Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1947 — Page 14
v
A Regular Weekly Feature of The Times) THE FIRST READER . . . . By Harry Hansen
*Books on Baseball Sell Better Than Those Written On Other Sporting Events’
LAST SATURDAY in reviewing “Do You Know Your Baseball?’ 1 asked: “As for baseball itself, how many fans ever read books about it?” John Lowell Pratt, president of A. S. Barnes & Co, comes right back with the answer: “I think that the success of Bob Feller's ‘Strikeout Story’ is pretty good evidence that fans do read baseball a.m» books. We have sold Approxi-| “TO COMBAT the false Hollymately 40,000 copi es in just|Vood screen characterizations and two months and Feller's successfu
talk of the trade.
“Of all sports , | present decent American life.
books, baseball “py yo well known that the Rusbooks sell the best. Such BOOKS a® sians read almost exclusively books *The Gashouse Gang,’ by J. ROV|,. jeri wing writers until. as John
Brockton; ‘My Greatest Day in| Fischer puts it in ‘Why They Be-
Baseball’ by John P. Carmichael; ),,y, Like Russiand, the Russian | *They played the Game,’ by HAarry|,. qe. naturally concludes that the | { United States is peopled almost en- | {tirely by Babbitts and Oakies, “To offset this damning view of
Grayson, and ‘Clowning Through Baseball’ by Al Schacht, have all chalked up pretty impressive salés.|
|| sensational press reports of political
arties have been the corruption, strikes and other social | Mtograph p ills,- there are far too few books that!
STUDYING POETRY — Hoosiers and their mentor in a poetry workshop of the
current Indiana university writers’ conference at Bloomington are (left to. righ¥:
|
"THE MONEYMAN." A novel Doubleday, $3. ;
RY
BUTLER
Mrs. H. T. Briscoe, Bloomington; Marya Zaturenska, Pulitzer poetry award winner and author of numerous volumes of verse; W. E.. Brockriede, Evansville; Charles F. Knauber, Richmond, and Richard K. Welsh, Bloomington. Next week's conference staff will include: Rolfe Humphries, former Guggenheim Fellow for creative writing; Ann. Weil, writer of children's stories and biography: Randell Jarrel, critic and poet, and Brendsn Gill, New Yorker magazine staff member. : r
Back in 1888, Hoosier Edwin ‘Caskoden (“Charles Major's of 8helby-
New Historical Novel Portrays Merchant's
Colorful Battle With Medieval Brass Hats .
y Thomas B, Cestain. New York
By
Ho
Hoosier By Harold Zink. New York Macmillan, $4. ‘ By RICHARD LEWIS science ot DePauw university, makes a contribution to his field in a! forthright and sometimes critical! analysis of how United States mili|tary government operates in Gers many. Tai ! The Hoosier political scientist ap-
pears qualified as an authority en
ant to the.U. 8. group in the Allied} control council on German governmental reorganization. Military government in Germa has passed over the horizon of public attention these days, but Prof. Zink’s study is still timely. The development of a workable democratic government in the conquered Reich remains an unfulfilled experiment. Germany has never been able to. make democracy work for
MILITARY GOV.| IN GERMANY."
BIRDS—One of Nora S."Unwin's wood engravings for ‘Foot.
