Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1948 — Page 8

THE FIRST' READER—By Harry Hahsen

Shnahie,

Nelia Gardner White Wins $8000 Annual Award for ‘No Trumpet Before Him'

“NO TRUMPET BEFORE HIM." A novel. B

Philadelphia, Westminster Press,

"COMMUNISM AND THE CONSCIENCE OF THE WEST." By the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merril,

$2.50.

NO FIRST NOVELIST, but a professional writer with! § 17 novels behind her, wins the annual $8000 Westminster award. It goes to Nelia Gardner White for “No Trumpet Before Him,” the account of a young Methodist minister's attempt to get his congregation to live up to Christian

principles.

Mrs. White is a former kindergarten teacher who has been writ-| Ing novels about family life for over 20 years.

$3.

y Nelia Gardner White.

She is married to a |

lawyer, has two children and lives near New Hartford, Conn.

It is important to mention that she is the daughter of a Methodist minister and thus may have gained first-hand knowledge of|

»

{ | | A | 4

the sympathy, felicity. The story of the young minister who opposes the worldly interests of an establishd congregation with the spirit of Christian hu-

trials described here with

with variations it has authors all the way from Henry Arthur Jones to James Street. The problem is often the same: The young minister preaches the gospel in a way that embarrasses some of his people; he makes enemies among influential members of the board; he proves attractive to a young woman and tales are carried to his wife; attempts are made to get rid of him, but he stands firm—and this, briefly, is also the plot of “No Trumpet Before Him.” a.» MRS. WHITE knows women better than she knows mer; and draws a whole gallery of individuals recognizable in any congregation. Maybe that’s why her minister, Paul Phillips, seems more acted upon than acting. For He gives ‘he impression of a static charicter because he does not raise ais voice. 5 J Firmness is his trait; tact is ‘ati evident. He is apologetic to iis bishop and his wife, and invokes reason rather than emo-

sre much stronger characters. Here is Paul's wife, who finds he atmosphere uncongenial and he state of a preacher's wife irkome. Here is the understdnding rishop’s wife, and her daughter ‘eanie, who falls in love with ‘aul on a rebound from her hus‘and. Here is Mrs. Brush, the : ver-present viper, whose bitter ngue wrecks her daughter-in-ww. In these and others, Mrs, ‘Vhite demonstrates her sure nowledge, ¥ =»

THERE ARE TWO BIG ‘RISES in Paul's ministry. One ~'svelops over his refusal to let professor lecture on BauZelaire, scause the poet is a defeatist. Do we not accept defeat and sath as the master when we ng hymns to them?” asks Paul. This is a new stand, an oppo‘tion to what Paul considers an responsible attitude toward setry. I doubt that we shall be ared by reading only about : weetness and light, but Paul's ject is to make the church exress only positive Christianity.

and hopelessness,

The same materialism is also blamed for communism, {came out of Western bourgeois ithinking, which makes man a so-| the [ith .iclal animal dependent on the eco-/ e litho iy -aud. justice is pot NeW: | omic machine. Only “the gospel, !in its fullness,” with faith in! save

Christ as redeemer, mankind, says he.

Ernest Hocking.

politics based on

was wrong.”

doctrine.

ism and imperialism

conscience.”

ligion,

and,

orthodox lines.

comprehension and Sheen for the present pessimism

will

Msgr. Sheen's reading is wide] and he is able to quote in his defense writings by Harold J. Laski, Max Weber, R. H. Tawney,

His principal attack is against a liberalisma<idat he associates with laissez faire. He also opposes, expediency | rather than on moral worth and hits at polls that establish majority opinion by declaring: “The first poll of public opinion taken in the history of Christianity was on Pilate's front porch, and it

BUT LAISSEZ FAIRE is no longer an American economic Moreover Msgr. Sheen gives little attention to the modifications of monopolistic capitalgoing on in the world since he condemnsa all political devices that do not have a spiritual or moral women | base. ion to'Win his case, The en He’ declares the weakening of personal responsibility has led men to lean on social and collective props; ‘social conscience takes the place ‘of «individual

Morality is imposed only by reaccording to his thesis, by belief in the guilt of man and the redemption. He is confident that if western civilization and the Soviet Union come to blows, the resulting disaster will clear the world of its materialistic bias and pave the way for a religious revival along

which

French artist Eugene Delacro

Faust."

FAUST IN ART—"'Faust Sees a Vision of M

argieris, ix (1798-1883), is one of a num

the print collection -of Herron Art Museum. In its theatrical treatment of the theme, graph resembles a |9th-Century stage set for the opera based on Goethe's

' a lithograph by the great ber of new acquisitions for

ANTI-SEMITISM ICA." By Carey McWilliams. Boston, Little, Brown, $2.75.

