Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1947 — Page 8

: : : Se

To Take Part

Regular Session Begin This Month AT LEAST 41 Great Books dis‘cussion groups with a total of 1640 participaits will .com{mence regular sessions in Indian{apolis this month, The Indiana committee of the | Great Books Foundation todgy announced a list of second-year groups, together with location and date of opening session, ,« First year groups «open to the public and free Include; Madison { Ave. branch library, Oct. 6; Rush | Memorial library, Oct. 7; Broad Ripple High School, Butler University, Howe High 8chool, Indiana University extension and Shortridge High Bchool, (call Charles Argast, BR-9063) Oct, 8; 38th St. Branch, Merchants National Bank (Mr. and { Mrs, Marshall Davis, TA-5845, Oct. 10; Planner House, Oct, 20, and the following locations, dates to be ‘announced: Central YMCA, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Morris, 524 Buckingham Dr.; Hawthorne Social Serve

ice Association and Hawthorne Bo a ; X branch lbrary and 17th Street GHOULISH—Two of Charles Addams favorite carfoon char. Memorial Baptist Church (Mrs. W rr : Y A. Edwards J 134! - acie a drawing with the caption May | borrow a cup of : 'e ie! oqether with numero other re t { Addam ra Cyn logether w 2 Ay rous : jo! © idan FIRST-YEAR groups open only v 6 18 in aan v Troe ! ! f { mastery APPeArs if 1dam: and Ev Iu ' BY to industrial employees and their

V New York I! e $2

Random

We it Cobb i pit families, or to club members inn 1" clude Allison ~ division, General Wom n of Property Tells Motors Corp.; American Association of University Women: L . . a Ayres & Co, Mrs. R. W. Fox, 5349 Price Girl Paid for Power Central Ave; Indiana Bell Telephone Co, Lloyd Dodd: Indianap"WOMAN OF PROPERTY." A a buh: olis Athletic Club; Indianapolis novel, By Mabel Seeley, New . Street Railways, two groups; ThYork. Doubleday, $3. dianapolls Bpeakers' Club: El Lilly FRIEDE SCHLEMFKE could have & Co, three groups; P. R. Mallory

& Co.: Sears, Roebuck & Co | Stewart; Warner Corp., three groups Second-year groups open to the public and free Include: Rauh Me{morial Branch Library, Central Library and Spades Park Branch | Library, Oct. 9; Broad Ripple High

mythical King Midas polnters monev-getting that would have made his hair stand on end, Frieda's beauty, her shrewdness pnd often-as-not criminal exploits {ii the search for the almighty dol-

given the

on

lar fill Mabel Seeley's 400-page {8chool, Oct. 7, Butler University, sovel The book "Woman of Oct. 10; Kirshbaum Center, Oct al Wik. published receLly 113; Howe High School and Indiana

[Central College; Oct. “15; and Or= [chard School (enrollment closed) ” » ” REGISTRATION for each group will be limited to 40 and those interested’ are requested io register

by Doubleday i Frieda was the product of a bittet childhood. She was one of five children, born of immigrant parcits, oppressed by a vain and cruel father. The family lived in the.

before the first meeti t small Midwestern town, West Hav- course. Groups will i the en; surréunded hy a society from weeks: ; T

which they were excluded" i

-

Members of the Indiana commii-

Year after year, Prieda watched EROINE— Ix Co} h —trieda Schlemp- tee of the Great Books foundation the procession of well-to-do young : . ! a : people go past’ her. Year after ke. money-hungry va of Include: Pierre F. Goodrich, chairy . a man; Harold Brigham, Mrs. Harold year she envied them increasingly. Mabel Sealey Woman Buell, Dr. Clarence Efroymson. Dr Money would set her above them BF Property.” {From the jacket 'M. O. Ross and Ben Watt, all of

Money would offer the solution to $204 ll her woes, Money she would get desis | by fair means or. foul. And she did get it!

