Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1946 — Page 16

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Roosevelt Administration

“Tioft Roosevelt nor the corre- principal contributor to the Repub-

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: (A Regular Weekly Feature of The Times) THE FIRST READER...By Henry Hansen

Miss Perkins' Book Called Best Yet Written About

“THE ROOSEVELT | KNEW." By Frances Perkins. New York, Viking, $3.75. MADAME PERKINS they called her in the corridors of Washington, and they meant it ironically. But the woman who, as secretary of labor from 1933 to 1945, often had the opposition of management and labor alike, has written the best, consistent account of the Roosevelt administration in The Roosevelt I Knew.. No one who has attempted reminiscences—neither Har- — old Ickes, Sumner Welles, El-

immediate reason for calling Lewis, “But when J. P. Morgan was the

ome within miles|lican party he certainly had con-Sgondentf-hus o triendly interpre- stant access to the President and of It as ’ : | told him exactly what he wanted

tation. na / Quite unintentionally, Frances done,’ said Lewis. Miss Perkins

at

__ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __ — Irene Lonnen Ernhart Writing New Novel

CALLING 6. 1.5— Advice Given Job ‘Seekers

"THE JOB THAT FITS YOU"— And How fo Get It." By John and Enid Wells. New York, Prentice-Hall, $3.75.

OF MAKING vocational-guidance books, there seems no end. And in the unpredictable economic conditions of a few year: hence, some of tliem may seer: strange indeed. “The Job That Fits You,” however, has the merits without too many of the crotchets of books on the subject. For one thing, it is about as “scientific” as a book of the sort can be, usingtests, charts, tables and similar apparatus. Its vocational guidance tests are based largely on the methodology of army general classification tests, which were used to channel draftees into the air force, the medics, the infantry or the MP’s, They will thus ring bells in veterans’ memories, especially the little diagrams of gears (“If gear A goes clockwise, - how. does gear C go?”) or drawings illustrating the best way to pile heavy cases.

” » » DESCRIPTIVE chapters are devoted to trades and professions, with discussion of opportunities in

Te,

Bigs in Sholem Asch Novel

"EAST RIVER." A novel. By Sholem Asch. New York: Putnam. $3.

OVER 30 YEARS AGO the United States was called the melting pot, Israel Zangwill wrote a famous play with that title, declaring America was “God's crucible, where the races of Eurgpe are melting and re-forming.” After the first world war some writers contended that the melting pot didn’t melt. And in our own decade Louis Adamig has been leading a movement to keep naturalized citizens from bee ing run over by the Anglo-Saxon|— . - - cultural steamroller, .. | Though Moshe holds to the Yet all the time the inevitable ancient faith, Nathan is led by his fusion of races and religions goes sufferings to doubt and insecurity, on. Whatever name you give it, A it is forging Americans who have| THE SOLVENT in this situation ancestors scattered all over Europe, |is Mary McCarthy, an Irish CathIn New York, where Jews are olic girl, who reacts to her father’s among the oldest sod the nee, abuse of the Jews by becoming ine immigrants, we ave ort 0X | ; families that light the candles on|'chSely concerned with the help. the eve of the Sabbath, and. re- léssness of Nathan. Her ministrae formed congregations that go to tions unsettle Nathan and bring his the temple on Sunday. At the blood to fever heat, and lead his [same time the old Inplagable san brother Irving to desert the girl |spirit of the Irish Catholics has he has promised to marry, Rachel |been softening, and today, after the ang marry Mary. The frst breay | holocaust in which all suffered alike 1, their understanding comes When | these groups recognize their com- Mary takes their little son to the {mon humanity. Catholic church to be*baptized. This allenates Irving, who insists that his

ya” SHOLEM ASCH always has been religion means a great deal to him,

a bearer of good tidings and ain, | workers for tolerance and mutual | .. na | understanding. Naturally he knows| MARY, as Mr. Asch describes Yor the Jews more intimately than the | becomes the angel for good in the Catholics, and this comes out in story. She is not any less the his new book, East River. But this woman, and her physical influence

. SATURDAY, NOV. 9, 1946

\Irish Girl Banishes Racial

Perkins also discloses why President Roosevelt kept her in-office despite powerful efforts to get her gt. he knew intuitively what information he needed, skillfully provided him with answers to many pressing problems and effaced herself.

