Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 December 1946 — Page 14

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Feature of The Times)

i : FIRST READER + « « By Harold Hansen mplete "Walden' Text, . Handsome Photographs Make Literary Adventure

"WALDEN." By Henry Thoreau. With 142 photographs by Edwin

& doh

the opening musketry of the

‘Way Teale. New York, Dodd, Mead, $5. IF YOU FOLLOW the crowds from Lexington, Mass, to Concord, reliving the days when the embattled farmers fired on the redcoats from behind .wall and tree, your path will lead straight to the rude bridge that arched the flood and

American Revolution.

If you have time on your hands you may visit the old

tavern, or wander past the house of the gentle Emerson to the museum where the memorials of Concord’s giants are dis-

played. ) " But only if you stay many hours, and take long walks, will you head Walden pond. There you may find crowds, too, se if it is a holiday; Sunpicnickers, lunching under the trees or diving from the float. But what you have come for is cairn of rocks and the memoon the banks of the cove where Henry Thoreau raised the rude éabin in the spring of 1845 that has become famous in literary history. ~ » » THE MEN who go to view where

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| » » » THE DRIVING northeast rain pelts at his hut and a bolt of lightning cuts a spiral groove from top to bottom of a large pitch pine. Men say to ‘Thoreau: “I should think you would feel lonesome down there and want to be nearer to folks, rainy and snowy days and nights especially.” He has a ready reply: “Why should I feel lonely? Is not our planet in the Milky Way? What sort of space is that which separates a man from his fellows and makes him solitary? I have found that no exertion of the legs ican bring two minds much nearer to one another, , , .” » » »

EDWIN WAY TEALE has been a

es;

"THE

among the novelties for the holida |books and are mighty attractive.

CIRCUS!—THE CIRCUS!" . . . James Whitcomb Riley's "The Circus Parade" is visualized by Sally Tate in her cover design for "Joyful Poems for Children," a new collection of Riley's children's verses (Bobbs-Merrill, $2). the new drawings are designed to make the Riley poems more attractive to children than they have been in older volumes.

Brilliantly Wastaled Books of Published for Tiny Tots, Teen-Agers

BOOKS WITH BOTH spoken and written stories for children are drawings by George Avison. They are called Graphic-Phono Nelson, $2.50.) Each book contains a record, while |

ys.

Modern format and n » »

All Types

(Thos.

The eternal lure of Viking adven-

PROFESSIONAL VIEW— Navy's Faults Are Revealed By Admiral

"SECRET MISSIONS." By Rear Adm, Ellis M, Zacharias. New York, Putnam's, $3.50.

By JIM G. LUCAS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer IT IS NOT OFTEN that a professional naval officer speaks as frankly about the navy as Rear Admiral Ellis M. Zacharias has done in the newly published “Secret Missions.” Many will feel that is a good thing. Too much of the criticism of both the army and navy in the past has come from non-profes-sionals. But Adm, Zacharias—he became. an admiral only by retirement on Nov. 1 after 38 years’ servtice—is an Annapolis graduate. No one can doubt he loves his navy; has loved it with a passion landsmen might find difficult to grasp. Adm. Zacharias will be remembered as the author of psychological broadcasts to Japan in the closing days of the war. As much as any single factor, they hastened the end of the war. He will be remembered also as the navy officer who said he warned his superior at Pearl Harbor months in advance that Japan would strike from the air on a Sunday. He told the Pearl Harbor investigating committee his warnings went unheeded. Adm.

‘the printed story appears not only in black and white but in alluring [ture on American shores is fhe ap- |Adm. W, W. Smith, failed to recall {colors and is fully illustrated. They are called how, why, what, who | peal of “Dragon Prows Westward,” |the discussion.

and where stories.

ft stood have read so often in “Wal- | patient follower on Thoreau's trail. | If T were just a tiny tot instead den, or Life in the Woods," that He has inspected the nearly 40! .., 04 jaded reviewer of adult outlines to be painted in by ‘the |lad on Vinland., (Harcourt, $2.)

they practically know it by heart.

{books of Thoreau's journal in itsiy que 1. too, would enjoy.the exam- child, in primary colors.