By HENRY BUTLER FOR A number of years Carey McWilliams has been a champion of minorities. What's more, he has pleaded unpopular causes in his home state, California, where social tensions frequently have been se: vere. He has written about the plight of migrant farm workers (“Factories in the Field”) doing with accuracy and thoroughness what John Steinbeck did dramatically in “The Grapes of Wrath.” . Two later books: Under the Skin” (1943) and “Prejudice” (1944) are credited with having influenced the report of the President's Committee on Civil Rights and, in the case of “Prejudice,” with having lessened California hysteria about Japa-nese-Americans, » » ” A SERIOUS STUDENT of social conflicts, Mr. McWilliams is

“Brothers

For if the causes of conflict are! known, we may be better able to ease tension before it reaches the point of violence. | Mr. McWilllams® latest book, “A Mask for Privilege: AntiSemitism in America” is a his-

The other crisis is more famil‘r; that of denouncing a rich oman who lets her property run “ywn because a certain race lives 1 it. Paul portrays her anony‘ously in a sermon, which seems roundabout way of getting ymething done. Miss Pyne, the rich culprit, is ventually reformed by Jeanie,

ho has the big, dressing-down Paul could aver has risen to such a power-

reech of the book.

al third-act climax, n » »

WHEN I READ novels about I always! onder why they have to put in|

reachers like Paul.

» much time battling wrch boards and superiors.

1e opposition always under their

wn roofs?

However, Nella Gardner White as written a fine novel inside ese limitations. She has avoid4 both the unctuous and the 1eatrical, and made “No Trumpet efore Him” a credible slice of

merican life. Social reform within

their | Books 2 Ia}

[Book on Crocheting, Knitting Due Soon

A third book by Elizabeth L.|er than as adherents of a faith. enon titled “The Baby Book of Knitting and Crochet,” will be pub- THE FIRST

Mathieson, crochet

| lished Apr. 26 by the World Pubthe|lishing Co.

Miss

nited States, including a more|previous books are

fuitable distribution of the fruits f labor, are often urged in reply

» the threat of communism,

But Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen, the and “The Complete 108t persuasive Catholic preacher 1 the country, declares that only general acceptance of the ortho-| ox tenets of Christianity can vercome the danger of collapse « a battle between the two great Best of Science Fiction,’

1aterial forces of today. Communism and monopolisti apitalism, The argument is cx

lained in his new book, “Com-

wnism and the Conscience o he West.”

~ ~ » THE DRIFT OF Western lands away from Christian orthodoxy, vhich has come with the rise ot iberal and scientific ideas since, by Msgr. §

Rousseau, is blam

| Knitting.”

New Book Due

pared a new C Treasury of

f

Also Available in. Our Neighborhood Stores

IL 3

ptly Filled

5 cent series.

Grofi Conklin, editor of

anthology, Science Fiction,”

DISASTER—John Hersey, whose "Hiroshima" tells graphically the story of the first great man-made - disaster of history. "Hiroshima" heads the March list of reprints in the Bantam

expert,

torical and analytical survey of what is perhaps the most vicious and dangerous of all recurrent prejudices, Anti-Semitism is vicious and dangerous not merely because. of its effect on the Jewish minority, but rather because it invariably accompanies the worst kind of crackpot, rabble-rousing attacks on civil rights. The KKK and the Columbians are too recent to be forgotten. Mr. McWilllans lists them among the more sinister and

threatened democracy here in the past generation. ” »

also that the that produced

” HE NOTES state of mind {them still exists. Rabble-rousers are still with us |drawing ample funds from mysterious sources, ready to prey

{soon as we enter bad times again In his historical survey, McWilliams notes that the Jews first achieved emancipation in the United States. What rights they had been grudgingly accorded in Europe were accompanied {by prejudice and hostility sur-

| viving from the Middle Ages.

But in America, prior to the {disastrous ‘reconstruction” period after the Civil War, Jews were treated primarily as people rath-

Mathieson's| summer of 1877, when Joseph

“The Com-|geljgman, New York banker, was plete Book of Crochet,” which refused accommodations at the has sold mote than 300,000 copies, Grand Union Hotel in Saratoga |according to Publishers’ Weekly, Springs, N. Y. That incident, Mr.| Book of McWilliams says, marks the be-| | ginning of a steadily growing

Soon

KILLER AND VICTIM—William Carder and Maria Marten,

AE ON

y EN

campaign of exclusion.

clear, Jews

be published Mar. 30 by Crown bitious Jews have turned to the Publishers.