- - » WHEN, ON the eve of his fourth inauguration she insisted on resigning, Roosevelt—“he had the pallor, the deep gray color of a man who had been long ill"—said: “No. You musn’t put this on me now. I just can't be bothered now. think of anybody else, and I can’t get used to anybody else. Not now!

I can't]

| replied that his view was ridiculous. | » ou » MISS PERKINS describes the {origin of many New Deal measures. She says: Mr, Roosevelt considered {the Social Security act “the corner|stone of his administration.” She describes compromises made in many actions. She declares that Mr. Roosevelt was experimental, but not truly radical; that he felt he was saving American economy. “He administered by the technique of friendship, encouragement and trust,” is her comment on his war years.

‘TWO THRILLERS—

Writer

Frances, you have done awfully well...”

2 Novels Offer

Road to S

“Writing is hard work and fun too.” , .

of Serials for

By HENRY BUTLER Times Books Reporter -

. Irene Lonnen Ernhart busy with a new novel

Newspapers Find uccess Requires Time, Effort

“new horizons” section, which cov-| York to describe the breaking of ers probable future developments in | the barriers of intolerance and bias, a variety of lines from agriculture is once more an attempt to show to transportation. . that love and sympathy can overPersonal counsel on applying for come the most grievous difficulties. a job includes such items as: “Al-| Although East River does not ways take the precaution of using read like a historical novel, it aca mouthwash or some breath-| tually deals with conditions over 40 \sweetener before entering an in-,years ago, when Jews and Irish 'terview, but do not go into the Catholics weré packed into. the |office chewing.” houses on 48th st. between First The writers have compiled the ave. and the river, and all were book from long experience in voca- equally poor. It was the day of the tional guidance. Since it covers so SWeatshops and the Triangle fire at much territory and contains such |W. Washington Park and Greene a variety of material, it should St. is one of the episodes in it. prove as helpful to vocational coun- | “4 0 sellors as to job-applicants.

each. An important feature is the |story, in which he turns to New is as great as her gentleness.

When Moshe has been left alone with Nathan by his wife Deborah and Irving, Mary begins to look after his house and even prepares

{the table for the Friday evening

ritual.

Here Moshe has a hard

“battle with himself, but he sheds his

prejudices and yields to Mary's kindness. As a character Mary is not always easy to believe, but Mr. Asch must uave been moved by the best of ine tentions in portraying her. n » n THE NOVEL is more complicated, but this is the essential action. Mr, Asch is working in a field plowed

| THE® CORE of the story is the!long ago by Albert Edwards and

accompaniments for Mr. Erfthart’s |

violin-playing in leisure moments.

family of a little grocer, Moshe Abraham Cahan. I do not find his Wolf Davidowsky, whose spiritual New York as convincing as his development from experiences with Polish towns, nor do I think he

She does awfully well in this, book, too, which demonstrates that | a woman often understands a man| better than his best male friends. "on. 8 a FOR ONE THING, she takes some | of the severest criticisms of F. D. R. by the opposition and turns them into virtues. For instance: “Rogse-|, velt's plans were never thoroughly thought out.” That's what the opposition said, | too. Miss Perkins explains that! “they were next steps . . , one plan] grew out of another.”

withéut having ready, “This kind of mentality develops a man who is more an instrument than an engineer.”

Spies, Murder |

|as dumb hillbilly, developed conHe’ was | siderable sharpening after he was| able to sense What was needed, ! framed into role of killer in pro- | any blueprints | hipition gang wars.

able part in undercover and in-|

telligence work during : he furnace AS AN EXAMPLE Miss Perkins|which led to a climax in London Went into the furnace.

or te

LOTS OF PEOPLE say they'd like to write. Far fewer have the determination to write regularly and systemat-| cally for a whole year until they turn out something saleable.

4215)

That's what Irene Lennen- Ernhart (Mrs. Robert C. Ernhart),

‘DARK HERO." By Peter Chey- Bowman ave. did before she started selling her widely-syndicated

ney. New York, Dodd Mead, $2. |

'ONE ALONE." New York, Crime Club, $2.

