Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1947 — Page 14

‘Weekly Feature of The Times) ER . . . By Harry Hansen

His Advice on Atom

“EINSTEIN: HIS LIFE AND TIMES." By Dr. Philipp Frank. New { ‘York; Knopf, $4.50. 3 a

>

"A REMARKABLE human being, on all counts, is Albert

i y

Einstein of Princeton, author of the theery of relativity,

whose note to President Roosevelt started the atomic bomb | ~* project. hg

soreed to carry to the President the warning of Leo Szilard and Enrico Fermi, Columbia| op \orugm apologized to Bin-.

might invent a death-dealing tainly learned more from conversa-’ bomb at any moment. He sug- tions with the child than she did

tunity | from me.” : gested that we had an OPPOTUNTY| Tp 0 osgers of scientific bent

eh, v }t Orie always will be as- | will welcome this book for its lucid agolated with the atomic bomb. | descriptians of the physical the"Dr. Philipp Frank, research -us- ories developed during the 20th : sociate: in: physics: and philosophy | century and their relation to the’ at Harvard, tells the story as well | theories of Dr. Einstein. = - 3 as many others in “Einstein: His| Others will find the presentaLife and Times.” : tion of Dr. Einstein's social and

¢ ; ucceeded Dr. political views important. The atCn 3912 be had 3 the~ titude of the scientist toward Nazi

mentals of Dr. Einstein's beliefs, | declaring that to call him cynical | or skeptical is to misread him. | “For Einstein religion is both a| mystical feeling toward the laws | of the universe and a feeling of ‘moral obligation toward - his. fel‘low men as well.” He “has never placed any importance on the formal aspects of religion.” { When Dr. Einstein first came ‘the United States, Rep. J. J. Kin-| dred of New York moved that-a, \popular account. of the theory of

8 are Rar physics was well’ pre lon his sympathies; his rational view | i * io%rite the Einstein biography. [of religion, including the Jewish, i : According to the title page his offen have been misunderstood. ed anuscript : was |i Tb] = = = 1 manuscript. : was in German DR. FRANK explains the funda-

_ . MODERN NEWTON-—Albert Einstein, subject of a new biog- |chusetts objected, asking: vaphy by Dr. Philipp Frank. legislation will it bear upon?” If HL K

| REP. DAVID WALSH of Massa-.

cosmos.”

| psychologically disturbed and TS needed -something to - give ‘them is’ completely | dignity as Jews.

pot the specialist in physics. =» . “DR. EINSTEIN without pretense. He is a Bohemian! . in" his tastes, an individualist Who university in efers to be free of social obliga- many students were barred by antiand who likes best to play |

3

on his violin. :

4]

He

ey

k

< to find their directions. “He sheep. i |

“ es people who are ready and py “enthusiastic to accompany his vio-| A THOROUGH pacifist, he told that people

Un playing on the bass viol, cellofNorman Thomas or piano” [would unite more easily | Characteristic of his attitude is | pacifism than for socialism. _. the story about the mother who| “My political ideal is democracy.”

for

learned that her 10-year-old He believed in leadership, but said | daughter often went to the Ein-| “those who are led should not be| stein’ house. : {driven, and they should be allowed |

“The child explained: “People to choose their leaders.” said that at No. 112 there ‘lives a| Also . “violence inevitably attracts very big mathematician who is also | moral inferiors.” For this reason he % very good man. I went to him!was opposed to the Russian and . 4nd asked him to help me with my Italian regimes and eventually broke homework. He was.very willing and with the German. . -stplained everything very well. It| He found himself at ease in the was easier to understand than when United States, and helped save our teacher explained it in school.” |democracy by his advice. #

: Boisferous Frontier Novel | . Full of Action, Adventure

THE WILD YAZOO." A novel.| + By John Myers Myers. New| = York, Dutton, $3. 1 By C. JAMES SMITH ' '¢ THE LUSTY, brawling frontier of | pearly 18th-century northern Miss=--issippl is the background for John| Myers’ latest novel, “The Wild a%00.” \ With this novel, Mr. Myers marks ! his distinction as a-writer of his-| torical fiction, Involved in homicide and adul-|. tery, Mordaunt Fitzmaurice Godol- | phin finds it healthy to leave his| fiative state of Virginia and head! , for the Mississippi wilds. One there, | his name conveniently shortened to! “Daunt,” Mr. Myers’ hero has to| » Jearn how to survive as a pioneer! He ‘becomes adept as 4 bear and| panther hunter, fights outlaws, even | delivers the first baby born in the ploneer settlement.

