Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 December 1947 — Page 8
POLIS TIMES
» 4 = or CAPE
aa
1 4 | i I 4
i 0.
_ THE INDIANA
THE FIRST READER, by Harry Hansen Roy Baldridge's Life Story = | 'Best Thing’ Since Ernie Pyle Wrote of the Kinship of Man
"TIME AND CHANCE." By Cyrus Leroy Baldridge. New York, John Day, $7.50. CYRUS LEROY Baldridge is the name you will find on the title page of a sparkling and picturesque life story called “Time and Chance.”» If you look beyond the gay cover on which natives of hues varying from shell pink to gingerbread brown disport themselves, you are in for an adventure in living that is the best thing in print since Ernie Pyle reminded us that we are nite importance to our own wel-| all members of the human tare” family. The booklet was suppressed—by|
Having called the author Roy Americans. Folly could go no fur-| her, Roy was five times elected] since I first met him carrying a ‘Der. Roy : tlecte portfolio across the campus of the commander of the Willard Straight | University of Chicago, I can hard- Post of the Legion in New York. | u n " i iy begin OW W call him Mr! wymp AND CHANCE" has «
Baldridge. . Ga ki Nor are: you likely to preserve | TUALLY that many life stories lack |
a A his intimately human and highly Jah perso y $ n the man's makeup were two things-|
intelligent account of friendly relations with people all over the globe. oo With no more money in his pockets ¥!'h the common man, These acthan was needed for expenses, Roy| count for his tendency to size up| invaded China, Japan, Liberia, | €Very man for what he is, not for Abyssinia, Iran, not to mention What other people say of him Europe, practicing a tolerance, de-| Having decided that every indl-| spite foreign odors and discomforts, vidual had the right to his own| that should be a model to many life, provided he did not violate the| of us. rights of his neighbor, Roy could bu. .¥ {not subscribe to racial snobbery or TRAVEL AND DRAWING have think men of one color had better been in his bones these 50-0dd rights to the earth than those of
his inquiring mind and his kinship |
WORLD-CONQUEROR'S DEATH-—A Renaissance conception of the great con-
{lively yarn, “The ‘Stainless Steel
. What the newsreels of paratroopers jumping out of planes didn't tell us}
TALES OF JAPAN— Steel Kimono Troops Had Their Fun, Too
NO." By Elliott Chaze. New
Kimono,” raw and rowdy paratroop-
age the tourist trade to the land of cherry blossoms. Nor is it going to help recruiting for the Army of tion, | [
for the other six lads who introduced democracy and profanity to the Japanese. Elliott's buddies were a part of
branch of the Army,” says he.
is here set down in print. The lads who practiced jumps at Pt. Benning, Ga. were badly scared, even if they sang out lound to the tune
"THE STAINLESS STEEL KIMO.! |
York, Simon &Schuster, $2.75. | NO, INDEED, Elliott Chaze’s
ers in Japan, isn't going to engour-
“the dizziest and the hardiest| 2
MAINE COOKING—Marjorie Mosser, niece of Novelist
of the Battle Hymn, “Gory, gory what a helluva way to die.”
yy. 8 8 . IN JAPAN they made the best
has been widely advertised, but Elliott Chaze describes it in a new, unpoetic way. “The winter snows cover up a million smells but now the big white lid was off and the smells whirled into the open train windows, as sharp and definite as stripes. When a train passed a town the stripes of smell were
i
pressed more tightly together in the
[spring air and they were more varied and disgusting. “I got in rather thick with an upper middle-class family in Shio-
years, for he began drawing pictures|another queror's last moments is "Death of Alexander,” painted by the Venetian artist Vittore when, as a very little boy, he trav-| But since he was not a protes-| Carpaccio (circa 1450-1522). The painting has been lent to Herron Art Museum by eled across the country with hissional agitator, he did not senti-| Adolph Loewi of Los Angeles for the current 'Arts of the Italian Renaissance" exhibit,
mothér, who sold clay cooking mentalize over dirty and grimy Le . . utensils. people just because they were poor which will continue at Herron through next Thursday.