notes
servations, product of countless walks in the fields and woods. John Kieran's Newes
Is Full of Quiet Charm
Flash flooc left a wide s diana a shan State pol struck by tl years late ye reached wind of town anc down the str in on the po A small rai away and 'o crewman wa
a
On Nature," John Kieran's new. book of lively outdoor ob-
tB
ook
It has always been my SaptEntion | us, to round out the picture with ville wrote “When Knighthood Was in Flower.” Tong. inte nes re that the sports pages indica €| some semblance of reality, could The Indianapolis-born (1856) novelist depicted chivalry with 19th- deseri } tremendous interest of people Injg, ;5t wend abroad books Sy such | century romantic enthusiasm, PROP, ZINK bes military "FOOTNOTES ON NATURE." Testored by reading about sports, but people) n,ets novelists and humorists as! And just as Tennyson disinfected Malory's “Morte D'Arthur” for the government from the viewpoint of | By John Kieran. Wood engrev- Shelbyvil buy books about sports if they know ponert Prost, William Mgxwell, |“Idylls of the King” and attributed Victorian sentiments to the lusty a specialist whose practical experi-| ings by Nora 5. Unwin. New At Shelby about them.” Clarence Day, Irwin Edman? How knights of the Round Table, so dia; ~~~ ~~ . Ferran yan ence in it enables him to balance York, Doubleday, $3. Tooled: and 1 also have to acknowledge a that admirable collection of short Cskoden and other romancers| cratic, lazy, scheming nobles whose theory against practice. He has ob-| FUBLICITY nearly always dis- Sileets. . Pou friendly note from J. G. Taylor stories, ‘Americas One and All,’ White-wash the flower of chivalry, Practice, common enough. in the served the conflict between the so | 'OTtS Personalities. ° teleplions ser Spink, publisher of the Sporting'by Hairy Shaw and. Ruth Davis, More recent writers have de- Middle ages, is to confiscate busi-| ‘called “old army” method and the Thus John Kieran, who has ac-| Taraing. - News, and an autographed copy of | would counteract the moVie Ameri. bunked the middle ages. Now Ness wealth as soon as businessmen | | “political scientist” approach | quired an almost necromantic repu- over curbs aj his book, “Judge Landis and 25/can. Why not send Ernie Pyle’s comes Thomas B. Costain, author have amassed it. | { His technical description a1 mili. | tation through his “memory-wizs tion doorstep Years of Baseball,” which I patted ‘Home “Country’ and the books of ©f the. best-selling novel, “The COEU AE Get #4 as [tary governmental operations is a ard” role in radio's “Information, § Residents « ¥h. the spine last Saturday, Kenneth Roberts? Black Rose,” with a new chronicle, COEUR WANTS to rid France of | critique of arm: methods and pub-|Fiease,” may strike the public as) WHIPS win ban TL “The Moneyman,” an: account of the English, to complete what Joan HAS NEW NOVEL—Thomas |, opinion EY ne .~ San A superhuman, ii storms had n NEW JERSEY is stalking John| o the spectacular but ill-fated career °f Arc attempted. First~he must Costwin, whose new novel, "The | ju ocd trained government of That's the fault of radio, not of yelephons Gunther. In his “Inside U. 8. 1] UD x Hg Pris oul Khe of Jacques Coeur, have influence at court. So he finds Moneyman,” is a special mid- |acers, > or. Kieran. His latest book, “Foot- |& Where reside: he described New Jersey as “a pot 3 Re a a om Service| # x |a lovely, youthful successor to the summer selection of the Book- | He deals with “‘rustrated senior| NOtes on Nature,” is intensely hu-|&& storm in 70 ; raucous little state” Charles R.|, uon8 \¢ Organization seems FOR MOST of us, Jacques Coeur King's dying mistress. Young Va-| ofthe Month. club. Mr. Cos. colonels” and their fanatic zeal for| an: A , order this mc Erdman Jr, commissioner of the | 3 be a working, proven method | 1 only a name, We may have read lerie will be able to sway Charles | tain's last novel "The Black |drill and military discipline in units “It’s human in its delight of dis-|# trees were s department of economic develop-,° sending books: Apd we Should | that he was a rich 15th-century| VII as Coeur’s ally, Agnes Sorel, Rose.” a Literar , ild choice. |Whose function. was to conduet|COVerY, its eager curiosity, its en-|# blocking’ traf ment of New Jersey, protests. The “end all we can, via government French merchant who financed preylously did, Coeur hopes. cold 7 i Quid: choice, governmental operations, Military | DUSIasm over the outside world. city from ne, comment, says he, is “cynical, *0d Private agencies. Charles VII's war to-drive the Brit-| But the vicious conservatism of 0/0 more than 1,500.000 [J CO ort enlisted men who ay And it indirectly suggests that {Hall frivolous and at times biased,” | Yes, the books have had a fine {sh from Normandy. (chivalry is not“so easily defeated.