Among them are naturalists with chest of pine board in a vault of | joc 1 nave seen.

cameras and one of them, Edwin Way Teale, invites us again into “Walden,” commenting on its writing and illustrating countless details of topography and vegetation

from 142 photographs taken on the

It is a handsome book, and a great literary adventure. just a few months after Henry B. Kane published his collection of in “Thoreau’s Walden” (Knopf, $4), it has the advantage

water, the gray goose overhead and the rambler in the trees, so Edwin Way Teale has garnered every view and contour, every mood and memory of the simple living and thinking one man did here over 100 years ago.

» * ” CHALK UP a good mark for the reader; it was in one of that I first met Thoreau's

two passages; one had his trip to the pond in when he cut down arrowy white pines” flurries of snow, for the

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to a new world.

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age I would have been such lines as “the mass lives of quiet despera-

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I was older it came to me Henry Thoreau had written wholesome of nause he leads you the woods to man’s re-

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15

It is the plainest and most in-

Coming |

house; the other dealt the pond. I read them memorized them, and they

not bargained for the wisdom that makes “Walden” a naturalist’s record, and

{the Pierpont Morgan library. He has walked the right of way of the - Fitchburg railroad that Thoreau followed on his way to and from Walden pond. It was the shanty of an Irish worker on the railroad that Thoreau bought for $4.25 for lumber. He knows what became of Thoreau’s cabin, and that the axe which Henry dropped into the pond and recovered through a hole in the ice belonged to A. Bronson Alcott, Louisa May's father. The spot where Thoreau planted his beans also is known to Mr. Teale. He tells how Thoreau replaced the beans with evenly-spaced pines and how they stood there until 1896, 34 years after Thoreau -died, when fire destroyed them. Today oaks cover the beanfield and a macadamized highway runs border,

along its

pond and the osprey is rare, but wild ducks arrive and Mr. Teale's practiced ear could recognize the towhee, grackle, crow, chickadee, bluejay, hermit thrush, phoebe, | song-sparrow and other New Eng. | land birds. Only as recently as Nov. 1045,

Wells Robbins of Lincoln, Mauss. found the exact site of Thoreau's hut, with bits of glass, old bricks, and the square cut nails he used; “one of them still has a piece of | wood adhering to it, apparently a knotty bit from one of the original | timbers of the hut.” Such objects are the visible relics of great shrines. But the finest in-| spiration comes from the words that | Thoreau set down at Walden pond and that, like the seasons, record |

to his fellows and the uni-|a renewal of vitality on this New sented in this collection of ludi-

England earth, Mr, Teale has made the adven- |

atiating sermonizing, for there is ture even more inspiring by his feature in the American magaziae.

patient, unpedantic research and his careful photography.

Color Returns To Book Pages

“ART NEWS ANNUAL 1946. 41." Edited by Alfred M. Frankfurter. New York, the Art Foundation, Inc., $2.50.

IN A PACKAGE of books just

Most of the books are prepared by the staff of Graphic Films Corp. {The publisher is Graphic Educa[tional Productions, Inc., Hollywood, | Cal. » Another attempt to answer the what? when? why? of children is |“The Golden Encyclopedia,” by Dorothy A. Bennett, for which Corinelius DeWitt has drawn 1500 {objects in color.” You'll be surprised {how much he has packed into the [pictures (Simon & Schuster, $2.50). » » » INTENDED TO guide little hands are the American Studio Paint books, large paper pamphlets with |objects in brilliant colors opposite

{to lead young ladies astray while

100 years after Thoreau, Roland [contents of this diverting, paper-

Illustra[tions by C. G. Holme.

“A Child's Bouquet of Yesterday,” a little book reproducing verses and illustrations of children’s books of long ago, chosen by Gerda Vautier. | (American Studio Books, $2.) » H »

YOUNG READERS interested in

have sent them copies of musical biography series that Henry Holt & Co. issues. The latest is “Haydn: A Good Life,” by David Ewen, illustrated by Marion R. Kohs ($2.75). "In the teen-age category also is a new {biography of a composer, by Antoni |Gronowica: “Tchaikovsky,” with

Volume Quotes Ludicrous

Outmoded Indiana Laws’

Foreword by Jack Benny.