At 10 he was in Frank Holme's His book radiates good healthy art school in Chicago, where Harry Americanism, Hershfield, Will Johnstone and H.|
T. Webster were older boys; he be- DANGEROUS LIVING —
came a sketch artist for the first
Pre-Christmas Round-up Indicates Books
gama,” writes Elliott, “and it made {me sick to my stomach, . They in{sisted that I eat boiled octopus and {codfish broth. Codfish broth tastes {the way the inside of a Japanese train smells, only stronger. It makes yoy want to wash your mouth out with after-shave lotion. . I never got quite used to seeing little Motoku with her mouth full of
Kenneth Roberts, who has brought out a new edition of "Good Maine Food," a collection of "Down East" recipes (Doubleday, $3),
of a smelly land. Spring in yupen! @ Soviets Appear in 2 Books
Written From 2 Points of View
"RUSSIA'S EUROPE." By Hal Lehrman. New York, Appleton-Cene 1 tury, $3.75. "THE UNITED STATES AND RUSSIA." By Vera Micheles Dean, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, $3. YOU CAN GET a quick idea of why the Russian situation is so bafling by reading two new books: Hal Lehrman’s “Russia’s Europe,” the account of a pro-Soviet correspondent who was shocked and horrified by what he saw behind the iron curtain in 1845, and “The United States and Russia,’ by Vera Micheles Dean, an above-the-battle study written for the American Foreign Policy Library, of which Sumner Wélles is editor. e | - Hal Lehrman went to the Bal- [tion for aggression while we were kans for two pro-Soviet New York uttering soothing syllables or apers. He started with Greece. /clucking in mild protest.” Only |Here the Communist excesses hit/in Czechoslovakia were: they give {him right between the eyes. Theling the nation a chance to rebuild, {ELAM had not merely murdered and even there they were pressing
+ Icitizens; it had slaughtered them. for nationalization of industries,
In Yugoslavia, Macedonia, Hun-| Mr. Lehrman returned to the
SATURDAY, DEC. 6, 1947
Stars and Stripes and swallowed the Cites Pe ri S
14 points as literal gospel. Today he believes fervently that|
this country is committed to equality! n Drug Use
of opportunity and of all men be-|
fore the law, fréedom of speech, "140 MILLION PATIENTS." By
By HENRY BUTLER
ANOTHER ROUND-UP of recent books seems timely now, with] that annual shopping problem right ahead. | In a series of brief mentions, I can't pretend to do more than tell|
opposition to dictatorship and re-| Carl Malmberg. New York, you what the books are about, besides listing publisher and price. 1f | sponsible citizenship. | Reynal & Hitchcock, $2.75. you've done any book shopping, you know that prices have nivanced| Packed with anecdotes, this Book| CARL MALMBERG'S “140 Mil- omewhat th tandard-sized volumes of fiction and non-fiction gives unexpected slants on charac=/lion Patients” undoubtedly will | Mew a on Lie Sancary-sise "no :
Despite higher prices, even de| $ 4 9 luxe volumes like “The American! THOMAS Y. CROWELL CO. has Past,” by Roger Butterfield (Simon inaugurated its comprehensive : & Schuster, $10), are doing well. “Growth of America” series with 4 4 Mr. Malm- |. putterfield’s copiously illustrat- “The Sea and the States: a Mari-
ters as different as Samuel Insull draw fire from the conservative! and Ras Tafari. |wing of the American medical proMr. Insull gave Roy $300 to reach| fession. Europe in 1914 and later bought his collection of African sketches
Are Selling Well Despite Higher Prices
ptr loctopus, combing the tentacles to ary industry. Under the general side of her chin with hooked
editorship of Clarence L. Barn-| hart, the new desk-sized word book, | ners, the better to wipe her
sald to contain more than 140,000 chin on the banker.”