RENE BERG, reaching Chicago]

That equipped him for a formid-

the "war,

cites Mr. Roosevelt's acceptance of when he was able to get some

“the absiruse and almost incompre-|answers to puzzles and square ac-| . hensible report of Dr. Albert Ein-|counts with some of his earlier DOW, I Buess. stein on the possibility of developing Chicago tutors.

an atomic bomb. . . . Roosevelt had 4 meager scientific education and could not possibly have understood and followed Einstein's scientific arguments.” : Mr. Roosevelt accepted Einstein's figures because he liked his personality. Similarly, John Maynard Keynes confused him and Keynes remarked he “supposed the President was more literate—economically speaking.” . =

. HE HAD blind spots. Miss Perkins admits he “never understood the point of view of the business community.” g His critics said he never had to earn his living and “therefore did rot sufficiently understand the importance of making everything pay

|

This tale has terrific impact, with | starkly realistic settings both in: Chicago's underworld and in gestapo atrocity camps. It pumps up blood pressure. » ” ” JOHN SHERWOOD, writer, was s0 completely smitten by a woman passenger that he followed her from a train in Arizona. Immediately he gets deeply in trouble because she was being trailed by vicious enemy trying to pin murders on her. Sherwood went all out for the lady, which meant harrowing experiences, first in Montana and later In nation’s “capital. but he finally bested the author of villainy. ;

of writing about 6000 words. Toward material, but the énd of that experimental year, of course. Sometimes I'd be in the! d she sold a serial to The Chicago midst of writing a love scene, and “Old Flame.” (Maybe they'll change

| Daily News.

already had written three 50.000- | word stories, all of which, she says, Ernhart

newspaper serials.

a = 8 | “] ALWAYS had wanted to write,” Mrs. Ernhart has a home and Sane

By Van Siller.!che says. “Seven years ago I decided |jly to care for. The Ernharts have

I'd write steadily for a year, and three sons, Frank, 15; Teddy, 10. theh if I got nowhere, I'd just for-

i about it.”

{and Stewart, 4. “They furnish me with a lot of! they don’t know it,

So she set herself a daily routinei

one of the boys would come in and

All last winter she wrote con-

[tinuity for radio station WFBM,

since she wanted to learn something about radio-scripts. She has plans for doing more scripts. She also has in mind writing a historical novel about Indiana: With about 10 serials sold to The Chicago Daily News and three to United Features, Mrs. Ernhart already is at work on a new one other than the one NEA has acquired. » = -

THE NEA SERIAL she has called

the title, as syndicates sometimes

Fight Against Drinking Told

| "BREAKDOWN." A novel. By Louis Paul. New York, Crown, $2.75.

Fashions change in fiction as |elsewhere. : | Right now there seems to be a market for novels dealing with the problem of alcoholism, as there is for stories about neurotics.

But before that first success, she ask, ‘Mom, where's my B B gun? ” do) “Old Flame,” she says, is “just| , “Breakdown,” which describes the

“Oh, boy, Teachers college at Terre Haute,

were they awful” r | “That's the only way you learn music. (He's now a research engi-| You have to write neer with the U. 8. Rubber Co.

and write and write.” here.) " » ” » » |

# WRITING is hard enough even! SHE USED to study. violin, and for a person with unlimited leisure. has learned enough piano to play |

| JUSTICE—

Nazi Trials

3 Are Pictured | | "JUSTICE AT NUERNBERG: A

Pictorial Record of the Trial of

Nazi War Criminals by the In-|

ternational Tribunal at Neeror) berg, Germany, 1945-46." Pho-|

tographed by Charles W, Al!

Autobiographer

Here is-a tensely dramatic dilem- |

a profit.”

ma set up for a woman victim of |

Miss Perkins says “There may be hatred, but the tale swings into]

~ something in this theory,” and ad-

mits that F. D. R. was not partic-| ularly concerned about the “imme- | diate financial situation of particular groups” when he considered a measure he thought ought to be tried. ” » » MISS PERKINS declares that many officials with projects to propose gave the President only their side of the matter. She, however, always presented arguments for and against a project. She made sure that a memo was in front of him. If he gave her a general assent, she repeated the specific clauses and on leaving stated the issue clearly once more, so that he was never misled about what she intended to do. Obviously this was one of the reasons why Roosevelt valued her help. » » » JOHN L. LEWIS didn't like Frances Perkins in office, and after he reads this book he won't like her out of office, either. There was the matter of Roosevelt's third term.

wildly melodramatic scenes of action. Complex and exciting.