» . ~ JUST HOW, by what surprising trickery you will see when you read this. very gripping book. And you nlso will see Just what the money made of Frieda by the time she wag 39 and the story ends. She had married four husbands and been instrumental in the death of two of them In ways the courts would never discover She stole

Indianapolis; the Rev. T. J. Brenies. IAN ANA the Rev. John J. Cavan-

NEW FUNNY BOOK — dugh, South Bend; Dr. Thomsa E

i Jones and Dr. Elton Trueblood, Art Linkletter

Richmond; Dr. Prank Sparks and Turns Author

Dean Byron K. Trippet, Crawfords(ville; Dr, Albert G. Parker Jr., Han"PEOPLE.ARE FUNNY.” By Ait, , TT Linkletter, Foreword by Bing Sister Madeleva Poems

over, and, Dr, Clyde E. Wildman, Greencastle, Crosby. New York, Double. To Be Published day, $2.50,

-

Times State Service

the first one from Schatz, her girl- ART LINKLETTER has written a NOTRE DAME, Ind, Oct. 4. The hood friend. Look about his radio experience in Collected Poems” of Sister M Frieda - also cheated her «only "People Are Funm with a pat Madeleva, president of St. Mary's other” friend, Rozzie, out of large on the back from Bing Crosb: College here, will be published ext sums of mone; Says Art luesday by Macmillan, All this may sound bizarre In & “I don't mean to. imply that the Other volumes of poetry by Sister “review of the novel. But the author secret of our success Is to smash Madeleva are “Christmas Eve and

things right and left. That is anly Other one ingredient in the formula for proving people are funny, “1 asked a 7-vear-old her mother did. was the reply.

has written her book convincingly #ud well. The writing is so very good you don't think of it at all You just go along with Frieda wondering what she will do next and horrified by what she did Hst. Without preaching or being didactie, the author by the natural use of cause and effect brings out the

Poems,” “Four Girls,” “Addressed to Youth” and “A Song of Bedlam Inn.” Her writings nave

appeared in the Saturday Review girl whafy i

She's a typewriter'|the American Mercury, the New Tie-

: public and Commonweal. A classic is the little fellow who " —-

announced he had a baby brother with whom he plaved when Mother

yoint that “as ye sow, s0 shall ye | =, 8 was busy with the housekeeping. 1 en asked him how I play wit} ) - SE ‘ th a pilIT IS refreshing indeed to fingra 0 0

a gun’ he confessed 1 put the pillow over him to Keep im quiet, then I play with tne un.’

modern novel which does not make sex its all-absorbing theme, Sex is ‘given an important place in “Wom an of Property” it 1s not fea tured exclusively

ust

but 1 » oo»

» "ONE LITTLE girl sald she'd like

Various scenes linger In the (4 he 4 singer, or a musician, or an memory after you lay this DoOK artist or a writer when she grew down. There was the time in the up bur sadly added she'd probadiv very beginning when Junius Hake ‘jue pe a housewife, because it's flung money about his store%balecony peen handed down through the to tmpress. the 14-year-old Frieda. (4,1, The episode 1s alinost symbolic CI Rica ‘as Boot Again many vears later, you see cist " pl rethers on the mature Frieda knowing she : t3ked a little 6-year-old

miss go to Rogzie, confess that she but i has defrauded her and make restji-

No, I haven't,’ she replied

I'm going to get a little baby brother Is

hould

CANDIDE—Title-page draw-

ng by Samuel M. Adler for

Mie ” that 50? When? ‘As 1 s 8 . ' . . tution, But of course Frieda doe BOG 0%. IY. Nobis. bat Voltaire's "Candide." just addnot go. If she had, she would not | 1er gels married i he Livi Li . have remained her coldly grasping “801. she reported.” ed-to the Living Library series self. Herself she remains to the Link's" radio program People (World Publishing Co, $1). last—E RM Are Funny, has turned Notty oe With an introduction by Carl upside _down.—It has led me | Van Doren, the book has nur en tc ¢ | “Penn-Mark’s the SPOT to Find | PAPer rooms against the owner's’ merous other illustrations by BOOKS Satisfying Heart & Mind” | Wil. steal gas from parked cars,! Mr, Adler.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

LN

DIXIE LITERATURE : South Subject |

Of Anthology |

"READER... By Harry Hansen A Glimpse. Into the Future And the Past Provided In Three Good Books