definitions, has much, including its] ELLIOTT AND ‘His BUDDIES in= $5 price, to commend t., ‘| dulged in the Army pastime of baitReviewing a dictionary is 8 ing officers, especially lieutenants. ticklish job. After all, it takes a rike this: 2 lexicographer to catch a ‘lexicog-| «you pulling my leg, Sergeant?” rapher, especially in minor mis-| asks a lieutenant. takes, and I don’t pretend to be &| «1 didn't know you asked me lexicographer. But I like the 100Kks|ts gir» replies Elliott. and the heft of this volume. And| gometimes this backfired. Trotis, judging from the roster of strictly|who had charge of a supply depot,
gary and Austria, the Communists were arrogant, dishonest, spiteful and ruthless. Though armed with friendly permits Mr. Lehrman was pushed around and threatened.
# ” RH HE WAS STARTLED and dazed. He had thought the western democracies had faults; now he found them the only guardians of individual rights and peace. He found the Russian soldiers completely devoid of respect for individual integrity. What Mr. Lehrman saw and heard convinced . him that the Soviets were “fortifying a. posi-
MEETS GREAT NEED
United States completely disillusioned. Then he tried to tell what he had seen to his pro-Soviet friends. They refused to believe him, but a few were worried, » ” » NOW TURN to the United States and Russia, by Vera Micheles Dean, This shows you the difference bee tween discussing nations on a high, academic level and meeting them face to face. Mrs. Dean's book is an {llustrae tion of the see-saw method: “On the one hand, on the other hand.” Read it and you will hear that the United States is equally at
fault with the Soviet Union for
the present impasse, perhaps more so. Mrs. Dean does not dis-
for Fisk University. Whether Bex ba erly ed history of ‘the United States time History of the American Peo yp.to-date authorities on language|was thrown into the stockade after sketching T, V. Soong, a Maharaiaih Public Healtp [Tom the Revolution to Hiroshima ple,” by Samuel-W. Bryant. Mr, Bry- gnq semantics who contributed to|a verpal -battle with Lt. Corey. or a rickshaw driver, Roy recogifized Service and chief is on Publishers’ Weekly's best- ant, now associated with Time, Inc. the work; I think it's probably asi Corey had been stalking him no social lines. At times he had > investigator for “eLer Mist. |writes a readable account of the good a dictionary for students and|for some time. to battle, even in Liberia, to be | { the Senate’ Sub.l wwe ‘uu historic role of our Navy and Mer- jaymen as you'll currently find. Trotts, says Elliott, was the only allowed to travel third class on THE LATEST luxury item to chant Marine, ($5). 5 man he ever saw stir coffee with
o “The Conquest of the West,” by pkg DICTIONARIES, handbooks th i Healt} d Edu- » aw . or a , ’ e stem of his pipe. One day a) nee eu. Houses,” written and illustrated by Walter F. McCaleb, deals with what of all kinds are excellent gift buys. the rubber bit of his pipe dropped many exisung tra, James Reynolds. Mr. Reynolds, the author calls our “heroic age,” Their value lasts. Milton Cross’ into the coffee cup. Trotts was ditional and prot- whose last book was “A World: of the period 1803-1848 when the vast “Complete Stories: of the Great fishing for it with a couple of Hable bractice Horses,” has amassed legends an {region from the Mississippi to the Operas” is certainly a useful one|pencils when Lt. Corey appeared. entitled to his clothing, one pound | Like other pny 1 folklore about ghosts and banshees | Pacific was gradually added to our ¢o. those of us who remember thet “What are you doing, gt. of tobacco and § sous a day, and, medicine, Mr. Malmberg — nd histaric castles and great national heritage. With interest In Lusic better than we do the often|Trotts?” asked the lieutenant. was assigned to drive a camion. estates of Eire. A large and beauti- [the Far West steadily increasing, .haotic plots of grand opera. Mr.| “I'm trying to get my pipe stem
unnecessary surgery, often the re- “ { , But he was quickly sent to isi'of inept diagnosis of primarily| [WI manufactured book, “Ghosts Dr. McCaleb's book is timely. (Pren- gross whose radio-announcing unc-fout of this ¢offee.”
