Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1947 — Page 8

@ &

‘John Steinbeck

Turns Mexican

Into Realistic Story

"THE PEARL." A novel. By John $2.

JOHN STEINBECK knows that the feelings of simple people are sharply defined. The stories they tell are etched

in black and white. His new

this. It is a little sidelight on human behavior that he picked up in Mexico in 1940, when he was on the expedition that

yielded “The Sea of Cortez.” drawings by Jose Clemente! Orozco.

There are many legends about pearls, which -usually denote sudden wealth. “The Pear!” 18 a variation of the familiar saying that sudden riches will demoralize a man of simple wants. With his keen understanding of human emotions, Mr. Steinbeck has turned a legend into a realistic tale, which also he seems to see as a parable. Kino, a poor Indian, who lived with his wife Juana and their in-| fant son Coyotito on the outskirts of La Paz, could not get help from the Mexican doctor when his in-

FIRST, READER . . . By Harry Hansen

i i

's 'Pearl’ Legend

Steinbeck, New York, Viking Press,

tale, “The Pearl,” exemplifies

It is embellished ‘with five

radical had no sooner mounted his | soapbox than the constable arrived] to. urge him out of town, Florence spoke for such wild projects as woman's suffrage, direct primaries and an end to hossism, As she grew older she may have become more reserved, but she never deserted the cause of individual liberty, If she had permitted herself to write of those times, ang to comment publicly on sockil projects, | her contribution would have. been invaluable, for she’ had a sounder

CITY SCENE "Signs of the Times," oil paintin which has been awarded the $1000

EM Ll i a

g of a city street scene by Garo Z. Antreasian, Indianapolis artist and student-instructor at Herron Art School,

first prize in the L. S. Ayres & Co. 75th

anniversary art contest, The 137 entries in the competition will remain on view in

Ayres’ auditorium through next Wednesday.

2

[Tells of OSS

THE WOMAN'S ANGLE New Volume

Activities

beth P. MacDonald. New York, Macmillan, $2.75. «By P R EDSON

NEA Stat Writer » WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—For

about a year at the start of the war, one Mrs. Elizabeth P. MacDonald worked in the NEA Service office here in Washington. Among other things, she wrote a feature called “Homefront Forecast.” This was a folksy, paragraphy, woman's page thing. It was intended to tell the good American housewife what wartime shortages to expect in sugar, salt pork, silk stockings and such stuff, One day she came in and ane nounced that she was quitting us cold—and for less money, too—so |she could become a spy and wear flowers in her teeth and a long | black dress. 80 she joined Col. Wild Bill Don|ovan’s cloak and daguerrotype OSS ~the hush-hush Office of Strategic Services. After flunking all the, courses in the crazy cops and rob-| bers finishing schools, which OSS, {operated in these parts, she was sent out to China and India for {ie duration. When it was all over she came home and wrote herself a book, which has just been publishéd

“UNDERCOVER GIRL." By Eliza-|

JEFFERSON AS ARCHITECT—The portico of the University of Virginia's library, one of Thomas Jefferson's best architectural achievements, is depicted in one of the 322 photographs by Samuel Chamberlain for "Springtime in Virginia" (New York,

fant was stung by a scorpion. But ferred to remain in the background,

in publirhing was highly esteemed, | especially by the late John Macrae, | and ky his sons, John and Elliott. | Just before her fatal illness she was | engaged In preparing historical ma- |

and Kino became the center of town gossip. The pearl made him avaricious. He began to hear the song .of evil, His wife tried to make him reject

nore vine vile weve: McKee's Story About Lew Wallace Is Frank hen he found a pear in 0 over Bont of nr nin. nes saves ANGIysis of Colorful Civil War General

"'BEN-HUR' WALLACE: THE LIFE OF GENERAL LEW WAL.| smn

the pearl, but he persisted and she thought him “half insane, half God." The traders were unable to | give enough for the pearl, so Klao rejected their offers and determined to sell the pearl in the capital, » » » THIS CONDUCT seems to be looked upon as evil by tre villagers because it takes Kino ot of his accustomed ways. Juan Tomas imptibs that he is out of his element; he has defled “the whole way of life. . . . It is new ground you are walking on, you do not- know the way.” Presumebly all the violence that follows comes because Kino has listened to the song of evil, which comes with the pearl the violence comes from wicke men, whose covetousness Jealousy have been aroused by the peari,

Wr. Steinbeck offers no explicit Ing scientific secrets. I cannot condemn Kino ll $

lesson. for wishing to capitalize on a stroke of luck, considering his

followed through and

terial for the centen¥ry of E. P Jutton & Co.

can.