~ w . 4 FULL of action and adventure, ® . the story. moves #t rapid pace. | § Loeal color includes some fine de- re | scription of old-time Natchez, with Debate to Entertain

its lawless, boisterous life. = The | Yamoo region is depicted as an ideal State Poetry Clubs The Indiana State Federation o

es

R

OF TOUGH HOMBRES— John Myers Myers, whose novel, "The Wild Yazoo," concerns rugged characters in. pioneer northern Mississippi.

". . place to “hunt bars, drink whisky,

the heat.” ~ [. «© Following his eariler successful ot | © ventures in fiction, “The Harp and, b the ¥. W. C.:A, Mist June Wi bie ATTRA RNR AN oy oie CE “The Wild Yatoo' ls another eX-| oc yi py: 00 yo gf uy 3 ) i - or _ oe Fe ELSA 05 \ AR Ams Me hvecs _|poetry-tias contributed more to th happiness of 3 science.” Speaking for the affirmativé™wi

“CE gry we | ont Ty

y ‘Walter Dorwin Teague, leading | be Alson E. Wrentmore and William. - wiitten | Chitwood. of Indianapolis and Mil-

of Plenty,” a picture of the dred Irvin of New Castle.

rd

is announced ‘by “Harcourt, a serve as’ moderator.

Dr. Einstein did not present the atomic formula, aii 3

physicists, that the Nazis ein who protested: “I have cer- 8

sical memoirs: Last heard here with Fabien Sevitzky and the In-

Binstein as rg University interference; the claims of zon Sziget Tel Is What M akes | A Virtuoso Keep Going

"WITH STRINGS ATTACHED: REMINISCENCES AND REFLEC. cused by the" Mexican police of

Attached.”

pression in the: United States must have a message, the Hungarian! 0 explained.. A ! In his final chapter, Mr. Szigeti has much of value to say about Mr. Kazin sees In the book "not... cca) comedies disclaims didactic intent. ‘Message’ | violin-playing, recording (in which | only a profoundly sustained his- . |thére shall be none , . if I can help pe has been especialy prolific since ‘OT of man's disint "gration, but «George Ade: Warmhearted Sat-| gant generosity, endeared him to a : lalso a positive statement In. de-|. i. yrinos the reader 8s close ‘as|great many people.’ n values and if. io jicely to get to Ade's per-|

| Rep. Kindred replied: “It may it's rather “the irrational pleasure?,wn kind, however great his fame. been translated by George pear upon the legislation of the that communication gives; commu-! At least one-third of the orchestra, and revised by- Shuichi | fytyre as to general relations with nication that transcends the bar-|the fellow-violinists, come to such ol usaka. ithe rier§ of language, of nationality, of | rehearsal with a decided ‘show me'| ' Tt bids fair to be an authoritative! pr Einstein did not. originally race .and that has never ceased, attitude.” statement of the Einstein ideas and |pelieve in the Zionist movement, during these four beliefs and has the advantage ofior in a Jewish nationalism. But playing in public, to give me, at péing written for the general reader, ne felt that German Jews were least, this irrational pleasure.”

have Dr. Einstein also‘favored a Jewish Szigeti early had to grapple with Jerusalém, because so linguistic problems. Concert tours, begun while he trends since pre-world war I days. Buyer,” by Raymond K. Graff, Ru- said George. For musicians and laymen alike, dolph A. ‘Matern and Henry Lionel | from Indiana.’” "

Semitism. But many German Jews was in his teens, carried him freely it should prové one of the year's Williams, will be published Mare

on his violin. . -lwere strongly for assimilation and through enjoys chatting With people resented the. Einstein support of psoundaries. In the course of a single best musical books. ‘has helped. many young stu-| Zionism and called him a black day he might read newspapers in

‘frontiers. The repeated experience]

. sical personalities like Feruccio Bu-

soni, in. a ‘passage recently ‘“‘pre- cuted drawings suggest. not only | N] aw $l Printing

; : | rpise children, start-cities and CUSS poetry clubs will present a debate (ate program choice, he cafefully (Production. ab its meeting at 2. p.m. March 9 : der, ,federation ‘president, . . ¥ pessoas Lily OF + 3 R S NREEAOEE I0L CY S R rn RATE LLNES Rely ed That ; a

humanity than

possible in this - On the negative side will be R. proper use of I. Cary Hale and Elmo Wood of