| COPIes. . {KP on days when they were needed|!f Mr. Kieran sometimes seems Martinsvill Raucous means hoarse and nolsy;| Fechtion i And something In the history of economics, he Jealousy and greed, male and fe- pansy comparable to Chaucer's|as interpreters and interviewers|®UPerhuman in his ability to re- was accompa Ahad. that is. the way . New ' Jersey oug one to give Europeans | is an important figure. Jacques male, upset, Loeur's plan. Sordid, | «yerray : part. gent] Knighte”: will find their tribulations recorded member things, that’s because most eral fields in “sometimes Setnis to. me ‘when the|® Dlanced ration of reading. But|Coeur typifies the emerging busi- | treacherous courtiers combine valerie. finally united in mutual] in this study. i of us are subhuman. : : under water wind is from Hoboken, On the other| OKs have » be paid for, and the nessman whose fight against rob-|against “the furrier,” as they con-|iove with D'Arlay; Pregent Ken-| > von fle Thee | st hand, Manhattan’s voice must seem | (AXPayer 1s loaded down, Only pri-|ber-baron restraints of trade even-|temptuously term Jacques Coeur, nedy, dour Scotsman and expert in| PROF. ZINK apparently had his! I THINK IT was William Ellery| y blocked near pretty raucous to Mew Jersey when | Vote endowment can continue this | tually overthrew feudalism. {alluding to his start in the garment ! the newfangled "bOmbLads "" the troubles with some of the. bigh Leonard who observed in his auto- | g U. 8. 31 no the wind blows the other way, (book service abroad. On the other| . Mr. Costain represents Coeur as/trade. They kidnap Valerie, rig acannon which overcame the Brit- br He doesn’ ®%| biography, “The Locomotive God,” MPH ne lersburg was Mr, Erdman is using official sta-| Nand there is a tremendous demand la man of vision, way ahead of his charge against Coeur of having ish; and Poitevin, the physician 435. He doesty think some of that there is no memory without OBSERVER john ki water at th tionery to broadcast his views on|f0f American books on technical | time. Coeur foresees government poisoned Agnes Sorel and drag the realistic and scientific oh hence | em did the occupation much §00d. | vitality of original experience. We inoed” with fol g eran, J last night. tbe Gunther book and direct the id social sciences, and intelligent by laws, not by man, to use a more king's financier through a long, also ahead of his time. Despite these conflicts, Prof Zink| remember what keenly interests us. pps il eld glasses, » New Alba author's attention to New Jersey|-\'OPCANS are aware that Ameri-|secent phrase. He fights a losing one-sided medieval trial comperable | Bug Mr. Costain has small bi belleves a constructive program in|If most of us have ill-furnished| aking one © the naturé-ob. were in dar matters that he overlooked. Since! ADS are much more than hill billies. and hopeless battle against auto-|to.the one that sent the Maid of [tience with an eval brass hats ne peace engineering- is emerging in memories, it's because we've never serving walks he. describes in the night a Mr, Gunther mentions the “creak- | EE _—— , TTT 1 Orleans to thE stake. (him, the flower of knighthood is hs Germany. : escaped from the bondage of self. ‘Footnotes on Nature." lines. Most ing black hovels” nf the industrial | Coeur is exonerated of the pre- odorous wesd. The reader, follow- But this is only half the story. |We remember an insult longer than which - we average dullards may was without Cities, why did he overlook the | / eT ow posterous murder charge, Other ing all this intrigue, scandal, in- Ri may take another decade ‘to|a bobolink. {assume to be accurate as well as The storm hundreds of delightful residential —_— “y= charges, however, easily “pfoven” justice and torture-chamber busi. show whether the United States can| As a boy, John Kieran lived in| appropriate. blamed for communities” which give New Jersey | wear Ww in a court full of judges eager for ness depicted against a background or "Ly develop political de-| the country in Dutchess county, New | Nora Unwin's wood engravings; 8 which fou Bousing a high rating? » . @ —- - a “out” in Coeur's vast estates, ruin | full of authentic detail, will be in. oer in Germany. The procuss| York, where, he says, he spent most | beautifully executed, lend the right y Mune AND If Mr. GUDe sought New, ty PR ) TR = . (him. The man of tomorrow is sud- clined to agree. co Rev siue the political life of alof his time outdoors. Score oneipictorial effect to an altogether ad- High wine Sears Mgbwny a] I * [fn ie = denly the man of yesterday, as if| Aside from its progress-vs.