trains. committee on reach my desk {s “Ghosts in Irish » » » AFTER TRAILING the Germans in Belgium in 1914, Roy painted the French army as a humble poilu,| Carl Malmberg
divisional headquarters to make ,. otic symptoms. He adduces '™ Irish Houses” contains nine four- | tice-Hall, $3.75). tion has been beautifully parodied] “What's it doing in the coffee?” sketches for Scribner's and Leslie's. [rq 01. and figures showing our ni. color reproductions of paintings and | To the growing literature on our by Alec Templeton, has assembled| “I don't know, sir. I can't see When he joined the AEF a similar (| health picture as less rosy many pencil sketches by Mr. Rey- railroad history, Crown Publishers essential information on 72 great|it. No telling what it’s doing.” assignment sent him to the original (1a, we've imagined nolds (Creative Age Press, $12). |have added “The Story of American ;peres (Doubleday, $3.75). | THE MEN'S CONTACTS with x ak ‘ ” , ” ’ x A | 1 ’ wi Stars and Stripes. He points out the dangers of The destruction of Europe as a Railroads,” by Stewart H. Holbrook. "a . ther book of lasting value is Figlly unrothantic.
tourist's paradise began with World With 100 illustrations, the 450-page gp A Botkin’s “A Treasury of New Jap women were hig : e One, Wagman, did pick up =a
Madame Butterfly, but her Jap friends beat her up so thoroughly that for her sake he dropped her.
His experiences there provide self-medication, the indiscriminate : sparkling sidelights on a brillant se of powerful drugs commercially War I, a slow process that reached volume relates rallroad growth to England Folklore,” which in som group. There was the editor, Pvt. a frightful climax in the last years national growth. ($4.50), 900 pages is a small encyclopedia of |
Harold W. Ross, “a sketch roughed of World War II. It has diverted 2 2 -n the New England character — its
available, the vitamin-extract fad. . —— |
out in cement by Gutzon Borglum,” American tourists’ attention to the! LLOYD MORRIS’ “Postscript {0 grneriness, saltiness and humor p then known as Buddy. There was regions “south of the border,” with Yesterday—America: The Last Fifty| crown, $4). he somplele Be Oe Sgt. ) > a resultant series of books on Cen- Years” d House, $5) and] | - Sgt. Alexander Woollcott, of the | Years”. (Random se, § . 4 8 maids in a rest hotel didn't stir
Leo Gurko's “The Angry Decade,”| 4-8 a story of the period from the LATEST AMONG books on our stock-market crash to Pearl Harbor nearest southern neighbor, Mexico, (Dodd, Mead, $3), also deserve it “These Are the Mexicans,” by mention. Herbert Cerwin, Mr. Cerwin, who; Two American
Medical Corps. who had just dis- tral and South America. covered “that the common man had & heart of purest gold,” and who could develdp anybody's anecdote into something marvelous and unrecognizable,
BURNS MANTLE'S “Best Plays the lads either. And when they lof 1946-47,” containing the com- had to sit around a bathing pool plete text of the 10 best, plus Mr./in the nude with these women Mantle's customary yearbook of they lost all interest in romance. a) American drama, should nok Dey Bion on Blades were ta: overlooked. Out of Mr. Mantle's sophomores on the loose. BR a raters Jo chown 10, Indianapolis has seen: must hav given the Japs strange hi > “The - Iceman Cometh,” “Another idea of American youth and an
ig i Mesos Suzie vary teresurg WAhOEY eciiaw BY 2 Part of the Forest” and “The Fatal extraordinary vocabulary, H. H ar evide » st twa agenknec es re ze, - rc —— % po A evide y ows the country ward igenknecn reative g Weakness” (Dodd, Mead, $4). .
and the people. His treatment of $4) and “Presidents’ Sons: The] Final mention in the reference-
biographic Lincoln: His an in-
» » » FANTASTIC, but quite explicable, was the uproar caused in the American Legion in 1936 by a booklet entitled “Americanism: What Is It?"
