Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1947 — Page 8
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t 4 ' : ) \ 4 A a < i if vy SA yR RSY I . : TS WORLD'S SUMMIT—M1t f verest 29 141 ‘an! immit of ¢ the world and scene of James Ramsey Ullman's new book, "King } com of Adventure: Everest.”
Dramatic New Book Depicts
expeditions of the 1920's and ‘30's. desperate 1024 attempt to scale the "oN = peak. They were last seen MR. ULLMAN writes the intro- brief moment ductory and passages mist Simpitg at something over . p p v ong. He which carry the narrative along reach the top? does-an-excellent job of commenting pp. oo. . and editing. But, as he himself . pq, would be first to admit, the book i. « gets its power from thie words of wiv do men try such a venture? : men like George Leigh-Mallory, 1t you've ever. been shove timberCapt. John Noel and Col. E. FP line or done any strenuous climb-
connective an altitude
Ullmai’s book answers queswe groundlubbers may ask
- as $ ®
A CLEAN NOVEL— Prize Winner ls Impressive Rural Novel
“THE YEARS orieds; William L. Shirer Sees vee 275. £0" Small Hope for Tranquil dor ra OF. THE World n Latest Book
THE FIRST READER ... By Harry Hansen ve
y ~
Irving Stone _ i Glorifies Debs |
in New Novel | ‘Romantic Triangle’ : ' Feature of Story I "ADVERSARY IN THE HOUSE." A biographical novel by Irving! S New York, Doubleday, $3. oy
4 Jone.
for a between clouds of of into the 28,000 feet. Did thev sider, she Nothing further is qualified to take Ellie's place after the worst excesses of human beings
{iterary competitions.
winner of the Dodd, Mead-Red~ book $10,000 prize novel award, Is a fine substantial piece of work. I anyone still needs convincing that the best literary themes are those of ®vera, normal, humen
Knopf, $3.50. "PROUD DESTINY." A r Vik ng, $3.50. \
WILLIAM IL. SHIRER
ove.
dence; For “The Years of the he was born.” Locust” manages to be both im- ; pressive . and entertaining without any such devices’ as neurosis, nymphomania or alcoholism It's a story of people in a rural Missouri community, chiefly of” the
growing rift between the
Dade~vigorous, kind, Dade's influence, the influence of berg and
readable | the Kenzie family and what that
singularly
Louella Grace Erdman's novel, "END OF A BERLIN DIARY." By Wiliam L. Shire
jexperience, here is further evi- Will henceforth “center what life remains in the land where ! He saw Germany in its period of turmoil and recorded its convulsive last gasps. : Hopeful for peace and understanding, he deplored the
Diary” is one of the best.” Kenzie family, dominated: by old personal accounts of the final in the onrushing life-loving. days in Berlin and Nurem- liberation.
New York
be
Hoosiers would certainly
By Lion Feuchtwariger. party for so long. «
IS through with Europe. He ism and high h ity. :
Five times Mr.
fore.
ictors. His “End of a Berlin humane tidings, steadying his boat waters of human
during world war I. tically. a million votes that year.
n' Writing in German, Mr. Feucht-
.By SEXSON E. HUMPHREYS i A LIST of the half-dozen greatest include Eugene V. Debs, the Terre Haute! New York resident who led. the U, 8. Socialist |
} His life story is one of great hero- |
bs was Socialist candidate for President. Each time | he got more popular votes than be He was nominated for the, last, time in 1920, while he was a| prisoner in the federal penitentiary | at Atlanta because of his pacifism | He got prac-|
Mr. Debs was the savior of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen | » and was ina real sense the father %
3
poe. spite. of the fact that so many Wanger called his new novel Waften of the ‘railway brakemen’s union. oe yr ; po a family represents, knits .the story other reporters have described sim- fuer Amerika~Arms for Ameri, He founded the first industrial hog i 0 : Ab : a " : ” together. ilar experiences. The publisher has called it “Proud ..." "ihe United States. there- IN HERRON EXHIBIT—"Man at Window," etching by the w , x Mr, Shirer returned severely/Destiny,” and under this title it Las ; es of Dutch master Adriaen van Ostade (1610-1685), one of a grou MISS "ERDMAN uses a familiar just gone to-oTér 500,000 subscribers by anticipating the doctrines fel . joo . 3. group fictional device. She starts her Citical of American opinion tie Tat Gos | “ithe C. I. O. , of prints in a display called ''Adriaen van.Ostade and His Connovel with Dade’s death, and then *cHon. He criticizes Herbert ©! the TATY rung, Irving Stone has written a new temporaries,” on view at Herron Art museum through Oct, 26, It Ry : Hoover's desire to rebuild German nim
'goes on with a series of flashbacks showing how Dade affected the lives of each of her characters, in . wy " Aside from the immediate family, the Truman Soctrine ah {hoon who are certainly interesting «peo- teived and hasiriy concocted Plun
industry on the ground
casting in our free land.” ~ ~ n
» ” ” THERES Beulah, a parson’s daughter from Ilinows, who marries family. Though a) outbecomes the one best
thought-control and uncertainty,
produced by Mr.
