Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1946 — Page 14
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— n fren — THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES aL SATURDAY, OCT.12 1946 "I Met 'God' in Philadelphia," Marcus Bach Says se SOMEBODY— | Emotional Clash of Sexes Ir LH n % , Wy | L | » Fy | . . He J * | Jule Reflects | g4i| Main Theme of Novels Rare Talent “THE FALL OF VALOR. A novel. “re ork, Rinehart, $2.75. For Writing
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By Charles Jackson. New
1 [A Regular Weekly Feature of The Times) : on | “LETTY FOX: Her Luck," A Novel. By Christina Stead. New THE FIRST READER . . . By Harry Hansen "JULE" .A novel. By George] Yorks Harcourt, Brass, $3.90, ; Wylie “Heriderton. New Yorks| TODAY WE CONSIDER the progress of two young writers in
| public eye, who aré bidding for attention again with two new novels $ j They are Charles Jackson, who has written “The Fall of Valo? : By HENRY BUTLER “which automatically will enlist the favor of a large audience because he }-ioit; GOT to be somebody, Son. | ¥ote "The Lost Weekend,” and Cliristina- Stead, whose-tLetiy-Fex =-Her
| You got to be somebody as long as | Luck,” is another of her series of imaginative studies of the love life of
'you live. Don't never forget jt! | Women. | You hears me, Jule?” | Miss Stead is praised by Clifton
“I hears you, Ma.” Fadiman, on the jacket of this book, | That is the most important theme ag “ibe A | ‘ lof this novel of Negro life. ! e AEnglish- | 3 When Jule is growing up in Ala- jipeaktng race since Virginia i. pama, his mother, Ollie Miss, in- | ’ Biss hm This statement, however, must|
‘structs him to the pest of her She teaches him how | Nave been made before the new |
Creative Age Press, $2.50,
| AHempts of Russ Population. | To Hold Body, Soul Together Told by War Correspondent
“BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN." By (Seorge Mocrad. Philadelphia, 8 Fireside Press, Inc. $3. :
GEORGE MOORAD, newspaperman, radio war corre-
|
Poems Reprinted
31 gpondent and native of Indianapolis, has put in 15 years in | knowledge. : 1 the world’s trouble spots since he left in 1981 for China and [to hunt possum and coon, how to | book was Witten, . [Eid : J ¢ ran headfirst into Japan's “Shanghai incident.” He has BR ie MN ne hie SINCE the emotional tussle be- President "3 or Time, Life and Columbia Broadcasting system a sharecropper tween the sexes has been the prin- § wor ’ Pper's Sres. cipal subject of novel i Make “. > 3 0 s ever since : and covered Guadalcanal, Buna and the South Pacific, and HE RSEL + sored by Jule's|S“mue: Richardson wrote “Pamela” Stres ; never had an body cut him H y land Henry Fieldin wrote “Tom ” 1 stocks of food are “in line with father before the child was born,| j oc» 8 i i off. But when he reached Ih al 11 f tion.” | Ollie Miss, has a flerce ambition for | ones,” we can hardly express sur- |, By L ; i ber, 1944 d gr Sonera) policy of preparaugh | : : {her son. And when Jule, in troubl urise that ‘authors are still inves-| United, P i Moscow in October, , and | The Soviet Union never has suc- La i TN ni : E latter a fist-fght with a § © | tigating the nuances of the subs WASHIN i stayed there until Ambassador W.|ceeded in regulating prices; “there “Lord. Heal the Child!” by Thomas Hart Benton. (F I > pm Wise man, | ject, | dent Trum: § Averell Harriman left for the San|is a double economy in Russia: A| sollection.) vi ohy nton. (From a reproduction in the Herron Art Institute | asi Oe: e Miss makes |, mpg main theme of Mr. Jackson's on stabiliza ! 