-con- i red people appears to be long for country life as superior to city mirable book.—H. B. brought traf *it 1s because engineers have de-| =U PR — |the medieval wheel of fortune had |servatism thesis, “The Moneyman” | failure pled. W a history ofljife, Where the bobolink sings, as aan on EER still in Mur i 3 1ta 3 a . . - B ised no better systems of mark. Youn / I 1 J aken a quick Yarn. Li gate reading, dramatically| Prof. Zink's “American Military he Ve ee delight for eyes aIdeCOt Medal Won oy et A lp (Bp Wy THERE ARE a f able | creiul. A special Book-of-the-| Government in Germany” relates : ! By 'The Little Island’ i 2 There are olher New Jersey| Wht, Pi & few other amiable | Month club mid“simmer selection the beginning of it. But it ol and ears. | DY e LiTTie Islan In New. Ps Boatters to which Mr. mr dman, : a Het characters besides Coeur: the Sire |it will probably have a big success. | the . is only| Anyone who has moved from the, This year's Caldecott medal, 52 were re-r points with pride. He says Mr.| i Su. | . = ve gining, country to the city knows the pro- annual American Library associa Aallen. ackoss Clunther has Degolocted its une: | Migatty ”, A St ravin ( : h . k 7 1 WwW. . gressive deadening of response to|tion award for the year's most dis- fall there wa ployment commission, alcoholic! # | y g pmun I aggy rites Monograph external nature that overcomes all|tinguished picture book, has been for a single beverage administration, civil serv- % : Nf oe O C . of us desk commandos. After some granted Leqnard Weisgard for his At_ Rushvi ; ’ ' 3 : Nn rusade Fi Ure vears in the city, the country illustrations in “The Little Island.” light but | fce, planning, agriculture depart- eqgse I ren x : ment and anti-discrimination com: SIFTING FACT from legend is| 20%" Seem the same again. Pulllished last year by. Doubleday Souden sires mission. ; { 8ix new titles have been added , the purpose of “The An cestey ‘and = npg \ .. in its junior books series, “The : But an atthor who hits the Ito Simon & Schuster's ‘ “Little! g Life of Godt » MR. KIERAN, wiser than most of Little Island,” with text by Golden . 8:45 p | " | ; : rey of Bouillon,” bY ys has kept up his nature-observ-! 1d, ibes “ ot Te highlights of a state can} be ex-| Golden Books” series for children. | John C. Andressohn i pro ' PL up ure-ol MacDonald, describes “the magic 7 pected to mention everything. | | Heading the list is Norman fessor of history on } ng mi BY is in ib Shasige sha glowin Sous ihe For 'N Probably Mr. Gunther did" let his Wright's “Chip Chip,” story of a at Indiana uni- Ul. quiet charm, 3 Sout rds, seagons on 4 litte 1sland;" 2000rds _hew deal sympathies color his! : 2 ol little chipmunk that strayed from | versity, : trees, shrubs, wildflowers and - all|ing to the publisher. Every perf “ wiew of the 48 states. | PROGRESS—Man's 3radual discovery of sources of power, | ome and had terrifying adventures Dr Andres. Hie ourious a Iwwineune ats) eeepc masts Moon” at } we Chicago there is complaint) as visualized by Maurice Sendak for "Atomics for the Millions. [ic the Soret Slustrations by Hine sohn’s mono. from asphalt and cobbles YI New Book Portrays - *e pa at alth " t dged i idi te : whi : 0 the ('s appeal. . : . e cen Co RR icra Sarai 4 Dr. Meal Lion EidingH 7 Hyman Ruchlis, which Whittlesey | walt Disney's “Dumbo,” familiar Nort Priiglt He cites some amiable contro- Generation of Jazz nounced tod made 10 eftars to ase him. Life. atl °V:® in pu . oy . Described as "amazingly clear and story of the big-eared baby ele- diana University versies between himself ‘as news-| “I Played Rhythm: ‘A Geners- Even thou non-technical,” the boo designed to make atomic science |phanht that learned to fly, repro- paper columnist and botanical ex- | tion of Jazz," the life story of Eddie utes before . least, went to the colonels party, c Vv, repro