fea:
Mrs. Kenzie dies. It is Beulali who and ‘the fall of vld~Europe. runs the homestead in the traditional manner and tactfully moulds ©0lors his thought, and while he the character of her husband, Mark, 8% faith in the “true American Dade’s grandson. But Beulah has| tradition.” he sees small hope for
lalways a sense of guilt because she ® tranquil world
that it will lead to rearmament and calls read about Benjamin Franklin or
HE LOOKS on it gs a form of
Shirer saw
As a recorder his deep pessimism
IT IS unlike any novel you ever story. ten; incidents
using the
- Louis XVI; indeed, its modern style,
"already remarked in the Josephus matic narrative.
\ a acc vels of ancien oman ‘imes, y a ; Att m ts fo Scale Everest ple, there are personalities like Miss that failed to take into account novels a t Roma mes "The novel it one-sided: It: overs . ; e Laura Meeks, who might (who that Turkey had never = been seems +n. change. the . historical looks the incidents in Mr. Debs’ as qg (oof qi unc : ‘ ; : democratic and that Greece wag record. a : " . "With an 7 ' - knows?) have married Dade if Ellie . life which are not ‘altogether. com- ; Gay KINGDOM OF ADEN] Re: EVEREST. A hy pe “hadn't got there first, or Charley “TTP! Mr. Feuchtwanger quotes, no piymentary to him. There is no "GRENADINE ETCHING: HER| ¥# dh y n m \ / ir r Ney ¥ vy 3 IY AL \ ’ y , . W WA : S : : ' ext! . 2 #3 hamsey 3 8 Vane, the grave-digger, whose phil- r WHILE ’ . ais SURE doubt approvingly, Mark Twain to mention of Mr. Debs’ participation! LIFE AND LOVES." A novel. By ¢ ates, $4.75; osophic comments give the story DO. VHILE he speaks slight- qudyard Kipling: “Young man, first in the establishment of the Indus-| _ Robert C. Ruark. New York By HENRY BUTLER range and timelessness “ingly of “the sublime short-sight- set your facts, then distort Lhem trial Workers of the World, because! ‘Doubleday $2.75 NO MOUNTAIN has a greatér hold on the popular imagination than Hopes fulfilled, hopes’ dashed edness of our statesmen and law- gg you please.” Mr. Debs himself soon lefl the ¢ Yi bau! 2. Everest human experience in Miss Erdman’s makers in the congress,” he offers'y Book club readers will have to I, W. W. and thereafter opposed it. READERS of The Times know It is a symbol of height and. of unattainability, especially after novel is much the same as else. 0 SPirer plan to save the world c, . Benjamin Franklin through There is also some inaccuracy. Robert C. Ruark as an outspoken. the failure of five well-organized attempts to climb the peak where, Elaine ‘loves Barry, Dade’s rom Starvation .and start . men long, and .at times tedious, dis- Most glaring error makes Warren trenchant reporter who sometimes James Ramsey- Ullman, who has written elsewhere (“High Conquest.” voungest son, but marries Henry "Or ¢08 3gAIN. iv 4 toler. Cussions about loans for the Ameri- T. McCray, who took office in 1921, gre things up. “The White Tower”) of mountaineering, has compiled what. may be Waring rather than .face spinster. Iie refers briefly to “the inloler- "0 00 rather than cavortings the governor of Indiana four years the best book yet on the Himalayan hood. With her mind on Barry, "ce In radio” that brought about in the’ chamber of Madame Hel- carlier : ,But those who have read Mr. 1 ry, . 4 - £ . V - glant, “Kingdom - of Adventuie IN A WAY, ‘the book's climax i4's vears before. Elaine realizes how ‘N® sudden ouster of several of us vetius. : “ud Ruark’s dispatches about Gen. Lee Everest” is an anthology of writings comes fairly early, with the de- much Henry has come to mean to whose views could no longer be It is true that Frankiin visits MR. STONE'S STORY of Mr. and the unhappy G. L's in Italy will by participants in the unsuccessful scription of Mallory and Irvine's her w’ tolerated by those who ran broad- .