4 Francisco conference the following controlled, rationed market, pro- i (oe ? Jo amOmy 0 sry. ~The Fall of: Valor,” nas to] der spvere ii April, he found it practically im-|viding & minimum of food at pre- Rd go. . i |do with an emotional aberration mea : i possible to communicate With the war prices, and an uncontrolled, BAD—AND GOOD 3 B : k A b ion an ROVE) Juss Wo Shpuinet S€C*lfor it records the progressive de- al wid {i United Stes. He Jus wo She Soa: hutionsd market at hair-raising Vd 5 00 ou tf Od d R o / IgIO ns Full of keen, sensitive observation BR . schoolmaster Carl Sandburg cessions to sons ‘Beh ' 5. che - - p which W. L. White introduces as | a4 % ‘Atom Thr iller . | ope a, he eather mate and whose aD iy . MORE THAN 200 poems by Carl be, Bg: | | “an important public service.” | SINCE “RUBLES accumulate rap- . i ay Give Readers q Shock | arst I oie i WHHED Jules young marine, summering at Scon- Sandburg were published last Satur- x juin, Soyer 3 ry un eo i ni ’ "4 i i i ; ; lidly in peasant homes the govern- i |set, proceeds to a point where th aay in a $1 reprint edition by th ; WHEN MR. MOORAD reached |! % o ; ship between Jule and the white] : e the wor ick e The. Pre: | & Moscow he found a dispirited group |ment conducts relief campaigns to, alls 0 ri THEY HAVE FOUND A FAITH." By Marcus Bach, Indianapolis, boy, “Rollo; the boys’ hunting trip | 1aUter early Stains tim with “fhe pi sussion wil of American correspondents, who|drain off surplus money and cut! a Bobbs-Merrill, $3. ; when Rollo’s two horses are killed |P2 of fire tongs. Bor in the baok, called dianapolis Jived at the Metropole and put in|down the danger of inflation.” One, TROUBLE FOLLOWS ME" A By EMMA RIVERS MILNER by lightning; Jule's girl, Bertha, oh wish Fiininb ey Ee raaly Sash by ali their days trying. to get the most device to get the farmer's rubles novel. By Kenneth Millar, New Times Churéh Editor : Mae; the eccentric characters, male |, TH Subject Was briftianiuly Hone Poems” A t¥o volumes, ” Living The mea! i fnnocent of messages past the over- is to open government unrationed| York, Dodd, Mead, $2. “I MET ‘GOD’ IN PHILADELPHIA. He was wonderful. We bowled 20d, female, of the tiny COMMUNILY | Vipice gph o- Death. 111" ‘vith an rg Llo} iitical ov g bearing and captious censorship. “commercial” markets, which com- ,,\ ;pnep OF THE U. S. A." [together and sat through part of a movie and ate fried chilcken. He | —8ll these things are reported|g,., then all i years ago, and, Poems of the Midwest” > Hod, : It was a “bureaucratic catacomb,” |pete with open markets. il EU. bo A. A| was humble and wise and generous and he had a sense of humor. , . » vividly and ecopomically. ale var i x — Sc oaasors Seem tanis 30 photogra Rings fons The Dem Wo ‘where foreigners were isolated,| The information that Mr. Moorad | novel, By Will F. Jenkins. New| And the people who followed him were lowly people of great faith.” 4. 4 [Pale yap aaons Desige 4, 1}of .»l tions and a a un a Tor its con i pewspapermen were looked upon as|gathered on Yalta leads him to be-| York, Crown, $2. This quotation, lifted ‘without previous explanation from Marcus | APPROPRIATELY enough, thei, 'y,, , i h SPALL) Yar portrait of Sandburg by st ch N general ele ; meddlers, if not enemies and “news” |lieve that the atmosphere was By C. JAMES SMITH Bach's new book, “They Have Found a Faith,” may deal you a shock. |. ie Shahiges sulmewhat in the Har-| ou JE , on as made a con-| oo. 1919 when the y et tomorrow. i was never at their disposal. So hardly friendly. Before the meeting | Eh : But when you meet it in the course) — —— ——— ~~ ere wea} 