Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1947 — Page 14

a

HERO SN En ast

IN

_matize the whole period.

Pioneer the WILDERNESS ROAD." By Bobbs-Merrill, $3.75.

“EVERGREEN LAND." By Nord $350,

eekly Feature: of The Times) we

DER... By Harry Hansen lilderness Road’ Tells hat it Cost in Human Lives

West

Robert L. Kincaid. Indianapolis,

Jones. New York, Dodd, Mead,

i FROM NEW YORK to Cumberland Gap is a few hours

ying time. It takes less than

a day by rail and only a little

ger than that by car over the fine concrete highways of Pennsylvania and the Blue Ridge mountains of Virginia. ~~ But when the American pioneers spilled over the Alleghanies into the West, it was the hardest obstacle on the old

Wilderness trail of Dan’l Boone. The whole Wilderness yoad - is now covered by smooth cement. ‘When you hurry along with only an occasional stop at a hamburger stand, you can’t visualize what it cost the pioneers in human lives, horses and wagons to penetrate Kentucky and Tennessee.

» » » . “HE WILDERNESS ROAD. first book of the new American Trails Series that Jay Monaghan is editing, tells the story. Mr, Monaghan was lucky in getting Robert Lee Kincaid to «write it, for this author sees its history in terms of the men who used the road and built its towns. Mr. Kincaid is executive vicepresident of Lincoln Memorial university at Harrogate, Tenn. and a Middlesbaro, Ky. newspaper man. Filled with the lore of his region, the Cumberland Gap country where Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee meet, he has produced an admirable record of one of the great arteries of the westward movement. » » » NO ONE MENTIONS the Wilderness Road without recalling Dan’l Boone: his experiences, fighting: Indians and building settlements, dra-

Dan’l was not the first to follow the ancient trails through the mountains, but he was the most in-

fiuential, Mr. Kincaid's book 1s|jones’ book, “Evergreen Land,” will {ful writer who uses the pen.name SUCCES’ : packed with specific details of thisimake you think well of distant |of Harold Maine, is possibly the best | his’ marriages and alienated most of ings the ladies American record. But for my pur-| Washington. If Mr. Jones’ hunch is of its kind to date. Like “The Lost his friends. After all, a drunk who themselves to endeavor, with pas- ‘disappointment pose I want to stress an episode|right, people dont leave Washing- Week-End,” it is a study of alco- |DOTTows without intending to repay sive behavior not negative.” z

‘that has had repercussions into our own time—the boom of the 1880s

>

The scheme was honest enough but .ill-timed. » td

F 4 LONDON investors had helped to

’ i a $n ¢ 1 > ny 2 : i La 3 Ai, A 3 : 1 . ft a & ile p . * . » y 5 .

E INDIANAPOLIS TIMES E— (LIVED BY TRICKS— ; Agnes Keith Tells of Life -

In Jap Prison

"THREE CAME HOME." By Agnes Newton Keith. Boston, Aflantic-Little, Brown, $3.

WHEN THE news gets around that Mrs, Keith is the person who wrote “Land Below the Wind" there will be a long line waiting for “Three Came Home." That first book was the story | of how a midwestern American | woman married: an Englishman | and adapted herself to life in North | Borneo, where he was director of agriculture. While American readers were still | going around begging, buying and! stealing her book Mrs, Keith, her’ (husband and her infant son were | thrust behind barbed wire at! Kuching by the Japanese invaders | of Sandakan. ! Her little .son, George, had been | tborn in April, 1940, and was less! than 2 when the Japanese came. | George is important. He is a big {reason for -Mrs. Keith's endurance | and fighting spirit, and rightly he! {gets a big slice of the book. | » # ~

