Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 February 1949 — Page 8
rr
| Empha
"DUKE." A novel. By Hal Ellson.
4 Harcourt, Brace, $3.
“TENDER MERCY." Creative Age, $3.
The first, Hal Ellson’s “Duk
documenta
And the third, “Tender Mercy,” by Lenard Kaufman, who won acclaim with “The Lower Part of the Sky,” poses a very special] kind of moral problem: What are a devoted, responsible and Kindly married couple to do with an idiot son—chranologically a man, but psychologically a human vegetable?
» ~ » ~ NONE OF THE three books can be recommended to readers who seek mere diversion, though Mr, Weidman’'s book probably is the most entertaining, despite
chronicle of a 15-year-old Harlem gang-leader, as told by Duke himself. Mr, Ellson bases his story on notes; ” he has taken in years of work Mr. Ellson 5g a recreational therapist helping delinquents, «80 Duke is a composite charac-
9
only part of Duke's trouble. True, Spanish girl he loved—the
Besides pay, he collects a small supply of the weed for himself, It helps him forget sadness Duke is president of the Mighty Counts, a destructive and some-
minds of young delinquents. Duke has sickening fears, even halluci-
. Moral Problems :mphasized in Three | Important New Novels
“series of
| Ballard and, their hopelessly deAaron
.| wom a n,
Aaron when.
AI Ti FF SINT
New York, Scribner's, $2.75.
“ “THE PRICE IS RIGHT." A novel. By-Jerome Weidman. New York,| : A novel. By Lenard Kaufman, New York,
By HENRY BUTLER THREE important new novels deal with social and moral prob-
e,” is less a novel than a vivid
-juvenile delinquency. } The second, “The Price Is Right,” a new novel by Jerome Weidman, is a study of the morality or immorality of success.
series of personalities — some good, some not so good, but most of them infected with ambitious greed. Mr. Weidman's Henry Cade, who has a good syndicate job, can’t forgive his boss for having married Henry's fiancee while Henry was serving overseas. The boss, Chester Vinnaver, was, Henry thinks bitterly, the nearest male who could provide mink coats for Luise. Henry's secretary, Irene Med-
wick, loves him and naturally de-|
plores the interest he still unwittingly shows in Luise. And
when Henry, through chance con-|
nection with a small-town columnist who suddenly wins national recognition, sees his opportunity to get revenge on Vinnaver and Luise, Irene becomes alarmed. . ” ~ WITH A NEW itch to become a big shot, Henry signs a contract with the columnist. He drives a hard bargain with Vinnaver because Vinnaver's fabulously successful and unscrupulous - competitor Hallock Ruyper also wants the columnist. From then on, experience is a fronic disasters for Henry. Each time he thinks he’s being clever, his plans miscarry. After the final dreadful debacle, following a sequence as closely knit and surprising as something in an early Alfred Hitchcock film, Henry realizes bitterly the emptiness of pursuing success. He has antagonized friends. The only person whose loyalty he can still depend on is Irene. Mr. Weidman has an ear for dialog and a keen eye for pretensions. He makes one especially memorable point when he has Henry momentarily reflect on the waste of talent in the battle for profits. The same brains, Henry thinks, “could make deserts bloom, diseases vanish, war a hideous memory." . » » “TENDER MERCY” is a pretty rugged story of Sam and Alice
fective 21-year-old son, Under unusual ¢ 1’ r c umstanceés they find Elizabeth Powell, a kind-hearted, capable young who agrees to live with them and take care of
prosperous Sam offers: to y hospital bills for Elizabeth's husband, Rudy.
Mr. Kaufman
»
Aaron tikes to Elizabeth, becomes totally dependent on her and refuses -to eat or sleep or
keep quiet if she's not around. When Rudy Powell, his TB.arrested, returns from the hospi-
nations associated with guilt and frustration. The he uses to case his mental paif eventually’ lead him to mpurder. . Reading Duke's own story—
see more clearly the “why” of delinquency. It's a sickness of
heart trouble, Mr. Ellison's grim and powerful book will help you understand | things you may find shocking in| newspaper stories even Here in| Indianapolis. : » . [ a J “THE PRICE. 18 Right,” Mr. Weidman’s study of a battle for prestige and profit between New. York news syndicates, strikes me as better than some other recent novels in much the same field. With admirable gifts for satirical writing, Mr... Weidman Sbrings to 1ffe Ir his pagés a
tal, he come to shdre Elizabeth's room at the Ballards. With. a blackmailer’'s Rudy “immediately sees
mind, his
well documented, according to chance. If Elizabeth is indispens- good Mr. Ellson's preface—you can [Able tothe Ballard household, nervy.—R.W.M.
how much will 8am pay Rudy not to take her away? So on money
privation, like TB or rheumatic insolently demanded from Sam, [Rudy plays the horses and makes
himself a little big-shot in the small Virginia city’s gambling crowd.