“A MULTITUDE OF LIVING THINGS." By Lorus J. Margery J. Milne, New York, Dodd, Mead, $3.75. "ONE DAY AT TETON MARSH." By Sally Carrighar. New Knopf, $3.50. "SMALL WONDER: THE STORY OF COLLOIDS." By Gessner G. Hawley. New York, Knopf, $3.50, Se WHEN the human race has killed itself off .in disputes over who is boss, the ifisects will clean our bones and thrive mightily. They have abilities as yet unmatched by human ingenuity. Some carry their own lamps to light their way over the roofs of dark caves. Some find their food by the principles of radar. Some walk on the water. No human being has these capacities, Yor. Is Columbla and Radcliffe). Naturalists and scientists They like to go “spelunking,” or

who observe these recurring|inspecting caves. In caves they wonders provide some of the best! OPserved bats who use a sort of

Mine and

York

reading in months, William Beebe, F2dar. “The creatures utter high-|

who made the jungle mare exciting Pitched squeaks as they fly, and than election night in Times the echoes reflected from objects

Square, isn't producing new books/in their path are picked up by

at .the moment, but Lorus J. their sensitive s. The bats Milne and Margery J. Milne, hus-/change direction accurately, [fke band and wife, have given some @irplanes following a radar signal” remarkably entertaining and in-' A few oddities, cribbed from “A forming news in “A Multitude of Multitude of Living Things": Living Things.” 8ally Carrighar, Why do worms appear after versatile observer of wild life, Prac heavy rain? tically gets romantic about various little animals in “One Day at Teton Marsh.” If you can't locate (‘hese two books at your public library, ask, for “Small Wonder; the Story of Colloids,” by Gessner G. Hawley, on That projects us into the world of ‘Whe hapless c

a

“Earthworms, swollen and discolordd from absorbing too much water, leave their flooded burrows and take their chances on the surface. Robins gorge themselves on reatures as they seek

spots |i which to start microscopic objects, such as the in- drier Spots in ai ¢ credible matters found in curds and afresh. Sunlight kills them and : dries their soft bodies to stiff,

Whe) shriveled relics that only the ants

n »

” THE MILNES are Biologists (ne s €RJOY. Harvard, and

Why don't termites digest their own food? “Neither termites nor wood ckroaches by themselves can wv the' food they cnew and swallow, They have no megns of changing cellulose into sugars that can be absorbed. Instead they delegate ——. digestion to a swarm of ‘guest “, .e~, In their intestines. These hE ‘simple’ animais (protozoans) a NY ~* side the insects engulf the plant

/

she, born in New

\ Ss i \) into smaller ones. From thé proto-

\ in useful’ form.”

3 WT SATE EE Al. ABOUT A YEAR AGO I found ($ 2° 5 on my desk a book called “One Day I on Beetle Rock,” by Sally Carri-

ghar. beasts in the Sierras and combined ‘intelligent - observation with excelf lent writing. I read it with delight for the way it was told. She had the Beebe love for writing, but her style was her own, This year in Jackson Hole, Wyo. and the Tetons, Sally Carrighar has { found the material for another de-

CQURTSHIP — Peterkin, the tomcat, shows off to impress Birl, the marvelously resourceful

| ”" heroine of "The Stout-Hearted | Marsh.

Miss Carrighar, a Cleveland-born

Cat: A Fable for Cat Lovers, womar, now living in San Francisby Alexander M. Frey. Trams. [5 "jices to imagine what moves lated from the German by these animals. She speculates on Richard and Clara Winston, the alarm of the bull moose when

and illustrated by Hans Fisch- "he encounters the white flash of

er, the book is a recent publica- the trumpeter swan, She describes tion of Henry Holt & Co. hi: frantic efforts to disengage hus $2 50 antlers from the boughs of a cot-

wi

wee. tONWOOd. She pictures the beaver staring at his damaged wall of logs mud, the osprey winging over the marsh, the “varying hare,” trembling, hopping, investigating. There may be readers who do not

Magazine Devotes 22 Pages to Records

The Saturday, Review of Literature's second monthly supplement

of Literature, the New York Times;%f records has reached a 22-page favor this superior way of per-

sonalizing wild animals, of interContributors - to SRL's latest preting their movements in terms recorded-music section include: of What they might be thinking. Howard Hanson, Charles O'Connell, But T find it delightful. : Behind it Bernard Herrmann, Irving Kolodin, lies a great deal of toil and Ter Herbert Weinstock, Robert Law. search. If we cannot tell what anirence, Harriett Van Horne, Went- als actudlly have In their mings, worth D. Fling, Wilbur Hobson, We can agree that this is what their Oscar Levant. Gilbert McKenn. Ed- actions Hight yean in our terms. ward Tatnall Canby, Everett L. De (COLLOIDS are extremelsh minute Golyer Jr. Herbert Menges and particles, says Gessner G. Hawley, Mari L. Mutch. authority on the electron miscro-