1651 DATS Of tho Dovel. Here the | arring b Yom ing on Paper te dl. . SHOT tem, thorough was the blanketing of for- Moscow's hotels were stripped of, THE ~ JACKE] on the book, |of your journey with the ‘author {down in his mind the reactions of {dialog is different (more eity slick- | Ce oe Yan a husband. and{'’,. got ray was also the dat era} lave 1 id eign newsmen that one of them re- waiters and accessories, so little) Murder of the U. 8. A, bravely through eight of the less-well- | the visited. erish) and the writer conveys a; _ . o e ave been married 10/ "Gio to dedicate the rey In the cong 3 marked wryly: “There are no ex-did the Soviet have to enteriain | ProC alms this a new type of murder known faiths, you take it in stride.| He met Aimee Semple McPherson | 10t of impressions of Harlem by |” pit nd are not fully in tune. birthplace of Sandbur in ES Pos perts in Russia. There are only its visitors. jmysiery. It's certainly a new type,| Dr. Bach possesses an “ear’ for personally, became familiar with conversation, brief, ‘trenchant de- | & some readers may = agree pare, TH g esbs varying degrees of jgnorance.” s 3. 4 {but that doesn't make it good. religion just as some other folk | her movement, past and present, scription and a minimum of com- | . me that this is the most con- y Bad new k x a = ON A trip to Leningrad Mr. | Author Jenkins undoubtedly has|do for music. ‘and later attended “Sister's” fu-| Went. lvincing part of his book. As. for battle grou | WHILE THE censorship dilemma Moorad heard that the horrors of |® good idea for a mystery book,| He can detect all the fine tones Neal. The reader is given a funn) For some time after Jule gets to | the rest, doesn't it seem trite to Periences that seem to have no tng the Wh : fs not new, Mr. Moorad has some the siege have never been realized. murder based on the use of theland grasp the underlying inspira- | description of this dramatic event. | Harlem, he is razzed as being a|FNg in once again the professor point, no direction, that Letty's Short of interesting sidelights to contribute|He says markets in human flesh atomic bomb, but then so have|tion of any sincere faith no mat- * uw = | “down-home boy” or addressed as who wanders off the ranch and the Story is merely the continuous nar- from meat, on the Russian people. He tries 10|were established and survivors were [*€Yeral other writers. to Bow overely ft has been the tenia «spiritualist seance in|“Mr. Green” But he works hard | resplendent young manlicod™ of a rative of a self-conscious girl who dertake oth give a fair estimate of their condi-|allowed to use a dead man's ration Unfortunately for the reader, Mr. demned. Because of this sympathy Chesterfield, Ind, Dr. Bach held|and gets to be a headwaiter in a | Marine captain? is ‘analyzing everybody and every- age. tion. The shortage of food and|card if he could produce the ca- Jenkins stumbles through a maze|the author very naturally falls into conversation..with the spirit of his|night club. 2 ‘mn. 2 (thing without getting anywhere. He could housing, with 25,000,000 houses|daver. of hypothetical technical situations|the phraseology of the religions late, Bishan, Paula. He had not| He makes money, buys a car, has| I HAD expected something more | FOR HER i sq fea or a bonus , needed, and the pitiful attempts to| Mr. Moorad had no original bi about the U. S. being rocket-|he investi | “called her up,” was not even think- (his own apartment. H t loriginal from Mr. Jackso ife “was intended to market. SI 3 8 A as | gates. 3 : p e meets some . Jackson. : " . i hold body and soul together, are against the Soviet Union, Soy ub hi bombed. . 