. » ” . IN THREE months, Rudy uses |
up $10,000, and In a big, climactic scene, istied with nothing Tess than own-
lership of Sam’s newspaper.
A desperate situation demands a desperate remedy. But it's
Mr. Kaufman writes with econ-
‘|vance that: Tarawa was a mi
Alice, not Sam, who makes the a |decision. |
E
4
|
| |
Rare Chinese Flowe
r Print
2
Shown
A rare Chinese print is this one of wind-blown flowers, one of 80 in the noted "Mustard Seed Garden" series, a complete set of which—is—imHerron Art Museum's permanent collection. The print shown here currently is on display in the museum, together with other examples of Chinese and Japanese flower prints, :
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES: Here ol |
In New Book
| Holland M. Smith. New York, i Scrioner, $3. a | “Today I live in a little white| !house by the side of the road, | strive to be a friend to my fellow man, and raise flowers, vege-, tables and grandchildren.” f
Thus ends “Coral and Brass,” It a “light tale.” It first appeared Perhaps its brevity is one reason
the war memoirs of Gen. Holland|!? Cosmopolitan as a novelette|for this. None of the characters, World of political action presents
|
M. (Howlin’ Mad) Smith, mander of fleet Marine forces in the Pacific. Well, maybe so. Maybe he’s not ‘howlin’ mad any more, but I'm inclined to doubt it, judging from the preceding pages of vituperation heaped upon the almost every non-Marine he came in contact with.
- . ~ HE'S MAD at: Gen. Douglas MacArthur for not giving the Marines. any publicity; Admiral Kelly Turner for not giving the Marines amtracks; Admiral Ches-
com-|
v
'Howlin' Mad’ Evelyn Waugh's Newest Satire
Seems to Lack Usual Bite
CORAL AND BRASS." By Gen. "§COTT.KING'S MODERN EU. nothing but Latin because he be-
ROPE." A novel. By Evelyn’ Waugh. Boston, Little, Brown, $2.
“Scott-King's Modern Europe”,
is not one of Evelyn Waugh’'s satire than we have been accus-|
major works. He himself calls|
under. the tile of “A Sojourn in Neutralia.”
The latter is a Balkan totalitarian state to which Scott-King, an English public school Latin teacher, is invited to honor an obscure poet, Bellorius. Here is the usual Waugh situation, a man utterly out of place, the dupe of numerous treacheries, aimlessly buffeted about by people with no feeling whatsoever. Scott-King soon finds that the whole celebration for his beloved 17th century poet is a fraud, Neutralia has tricked him and his
ter Nimitz for riding to fame on Marine victories; Lieut. Gen. Robert Richardson Jr. for opposing {his removal of Gen. Ralph’ Smith from command of the vision at Saipan.
| When he isn't being mad at
| someone Gen. Smith is being right | about something. He knew in adtake; Tinian would be easy; the Japs had left Kiska; Iwo Jima would be hell, Japan would never be invaded. Occasionally Gen. Smith tires of praising himself ‘and - inserts some kind words about him by his aide, who no doubt is just as objective on the subject of Gen.
ee W # 8 . IF YOU can pul up with some of the most annoying conceit that has come out of this wur you may enjoy Gen. Smith's account of his fight to build up an amphibious Marine force and the succcess it achieved in island warfare. Like Gen. Patton his brilliance as a
arrogance and made him one of our most valuable assets in the Pacific. | Just how valuable this diatribe] {is remains for military analysts to judge. “Coral and Brass” is a title for it -— brittle and,
NN
War of 1812 History Told
"THE WAR OF 1812." By Fran- | cis Beirne. New York, Dutton,
$5. Ma.
