Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 September 1949 — Page 8

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- | THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES lllustrates ‘ldylls of King’

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‘RADIO PROGRAMS ~~ Some | NU THIS JYENING ne

FM After T:00 P. ML win Nowshun WIR Duss on Line Collng

Wood Engraving

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Writer's Memoirs,

2 Works: of Fiction “Offer Good Reading

"NO MATTER WHAT HAPPENS." Dutton, $3. E "FRIEND OF THE FAMILY." A novel. By Oswald Wynd. ‘New York, Doubleday, $3. | "THE DESPERATE CHILDREN." A novel. New York, Doubleday, $3. : By HENRY BUTLER

ONE REASON FOR Max Miller's'success as a writer is! his engaging simplicity. The author of a series of books, from “I Cover the Wa-! terfront” to “The Town With the Funny Name,” now comes! forth with a volume of memoirs, “No Matter What Hap-|

pens [terfly in George's life, even bearBack of Mr, Miller's: sim-/inc nim a sono plicity is plenty of shrewd-| Davie Plavd ve role Britial novelists frequently assign their ness. Mr. Miller knows how , 0" the long-suffering.” pato make his writing seem In-|tjent guy who waits around for genuous rather than ingenious. years until he can finally marry He knows that readers feel es-|the woman he loves, meanwhile ) serving as sympathetic listener to pecially warm-hearted toward a .verybody’s troubles. Besides| writer who admits his own em- having to console George and barrassing mistakes. {Irma, David also undertakes to From childhood. years in help Setsue in her career of progEverett, Wash., through - the ress from runaway farm girl who rigors of Montana homesteading briefly served as a prostitute beand back to high school in/fore George met her, to woman's Everett, . there were many oc- page writer for a Tokyo newscasions for making mistakes. Mr. paper. = Setsue exemplifiés theP Miller writes: “Always it seems, Japanese ‘‘modern woman" who even now, that I never quite catch had a short-lived emancipation | 2 up to my age. . ... Pedple-youhger before the military and the police | than I am always seem to. know took over Japan in the late 1930s. | #8 much as 1 know, while people] Historical authenticity, ‘care-| my own agé always seem to know fully and vividly drawn settings| a lot more and always seem more and skillfully created characters, re — es certain ‘about what they know.” like the fat and sgrigius Baton.) . » * After sub-chaser and destroyer ess von Heisen, make t Is nove Lyd P kh | t + E d service in the World War I Navy, excellent reading. . ’ ’ 19 In am, nven or Oo ame g { yo» Max workedsfs way through the| pp 1 /SpYRATE CHIL

| Ee By Max Miller. New York,

By David Cornel DeJong.

ee

. » On the Air TWENTY QUESTIONS — John Carradine, stage and screen actor, . will join regular panel members ! {Fred VanDeventer, Florence Ris - * 'nard, Bobby McGuire and Herb | Polesie for a session of the “ani« {mal, vegetable or mineral” game, «es WIBC 7 p.m. HOLLYWOOD STAR THEA. 4 |TER—Charles Boyer will intro E duce 16-year-old Debra Paget in “Pressure of Evil,” the story of a \girl who becomes involved with a murderer and his captor. Hand« cuffed together, both claim to be {thé policeman. ... WIRE 7 p.m, —WLW 8 p.m. | BASEBALL—The Indians play the Mud Hens at Toledo. . . » (WISH 8:15 and 9:30 p. a. i & DENNIS DAY — Setting out to by Lillian Smith Albert and {hire a horse for a hay ride, Dennis Kathryn Kent, are shown _here. 'has to take the horse with him.