_ professions and to what Mr. yj) pe the May selection df the]

professions have been, Mr. MeWilliams declares (and evidence from other sources him), frustrated by the: “quota” system in many colleges and universities.

proclaimed, has kept many brilliant Jews from giving their best services to the community. Mr,

powerful movements which have.

{on popular fears and anxieties as!

Mr |

recorded dramatic| instance of discrimination against|MOUsY little author in “Death of |Jews in America occurred in the,

For some reason not altogether have béen excluded “The from American heavy industry, ' has pre- which has acquired enormous pow“Aer and influence. With large comto petitive fields closed to them, am-

'Mask for Privilege: Anti-Semitism in U. S.' Lifts Secrets on Dangerous Prejudices

Arnold J. Toynbee and Willlam vs MASK FOR PRIVILEGE: McWilliams terms “marginal IN AMER. business”—the kind of business {that can flourish only on the out- | sk

irts of big enterprise. . ” ”

JEWS SEEKING careers in the

t supports

i That system, seldom officially

McWilliams cites Ludwig Lewisohn as an example. Certainly Mr. Lewisohn’s autobiographical “Upstream” is a powerful indictment of a form of injustice still persisting in many quarters. Anti-Semitism is always part of the ‘“keep-America-for-Ameri-cans” psychology, dominant in the hate-preaching groups. Quite apart from any specific prejudice, it belongs in the exclusion process whereby professions and crafts attempt to keep out competitors. (The residence require-

ment for unién musicians trans- doubtedly the best recent popular concerned with uncovering causes.| erring to California is an ex-| work on the subject. - It deserves ample). {wide reading.

Semitism would be through reopening the realm of opportunity. That would mean breaking the stranglehold of monopoly. thi: point Mr, McWilliams agrees with Thurman W. Arnold, the

plicants than ‘jobs, particularly

training, there will be tension. And that tension will inevitably take on an emotional coloring of prejudice.

hopeful about chances of reeducating people | prejudice. A good many persons cannot -do without the luxury of hates, contempts and feelings of imagined superiority.

soundest liberals have urged for many years: program designed to save and revive free enterprise, free competition. may be the only remedy for an increasingly sick society.

THE BEST WAY to fight anti-

In

1ust-busting theorist. As long as we have more ‘ap-

n fields requiring ability and

MR. McWILLIAMS isn't too infected with

The surest cure is what the

A comprehensive

It's a tall order, but it

Mr. McWilliams’ book is un-

Perry Writes Lonely Heart

"THE CASE OF THE LONELY HEIRESS." A. novel. By Erle Stanley Gardner. New York, Morrow, $2.50.

"DEATH OF AN AUTHOR." A novel. By John Rhode. New York, Dodd, Mead, $2.50.

By DONNA MIKELS THE prolific author, Erle Stanley Gardner, gets his lawyerdetective, Perry Mason, mixed up in a lonely hearts scheme in —__ . “The Case of the Lonely Heiress,”

Wolfe Book to

Thomas Wolfe's autobiographical

Be Filmed

“Look Homeward, Angel” novel, is going to appear as a

in Publishers’ Weekly. Mr. Nathan reports: “The late Maxwell Perkins assigned screen rights to the team of Ripley and Monter, who sent a camera crew to North Carolina for background

deal with Selznick. + “Matters stalled at this point, but ifow Paramount has taken over the Thomas Wolfe story plus the 20,000 feet of film al-

atest of his Case of . . .” "series. | It starts off with Mason and his secretary,

writing love let-| ters to a girl

| ‘ ‘along with a | Mr. Gardner high mortality | irate of the characters involved. As usual, the smash surprise {ending takes place in a courtroom {with Perry pulling out legal loop{holes faster .than rabbits from a magician’s hat. It's sure to be entertaining to ESG fans. » - # IT WOULDN'T seem right if each release of whodunits didn’t get someone killed off in merry olde England. This time it's a

lan Author.” The murder of the quiet little | writer and the search for his | murderer take the readers | through 200 pages of not too |sparkling reading. There's a trick murder gim{mick involved that will make an addition to any library of crime lore. Otherwise, “Death of an Author” is just average whodunit

Book of Month Choice

by Louis P. Lochner (Doubleday)

Book - of - the - Month Club. Mr.

fl (Lochner was of the Associated

[Press Berlin’ bureau from 1928 to oz.

| New Proust Study Due

| “The Two Worlds of Marcel {Proust,” by Harold March, a new | study of Proust, is announced for

1

%

~

| the two principal figures in "The Murder of Maria Marten," edited and arranged by Jeanne and Norman Mackenzie. The story of

© 4217 Gollage * 6829 E. Wash, the sensational murder in England in 1828 is fold in the actual

| words of one J. Curtis, contemporary reporter for the London

Times, with an epilogue added by the editors (New York, gellagrini & Cudahy, $3.75).