2.» |ing about Paula when she surprised | fairly sordid characters, including Christina Stead is still a young be a grand tour,” and although it be readjust described from personal observation. observed the iron curtain-on news The mystery is: Who is sending] HE WAS BORN into the family brim by appearing. Lou. a selfish, extravagant girl who [Woman, and yet I believe she has |16ft her often disappointed and Imports So rock-bound is the isolation of|the antagonistic attitude toward the bombs. And although the bomb-|of a Presbyterian father and a At the close of the chat, she put|involves him in debt and then two- | Written more words about love than | moody , she seems,” for the most meat could the Russians that they have an foreigners, no matter how well~dis- ing stops by the end of the book,| =~. oi who w d her spirit arms about his neck and | times him. any other author of our time. part to have bounced merrily from tificate sys! vincredible ignorance of the world,” posed, the refusal to let correspond- |' 6 MYStery remains. This isn't as a devout member kissed him. And in the end, the o. Xi3 The reason is her intellectual |OU€ Situation fo ariother : 10 assure 3 and believe the Soviet Union laid|ents disaiibe ae good reading even for a dull eve- of the Reformed church. But he |reader cannot say whether Dr. Bach FED UP with the night-club [curiosity and her tremendous verbal | She can be highly entertaining, of cattle tl actual conditions, he : | : . : low all its enemies, with little help became baffled and bewildered. |" °%' developed a very special feeling believed that Paula was bona fide| TORS, Sule £310 8 job as apprentice | facility. Hit you ‘ean take her Houbles , Jecteq agai ; from the capitalistic countries. Yet, ¥ 8 8 sy 2. of his own about religion, all re- or not. | typesetter. Through the influence{ When she tells a story she ex. | Seriously. in prices. te the way news has been| THE INFORMATION he reveled {a TIE Avi mystery reader will gions ’ He sits in on house parties ang! Of @ white friend, son of his em- plores every fact of her characters,| Lety’s mind is like a spotlight, Belief th played, “the hunger for unslanted, about the looting of Ma ling 8 B eal of enjoymery and | TE sharing sessions of the Oxford | Plover, he manages to secure a their families and relations to the Playing all over the landscape at * Insist on hi simple news is unbelievabl hateed his 8 Manchuria | {he proper number of persons killed| “I always knew that someday friend ‘union card despite discriminatory [42d d d lonce, and this, too, may be th tio : : unbelievable.” chang opinion about “the new . ‘ . : r Y group, sees a frien “changed” | riminatory egree, and reports oh all the| . » h e the n prograi vw ou : order. He quotes the opinion of a i ng allows Me, } woul write a book on religion,” | through its efforts and hears the| 3Uempts to exclude him. Now he situations they get into, and her 2% “ith Christina Stead. blows struc v MR. MOORAD describes in detail | foreign diplomat that “good stiff enne illar's new spy novel he explains in chapter one of the wisdom and doctrines of Frank | iS on the way to “be somebody.” narrative runs on like a torrent. | An instance of the author's in- members of i the way Russis rations its food and | resistance on vital issues all along moves at a fast pace, and has anew book, “not in the theological | Buchman expounded. I With no editorializing or preach- 2 = = tability to leave anything out is ’ board .have : declares that, while its food reserves |the line” is necessary to arrive Re | gE TOR