They|
cuss the arrogant methods of Soviet representatives in the U. N, nor does she have to take into ac
Book Answers count the ruthlessness with which
* Sport Queries |x i mee mos "THE NEW ENCYCLOPEDIA OF| middle class in occupied Europe.
SPORTS." By Frank G. Menke. OUR OBJECT pe EUROPE, Sava New York, Barnes, $5. Mrs. Dean, should be not to help By BOB STRANAHAN countries stand off Russia, but to THE SPORTS DEPARTMENT, nel them reconstruct and develop |knee deep in football, basketball, their own form of democracy. That bowling and ice hockey, expresses js just what we had in mind; who the fond hope that Frank G. Men-|gtonned us? |ke’s “New Encyclopedia of Sports”) We should learn more about Rusis a best seller—particularly in the gia, says Mrs. Dean, and Russia | tavern trade. {should learn more about us. It The men from the sports depart-/seems we are learning rapidly, and ment explain that just when they js not conducive to the academic are knee deep in football scores,.gim with which Mrs. Dean weighs etc., a call invariably comes in from the issues. She closes by saying |some pub asking for the settle-|pyssig and the United States should ment of an argument on some phase pe gllies in the war on hunger, disof sports. ‘lease, illiteracy, poverty and fear, Since Mr. Menke’s big 1000-page and there “should be no ideological volume covers virtually every sport|differences,” since we can fight “side known and contains records on end hy gide as peacetime allies.” {in all lines of athletic endeavor, the| we suggest that Mrs. Dean read | sports department thinks the Ency-|the newspapers. We hesitate to ask clopedia should be standard equip- Mr Lehrman to read Mrs. Dean's {ment in all taverns, clubs and the nook. He might have a good laugh, /like wherever men gather. lif the whole situation were not so | Actually, every good sports library | tragic. —H, H.
written by Roy Baldridge and distributed by the New York county organization of the Legion.
the country and its problems seems Prestige of Name in a Democracy,” | keen and sympathetic.- The book by J. J. Perling (Odyssey, $4), deincludes numerous photographic part from conventional blographi-
book department is “Guide to America,” edited by Elmer Jenkins, travel director of the American Au-
This compact definition of de- illustrations (Reynal & tcheock, '¢ J y y Ry. pal op Ses hu 0 ynal & Hi jou! Proedure enough to have new tomobile Association, 8 guidebook, tolerance, here reproduced, seems Several recent works on phases| In the field of world history, Dr. designed = primarily - for tour Sts |
& simple restatement of the pringi-
ples of American life—in fact Roy ment. Henry Steele Commager's Jews: From the Babylonian Exile * i says it was “swiped from Thomas “America in Perspective: The to the End of World War II” has| . couple of illustrated art items Jefferson and “others.” United States Through Foreign been praised by authotitative critics should>be mentioned. "The Inner Legion heads saw in it a swing ATTIC FIND-~Mason Wade, Eyes” is a valuable anthology of as a solid but readable study of Life of Pablo Picasso by Paul to the left. What aroused their who edited "The Journals of [comments by alien observers, In-the inestimably great Jewish con- Eluard, will appear Monday under |§ suspicions was the sentence: “To- Francis Parkman m original cluding de Tocqueville, Charles tribution to modern culture (Phil- the Philosophical Libfary's imprint § day the welfare of peoples on the documents found in a Boston Pickens, Matthew Arnold, James adelphia, Jewish Publication so-| 34 79). Wik TUMeIOUs . examples opposite side of the globe is of defi-' attic (Harper, 2 vole, $10) Bryce and, more recently, Raoul de ciety, $3.50). [of Picasso's work in various styles, SS ———————————— . he Fd 4 {including some early and surpris-