“An Indiana law forbids anyone |

teaching them to roller-skate.” Quoted from the Indiana seciion | of Dick Hyman's “Looney Laws, that gives a fair notion of the

boufid volume. Mr. Hyman tells us that the state of Indiana once passed a law making it illegal to.take a bath in the winter. He says that in Indiauapolis and Elkhart it is illegal to quarrel on Sunday. “In Gary it 1s against the law to ride any stree’ car or to attend any theater within four hours after | eating garlic.” Second Volume Due Indiana is only one state repre-

crous legislation, which has heen previously publisned as a regular

The present vc'ume covers slates

is to be followed Ly a second volume, from New York to Wyoming, inclusiye. With . an introduction by Benny, and with characteristically

Jack |

famed for his work in the New Yorker and elsewhere, Laws, provides good entertainment, Final quotation: “It’s the law, in | P Sterling, Col., that a man may not | kiss a woman while she is asleep

without waking Ler first.”

from Alabama to New Mexico, and |

Notre Dame Awards Author Laetare Medal

Dr. Carlton J. H. Hayes, author O% books are now classics, so there

absurd drawings by O. Soglow, |°,

LOONS no. longer come to the "LOONEY LAWS." By Dick Hyman. Illustrated by O. Soglow. New York, Arpy Book Co., $1.

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ILLEGAL—"A North Caro-

lina law states that it is illegal

to sing out of tune.” Drawn by O. Soglow for "Looney Laws."

“Wartime Mission in- Spain”

The annual Notre Dame award

fto the year's outstanding American . Catholic layman has beer given Dr.|Digh points of his career in popular

{by William - H. Bunce, which de-

{scribes the experiences of a Viking |

# . “PATCH,” by Elizabeth Kinsey, is

! {large

| Davis. What is Christmas without tales of magic? This year an original

{contribution is “Prince Godfrey, the

illustrations by James H.

music are lucky if their friends knight of the star of the Nativity |zacharias says just enough. the by Halina Gorska, favorite story- book lacks bitterness.

{teller of the children of Poland, with illustrations by Irena Lorentowicz. A beautiful book of twelve tales. (Roy Publishers, $3.) “The Great White . Buffalo,” by {Harold McCracken is an Indian {story—this time about the Sioux of {the Dakotas before the white men came. With some dramatic moments with “the thundering herd” and drawings by Remington Schuyler. An adventure story for boys of all ages. (Lippincott, $2.50.)

(McBride, $1.50.) 1

Today, at 54, Adm. Zacharias is in his prime. But the Navy is letting him go. His retirement,- Nov. 1, was ordered because he had reached that age without promotion

Of interest to adults as well isl story about a pony for little folks; |!© flag rank. He was never passed

{over in the sense that his name came before a board and was rejected. He was never considered {and therefore was not given the | higher ‘rank until after retirement. Reading between the ~lines in “Secret Missibns” is enjoyable. Adm. His He criticizes his superiors with tact and discretion, but always with finality. » n = AS WAS to be expected, his Plan to bombard.Japan from the air with words instead of bombs met a cold reception when he first mentioned it in the Navy department. He says: “My enthusiasm was not generally shared. I was told ‘We are fighting this war with ships, not words,” and

|

Kimmel and his chief of staff, Vice A

Halt, $2.75.

BARABBAS was a Jewish rebel while Pontius Pilate was tetrarch as a robber and a murderer.

are not, because his name appears passion of Jesus. Pilate had a custom of releasing one prisoner at the time of the Jewish Passover festival. For reasons not altogether clear in the Gospel story, Pilate offered to the Jewish people the’ choice of either Jesus or Barabbas as the prisoner to be freed in 30 A. D. The crowd which stood outside Pilate's courtroom insisted he should release Barabbas,

” tJ ” UPON THE basis of this scanty information, the present novel is based, - 4 Emery Bekessy is an Austro-Hun-garian refugee now in Hollywood writing for the movies. He started the book before he fled from Hitler's Vienna to America in 1940, In Vienna, he had the help of Andreas Hemberger, a historian who died of undernourishment in

Emery Bekessy

Vienna last June. The translators {are a pair who have previously {given us English versions of Ger{man books by authors as unlike as Freud and Hitler. o ” » MR. BEKESSY is unfortunately rather obsessed with finding mod{ern parallels to the biblical story. {He becomes rather confused in an leffort. to make both Barabbas and Pilate into Nazis. Pilate is to Mr. Bekessy a Naz gauleiter, who has his concentration camps and his executions. Barabbas is the pre-1933 Hitler striving to build a political party on the

_ nr Barabbas Symbol of Hate In.New Biblical Novel Se

"BARABBAS." A novel of the time of Jesus. By Emery Bekessy. With the collaboration of Andreas Hemberger. Translated from the German by Richard and Clara Winston. New York, Prentice-

° By SEXSON E. HUMPHREYS" ; y

Barabvas is known today, when most rebels against Roman rule

DEC. 7, 19%

against the Roman rule of Palestine of Jerusalem. He is also recorded

in the four Gospel versions of the

Whodunits Set A Dizzy Pace

"AS GOOD AS DEAD." A novel. By Thomas B. Dewey. So York, Jefferson House, 2.

