretary.” Present at theigng nighlights the best Herd solo-| Lee Simonson, noted stage dewife, tired of his eccentric Ways, jonn Robert Moore professor of meeting, in addition to Stalin and |ists Plip Phillips, Chubby Jackson, | Signer, has written “Untended = went back to her mother. | English at Indi yl | himself, were Gregory Zinoviev and |pete Condoli, Bill Harris, and of [Grove,” a volume of poems to be Mr. Anthony looks on all this as :glish at Indiana university, make|jey Kamenev, Trotsky's a pe Herman himself . . . Just [Published tomorrow by Duell, Sloan

_western and here began the pro-

gressive movement. have come in the definitions of|for medieval science still survives, | WHEN his money departed—even ary research.

Moreover, it is impossible to know liberty, equality and fraternity. modified, of course, in back-country [the horses went back on him—his the Midwest political temper with-| He finds Midwesterners distrust | American folk-lore. out knowing the LaFollettes, yet ideas. ‘They have put a lower value

- ” Mr. Hutton’s passing mention ofjon the original and creative life of| MISS ERSKINE acknowledges . : them is solely in connection with the the mind than they have on ma-|her debt to such scholars as G..G.|a matter of infinite jest, and, in or-| an important Defoe discovery last|in-law. Both these men were exe- released, Benny Goodman's “Don’t {& Pearce. Be a Baby” is climbing fast. Art| Mr. ‘Simonson’s book will include

an of businessmen. terial things, practical affairs, com-| Coulton, whose views of medieval der to give you a chance to laugh year in England. cuted during the famous purge. Many New York publicists, who mon sense. England were vigorously assailed with him, he adds anecdotes about| While serving on the faculty off “No vote was taken,” Trotsky re-| Lund does the vocal in his first |an introductory letter to Louis Uns consider the whole Middlewest “There is,” he says, “belief in and| by the late G. K. Chesterton. Robert Benchley, Heywood Broun, Shrivenham university, the army’s | ported, “since this was nét a for-| record with the sextet. On the re- | termeyer and poems dedicated to molded solely by the editorial opin- even satisfaction with popular ig-| While it would take a scholar to|F. P. A. Russell Patterson, Fr ank| school for G. Is awaiting redeploy-| mal conference, but we parted with|verse Goodman and Liza Morrow | Lewis Mumford, Van Wyck Brooks fons of one newspaper, will be sur-|norance. ..." pronounce judgment, a layman gets Psullivan, Tom Chalmers and other ment, Prof. Moore found time to|the implicit understanding that |yocalize on “All the Cats Join In.” jand Mendsen Hartley. prised to find that Graham Hutton continue research in the Bodleian | we could not even consider sending! , , Pearl Bailey fan better hop ;— ee

We pause for explosive reper-|the impression that “The Crystal | pals. PHC does not mention the Chi- poison to Lenin.” iout and snatch up “Legalize My

| cussions. Mr. Hutton, however, is| Boat” is accurate and authoritative.] One of his best tells how Dan library at Oxford. ROEBUCK AND CO

cago Tribune, but even asserts that safe in England. 1t certainly reads well, once you | Healey produced a camel on a bet 8 a = Eleven months after the alleged Name” and “It's a Woman's Pre“no one worries much about what's ™ e— get used to the style. and led it into the Ha Ha club in] ON THE suggestion of his friend incident Lenin died. rogative” . . . Another new Sinatra printed or said. What's being done? | mo ——————————— the early morning hours. Norman James Sutherland, president of x =» release features Frankie on “All. —r Hobart Novel {tells it so much better than I can, London university, Prof. Moore “WHETHER Stalin sent the|Through the Day” and “Two Hearts : [that T'll let you discover the chap-| went through some less familiar poison to Lenin with the hint that|Are Better Than One.” . , . Harry Big Seller {ter—H. H. | portions of the Bodleian's immense | the physicians had left no hope for James solos and Ginnie Powell Bobbs-Merrill "Co. Indianapolis | ye, Si | collection of 18th century news- his recovery,” said Trotsky, “or|sings “Do You Love Me” and Buddy | publishers, today announced that | New Sharp Novel