Madame - Brillon . when she takes her bath, but there is a wooden cover over the tub and he an old sits on it and converses learnedly with the lady, while she soaks within: It was the custom. ~ : = ~ i er MR. FEUCHTWANGER feels that he has produced a novel demon-
biographical novel The fiction consists in a “roman- . man, : Mr. Debs’ life.
According to Mr. Stone.
strating the impact of the democratic ideas of the western continent on the crumbling monarchical society? of Europe.
devotion to his labor union work delayed the ceremony, until Gloria, discouraged, was persuaded by her
novel based on that heroic, human The book is skillfully writ-
Debs’ life is a piece of fiction—a hardly recognize the reporter in
tic triangle” Mr. Stone creates in longwinded
the imagination of a born comic could vouthiul Eugene Debs loved a Terre eontrive, It Haute girl named Gloria Weston. She loved him, too. They wanted to see quicker than other people the be married. But his overpowering value and the
was a gift of the late Eliza M, Niblack of Indianapolis.
Debs’ exciting life" to orks of bo Ruark's ‘Grenadine Etching’
his novel, “Grenadine Etching.” For this wonderful parody of historical novels has just about everything the screwball
takes-Hnagination, of course, to be _.a good reporter, to
possibilities of a story. : * » ” n . . Rar Ti . A * uark, limes columnist, whos IN “Grenadine Etching.” Mr. s_colu : hose ’
WRITES PARODY — Robert
Norton i - ing,. you won't need convincing, [tidu’t tell Mark about the injury As you read you see through the climbing is absorbing and fascinat- the doctor said would leave her! eyes of the mountaineers. You get ing And, of all mountains, Evbrest barren, . a clear picture, a physical selse of being’ probably most difficult, is the! Miss Erdman, who now teaches downward, outward - sloping rock most fascinating : creative writing at West Texas State
B
in the
’ on wn WHEN LION Feuchtwanger, Ger-
horrors uchenwald,
slabs covered with snow. You begin| Mr. Ullman's book will “certainly college, has set an admirable ex-
man novelist, fled Paris in the midst of the war, he was marked for death of “ Dachau. and
There is no doubt
Franklin has greater depth than any Franklin we have encountered |
that
his
so _far outside of actual ‘history. If
parents to marry a Chicago attor- Ruark's imagination takes a holiney named Harkness. day, with no strings attached. The Mr. Debs some years later mar- result i§ one of the funniest books ried another Terre Haute woman, I've seen in a long time. Kate Metzel. According to all- Mr.. There's too much in it for ade-
"Grenadine - Etching, Her Life and Loves” is a parody of His - forical novék. Mr. Ruark describes the book as ''suitable for
Wwe do” not feel at home with him pec. biographies, the marriage was quate description here, Grenadine
Hollywood, book clubs or light-
ing the fire."
or an avalanche. And the admirable Hounced for pyblication Oct. 21, by “Growth Regulators for Garden photographic illustrations help you Random House. The book is Field and Orchard,” by John C to visualize the dread, deadly mag- described as dealing with an im- Mitchell and Paul. C. Marth, will nificerice of the mountain near its mensely wealthy man's sudden in- be published late next month by the summit, There. is ope captioned volvement in emotional stress, , University of Chicago Press. hat 26,000 feet.” This pho- " rs
“Nor ea taken by Somervell, is the hight ever made on the earth's surfat@ and discloses the difficulties and perils of Everest, go ¥ ~ ALL ROUTINE problems of mountain-climbing are enormously reater on Everest. Altitude and] weather are the two major difficulties. In those fantastically high places, men cannot exert the same, effort they might in climbing some
isynthetic plant hormones, devote
weeds, making cuttings root readily,
vesting of fruit and retarding the | ‘sprouting “of stored vegetables and nursery stock. They specify trade names of chemicals available for jeach purpose,
'Other Side of Record’
HOUR."
man, .New York, Dodd, Mead
democracy, and by picturing its impacts on the corrupt regime of Louis XVI in" the days after 1776, made Benjamin Franklin the bearer of
PICKING a title for a book of 37!