{under the intriguing title of “Undercover Girl.”

/story ‘of OSS from the woman's

LACE." By Irving McKee. Berkeley, University of Californial

Press, $4. they let women mess around in ft.

| Also, it is a revelation of what we |didn't know about Elizabeth. Oh,

By HENRY BUTLER THE STORY of Gen. Lew Wallace is the story of a vanished AmeriHis type no longer exists,

Hastings House, $4).

| “UNDERCOVER GIRL” is we DF ee F all

ee —————

Books Worthy ansie, and 1 sows what ves Of Special Consideration | "CRESCENT CITY." A novel. B

& Schuster, $3. " . ot the skullduggery that sweet little] THE BRACELET OF WAVIA LEA: AND OTHER SHORT STORIES.

y William E. Wilson. New York, Simon

a

Scam

ers,

dq story.

Old

THREE new novels of suspense, as distinguished from crime thrillInvite reading, v by Georges Simenon, shows another side of this author's ingenuity. y in Normandy recalls the incidents of a mysterious hideaway and {a cantankerous aunt. | Hitchcock, $2.50) David Goodls, tells how a commerclal artist blunders into a bank robbery and develops a case of regressive amnesia. This one is a bit con(Jullan Messner,

“We've Been Waiting for You,” by “nn fr g YOU GET THE impression from Ver: We have only to consider more

fusing.

250) New crime stories—'“The Bells of gorrow, what that by Dorothy Bowers, |cti)] costing.

poverty. I wish Mr. Steinbeck had 800d Scotland Yard story. “Lethal feeling that indicated Lady,” by Rufus King, is a new ver- 44

Bailey,”

But Ethel Thornbury, is a post-war spy 5 An American flying officer, Mr, McKee's admirable book that and recovered from htssimprisonment in Gen. wallace had 1i Germany, runs into a fresh con|spiracy In the United States fvolv- (he Civil. W (Bobbs Mer- That's partly

“Black Rain,”

(Reynal & “Nightfall,” by

For while romantic adventurers are perennial, the Lew Wallace combination of personal and imaginative qualities is as outmoded in its way as the famous stage chariot-race in “Ben-Hur.” 5 Gen. Wallace's Interests, his tastes belonged to a period we

more difficult to understand

A or Henry Fielding.

of the Christian Era. *

$2.50.)

ar and its aftermath

after the event,

how Kino is to readjust himself to sion of the double. “Foggy, Foggy might have left a less burdensom

what follows after the pearl, a'$ “gray, malignant growth” has veen

cast away and the song of evil has

died on the wind. “The Pearl” appeared In a maga-| zine In 1048 and has since oeen| made into a movie with all-Mexican | cast by RKO. Another Steinbeck book for the holiday trade is the inimitable “Tortilla Flat,” which, the publisher says, has sold over 1 nillion coins | This edition: has ‘17 ‘paintings, In colors by Peggy Worthington, who

vi.ited Monterey, Cal, to study

people ‘and places. Her paisanos|

leap right out of the setting In their| (Viking Press, $8) !

vivid coloring, ~ » »

2.)

THERE SHOULD BE a special =

page in the chronicle of human achievement for those who, in the line of duty, work quietly and un notrusively for a better understanding. On that page should appear the name of Florence W. Bowers, whose immediate work was promoting the books of the house of Dutton, and whose larger alm was a fairer deal for the common man. Florence W. Bowers grew to maturity when the century was

OF FOX-FARMING — Kath-

Pinkertor

rene bo k “Br qnht With S Iver," is a story of the Fromm brothers

of WwW S¢ onsin and their pioneers

‘the villagers and atone for his kill-| Dew, by Ambe ings, but the author gives no hint of medical science. (Crime Club, each

Ww ho 0 atest

in the eternal,

the impact of the contrast between Mr, Lincoln's long-range view, still immediately understandable, .and {the short-range, prejudiced, vanity[inspired views of his contemporaries. {Gen, Wallace may have been better {than average in that troubled environment, » » » MR. McKEE is as generous as possible in his estimate of Gen.