"THE WIDOW - MAKERS." A novel. By Michael Blanfort. New York, Simon & Schuster, $2.50.

By DREXEL DRAKE “AS GOOD AS DEAD,” by Thomas B. Dewey, Gossips were restlessly curious when they thought Linda Graves, after 20 years, had returned secretively to her old home in Preston. But curiosity turned to uneasiness for various townsfolk’ when Singer Batts, philosophical hotel owner and sleuthing genius, and his agile legman Joe Spinder, found that corpse in the house was that of a womah tied up with a notorious Chicago gambler, The pair had to mix with vicious gunmen while fitting the uncoverefl

murder in with town scandal and

longtime blackmail. Huge enjoyment and thrill at a dizzy pace,

» " » “THE WIDOW - MAKERS,” by Michael Blanfort. Elliot Green,

{wealthy American, was murdered in Portugal when fascist conspirators llearned he had been spying at their meetings to gather malerial for a book. Green's three young children, uniaware of the critical character of [notes and films he had concealed, guarded material zealously through 'sense of loyalty to their father, {When they were back in New York with aunt, There were rival quests for the material, with a dramatic climax | for Green's sinister enemies. The tauthor presents three amazing {youngsters and builds up nerve-

acmillian), has been awarded the d€mn me, but I'll rest my reputa“y ,| Laetare medal this year by Notre tion with the younger generation. Looney ) ) : Dame university, according to the (Reilly & Lee, $1.75.) | ublishers. |

again ‘What good will come from a series of broadcasts, no one will | listen to them.’ My patience was, sorely strained, But I closed my | ears and went ahead.”

reader soon becomes even more confused than Mr. Bekessy. u n

5 i THE BIBLICAL STORY is, how-

Still, Adm. Zacharias’ story is one ever, a highly dramatic siustion—

jee > r the other.” Mr. of failure and frustration. In p54, Closes Jo One re most: of {lie ol | es 08 he had every reason to believe Adm. | drama in plotting his book.

n » » STORIES ABOUT horses are not | written solely for boys. Girls, too, | {enjoy tales about riding and train- | {ing horses, especially when written by their favorite author, Dorothy Lyons. t This year Miss Lyons has written

i ief of | y : | “Golden Sovereign,” which tells how joing olla taake re Without doing any violence to {Connie McGuire trained Silver | : : ok But it |the gospel story, Mr. Bekessy brings { | b. But it went, ! Birch's colt at Tyrone, Mich. promised him the jo

Al instead i | Jesus and Barabbas together twice . pio Cup. Jarsig Fait whe {before they meet in Pilate’s court.|

{lively talk, with plenty of dialogue i i (and swift action. If girls like ic Vo Promoted immetie lo year/:® parallels the last year of Jesus’ | book they will be happy to turn to |pis assistant. He makes no attempt [ministry with the development of} “Midnight Moon” and “Silver {, concea) his hurt. {the Barabbas revolt- conspiracy, so Birch,” two other stories about Con- 2 2 = {that all Israel has its chance for nie. (Harcourt, Brace, $2.) IN HIS STORY of Pearl Harbor, a year to “choose one or She ote) Kate Greenaway's pictures of | i . | Finally, he brings them together children are famous, ahd now young 2 Zactiatias makes Adm. Bim ipefore Pilate and puts the fatal readers have the opportunity of Mel something of a villain, but he | 0m, to the public of Jerusalem. | reading how she grew up and began attempts to deal gently with him. a no” to draw in a lively story of her ex-| “In Hawaii,” he related, “Adm.| BY THAT TIME it is clear that periences, “The Secret Door,” by Kimmel was known as. hard-!Jesus stands as the symbol of love Covelle Newcomb. foro 4 constientious. In fatt rand Barabbas as the symbol of The real Greenaway flavor is ny ME ane < : ’ hatred. That may be an overthe illustrations, drawn according to Observers said he was working 100 |; hlifeation of Christ's teachings, | the Greenaway tradition by Addison hard trying to do everything him- 'pyt jt js certainly the best simpli- | Burbank, so that girls will find their self. He certainly was entitled t0 fication that is possible. Jesus loved captivated by this book, too. (Dodd, better advice from certain mem- pis enemies and Barabbas hated his Mead, $2.50.) {bers of his staff.” | enemies, y8 9 He continues: “Anyone who read | when the choice was made, BaHERE'S SOMETHING that goes | the daily papers in Honolulu would | a pbag went free and Jesus went on and on. “The Magical Mimies in have known that war was imminent 4, the cross. Death was not perma- | 0z,” by Jack Snow. I see that I am |by merely scanning the headlines. | ot for Jesus; ‘in three days He| quoted on the jacket as saying that| “Adm. Kimmel did read the news- |arose. Hence it is possible for Mr. | papers. {Bekessy to end his book on the | “Adm. Kimmel did expect war— |r 0 yo Jesus and Barab\but by a rationalization for which |). oi1 are alive in the world, and it is difficult to find an explanation, | },.¢ he world must still make that |he excluded himself and his com- same choice between love and hate. A biography for young readers is {mand from participation in that | “Thomas Jefferson,” by Frank and War. |Cortelle Hutchins, which gives the