Bantam Books Offer 4 Popular Titles Latest Bantam books received by, The Times Book .Page and pub-! lished Thursday include four popular titles,

Heading the list is W. H. Hudson's “Green Mansions.” Other new

|

|

reprints in the 25-cent series are “Harriet,” by Elizabeth Jenkins: “Dead Center,” by Mary Collins

and “She Loves Me Not,” by Edward Hope. |

Lippincott Starts . » ’ Ka Physicians’ Magazine “American Practitioner,” a new “Time”-size monthly magazine for! physicians, has been started by J. B Lippincott Co., Philadelphia publishers. | Each issue will contain eight or| more articles on current medical |

Miss Perkins says Mr. Roosevelt was against it at the start—he wanted a chance to cure his sinus trouble, and live on his estate. Miss Perkins doubted its wisdom “as a matter of principle.” But Daniel Tobin of the teamsters’ union proposed it. “You know, the, people don't like the third term, ‘either,’ satd Mr. Roosevelt, "= » “THAT'S ALL right,” said Tobin, “labor will stand by you.”

| lishers,

Teen-Agers' Recipe

TEEN-AGERS may invade the

subjects, according to the pub- |able to those military hospitals with |

Relates History of Food

"A COOKBOOK FOR GIRLS AND BOYS." By Irma S. bauer, Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill, $2.50.

By BARBARA BROEKING

erander, direcfor of photog-|

\

| raphy for the trial. Text by! HOAGY CARMICHAEL IS shown'| Anne Kaehan Chicoao. Pence above as he appeared in the film, | Not Ae ra lal or “Johnny Angel. | James & As ates, $5. The {amed Indiana composer has THE INTEREST attaching to

in ““Star-| i blished Nov {“Justicé at Nuernberg” is not mere- |

{ly morbid.

True, there are a few horror ex- |

turned autobiographer dust Road,” to be pu 23 by Rinehart. Mr. Carmichael will autograph copies of his book during Ke n= hipits trom. tise evidence adduced rmissi s ano and son termission of his piano. 80 8) against the Nazis. recital here at English's at 8:30 2 COB IL. Jackson slots p. m. Sunday, Nov. 24. ut, as-<Rober ackson states

—————— in the foreword the 180-page

: th i hs VY terans collection of official photographs, Bedridden ¢ . the trial was the “first of its kind | To See Fight Film Alexander Johnston's “Ten—and (,.ia) record of it should claim the

out!” published by Ives Washburn, itention even of those who have] Inc., will he read by bedridden war criticized the trial methods.

to |

ever undertaken.” Hence .the pic-|

| eter y ANS wucrofilm pro- "8 | velerans by tests wii P THE FIRST part of the book | jected on the ceiling. {depicts, among other things, prob- |

For the diversion of the hos- lems confronting U. S. army enpitali?ed who are unable even to |gineers who had to repair and renturn their heads, Projected Books, |der habitable buildings used for the | Inc., has arranged to reproduce this|trial and for housing trial person- | illustrated history of American nel, translators, correspondents and | prizefighting. The film will be avail- others. ; ie As evervone knows, Nuernberg | was about 90 per-cent destroyed by | the war, What had escaped dam- | age in the 11 raids between Sep-|

projectors.

eee ——

Book shattered by American prior to the Nazi surrender, after Nazi rejection of several American

ultimatums designed to spare the ancient city.

artillery

Rom- y 4 n " PANORAMIC views of the ruined {town will sadden those who saw it |before the’ war,

family kitchen and produce some| pyrther photos reveal the tech-

“About two months ago John L. delectable dishes to their amazed families when Irma S. Rombauer’s nical complexities of the trial pro-

Lewis , . . talked about the third new cookbobk makes the rounds of the younger set. term, too, Dan, just the way you!

have, said:

only much smoother, ‘Mr. President, I

He

I have & suggestion to make.