= n scope, in his book Small Wonder: New Titles Released

The Story of Colloids. So minute that the na fi ’ By Pocket Books e naked eye can't see them, “The Barbary Coast, Herbert As-

For instance, a colloid is a particle 4 50 small that it wil not settle unbury's “informal history of the San less in a solution. It hangs te un Francisco underworld” is among air, defying gravity : the latest Pocket Books to reach , 4 I'he Times Book Page

Nothing defies gravity. vou say It doesn't eh? Well what about a Also among latest releases in the fog? That's made up of raindrops 23-cen} reprint series are: “The givided into thousands of particles, Pocket Book O. Henry Prize, gna) that they just won't settle. | Stories,” edited by Herschell Brick- They remain suspended in air ell; “District Nurse,” by Faith Som : A [ e ti , Baldwin; “Remembered Death,” by ine they may he turned into Agatha Christie; “Dread Journey,”

|something else and disappear, but by Dorothy B. Hughes, and “The

{as long as the fog lasts, they defy Second Pocket Book of Crossword |

length in the Sept. 27 issue.

fibers and split the large molecules] ©

3A zoans the insects recover fhe food

It dealt with birds and °

Ilightful book, “One Day at Teton

By Allen Tate | "A SOUTHERN VANGUARD." Edited by Allen Tate.. New. York, Prentice-Hall, lac. $4.50. ALLEN TATE presents a large proportion of the new southern | literary talent in his anthology just released by Prentice-Hall, 1 At least, so Mr. Tate informs the reader in the preface to the collection which he edited. The book is titled: “A Southern Vanguard Mr, Tate speaks with authority concerning what goes field ‘of letters south of the Mason~ Dixon line. Long a writer and critic, he lives in Sewanee, Tenn. a x > ! .*A SOUTHERN VANGUARD" includes 28 stories,’ poems and essays by young southern writers or, on southern topics. © All of them| were chosen from the hundreds of| 'manuscripts submitted in the recent prize contest sponsored by the publisher and the Sewanee

eri mete Li pe a: oles, was held as a .. Success an Hollywood : Predicted for New Novel

STIEGEL GLASS—An enameled bottle and an amethyst picture ‘are two specimens from the large collection of sarly American glassware given to Herron Art museum recently by Mrs, Louis H. Levey of Indianapolis. They are both tie A of Baron William Henry Stiegel, pioneer glassware-maker, who came to this country yin 1750.

There's the hero, Grady Dunavant, of. part-Irish descent—tall, broad - shouldered, slim - waisted. There's the heroine, Luz de Zubar~ an, tawny-eyed daughter of a rich Spanish rancher in 1846 California. Gradv first meets Luz when he’s’ escorting a pack-train towards Los’ oo. /[Angeles. Luz and her party. cross | wis ing the King's Highway, take the right of way, defying the Ameri{cans. Her lithe beauty. her superb! (horsemanship, her scornful defiance, |=these things trouble Grady then; land afterwards. i |

morial to the late John Peale | Bishop,” southern writer. And the! anthology is dedicated to him. Mr, - Bishop was born in 1892 in Charles "HILL OF THE HAWK." A novel. Town, W. Va, and died in 1944 By-Scott O'Dell. Indianapolis, in Maine, Bobbs-Merrill, $3. His essay, “Poetry and Painting” By HENRY BUTLER : leads the group of essays and his : oe 4 poem, “The Dream,” the verse, SCOTT ODELL'S “Hill of the . aa Hawk” bids simultaneously for wide circulation and Hollywood, * A PARTICULARLY pleasing fea- pjke other recent and current ture of these collected writings are historical novels, it is written to biographical sketches of all the entertain. And it uses fictional deauthors. vices that have become almost too The prize-winning poem included familiar. in the anthology is “The Marchen,” by Randall Jarrell, literary editor, of The Nation. Two other offerings! are “William Faulkner's Legend of! the South,” prize-winning essay by, Malcolm Cowley; and “The Guide,” a short story which won the Bishop prize for its author, Andrew Lytle. — E. R. M. ‘