New Castle and Walter N. Reed|| w . mart} of Indianapolis. Miss Snyder will|% WRITERS: Make It Sell

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

A

Lowry, I learn: . That - Alfred Kazin

anyone who language, a sheer joy. i ” 4

MUSICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHER Joseph Sziget, . eminent

violinist-and author of "With Strings Attached,” “a volume of mu- |nerence in, a her.

dianapolis Symphony orchestra Dec, 4.and 5, 1943, Mr, Szigeti will appear in recital at Indiana university auditorium-in Bloomington April 9. ;

{venes and confuses 1 | cqurse.

|

‘TIONS.” By Joseph Szigeti. New York, Knopf, $4. - [having murdered a man and is ef 9 X op | cna : [killed for an incoherent express.

lof political ‘opinion. a

: n By HENRY BUTLER iy . “WHERE is the mess-edge?” : ; ‘ = A Hungarian friend of Joseph Szigeti asked the violinist that, OBVIOUSLY : THE

Every book, every article,

by liquor,

. : : {it.” But he does explain to some | . : ‘relativity be published in the con-| - a ot .. (his pioneering ys), . composing so basi am |gressional record. Jextent the-'why" ofa yittuosn's id orchestras. 5 : jte o ie Ba RCE» j career. $ ro» | human hope.

What makes a virtuoso keép go- |

on his writing.

: That's why his first redecades of IY hearsal of the Beethoven concegglo| with Leopold Stokowski and Be Philadelphia orchestra in 1925 was “intimidating.” “With Strings Attached” is more than autobiography. It highly intelligent and urbane dis-| cussion of musical and artistic| Practical

zles

§ ® = = LIKE ALL other Hungarians who acquired world fame, Mr.

pational and - cultural

120-by Doubleday.’

several languages as he crossed as 4 lesson in internationalism. | So were the moves from Budapest ‘to London, to Paris, to Geneva, trips to the U. S. 8. R. (where musical audiences are the world’s most sensitive, he says), and the; final war-occasioned settling in| California, where the Szigetis now | Age Press, $5.

Bye, | JAMES REYNOLDS “A World| ¢ “with Of Horses” has a subtitle almost as Strings Attached"—“a citizen of the long ‘as one of Daniel Defoe’s. world“—Mr. Szigeti weuld be .to0 It.runs: “A conversation piece demodest to apply to himself. Yel voted to all aspects of the subject, | the phrase is api, ; horse, the way a human regards a

hroughout the book, the violina Ee mellow world out- horse and the way a horse regards look could be described in such @ human.” statements as these: Art is greater! BY calling his book “a conversathan politics; culture is greater tion piece,” Mr. Reynolds avoids than hationalism: people are more reproach for skipping about chronimportant than ‘theories. ologically.” He can be discursive, | a. reminiscent, anecdotal without

NOT THAT “With Strings At- needing to. observe strict historical sequence. .

{tached” dwells excessively on Mr. Szigeti's social or political views. 8% -% |Rather, the absence of doctrine, the THE RESULT is a book which | suspension of jwdgment indicate. a certainly commands the attention | % \more than usullly well balanced or g)1 overs of horses. It'is inter-|.

|personality. Many of Mr, Szigeti’s . : : : | fellow musicians, in their more can- national in scope, wide in -histori- | did moments, would admit that such al spread. ; “4 maturity is not too eommon among - It mingles fact and legend, in|virtuosi.” . . - cluding pedigree statistics on some “With Strings Attached” is far of the mest famouf strains in \richer than -a brief review can in- breeding history, as well ‘as exam\dicate. Reminiscengces:of great mu- ples of folklore concerning .horses. Mr. ~ Reynolds’ beautifully - exe~

“A WORLD OF HORSES." By James Reynolds.

¥ » » ; The concluding phrase o

|viewed”-by the Saturday Review of motion but, you might. say, the

|Literature, belong among the best | personality of the horses he por- t Alay ! ] trays... His understanding of are Of Sea of Grass

chapters of musical biography. | ‘Briefer comments on titans like nature, from many years' experi[the “Balzacian” Eugene Ysaye lence, is, profound. 3 (subsequently conductor for a tire!

n - n {of the Cincinnati Symphony or-| AN ESTIMATED 600,075 miles of

land, among the younger generation, | gi , i { ! : «| given Mr. Reynolds varied material | : ; men | ins ir | ‘ western pioneering. ike Stravinsky or Bela Bartok, on racing, hunting,

{are invariably ' keen ‘and sympa- : thetic. training. simultaneous. ‘release { RHR Some of his best anecdotal stuff | Metro - Goldwyn_= Mayer _ picture, | IN Ogden Nash's ‘Imsortal |is about Ireland, a country of horse- | “The Sea of Grass,” scheduled to

|phrase, the book is written with far | fanciers. whose Celtic imagination ‘open. in New York's Radio City| Music hall within the next: few

nd wit-enriches their legends.

|less malice toward none. Whenever a " |. Handsomely printed oni cream- days.