| “THREE CAME HOME” is the

a

pour $20,000,000 into it, but when

Baring Bros. failed the whole proj-| ect collapsed. |

A belt line railway costing $1 million yas sold for $30,000, 80.000 acres of land went for $15,000, a blast furnace, a gun works and other enterprises closed. The hotel building was sold to a wrecking company | for $9000. But Mr. Kincaid recalls, with a certain satisfaction, that a humole preacher named Myers had been! trying to build a school, which Lady | Pauncefote, wife of the British am- | bassador, asked him to call Harrow school. » = » His motto was “better to get wisdom than gold.” He ran the little school, and when Gen. O. O. How- | ard came there to lecture, he con-’ fided to him his plan to use the surviving buildings of the hotel. * | The general was inspired and de-| cided to back the idea of a larger | school, if it became a memorial to Lincoln. ! And that’s how Lincoln Memorial ame to stand in Harrogate, in the Cumberland coal region, on the old! Wilderness road that once baffied Dan’l Boone. , = = | IF MR. KINCAID’S book interests | you in the Wilderness road, Nard

ton; they're satisfied. | Of course there are a few expa-

a | AUTHOR IN DISGUISE—The writer of "If a Man Be Mad," [voc of oll She detices tricks.

candid:and harrowing reminiscences of alcoholism and mental insti- | women employed to keep the breath tutions, is here photographed so as to be unrecognizable. Writing |of life in their bodies and support the present volume under the pseudonym of Harold Maine, he. is |their children in captivity. said to be the author of two successful novels, much poetry ‘and It is the story of how they had _ many magazine articles. {to call on all their endurance and = =

New Mental Hospital Study It tells how mothers loath=d one Called Best of Recent Works

another and yet battled for one | another; how women endured in{sults from leering Jap captors; how | children were “mischievous, wicked, naughty, profane,” and learned to|"THE GREAT SNOW" A nove!

“IE A MAN BE MAD." By Harold Maine. New York, Doubleday, $3. decuive. Suvggle and act tough. It] By Henry Maria ‘ Robinen. p ” { ork, Simon chuster By HENRY BUTLER Mrs. Keith has a sense of the| ¢7c

“Great wits are sure to madness near allied, ludicrous and manages to work it! And thin partitions do their bounds divide.” into her story. She alsé has a| THE IMPACT of common peril SO WROTE John Dryden in “Absalom and, Achitophel,” voicing a flair for ready characterization o. a ‘small group of characters is 17th-century notion that has been considerably modified since. that leaves the subject little be-! : : . Whatever the change in meanings, Dryden's clear phrases are still sides his shirt. a ‘an old fictional device. useful. His “thin partitions” are the chief study of psychiatrists, although x = = Henry Morton Robinson. his psychiatrists have whole dictionaries | | TWO JAPANESE ' commanders, new novel, “The Great Show.’ reof dificult words that, for the porary aid alcohol gives to day-|Col. Suga and Lt. Nekata, who had |yives it' with uncommon skill. la¥man, confuse rather than ex-|dreams. charge of the women's camp, are. pe puts an up-Hudsoa week-end plain the difference between sanity | “Before I was 18 I could be as her special victims. house party through the terrors and and insanity. shaken as a Bowery bum when; Col Suga could be moved by discomforts of a fabulous. 20-day For any understandine of that liquor was taken from me,” he |wheedling—he was full of contra- |plizzard. showing what such an exdifference, laymen must turn to writes. By that time he was in the dictions and hesitations, - but Lt. | perience might ‘do to people physbooks by other laymen. The second army, apparently in the Philippines, |Nekata was a boor who went in lically and psychically. s war, even more than the first, has|although places and place-names for slapping women for infringe-| His characters are diverse: Rusbrought a flock of such books, vary- (are disguised throughout the book. ment for rules. When the women (ton Cobb, successful and prosperous ing in value. In lucid intervals he wrote stories inquired why they were slapped New York patent attorney; his neu“If a Man Be Mad,” by a success- @0d poetry and enjoyed some Nekata replied: {totic wife, Nolla, recently afflicted But drink destroyed both “To avoid punishments or beat- | with kleptomania; his delicate. senshould presume sitive son, Roddy, a puzzle and a to Ruston, i ‘ = . Suga managéd to get the, THEN THERE are the guests: prisoners some bananas, and Lt. Beryl, Nolla’s younger sister, and

in

holism. Like “The Snake Pit” it|and passes bad checks wears out’ Col. is a study also of mental hospitals. 80V conceivable welcome.

and collapse of an ambitious mining |triates: New York has Eric John-|But it has the advantage over those: Much of the book concerns his Nekata, after subjecting Mrs. Keith | Laimbeer, temporarily unproductive

and settlement project that would not gone broke.

