Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1949 — Page 8

THE INDIARAPOLE TIMES

rhist Tom

By EMERSON PRICE, Book

ovelist, and 1 suspect that

“by high ‘adventure. In the more superficial sense, | the story fs one of bull fighting

emerge from this book. But it also reiets a much larger “life.”

hint of His contention that bull[is

Ee sectaci.n he mowing

with sport and

the art confuses ton

Accomp lished Talents - To the Writing Field |

PB Rosamond Marshall: Now York, Prentice-

"THE BRAVE BULLS." A novel. CELESTE A novel: Hall, $2. 75. (Quen Any

IE Roc well kndwn as an accomplished artist, n

will win for him. a large group of discriminating readers. It seems to me a work that will meet the most exacting literary taste, as it

5 that © ¥ince 1 left Paris and exico, and if you are a » g nu to that-—-shall we say Yvette. art?—you will no longer look upon|. Bo you see he's been to Paris

Tend 1 as confounding ‘when you and you understand phase of |~-o00ps!—1 mean the girls, for|

with

ILE the adtior a at pains|ma “explain the emotional signifi With ly in his he the bull ring, there is a securely in h art, that

but an POW:

ts also that actuality Which da

TIER)

pe

J ah

CRIT

By, Tom Lea. Boston; Lita, F

x

Editor, the Cleveland ob ER now. £4 his first novel, “The Brave Bulls,”

haven't seen anyone s 80 lovely as

diately that he is a devil with the ladies

obviously they were not ladies, and he never once considered e with any of them. But| eleste’'s lovely image

ecisely what he has in mind SA

Tagine his shoeked. surprise when he discovers that she is the

ughter-of -a—gambling-woman; a woman once ‘a Barbary Coast Queen. Heaven help us, what

blood a revulsion—or & mors

if ” i, | even the most - ab-

L : E

“ “are

: essentially creations em, To To allow man to partici pate in\God 5, designs at one atep,

in ‘which

tion his own ‘bravery unt has fallen in love with a beautiful woman whose morals © the: Jondes sees clearly, are not n It is gy a that Luis Knows what it is to he afraid; it is then that he behaves badly in the bull nog. ter, his manager, ‘for

Don Alberto broke ini-

rom the anguish of V-land ends up with a dreadful hog them. Sitting safely in a hangover a

5 et tins only one facet of an|gonthi-.,

bas we mw uw suns Novel of Chicago's Wealthy in 80's and 90's

close examination. hy informing you. that poor Ce- | cruelty are exam-i jects didn’t know about

> : with the care, s0 mama's horrid ‘occupation. She uz, dona with | EERE out apout it and cries and|"PRAIRIE AVENUE" A novel. By

Lads does nOtmymninook

ind | ovel, “The Case of Mr. Crump,” |according, to Farrar; Straus, the

Yisold over a million copies.

would-his- father say to such-an impossible mar e? Why “it would break his father's heart. As a matter of fact, it- breaks Bart's heart. He tries to mend! ’ — it by getting drunk with a pret-| Wilk art] a h. ‘ty girl-not a nice one, ¢ William Hogarth, great 18%

d the stern resolu-

View of. 17 27 London Theater Crowd

x | geroiis and least known bodies of [water is the subject of “The Coral {Sea.” The author is Australian-|; born Alan Villiers, who has sailed |

h ’ | I

FHA

Aan

Coral Son

Villiers. 3-New York, Whittlesey

.’ nia

— “RADIO PRO

i APR. , 1919

gins” Ha

"THIS EVENING

; wii i Chiropractics Le 2.2: on £5 ~ | Woledy Billboard | Cole Bros. Circus i : Band [MaaVale a gos fo Solely [Marte Bees. | TT Rs Frank Edwards

Gems ; Music to Salurdey ep iy Gong ov _ s.