{Mr. Szigeti mentions, say, an unen-|: ; lightened, commercially - minded | colored paper, “A World ol’ Horses" |.

{ concert.manager who tries tp die-

preserves anonymity. < Even with critics he ' is more amused than provoked.” On the hos-| +

irectors to new aks more in sorrow than in angér. He notes that concert .audiences whesheft new:| tompositions - preseiited” as nevelty additions to standard programs rarely get a chance to understand new music. ? On the technical side, Mr. Szigeti

[chestra_ boards -of Susi Mr. Sziget?

£

1

Protect your furniture by the use of clear glass tops. Van“ity, coffee, end, dresser and desk cut to size. One week delivery. Buy in your size and

By Mildred I. Reid

phy Ischnets Translated

of “New nd

‘The sonnets of Mary Stuart, queer of Scots, translated for the for a first time from the original French

pattern,

~~ Lyman Bros., Inc.

31 on the Cicle

“Well Known Literary Critic and“\Author

oa BOY : PENN MARK BOOK SHOP _ \ 120 E. Market St, Room 24 : 4th Fl. Union Trust Bldg. ~

' 4

od

. 1

au

i ~ v

INTELLECTUAL BOOK— | Lowry Novel | Recommended | -a Puzzler

| Writer Tells Alcoholic's Mental Stupor : "UNDER THE. VOLCANO." A

novel. By Malcolm Lowry. New * York, Reynal & Hitchcock, $3. FROM THE “advance critical acclaim” printed on the jacket of “Under the Volcano,” by Malcolm.

considers 1t| one of “the most original and crea {tive novels of our time." _ That Robert Penn Warren thinks lit “ambitious and compelling." That Conrad Aiken feels it is “for loves the English

» . THE WRITING records the mental fog of a former British consul,’ Geoffrey Firmin,” ‘whose alcoholic stupor helps give a nightmarish quality to his perceptions. {| The happy married life he might have had with Yvonne is blasted. | On the “day of the dead” she Yeturns to Quauhnahuac, the city of | two volcanoes, and confronts Geof-! |frey as he is battling to gain co-}

She is eager for a re-establish-ment of” stable relations, but the [consul "is "not vet able to find the: ? ‘road back. The memory of her| morit, from a photograph taken probably“at Hazelden, his north{relations with two other men inter. : present

his

Separately and jointly the econ|sul and Yvonne share a number of " 'experiences—a fair, a bull fight and. la wild ride into the country, and < {toward the ‘end the consul is ac-|

INLI fani ; literal and less “UNLIKE. a pianist or a § er, My own mind is “What ing? ~The answer is not just grati-| the violinist has to pass muster be- | LKEIY to-read profundity into what

fication of vanity, Mr. Szigeti says; fore a critical fraternity of his| clearly intentional obscurity. But CAgE days.

{the author builds an atmosphere and puts “his own mark indelibly

I recommend “Under the Volcano” io those who "enjoy literary PuZ- |... “was on, Victor Lawson sent] ;

The author is an Englishman, now~ living ‘in. British Columbia. ai not believe Spain would: be: a

i : ' . - s aso a House Buyer's Guide “The Prefabricated Guide ‘for the Prospective into thinking I'm an Englishman,’

New Book Will Command

Attention of Horse Lovers

Mustrated with |bles,” before they were called! photographs and drawings by the author. New York, Creative

HUNTER'S HEAD—"Huntingtower," - grey hunter stallion, drawn by James Reynolds for “A-“World-of Horses."

The World Publishing Co. has ordered a -new, large printing of it h Forum $1' edition of “The Sea 0 chestra), ' the venerable Joachim |travel throughout the world has Grass,”~ Conrad_Richter's novel of than rotor. MI.

, breeding and This new printing is planned for | ships—with John T. “McCutcheon, . with

Starred in-the film are Spencer is a fine-example of post-war book Tracy. Katharine Hepburn, Robert | Walker and Melvyn Douglas.