CRITIC.NOVELIST — Scott O'Dell, literary editor of the Los Angeles Daily News and author of "Hill of the Hawk." . a new novel about early days - | Bao 0 ' in Spanish California. ; '! SHE NEEDS +taming.' Grady ..__* BE :

‘thinks. He needs a lesson in man- NEW ENGLISH STORY—

ners, Luz thinks. There's, nothing,

| beats an episode in the war of te Piotures Life

_ | séxes to start a historical novel on

the right path. : 1 : other women . in In Vil lage

There are Grady's life. Camilla Howland, for ‘example, who jilts him after he "CHATTERTON, SQUARE." * A ' reaches Los Angeles. Two years of novel, By E. H. Young. New | separation have changed her mind. York Harcourt, Brace, $3.50. And Yris Liorente, former stage By JEAN MANEY

| beauty from Mexico City. who com- ) . H. YOUNG ovel i 3 {bines the allure of youth with the gl be 8 stn vel Janise : * | provocative sophistication of ma- who remember her earlier ones i

*

on turity. “ ; » WME » “Ola ‘ OF PITCH-MEN~—Violet Mc- | ‘And there's enough intrigue, cia, Miss Mole” and Ge

Neal, as she looked in her medi-cine-show days, which she describes in "Four White Horses and a’ Brass Band." To be published next Thursday by Doubleday, the book is said to be “the true story of the unbelievable life of a young girl, kidnaped | into the medicine-show racket,

| danger, violence and mayhem in! {the troubled background of Cali‘fornia just prior to American con{quest to keep readers deliciously | jittery. How will Grady’s feud with the cynical and dangerous Cesaire Curel turn: out?

The action of “Chatterton Square” {takes place in Upper Radstowe, a small town in western England dur- h ing the period before World War II." Miss Young has captured the tense- # ness and uncertainty of that era. : Her characters seem to fear the fu- ; . 4 2 tute and help ‘to :recreate the- # GRADY'S. quick on the Colt atmosphere of a. nation In the trigger, but Curgl has a lethal ver- shadow of disaster.

doped and tattooed for safe- !and-under, double-barreled. pearl- a2 x » keeping, and then taught all [handled shootin’ arn from Mexico. ROSAMUND FRASER, an attrac~ ine tricks of the fast operators Which he can whip out in one-third tive though somewhat vague eharwho were faking the easy of a trice. Curel also knows all ti.e acter, is the central figure. She " angles in aiming a dagger-blow. ‘mothers five grownup children and

money .and moving on.

Stone to Autograph

Mr. O'Dell evidently has done ala, old-maid school chum, the tart jot of research in California his- Miss Agnes Spanner. {tory. The ckground, the “mise- Fergus, her charming, but erratic

At Ayres Wednesday ~~ [®-scene” of “Hill of the Hawk” nyughand, deserted his family which ls full of picturesque and presum- was in his wife's words, “the best

Irving Stone, author of the novel- aply authentic detail. ; thing he ever did for them, poor 1zed biography of Eugene V. Debs, Such. ingredients are time-tested. lamb, except giving them some of “Adversary in the House,” will be Mr. O'Dell has stirred them to- his good ks ” Hn 4 guest of honor * at an autograph ‘gether expertly in a novel which 2 Black tt family . across the party in L. S. Ayres’ book depart-!seems highly likely 3 e Bcke y i ment beginning at 2:30 p. m. next rr Square orate te ore. yiras p Wy - I .

Wednesday. or Se oe Schultz Writing Book Herbert Blackett is a sober Vic-

“Adversary in the House" was re- . : viewed in The Times Book Page Sigrid Schultz, veteran foreign torian father type who is perfectly last Saturday by Sexson E. Hum- correspondent, radio commentator Satisfied with his life until he phreys. and author of “Germany Will Try meets the disconcerting Rosamund. - — {It Again,” is preparing a manu- The rebellion of ‘his wife, Bertha, of Jt . ge script called “Germany IS ‘Frying 38ainst her smug = environment Child's Dictionary [It Again” The book A be ying supplies a major part ‘of the acChosen by Clinic lished next ‘year by Reynal & Hitch-| tion in “Chatterton Square. “The Rainbow Dictionary," pub- COCK: Sart gobi ol omnes lished by World Publishing Co., has " :