» » ” AT HARROGATE, Tenn, a few miles from the Gap, you will find Mr. Kinecaid’s Lincoln Memorial ; ty. : «>It is not a large institution, but “yaluable to those who study there, A it has become a center of Linlore. Its Lincoln Herald regupublishes new Lincoln ma-

coin Tarly terial, The main building of this college was built on the foundations of a great hotel—the Four Seasons, 700 rooms, erected 1892, - demolished 1805—and there's a story. , = a = IN 1886 A Scottish-born promoter, Alexander A. Arthur, who was related to President Chester A. Arthur, was so impressed with the coal and timber possibilities of the Cumberland region that he formed an enormous development company. In the Yellow Creek Valley, where Boone had hunted deer and Buffalo, he got control of 80,000 acres, laid out the town of Middlesboro, called in two railway lines, bored a tunnel through the Cumberlands, started mining and erected this enormous hotel.

Arthur could have given Barnum

lessons in publicity and promotion.

ston and Guthrie McClintic;

and Hollywood has Bing Crosby, but Mr. Jones knows their hearts are in the evergreen state. # » E 2 ONE OF Nard Jones’ objects is to assure readers east of the Rockies that labor relations in the state of Washington are excellent. “The bad name is simply a hangover from a fybntier binge that is still too recent to be forgotten by outsiders,” he writes. He means the I. W. W., the clash at Centralia and the “Seattle revolution.” The Indian days, the settlements and the coming of Asa Mercer, who worked hard to get shiploads of “Mercer girls” to Washington so that the settlers might have wives, are here recorded, and there is much other good reading.

terested in Mr. Jones’ assertion that a full life can be lived more reasonably in the West than in the East. For $5000 a year a Washington man can have a six or seven room house in the country, only 30 minutes from his office; a car and a modest sailboat or cruiser. He can have a garden, fish and play poker and hunt for deer a few hours from his front door. You can live in a New England town for $2000 or $3000 a year, too, says he, but it's a day from a city of any size, and think of the winters. Which suggests that the winters in Washington must be all.

Rei TH EA

LOUNGE CHAIR & OTTOMAN

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LINCOLN 326

[A 1: RY

LEwisohn's Novel :

“The Case of Mr. Crump,” Ludwig Lewisohn’s- novel reviewed in The Times Book Page for March 29, went. into its second printing -two days before publication March 28. According to Farrar, Straus, the publishers, Mr. Lewisohn is currently at’ work on a massive his-

To Print in Bengali

White Folks," published by Knopf

lishers.

the two and all the similar recent books experiences have succeeded if the country had|Statler chain has Art Douglas; {I've seen of being broader and more General Motors has Paul Garrett profound.

= PERHAPS YOU will be most in-|

in hospitals, ranging to- kicking and arm twisting be- | painter. from what he describes as the best cause she had complained of anirelease from psychic tensions (oddly enough. despite popular no- attempted rape by a Japanese | through a series of affairs, is be“If a Man Be Mad” is not merely lions, New York's Bellevue) to one guard, placed before her a present ginning to weary of Laimbeer : the story of Harold Maine's per-|0f the worst, a veterans’ admini-/of four eggs! | Cobb's daughter, Sicely, whom sonal struggle with demons that stration hospital. | y=» pursued him into the clutches of | He entered the veterans’ hos-| “THE JAPANESE gave us a|froin a snowbound, panicky crowd Demon Rum. It is also the record Pital- as an attendant, following!'young female pig. ‘Raise pigs,’ they in the Albany railroad station (that of his learning from his own ex- some months of sobriety in which said, ‘and stop complaining about hazardous, two-day boat trip is a perience to focus attention on the he was aided by Alcoholics Anon-|the food.’ experience of other sufferers. That ymbus. His conviction that all men-| “’'Raise pigs on what? we said.