Allen Jefirles = " - Morten Downey norm Ra Dancing Party. - Dance Band : . T {Wews—Sportsman © | Variely Hew [Sign ON NSC Orchestrs ly aT g Lonnie Herman Quint. a. ' at Orch ye

History Told |B

"THE tory SEA" By Alan

House: $4.

extensively in the Coral Sea.

di . rv Century British satirist, has left inwhis engraving his view of a Lon-

don theater audience of 1727 amused by some current comedy. The rare prigt is one of a series of Hogarth’ $ works rks belonging fo to Herron Art Museum,

tion to be re temperate hence-

much too . long;=-1 must. close it

Arthur Meeker. - Knopf, $3. Sy HENRY BUTLER IN HIS new novel, ."Prairie {avenue Arthur Meeker promises more than he performs. ‘Dinner at Antoine's’ | mis story of life in Chicago's idaet |opulent set two generations ago Heads Abridgaments | starts -out with a suggestion of Parkinson Keyes’ “Dinner at dramatic possibilities ngver quite Antoine's” heads {the list. of realized. abridgements in the May issue of|: In the character . of Lydia

Stack, voluptuously beautiful woman much younger ‘than her

New York,

Also abridged in the current issue are “Escape from Vermont,” jumber - tycoon hushand ‘Hira by James Gordon, ‘And ‘The Mr. Meeker has started a portr it Hearth and Eagle” by Anya that should have been’ finished. Seton, together with selections Lydia, supposedly weak of heart, from Galbraith Welch's “North has a main-floor bedroom in the. African Prelude” and James Kel-'Stacks' yellow - brick Prairie ler's “You Can Changs the ‘Aventie mansion. World. The room Tas ifs own private

entrance from outside, and Aunt Gets Rights to Novel Lydia, a5 young Ned Ramsey, the Robert Whitehead and Oliver Parr

narrator, describes her, has male Rea ‘have sequired the dramatic) visitors at indiscreet hour rights to Ludwig Lewisohn's

ei» » * THERE'S MYSTERY and a] kind of pervasive but Jascluating |. herd coun- (evil about all this. t as Eo od Paso tu 1 a of Meeker develops als story, what

nly young man married to a woman Must have been the shdck-value

20 years his senior was first : : \ssiied in Europe in.1926, and has New Book Due Soon

Cornelia Meigs’ “The Violent

ped penetrating commentary : upon life jtself. For here the author tells us clearly that grief

__and.anguish will find their way

“the heart must then. #xpand or - break. o. y 5 = ROSAMOND MARSHALL been writing another novel, an she is bound to expect herTeaders to share her astonishment over the earlier discovery that the laws governing propagation apply to the rich as well as the poor. In most cases, according to Miss Marshall, the rich are also the refined and- cultivated. If good manners seem to you to exclude the high-born from the compulsions which are known to multiply the race, the author wishes you to understand that they do not. : In order to prove this curiousis ™ biological fact, Miss Marshall has written another naughty: story, in which the bedroom has aspromfnent part. Or perhaps 1 should say the private railroad car, for this case her hero, Barton has such a fancy car up on a rajiroad siding In

4 | i

A

Decorates Book

to the toughest heart, and that! Sg

has|

Men” will be published May 24 by Macmillan, It is described as “a|human interest story of the men who confronted’ each other during the stormy meetings of the Continental Co! ss (1774-1776), arguing bitterly. over whether to break away from England, or to J eompromise and conciliate.”

5 ‘Warburg’ s 'Last Call"

{a warning about possible consequences «of our present foreign, | uae by James P. Warburg, will | | be released June 17 by Harcourt, Brace.

Armin Landeck drew this Publishing Date Set squirrel as one of the decora- | “Father of the Bride” by tions for "The Twelve Seasons: | Edward Streeter, a humorous ac-

A Perpetual Calondor for the |count of the tribulations a father Country,” country life by Joseph Wood Krutch, distinguished critic and scholar (Sloane, DD

goes through when his daughter meditative book en erties, by Simon & Schuster. The book 1&8 copiously illustrated by Gyms,

Williams.

BUTLER UNIVERSITY |

_ ANNOUNCES FOUR

wai Los Angeles, : A very. rich young man, you And a cultured man. ! can ‘even sing; he is, according] to the author, “proud of his abil-| to read music at sight.” * | Title of her new novel fis #Celeste” and the time is during the early years of this century. The place, already indicated, Ia Bart Strang

Lo of: his arrival, and he loves her

x : gE: = a

t mY Gideon!” said Bar-| { f, “what a stunner! nat a Gibson Girl! 1

i

HE MEETS Celeste on the day |-

COMPLETE SUMMER SESSIONS

Pre-Summer Session ‘May 16-June 3 Regular Summer Session ~~ June 14-Aug.5 ‘Veterans' Semester June 14-Aug. 26 Post-Summer Session Aug. 8-26

Butler: University's Summer. Sessions offer the. college student, teacher, and others an opportunity for undergraduate or graduate study amid the numerous cultural and-recreational facilities afforded by A metropolitan center.