| | |
ny a bright page of history
Jets Bam know he'll be sat-/has heen made in the seven ma-|
jor ~wars- the United. States. has| fought but few of them occurred in the War of 1812. It, was a war that need not have happened if communications| d been faster. The battle of| New Orleans never would have]
“ ¢ :
27th Di-{
Smith as the general is himself. |
soldier outweighed his incredible|
companions into posing before a {memorial of a treacherous purge {carried out by the ruling party 110 years ago. »
” »
lieves “it would be very wicked indeed to do any thing to fit a boy for the
~ s ~
THERE IS far less bite to this
tomed to except from Mr. Waugh.
with the exception of Scott-King, are developed at any length. They are merely suggestions. ’ There is Miss Bombaum the col-
ister, all of whom present excellent possibilities. But they disappear before we come to know them. Scott-King himself is something of a departure. Like most Waugh
thing which Mr. Waugh loves and therefore has none of the absurdity of William Boot in “Scoop” or Basil Seal in “Black Mischief.” {Lacking an extremely absurd per-
comic figure he should be. - ~
NONETHELESS he dedicates a.
. I THINK another reason Mr.
modern world,” |
a = a -
#
SATURDAY, FEB. 19, 104%
10 PROGRAMS
’
linked -by- ~adio. airplane, atomic formulae and countless other nev’ tools — and weapons — has been welded into “one world.” In bewildering contrast is man’s world of human relations. Fierce competitions rage, changes are slow, races struggle, ancient prej|udices move powerfully, and the
what social scientists often regard as a humiliating picture. Fourteen such scientists have {joined in a symposium titled
|
umnist, Miss Sveningen the ath-|‘‘Most of the World,” which points| lete and Dr. Fe, propaganda min-/up the immense problems facing) men.
|{laya and Indonesia, the Near East and all of mainland Latin-
heroes he is passive, but he is/America except three countries) ‘day Apr. 7.. Set in a small also good. He stands for some- USUally considered as 100 per cent| Florida town, the
{White in racial type—Argentina, {Uruguay and Costa Rica. | The populations of these coun-
{tries are non-European for the the pub lisher.............
most part. They are the nations
sonality Scott-King cannot be the “now winning their freedom from Van Paassen Tell
|potitical or economic domination,”
| teditor Ralph W. Linton, Yale Uni. Story of Jesus versity anthropologist, explains. | statue to Bellorius and when it Waugh's sword edge is blunted! Furthermore, they do not be- nonfiction work by Pierre van |
is unveiled it turns out to be an|lies in the -positive approach to long on “either side of the iron junfinished statue designed for a life he has adopted since joining curtain. Capitalism and commu-
fraudulent merchant.
| Scott-King is then left by the novels he was utferly destructive ism are equally foreign
[the Catholic Church. In his early
litarian-
nism, democracy and tota to these
{government to get home as best of all middle-class values and of-|nations, and any apparent conver-
|he can and he has the devil's own [time doing so, When he finally gets back to |Granchester, his school, he makes |no mention of his trip, but he re-
|afirms his intention to teach
‘Gay. + Free’ A
|
fered nothing in their stead.
Now, “there are, and although King's Modern Europe” is
Key to Mind
“BASIC PRINCIPLES OF PSY. CHOANALYSIS." By Dr. A. A,
{Brill New. edition, New. York,
Doubleday, $3.45,
| | |
Maggie-Owen Wadeltor, Indianapolis author, writes. about | 28 ‘years of experience as an [bétween the wish and the symp-
Army officer's wife in “Gay, Wild and Free," a new book of | reminiscences published yesterday by Bobbs-Merrill ($3).
*
- nations.”
ow
roe
analysis.” by Dr. A. A. Brill is
states his thesis in a postscript: “All unconscious - mentation is motivated fundamentally by the wish.” ' ! Psychoanalysis, as Dr. Brill explains it, consists of finding out | what is bothering The patient and |
[causing the neurotic or psychotic Macmillan "Co., will be in In-|
symptoms that need treatment. | Once the fundamental wish is] laid bare, so to speak, the patient |
understands the relationship
|
toms and theoretically is able to]
make an adjustment. ~ - ~ THE WISH, Dr. Brill avers, is buried deep in the “unconscious!
There were no limits to his satire.
easant reading, it Js disappoint-|
“Basic Principles of Psycho- |,
tsion to any of them will be only a transitory episode in the slow unfolding of their own deeply rooted civilizations,” ments.
| » ss » IT IS dificult to accept this verdict, or to link Chile and China, for instance, in world perspective.
do just this, however, by a series of detailed analyses or racial, cultural, historical, educational, political, religious, geographical, climatic and physical studies of each of the 10 mafor areas involved rand their component peoples and nations. :
Opinions are expressed freely| the various authors, whose
scholarly thoroughness at times
{ + . {essentially a primer on the func- tends to enumerate more dificul- Pe tions of the unconscious. Dr, Brill ties than
solutions. Most are unanimous in emphasizing that it is man, not nature, who mast be conquered, guided and developed.