papers, whether he resorted to more direct|DiVoto sings the reverse “As If I| ew . Alice: Tisdale Hobart’s novel, “The Yas 20s to Jentily 79 mun Peacock Sheds His Tail,” has sold |lection for July will be Margery) ished in 1720, and 21 issues of

| D ’ ”» The Book-of-the-Month club s8-| parc of “The Commentator.” pub- = I do not know. Bul I am|DMdnk Fave EnCieh vp My HUH well over 600,000 copies. Sharp's new novel, “Britannia wrne citizen” 1727, as having been

firmly convinced that Stalin could|Which also features fe Smith's | not have waited passively when his|alto sax. : Published ‘by Bobbs:-Merrill last Mews” (Little, Brown). Miss|qiteq py the ho September, “The Peacock Sheds His |Sharp's previous novel, “Cluny| Grusoe Suthor ©! Robiason

fate hung by a thread and the decision depended on a small—very Tail” has been on best-seller lists |Brown,” was also a Book-of-the| {for months, {Month club selection.

small—motion of his hand.” 3 | AND ANOTHER THING j , :

Internal evidence, Including pre- | » By

Literary Cat |

" = sz VICTOR—Freddy Martin has a! natural. It's a lilting tune, “I Love lan Old Fashioned Song,” sung by

” "| | 2 & zt i TROTSKY quoted Lenin's so-called | Arte Wayne and the Martin Men. Youre the Cause of}

“testament’—a letter of guidance | Backed by Onc ako to the Communist party, : . par Please Don't

liminary sketches of works Daniel Defoe later elaborated, helped the | identification. .

JUL SETS fic

10INCH

written! 1? Al”.

* = about a year before Lenin's death — pleads, “Josephine,

Lean On the Bell,” backed by a

AE

FOUNDATIONS FOR RECONSTRUCTION

By ELTON TRUEBLOOD

$1.00 CHARLES DICKENS

By UNA POPE-HENNESSY

FOREVER AMBER

By KATHLEEN WINSOR '

Te obiain any _book reviewed on this page, write or phone LI-4571, .

Zipper the Zany

| "Zipper the Zany: | Book. Story and photographs by Richard M, Stevens. New York,

Penn Publishing Co. $1.

| picture-story for very young read- | ers. With plenty of action photos of | “Zipper” spilling ink, using a por|table typewriter, walking on the

The Little | Cat Who Tried to Write a |

William |

HERE'S AN unusually pleasing | They were clubbed on the head with rifle butts—but hard—and they

They walked—or dug-—out of Yankee prisons . . { They strolled along thé streets in full view of the|

“Ga ||| ES, Sg Historical Novel Unfolds

Lurid Spying Activities

| | | |

By DICK

"LODGING AT THE SAINT CLOUD." A novel. By Alfred Leland Crabb. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill.

$2.50.

BERRY

THE CONFEDERATE spies who haunted the Nashville occupation

force in the summer of 1862 must have been Civil war versions of the

modern superman.

{lived through it. jonce, but repeatedly. | Yankees, undetected.

They held conferences with Union

. hot |

The -adventure begins when Gen. | Nathan Bedford (Get-there-fustest-|

i; # AN ACCOUNT in “The Commentator” of capture by Moorish

pirates seems almost certainly to!

have been written by Defoe and to have served as a background for

| “Robinson Crusoe,” Prof. Moore bei lieves. °

Prof. Moore, who returned from England Feb. 18, has high praise for Shrivenham university. “It was just about the most successful undertaking I've ever been associated with, You might say it was a teacher's paradise, almost, for students never complained about assignments, and there was nobody ever in classes who didn’t