I —— Bn — - AE 2 i bis AS a pad " i v 3 “GLASS " a JAE SELLS i * . % i ‘ ’ ~

ACTION is) ° Ade’s wr , ; question upon looking over ‘parts of the manuseript of “With Strings only an excuse for the author's vir-| po TH ror of Coerse AGES WINNIE SH7007 15 Olle ol the bigest : | tuosity, in which he rejects co-! oosier -litérary-success stories. every lecture designed to make an im- [herent narrative and [follows al stream of consciousness befuddled: modern readers would. M

House:

hi Out of context, such a statement

t | concerned the small town girl who ; | yearned, not just for a mate, but

§ |One—the Ideal. He was a big and

| comedy,

the

ae.

3

SAGE OF HAZELDEN—Georgs Ade, late great Hoosier hu-

New Ade Biography Lets. Hoosier Tell Own Story

""GEORGE ADE: WARMHEARTED SATIRIST." By Fred C. Kelly. In-

|- |

dianapolis, Bobbs-Merriil, $3.50.

In. a manner his contemporaries relished * perhaps more than SvBgieger-dndiana. humor, wisdom

"iis “HifOMt stories, plays and books for

and direct, simple tai

¢

{ —r . A biography like Fred C. Kelly's oys vears at Hazelden, his extrava-

| ie | hi | - Possibly his“best comic vein was { sonality, his interests, his attitudes. |; terse statements: “Barly to bed | Mr. Kelly is a newspaperman. 8S nd. early to. rise, and you'll meet Mr. Ade himself was in his Chi- very few prominent people.” A. long-time friend of gpowing a man with that kind Mr. Ade, he writes simply and. lets or jmagination must have been a

Mr. Ade Speak for himself Wherever pyiyijege. “Mr. Kelly has certdinly | A - pew pictorial ~annua' called recorded his frieridship in terms —H. B.

possible:

“While the

Spanish-American or deepest appreciation.

George a. message asking him to go to Spain. George replied that he

desirable place for - an American ‘Pass yourself off as an English‘man,’ came a message from Lawson. ‘#1 couldn't fool even a Spaniard

~They would khow I'm i

.seenis less funny than it must have |seemed at the tine. Humor of 50 |years ago, however genuine, is apt {to strike most of us today as mild! by comparison with the hopped-up,! |over-stienuous wise-cracking we get, lin “our standardized entertainment.

| » ” » | | ONE OF the earliest Ade “Fa-|

|“mables in Slang,” appeared in |Ade’s column, “Stories of the. Streets and of the Town,” in the i Chicago Record in July, 1899. It] CAN" WE SURVIVE?—Dr. William Lowe Bryan, president ementus of! tndiana yniversity, and “author of a new ‘pamphlet, “A Better Woild or Nong. phblished by the Indiana University Foundation. Dt Bryan find® the "law of love," as set forth in the Bible, the only hope for human survival.

Literary Club Books Speakers

FRANCIS H. INSLEY, secretar

for a soul-mate. Complete with the famous capital letters, the style ran like this: “In all the Couritry around there was not a Man who came up to her Plans and Specifications for a Husband. Neither was there any Man who had any time for Her. So she led a lonely Life, dreaming of the

strong Literary Man, wearing - a Prince: Albert coat, a neat Derby Hat and godlike Whiskers. When "He came he would enfold Her in his Arms and whisper Emerson's Essays to her. : “But the Party failed to show up.” There's a lot of social history in {that passage. You need to sense lthe background; if only through lother reading about that period, to get the full comic effect.

program.

ing, which will be ladies’ night; M

+ World.” » : SOME OF Mr. "Ade’s writing for, Other speakers and : topics for! the . stage, .such as the examples March “include: Lawrence * Epps “The Ireland Hoax,” March |

Mr. Kelly gives from the musical (Hill, “The ‘Sho-Gun,” is [far more dated. Characters with names like the. dowager Hi-Faloot or the | Townsend Jr. | princess Hunni-Bunni bel | earlier; more innocent period in and Gambling,” | American - stage history. ’ jor . Without re-reading a lot of Mr.| 5 Ade’s writings, not easily accessible | {| nowadays, one is apt -to find Ade | more interesting as a personality Kelly's book | friend-

March+31.

Ade's” many

recalls Mr.

