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Show 'Teen Age: . . . The Circle of Footprints, a mystery by Carolyn Keene; New Ideas in Woodcraft,' by John T. Lemos, for those interested inter-ested in handicrafts: Midnight, by Rutherford Montgomery Mont-gomery a wild animal story with a horse as the hero; Shadow Over WindtaTTV a tale of mystery and by Sarah L. Schmidt; Forty Faces, by Mary ,, : ston, an -inspiring and rising ris-ing story for girb. WtV Also books for juvenile ers. . ,F BOOKS At The Library COPPERTON LIBRARY At the Bingham high school. Open Wednesdays from 3-8 p. m. To be placed on the shelves on Wednesday, March 19. Adult Non-Fiction A Goodly Heritage, an account of New England coast life, by Mary Ellen Chase; Intercollegiate Debates, the year book of college debating, edited by E. R. Nichols; The Story of the Human Race, the lives of forty-eight great figures fig-ures from Moses to Mussolini, by Henry Thomas; Out of the Night, by Jan Vat-lin, Vat-lin, the autobiography of a young German Communist who was captured and imprisoned by the Nazis, and who later escaped escap-ed to give us this authentic and shocking account of terrorism, violence and human suffering. Adult Fiction: King's Row, by Henry Bella-man, Bella-man, two decades in the life of a midwestern town; The Case of the Rolling Bones, murder mystery by Erie Gardner; Gard-ner; Back Street, by Fannie Hurst, the stry of a woman's life-long devotion to a man who was married mar-ried to another; Oliver Wiswell, a new novel by Kenneth Roberts, which sets forth the loyalist cause in the American Revolution. |