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
t _ Amawer to Previous Passle
New Deputy
of American history deserve com- Solomon Grayzel's “History of the
(Washington, Public Affairs Press, §
‘of the country could use a copy, {for the contents have been gathered |studiously and presented by a sports expert. Mr. Menke began this career as a sports- scribe in 1912 with International News Service, land has been in close contact as
Fortnightly Literary Club Plans Yule Party
The Fortnightly Literary Club ‘of Indianapolis will hold its Christmas party at 2:30 p. m., Tuesday, Dee,
Roussy de Sales. The last-named s =» [is represented by his Atlantic, BEFORE WE get into the misMonthly article on “Love in Amer- cellaneous department where all {ica,” expressing a Frenchman's be- kinds of books are apt to turn up, {wilderment . over our ceaseless and let's have a look at “The Ameri-
” ingly recognizable paintings, the ©
[book contains in its brief text an _ attempt to explain and justify 3 Picasso's wilder creations. Even more sumptuous than some
& for all sportsmen,
Five New Reprints
{a writer and historian since. The, . | h . - | Encyclopedia is a history book as| 0. 1 fhe Ppslaeun, 140 N. Dal
(well as a standard record reference The program will be in charge of . Mary Klentschy Rhodehamel, Mary
O’'Hair Hitz and Frances Pardue Bantam Books to Ad Belden.
Five new reprints will be added. to the Bantam Books 25-cent- series Dec. 8. | The new titles include: “Up st (the Villa,” by W. Somerset Maug|ham;
{universal concern with romantic|can College Dictionary,” the Ran-| the imported fiustrated | “Cinnamon Murder,” by love. (Random House, $4). dom H hall he diction- mporte strated-maga- | Fri > i " HORIZONTAL VERTICAL mms Nevin — S Slee Sh ehpe othe Ration |zine Christmas annuals already on . i tle Posi . gry pid 1,7 Pictured US 1 Learning WYNANT display is “Art News Annual: 1948." PRICE NO BAR—Roger But- | Mouse”), by Eaton K. Goldthwaite;| [if : Army officer, 2 On the currently distributed by Simon &| terfield, whose copiously illus- |“Kid Galahad,” by Francis Wallace, Choose From Forgas Section Lt.-Gen J. sheltered side Schuster ($3). It's a wonderful) , .. 4 history, "The American |and “Hell for Breakfast” (originally po lm i 8 Have on Start Your 1948 printing and engraving job, with po \." \97c 1046" has hit published as “Useless Cowboy”), by 14 Oleic acid sat € Small child some of that super-opulent adver. | as}. . i 188 Jub Na {Alan Lemay: 18 Side SOs time (ab.) tising that makes you uncertain Jone! Dest idler is Jorpiie " — AAE SN. 9 monto } whether New York is the City of! price {simon chuster). | H 1 16 Peruse 7 Hint 27 Royal College 44 Detest Tomorrow or just, plain Gomorrah. Non-Conformists Study we 17Frenci. 