Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1947 — Page 14
Ci SH
E FIRST READER... By
{A Reguler Weekly Veekly Feature of The Times)
Harry Hansen
Ey Authors Strongly Critical Of British and U. S. Policy
‘On Palestine Question
#BEHIND THE SILKEN CURTAIN." By Bartley C. Crum. New York,
* Simon & Schuster, $3.
“PALESTINE MISSIGiN: A PERSONAL RECORD." By Richard Cross-
man, New York, Harper, $2.75.
TWO MEMBERS of the Anglo-American committee on| I Palestine, Bartley C. Crum, American, and Richard Cross-|'§ man, Briton, are making public their views on this thorny | £8 ‘subject in two soberly serious accounts of their experiences. Mr, Crum calls his book, “Behind the Silken Curtain.” ‘Mr, Crossman’s book is “Palestine Mission: A Personal Rec-
Hinshaw Tells
¢ | workers—only about «one-third of
i
Tg rao X a ha my Jay nid
How Quakers Help Finland
Aid Goes to Needy, No 'Converting'
"AN EXPERIMENT IN FRIENDSHIP," By David Hinshaw, New York, Putnam, $2.50. ‘
' THE QUAKERS, a small undemonstrative religious group, with only 114000 in the United States, are making avery organization's relief Ji work look puny. Why? Because! BB the Quakers serve the needy and| 8 do not try to convert ihem to
ment in Friendship,” shows how far the contributor's dollar can go when nobody pares anything off of it, or tries to buy something besides the bare necessities with it.
~ f J - ONLY 200 TRAINED volunteer
Lisi
United World Recommended
STRUGGLE FOR THE WORLD." By James Burnham, New Yark, Day, $3. :
~ JAMES BURNHAM can read symptoms a long way off. When, & few years ago, he wrote about the
|place that managers and technical {men would assume in world affairs, _|he ran ahead of events, but he had {his finger on a major issue.
Now he becomes a prophet of doom in proposing a plan for a workable world. He calls his book “The Struggle for the World.” While he has misgivings about American ability to stick to any policy for long, he recommends a democratic world federation led by the United .States. He recognizes the march of the Soviet Union as deliberately directed toward world power and that the West “gropes and lurches.” He proposes “the
“(policy of democratic world order,*
.
ord.” : movement and are bringing progress Es of the — a qu ¢ " Both authors are strongly AS TO Communists, Mr. Burne and enlightenment to Palestine, Service committee. critical of the policy of expedience i wt. They have 20,000 volunteer help- ham discusses in detail the issues that has governed Britain in iS) pOR BRITAIN and the United ers who live in the areas served. involved In suppressing Com. - relations with the Jews and Arabs, |giqtes to support the Arab chiefs What accounts for this disinter- munists in the United States and which has had the tacit support of ard reaction is to him an invita- ested devotion? An inner light, a Sunkluge Hat the survival of i) 1. I twat stiton] : | mation, vu Sey a 58 flmoser Ss is symiy vogue WU T. | RP ERT RE IRR A ore the eyes of men the » {1 BOTH MEN want the Jewish Da-|yq ggqingt binationslism, and be- : | = bright goal of a peaceable, kindly ROW, ; i tional home supported. They agreed, lieves the mountain areas should PAINTER AS DRAFTSMAN—This chalk drawing of "Fir Trees | gong» He also believes “the danger of i with the rest of the committee, be left to the Arabs. at Hampstead,” by John Constable (1776-1837), England's great- , sw n ‘war will not disappear until the i that 100,000 refugee™Jews should] He writes: “A clean partition est landscape painter, is an illustration in "A Treasury of Englis Whea the Quakers first come L-. icaen J poplin Mg : 9 seems to me the only way to avoid iid Life.” edi ; some church officials are suspicious hrown. ‘ be admitted at once to Palestine. y y Wild Life, edited by W. J. Turner (New York, Hastings House, $5). of them, but when they see that SCULPTURED DEVOTIO “Mother and Child," b the late to the Soviet peoples, so that they ! .