With a foreword by Carl W, (He hides the horse in his girl

Anniversary

Of Goethe

"New Books Honor 200th Birthday

"GOETHE THE POET." By Karl A L-Vietor. Cambridge, Mass. This wood engraving is one of Gustave Dore's illustrations for Tennyson's "Idylls of the King." Harvard University Press, $5. A recent gift to Herron Art Museum from Mrs. Charles C. Kryter of Indianapolis, the print is one "GOETHE'S AUTOBIOGRAof a series of 12 originals signed by artist and author. : PHY." Tradslated by R. O. He : Spas eg Moon. Washington, D. C., Pub- | lic Affairs Press, $5. Last Sunday marked the 200th anniversary of the birth of Je- ; , hann Wolfgang von Goethe, and "LYDIA PINKHAM 1S HER 54th year to block .Isaac’s final the hands of a more capable On the same day the anniversary NAME." By Jean Burton. New business collapse by - marketing writer.’ Unfortunately, the author was. commemorated by the pub-

York, Fa “Strauss, $2.75. |the compound she had previously devotes far too mugh space to lication of “Goethe the Poet,” by B bin Si . $2.75 {given freely to all women in dis- the ordeals of Dan tramping the par Vietor 3 UNG NORTH. tress. streets of Brooklyn with his hand-| : what db. New York World-Telesram Rook Reviawss The compound never was a bills, and to th b A short time earlier? what ap. DESIST, kind sir, before con- : : i. om Arrassing|, rently is the first English

secret. It is composed of: [squabbles of the grandchildren] “ ’ 1 signing Lydia E. Pinkham to the |" g . |translation of “Goethe’s -Auto-| realm of quacks, nost pol 8 oz. true unicorn root fighting for control of the com-|

2

Four of the more than 5700 specimens of buttons illustrated in "The Complete Button Book,"

University of Washington, He's! REN,” by David Cornel cui- Remedy, Pictured as Militant Feminist

briefly nostalgic about perience, praising the fraternity system in spite of its many de-

the X= helongs to the class of contem-

| porary fiction that needs a special {name. It’s.the kind of writing |practitioners : like Eudora Welty and Truman Capote excel in. It's the sort of creative prose in which bare narrative almost never oc- = leurs. It mingles circumstance : lwith poetic Insight until the writer

Dfepperd, the encyclopedic friend . hoarding h ous es 3 | work has just been published by ly ve i {biography” since 1847 appeared. p. m~WLW 9:30 p. m, ‘ 2! |has created an entirely new world |dlers and snake-oll-vendors. : 3 S3is8" dnisory vet an Yen Jadia drops ool ofiruis highly readable version of Doubleday ($10). . MEET THE PRESS—Lycurgus in which even trivial happenings Her far-famed vegetable com-| g .. pbrack {the autobiography was translated | : Spinks; newly inducted Imperial d for f | z. black cohash up for want of a protagonist. IA d K I Emperor of the Ku Klux Klan seem more important than grave Pound for female ailments actu-| .g oz. pleurisy root Nevertheless, despite flaws, this|°Y_ TO: Moon. | iol Ap. pWRIELD rdyth pote y OR rvs vol bs ary events In our daily life. | 12 oz fenugreek seed |is a rich and rewarding picture/ ‘There is little ne restate pane First Nove P Lawn Spivak In this story of a small New| Pure Food and Drug people. Her| 4 mitted ope ice of “per-iof an er here the value and interest of ~~. {Drew Pearson; Lawrence Spivak, England city,” Mr. Delong pre- honest and accurate pamphlet on coating: at of this eo og EE auc) Sold] wich volumes as these. In the The Literary Guild's December editor, American eA Wash. sents simultaneously the world of | the long-hidden facts of life pre-/j, (no “finest spirits” available, offers an intriguing sample of 2utobiography, one of the world’s | selection is “The Peaceable King-|zine; Ed Follliard, o po a ¢ lescence and the world of ma- ceded by half a century any (hue ‘giving the compound an 18 rugged individualism blended with 8reatest artists describes the dom,” a first novel by Ardyth ington Post; and Me 38 on urity, each with its conflicts. His| Other widely disseminated Infor-| per cent alcoholic content helped| “social consciousness”; a charac- STOWth and development of his| Kennelly. ; the Portland file} Press-Hary young protagonists are Sebastian mation on the subject. |this militant temperance leader to ter (study of an outstanding 8eMus in a work that is rich in| It deals with the trials of being . . - WIBC 9:30 p. m.