Macmillan Editor To Read Manuscripts
Cecil Scott, an editor of the]
dianapolis Mar. 1 to Mar. 4 to confer with Indiana authors who have full - length manuscripts ready for examination. Mr. Scott, who will stay at the
Lincoln Hotel, will look at man-|
uscripts in all fields, fiction and nonfiction, except textbooks, juveniles and poetry, according to! the publishing firm. .
THEIR WORK fs a 917-page| . és won the
|study of Africa, Asia, India, Ma: |
Mr. Linton. com-|
“Most of the World” sets out to
THIS EVENING &* n pea ——— Cre = ie a CBs wiK 107 "am | on" TM a b:00 PM rs See Deus (aie ~ Horopollin Opera [Fun With Dunn. [Heller's Sports Easy Dows ns . Fibpeitin Spor he w wtf - . Leh” ye i-Stat hllk aw fe. Toa and Crumpet Back and Listen “Displaced Persons (Eddie LaMar Orch, oe of the Enquirer Jack Smith Co oo Harlin Bros. Dance Parade Midwesters Hayride : sks Wallen Wusic for Dining |Safurday Jamboree Frank Edwards ~ Rep. Jacobs Speaks | News Vic Damene {DRE Jurgens Pu Soon Weed Sar Thaler (Staring Kay Star (Sumsal and Vina |Fwood Star_Vhowr_ Truth or Consequences Famous Jury Trials Music for Saturday Tru or Consequences | Narman Wes. Rosettes Dural fakes Wamber | Dowel Day Wail Behiags |" owen day Parade (Grand Ola Mayloll Hoedown |News Grand —OT Opry Country Wit ho . - Ory v " », Good Maske Howr - - - Gone Kelly Alien Jeffries News—Music News—Deler Groal Easy on Record . Morton Downey Dance Band - Morfon Downey “0 Ivancing Party ol Lullaby In Rhythw Dance Orchestra Kelly Kiubhouse " ._» le Easy on Rocod |Nowi—Sporisman | Varlely How (Sign Of Nows—Moon River iE NSC Orchestre . Moon River . Lonnie Herman Quint. °° Platter Time . oo. The Smoothles—Nows! °° . ” n . Train Man (Award Winner oO th Ai For One World {ii Tod "MOST OF THE WORLD." A’ 10aqQay | symposium. Edited by Ralph W.| | TWENTY QUESTIONS—Radio Linton. New York, Columbia | version of popular parlor game University Press, $5.50. - with Peggy Wood as guest panel. Man's physical’ world, suddenly nt IBC 3 hn HEX
TER—Viveca Lindfors, cover girl {the current issue of “Life” maga|zine, introduces Mercedes Mec- | | Cambridge. , .~. WIRE-WLW 7 ! lp. m. | ’ BASKETBALL GAME — Indilana plays at Purdue. . .. WIBO {7:30 p. m, #" LITTIE HERMAN — Comedy- | mystery starring Bill Quinn titled { | “Blood of India.” ., . WISH 8 'p. m. " | BASKETBALL GAME — West-
jern Reserve plays at Butler. , , , WXLW (FM) 8 p. m. f
Gide Book Announced | The first authorized translation |of Andre Gide's personal me ories concerning Oscar Wilde will | be published Mar. 15 by the Philo|sophical Library. Written at the turn of the century, Gide's syme { pathetic sketches will be pre|sented under the title “Oscar gro world, according to Wilde.”
Bucklin Man, author of the 1943 novel ‘The Darker BrothGeorge Washington Carver Award for his “new novel, "Without Magno-
+lias," to be published by Double-
forthcoming novel presents a panorama of { the Ne
ALA
5
"UNFA
‘Why Jesus Died” a new
Paassen, author of “Days of Our BS Years,” will be published May 9 + by the Dial Press. According to the publisher, Mr. van Paassen attempts to tell ithe Jesus story as it actually, | happened. . .