Hak ous son ® donne) Sense, but about’ what| Dr, Bach's remarks about Father IN8 Mr. Henderson, himself al THERE must be over 225,000 words this: Letty’s father is having his that the bi have risen enormously, rationing is| tolerable relations with the Soviet |pnq IY ravels ne ele 2 and what it does in the !pjvine and his cult are very re- Negro, presents important phases of |in “Letty Fox: Her Luck,” the story |cronies in for an evening and Letty tion. not likely to be abolished. Great Union. and forth ‘acvess an ocean and’ w ue pe. es vealing indeed. And the three- the. minarity-group problem. He of one girl's adjustment to life, to |Is present, as a precocious girl, ens Consun i gn ense is built the thar agli premonition 10| hour banquet, strangely called “Holy | 08 SO concretely, from the ignor- | A to marriage—and to. the Joying their off-color stories. Democrat Slain Dutchman's WwW i+ M . fully : Sspetise ov ou ice 8 oe - ie IY dad took me to a meet- | Communion,” has implications the | ant and poverty-ridden Alabama Weather. | The author is not satisfied w horth and J ri es emoilrs Sar a I es os Pets up in Wau-! reader has not dreamed of before. background to the tawdry and rest- | You can't consider Letty Fox | this situation alone; she must tell Mr, Truma ¢ ying. , ; en the members of . oh less Harlem night life. lapart from her family; the Fox all the stories! All this helps ac- li ove r anslated The extremely hard-boiled realism that congregation ‘got the spirit’| THE ALL-INCLUSIVE Bahai| " £8 loutfit is incredibly baffling, prepos- count for an interminable parrative rel for La of Author Millar's style is saved they began hopping up and down. {faith, its Evanston temple, its his- THE PARTY given by Maisie |terous, irritating and amusing. and a high printing hill—H. H, Be 5 A. M. DE JONG, one of Holland's from oe icin wy on ele- Soyietiace they stood in one tory and its tenets come in for a|Simmons, wife of Julie's night-club| Miss Stead has written Letty's| ens ames ee Site of best-known novelists was murdered ment of social protest which runs |spot, jumping higher and higher; share of attention. Then there is employer, is possibly the most lurid story with an eye to the humorous | B k i throughout the story and gives it (sometimes they skipped up and Unity, which 1 ; |episode” in the book. Y v . 00 Helps Retailer of them ar Dutch Nazis in A ; . y, which has grown and spread . Yet, as Mr. side, so that you can't get very) I ow October, 1943 tragic overtones. down the aisles, shouting as they | prodigiously since ‘its. principles Henderson reports it, the shindig {much excited about her mishaps. Avoid Comm Pitf I Pe aa ext month, Querido, Inc, New Mystery fans, this book is bound | journeyed. {were first conceived: by its founder, (It winds up in a brawl is a study # = = on Fittalls hi York publishers, will bring out an to give you an enjoyable evening.| sn = | Charles Fillmore. of people trying..to drown their] THE TABLE talk in the Fox| Among the latest books received oy Olfice 8 English translation of one of de w ud I walched, I was sure that.I| The last faith dealt with is Psy. | frustration and insecurity in alco- [home is as free. as the breeze; the by The Times Book Page is “How vere econo Jong's shorter works under the N S dl » N ould never find anything more ex- | chiana, the gift of Frank B. Robin- hol and bawdiness. Harlem night youngsters carry on a precocious | to Establish and O ; if ‘prices cc title, “The Platter,’ with 12 ful ew Jadaieir ove Siete Anny jn Me than what !son to the world, “The power ot Life. Broadway night life—both