"unscalable” rock needle in vie Alps :
L To Be Out Next Month
lan Hour.”
Weather. with high wind, snow, and lethal cold, is unpredictTheres no adequate deferise gihinst weather, no way to proceed ul sometimes even Lo retreat during v blizzard”
mist
ble
Add to these factors the problem of supply with the base camp 300 miles distant from railroad or even good roads Everything
has to be ’
(
LIGHT READING —- §
auled that distance by mule-pack. Nye-omith, whose Ww novel, Everything has to be carried by ihe Laraners and the Lau porters from: 16,000 feet up to 26000 wood 1S le bed as a lig cet or higher. where the highest med about tng y amps were established \ I
TODAY ...and EVERYDAY...
Say it with Flowers” Loria Ain x
OF INDIANAPOLIS
Today and « EVERYDAY . .
2llliad
Flowers Telegraphed
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Answer (eo Previous Pussle
U. S. Army Leader
HORIZONTAL 1.6 Pictured US Army leader, Maj.-Gen. 11 Originate., 12 Fea: 14 Paper measiire
2 Tidy 3 Appellation 4 That thing 5 Appear 6 Plant part
7 Pronoun
{ “The Other Side of the Record.
He
varied sketches must have proved! a task for Geoffrey Hellman. jdecided on "How to Disappear for!
\
pings of history. He does not mean
of a historical moment.
lei rin ness H1€lIman's Collection
increasing fruit set, facilitating har- | "HOW TO DISAPPEAR FOR AN! Vg
P= rr 1 By Geoffrey Hel
{their volume to problems o kine Sketches Noted Personalities
to recreate a room with its furnishings, but catch the essential ideas
'Debs’ “adversary in the house.”
to understand what cutting stepsiwin a large audience ample for her students in “The aye Nady, h ane tonnscated his x these People do a TECORNIZE 5 completely happy one. Mr. Stone (named for the sweetening element in almost vertical ice at 22,000 feet . Years.of the Locust n br ng an . 11s earnings, - on Jap Dortraits, it fs Because disagrees, ai least for the purpose in various lethal potions) lives Altude means New Book Due Oct 21 i ee dnd i on I cl hs bro ide: $ wri ria ad Hove 1 9 of fiction. through most of the important hisThe book hgs such cumulative : Book on Gardening the United Noreen el yea ice as Be A HOSpanme. oF Mr. Stone paints a portrait of torical events since the Civil war force that vou almost wince at the A Certain Rich Mun," a new N : fe he J oreover in hus novels there Mrs. Debs as a woman interested She's present on great occasions novel bv Vincent Sheean. is an- Out ext Month tame Interested in the essence of little attempt to revive the trapdescription of an accidental slip y
chiefly in money and position and Thanks to Mr. Ruark’s comic sense, determined to have both. Thus he I can quote Chapter 22 in full: has the basis for an incessant con- Headed “Kittyhawk, North Caroflict between her aims and the life- line,” the chapter reads: “I just long dedication of her husband to know it'll fly, boys,’ Grenadine the cause of the workingman. For said.” Mr. Stone, Kate Debs was Eugene o.oo. PETER AND JETER. one pair of
E it quadruplets, attend MR STONE carries his triangle - turther. He makes Glbria Hark- Groton with the young Franklin“D: ness’ husband the chief counsel Roosevelt. “ ‘There's a youngster for the Pullman Co. in the famed will go far,’ Grenadine said. ‘Who?’ trial which followed the violence Mammy asked. ‘That one'--peinting in the Pullman strike by Mr. Debs’ to young Roosevelt. ‘I like his stubunion. = {born chin.’ ‘Mmmmpf,’ said Mammy. Then, according to the story, MF. ‘He ain't nevah gon’ measure up to Harkness dies and his widow re-|his papa. ‘Who?’ ‘Teddy, ob co'se.” turns to Terre Haute, still secretly
Grenadine’s
Much ‘earlier in the story, Mammy +
in love with Mr. Debs. In the story, Mrs. Debs refused to be hostess to
| Toudy herself, later an expert in |
any of her husband's union” er So-| woods “to gather
scrapple for a
{Charles O'Connell's candid recol.'