(Wallace's part in the trial of the!Papal encyclical ever to be indexed

supposed conspirators following the President's assassination. But in that instance, as later in the trial and railroading to the gallows of Wirz for his share of guilt in the Andersonville, Ga, prison - camp atrocities,” Gen, Wallace was certainly among the non-immortals, In both disgracefully one-sided _travesties of justice, the prosecution acted like a bunch of Nazis. | As a military leader, Gen. Wallace was doubtless the .vietim of!

say, the period of Samuel Johnson As Irving Mc-: yarns, not realism. Kee points out in his new biography | . = of the Hoosier romantic, Gen. Wal-| “BEN-HUR” WAS just perfect for lace was in the thick of practical! public demand. affairs and risky adventure before, in stage and, long after Gen. Wal{during and after the Civil War, and yet he chose to write about, the adaptations, the story earned more remote past, about the beginning money than probably any o%her

ttle of what we should term realism in his views of |

because we are wiser|yood man, N»-

We know, to our marred his career, and he seems to! war cost and 18 have been a loyal friend.

If he . And we can't help|sometimes lacked judgment and “New Medical

more common sense his creative gifts were not of the|

less oratorical attitudinizing highest order, he is important «Q et | A € typifying a whole realm of| ecr S oO r Dean, makes use of legacy of unsolved problems,

‘It wouldn't be fair to condemn| garded with highest admiration in Gren, Wallace for not being as wise his time. humane sense as {Abraham Lincoln was. Even in the throughout his spectacular career, {brief glimpses you get of Mr, Lin-{in which not the least picturesque lecoln in Mr, McKeeé's book, you get|chapter was his serving as minister

By Bessie Breuer, New York, William Sloane Associates, $2.75. "EUROPE WITHOUT BAEDEKER: SKETCHES AMONG THE RUINS OF ITALY, GREECE AND ENGLAND." By Edmund Wilson. New York, Doubleday, $4. BOOKS OF REAL MERIT deserve even delayed plugs. {Having spent all her innocent .girl-| With Christmas coming on, it seems appropriate to devote space {hood in Hawaii, Elizabeth knew now and then to a few books on the fall list which may hgve received [some Japanese. And wherever she inadequate previous recognition in these columns. Dy 5. {went, she was always running into The first of three I'd like to discuss today is “Crescent City,” a four Hawalians who knew more novel by Hoosier-born William E. Wilson, which Simon & Schuster Japanese than she did. Together brought out in September. : they conspired to fake letters, forge] What called my tardy attenfion sonality, besides many other types, \ | documents, print newspapers full of to Mr. Wilson's admirable novel seem almost frighteningly real. I false information and arrange phony, - was the abridg-/might add that “The Bracelet. of {radio broadcasts for Japanese con- [°° ment of it.in the /Wavia Lea” is no book for nambysumption. 3 December Omni-|pamby romance addicts. | For instance, when she first got book. An excel-| “Europe Without Baedeker is a DASHING—Gen. Lew Wal- to India, Mrs. MacD. came across E lent job of con-| collection of reports Edmund Wile : a ck of captured Jap postcards " densing, the son wrote in the spring and sume Both Mr, McKee and the con- lace Ne: dashing young officer in ot intelligence office. They had | §# abridgment made mer of 1045, chiefly for the New |temporaries of Wallace whom he| in the 1860's. been written in pencil and were ad-' % me want to read Yorker. Most gums: cites agree that the general was yes dressed to the folks at home. Mrs.| the whole story,| Overseas reports, & ersonal scandal ever| CJRES FOR PAIN— if only to fill in| especially

MacD. got the idea of erasing the ally | messages and substituting things the missing epi-| Written for mass sodes in the lives| consumption, go

like, “Where are the supplies from home? We starve in the jungles.” of Mr. Wilson’s| out of date quickOr, “Don’t ever tell our son I die for| William numerous char-1y. Mr. Wilson's have lasting

a lost cause.” acters. “Cresent City,” like many : value, I think.

z a another novel of the sort, is a biog- » " » about Mrs, MacDonald, Much of it| 1 Of & community, ts central] Not too many . . c r, Jay Holt, a crusading CHOSOMATIC MEDICINE." | 1 ete 0 oe Pe te under, | CAltoF Who lives on ia the mamory| le a . ot ground all over the world. With 91 his . successtul jo 5 :| the world outside Edmund Wilson

By Frank G. Slaughter, M. D. d Stephen, is ymbol of goodness Messner, | becoming modesty, > Ar books. Conversely, not too: many

New ' York, Julian beth says ' in the. unity, Like other good, ; $3.50. |she was never cut out to be &,,0omptomising men in other com. | 800d reporters have Mr. Wilson's