are probably librarians who con-

So far as Mr. Bekessy can see!

the people still are choosing Barab-

go. bas “SUFFICIENT FACTS are now | "

(Longmans, Green, $2.50.)

basis of hatred. On this point the |straining apprehension for their safety. A real treat.

sent by New York's Crown Pub-

lishers to The Times Book Page comes this handsome and opuiently fllustrated annual. ‘With the removal of war-time restrictions, publishers can again get limited quantities of the heavy

Air Guide to Europe

Hayes for “his pre-eminence in the form.

{known for the historian to pass

| 'The Razor's Edge’ |

|

|

|

NE may remind you of Miss Alcott’'s Meg Fa

\.. but you ain't] seen nobodylik

HANNAH

nowhere!

Gather

Ye

|

Tusebuds

a

glazed paper needed for art reproductions. The present annual (paper bound, 9% x12%) is a fine addition to the pre-war-type Christmas pubHoations now re-appearing on newsstands and book counters, ~ » » A LEADING article by Morris Carter on “Mrs. Gardner and the Treasures of Fenway Court,” copiously illustrated, describes one of the most remarkable museums in the United States and gives interesting biographical .naterial on ‘the woman whose connoisseurship and imagination startled staid Bos-

Beaumont Neéwhall's discussion of “The New Abstract Vision,” is ilJustrated with fascinating examples of abstract patterns caught by microphotography of the ‘new electronic sort, as well as aerial, asfronomic and stroboscopic photos.

i JRC. O'MENRY'S “The Gift of the

[}

” is reprinted, with new illus- | ns by Philip Guston, “Three Piet , Three Poems,” presents i ; by Arthur Waley _ the Chinese, together with =reproductions of early Chi-

.

in any pubileaoii oon to look at.

or A wid

80TH BIRTHDAY—Meredith Nicholson, distinguished Hoosier novelist, essayist and former diplomat, who will observe his 80th anniversary. tomorrow,

Mr, Nitholson will be entertained at a family d nner party at the home of his daughter, Mrs, Austin Brown, 4401 N. |. linois st., at which the youngest quest will be the author's great-

Il of Indianapolis.

To Be Out Next June

“Fielding's Air Guide to Europe,” Temple Flelding's “Baedeker for air travelers,” will be published by Farrar, Straus next June, by which time airlines predict and are preparing for unprecedented air travel. Mr, Fielding’'s guide contains pre{cise information concerning air {travel throughout Europe and North | Africa, according to the publishers

oT Titles Announced ‘For New $1 Series

The American Artists group an-!

nounces the addition of five new titles, to its Artists Monograph

| series.

| New monographs in the $1 series per Fidelis: The U grandson, |-year-old Neil Funk (are devoted to Doris Lee, Leon the Pacific 1042-1945” has been| Raphael | postponed from the original date of

| Kroll, Arnold = Blanch, Soyer and Frederic Taubes,

H. F. Heard Pictures Forthcoming World

“Doppglgaengers: An Episode of the Fourth, the Psychological Revoby H. PF. Heard is announced by Vanguard Press for

lution, 1997."

publication early next year.