Bolcher, precocious, undersized] And Lydia herself was quite a ge) her medicine in what eventu- Woman of the 19th Centur detail and full of the wide inter- wife. No, 2 in the last days of kid, and Orrin West, overgrown Bal. deeply interested In all the 4)1y was enormous quantities. |an appalling Fao ni ests and pursuits of a tremen- plural marriage in Utah. Hough-| WFBM-TV Program and somewhat retarded, though problems of her day;.an intellect, | At first, however, there were Ignorance, hypocrisy and conceit dously interesting mind. ton Mifflin will publish it on (CENTRAL DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)

Vietor’s extensive work, on the November 20. t

}|dependable, boy. Both ‘youngsters, ® Wit, ‘a debater, a crusader-foriyears of hardship. All four of Of the filthy-handed doctors, half-| 1s.ve ! I p is at ‘once a critical

; Sarday, Sel. 3, 1949 a in the classroom of the amazing the rights of females and other} hoo

: ,ydia's brilliant children (three educated druggists and other Other hand, ; P.M [Miss Tumolcy, the school's most (then) suppressed segments of gone and a daughter) helped “per- death-dealing =~ pill-peddiers of analysis of Goethe's work and an Football Background | - 6:25—Program Preview imaginative, radical ‘and out- Our population. lcolate”” peddle and distribute. |Lydia’s century. Compared to Absorbing story of his _develop- | ce 6:30—Sonny Kendis {spoken teacher, are acquiring a! In fact, after reading this high-|1 evel.hsaded Charles. aggressive Most of them she was a person Ment as a man rom early ado-|. College lonthull iu thé back. 6:45—Lucky Pup

{tolerance of outlook other teach-i!¥ Informative book, you will lescence throughout his life. These ground for Millard Lampell's sec-

5 ‘ Danijel, ¢ w of intellect, science and . “ " LT Wi lers, including the principal, Miss doubtless be singing the praises Debs ne Jyilam and, : iv Integrity 'volumes may be read with profit ond book, “The Hero,” which Jul- J. Ik of CHizonship |8trook, endeavor to spoil. |of the Lynn, Mass., housewife and joa ther disseminating handbills. | Academic Freed {and pleasure as companion pieces, | an Messner, Inc. will Issue Sept. oug™ yon : | Both Miss Strook and Sebas- student of medicine who saved pit: A + |[ACademic rreeaom | whether or not you have any pre- 12. The Lo ng Way Home was'.o a " ] | . - 8 ol pl , m 's firs > ’ tian’s neurotic, self-centered Many a terrified woman from yo... o Joo until they discov-| Subject of Book vious— knowledge of Goethe's hampe boo 34 Caratcnse Stars

!mother by implication accuse thelsléepless nights by personally an-| i" - boy of perverse motives in his/Swering hundreds of thousands! Costar Yalve St Beer ardent, hero-worshipping friend-|0f very private letters and by pre-| pulsively in he Ny

{ship for Orrin. And so the evil| scribing a concoction which seem-

work.—E. P. # “A Primer of Intellectual Free- po dom,” edited by Howard Mumford Jones, is announced for November

~ Publishing Date Set [18000 ccm ., : i Karl Barth, the eminent Swiss Plot Against Art World

Writes simply . . . Max Miller. “tfactors. Even though he had no and malice of adult society in-|Ingly has some slight beneficial| P28 of the Boston Herald that'publication by Harvard Uni-

Swami Pens Book

On Teachings of Christ

|theologian, will have his “Dog-| “Trial and Terror,” Lawrence

effects at the {the Pinkhams uncovered the road versity Press. matics in Outline” published by Treat’s new mystery published by

money except what little he could vades the youngsters’ lives. most crucial mo-

earn in long-hour odd jobs, he! As a rather melodramatic ¢li- ments in the lives of th : [to riches. Advertising managers| The. forthcoming volume is al Swami Akhilananda, head of the Philosophical Library of New| Morrow in July,- which has its # was weicomed into a fraternity. max, Mr. DeJong has Mrs. Glloog- | sex. © gentler) wii) pe happy to read that eventu- collection. of outstanding state- the Ramarkrishna Vedanta So-! York on Oct. 3. The book has|piot set against the fabulous art So Readers ‘with a different attitude ley, the town’s most dist! nguished | EE {ally the company was willing to ments on.academic freedom, from |ciety, has-written a book on the| Deen selected as the October Se-| world of New York, is a Septem’ ; toward “the fraternity system dipso-, klepto- and, in former| LYDIA .WAS the 10th of 12|Spend $3 million of its $3.8 mil-}excerpts from Sir Francis Bacon's teachings of Jesus, which he rec- lection of the Religious Book | ser selection-of the Detective Kk