Courses will be offered in major “fields of the Col leges of Liberal Arts ahd Sciences, Education, Bush ness Administration, Pharntacy, and. ~ School of Religion. Write or call (HU. 1346) the Director, Summer Sessions, for complete information.

i-Makes Easy, Pleasingly Reminiscent Reading

“Last Call for Common Sense |

will be published May 20

But I can’t help thinking he has dodged the challenge his charac: ters present. a. : x TAKE, MRS. Kennerley, the 2 e, pathetic and alcholic wife of' Abner Kennerley, immensely rich and hardboiled merchant. Through Ned's eyes, the readef observes rs. ' Kennerley giving lavish parties in her vast and grimly ornate’ chateau, or, in tipsy moments, scattering candy --to

They are jammed with adven{ture and they make the reader: how so many sallors|;

The most inferesting chapters {are-accounts of the voyages of {Tasman, Cook, Bougainville and {other early "navigators who ex- : ploredfthe Southwest Pacific area.

wonder searching ‘fof Australia could,

found instead so- many of the Melanesian islangs. - £ - » “

ter on slave-trad ] bals. Some of the “blackbirders” posed as missionaries to get jnatives aboard their schooners, where - they were locked in the holds and carried ‘away — with children and the elderly thrown overboard at sea because they had no market value, ‘Among the gannibals, Mr. Vil-

street urchins. But{ thése are wi perficial glimpses, id Ned falls in love with Celia, the, Kennerleys’' daughter ——exquisite,! neurotic and later also alcoholic. But neither Ned's infatuation nor! Celia herself seems more signifi-| cant than something we might hear in reminiscent conversation. All alo the line in "Prairie Ave nue’ readers are apt to won Arthur Meeker writes of Chi-_. why Mr. Meeker didn't do.m cago ‘two generations ago in With Such interesting Possibiies,

"py, ; ” a " rain Reais the Literary. vy JSN'E enough that hia eve ui ay selection. . and memory are keen. He us exactly and minutely how Chiin he 26600 ot sich . situation | cago’ o's wealthy lived in the '80’s

You expect some building up of and '90's. He knows the decor, the /tension, some accelerating prog- ery the Sost mes, ee ornaress toward the tragic outcome yd Paintings — * rac when Uncle Hiram returns home [*"¢ "¢ es of cony mn. one night late and un y,| And ‘he injects enough wistfuland next day dies from an acci-|ness into- the book to make it dental or suicidal fall on the pleasingly. melancholy, elevated tracks. |ever approaching real tragedy. Mr. . Meeker has recounted! As-a Literary Guild selection, events as young Ned observed “Prairie Avenue” them, His novel is less of a novel large audience. Some readers may than’ a series -of reminiscences, wonder whether this isn’t another,

hence eagy and pleasant reading. ing as fiction,

|

J i

|

-convenient for more people

i so Felon Trust

shows! Man,” originally scheduled for.

‘without

will reach a

clearly and quietly set down, and example of memoirs masquerad-| May ‘24 under Farrar,

liers reports, “some connoisseurs: {avoided johits" {birders on the ground that they fare spoiled by .the pickling in m they had received while nip

Mr. Villiers praises the work of | {20th century white administra tions in Melanesia. He devotes his | {final chapter to Allied defeat of | r| the Japanese in that area.

v!

Delay Publication

Stringfellow Barr's “The Pilgrimage of

ew book, estern

May “5 publication by Harcourt,

21. Chosen as the August selection of the Religious Book Club, Mr. Barr's study covers western man’s “search for one world from 1500 to Armistice IL” *

Cookbook on Seafood +

“The Key West Cook Book,” a ‘collection of recipes including many for sea-food pre tion and

ONE of the world’s most dan-|

have missed so huge a land, and?

: THERE IS a fascinating chap-| and canni-{-

will be in the Wm. H. Block Co..

he

p N. RELAYS--Bill Camp. bell will announce the running of | the feature event from Franklin Field, Philadelphia. | 14:30 Pm. ~WLW, 5:30 p. m. . TWENTY. QUESTIONS Jerry {Mahohey, “dummy” of ventrilo+ |quist Paul Winchell, will be the | guest .with the regular panel. ,, . WIBC, 7 p. m. > HOLLYWOOD STAR THEA- % | TER—Comedienne Jeff Donnell will be introduced by Chester Morris. . . . WIRE, 7:30 p. m.— WLW. 8:30 p, m. SPIKE JONES—Don McNeill, J (famed toastmaster of “Breakfast : Club” program, will be the guest XL “7 lwith Spike and his City Slickers. Harold Russell, handles) +++ WFBM, 7:30 p. m, veteran who won two | DENNIS DAY—A game of AfAcademy awards for his acting ig gy gi iy Dennis Zuo Men in."The Best Years of Our Liyes," WLW, 10°p. m. * » BASEBALL Luke Walton an-