Mr. Heard, author of “A Taste

for Honey" and “The Great Fog," pictures in his forthcoming a world in which man’s individuality is completely effaced.

‘The Lincoln Reader

Is February Selection

The Book-of-the-Month club selection for February will be “The lh Reader,” edited by Paul Angle (Rutgers University Press). Containing 172 selections by 66 authors, including Lincoln's great biographers and contemporaries and Lincoln's own writings, the book ix also fllustrated with, a number of

et] prey

- uid SEI TRAE bn, Woot

field of history as teacher and] H. H. [judgement even today. All the docu- | " d Ti By JEANNETTE author” and for his “brilliant dis-| eee ments are available. We know that Reprinted 2 Ime ! COVERT NOLAN | charge of a wartime diplomatic Radio Fan Urges Pearl Harbor was a test of leader-| Pocket Books, Inc., announce that

| mission as United States ambassa-|y

the first printing of 40,000 copies of |

: ' i that wh the {dor to Spain for 1042 to 1945, Van Beethoven On oi and YO os their reprint of W. Somerset {which marks him as one of the| Henry Holt & Co., publishers re-| tin . > Maugham's “The Razor's Edge,” was | truly Ls g sold out before publication date.- - |

great heroes of the war,” the|cently of “Beethoven: Master Musi- | {publishers quote the citation as|cian,” by Madeleine Goss, report al | reading. unique example among fan letters ew to a New York radio station. Addressed to “Mr. Van Beetho-

The’navy will not—does not—like “Secret + Missions.” It sought to delete certain portions, but finally | yielded. The navy is emphasizing |

Released the same day as the! New York premier of the MGM | film, based on the novel, the 25-

_is a novel as endearing as Little Women, with an added ungency that is all its own, P $2.50

At All Bookstores

Appleton-Century

“U. 8. Camera edited by T. J. Maloney, is announced for publication this month by Duell, Sloan & Pearce have two sections: - Gallery section and news-picture section.

Marines’ Book Delayed William Sloane Associates nounce that publication of

|

| today to next spring.

Annual—1947," It willd : foi you don't get enough fan!

an-| won't

“Sem- | like you should go on writing. Yours S. Marines in|tryly.”

{cent reprint is now in a Second g of 200,000 copies.

{ven.” ‘lw _ that it does not approve or sponsor ven,” the letter read: “Dear Van:l, .* , cation. That is under- | printin

| : : I heard your selection Moonlight | io dable.

Sonata the other night. It was] Much of “Secret Missions” is a swell, much better than a Jot

; . of trrice-told tale, some of it is hearOther selections I've heard lately. say, But is a technician's account {It seems to have a lot more: to it lot naval structure, and as such is! a valuable contribution to public |

Tr RING INNERSE RESSES

bY. DER ENGL famov® -~

b

mail to keep the program going so I'm writing this in hope Moonlight | A

go down the skids. guy

| lil

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Special plastic duced nw the threaded up to amounts of blood her body and les child's own bloot This procedu until the infant's Leen flooded wit place that whic doomed her, Less than 24 transfusion was complexion had later she was al with her mother lost one previou of the RH condit The RH factor 85 per cent of th It is the other 1

directly cause t

RH negative bl bodies when it with the blood humans. This happened Seavey and her Poisons ( The mother blood which m pregnancy her t and destroying child while it sti As pregnancy de more of the bal soned .by the manufactured by The positive | was replaced in special RH nega and held at Chi emergencies. The was developed | one of the steps a $10 million center, Cold Weat End ‘Sprin Springtime in shot temperatur yesterday and | part tomorrow \u cool air masses { Yesterday was since the weat keeping records the hottest Dee, 65 degrees Satu day. More usual we i? cooler, but not

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TEHRAN, Dec chief of the Ir said tonight th ment troops wer entire southern Jan province, for action ‘and The staff ch fighting so far lower Kurdistan attacked govern day. The fighti going on, he sai The officer ma troops of Prem had not yet o offensive. Reports circul plane flew over evening. Irania terie® were said fire to avoid ai

TIMES

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Crossword ... 1 Editorials .,.. 1 Fashions .... 1 Forum G. 1..Rights,, 2 Meta Given, , 1 Don Hoover... 1 In Indpls. | Inside Indpls. 1 Charles Lucey Eugene Lyons Christmas Shopper Charley's Restaura ‘ ¥