may point out that Max was not years, nympho-maniac, -deliber-|children in a Quaker famil {lion gross on newspaper advertis-| “Advancement of Learning” to| Club. Club. only a capable and ambitiousiately run into and kill Miss| Which later rebelled against the| nS: Itstill left a handsome profit.|Chancelior. Robert Hutchins’ OMmends to fellow Hindus. i

writer for the college paper, but Strook with her car. It's obvious-| Plain Sect.

She and her sisters| THis was true even in the daysirecent statement to the committee] Philosophical Library, who will| ——" also a pretty good semipro boxer:ly an accident, people say: -they, tested and tasted most of the ip.|¥hen Mrs. Pinkham devoted large of the Illinois legislature investi- publish the book op, Sept. 19, say START WITH KEW CLASSES Nb wonder the fraternity went were such good friends. Now Miss| tellectual and religious ferments| Portions of her advertising to po- gating “subversive” activiti#s in it is the first comprehensive book} - ;

1

&fter him. Tumolcy, in the little time her in- of their day and aided both the litical propaganda, ardently sup: the University of Chicago ahd on Shia by a. Bunn reigiows BEGINNING SEPT 6 ow ‘curable cancer will leave her, can | abolitionist and the feminist POrting_the Greenbacker move-: Roosevelt College. teacher. : "HERE, AS ELSEWHERE in serve as principal of the school CAUSes. ment and suggesting that the re- eT | Join the groups of fine, forward-lookin ; ; . nent and sug : : . . " d- g young men and Mr. Milier's reminiscences, the and undo much of the harm Miss| They helped organize the Free- Calcitrants who didn't like unse- Tells of Russ Capture ~~ Devotional Reading - young women who will begin here the 6th. The demands question Is simply how Max got Strook had done. man's Institute in Lynn, debafing cured paper money probably need- . , : T nF < ell for 1.B.C d i i i i along +n this or that situation. No brief summary can convey IN early Victorian times such ed doses of her compound “Guests of the Kremlin,” by Lt. he-Rev..Fr. James Keller, we or 1.B.C. graduates continue in-substantiol numbers. Like

~Mistakes generally are described as his own, and he is disinclined " to criticize either society or the ~MERADIZALIONS he has worke ~—He has Wette interest preachs ers of causes—a fact which puts his memoirs high up in the list of Books that will offend nobody. Fellow Hollywood writers in the

Mr. DéJopg's story in all its com-

subjects as: Has the institution of the clergy

The pioneering venture of put- Col. Robert G. Emmens, will be khown Catholic priest and founder ting mother's picture on .the la- Published by Macmillan Sept. 13. of the Christophers, has compiled

thousands of others, you'll find 1.B.C. training a good investment. * This is the

d for. Mr. De 1s v he P he feeperate Cid res C0 WHEE RUAN FEE RA de Rane EE tre wha Tar00k: of ram he

plexity. %*Nor can critical adjec-| tives in. short space do. justice to Peen beneficial to mankind? bels and in the ads Wis'a real

Johg's compressed, vital Is there conclusive proof that stemwinder of an idea. But print-

one day in 1942. bombed

scended from a common origin? chosen from the hundreds of thou- © Is the institution of the state Sands which poured into the {subversive of the Rights of Man? Lynn headquarters was equally | Could socfety exist and flourish Important to the success of Ly-

certainly will rank high among the best-written fiction of 1949. i ———————— sians. A year and a month later ‘Writes Book About -

The author was co-pilot of the a:-book of daily - devotional readDoolittle bomber crew of five who ings to be called “Three Minutes carrier Hornet & Day.” ” . okyo, Ruther OF °You Can Change the