§ spring publication by the Univer-

Your Sym pathy in the Most Understandable Way

% The ALLIED FLORISTS Assn.

of Indianapolis

|is slated to produce and direct.”

|

ready shot, and William Wyler

New Book Written

ack FROM WAR—

And Frank

“TEMPER THE WIND." A novel.

id "SEND FOR MISS CORA" Al

Buell, Wyo., with the idea that he can

‘| pez, taught him the Ketchell shift and other bright steps while in the Navy.

sports writer, to be his manager. Danny doesn’t know much about boxing and Ruth Cramer, Shandy’s girl, doesn’t approve of a ¢ | fighting career, but Shandy thinks i |it will get him enough dough to i (buy a garage and marry Ruth. 5 td =

Fall.” |

film, according to Paul 8. Nathan

and then arranged a releasing

Cowboy Tale Is Amusing

By Clyde Brion Davis. Philadelphia, Lippincott, $2.75.

By Charley Robertson. New York, Reynal & HitchcockHarcourt, $3.

IN “TEMPER THE WIND”

become a prize fighter. A lightweight boxer, Pete Lo-

Shandy gets Danny Shaw,

THE SMALL-TOWN characters around Shandy are stumblebums. Shandy’s biggest match with Trexler is an amusing affair far different from anything in Bud Shulberg’s “The Harder They

“I didn’t hear you say anything about going after Trexler's fat| between rounds,” says Shandy to Danny. “If I thought you needed to be told anything so obvious I never would have agreed to manage you,” says Danny. t

LATER IT TURNS out our Shanty Boat Days Depicted In ‘Tammy Out of Time'

Danny placed a bet against his own man. “I hold that & man’s a complete simpleton who bets! with his sympathies,” explains “TAMMY OUT OF TIME" A accelerated. Grandpa and Tam. Danny. “My sympathies were Ta By Cid Ricketts Sumner Imy rescued Pete, a’ victim of the entirely with you, but I didn’t be- 8 y Bobbs.Merrill Co. Wreck, from drowning. They took Indianapolis. Bobbs-Merrill Co. pm ‘to the Ellen B., warmed him, $2.75. . fed him and nursed him back to By EMMA RIVERS MILNER ~ [health. TWO WELL-DEFINED

lieve you had experience enough to meet a tough guy like Trexler.” THEMES vie with one another for the reader’s interest in “Tam-

While Mr. Davis makes his characters™ amusing, he doesn’t my Out of Time.” Cid - Ricketts Sumner, the

make fun of them. author, uses a pleasing device to

Ld ” » A YOUNG FELLOW of 17, accomplish this end. She permits 17-year-old Tam-

working on a tobacco plantation in Kentucky, has a fairly hard time getting himself adjusted to adult ways, especially when his father has been kiled by night riders and he is trying to trace/my to serve ag a mirror to reflect contemporary life in Mississippi. Through the girl's eyes and through the medium of her quaint speech, the reader gets the picture of today.

the killer. In “Send for Miss Cora,” Charley Robertson, who grew up in the locale he writes about, gives a warm picture of Lennie Bogard, who is trying to make| gimyjtaneously, the “mirror” creates a steady flow of incidents on her own account. Some are extremely amusing causing the reader to laugh aloud and others are quite full of pathos. But all

up his mind about Deedy Calhoun, the boss’ daughter. bespeak Tammy's unusual charm. » » »

* Miss Cora is the housekeeper at the Calhoun place, living there with her daughter Jessie, and everybody depends on her. She knows all the secrets and is in ; turn disturbed by them and MRS. SUMNER will’ be’ re: membered as having written “Quality,” a novel dealing with the problem of race, brought out last year. The Bobbs-Merrill Co. published both books.

eager to leave. Tammy grew up’ on the Ellen

» tJ » DEEDY VISITS Lennie while B., a shanty boat, in the Mississippi River. With little aid

he is “firing” tobacco leaves in the big barn and tries to get him to marry her. But Lennie is a reluctant lover. All threads of but her own high heart, she contrived a home on the boat for) herself and her grandfather. “Grandpa” is drawn as an

the tale are well woven together in an entertaining novel, true to the life described. H. H. original character, a powerful though uneducated preacher. He is entirely sincere and yet has no qualms about running a moonshine still. He made illicit liquor, he explained to Tammy, to get money for her future education. With the news of a nearby