lections
of
musical
personalit ios
His opening sketch. which teils that he was born in 1907 and what
cialist friends and most of them! Yankee visitor from Philadelphia
will be published early next month ‘he World was doing. at the time
by Alfred A. Knopf. Formerly RCA-Victo
musical’ director of did his advice on how
gave me no clue to the title, Neithe: to become
hook,
ria Harkness A ] In the concluding chapters of the tv in filling her apron with this sucMrs,
likewise,
Debs
1S
stayed instead at the home of Glo- The scrapple
trees were in full
bloom, and Toddyv had little difficul-
said culent bivalve.
Great Books - Courses Offered tegistration is now open for a series of Great Books courses to be offered by the Indianapolis public
library, according to Miss Marian McFadden. city librarian,
Rauh library will commence a first-year class Oct. 7. and both Central and Rauh libraries will have second-year study classes
starting Oct, §, All classes will be held at 7:30 bP. m, and will meet twice a month
according to Miss Esther Th orn In charge of registration, on.
Indiana universit i ily extension, cooperating with the lib; te
a first-year class beginning Oct. 8
Post’ Stories Headline
voodoo, was sent one day to the September Listings
“Great ‘Stories Fro ay Evening Post» Post's editor,
m the ‘Saturedited by the Ben Hibbs, is a head-
liner in Bant ks’ S list. am Books’ September
rary, will offer _
Mr a terrible bore, nor his summan
O’Connelk now . is:
musical - director for Columbia of what appears in the Nantucket Mastérworks. Inquirer. Only in the fourth sketch " did I learn that the title was in-
B k f Th ill (spired by an article on jealousy that 00k 0 riliers Mr. Hellman found in a magazine ;n “Alfred Hitchcock's Firdside Book a dentist's office. of Suspense,” edited by filmdom's - ¥ =
specialist In suspense pictures. will THE MAN who gave his wife a be published next Friday bv Simon chance to tell a story, gains- her & Schuster It is a collection of favor and “can disappear for an
famous thrillers
hour after that and she will not be jealous.”
In order, therefore, to tell the {public the true nature of the package that Mr. Helunan has dis[guised under this provocative iitle I must disclose that some of the sketches describe personalities, such as Dr. Gilbert H. Grosvenor, editor of the National Georgraphic magszine, Jean Delacour, Frank M Chapman and Robert W, Service, | Several are parodies of novels and others are personal adventures the realm of mild surprises, or.such eyebrow lifting as the New Yorker writers trbanely assume toward the lesser insects that circulate around them: ~ ~ » I SHOULD account the Grosvenor, sketch the best, especially in re-|
8 Girl's name lating the man to his magazine, and ' 15 Italian cits Pp ns the Delacour the most informing.| 18 Be dull and - eposition 0 Exist form) Mr: Hellman is one of the least! spiritiess 1 S Ds 30 Observe 43 Mysot esting People, from a carica. Acidulous of the New Yorker's cons! 19 Poker stake Stut 33 Pennant 44 Half-em es C Naar s4. tributors, and no man is likely to! 20 Mutilate 13 Interp ot 33 Short run at 43 Filé | Tl Roy ( Va object 40 his evident desire to do 21 Among 16 Sy bol for. top speed 46 Mohammedan Casey s new PODS OF NBWSDAPer ° justice to the subject, at the same 22 Tone FE. . IN Ritum 36 ( zan udge reminiscences has just bee time retaining full standing with (music) 17 Palm-lily 38 Afternoon 47 Algerian published by. Bobbs-Merrill ($3). |his colleagues. In the meantime the 23 Symbol for 25 Bustle parties seaport - pi / " ta aa— a ctu eres eno rant bg pod Sure title 40 To the inside $2 Musical note EE mm 24 Hun) Num . 41 Reimbursed = 54 Daybreak » . BGoby Deep hole 200 (comb. "(comb form) Job-Objective Courses 1 Perish “32 Anger * 1 The following courses are designed to give "the basic 33 He wag —ime preparation for the specific services indicated by their in Wyoming respective titles: ° : 34 Colt mounds Private Secretarial, Executive Secretarial, Junior Fe or Accounting, Senior Accounting, Junior Executive, 3 irr H Stenographic, Complete Commerce... This is the : Ww , ! . 