| war, but it must be imposed and it d.f h | f N— y But the British government an Covering England's flora and.fauna, the volume is a series of essays ; will nism thy ! must be genercus enough to the ; : oN oy they are not meddlers, they ap-| John Magnus Johnson (1893-1947), formerly of Frankfort. Together Suppress . comm em= : through Clement Attlee, : by experts, with 48 plates in color and 113 illustrations in black [nove : . a : selves, but his plans for doing this that before any immigration would Jews to enable Weizmann to regain sf wife . ea with other examples of the sculptor’s work, this marble is currently d5 Tob seam Practical, th be permitted the Haganah must Bis authority and sell it to his own . POOR FINLAND, ravaged by two| °" View at Herron Art museum in an exhibition loaned by the |" 4per you have followed Mr. The (go Bate ct 3 ‘Aurora Dawn : Cl ever Sa ire |xae had its rich province of| Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Burnham's arguments to the bitter authors agree IN PLACING the blame for the t Karelia seized by the Russians and conclusion that war may come in is not the proper approach to the burned ' ' fi 1 _ |present crisis, Mr. Crossman plays Lapland by the Nazis, Now D tf E th / RK ve or 10 years, he tells you that i present situation. ~~ [FRC] Ab $ R di d si it must provide for 420% men,| LJOWN TO LAr S eport American foreign policy is likely || Be in sympathy with Wen.| The mistakes of the British ad- ou aqio A verrising women and children from Karelia ; : to be vaciliating, hence useless | Wikies me ord principles 10" Arb cht, he seressn: “Pan haa On Pitfalls of Farmin Fe ron we. 1] dell. to the Arab chiefs, the unreason- |» URORA DAWN." A nov l Finland has 50,000 crippled g ing us half to death, we will prove | He was associated with Mr, Wilikis| 5) of Jews, tho ——"— A 2 a” : Al ok veterans, 27.000 war widows, 50,000 . him wrong HA : . nture ’ ' : 1 ] in 1940, Sad wu Shalrnah or |Of the Americans, the slovenliness| o' Tn N od York S ur war orphans. One out of every six "DOWN TO EARTH: THE PERILS AND PLEASURES OF BECOM- i Independent Republicans for Roose-|, 4 a4, of the Arabs—all get his| Press book. New York, Simon Finns must be helped. ING A FARMER." By Eugene S. Hahnel, Illustrated velt in 1944. ge & Schuster, $2.75 The Finn is a natural-born =" By Evgene 5, Hahnel. Vusiraied by Fred 1 ts . =» condemnation. Fe Juows Dae Stra. 34.70, bulider Dreher, New Brunswick, N. J., Rutgers University Press, $1.75. U. S. Education \ e asm base HENRY BUTLER . Fond BELIE Ry me b iteq | Palestine. HERA WOUK'S preface to “Give a young Finn an ax; a saw,/| WHAT ERIC HODGINS does for the would-be country-dweller in Crisis Told i States, have an opportunity to sup- “Aurora Dawn” states that the a hammer and some nails, and he “Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House,” Eugene 8. Hahnel does for i tes, have : book “to will build you a good house in a few| the would-be farmer in “Down to Earth.” progressive measures in the writing of the was ‘begun days” The Quakers set up work- Mr. Hahnel, who is on the research and editorial staff of Doane| HENRY HOLT & CO. announce Near East and thus advance the relieve the tedium” of sea duty relief to do ful jobs and : . 9 ® tor tall publication a new book by . of democracy among Jews and in the Pacific back in 1943. Sampe iit Agricultural Service, Inc, of St. Louis, was not always an expert on Pine, based 4 gause y relieve tensions. farming, according to his publisher. Dr. Benjamin Fine, on a sex | Arabs.’ He believes the British Mr. Wouk adds that the book = = = In fact, he once got “burned” on ries of articles on American educaLabor party has adopted the British was finished in 1946. THEY BELIEVE “it is hard $0], farm-buying deal, and had to tion in the New York Times last tastle of jgeehing friends with the Jhess ems sre Wportani, Site dislike a man with whom you have|jeam from costly experience what TV Arab leaders in order to hold off the several other novels about radio ad- dug ditch; that when nafling|oyeens to avoid The articles, under the general Jed; of Sovictiem ana sateguare: Sine ve ay Sinsitershie - SRN shingles to beat the weather, or| a. title, “Crisis in American Educa- iter a Arabian pu year. THE FIELDING MANNER— |spading a sewer to outwit typhoid tion,” reflect months of research ot the ists only on the top levels; the best to date in that field, and not| ierman ouk, whose first poor man and a rich man.” book, he warns beginning farmers education in this country Jews and Arabs get along well to- only because of its restraint (“Aurora| novel, “Aurora Dawn,” a satire |" Here you will read much about|that they should have capital. * An Some of the facts’ Dr. Fine mM 4 gether. Dawn” may be safely left around| on radio advertising, recalls the |the Quakers, the men with an in-|initial capital of ‘$15,000 is 1, brought back from countrywide ine Lo) LS § for youngsters to see, the author| |8th-century manner of Fielding |ner light, and the Finns, a people 310.000 fatr. } an $10,000 vestigation include: RICHARD AN book, - affirms, and that is no small merit).| and Sterne. with “the unconquerable” spirit that be oi = Gp pan “initial jae, Three - hundred - fifty thousand K “Palestine Mission: Personal 7 z= = = aay 2 impels mankind to go upward and » stressin . teachers have left American publie Y Record,” is by far the superior] W]LLKIE COLLEAGUE— | THE BOOK’S full title, in an en- beat Dus threats from the Re-| fo yqrq men who have grown sadder and schools since 1940. f book. It discloses a keen political| Bartley C, Crum, political asso- |gaging parody of 18th-century style, P Ns Sr dca Ro and the| Tne Quakers redeem our own sel-| wiser in other lines have observed, Ome out of every seven teachers ° He mind. Mr, Crossman piles up a| i" f Wendell Willkie in big “a Dawn: Or. The { bank 0 arquis finan-| qe covetous living, and the PFinns|{it ain't the initial cost—it's the is on an émergency or substandgreat mass of specific evidence 10) 1940194; and proponent of | El a Twe|ey, eles rey Ta th make us aware that the world's|upkeep. ard certificate. : Jo Ww : po 1 dreams Ww gaplain the atiftudes of Arabs, ‘vou. von World” doc. [0 © 3 ry Deen health lies in small cases of culture.| Mr. Hahnel adds, “Students off, GREAT PLAYWRIGHT— | Sixty thousand teachers in the Egyptians, British administrators] "° "/UF : taining a Faithful Account of the indulging No one can read this book without|farm economics usually find that nl: : United States have a high school John | ‘and Jews. - tring in "Behind the Silken Cur- |Great Riot, Together With the| Things turn out well enough for|giving thanks for the Quakers or|stable’ farm enterprises, operating Eugene O'Neill, leading Amer- education or less. mile’ sout He sees the Jewish state as an| fain,” new book on Anglo- |complete Texts of Michael Wilde's Andrew, after bitter, instructive ex-|yithout wishing to dig into nis own | economically and providing a de-| 130 playwright, whose latest | "gx thousand schools will be crashed ir accomplished fact; 600,000 Jews are| American diplomacy in Pale- |Oration and Father Stanfield’s| perience. Things also turn out welll pockets for the dollar that gets to|sirable standard of living, eventu-| Play. "The Iceman Cometh,” |iosed for lack of teachers and 75 | The d firmly ‘welded in a great democratic| stine and the Near East. Sermon.” It alludes to the chief|enough- for Marquis, who, before ihe spot.