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Show i 0S New at the LIBRARY 'of Noto: Tl.o following f n- nvommen.11 espovially k " adult- Sonic, older peo- "mis" ,M "i.v '"K . Th. i:.hI '"". flight Ans. "' , iut,vdm'tory study ot the tie v' : luPoi'l:nt religious of the ' i o.'iul,MS 1,10 onS'ins iuul ': i,s of the Kgyptiim rotig--31 ,luHism. iJr.vk and Roman Vlinduisi". Huddism, and ? fSofs of the Chinese. Moham- i.n.Uhen.ri-stmns. . .k Treasure" b" mson 'i The secrets of the high v i's of ranama have eluded ioc. "'t centuries. Fabulous stor-';!y stor-';!y 'Sj savase demons and un- ;'.f(Xl treasure have been woven i-.- ''"""if the nivsteries of unexplored t ::1lt and canyons and many J r advent urers have hewn thru ' broken wilderness in search -'.viodce and wealth from this . "iThi storv tells of the hunt ' '". rolJ dliri,,S which the forest v tamed, a child was born and a ; f solved. Death lurked for -'who made a misstep and fail-fl. fail-fl. CjMiiited those who couldn't ' 1 the uncovered treasure because ".tis black. The author is a young .st coast naturalist whose lec-3i lec-3i !.,s and writings are widely used 'schools, scouts, and individual students. -The President's Lady" Irving' "j. In this story. Irving Stone is :-j.cs to life the deeply-moving id atv of Rachel and Andrew Jack-n Jack-n Theirs is a tender and poig- at !ve stor-v ancl the readers f3 find that Rachel Jackson lived - the most controversial and ama--; melodramas that ever en- Some people study all their life, and at their death they have learned everything except to think. Domergue gulfed an American woman. In Irving Stone's writing, philosophy, philos-ophy, all histroy is contemporary, as live, vital and exciting today as dm-ing the hours when it actually occured. The reader in, '-The President's Pres-ident's Lady," will watch Rachel .Tackson's story unroll as though it were happening at this very moment. "The Diligence in Love," Daisy Newman. This story, simply told, beautifully characterized, is a novel about a sophisticated advertising woman, who found much to learn and admire among the Quakers and saved her marriage from disaster. dis-aster. The author of this story was bron ni Lancashire, England of American parents and was educated educa-ted both in Europe and America. A Quaker herself, she lives, at present, near New Haven, Conn., with her husband, who teaches at Yale, and their two children. , "Tc Tell Y-our Love," by Mary Stolz. The summer she was seventeen, seven-teen, was a strange one for Ann and it seemed to her later, when she looked back on it, that the most important thing in it was the telephone the telephone that didn't ring. Because during all her activities in and out of the house, she found herself listening for Doug Eamcn's call. While she listened lis-tened through the summer of young bitterness. and unhappi-ness. unhappi-ness. she learned many things about love, from her family, her friends and from her first deep experience with the beauty of mutual feelings. The author has spun the thread of the theme skillfully and with a warmth and wise humor that makes Ann's story and her family story a real wonderful one to read. |