This new volume by the

ran out of gas, landed in Siberia World” will be published Oct. 3 and were interned by the Rus- DY Doubleday. i

all five escaped from Ashkabad Book on Notre Dame

Indiana Business College of indignapolis.: The others ave-at-Marion; Muncie; Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond ond Vincennes—Ora E. Butz, President. Approved for G. |. ~~ Training. For Bulletin giving complete information, get in

gy

1930s tried to get him-steamed up if all punishment were abolished” dia’s liquid gold mine. to Irs touch with the 1.B.C. nearest you, or Fred W. Case, Prinabout the plight of the Okies, the Struggle for Germany Is it the rightful prerogative of " x= Hn I DA. ——— {"~ A history of Notre Dame Uni- cipak 3 : } Mexicans ‘or. other minority! “The "Struggle for Germanv.” man lo exercise control over THE MATERIAL gathered for a. {versity will be published by Rine- - . groups, but Max didn't steam hy Drew Middleton, New York Nomen this hook is excéllent. Tt reveals Advice on Budgets hart & Co. Sept. 29. Praficis. Wal- C E N T RAL BUSINESS C 0 L L E G E Mui easily. Having worked at all Times correspondent, will be pub- Ought the right of suffrage to the dirt; ignorance, superstition | “Spending for Happiness,” a lace, sporis- writer and -president - .

kinds of johs himself, he couldn't

lished by Bobbs-Merrill Oot, 14 0 tXtended. to woirien?

. 4 a ¥ ¥ . . : ~ —

- ; ¢

and disease which bedeviled the book on *'painless personal money- of the Notre Dame Alumni Asso-