1 $." 32 Quits cut Indiana Business College 46 Center { of Indianapolis. The others are at Mawion, Muncie, 48 Indian coin | Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, | 49 Russian river Richmond and Vincennesc-all accredited for G. I. Train- | $0 Operatic solo ing. Alumni enjoy free personal placement service | $1 Go to bed through the ten schools. : 53 Cars Call personally, if convenient. Otherwise. for Bulletin, 65 Popular sh opular show * dederibing courses and quoting tuition fees, phone or lig nativ:: ‘write the LB.C. nearest you, or Fred W. Case, Principal ate 3 . : - i Central Business College ee graduate ntrai - business -Goliege AL | 333 N ini fh "e A | 0. Pennsylvania St, Indianapolis’ , Peaceful, i g
A A
§ it ah
me
‘on | O'Neill in foreign countries is the subject of a book being written by
| O'Neill's plays in other countries. An article by Dr. PFrenz, “O'Neill
to have been conscientiously unable to degrade herself by visiting: her husband in the Atlanta prison, but Mrs. Harkness paid him a visit there. A careful check of all the biographies of Mr. Débs in the Indiana
HARPIST — One of Saul®
Steinbe qs arawings to
) How. state Library discloses no referto Disappear tor an Ho sle ence whatever to Gloria Weston or ected humorous essaysi by to any Mrs. Harkness Geoffrey 1. Hellman. Mr. Stone's novel is good reading
well written. But his fiction version of the Socialist leader's life makes no better reading than the fact of McAlister Coleman's standard oiography of Mr. Debs.
reader is edified by what appears to be information, even if it won't tell him exactly how to disappear for an hour—H, H.
Best-Sellers in Review | Farmer-Novelist Loujs Bromfield | takes a crack at contemporary bestsellers in “A Case of Literary Sickness,” leading article in the Saturday Review of Literature for Sept. 12. « Mr. Bromfield characterizes much of the current output of fiction as trash, and assails critics who extravagantly praise mediocre books. 'Gin Rummy*:Slated For Sale in October teaching duties at. “Gin Rummy;"-by-Oswold Jacob: I U, following a !s: scheduled for publication next summer of fre- month by Henry Holt & Co. search in the' li- The book will include chapters brary ‘of congress, telling how the game varies in where he worked Dallas, Cincinnati, Washington,” Ft Free. oder a grant Worth, Boston, Cleveland, Philafrom the American Council of delphia, Richmond, New York and Learned Societies. Chicago, each written by a local His forthcoming book will deal *UtPOTILY. ’
with the problems of producing Mr. "ws x , Cte¥ on : [ h )
Choose’ From Largest Selection in Indianapolis :
Stitt
Also Available tm Our Neighborhong Stores © 4217 College * 5839 E. Wash, * 100 E 34th 2
Book's Theme Times State Service BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Sept. 27.— The literary reputation of Eugene
Dr. Horst Frenz, assistant professprof English at Indiana university. Dr. Frenz has returned to his
Dr,
on the"London Stage,” appears in the current issue of Queen's Quarterly, a Canadian magazine.
Mauldin Book Selected
Bill Mauldin's “Back Home" (Wil- | liam Sloane Associates) will be the | November selection of the Book-of-4 the-Month club. book combines | 200 of Mauldin’s post-war drawings
with accompanying text.
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Bromfield Assails ||
Other offe Theré’s plenty .of that nonsense 25-cent a
in the Stephen Leacock manner, also a good deal Mr. Leacck would not have written. Ribaldry, wackiness and shrewd satire make “Grenadine Etching” an - irresistible laugh-getter, ‘though hardly-for the younger set—H. B.
rings on ‘that list of : reprints include “Trouble Shooter,” by Robert Traver; “Old Lover's Ghost,” a whodunit by Leslie Ford; “William will Be Doctors,” by Hannah Lees; “Hardcase by Like Short, a gangster storv an ugene Cunningham's “Rider of the Night» Riders
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