Book Shop from 440 5 p.m. nounces the play-by-play between

next’ Tuesday to Suleghank, the Indians and the Mi copies. oon book, "'Vic- |Brewers. .. . , Wid, mee

tory in My Hands” (Creative! Age Press, $2.50).

‘T™#de from black- Burlingame Book Set

and society is agaih the theme of : grounds of Power: A. Social His-

tory, of. Mass Production,” to be issued by Scribner's in the fall. . |

'The River Journey" >

“The River -Journey,” a new | . Ulinols novel hy Reet Nathan about a “SIMMONS myste trip on" a Missigsip) sigsippl | . Furniture’ River houseboat, will be published J, f . es Anime ge,

in September by Knopf. |

Brace, has been postponed to July].

gathered by the Women's Club of Key West, Fla., will appear Straus) { imprint.

Who seid 13 is unlucky?

I. our experience, 13 is a good number. For many years Fletcher Trust Company has had'13 offices located all over Indianapolis. During this period these offices have served a growing number of customers until today Fletcher Trust Company has.more than 90,000 depositors — just about one out of every five in the Indianapolis area. dou * Soon, we will open our 14th office, on Arlington Avene ; at East Tenth Street. This means, of course, that we will be ; 2 saying-good-bye to “13.” But we know we're going to like

1 | | = "14" even more, because another new office will permit us | better to achieve our basic objective: to make basking more

AU |

Compan,

| : . = : {INDIANAPOLIS

LISTEN. TO % i = MUSICAL MANHUNT The inter-relation of science]

Roger Burlingame in “Back-|

on Sve £30020 n = Pre inde in

NOME APPLIANCE co.

EE — WFBM—:15 AM. Sun, Dr. E. Burdette Backus Speaks on “A Modern Man's Creed”

§ 114 M. AT THE CHURCH

A rr bom A Civic Circumference

ALL S0ULS UNITARIAN CHURCH

1453 N. Alabama Street

BROAD RIPPLE OFFICE 706 E. Sixty-third Stree! Lee Welker, Manager

THIRTIETH STREET OFFICE 3001 N. Winois Stroot George E. Hulsman, Manager

SIXTEENTH STREET OFFICE 20 West Sixteenth Stree! Ralph E Dodson, Manager SOUTH SIDE OFFICE “ 1125 S. Meridica Street , Emil L. Kuhn, Manager

_ ROOSEVELT AVENUE OFFICE - > “1533 Roosevelt Avenve W. Blison Gatewood, Manager

| EAST TENTH OFFICE b 2122 E. Tenth Street , Donald E. Williams, Manager

IRVINGTON OFFICE Sy. 5501 E. Washington Street Tod M. Compbeli, Manager

EAST SIDE OFFICE 2506 E. Washington Street Charles F. Bechtoid, Manager

EAST WASHINGTON oFfict 500 E. Washington Straet “Roy A Wilson, Manager ip

WEST STREET OFFICE 474 W. Washington Street . j Stoilko Yovanovich, Manager

-.

; WEST-INDIANAPOLIS OFFICE «or B . 1233 Oliver Avenue

_Theodore R. Beck, Manager 4 3 “ ot “WEST MICHIGAN OFFICE ~~ 1 * ‘MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION ' - 2600 West Michigan Street * ) R$ al © JamesL Moffe, Manager 3 8 ¢ ¥ -~ oi — } a = SS <i = } 5 iy = Nn a:

elon amen

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AEE WE

5

dain

WIBC |

‘A Si To C

Civic Purdy

THE » with “Brigs Followi final produc more with * Cole Br uled for 2 at E. Washi Out of Show, “Rio | day in the Ha pus; Alec Te Ernst Hoffm: phony in the 8:30 p. m. ES gic’'s elaborat

will be repea

May 8. ““Brigadoo is — th characters’ cr this instance, enchanted vil one day each village girl ar on one hand, Playing le on tour are F

critical -acqla University's | folk opera, “I “With. Rob has music hy "¥ Agnes de