Shaw Autobiography Bernard Shaw's long-awaited |unconven tional autobiography now is definitely scheduled for| |Mead under. the title “Sixteen|{p Self Sketches.” The book will contain 24 pages of photographs.
|
241 Mass. Ave. * City-wide delivery.
Flowers tele graphed, cabled ond sent by eir ex-
Morgan Book Due
“The Great Pierpont Morgan,” a new estimate of the legendary! & financier by Frederick Lewis) LX Allen, author of “Only Yester-|! day” and other best-sellers, will !§ published in March by arper’s. '
Fifth of a Series of Sermons on
"RELIGION ‘ROUND THE WORLD" By Dr. E Burdette Backus
"AMERICAN CULTS”
11 A. M. SUNDAY
=
cE fr | Radio—Sun, 9:15 A. M—WFBM A Religious Center with | "The Mind of Man Grows Broader” A Civic Circumference .
aut sous UNITARIAN cuvrcn
=" 1453 N. Alabama St.
lce-( Stag
LE ——————————————— |been fought. ; ov | (* eg 0 — Cer omy, distinction and vividness. He, The ug. CHI6F reasons for the 7° ' —— (and must be tracked down by. No Place To Hide - . - imal 1 ER Ee, a So Sigr has chosen an exceedingly UE yur were the Orders in Coun- Japs Overwork means of clues offered through, Bantam Books next Wednes- . Striped Animal roy Boa 42 Moi Ti, a cit of Great Britain and impress-| r; , .+. |free association, or uninhibited) day Will publish a ‘half million s— — IAEA IAT INIC BAER! ee dea admirably and tact-'ynent of American sailors. The Their Culture discussion of unconscious| Print copies of Dr. David pop oamwar 2 Type of ALT PCL OSIEIS ITERPL | , fully. first was rescinded two days be- "POPCORN ON THE Gl «thoughts. The dream is the most | Brhdley's “No Place to Hide," | 1 Depicted cabbage by ALT NEX Le fore war ‘was declared by the, . NZA."| ey {his widely read repoft on the! ct night at t Civilization Study [United States. Impressment By Lucy Heridon Crockett. mentation ang its. intaricios| dangers of atomic radiation animal 3 Say © Fabi Vanguard Press will issue in Wasn't mentioned-.ih Madison's) New York, Sloane, $3.50. therefore furnishes the Fajortty| Cased on Bikini findings. | OSes 4 rool tor IQ ar the fall an appraisal of American Diessage to Congress. The J Lo lof clues Yi re A substance niton AIS ID]! Jascha H civilization in this century chief} na | The Japanese ‘people deserve : {| LISTEN TO | 11 Lingo 5 Cognizance R10 EAGIAIRIRIE [TS EAST i 3 Y| THE DETAILS of thi - < evening as revealed in its newspapers; Tn Ans has and are getting the friendship The book. Dr. Brill admits MUSICAL MANHUNT 13 Click beetle _ 6 Inclination Sf: i LIE IALTIRIS A . magn com sve” apa 1 LOUIE WAT co eration of 1.8 cur. [ry hel on tate an) Trou ie RT {IBM — bove all, its advertising. - me Sh ; y . ’ hy . A § 8 ——— > orchestra : fusely A atten pH ne Fro- is associate editor of the Balti- Ing forces, a woman observer re- might be called an American] =. WIBC “i 7 JIM Scottish animal 27 Fillip ' 43 Brazilian p. m. next tentative title of “Guide to Chaos.” ni “ da tall ports, but progress would be adaptation of Freud's theories, ’ + “sheepfold 9 Abound 28 Story macaw : Robert the book is by Prof. Herbert E. saw 8 ho-ah -a-half-year ar faster If the Japanese would put Which were'propounded and tested | Eyery Sunday 1:30 fo 2:00 P, M, | !8Snaky fish 10 Before 32 Fantasy , 45 Was borne will appear McLuhan ‘of the University of home i” mericans ma DE oss faith in their culture. | ~in a European. setting. Dr. Brill The Biggest Locol Prize 20 Pedal digit 12 Soak flax 33 Domestic slave 46 Greek letter tens series Toronto. y every possible mistake on . . uses . American case histories to 9gest Local Frix | 21 Edge 13 Dutch city 36 Camper's 47 Device used Murat. M land and winning some brilliant] Lucy Herndon Crockett makes Show in ‘Indiane 7 i ‘victories on the Fen ‘a reversal this obser: “ fllustrate his points. Sponsored b 22 Sun god 16 Daybreak folding bed in golf With the 8) of Wht had Deen expected tne Cos a poo O “Basic Principles of Pychoan- | HOME APPLIANCE 00 [ 230Pers (obs (comb. form) ITBiblical 48 Part of » ton to the This war also Sx pcre: m the Ginza,” .a book based on her lysis” was first published in 1921 * | 24 Misplaced 19 Column mountain circle My coll stand on the south bank of a XPeriences with the American and revised by Dr. Brill for this 380. N Stinols 26Nuisance ~~ 2] Stout cord 40 Prevaricator g 50 Auricle Ice-O-Ram river dividing the U. 8. from Red Cross in post-war.Japan. .