Publications so- 6 nd Ale tives ” understood by: laymen ($3.50). | duces many sceries from the film. é perts—the blueberry—huckleberry | Condon will be published in Oc- will go on. and the executives of the newspaper UN08r51000 by ed AREAL | uces mal es $re clal science series, one, for example. He draws on! tober by Henry Holt & Co. honored onl posed for the magazine, i . oat 3 Sa - Ihe Happy mily,” story by examin i ’ . dl . on on ’ 4 » ‘James Rorty Writes British Book Has New [ Nicole, illustrations by Gertrude; | able es AYA ihe Riera Hor gr relorsmce] With narration, introduction and start by 9:4¢ AN APPEAL to keep the Armed ‘ctor | “The Little Golden Book of Hymns," | To } [an effort e-known naire books. And) notes by Thomas Sugrue, the forth Butler fie —Sarviots: ditions going. in the ine Food Booklet for TVA . Queen Victoria Data {collected by Elsa Jane Werner and. — Li | rect a? ast Dr. Andressohn | nis observations suggest a remark: coming book will discuss the great to provide s terest of international understand-| . ! Arey ie Reign of Victoria" a new illustrated by Corinne Malvern, with, "CHIP CHIP"—Chip Chip, | impressions ‘conosrning- the |able variety of’ literary quotations; yiames in jazz of the past 25 years ‘storm ~ Gecu “ing, comes from Mrs. Marion| EOP Norman “of “Tomorrow's full-length “wecouiit “of "thé" ques, music to help adults teach the tunes | the little chipmunk. one of Ni fig Pirst Sd hd ; ” : a stated. Towner, Charlotte, N. C., who writes Food: ‘The Coming Revolution tr | Her prince consort, her court and ito chilren, and “The Little ‘Golden -Carbe's Hustrations for Notman Tre in = middle age: : Si —— "me because I was a gember of the |Nutrition” (Prentice-Hall), is alo 0 BH empire of her era by Book of Poetry,” also - illustrated | Wright's "Chip Chip." Godfrey was over-criticized a BLOCKS BOOKWORM Air Frei editorial board that chose the author of “Food at the Grassi, itho, will be published by Corinne Malvern, are all in the! ——e— obo 0" "19th centu resso : : : i. books for the G. Ls. Roots,” & TVA booklet. ih August by Howell, Soskin. = pleasantly instructive vein. U. S. Race-Relati Historical justios demands nl If “Airfin “I cannot think of better ambas-| Obtainable from the department ceording to the publisher, “the | Finally, “The Saggy Baggy BEle-| _' %° ace-Relations appraisal of the time . - will fill your order for an WASHING sadors of goodwill than books to|of agricultural relations, Tennessee death idk whe of Victoria's chil- |phant,” by K. and B. Jackson, with| Topic of New Nowel the kingdom of a if Y y «An intens the hook-hungry people of Europe,” valley authority, Knoxville, Tenn. publish Mr. Bolitho free to|Tenggren illustrations, is a comic! “God Is for White Folks,” a new| U- historian believes, : ‘Ibook reviewed or advertised scheduled a A ’ material which would | fantasy of jungl : she writes. “Maurice Hindus says/Mr. Rorty’s booklet is subtitled i y of jungle life. novel on race relati by Wi — a carriers was that 13 Cuechoslovakin, where a|“The Nation's Stake in Soil Miner-| “inc vise have been an intrusion” | Aftractively bound, the “Little 7 i Tin Seema | Patt Aid Wri here. fale» | New material includes some 200|Gold " : homas, will appear in September on Ai rites > Al Cargc chalr of American literature and als.” It outlines the disastrous re-|, .. ..- bl |Golden Books” sell at 25. cents each. | under the Creative Age Press im- Hi service ory another ‘of American history have|sults of excessive corn and cotton | o eer Vi pue ag letters trom a print. istory of 3d Arm Block's Bookshop, that 19 scl been instituted, the students are|farming and shows what can be|s = ie | empress of Change Distribution The autl t ; | Vanguard announces for fall pub- | h i freight rates erying for books.” The same appeal| accomplished even with partly erod- | FTUssia, found in the archives of Of ot Ir . i author o this first novel yieation “Lucky Forward: The Bs South Mezzanine . ye comes from Germany and otherled land by careful planting of Charlottenburg and now used by Child § Magazine [maou 8 man of Miled ancestry tory of Patton’ y tarift BO 1X ) Planting permission of George VI. | Simon & Schuster have taken | Te0l8 that “black-white relations in by Col i hp Be ape A Tro " Pe ’ Sses. SRR i : . . . Co en! e anno! rass a over the distribution of Story | America supply the richest dramatic was & member of Ge : | : CROSSWORD PUZZLE ‘Book Tells