Written especially for boys and

terms and processes; she gives the

the vice presidential candidate on | #8Sentials of measuring ingredients,

| introduction .to the history of foods and their preparation. have author of “The Joy. of. Cooking,” thought of all that opposition and

your ticket should happen to be| tables of measurements and John L. Lewis, those objections|lents and clever would disappear.’ Can you beat it?” drawings of all »

p | the utensils. TOBIN

equiva-

* » “exploded,” declaring) Pour hundred was not even a Demo- fecipes that ‘Miss Perkins also discloses | youngsters from 9 when John L. Lewis con-|to 15 years can to the Democratic cam-|grasp are includ. | fund in 1936 he expected toed in the new the book. Mrs. Rom» ; bauer has” inter-

pO

complained

of her world-wide travels and her

Mrs. Rombauer [extensive knowledge of food among ~jthe recipes. She tells. how sweet

|pastry and many other “kinds of

[ceedings and the recording of them, girls, the cookbook is an Intriguing | The problem of translation, for exThe ample, was ingeniously hanfled by Mrs. Rombauer defines all cooking having interpreters record,/each in TT "ihis own language, the es |but the root of a morning glory | word for word. ~ (plant brought here from Peru. | The hook includes shots of the a a wn | principal war criminals, with sideRECIPES cover everything, liter-|Jights on their rugged living condially from soup to nuts, with sand-|tions in the Nuernberg prison, wiches, souffles, chicken and meats, $. 8 IT CONCLUDES with several exdishes Included. Helpful hints on amples of the hideous evidence tricky things‘like beating eggs, peei- brought forth, including an ornaing vegetables and fruits, table set-| ment fashioned from a human tinfl, etc. are “food for thought” head. “An official U. 8, army report for the yolingster. revealed how tattooed prisoners Written in Mrs. Rombauer’s dis-| were asked to report to the distinctive .style. the ingredients. are{pensary at Camp Buchenwald in

of the explicit directions. It's an|with the artistic designs innoyation for future homemakers tattooed on their skin were killed (and their husbands) and might by injections. The skin was then

most,

are not potatoes at all,

aid a few older neophytes in this

business of jonsne. ; ornamental household articles.”

.

average novel length.

{where Mr. Ernhart used to teach] Now that she's gotten into the

Born in Jamestown, N. Y. Mrs. a love story about ordinary people.” struggle a successful woman colattended Indiana State It runs to about 50,000 words, or umnist has with demon rum, is

better as propaganda than as art. | It puts in a good and doubtless

his sons monopolizes the book. Moshe has two sons, Nathan, | numbed in body and soul by polio, | [and Irving, who is in a fair way ia become a sweatshop boss.

portrays the Catholic family with much. intimate knowledge. But the kernel of his tale is the Jewish family, and this he holds in the hollow of his hand.—H. H.

Best Seller May Bring Highest Movie Price

Russell Janney's best selling “The | Miracle of the Bells” may reach the highest price yet paid by Hollywood for a novel, according to the book's: publishers, Prentice-Hall. | | Negotiations now under way involve a down payment of $100,000, | plus 5 per cent of the producer's | gross up to the first $4,000,000, with 10 per cent on the gross thereafter. Movie grosses have run as high as $15,000,000.

Tarkington's Last Book Is on Youth

“THE SHOW PIECE,” the novel Booth Tarkington was finishing at the time of his death, is announced for publication next February by Doubleday. It is described as resembling “Seventeen” and “Alice Adams" in being a story of youth, This time the central character is Irving Peace, “a shallow piece of precocity

tember, 1944, and April, 1945, was| Book Out Nov. |9

printed 'in bold face ‘type as part|1939. When they reported, the ones |

writers’ market, Mrs. Ernhart re- : calls with satisfaction that vear of justified plug for Alcoholics Anonyhard, often discouraging work. mous, at the end of some fairly “People so often put off things harrowing pages describing Ellen they want to do. I'm glad I didn't Croy’'s disastrous binges. And it input off trying to write,” she says. |troduces what 1s now routine equip-

Author to Speak Here Nov. 17

Margaret Halsey, whose hook on! race-relations, “Color Blind,” was] reviewed in The Times book page Oct. 5, will address an inter-racial mass. meeting here at 3:30 p. m. Sunday, Nov. 17. Under the chairmanship of Fay E. DeFrantz, secretary of the

{choanalytic diagnosis revealing a “traumatic” experience in childhood. Tension Relieved