re- banter; the mother whines because |store,” oo £04 Opéivie 3 Raat es Vy - e found in their religion.” {God by mail w . ect inner unhappiness. the f | rizr e v File ! { . ) ith a money-back | ppiness e father, Solander Fox, prefers his | 2 page illustrations. Has London Setting And Dr. Bach set out upon his| guarantee.” I think most readers will find the mistress Persia to her, and Sol LRP Of Ste At ov yore al ron id “The Platter” is described as “a Repee fon trip of religions with the| Into this book of 300 pages, Dr. | earlier half of the novel better read- | father laughs heartily at her and|the U. S. Education office a : “I hope tale of small folk in a small coun- MICHAEL SADLEIR has written emt Y 5 Hough, “41 roads that Bach has put the same charm and| 1% I has a kind of “Huckleberry (occasionally doles out a dollar or ington. . , Wash- Yorker try, with no greater aims in life hy Sv Ty an He played the pacnograph for el oe hs ho is a So have! ent SR Res 6B tly had been flirtia ith rad According to the authors’ preface, tall to he Sixp those of making a fair IVInG: Katherine Tupper | Marshall, ’ : , Jehovalr's’ 'Withess “on h og iversity of Iowa. He . ; irting with rad-|the book “is designed to help the the report: The greatest event in such lives is wife of Gen. George C. Marshall, BalRE va ol = Pe house visitation carelolls jt aha Rom: ee mo pis elimi B k ali, be are iam Saris Ive conscientious beginning fetailer get OIF proce! whose memoirs will be published * ion - : school of religion, | : ell as the New York off to a good start and avoid the sud on pn the chance to make a large sum : Sadleir calls the book a “companion | DOOK On allaces [society in which she ) h i in November by Tupper and |piece” to “I! " moves when | pitfalls of the first few years.” With tresse In Pp : of money, thus bringing all their| Lo : piece” to “Fanny by Gaslight,” but B k P » . grown up. 15 chapte 1 diftely befc i , ve, Inc, of Atlanta and New “For » t /] ¥ . : apters and almost 300 pages of i worst qualities to the surface and| York. Entitled “Together,” Mrs. explains that “Forlorn Sunset is DOO resents oliecrion Wins $2500 Prize There are so many girlish ex- material, the book sells for $4.35. Thee "wi i disturbing the even flow of their| Marshall's book is the first 1 *8 eppioach io ihe Lountioe under yent on Rt ¥ existence.” tion of the new publishing Bon Old op siflorent pon Brive Of 1920 C | ! “Tie Wallades SI Towa” Dissdll, SAVE ON BEA Hon on . me 8 . nd, and an attempt to reconstruct omic avorite Lord's biographical study of Henry | ¢ PERMANENTS E UTY SERVICE conferences the kind of life which was being led [A. $ .) . NOW at Your FA VORITE Theater ! | behind the dun-colored of | "KRAZY KAT." By George Herriman With an intr Such 1 A glare, us BE a * SHAMPOOS eo FIN * MANICURES the rill 0 | moldering terraces, and in melan- E.E Cummings. New York Holt $3.7 troduction by! inth | Life-in-America award of | 3 GER WAVES : Ii /F) 4, | choly little squares ‘through which 9 ” + Holt, $3.75. $2500. Personal Supervision and Modern Equipment He pred o id, 5 es no traffic ran.” ——— IN THE 1920's, “Krazy Kat” was possibly the most quoted| Mr. Lord's book, in preparation | International Beauty School “ak Wun wily RUT : ; sll . C > ; (for six years, is scheduled for Jan- - : P » Funk, Wagnalls Plan reas SOWLiealion of ingenious fantasy and imaginative drawing with | UBTY, 1947 publication. P7; > Yo Improve n> kLiterature Series Dn RR neire of baby talk, Bronx “excent” and Bte-delar} E Jo with @ jeek later {| Punk and Wagnalls, publishers of | & Taian; Rian Kat plants an olive seed. A