Story | Parade, a magazine for childten, | PO ential. and their analysis is ex-| ang Jost an arm » nin of | Mail this coupon to | f De Answer ta Previous Punsle Of Indiana Farm Co op | Aprding to Publishers’ Weekly. HI Sled oN Negune at he Germany. a Is. coupon R | dustry whic ¥ % -OpPS$. Retailing at 25 cents an issue, the / Tous “ ” , American Jurist “They Did It In Indiana: The magazine will be sold eritirely by | the nation,”. according to the pub- ATT ae Cy" silted by Col. | THE WM. H. BLOCK CO. BOOK SHOP poten Rially ys _ | Story of the Indiana Farm Bureau|subscription and through book- | Usher. printing. mother Ind; lis 9 Ind. | The cuts | HORIZONTAL 4 Rgwphian town | Conopantivess by Paul Turner of! stores, with no newsstand distribu- B d' 3 Son Analvies ——————— wag novangpois 7, : hich | freight rate { ’ HA] | Richmond, has been published by! tion. : eard's Son Analyzes Bi h . {1 Please send the following for which | enclose. .csviseeveseses 1,7 Pictured 5 Musical note LOULUTIAS | the Dryden Press of New York. nr m————————— : yz ography of Russian | Sakamie, ox \ American 6 Crar ih IO LeTTA Based on research Mr. Turner New Novel by Dickens American System w Shostasovich: The Man and His Shatde my regula: SIEM}: | y Stila chars ie Justice - 7 Deceive in J Ax 0 NIL | {did for his master's thesis in Monica. Dickens great-grands | “Government and Liberty: The hori the first complete biography | Print titles of books wanted. ...c.ovovvvecinssrvarsnvennss sideranie ex 115 Ungrateful love IRILICET 1 economics at Indians university, daughter of Charles Dickens, is the|American System,” by Dr. William Martynov, will ip 6 3Y Jean Ceteitassesssstastiatissctasrtarectantanitasanrasscns | , ih 8 Handle the history covers more than 20 author of “The Happy Prisoner,” a Beard, is announced for release by the Philosop released Aug. 18] T li a lake J Centigram years of the co-op movement in|novel to be published by Lippincott Monday by Halcyon House, a taneously Sephical Yiray siinyl- NAME ieeevrecranreerasteassaresrsssaatistonrunsans { ravelin 17 Is sick (ab.) 29 Sick 39 Accomplishe this state. gon {July 23, Garden City Publishing Co. depari-| Moscow Publication || " Visit M 19 Emmets 13 Tahr 32 Fiyer ments : sn En o | ment. 5 | : : 4 | ADDRESS “Esstagrasiesrysastone raster cantantoseyatany | TOKYO ye ' | Dr. Beard, son of the - ! 80 Genus of sandalwood 33 Girl's 41 Makes edging? | 3 | guished Hoosl his Sistin } | City Cress eta est setae tentan Siale one aves Douglas M: Shrubs 12 Musteline nickname 42 False god | 0 Graduates! Fagan on y istorians, Oharles| L : | frank, off-t! 81 Roster mammals 35 Upper house 43 Type of fuel . : » Analyzes the [le wo o_o -—— —_ a current siti 22 Let it stand! | ’ t 44 Symbol political and governmental organi- : 23Era 12 Binds’ tomas sooCongres. 44 Systbol tor A LIFETIME OF zation of the United States, showing ' Yisidieie An \ $4 Measures of 26 American 37 He is an aseo- 43 Challenge OPPORTUNITIES the practical operation of our ays. ! guests of 1 arta writer ciate justice of 46 Former * AWAITS YOU am the Ja ute and national - ‘ The new 'S 27 Sweet potato the Supreme 51 Baronet (ab. 4 according blisher. | . 300m account MPedaldight — 33 Rate Will you be equipped to take : IG | ‘ sh of all (ab.) \ Ts | advantage of the business and - Revised Edition Due { { . members of 31 Oleum (ab.) | | social opportunities that will = { Of Wood's History ox She Ae 32 Flower ‘part | | come to you during your life- : A revised and enlarged ! pols in Japan. fat | . » . v edition 1 84 Lohangrin’s - i | time? of Clement ‘Wood's “A Complete Indiana's Most Popular ay (YR a Ge: Ma 37 Mine shaft hut Look about vou. College History of the United States” will de Ro BE Sn group at a 38 Terminal - { | trained men and wom 3 ihe Dubishta July i Cleve! : oy ‘MIRRORS Times | | dominate as toiny de . anys Wald Pu he Go. | : } : : : , 8, First published in 1936, the 736- “ fi Fgh : do ily e his udes t A In stock and made te order, oq Amusement Butler University offers a Page history. nak new mite- | DEPARTMENT! stackienc) mag Carnival ,, vial] such as the story of American complete ‘curriculum in the : EER |= ~~ We can furnish just about any type Colleges of Liberal Arts and * FICTION ® TRAVEL mirror or size made jo your order. . Sciences, Education, Business © NON-FICTION * BIBLES ~~ Over mantel or door mirrors in. Pharmacy, 1.18 i
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