Inner conflict produces tension. Alcohol momentarily relieves the tension. That's the standard current diagnosis of the malady. But fashions change in diagnosis also. About 100 years ago, “inflammation of the bowels” was standard diagnosis of appendicitis. It had the merit of plausibility, and was no doubt correct, even though the patients usually died. Whether the inner-conflict theory

Senate ave. will seem impressive 100 years from branch of the Y. inow is a question problem-novel M. CA. the —Whibers—should--eensider; meeting will be In “Breakdown,” as in other ficheld in Central

o tion dealing with psychological upY. M. C. A, llli- g set

, the emphasis is on the indivi-

nois and New Miss Halsey dual. That's right in our American York sts. tradition of rugged individualism. “Colgr Blind” is a Simon & Mental Troubles Schuster publication. i I But the statistical increase in

; {mental troubles can scarcely be exPocket Book Reprints | plained individualistically. There lare lots of things wrong with the

Includes "Razor's Edge" |entire society. A depression sand-

W. Somerset Maugham's “The “iced between two wars has pro- : ss . pduced an America in sharp conRazor's Edge” heads the list of eight |y,.<t to the ideal we learned in new reprint titles in Pocket Books!school. You' don’t have to look recently received by The Times much. farther for sources of conAi Book. Page. 4 far ti test trouble with . : . vy far the greatest trouble with . N58 rp | Y . Other popula: Jitter in the 1 ¢h'ythe fiction of maladjustment is its Ser nmbrideed re by | concentrating on what is merely . . ro A v incidental to the process Julia Peterkin; “Fielding's Folly,” | process of birth,

’ growth and death. To make a cenby . Frances Parkinson Keyes; tral character of an essentially sick “Runyon a la Carte,

by Damon ..... is . son is to distort the picture of Runyon: "The Ret Right Hand,” 8] neocon oo orc 8, Pi.

mystery by Joel Townsley Rogers; | 5 “The D. A Goes to Trial,” by Erle] ' New Milt Gross Book by Carter Dickson, and| “I Shoulda Ate the Eclair,” Milt

Stanley Gardner; “Seeing Is Believing,”

—— ment for this kind of story, a psy-!

- 125,000 copies in print before date

{who is first introduced to the read

Jesse Lasky and Walter Mac- . er at the age of 14”

Ewen, RKO producing team, are | attempting to obtain James Cagney : for the role of Bill Dunnigan, the Browder Writes Book

press agent. Earl Browder, former head of

a the American Communist party, Cloud Book Firm

|from which he was recently exe . pelled, has just signed a contract Announces Fall List i AD. Cloud Jr,

with A. A. Wyn, Inc, for a book president of on the possibilities of co-operation Cloud, Inc., 4 new Chicago publish- with Russia. Tentatively entitled ing house, has just announced his “Toward Peace,” Mr. Browder’s firm's new fall list. | book is scheduled for publication Among the titles is “Mark Twain early next year. at Your Fingertips,” by Caroline

Thomas Harnsberger, a collection of re RUSE’ §— opinions and epigrams, some hitherSATURDAY SPECIAL!

to unpublished. The Mark Twain item is scheduled for release this month. = —¥ ] Cloud, Inc., is planning to publish 30 additional titles in 1947. |

Novel to Be Filmed —w Green Grass of ~Wyoming;" the | climax novel of Mary Q’'Hara's west- | rn trilogy, reviewed by Harry Han-! sen in last Saturday's Times Book Page, will be filmed by 20th-Century Fox. The novel reached a total of}

+

All Metal UTILITY

of icati y Lippincott, Oct, 23. )f publication by Lippincott, Oc | White enameled; |

rubber foot pads,

Tables with extra dimen-

$495 sions, only— 6 ® OPEN TILL 9 P. M.

5707 W. Morris . BE-4863 TITRA RL LL TR LLL LL

Book on Physiognomy Prentice-Hall announce for Nov. 25 publication “The Human Face,” | by John Brophy, an exhaustive study—esthetic, anatomical, social! and psychological of physiognomy.