‘as warning the party against Stalin, {urging them to pick someone as party secretary “more loyal, more courteous anid more considerate to comrades, less capricious.” Trotsky's death interrupted his biography 10 months before Russia —and Stalin—began their most grueling test, Hitler's attack. In almost the final note of the collection of Trotskyisms which concluded his work he noted that the czarist government, in its final days, had arrested its minister of war at a moment when it “was on the verge of collapse.” | ”

Russian novelty, “Katinka.” . , Perry Como's newest, is “They Say It's Wonderful” and “If You Were the Only Girl.” . . . Johnny Desmond cut “Shoo Fly Pie,” and “I Don't Know Enough About You,”

Crosby Introduces Horse Anthology

anthology of horse stories from Homer to Hemingway, is announced for May publication by the Readers Press, Inc. Edited by Thurston Macauley, the

i

| |

“The Great Horse Omnibus,” an |

book will have as a feature an in-

* Popular ** Classical

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» » “THE SOVIET government,” concluded Trotsky, “not only arrested and executed its actual minister of war, Tukachevsky, but over and aboye that it exterminated the entire senior commanding staff of the army, navy and the air corps. “Aided by accommodating foreign correspondents in Moscow, the

| piano keys and so on, the little book | generals, spent a day or tWo 0CCA=|yitr tye ocvact) Forrest sends cut as an i ell) J DE ee a pies paring ES well sionally at the homes of their sweet-| two spies to recapture one spy. The| Mr. Stevens, who is a member ot | Dearts, and created general havoc|mission is accomplished, but in the among the entire occupation force|process one of the pair is captured. |

the Chicago Sun staff, has posed| ; i his own pet (no pedigree, just alley-|® + + #0 if 0ld age hadn't overtaken | From then on it's a hodgepodge , y escapes, recaptures, shootings, |

(them, they'd probably be alive to-|of cat) in a series of pictures even| ’ : pronalyly oe ave 10 i i grown-ups may find engaging. | day to tell the tale. | sluggings, fights, flights and wild

“Zipper the Zany” is a welcome | 4.8 n goose chases . . . and a little time addition to the list of photo-stories AT LEAST that's what one would|is taken out for romance.

. {gather from “Lodging at the Saint oH 2M for young people. ging a e oal we. a ‘ w———— . > ob | Cloud,” by Alfred Leland Crabb, SHAKESPEARE-QUOTING Lt

Beasley Nichol is. the principal

character, A princeton university ROEBUCK AND CO.

want to be there,” he says.

troduction by Bing Crosby.

Tries to Analyze Life in College

“Campus Versus Classroom: A| Candid Appraisal of the American | College,” by Burgess Johnson, is ay nounced for May 14 publication by Ives Washburn, Inc. Stalin propaganda machine has Based on Mr. Johnson's more been systematically deceiving pubthan 30 years of college teaching, | lic opinion the world over about the “Campus Versus Classroom” is de- {actual state of affairs in the Soviet scribed as an effort to analyze and Union. | sperian actor, Edwin Forrest, before evaluate the often confusing pat-| “The monolithic Stalinist governthe war. | terns of American college life. ment is a myth.” | His flair for the dranatic and) ron Pp ——————————— his assistant, drawling, Tennessee- | born Sgt. Mpek Goforth, get him lin and out of more scrapes in three days than most people can dream lup in a lifetime. Then there are President Polk's widow, the farmer's wife who can always furnish a choice morsel for the rumor mongers, and beautiful Hunter Cragwall, who engages in| subversive activities. | It's hard to believe that any] group of men could have so many (narrow escapes or get into so much {trouble and get “out again. But if |you're just a little bit gullible, you'll ® FICTION ® TRAVEL || find this bodk one you won't want ® NONFICTION ® BIBLES Ho Do down once you've picked] O CHILDREN'S . ®COOK || sms - ® REFERENCE ® SHOP come TO ® DICTIONARIES ® ATLAS . ® LATEST MAGAZINES N.

Mii

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