Beryl, who nas sought

was his salvation. In the scriptural tal hospitals were stupidly and ig-| *‘On garbage.’ paradox, losing his life, he found norantly run made him determine “ ‘We eat the garbage.’ i it. For as soon as he franslated to learn as much as possible about. “‘Don’t argue. It is an order’ nl

{ i {

Before the pig, named Salina,

personal resentment into unselfish | them. could increase and multiply ‘it was]

moral indignation, he got well. $n = £ x = WHAT HE SAYS about hospitals Struck by lightning. The body was| FRUSTRATION and unbearable js perhaps the best feature of his raced to the kitchen and the carcass! guilt were the product of Harold pook Like Clifford Beers’ “A Mind |divided among three groups, for| Maine's childhood and adolescence. That Found Itself,” Harold Maine's ‘One pig equals pork stew for 280 A pious, precise and humorless step- story should start people thinking hungry people.” i father missed no chance to make _certainly in a state like Indiana,| Mrs. Keith's book is not merely | capital of his stepson’s delinquencies, ‘where even the statistics regarding anecdotes. Through it all runs a! major, or minor. So young Harold renta) hospitals are depressing and | fine understanding of human na-| lived increasingly in reverie and dis- the public has no means of ascer- | ture, good and evil. Her racial prej- | covered early in his teens the tem- taining the human facts. udice was nil, and her pity for the! | Mental-hospital attendants,| Way the Japs had been brought up |known among themselves as “bug-|Was real. housers,” are ignorant even when gn 8 {they're not vicious, Maine says.| “I'LEARNED then ‘that I hated {After all $50 or $60 a month plus| the spirit of brutality in man more | {keep is miserable pay. Hospitals bitterly than I hated anything that | lare understaffed with doctors and|De Japanese could do to me,” is one nurses, and even the doctors and|©f her wise conclusions. \nurses are often ignorant, inferior| Mrs. Keith's husband was in a \neople, more concerned with their| Camp nearby and sometimes she lcaste system, as in the veterans’|Sa8W him by stealth. At one time he |

SPEECH EXPERT—Dr. Bess Sondel, professor of speech at Chicago university, whose new book, "Are You Telling Them?" was published recently by Pren-tice-Hall ($2.95). The book discusses _ effective public speak ing, with especial reference to

nothing at |

Hi Second: Phlting a SR a 4 A v

torical novel about ‘the last revolt of the Jewish people against Rome at the time of the Emperor Hadrian.

Langston Hughes' “The Ways of|To Would-Be Farmers

Is. soon to appear in the Bengali|farmers is the theme of language, according to the pub- Earth:

(hospital he describes, than with the| Was in danger of execution, but] patients. { survived. Husbands of some of her! derstanding. Brutality is one effective means| friends were beheaded. — of making seriously ill patients “be-| The Jap guards, after the war, ! : have.” It's the easiest way, Oe ee punishment befitting their Earth $ Last Family way that requires least intelligence|crimes and many met with ~tatal| Described in Novel \from the attendants. And since the | accidents.” Mrs. Keith records that |

clarity and avoidance of misun-

Ms sures EES comBlajat js. ascribed. to his! He was always. kind. to. the om LSMamity” : : mental-iiness. = "reer pol i

= EVEN MORE

“rpolite” to" tite WOINER "ANd probably saved her husband from death. H. H.

”. important ‘than

Cobb rescues via the Hudson river

a

WITH BARE HANDS—According to Greek wheedling that the English-speaking ||os (Hercules) siew the Nemean lion with his bare hands. The | ‘painting on _this ancient Grecian urn shows the struggle. Together with nine other equally important pieces of pottery, this one is a |physically strenuous program, inrecent gift to Herron Art museum from Mr, and Mrs. Eli Lilly. |

i

tion), joins the party. are keepef:

ER wei or

wo

%

| ) {

{

mythology, Hera- |

'Great Snow’ Tells Impact Of Common Peril on Group

SNOWED UNDER — Henry Morton Robinson, whe, having been snowed under in a blizzard some years back writes of a blizzard three times as bad in The Great Snow."