Announce Joe Louis Book Essential Books of Duell, Sloan | '|& Pearce have announced that] they will publish the autobiography | of Joe Louis. The publishers hope | to bring the fighter’s story out late next spring. |

CROSSWORD PUZZLE :

Answer te Previous Pisste

U. S. Army Group

“South of Rio Grande,” by Max|Gross' first non-dialect book, is an-| HORIZONTAL VERTICAL ey Brand. {nounced for publication Nov. 30 by | 1 Depicted is 1 Raced eex | Ziff-Davis. The book will contain | insigne of U 2 Process STOUT 142 of Mr, Gross’ drawings. S. Army =—— J (Comb, Jem gu f ei ——————— ivied urgica - | “Time of Delirium,” Hermann Book} d ce Division instrument ot | Rauschning’s new book discussing POOK In 3 Printing 6 Merits 4 Golf mound e wl the ideological conflict between the| “Highball: A Pageant of Trains” 11 Persons to 5 Him ; western allies and the Soviet| Lucius Beebe's fourth heavily-illus- whom Money 6 Half-em 23 Asiatic 38 Tatter | Union, will- be published Nov. 19) trated railroad book, is now in a has been paid 7 Atlantic (ab.) kingdom 39 Oleum (ab ) [by Appletoh-Century.. Originally! third printing for Appleton-Cen-| 13 Impose as a 8 One who 3 Thread! are 40 While {scheduled for Oct. 18, publication|tury. Shortage of high-quality result reviles a ed 26 oe 41 Decay was delayed by the New York truck | coated paper has kept printings| 14 Essential 3 Nore lefne le 31 Constabulary 43 Ye | strike, according to the pyblishers.| down to small size. , being 12 Holt Jena 33 Schedules 45 Expire 13 Ache 13 Abstract being 34 Native of 47 Female 18 Insects 16 Sloth Rome garment 19 Short poem 17 Symbol for 36 Exploits . 49 Near (ab. 20 Ventilates iridium 37 Vehicles 51 Epistle (ab.) i 21 Conducted : 4 22 Dispatched i - . es se pa 25 Sheaf if ap i 27 Scottish iH] : : sheepfold x, v 28 Evergreen | MIRRORS [if Br 4 ‘Bl | 30 Footnote (ab.) i . . i 31 Dance step ef Instock and made to order. fs 2 Peed it 3 Sil i a 3 We can furnish just about any type | 35 ri) ; mirror or size made to your order, . 37 Mountain pass 8 Over mantle or doer mirrors installed, i 38 Betlow i L y 44 Among fy . ; . 46 And Ti Ly BH ] i | 47 Nonsense | man Bros., Inc. [| “tm ht: 31 on the Circle 12 Speeding H . . § 52 Scoft : made into lamp shades and other ean — a a ga “4% ari mains or $3 Antiquated

{ oy : oS RG oo va * 1 8 s > ;

EY EGTA TPW PGW ON WORT TRY TW

ETN 2. NA.

IN CL AIRLI

Piloty Co-f DC-3 § Line

CLEVELANI Two persons injured early Airlines trans from the Cle was preparing ’ Killed were the pilot, and co-pilot. Eleven of tl released from ing after tr hurts. None Miss Betty ardess and on the plane, ¢ struck a powe crashed. The second appros & hard rain, Plane “We were a a hard rain; “There was anything was struck the w seemed to b faster than u The plane ( Miss Dobsor son, Wis., sai strapped ‘in t plane crashed broken by the sengers remai seats, she sai The plane 1 cago to Bosto Hartford, Con It withdrew proach and t airport He wo land in a few occurred at 3 Residents i failure of pow ice shortly a craft came du a mile north fusilage was k front cabin sh gines were | wreckage. The airliner of two trees a line, and cht the ground. were thrown 1 age,

FT. WAY BY T

FT, WAYNI —More than | Ft. Wayne ar lic transporte bus company their jobs in wages, The worker A. F, of L. An of Street, EI Motor Coach “continuous | Sunday after

“Indiafia Serv

deadlock. ~The union of 30 cents a: countered wi would give er boost of 22 ce

Bodies Kidn.

LAKEWOO P.).—The dec man and Wc a kidnaper found today i -~ state forest. The bodies U. 8. navy overhead whi the brush r naper’s auton terday. The bodies those of Mrs 26, wife of a Chalmers N, convict, from prison, State police to Ft. Monn Sgt. Glynn ¥ victim's husb make identif ' On Sept. 2 suitor of Mrs himself as-a vestigation a way into th which the Ki The Kimme Laubaugh bu gunpoint, he to get dregse As he left, h with the butt matic.

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