1: 8 Hops' kiln of Physicians 45 Poems —————— 's dv Sal f Book “Critics and Crusaders,” Charles : 19 Volun 9 Lieutenant (ab.) 46 Mother - D S ' Head teady Sales of Books |. Madison's biographical study of : Als Available 120 Ever (AP op fb) 28 Makes 47 Among ¢ eep summer eads Predicted by Weekly 18 American political non-conform- in Our Neighborhood Stores ermit mistake 8 : | . . Er Washy———— Properly i pres Where 45 Alda stan | | ow . Pocket Books List | Dollar volume of 1047 book bust sock “pina clus February sees fo 18 ESA | items 12 Appellation 31 Girl's name - 50 Impish “Deep Summer,” Gwen Bristow's ness is expected to be near the fig-1;,, yt will be published by Henry i (33 Diminutive of 13 Snow vehicle 32 Droop 52 Fourth Make sure you have ample funds for next novel, heads the list of six new ure for 1946, according to Pub-/y.¢ & Oo, Mail Orders Promptly Filled Edgar 18 Bone 33 Compass point Arabian caliph | year's Christmas expense. The easy way to Pocket Books just received by The lishers' Weekly, trade journal, for| ~~ HAR RR —— |24 Yes (Sp.) 21 Weaknes» 40 High 54 Viper do this is to select ‘one of the followin Times book page. Nov. 5. : 125 Out of (prefix) 22 Salts mountains 56 Paid notice clubs and ’ lar] 9 Other new additions to the 25-| That profits will be “considerably |27 Drive off 24 Chairs 41 Short barb 58 Symbol for . 8 Save regularly. cent reprint series include: “Did below last year” is the consensus of / Zl S #4 & Co [30.Get » 26 Wave top 42 Above neon She Fall,” by Thorne Smith; “Death |“a pumber of representative pub-| ~ Lae "So yred ’ 3 25 Bi-Weekly Amount and the Gilded Man,” by Carter lishers and booksellers,” PW con- ||" Coad yy HOME IN INDIANA FOR 75 CHRISTMASES Elite Deposits of » You'll Save Dickson; “Death Comes As the tinues. : Row End,” by Agath Christie; “Mys-| rr For a Useful Gift i Prattle tery House,” by Kathleen Norris, \N Sheen's Book Out! ' > $ 1.00 $ 25.00 SR : 3gr. Sheen s Dook Lut Ww : iate’ Dicti { f th y | IcTriona 3 indian, a a and “Rim of the Desert” by Bimest) "yo [Up "paper pultom 4, ebster’s Collegiate ry » Niton (symbol) 4.00 100.00 “ily 1 Sheen has entered a new fleld of | Fifth Edition Bustle J | . authorship with “Jesus, Son: of - 43 He succeeded 2 ; ne Proofreads Appendix; Mary” a book for children. Tius- Based on WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL Gent we T | 10.00 250.00 Doctors Remove Same |trated in color and black-and-white | FETE OAT, Loe BLD, SE Tui Baitim 4 : Te | HY Moke rE a ane Yolume i6 Pubilstied'hy the Deciat handy-stzed Rigg ier olgn * matter |Il Peoples State Bank an To Bh ma poe ot, Son, 0 Fut { completed proofreading the longest). , . 53 First man : appendix that he has ever had in Find WEBSTER'S OOLLEG jection from SATII oF bomb * 7 Felix T. McWhirter, Founder lone of his books, was rushed to the pvunRavs the SPOT Jo Fina a truly ERs DLEGIATE 11 Just gue sees at Ayres 55 : “The Friendly Bank” -{ hospital for mn. operation—to have Satutying SL ; just about embracing the whole field . . - to and. dignitary y Te oe “|| his appendix removed. He is doing | Popn-Mark Book Shop including amed OXFORD DICTIONARY. 57 Foot part 130 East Market Street Inicely, thank you. : clu Wh : OXFORD . DICTIORARY, 1-1 50 Long steps | “His book, ‘The Great Rehearsal, j : . : Heh rg “Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. with appendix intact) will be pub- " Book Department, Street Floor : : i lished by Viking in January.” bh es i a - 7 inv . § } T
#
i 3 §
| |
‘Lat On
Sle Sy!
DE dianapo The Pitts ar Th Francis THE Slater, h! said to bi Miranda It k mas seas Maritzas that som include t
ENO the conv: stage far about it, for smoo tions; it “Maid in Add, appearan leaves fo year, whi Peop! run cinet while you how we 1 is likely . torium. mellow ¢ or she pl
WE | of the U sppeared