And there Rollefson, the .house- | her quietly alcoholic hus-

Mrs.

band and her son, Gunnar, army

pilot reach

on the

leave who manages house by plane » . . . of sheer incident,

to

= ON THE SIDE

— SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1047: ser [PICTURE JOURNALISM—

i

‘increase in crime, particularly

3

TO vy

HR TR

Photos Tell . How G-Men Do Their Job

("THE STORY OF THE Fk THE

OFFICIAL PICTURE HISTORY OF THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION," By the editors of Look. Introduction by J. Edgar Hoover, New York, Dutton, $3.75.

" WHAT Look magazine terms “ple~ ture journalism” is employed again

“lin “The Stgry of the FBL" which

will appear Monday, - The familiar technique uses plausible models in carefully re-

‘|hearsed action shots, thus bringing

the complicated business of detection and apprehension of criminals

(closer to popular imagination,

With so much radio and Alm material, not to mention comic books, devoted to crime and criminals, the FBI book will probably

get a wide audience.

" - ” OVER 300 photographs with clearly written text set forth the history, methods and aims of the .federal bureau. J. Edgar Hoover's introduction explains how the FBI came into being, ‘with Some reference to government unpreparedness for sibotage during world war I. There is a chapter on FBI training, detailing the mentally and

cluding surprise demands on stuénts' concentration and alertness. A chapter on “How the FBI Solves a Crime” shows the exhaustive techniques used in evaluating clues. It is followed by a collection of some of the FBI's most famous cases, such as the breaking up of the Barker-Karpis gang, notorious Kidnapers of the 1930's, v » » ANOTHER CHAPTER on how the agency helped win the war describes the systematic frustration

‘of attempted axis sabotage.

A final chapter on the bureau's future role notes the recent great Juvenile delinquency. It gives valuable advice to law-abiding citizens on how they may assist law-en-forcement agencies.

American Ballet Topic of Book

GEORGE AMBERG, curator of the department of theater arts at New York Museum of Modern Art, has just signed a contract with Penguin Books, Inc, for a book on American ballet, Mr. Amberg's book, which will deal with ballet in America from the early days of theatrical dancing to the present, with particular emphasis on recent developments and contemporary ballet companies, will

the novel shows what the caprices contain a comprehensive index as of nature can do to the comforts|well as the complete repertories of

of a mechanical civilization.

Ac-

all major companies in this coun-

{cording to the publishers, Mr. Rob- Uy. inson got the idea for it from his| To be entitled “Ballet in Amerown experiences during a severe ica.” the book will first appear un-

Fortunately,

blizzard N

up around Woodstock, Y. some winters ago. First, fuel gives out. then power. the food supply is

{der the Duell, Sloan & Pearce imprint prior to its issuance in the | paper-backed Penguin edition. Both | editions are scheduled for early next

lample. But as the cold increases, | year.

iso do

the problems of survival

Even lazy, undisciplined Laimbeer is forced to abandon his temperamental egocentricity and work hard on the compulsory chores.

RODDY contracts pneumonia and

Capablanca's Games In Book for Chess Fans

During his lifetime, Jose R. Capablanca held all the major world's chess records, and in 25 years of

dies—a fate which, though tragic |tournament play he lost less than

for a

13-year-old, seems to his

125 games.

father less tragic than what might H. Golombek, chess correspondent have been the future of so fragile, of the London Times and one of

half-feminine a boy in a hard, competitive world Laimbeer transfers his interest from Bervl to Nella. Cobb him-

Great Britain's leading players, has brought together the master’s 100 best games, which Harcourt, Brace {will ‘publish on May 1 under the

self, for the first time %bandoning |title, “Capablanca’s 100 Best Games

his

marital fidelity, discovers in

Beryl the inner torment that has

made her outwardly

brazen. ” » MR. ROBINSON writes of all

these matters in a style remarkable

With” profound insight, he reveals

for econogly and vivid imagery.

of Chess.”