[to Turkey in 1880-1885, Hoosiers PSYCHOSOMATIC medicine is “femme fatale” because she never munities, Jay Holt has only partial proverbially get around. In thatly,, study of problems like what learned to keep her cover, how t0|gyccess, In fact, his career never

‘and other respects, Gen. Wallace is| {keep a secret, how to tell a lie with ecovers lone of the great legendary Hoosiers, (Nervous Jitters will do to digestion. | straight face and stick to it under!’ from the blow dealt it by

| th lan. | ——————————— Everybody knows that state of | torture. ir 2 lout, Yo vit Prof. Brown Indexes (mind and state of body are not so Just the same, they taught her|ihen had him charged with arson. Pius X's Encyclical independent as was formerly as-|how to shoot a Tommy gun, hive a. nis Mr. ‘Wilson's observations on the | sumed. Worry and frustration are| Put knogkout drops in a man’s beel,| OUTSIDE OF SUCH inspira- British ruling class especially tren Times State Setvice ‘among mental states that have pro how to use an OSS developed Per-| tional pieces as the Reader's Di- chant, He orients the all-tooe | NOTRE DAME, Ind, Nov. #8—t,n4 ifiuence on the nody fume called “Who, Me?” It smelled gest loves to print, the influence typical snobbery, smugness and {What is believed to be the first] * worse than skunk and the idea was of good, honest people seems more] hypocrisy against a human back / to get it splashed on some enemy subtle and intangible than force-| ground of misery aggravated by A | la new, popularly written hook big shot so he'd have to go home ful. Whatever communities may British’ policy, as in Greece. in the Outline Press publication, | (00 ome” of the most § ‘and stay there two weeks until it spend on monuments to the vir-| His description of Milan in 1945, i “Social Justice in the Modern tant findings in the Twi science] "T° off. tuous dead, the moral tone of those which the allies had pounded as World.” of psychosomatic ownge | THe question all this raises is communities is apt to remain medi- unmercifully, he says, as the GerPrepared by Dr. Francis Joseph (mind - ph ody) y : . [whether women who know “hese ocre — a melancholy truth we are mans pounded London, is a valuable ' Brown, professor of economics at ~ [things should now be allowed at prone to forget.

girl was capable of. Oh, the shame lof it. They assigned her to Morale {Operations, the OSS department {that ‘dealt In black propaganda.

find

|

ed what we should call “escapist”

In book form and

lace’s death in 1905, in screen

American novel. Lest we become tno;

smug in our comparisons, how-|

recent literary honanzas, such as { “Forever Amber.”

pr

|attitudes and esthetic taste re-'/u

MEDICINE FOR MODERNS:

THE NEW SCIENCE OF PSYMr. McKee lollows the general

intellectual background, which, to say the least, is formidable.

" » 2 MIDWESTERN ANGLOPHOBES and even some of us who are not { so extreme in our views will find SN.

LJ ~ ” completely was released this week| DR. FRANK G. SLAUGHTER in

and an index of Pope Pius XI's! famed encyclical, “Quadragesimo! Anno.” It is the first in a series of | publications to be released by Outline Press, Inc, 2308 W. Van Buren

: medicine. corrective to the notion that our Notre Dame University, the 84-page Physical pain | large. Mr. Wilson's keen perception and side fought humanely and spared booklet includes a complete outline resulting from | SS ——————————————— {reporting of the ethical chiaros- monuments. The refectory of Santa ILLUSTRATED—

| euro, the moral light and shade of {his Crescent City, is not his only excellence as a novelist. But it is “Last Supper,” was wrecked—hardly important and gives his book sub-|a military objective. “The ‘Last. stance and informative value, For Supper’ . . . is little today but a