treé grows. ‘Kat thinks Vo Dolan Wher p—r A Fresident w the New Standard dictionaries, ane] {ree is “a braw, brave, sturdy : Yvans rize On those occasions when th : inad : t | : g e spoken word seems os this winter nounce a Centenary series in Amer- oak,” until told it's an olive tree Julian M ) ) : DE ok Inc. announce|| quate—let beautiful flowers expres t ts hat ir) jean literature. Kat's final comment: “It's kwite essner press your sentiments. ever, phat h Jb 2 ; A {the $1250 Julia Ellsworth Ford] Si t ; hr 65 The new series will present new|Pottibil I was labin’ unda a dilution, : . inoe sty fi A i een hey yet always I had a ides olives eame | Foundation award for 1946 for the Zs dled aris Zi Asn, not improve . . . ween ng a ting cans.” |best book manuscript for children. fs Butter is : . . | The prize goes to Genevieve Torrey F INDIANAPOLIS a. ! a cent or! . Times-Movietone News [mmhemar oso un poids ow Fo yo to Se Sell COMING? ... Se FEET tn The-series will be developed by an “Krazy Kat” is as follows: Kat [7A Horse to Remember,” story of a ¢ o.+ ¢ NOVEMBER 8th, 9th, 19th—Murat Temple Pork is h ; . vy i ¢ » P ) loves Ignatz Mouse; Mouse hates | \' |boy of 10 and his Palomino horse. 7 op? advisory editorial - ; ates Bacon is ar Highlights of This Week's Times-Movietone News|; ; james p ial Sommiiice sntleg Kat; Offissa Pupp loves Kat, hates Cs CROSSWORD PUZZLE Poultry 1s y 7 : : YO" Mouse; Kat is cold to Offissa Pupp.| — are expensi h % "TRUCULENT TURTLE"—Navy plane breaks world's aide, ee Ber. Mouse wishes always to i Papp [New Nove! Tels Stor A ten al o thi non-stop distance record; flying 11,236 miles from Carmen, history; ig p.| Prick at Kat, but 1s often forestalled (Of Returned’ Veteran U.S. Army Group : EE RISE ee: al head of Australia to Columbus, Ohio. Adams, humor; Bruce Bliven, jour- BY ese bUPD, Bot. Heri “Storm Before Daybreak,” the new SEARO Lik an election : ish nalism; Edga gh, but Herriman's novel by Mari 2 ES NOWRA % 500,000 POUNDS—of TNT is exploded in Idaho desert and Sitar a Lee Masiorh Poetry, | wit and creativity transformed the f °N 3 Japtest Suns: a Rhegsed HORIZONTAL 4 Symbol for GIES {EERE by U.S determi is ock, political papers. Krazy Kat for Nov. publication, according 17 : ckel [=] 4 BRUCE Ee y U.S. navy to determine protective measures. pattern into something always new. y Io to Lippincott, the publisher ,7 Depicted is nickel [TIE EE [Cll A rum % NAZI LEADERS— loath 5 His weird technique of drawing |, A The novel tells the story of a insigne of U. 3 Spinning toy RRS cAROT RIATGE : near death as war trials end .at FRIGHTENS RELATIVES! new backgrounds for the same fore- Barabbas' Is N | ; " : S A ____ S Belgian river ISIRICSIE] ENRNEIA . Nuernburg; 11 to hang, 7 to serve jail sentences, 3 * |ground, his surrealist notions and $ 51 ove baile Daroned, IE) a ry 3 Louse’ ces TARE Rta K ot : jail. se J . 1%, . . returns to his. home to ivision - Ol RH ON EAT RIOR = are acquitted, : P ; AE fine-lined, almost etched, drawings About Time of Christ TnIe ai the er 12 eh Be ont SNS Sr BERETS eep & WORLD SERIES—S+. Louis Cardi are evidence of the great gift the| “Barabbas” by Emery Bekessy, a | unrecognizable. 