: . too complex for easy reading. Miss been chosen one of the September Book Premiere Date Set Young's chief fault is her tendency selections of the Trade Book clinic ; ,

of the Amerie Yas The 20th Ceptury-Fox film ver- to allow her characters to wander a he x foun nstitute of gon of Laura Hobson's best-selling aimlessly through an almost plotless ap in v: fi ne novel, “Gentleman's Agreement” story. The delightful dialog comre oe BE Dye Youre a tne nak (Simon & Schuster) is due for its pensates, however, for these defects ' 0! Cc I J i vy i <td 5 5 New York premiere on Armistice and the Fraser family#is worth aged 4 to 10 was written by Wendell p : y

" day, according to the publishers. meeting. W. Wright, dean of Indiana Uni- 8%, Stcorcing Yo bie ph Beeline versity's School of Education.

to enjoy success

Ee |

Book in Big Demand © | “Peace of Mind” now is making its 72d consecutive appearance on

S

current issue of the pocket-sized ty at magazine include: “Linden on the [Saugus Branch,” “Men and Books" a new book | “The Big Sky,” by A. B. Guthri

Wm 1 Castleman, Mgr Householder; led a spectator to “The Proper Bostonians,” Cleve 2 FRanklin 7854 \Ckie the runner in a football land Amory's study of Boston game ' 8 man to kiss a pig. He society, will be published Oct. 10 bv Sid 0 difficulty getting victims, Dutton. The book is described as a P fi . 48 ong as he has $100 bills. and historical and critical survey of the ro ciency refrigerators to distribute H H city which, as some have put it, is Century), is one of the a Cn ohorv hand. one: heats not merely a city, but a state of of the need for greater PRO mind. FICIENCY —knowledge, skill, ar capability. PROFICIENCY is New John Dewey Book \ one of the chief keys to opunity. Coupled with inBartow Eo and re- in! by John Dewey, will be published jr, and “Give Us

in December by the Philogophical Arthemise Goertz.

~~ Writes Second Novel

book is described as a novel about a Jewish professor in a midwesterh college.

no. They grow, from minute par- national best-seller lists, according ticles of food held in solution. “Np! to Simon & Schuster, the publisher. matter how rich the soil may be, First published in 1946, Dr. Joshua or how well fertilized. the nutrient! loth Liebman’s book has gone back material does the plant no good OM Press 14 times and has been whatsoever unless it is in water POUght by 470,000 people. ' “Knock on Any Door,” Willard solution.” ig TT | Motley's much-publicized novel of he microscope not: onlv enjuvenile delinquency (Appleton- larges objects for ‘the human eye: bridgements jt reveals 5 in the October issue of Omnibook. tie eye

(gravity. 2 Puzzles,” edited by Margaret Peth- Do plants grow from water? Oh, erbridge. .

‘Knock on Any Door’ Omnibook Feature

». - ' Sign Biography Contract Composer-pianist Henry Cowell § Raptiohs too staal for has signed a contract with Prensee. The electron mi- tice-Hall for a biography of the Other best-sellers abridged in the croscope reveals so many particles’ American ne Orion Ives.’ “a single pound of carbon The Cowell study of one of the most

black ‘would blanket an area of no influential contemporary composers

by Elliot Pauliljees than 12 meres If the surface|will appear fn the falf of 1948.

of i | Our Dream.” by o ap ts particles were spread out

Book Discusses Veterans “The Best Is None Too Good,” a collection of interviews with vet-

Dyes have a high surface area, which accounts for their coloring

and responsibility. PRO. w's : power. A teaspoon of aniline dye erans all over the country written right frame to do the most for your BR Neyousility, FRO. ¥ Random House will publish a was dropped intd the Hudson River by Ralph G. Martin for the New photograph. All sizes available. J Ag Wh gi G ’ second novel by Mary Jane Ward, at Albany and detected as far Republic, will be published next * turns. This is the Indiana's Most Popular OR. author of “The. Snake Pit" next south as the George Washington February or March by Farrar, 4x6:to 8x10 Frames January.. Miss Ward's forthcoming Bridge. 150 miles away,

Straus,

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