OCR Text |
Show ' : . Si if Bf '1 THE DESERET NEWS, SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1928 FfCT! SECTION WtUUloyeliiiij Poetry and Philosophylir A Rare Tale of Forest Life Quriloine Wfiters Note Says That Mars And Other Stars State of My Nativity C30I State of my nativity! Proud! proud am In Mambi A Life in the Woods Felix Salten ' Writee mn Animal Story of Unusual . Are Inhabited I of you! Of your emfling, golden gladness, ,Of your skies own flawless hue; Of your wealth of surging waters. sea-bird roam. Oer which rt islands. wave-gion Finding your A crime gave on Mars! Such a headline, appearing In a daily newspaper of the United States, would startle the average householder perusing the daily prints over his roornftg coffee. But such a headline la quite possible in Mars today in the opinion of Sir Francis Younghusband. author of Life in ths Stars." 4E. P. Duttoa Haven for a nesting-homA Co.). Sir Francis began followthe stars while a young man ing Of your might of regal mountains, . living on the Gobi desert and his conclusions, surprising to the layTowering high on every side, man, are all made after investigation of existing theories and his Holding wonders of the ages own research. Crime and erjl, in all In their canyons deep and wide ; I existing on Mars and probability the other planets, may be what in our opinProud of the intrepid mortals io p in the known world la conoid . ersd good. Sir Francis believes. "In Who have bade you yield your best-pl- aced a sense then," he says, there be J would more evil in jhe world of the rose upon your bosom I higher beings than, there Is here. 'Finely sensitive to excellence they Where once cacti drained your breast! ba would finely sensitive to evil. And what to us seems good by our standard would be atrociously evil according to theirs. Other climes may lure me thither. Sir Francis declares that as a result of his findings ha van say casttime For a may glamor positively that: 1. There not only may he intelO'er my beauty-cravin- g spirit, ligent beings like our skives among the Stars but that there must be. But not long their carm may last 2. These beings may ba of an heart-throentirely different form than ours, Comes a day when quiver but ths spirit animating them must be the same. With keen pangs of longing pain, 2 The most obvious consequence of their sensitivity must be And my steps arp homeward wended,. the pain they suffer from the evil in their world. Where my love and pride remain! 4. Musio must play a fundaLand of my nativity! mental part In the lives of these higher beings. Shrined is your every grace. Rhythm is a basic character of the universe," tha author continues And echoed are the words of him On this earth Insects, birds, men all rejoice in making music. Those Who said This Is the Place. who have had the deepest' experience of the Genius of ths World Grace Ingles Frost. describe the world as a song. Visionaries In ail countries havs heard angels singing. And therefore we may assume that dancaand song occupy much of tho lives of the higher beings" Life on Mars end Indeed on the other planets must offer much In the way of relaxation and expression, according to this seeker after facts concerning the stars Ha un sees them pursuing many of the un technical, easily read and FQCB CENTURIES activities common to people in the derstood everyone. LITE by OF RIVER Ia order to accomplish bis pur- cities and towns of tha United FATHER MISSISSIPPI, bf 11 pose tha author seeks first of ail Slates, suggests that they may even Saxon; The Century Company; to vindicate the historical accuracy know tha struggling poet, the tag-gand Charleston dancer, tha of the Bible; secondlly ha defends New York; $4.84; 427 page. tha trustworthiness of the doctrine painter and other artists we might picture one of these ex"If of be and Christianity; lastly "Truth U stranger than fiction." poses the unscientific character of beings he adds we would This is decidedly true in the eeee the evoiutionarv theory, ridiculing higher paint a rad, ant figure Just rising f Father Mississippi.' on a heavenward flight. from earth of the absurd and varied attempts Mr. Saxon baa written a work the evolutionists to account for the One arm would stretch up toward one doea so romantic -, that ia that creation. He also defends the Mo- the supreme star. The other would not feel be or abe is reading dry sato authorship of ths Pentateuch be reaching downward with the facts; yet they are facte, to woU la his book. finger just touching the uplifted Dr. written that they carry the reader Campbell's discussion is hands on tho toe of expectation beout And to straightforward and his arguments low. He would be longing to carry along from page to page w hat Is coming next. And in them easily followed. He cites in his them with him. While eeery page of he booh Is own words what be considers to would be the faith that by the virof interest, some, which Is to be be the best authorities on the sub- tue issuing from him they also expected, ere of more then ordi- ject. and his examples