Booth Tarkington, James Whitcomb Riley and a host of other notables. Ade's sincerity and, in his prosper-

For all of Ernie's

LI |

A WARM, PERSOYAL ROEBUCK AND CO uu PICTURE D BRT PON hc. IRL

vo RAR

weil “ Ra oo an

| Indiana's ‘Most Popular

BOOK]

DEPARTMENT

INDIANS 10

a

# LATEST MAGAZINES

rs

of the Indianapolis Literary club, has announced the club's. March

F Conic)

ag (NO WAR NOW—

E Writer Lifts |! Russ Curtain = .4

"THROUGH RUSSIA'S . BACK DOOR." By Richard E. Lauter- + bach. New York, Harper, $2.75:

PROBABLY “the: most {important disclosure in Richard . E. Lauter bach's new book, "Through Russia's Back Door, is that “Russia is in {no condition to start or conduct a 3 major war of any kind, much less - J a war that would involve the United -| States.” : Next -is the reiteration of ‘a fact frequently reported by fair-minded * | |cotrespondents. This is that the - : |Russian people are fed ‘anti-Amer-ican propaganda at every: turn, that any defensive measures taken by ‘the United States are distorted as |directed against: Russia and that the ‘masses, having no access to ‘uricolored reports, "believe a} “this.

J » » » i MR. LAUTERBACH of Times Moscow staff crossed Siberia from Viadivostok on the Trans-Siberian Jor Life last year and attempted to ple and their views. Personal contact has this advantage. It shows how events have ‘Affected ‘individuals. Mr. Lauter- % bach took advantage of i “meeting, prodding the ' Russians with questions, answers were wryly given, they revealed their attitudes. . “Siberia is America as it was 100 years ago, but it won't require years to catch up. like an unruly young giapt” with a surplus of thyroid.” ,~ The people in Moscow “had more food, “a little ‘mefe clothing, but, { understandably’, ~ they drive... rT ae

2 |

Ye

hs

oa———

‘Finds. Reds Couldn't Carry On War Now _ °

reflect the condition of the peo-

of every Even when their

He says: hd

It is wing §

SE

had less .

ox

7 2. N 8 “INTHE Soviet press, American

SR

actions are ‘imperialistic’ and even Mascist.” They quote only reaction= ary or left-wing newspapers.”

that

Mr. Lauterbach . believes : firmly

unless - the Big Two “can

compromise their differences and consolidate their similarities this

phasizes the atomic bomb as likely

to shatter event of war.

both

is only an interim peace.” He em- £ nations in the

On leave from Life, Mr. Lauter-

bach is now on a Nieman fellow- .

ship at Harvard—H. H.

1 Grolier Society : Publishes Pictorial

“Spotlight” and ‘published by the Grolier

Inc., will reach

AS

Society,

‘bookstores. early this year.

|

y |

- : { At next Monday evening's meet-

Y.

Insley will speak on "Rank Young

10: F. E. Raschig, “Let's Ration| Communists,” March 17; J. Russell | “Foreign Influence,” | ong to an|March 24; J: P. Edmison, “Gamblers

h LEEG milLea

12,000 words of text.

yie

The publishers, who also get out the

Grolier Encyclopedia, describe the new annual as a 500-page pictorial history of 1946, designed and written especially from 15 on up, but likely to be of ‘interest to young and old alike. :

for the teen-age group

“Sleek: <

BOOKWORM

reminds you:

"You can get any

book reviewed on this page in Block's Lending Library or = Bookshop."

Book Shop South Mezzanine

IE SWina

e FICTION ®TRAVEL | Se — ¢ NON-FICTION . ®# COOK - fi ¥ A | CHILDREN'S * BIBLES | An informal picture biography of America's o REFERENCES ® SHOP beloved correspondent. days : ES. o ATLAS 4 “in Indiana through all of his battle cam- || © DICTIONARIES, * ATL | a ns Poste sunpittaat te Ereie's

CUR wn { oa

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@ of Mok WILLIAM O4OANS ASSOCIATES

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Reece Plea “WASHIN ~—-Senator today Committee plea for G. zen deman trol of the “As one the group Carroll Re represents of - register Mr. Morse The hart today's is§ News.” M torial: “A which exe by the dul Mr: Mor advice” al “amused.”

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Mr, Mol 20 per ce made by * with whon should ple make the poorer, Mr, Ree gressmen football fie harmony. Meanwh Martin (] Leader Ch have the * the house. But the lican force ers, It i ‘danger fo A. Taft's pastings. Mr, Re down anc not impre lenged pa “No Re] gress is b tion of ps lieves the what is b Senator C He said against would mu

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