Maria Della Grazie, on the out= skirts of the city, which housed the

worry or insecurity may be just as real as pain caused by infection. Doctors

Look Editors Do Book Tour

ing in the silverfox industry Offcial jealousy. His brilliant, though St» Chicago, are learning to & Or + City, a mythical and prob-| grease spot—a vague and income young- and arguments for social re- IN Cy I Ww | Sinn; . A minor, exploits and his theatrical| iiagnose hidden i ably composite town vaguely located plete phantom, which, - however, form were ringing in her ears. In | CT" fo $3 rE) "\ oo, ho 1%" | personality won him publicity in the Literary Club Books emotional factors : Latest Volume Serves Ji southern Indiana, read the name does assert its reality in a curious rural Elwood, Ind, where the Will- aes, 35.75) Urs. Pinker: | ustrated weeklies. There's a faint land not merely Dr Slaughter As Regional Guide of your own home town. Compare and poignant way,” Mr. Wilson kies were neighbors, she caught; fons previous books have in. nin al ava , Paul V. Brown Talk 1 " (the kind of reporting Mr. Wilson writes—H. B RE OE ld cE Oak ae suspicion that even Gen. Grant did| Ts ot tis 13} _Ithe symptoms of which the patient| LOOK AT AMERICA: THE ang other XioVellsts “have: done. Tole . B, V. Debs. In the days when & “Three's a Cre “7% bot relish a subordinate’s becoming] The Indianapolis Literary Club's complains. MIDWEST." . By the editors of their candid stories of American! ws A rim omtmiree 20 3 1 w loo_conspicuous. program for December was an-| pr. Slaughter tells us about the Look, in collaboration with Louis cities with what you read in news- ; . dow {nounced today by Francis H. Insley, emotional tensions that can pro- Bromiiad Boston, Houghton papers and you get a much clearer G Flowers J? . zl © y 9 GEN. WALLACE'S post-war ad- Sas So Fark D Jag ueers and other serious all-|) .p.. $5 : [notion of forces behind the news. ; FOR. p re ; “ , " 0 mn, ; tment men | ! . { { kad ils venture in aiding the “liberation” of Pau Tw PAT Oupar “LOOK AT AMERICA: The Mid-| 8 Telegraphed v4 yo Mexico from Maximilian’s rule is director, will speak on “Indianap-| . a3 Lwest,” latest regional volume of the THE BRACELET of Wavia Lea”

OF INDIANAPOLIS

kph MB 4 A

at this distance in time, faintly ludicrous. He was out to win honor, as he wrote his wife in Crawfordsville. | The promised $100,000 in what

{turned out to be extremely unre-

J. Trupp will address the Dec. 8|enriched many a fashionable pW |is one of the best one-man anthmeeting on the subject, “Voltaire— surgeon at the expense of people | With an introduction by Louis|ologies I've seen this season. Miss Cynic or Seer.” {whe needed psychiatry more than! gromfield, the book presents, in/Breuer has an individuality and a

: 3 olis Summer Opera” at next Mon- | HE ATTACKS the neurotic. ov at America” series, is both a|collected stories by Bessie Breuer day's ladies’ night meeting. Fred mania for operations, which has photographic tour and a :guide- Which Sloane published last month, J