are drawn might be enabled to wing their way ths best known oeurceg of starward." nary Interest, lor the author holds from In this latter suggestion there his reader in breathlees suspense information. may he the germ of an Idea that as to what Is going to happen next. the author thinks ft possible that That Mr. Saxon has made a deep "Dr BOO ELAND life hereafter will carry men and and exhaustive study of his subject ADVENTURES IN READING by women to life on the stars ms their none will deny who reads the work. - .. . May Lamberton Becker; Freder- reward of virtue- Authority, after authority, back to ick A. Stokes Company, hew DUKE N, PARRY. the earliest records of the river Tork; 242 pages; 12.44. gre quoted. - . .Father Mississippi"- - la a great, Answer. Thtvotinu boys and glru human story entwined whb the tells what books'for to rend and why, history of the great river. There dividing the types of literatura into Age. Age, will you tell Is tragedy, pathos, humor. Did Love serve you ill or well T various Classes Is it true he only brings The book opens with a vivid picSome of the covered Heartaches on his shining wings ? ture of life on an old Louisiana are: Leading forsubjects companionship, Is it true he will not stay plantation, where the author spent reading for encouragement, discovFast the glamour of a day?" his childhood. The first four chap- ering the delights of history readIs In which this Ilfs descrln ing by subject, other ters, lives people's "What you ask Ive long forgot; in an without la equal ed, perhaps a study of charcter In biography, This remembrance wavers not American literature. Then cornea other countries people's including Youth, Love is worth the history of the river, told not as travel, homi and school Ilfs In Youth, Any heartbreak of the erth! dry facts hut with a touch that other lands books for a world's ADELAIDE P. LOVE. makes decidedly interesting reed- eye view; romance and fantasy. ing. Swiftly Saxon traces the Poetry and nature books both for eliminated from connection with growth of the great valley; when, field use and family reading. ths killing As ths polics deteetlvs how and by whom It was settled. The closing chapters deal with THE TWENTT-TVTslowly follows up of. cluo aftor STORY another until every source of a posthe great flood of 1427. which Is STURT. Ml. sible theory is exhausted, a young told in a manner to hold tha at THE SKYSCRAPER MURDER, by doctor connected with the examinertlon of the reader. of the police stum Mr. Saxon has given a distinct Samuel Epeaack; Macaulay ing department end valuable contribution to AmerCompany, New York; 74 pagex; bias upon a plausibly explanation of the crime. 12 40. ican literature. The ecene of the story it sudfrAm New Yprk to shifted denly In tnpoort apartment of a Paris where the swift IV DEFENSE OF THE BIBLE. twenty-si-tha succession x story bulldtng tha mur- of events that, unravel and bring to THE BIBLE UNDER FIRE, by dered body of a man is discovered a climax one of most the D. mysterious D.i Harp- by his butler. No one saw .he John I Campbell, er and Brother. New York; IIS man go into the building from of society murders la a pleasant and lnterestfig surprise for Lucys Cl tit New York,'- - n pop- Intensely pages, $2.50. . reader. ' ular Broadway night club where the theThe - Jo-i- n author's styie is clear .and L. Campbell, in this book, murdered man was last seen in concise and from the first page especially company with the newly divorced presents to inquirers, novel begins to build toward a young people who are perplexed eocietv couple, Mr. and Mrs Van the climax grand at. Nest modern Edison. bewildered" the , . and by , . ,heading, the reader tacks on the Bible, cotivlneingattrwer T those Each one disputing the divinity of scripture elates under suspicion. and ANOTHER BY RIPERT HUGHE The style of ths book is clear and ia carefully THE LOVELY DCKL1XGS. by Rupert Hughes; Harper & Brothers, New York, 110 pages, 12. wide-winge- e; bs - BOOKS OFTHE DAY o -- ' ' -- Bambi" the author has while writing wholly of animals, somehow transcended bis subject. He has given us ths fife story of a forest deer and FeEx Salten a comprehension of ths entirs univeras as wall. Hera is a rationale of lifs if you want such a thing, that is delightfully Implicit in a charmn ing story. Throw away your tomes on pantheism and read Bambi." In an unpretentious preface that cuts to the heart of tho book lit a par? graph, John Galsworthy remarks: I do not as a rule liks ths method which places human words in the mouths of dumb creatures, and it is tha triumph of this book that, behind the conversation, ons feels tha real sensation creatrues of who the speak. Clear and illuminmov-' and in ating places very at ing, it Is a little masterpiece."1-SomewhIronically, Mr, Galsworthy recommends Bambi" particularly to sportsmen. Why does one feel the "real sensations of ths ere urea who speak" behind their human conversation? Because SaJen hex Invested the conversation with tha rhythm of tho animals and birds and insects . who - do- - the