|edition. Dr. Brill died in 1948 and SIMMONS | 20 Paid notice § 24 Tardy. 41 Middle 52 Registered dally stor} By Elsie, the Bordem Cow Canada and permit regulars on! In a generally sympathetic/0me few minor revisions of thell Furniture & Appliance Co. | 30 Girl's name . - 25 It can eject an 42 On account nurse (aby the show's : . the other side to be cut to pieces book about the Japanese in de- Manuscript were made by Dr. | 55 W. 34th | 31 Ripped offensive — (ab) 34 Mother ~. much In. de pre er yh Brittet: “The militia was feat, Miss Crockett —s-a-y othe EDD R. Lehrman. | : Hindian - the amatey You'll want to try (nog, Feduired 10 Jave tie country, Japanese PULVE ne Loui biite Ling || e————————— a T— 45 Love god or ee re tg] Borden's Cherry Pecan!) | also saw New England mer- tradition “the two most tire-| a B | 36 Sleeveless ! {chants and -traders sell supplies somely overworked words in edu- merit as « hl [to the British-_throughout the cated Nipponese society. . . . A JOB-OB.ECTIVE COURSES | 30 Sat for and Se S war, even when their coasts were visitor gets the § | . and grace itor gets the impression that ay an vening Sessions b ro manganese (Png raided. = burned York (Nee ain't been a truly original Offices open 8:30 to 4:30 Monday through Friday, 39 Correlative of eapecially 7 ork thought in Japan for five hundred | until noon Saturday, and Monday and Thursday eve- either . (now Toronto) and the British years. . , . Long-term students i ol Audienc retaliated by burning ‘Washing- of the Orient, Old Japan hands Ringe Jor, inquirysand registration, gh whew Guines Ice-O-Ram ton. Atrocities were com * : ( High school graduates, veterans and ex-college studénts |the Indian allies of the British, ye Ia Pr tiBoation aives| appreciate the definite, spegific, effectiye courses offered $1 Satie bird So mn | Americans retalisted in kind. such sweeping criticism by . . hese} hiao | ne Pek feosny of the school’s Free Place- * 1 but the Ic IF THE war didn't produce M¢'® transient occupationer. But * y 47 Pope's triple’ 1 rw Hany. victories, it . made "heroes, | believe thie anap Judgment o “yy Indiana Business College crown atiiiith SAY. erry and MacDonough emerged! eneral impression the of Indianapolis, The others are at n, Muncie, 49 Fish eggs , “> las’ heroes in lake warfare. © A JAPAnese. are now making - Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, 51 Dedicated drawing Pt It ; { $8 Cherry ice cream, with |young cblonel named Winfield |their Western visitors, and byl. Richmond and Vihcennes—Ora E. Butz, President, All | 53 Fleet Symphony pecons added for extra good- Scott distinguished himself, .. Which they will probably have te “fully approved for G.I. Training. For bulletin giving 55 Goddess of ext Batu ness! Just the thing to brighten Most of the land commanders "tard in American public complete information, contact the school you wish to ! ce years February dinners and parties. were inetfditive holdovers from OPinion.” : ! attend, or Fred W. Case, Principal. ' . ~~ | 58 Provide with Bi, ta’ a Rm ’ @ Revolutign. Only 1 The writer ol = . . HL Thust's & Borden decler near. (ut, Tetouan, Only late in thei The writer noted thai the Japa Central Business College Joos In next Baltimore and New Orle {help themsel : Indiana Business College Building : VERTICAL in, Mozart’ C ad, N ans did help themselves—more than most ‘ h the young men get into action other Asiatic countries and even 80% N. Meridian (St. Clair Entrance) - LIL 8337 { Mineral Prokofieff win, some Eur i cor oe : / d