PLAYING SCHOOL—One of Eloise Wilkin's drawings for Edith Osswald's "Come Play House" shows the diminutive heroine making like a' schoolmarm. "Come Play House" is one of Simon & Schuster's latest Little Golden Books for children [25 cents each),

IN THE PROCESS, Tammy fell in love with Pete, He basked in her sympathy as he described the frustration and disappoint. ment suffered since his return from the war. He marveled that such. wisdom should fall from the lips of one 80 young as she. Finally depart. ing, he insisted that Tammy and Grandpa must get in touch with him if they should need him. That is how it happened that when “the law caught up with Grandpa” Tammy and her pet nanny goat arrived at Pete's ‘home, Brenton Hall, an estats nt atchez, just as the family was preparing for the annual pilgrimage of visitors. ‘There, the barefoot, downright girl creates much consternation. And she misses nothing in the aristocratic household—the petty meanness, the jealousies, nor the kindness and hospitality. When she isn’t blundering, she is tri umphing over some very difficult situation. She crosses lances with the beautiful Barbara, “Petes girl,” and altogether has a tumultuous "and bewildering ex perience.

#" Ed » WHAT EVENTUATES between Tammy and Pete, only Mrs. Sumner adequately can tell Now and then, s speeches and her thought processes suggest the novels of the Kentucky backwoods written by the late Elizabeth Maddox Rob erts. And the story's other worldly aspect at times is remi jairplane crash, the leisurely |niscent of Robert Nathan and his tempo of shanty boat days was|near-phantasies.

Job-Objective Courses

The following courses are designed to give the basic preparation for the specific services indicated by their respective titles: : ‘ ;

MUTT—""Spoodles," pup of spaniel-poodle descent and hero of “Spoodles: The Puppy Who

Learned," by Irma Simonton Black with pictures by Johnny | Whistle. The child's book is a

By IU Instructor

Della Street, «The Art of Writing Fiction,” R. Scott, Inc. ($1.25). by Mary B. Orvis, assistant pro-| ! . Accounting, Senior Accounting, Junior Executive, they’ve never/fessor at the Indianapolis Center| seen, and goes of Indiana University’s Extension |

Division, will be published Mar. 29 by Prentice-Hall.

Miss Orvis, swhose forthcoming

book was discussed in The Times

|Book Page last Dec. 27, is concerned in the volume with ap-

preciative and creative interest in fiction.

Tchaikovsky in Novel

by Klaus Mann, son of Thomas

|

| |

|'Freedom and Order

| “Freedom and Order,” a selection of speeches by Britain's for-

mer foreign minister,

from 1939 to 1946.

Peter Ilitch Tchaikovsky is the central character of a new novel

Mann. Entitled “Pathetic Symphony,” the book will be published {Mar. 25 by Allen, Towne & Heath.

Eden, will be published next sum- | {mer by Houghton Mifflin Co. The| period covered by the speeches is |.

recent publication of William : Private Secretarial, Executive Secretarial, Junior

New Book on Rummy Stenographic, Complete Commerce. This is the “OKLAHOMA: The Wild Rum-, my Game,” by Oswald Jacoby, {is announced for April publication by Henry Holt & Co. The, book explains “every important aspect of play” in the “wildest| rummy game of them all,” ac-| cording to the publisher. i

Indiana Business College

of Indianapolis. The others are at Marion, Muncie, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond, and Vincennes—all accredited for G.I. Training. Alumni enjoy free personal placement service through the ten schools.

Call personally, if convenient. Otherwise, for Bulletin, describing courses and quoting tuition fees, phone or write the I. B. C. nearest you, or Fred W. Case, Principal.

Central Business College

Indiana Business College Building 802 N. Meriidan (St. Clair Entrance) Lincoln 8337

i | Tip on Show Business | “Your Career in Show Business,” by Paul Denis, a new, analysis of opportunities in the |

entire entertainment field, will be published Apr. 5 by E. P. Dutton & Co.

Which rrr

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

“The Goebbels Diaries,” edited! 4 Religious Center With al

A ; i Civie Circumference |

|

11 A. M.

Dr. E. Burdette Backus Presents the Last of a Series of Addresses on GREAT BOOKS Arnold J. Toynbee's “A Study of History”

9:15 A. M. SUN.—-WFBM “The Genie of the Jug”

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