talking who "had a very mild faee and extremely good natured features," and who "cast timid glanced at the Spin-osa- The-har- world from out of his big round eyes," talks with a deference ana a nervous quality 'of apologetic The jays shriek, reiteration. What vulgarity, what vulgarity!" and shout at the young dear Bambi, with his leggy Umbo, "What are you gawking at, you freak?" The butterfly, that prims donna among Insects, exclaims. "What? Did you say like a flower? In my circle it's generally supposed that were handsomer than flowers. And the jumpy grasshopper, when Bambi almost steps on him, answers an apology this wise. "Not at alL Bines its you. It's perfectly all right. But you never know who's coming, and yon have to be careful." Now one doesn't have to be much of a naturalist to- - perceive that Felts Salim In bia conversations had caught ths rhtbra of ths different beings who people his forest world. Without being able to distinguish the coxa from the trochanter, or the femur from the tarsus, we, the reviewer, affirm the statement that Saltan's eta Is perfect and his eye lends 'authenticity to his ear. Bambi came into ths world In the middle of ths thicket, in one of thoee little, hidden foreet glades which eeem to be entirely open.i hot we 'are really screened in on What a beau'ifnl child all s'des cried the magp.e; but Bambis mother pays no attention to this encomium for her first born. She continues to wash her child. The slight thirg staggered a little. Under the strokes of which softly her tongue, touched him here and there, ha drew himself together and stood still. Hla little red coat, that was stilt somewhat tousled. bora fins whits spots, and on tun vague, baby face there was still deep, sleepy expres-- , sion. Can poetic observation Improve on such a paragraph? Before the close of hie lifs Bam-,learns that "thers is one who ia over us all, over us end over him." .Man the megalomaniac. is put in his place as the story - ends John R. Chamberlain York Times. b! This is ths first collection In book form of poems by s well knows writer of versa for mags sines in the United States and Great Britain. Many of them have been mad into songs; soma have been used for pageants and soma are favorites with publio speakers. Sometimes tbs poems startle ths delineareader by their clean-ctions of life's situations, as In Ths China Tea Set." sometimes they reveal a gentle humor, as in "Bedtime Stories; sometimes they are vibrant with tendernes. as in I Know a Friendly Maple Tree," but they all carry a not of inspiration, such as is sounded by the title Winston Churchill Is going to poem, House of Happiness. inThs poem entitled Gray" la eswrite a series of sketches about pecially well done. It does bring teresting people be has met. out the coldnes, the somber and The collected poems of William the dull and gives one a real of the meaning of the come soon Ellery Leonard will word. from Ths Viking Press. Beauty has crossed our way. And aha has placed Upon our hearts her gift.. Faith has effaced The pain and doubt of yearn While held In thrall And deafened ns so oft To beauty's call. Since beauty crossed our way Naught else remains. We kneel here at faith's shrins As anger wanes. Ws quaff her brimming cup And feel within That we to beauty's kind. Once more are kin. HARRIET FOSTER CHANDLER. -- ut 1 Twiri-.Gir- L Writers ChaseNewsTogether On J ournalastic-- J ob ' erj; d Exeecr scut is tBe common cause of indigestion. It results in pstn and sourness about two hours after eating. The quick corrective Is an alkali which neutralises acid The best corrective is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia It has remained stand- - Family problems are more baf- of the world, is a statement made without qualification after g'eanmg from both the daily papers news and feature writers and alao from essays in the more intellectual magazines. . This story Is up to the minute, the ducklings from Louise Todd, the high school girls ,to her older sister with a "case on a married man down to a younger brother and sister. all hare expenencee that in "glorious nineties" would not only have been improbable but at that time would have been Impossible. , It is unnecessary to say tha story is well handled, sufficient to note th J author, who has rely os crude methods never contiao to suffer wheo yrvw learn iow tniillea rttaan for close os to two decades and appears to have lost quickly, how pleasantly Him ere-- 1 mier, method acta. Please lei It none of his cunning, in the handling show you now. ot a tale, Be sure to get the renufne Phil-!!