Radio Satire Chosen

“Aurora Dawn,” Herman Wouk's | satirical novel about radio advertising, will be a May Book-of-the-Month club selection. The pub-

again the often-depicted loneliness |lisher is Simon & Schuster.

of individuals, the internal conflicts ' ges {reflecting

the disillusionments of

childhood.

|

fof merit. tchastisement is done so.as to “leave Col. Suga, graduate of the Univer. | + VDA would happen to the last ancy critical phraseology is the

no marks" on th i - | sit | family deft on earth after “the great ic statement that “The Great 0 on the patient, the pa-|sity of Washington, cut his throat.| ts. thie theme ‘of .* Adrift gon. oe

chtldzen, ior esegnra.e navel ty Robert {Lewis Taylor, ‘to .be. published by 'Doubleday April 24. With all the

|

|Maine’s indictment of hospitals, | ev |tools of civilization and. nobody to "ORPHAN JANE —. Ons: of however, is his indictment ih “Book of Drawings run them, he Robinsons find life Kare: Seredv's. Ji ne 2 ciety. Who is sick, the patient or Will Be Reprinted on this planet more than challeng. Kate Seredy's illustrations” for the society that sent him to the! : # ing, according to the publishers | “Adopted Jane," by Helen Fern hospital? i ; | “Ink & Blood,” a collection of 74

|

: | satirical drawt | description of the book. * What about those of us outside | win ri Suk _-~

hospitals who accept calmly (partic- | ularly if our dividends increase dur- sven der the Heritage Press

ing war) the fact that most of the | {world's available wealth has been|

-Daringer, a novel for younger readers about -an orphanage | child in the early 1900's, (Har- | court, Brace, $2.)

/Capa Book Delayed

Photographer Robert Capa’s book

The Perils ‘and Pleasures | of Becoming a Farmer,” to be pub-

“|lor . June publication by Farrar,

[elected president of the Federal | Council of Churches It

lished Monday by Rutgers University Press. It is written by Eugene S. Hahnel, an expert on the subject, who “gives city greenhorns {the lowdown on country slickers,” |according to the publishers.

"The Egg and I" Hens In Movie Productive

According to J. B. Lippincott Co,,| publishers of Betty MacDonald's!

best selling “The Egg and 1,” pe B R # K |

used in the screening of the novel DEPARTMENT

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laid 36,000 eggs while the picture was being made. ‘ The film, which evidently hasn't laid a single egg, commences its second week here at

Indianapolis 9, Ind.

A ° FICTION ® TRAVEL | Dread a which | enclose... . eraaeeenes . Taft Writes on Religion i | args ry ns Bd sive tast anus “Why T Am for the an Talks|] NON.FiETION * BIBLES Print titles of books Wanted, rat on Religion and " Politics,” , by ® CHILDREN'S ; .'® COOK : t Cisne fauna areata et saat sae ata ts str sasbnreries

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First published in a limited edition “Slightly Out of Focus,” originally of 1000 copies at $25 a copy, the|scheduled for spring publication by |!

+ readng.—¥

“The Great Snow” has all kinds More appropriate than

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MADISO Mrs. M one of the 1 terious ur and old lac today in | hospital. § Mrs. Lottie ferfon count; was acquitted of a charge by poison of | Two weeks testified agai keeper from Three days la turn for the turned to the

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Mrs. Lockr attempted m nell when D toxicologist, mercury in He testifiec slight amour would Mave |} "An invalid Mrs. McConi heart conditi A kidney ai that he was fered the eff Ing. : County off still are im cury and broke sensat 3 B« At that. ti on a murde of Mrs. Min of Forrest. two others, « ger found Tm organs. He - descril Jarge “it cg

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