Indiana Business College Building

Hob WHY WIteTs Should Worry | Migateton's Story 1a VS SPOCIAT = = wom pense ratlegediy- happy... Victorian era. management written. by budget. ciation, is the author. His book. is 802 North Meridian (St. Clair. Entrance) L1..8337 . ’ F ‘ about people in situations the emphasis on the Russian position] 1YPIA PINKHAM, nee Estes, But it also reveals how much expert KElsle Stapleton, will bela general history of the university, . or vin knew hothing show dn its relation to developing et eter A very beautiful, Rare lgnin ant and instructive published by "Prentice-Hall on besides a chronicle of Notre —/— eee eee ret ee te —_— a ere’'s a certain faint smug- American policy in Germany. spirited and brilliant woman (see this chronicle could have been in!Sept. 12. Dame's role in. American sports. | ZZ ness in this, One might: feel more - 1] 4 y | frontispiece); 5 feet, 10, reddish| ~~ DE ———— B Fcc telspee efereetmeerei rr—— pois: i CROSSWORD PU LE 1 enthusiastic about “No Matter ac . 1 hair, fine dark eyes, composed | Answer to Previous Puzzle. What Happens” if at least some Writes on Socialism and striking looking, in Arctic D 6f Max Miller's mistakes had been John T. Flynn, author of She married a short plump, cnc 0g 1 AT _the product of youthful, burning osseveit: Myth. 3) sesses the mild. 29-year-old widower. Isaac : ASITIELA Th concern for human welfare. merican trend toward socialism ‘Pinkham, and saw. him through| HORIZONTAL AL ZS GIR x are fair But the genial wisdom and the °f the British pattern In “The countless business pipe dren oi) 1 Depieted ,TETIC pele The quiet humor of the hook, together Road Ahead, a Devin-Adair pub- and failures before deciding in her| Asiatic and 2 on fv v with its slightly artful humility, !ication this month. [ a | Arctic dog 3 Bring to - there's certainly will make “No Matter| _“« i OPEN EVENINGS 81t is used ” to attention ter proj What Happens” an excellent Opposes Caste System MON., WED. FRI. pull 4 Oleum (comb ’ seller. yw “Twilight in India,” by Miss | '[ 13 Church form) IS y Gery % 2 : . , ; OSWALD WYND, who won the Pre Barontes to be Jagued by Capitol Book Store v - - v “ | 14 Signitary 3 Swe: potate dates. 1947 Doubleday $20,000 prize for Pica. Library op Sept. 26 208 N. Meridian St. RB T ] y | 14 COUDtY. Mm 6 Short jacket cuss eac 1 Doub y $2 prize pleads against the still prevail (Opposite Post Office) | - a / a TY Michigan 3 Remave ’ i i nd novel bis K Roubiams aud ing caste system ' a { 1 w 15 Hostelry 8 Courtesy title 28 Great Lake 43 For fear that it arrive RU Yam : : : 16 Tooth 9 Behold! - 29 High cards 44 Assam “The again introduces a Japanese back- ! AYN J ¢ ‘4° r > os ’ worm pl a ea (© AN EXCELLENT EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION! IH Ccormb form) 11 Dreadiol” 3 Flowers # Sma So Bre 1 i . x : readfu Li Friend of the Family . 19 Memorandum 12 Go by steamer 36 Born } aperture ght The story of this more work 21 Seine 17 Near 37 Girl's name 47 Greek letters | “Finia Jantice than inspired novel con- . ; 22 Stagger 20 Conclusion 40 Pillar 49 Observe “Miste erns Suune Prewmer American re ? Butler University offers youth and adults of Indianapolis and vicinity excellent 23 Preposition 22 Narrow inlet 41 Scope 50 Decline “Rose journalist in Japan; Irma Barling Courses this semester include Introduction te Radio, Radio Speech | educational facilities in both the day and evening divisions : 24 Symbol for 25 At this place 42 Note m S53 Great (ab) his second cousin, whom David Production, Writing, Newscasting, Announcing, Special Events, Electro. .. iridium 26 Verbal Guido's scale 55 Cloth measurg loves; George Merion, the Briton Acoustics, Television, and Radio Workshop. Faculty includes Tom { : . . 25. Covering for ’ WRIT Irma marries, and Setsue Kat- Carnegie, Lyell Ludwig, Sid Collins, James Phillippe, Harold Emmis ° * Complete courses of instruction are offered in both divisions by the the head » shows is suke, who has played Mme. But- Elizobeth Slocum. Degree conferred: Bachelor of Science in Radio. - ' Colleges of Libefal Arts and Sciences; Educatiofi, Business Administra: e 27 On the ocean dogsleds . } tion, Pharmacy, and the pre-professional fields. 3 Ses ie Hulu. It { ross anigon The * Students’ are advised, counselled : as.) Bposita To + counselled, and taught by a well trained faculty. 32 Egyptian sun to us imj Indianapolis ! ~ Hp 19 ahs of She Butler University faculty are listed In Who's ul + C iT ; ides . o In. America, Am N , , y Pastry | Gowrsan Tha Simaitor lochule Actin, Theor Frocrce. Soorth. Trios | Wada Ab a, erican Men of Science, and Who's Whe in American 34 Enthusiastic grid ; Piano Teachers’ Workshop, and practical experience with the Jordan Players. Complete | ’ : ardor stand ha curriculum includes Advanced Acting, Direction, Stagecraft, Costume, { . : 37 Greek god of harm tha Association bighting, Make-up, Theotre History ; Voice and Diction, Contemporary For complete Information on the day division write or eall (HU. 1346) the war for some heatre, and Droma Research, in addition to production work with the Student Information Qffice. For information on ev ’ 38 Compass point What Players. Under the direction of James R. Phillippe ond G. Marguerite Director, Evening Division dab evening classes write or call the 39 Down thing Lil q ) Carlson. Degree conferred: Bachelor of Arts in Speech and Drome. . Nh: and a bulletin will be went. } 40 Top of the summer | FALL CL REGISTRAT ; , howd Anory ASSES oi 4 JON for Foll Term Begins September . 14 Freshman Week Sept. 12-16 42 Rubber tree aters wh NOW BEING : or Information Write or Call Admission Office : . 45 Church part ™ may. wor ! ; \. . 48 Mineral rock Each X FORMED J d c I i . EVENING DIVISION REGISTRATION—Sept. 19-24 49 Cubic meter Fad Ea 51 Altitude (ab.) ‘The Jordan College of Music —— Ll 32 Type of tari nat i 3 ; J : » mative stars tha Oo BE. 2037 ;; I120(N Driowone$: kh 751 INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA BSH ann y 57 Writing pads The { > \ A : = y Cig : ; ad PRA 2