—H. H. ally represent minimum investments| will be seen here at English's for [000 children will have no schooling he did no . vents of the story. | long, is again ignorantly, humor- ” th d YL Mond top of it ” : e fii 8 of BY tes Elem lon Sa Dir of $30,000. ree days beginning Monday, |at all during the year.- pa x o . Real ’ . r i Religious Book "This Day's Journey’ \ | counterpart of the young adven- | tating the entertainment policies of In 25-Cent Reprint \ THESE THINGS may come as a May 5. Viking bo Publish MoE, : 1 1 turer and opportunist of 18th century | soap programs. Marquis is thus| “Congo Song,” Stuart Cloete’s ' . ' . Mr. Strat WwW k Ma 4.1 | Publication Monday d earlier fiction. He hungers for 8 fictional example of what's wrong | best-selling novel, has just been shock to people weary of city lite, Man Against Myth ack. an } ebecca e 00 tr “This Day's Journey,” a new novel | power and money. Radio adver- With radio. ~ |published in the Popular Library hungry for the good food and the p. | [ind Selection The Viking Press for He Times Special by Constance Beresford - Howe, |tising, where achievement is al-| Mr. Wouk writes with skill, learn- | 25-cent reprint series. “freedom” of the farm. As Mr.|~ pou an Selection, the Book Seng Ro a State p NEW YORK, April 19.—The fifth |5,410r of “The Unreasoning Heart,” | most entirely in terms of those two|Ing and wit. His philosphical dis- Hahnel is careful to point out, farm- ' pind club has chosen “Man Against Da of Treason” Rebecca headed to sm ostionmde dherrasce of i be uh Mendy vy Doda POOLS Be SOI Him [Suey ene whee an ng is + bios ke ey other Myin® Ty Bums Dunia: Wes ov tn Mew ro on nef] i / » | iinl< ight n Religious Book week will be held |yeo.o : ising firm of Grovill & Leach, | Jones” are tinlely and diverting. business, only a good deal more Jesate of philosophy at Temple uni- | arst visit since before the war. Hook. H May 4 to 11, Dr. Everett R. Clinchy,| Miss Beresford-Howe, yo Ca-| Andrew signs up Father Stanfield,| He has evidently soaked up a great risky and full of headaches. iy Duichiats. wh book will This is Miss West's first book city morg president of the National Confer- nadian writer, won the Dodd, ead |p), corny, but honest West Vir- | deal of profitable reading and There are gremlins, for example, pe published By Little. cn singe Task Laub a: Grey ul. Police ence of Christians and Jews, an- WE Literary fellowship ginia evangelist, for a nation-wide KNOWS how to make it serve his which other businesses don't have: next Tuesday, argues that myths|the new book has appeared as a was 360 S . Rounted today. bl [radio pograls Sposssored > on creative purpose. insects, disease of plants and ani- have prevented modern man from series of essays in the New Yorker * : Rye oth . madge Marquis, manufacturer © . .% =a mals, floods or droughts, vagaries | clear and unobstructed: thin on — . i ndianapo The Nawonal Conference, spon- “Aurora Dawn” soap. The program| I CAN'T RESIST final quotation of the market. A farmer has to be problems of the day. os i mghvay s soring the observance, sought ad- ‘is a huge success, Father Stanfield’s from Michael Wilde's impromptu |exceedingly well informed on a| Among the myths Professor Dun- ANY BOOK Reviewed on i terday. vice from panels of leading Protes- “Hooley rating” tops that of the oration at the Marquis dinner: |great variety of subjects if he is to ham discusess are: “You OCan’t| This Page