Choose From Largest Selection 7 lis

Bragnississiil

! in Indianapo seesm——— ete en — liable Mexican money was only sec-! Mr. Insley also announced that|they needed sub-acute appendee-|..ncise text and copious illustra-| virtuosity of style almost as strik- | CROSSWORD PUZZLE |ondary. Before the end of that epi- the club will not hold meetings omy [tions, the principal features of the Ing today as Katherine.Mansfield’s : sode, Gen. Wallace had been Dec. 15, 22 and 20 and Jan. 5. Like other’ books on the subject, | eight midwestern states. It may| Was in. her day, though no other A4E.00ASN. $ Answer to Previous Purele through some fantastic intrigue, in {however, Dr. Slaughter 8 study | evoke the criticism applied to earlier comparison is implied. While ir the course of which he maively Work on Opera a Guide 5" 1 think, too little attention volumes in the series—that it is a) There's variety and power in the ine son and a Church Head trusted some ace swindlers, and the’ P UID@ i, the entire society as a factor in [tourist's book rather than a social/collection. Miss Breuer has a won- h ] Reid, disc hoped-for honor was illusory “A Short History of Opera,” In individual psychosomatic disturb- student's book. {derful eye for background, a won- : Also Available coming ol Gen. Wallace -and his literary 0 volumes, by Donald Jay Grout, ance, Contemporary American so-| Compact, handsomely made, with derful understanding of people. A in Our Neighborhood Stores the holida HORIZONTAL 3 Confined imagination were both characteris. will be published by Columbia Uni- ciety, persistently fleeing reality, is(12 full-color plates in addition to/recurrent, but not dominant theme ® 4217 College * 5539 E, Wash, the autho 1,5 Pictured 4 Value highly tic of his time. Probably no other . .t¥ Press. It is intended to in- not the healthiest psychosomatic the black-and-white illustrations, /is the ardent woman neurotically * (09 E. 34th up about church $ Go by El period of American Yeistory i" ol troduce opera to the layman and vironment. —H. B. |“The Midwest” should prove at-|frightened by the ravages of age. v2 Ne dignitary 6 Interest (ab.) pg =v the early 1930's RW BR Ii Dl also serve as a guide to professional bret tractive to gift-shoppers. Miss Breuer makes that kind of per- Yom . in “The F 9? Stuff CLIT AL THY ALE NY WUE, Saw as much DU-\yugieians and scholars. Liopi Co. Pri —— howl on {i 13 Prayer ending ii (DA IIA GE en misery as did the Civil War a Lippincott Co. Prints pivot 14 Handle entica A Pt and subsequent decades. The read- . ' . ) 15 Assistant 9 Tosser " ing public did not or could not face Book Find for January | Arnall s New Script pute an 16 Loan 10 Mature 20 High n Durajse that misery, According to one au-| “The World Within,” anthalogy| Ellis G. Arnall, former governor " ’| trigger bu 17 Plant part 1 Hebrew % mountaih “ LOCK ver thority, some 300 dead babies were of psychological fiction edited by |of Georgia, expects to deliver a new Everything costs more he cracke 18 Health resorts mon : J § found in New York City ashcans Mary Louise Aswell and manuscript to Lippincott early. next v 12 Disord 31 Before 46 Operatic solo : 3 and reviewed , a investigati 19 Penetrates R sorder 35 C1 $1 Observe y during the winter of 1187374. The in “Harry Hansen's colums ob this (year, —— edit ' hi rrp Ay . "Wi Compound 29 este: 36 Terminal (Latin) Same year saw a great upsurge of page last Saturday, is the Book| Tentatively titled “Free Men Shall 1 Pyedic ethers er erminal, sentiment for kindness to animals. Fi ; Stand,” the new book will contain and. Jack 23 Rough lava 25 Lettuce 37 An 48 Czar Fiction Yeaders © in [Find Club's selection for next Jan- Mr; Amall's views and interpreta-| ® will . i 1 51 Suffix id caders then, as now, want- uary. file or) . 2 Him » fiend Soverig 3 ery rotiver 52 Threefold ———e——. 10N8 Of our national scene based his famou 28 Expunge macaw 42 Manufactured (comb, form) upon the experiences of his career of Will R “32 Boat paddle Ly in publi life and his lecture "activ- DANCE LESSONS AT be made 1 2. Fys ities, according to the publisher, ig ner studic 83 Gibbon ey - — — ; 34 Platform >. Ayres & Co. D b . ARTHUR MURRAY It seem: 5 fruit AT HOME IN INDIANA FOR 7) THANE | ecem er Harper s . ginia- Wei alf-em " | . . “" 40 Symbol for For an Aduly's Gift Has Article on Stein Is the best time to start your way to J nr ¥ 41 Adjusts | “Gertrude Stein: A Self-Portrait,” His prices Popuiasiy by Srslling. a An Artiiue. Murray's, urray’s, Pagar. 45 Absolute ruler | AGE CANNOT WITHER portant feats of Here's me’| Method continues. 'With an Arthur Murray teacher. _Yole in th 49 Commended By Bertita Harding, azine for De nny A. in half the time 1 Xt usually © on You'll 2S She's 23 | » fie Tules over widely esteemed Indianapolis Authoress As one of the most devastatingly dance from the rumba to foxtrot in only a few lessons , Sevetal = . {realistic appraisals of the late Miss Come today from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. for a free dance ngey 14 53 Love god Here is a panorama of the gaslight era in the history Stein to date, the article deserves .analysis at your Arthur Murray Studio. Of course, again wit 54 German river of the theatre as spanned in the biography of Eleanora wide attention. Visitors are always welcome. Veterans may enroll now ' dancing 38 Asseverate ) Duse, one of the world's great actresses and the final i” for GL Teachers’ Training. Act immediately, definite, w osmic order’ ; . . | ee Jotaln fhe Furie 0 rot aps patetaltes thay” {Fp aey the SPU ei hme bore for 58 Roman of the theatre and story of the Duse’ love for Gabriele | BOOKS Satisfying Heart & Mind” ARTHUR MURRAY Gary. C emperor d' Annunzio, the poet-playwright-politician. Auto- $50,000 go 59 French river graphed copies available. 3.50 Penn-Mark Book Shop 2% North Pennsylvania Street sponsor. VERTICAL icing nh is nd : an 2 emcee A 1 Wan Budk Department, Siroed Fisey gigi vies we Biotic Opaa Dolly, 10 AM. to 1015 PM. Mendoy Through Seberdey r disk Jocks 2 Yorebode —— - 1 ‘ Swadoy, 1 to 7 PM, > Papa Bin 1 : j

7 - | : a x a“! - : :