13 Habit "10 Journey LOA [TIAIMEID ‘ COLUMB Sex moa} in fi . Louis: Cardinals and Boston Red man had. novel about the time of Jesus, will ye : avituste 11 Capital of rodents 40 Whirlwind ~National 1 ox meet in first game of World Series——Boston win- The present collection has a keen- be published by Prentice-Hall on 14 Smooth Montana 27 Aeriform fuel 41 Soft mineral Ca h y A N P oft m rroll Ree ning in the 0th inning by the scoré of 3 to 2. ly analytical introduction by E. E. Nov. 12. | re oyes oem 13 Type of Joel 14 Meadows 30 Arabian gulf 44 Beverage dent Trums “ " | 0) J o In Indianapolis rs Dammings, of owerscuse: ooo According to the publishers, the Scheduled for Film 19 Having height 36 Rough lava 5) packers 45 Grain to the natio : . —H. B, |name “Barabbas” is more familiar : , 8 Not as much 32 Ascended’ 46 Vegetable follow the TD. than the man’s story. He seems atest OF the BUI He es TL Engin letter 23 Deadens 34 Puffs up 47 Employ and ” cc AMBASSADOR, 152 N. Illinois i Holt to Reprint to have been an ins ws 2 24 Endures 33 Horsemen 49 Doctor (ab. 3, , , Mars Hill 10 urrectionist, and | tion is “The Highwayman” (Lip- 22 Solar disk 26 Genus of 36 Epic t S1A Mr. Reece AVALON, 2119 Prospect PARAMOUNT, 411 E. Wash, 1912 Belloc Book the Souilug nove) 1 idncerniod Wilh pisioott, 34 Camera's eve ih Epic poatry S1Ares measiary Ohio Fede i . ( c ween him and Jesus, ous fluid a u by - CIRCLE, 45 Monument Circle REGAL, 2464 Northwestern Henry Holt and Co. ‘will publish| who sought the way of peace. Snes % Lm gi 27 Festivals T DAISY, 2540 West Michigan RITZ, 3430 N. Illinois next Monday a new edition of Hil- “ " 28 Greek letter i TIN j ] i SANDERS. 1105 P 4 aire Belloc’s “The Servile State.” i million dollar picture,” according 29 While . 1 “ ' rospe 's. : 7 . fd DREAM. 2381 Station . +. ST. CLAIR, 800 Fort Wat " Re-published with an introduction Kersh Book Due Oct. 16 |'o Lippincotts | 30 Arabians . i Amusements 3 FOUNTAIN $Q., 1105 Shelby SPEEDW AY 1450 Mai yne by Christian Gauss, Belloc's study,| Sinion & Schuster apnounce for 33 Cubic meter : an? Eddie Ash 2203 Shelby ' ain first published in 1012, “expresses|Oct. 16 publication “The Weak dnd 37 Drone bees 4 i > =v, \ : VOGUE 6259 Coll aK an I's FOR : 4 Aviation .. 8507 E. Washington WALK ' ollege Rex Harrison Belloc's views that both capitalism |the Strong,” by Gerald Kersh 38 Slide books mn 9 ER, 607 Indiana He's fantastic! American-born and collectivism tend to end up as|author of “Night and the City.” Cte BOOKS 39 Roof finial be Sl 1 Cities . Peter Grasiish shocks hie staid. Sorvlie. So according to the Mr. Reruits new novel concerns a Te abiain say beck reviewed 2 On Hime (ab) Classified .. Indiana ; “ae es ‘em ] . group of oddly-assor > shone : . HS. OLD TRAILS a athe Tammiy. shoal indi mig iad | Th co RIE ta Havant Mla Crossword i ' Mi 4 ns in amily closet! i * iy - 4 arvest . £1) b 0! PREWITT ae «Jo... | Hasrlatventus wid fe 50th Anniversary Hert Bunge: 3 Seah “E #7 Indians NO) Litorials ; + Plaintield; In on ir bri yout The Oxford University Press’|B REE : WASH 48 Made of reeds Europe Tod RILEY, Greenfield, Ind. -[ famous drama Berkeley- Square. Americdh branch recently celebrated | OE ’ 50 Lessee — "Fashions .. ' Starring Rex Harrison Moan : ERE \ ’ q v ROXY, Pendleton, Ind : : . . its 50th ;anniversary. = Founded in|} Pictures . . . . P Sine: | 52 Trap na y i! Mrs, Fergus ROYAL, Danville, Ind. SUNDAY, WISH—9 P; M, 1 lafeely ue ou dsribuing 8) . ... Framing prone TF by Forum 21 ONS e na. . 4 agency for the parent company, the | ps LYMAN BROS Neighborhood © 5539 E. Wash, VERTICAL : lf G. 1. Right§ re VILLE, Zionsville, Ind. : STATES STEEL Sraneh is now a full junior partner, | ron th os Inc. ore ® 4217 College | 130 (Fr) ; ) 50 Meta Given HE es A git ¥ roster of over 600 authors a |} ihe Cirele Evenings. © 100 E. 34th | 2 Roam 3 In Indpls. 5 ‘ : , -' 1 ‘more than 1600active books. > vw _|l 3 Dutch city wee 3K FOR THOKE RE a ; A ash 3 : 8 — - , -_ Ee J Charley's Res i oi sill : : . . / : Z i i ” /- : : ow Shih ; 3 J ii wo ; : A g ita