Is Available i In Indi tants, Catholics and Jews in select- Presidents speeches. “You are staring. Let me tell survive financially. |Change Human Nature,” “There || Mo! and Phone Orders Given Prompt ! were bowl ] fu without im: , then, > Th disadvan f I » £ more pers ne a Bk of 50 important Mhistous ANDREW 18 Pommted to a $25,- . bres er ne ~ woop a Re ine A Superiee ~ Blaes to Brey “ ST EWARTS, Inc. : trash of good-will lst of 50 outstanding 000-a-year post, and simultaneously |ceasing to be an honest method of all schools, for example, are Question” and “Words Will Never e100 E. . @ 4217 College automobil books has also been chosen by an begins to cherish the notion that|exchange, and the people, not the imp ve consolidated town- ‘Hurt Me.” o 55% r Wash. car at th -religlous comm - Carol Marquis, the millionaire’s | knowing that the English in a radio ship schools people like to think | I Po Se pono lovely, coquettish ‘daughter, is fall- |commercial is meant to be a lie, of when dream of the country The. des standing among all faiths MINOU. THE CAT—One of |in8 for him. Indeed, Andrew's wish {and the English in the President's as a r place for children. BLOCK'S BOOKWORM ] identified 3 Among recommended Pooks are:| th . i h + ; Th so boldly fathers the thought, that|speech which follows, a truth, will Money i8 much scarcer on the farm R. R18. “The Son of the Lost Son” by 'e animal characters in IN |ne preaks his engagement to “Laura in the end fall into a paralyzing than in town, and that's why f Troquols o Morgenstern; “The River Sordan.” Little French Farm, by Lida, | (“Honey”) Beaton, glamorous and skepticism in which all utterance (farmers are so careful to pinch! 0 £0 Cour order for an & Ill, after by Glueck; “Joy,” by Bernanos; with illustrations in black and |intelligent model who really” loves| will be disbelieved.” pennies. : y y £ he was “Woman of the Pharisees” by white and color by Helene [him. It is easy to understand why the a“ un» . ,. [book reviewed or advertised 1 tractor-tr Mauriac; “The Wall Between” by| Ouertik. Translated from the | Marquis gives an elaborate din-|Book-of-the-Month club and Phi- AN EXCERPT from Mr. Hahnel's k and 41 n Barber; “Road to Reformation * py| French by Louise'Raymond, this |ner celebrating the success of losopher Irwin Edman, to whom final advice may serve to exemplify | here. The d Beam, “assem & Soc oil Lec fo wry young (Tuber Santas Td ofthe “rs Din is dene re i nd vi mace, Jisease yy summa, and “Action| readers has been recently re- gram in SHED ar 3 pros » ® hove “Assuming that you are dead set -Block's Bookshop, Jeo] E. or ) atson. issued by Harper's. ($1.25). . . : South Mezzanine : i y Harper's, ($1.25) Stanfield sermonges in 1s homely Community Planning CAN YOU NAME IT?—Co- es ars: oa 209 Du son, 14, : . x . . . + . : - - ruised. 4 CROSSWORD PUZZLE At the dinner, Michael Wilde, ls Subject of Treatise urbia University Press, In its bi ticular Yocality a5 your farm home, |” "= Wm wn —. a- " State p 5 oe en ote |S Sr SH 8 YE ee nd of cmt in| S70 PAO Pn Go A] a { ; nswer to Previous Puzzle ous diatribe against adver g 8s He ' ors 9 | . nois bord ; Author NSHMEE] FERES0RN] being dishonest and non-produc- ning is the theme of “Communitas,”| c.o. of Anna Balakian's "Liter- of succeeding there, Mail this coupon to ; Re exatuny : Ell DIE EQUI IPIAIGIE] _|tive. Father Stanfield, guest of by Percival Goodman, New York ary Origins of Surrealism’ to TWO. Consult your local agri- | Ww BLOCK CO BOOK SHOP The" ti CR SSONT. TRC OF CREA] |honor,® is deeply impressed by|architect, and his brother, Paull the reader suggesting the best Cultural experts as to the worth of THE WM. H. ’ Lawrence - 152 J} A , : ' » cons : . ay AL 4 Drudge Ql [LIEINIEIT] | Michael's oration and decides 10|Gooqman, novelist and poet, to be| title for this surrealiste drawing. we arm you upp Bldesing. Take | Indiapapolis 9, Ind. N. C. 1.7 Pictured 5 Land measure IE ERASE make a sermon of it for his next blished Monday by the University| Drawn by Yves Tanguy, French | 80 yses. ow We exae} pete. ; ; { Two C a at S Bowmiire SHA El REUS( Ri i dg bY Chi te ? eal painter rn is Don't Be ie he Hess Clear Please send the following for which 1 enclose. eesevessessesss . were bur * 12 Ancient quancy LIAIRIEIN| [STATE] a a a 0 £ago . . ; ie a ' Charge my regular account. . \ 3 country - 8 Twisted BT gi El HERES I N THEN ENSUES the great battle, The book 1s described as offering the untitled frontispiece to Miss THREE. Be sure of the Proper I Print Sy A) wanted testa athateatestantastentanen f (Continu 13 Expunge 9Babylonian pe EREAIMLE NLTREAID for if the evangelist is determined to|a new philosophy for community| Balakian's book, a recent Co.’ [initial capital which will stand up ; — pit 14 Garden tool deity DESSERTS BAe speak his mind on advertising, the planning—one in which modern| lumbia publication. Deadline for |under-mistakes and plenty of them. f Cader iar ers vas satan tuansr iri cits tiara st reneavierree : : AS Olly 3 Jdand st infatuat / millionaire is equally determined to|man’s material, social, cultural and| suggestions is April 30, | ; | Intere. { 17 Loiter Hl ine pa 2B Ly aon $i Navow inlets |shut him up. A vast public demon-|spiritual needs will be taken into = i by CNAME ciicatesenseriiniitiatiisiirisnadiiitesioanens { 19 Mimicked Laughter, 28Low baum, 45 Stupefy stration (the “riot”) in Stanfleld’s account. Peoples | ADDRESS na Tre i 22 At this place 16 Sloth goddess 48 Peltry ; ; : On » . . : 23 Within . 18 Earth goddess 31 Malt drink 49 Symbol for PAY-AS-YOU-GO City +v4s0. Wensieuristasnessnssevrns “Sale vs comismens +} 2 * 25 Symbol for’ 120 Deviate 32 Seine thoron : { y — : 5 telluri . a assistants » Pench article 51 Native WB GER ES GE GEES ED WEED GENS Gn GES en Gm mmm Sm Sw— — . rds’ homes $s indebted (suffix) : J : i ‘3 Een, 25 Czars 41 Vend 52 Summer (Fr.) Checking Accounts Princes Brain passages 26 Bridle part. 42 Dil 55 Any _(Seot.) ~ LIT AIL : ‘ Phone | p Fruit 21 Goddess of 43 Four (Roman) 57 Him . ; = A checking account service Local } Le a " ™N Rh ; : * % A Ea pr y qi - y. designed for your conveni- Em a New Or 2 4 ; | i" : , 5, i = 4 During Ge (ab.) Indiana’s Most Popular ence and economy ... No A Indians % iss Senior (ab. To ' . i J wily a ; i Strid . Ema fe in minimum balance required, MIRRORS : ou ¥ a — : In Real Estate Matters B So menily yore Sharge Tale sheep . Your only &ost is for In stock and made ¥o order. Local Sc T Wo I5 ; ¢ - : DEPARTMENT tat Lh in The .Hea : : : the checks you buy—I10 We cen furnish just about any type Bel ‘G. O. F A w hy » y os Loy | : ! : . * FICTION TRAVEL checks for $1.00 or 20 mirror or size made to your order, A Rent ‘ x } A ; " » ad ° 7 ° - 2 \ . . * { an, b -® 0 NON-FICTION BIBLES checks for $2. ; Over mantel or door mirrors installed. ] Baker rain rd ; ‘ . ® CHILDREN'S ~~ ® COOK : ; fi : Sime a : COLU! by i TT - oF Sx rh ali ; : of . P.}—A ! ft te | "CIRCLE TOWER = I || »oicTIONARIES * SHOP The Peoples State Bank Lyman Br 0S., Inc. i four bi h Po f Li 7 wir ES PH o LATEST MAGAZINES Felix T. McWhirter, Founder 2a on the Circle yr hd 1 threaten i v TT Fo abl FR. 3174 ia iy Prodi oh Bis : | 130 E. Market MA. 1301 TH in 1%. aise { in this « od. & lappa sd cds 2 i Mal Beda B Filled Member F _ os _ : by “75. } . : ima pum) || Mall Orders Promptly Filled ||fj Member Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. ik baked it
today,