- P Mu of prescribed by "What America Did." by Florence Msy-ie.i- a winter's Lariat (Salem. Ore.' for SUMMER' heat and ,'THE A te- - have no af July has "rounded up" several of our homo writers. There Is Laura fect on one of our home writers " Beebe of Salt Lake with two poems the ambitious Frank C. Robertson. "Restless." and a striking bit bf While other writers may sit Idly In the shade. Mr. Robertson pushes Imagery. The Vortex." Another Salt Laker, "Violet Elnluad. con- steadily on. Results, another story "Ele-sus- ," tributes I Cannot Forget." la Wert, the July 21 issue. tho pen name of the port This 1 sailed jUme hi rtory comes writing "Sad Eyed Boy," nnr a he and Card." my from Salt Lake City, also. Dirty St. George is represented by two poeed h ha thrlllng things to o poems. "The Path to Heaven" and about unprincipled men who "The Path I Love to Travel." Both not do slay the game fairly, for Reid. H. Lorenzo ot work Jare the there is a mystery, no apparent I From further afield cornea "Our clue and a sheriff who works so Yesterdays" written by Selma Step-Ke- n solve the problemby a method all of Twin Falls, Idaho, and re-lt- 4 AUCHAN, HILDA Hilda Vaughan waa born and reared in ths Welsh countryside about which she has written in her third novel, The Invader, which will bo published July 2ttth by Har- pers, Miss Vaughan, who ia the wife of Charles Morgan. English novelist and dramatic critic, feels that her education was perhaps as good as any that could be devised lor e future novelist, although she never went to school and although her mother never kept any of the governesses she engaged to teach her. As a child. Miss 4 aughan travelled a great deal, and waa a great reader. She loved to find In the of books sh read- greet try and characters who are a part of it. Hardy and Scott were never forced upon her, and were treated by her as a pleasure and not a task. They were devoured among the topmast branches of tree or bidden tn a haystack where no one coold find her. She had few companions of her own age and so mads friends the more- -' readily with her eiders and with persons Of classes other than her own. Many of those who cams to her; bouse to see her father, a country solicitor and landowner, on business, were characters' rugged in a sense that only those, who, living in remote, districts, navg 'escaped tha levelling in flu ence of modern civilization, can be rugged." The blood and traditions ot the conntrys.de Miss Vaughan describes are thus part of a long Inheritances The Welsh papers in reviewing her previous novels, "The Battle to tho Weak." and "Hers Are hovers," have declared that Wales haa found In Mias Vaughan one who will Interpret her Ufa for the world in something of the fashion that Hardy haa done for Wessex, and the Brontes for the moors of tho North. Mina Vaughan now lives In London. She has a small daughter. Who Loves Mountains Overmuch" by a Pocatello poet, Ruth Bernice Mead. Two other Idahoans appear. Norris McDonald Phelps of Feathia ery Ilia with a poem 'Tooth Tim.' 'and W K. (Armour T. ec - open-coun- Utah-ldah- Chaucers Fat Job. ERNACU ing of the Canterbury-Tale-wa- VERSES s only a spare time hobby. Chaucer, who began as a royal Page, had undertaken many embassies One, in Italy, had been so successful as to earn him a gram of a pitcher of wine a day, to be supplied by the king's butler. Two years later he received f IS 13s 4d for some eecret service work. A mission to Flanders and an embassy to the king of France brought him nearly 89; no small sum In those days. It was, no doubt, these journey-tng- s abroad that enabled him to dip into all the treasure houses of Christendom for his stones. But h.s merry manner of telling them that we owe to his genius alone, or perhaps, a little to the county which he made his home; for if a man can't be merry and poetic in springtime and in Kent, when and where can. he be? London Mail. y Alf Osmond BUNNY BROWN. old-tim- -- but--los- "What is the best bo&k on evolution for readers? Within, Aha jast three- years I have two answers different to that given ikiueafioa. Each answer was, 1 "think, correct at ths time when it was given but neither is correct now. . Helen (left) and ohve Pariah, twin reporters on the Atlanta Superceding both of these excellent books Is this still better Ga.) Constitution staff, look and write alike. They cover" assignone by 2i scientists of ths highest ments together and collaborate in writing the stories. each writing of the aa of a large daily) A man reputeofwho, ATLANTA (AP) Twin souls the subject which constined pect 4t- ta Xoe Sr own field or special comtutes?! with but a single though a Job for writing it. petency. have produoed a work That describes Heten and Olive Since that eventful day a year that ia in the beqt sense both popAton the and a half ago. tho twins have ular and scientific Perish, twin reporters is a lanta Constitution twins because become, fully Initiated into the great collection of fact Her Illustrating they were born that way, because newspaper fraternity. Why should and cumulatively supporting the they dree, that way and because they want party dresses, slip peri view ot tbe world-f- acts and the like? All they desire is evolutionary they report that way. about rocks the and fossils, Furthermore, when they write business clohtes, their mother saya progression of Ilf upon ths earth, a letter which says "L etc," they And furthermore she tuers that embryology, ot tme genealogy both a gn it 4 she has ceased to be thF.r mother butterflies, bees. ants, horsBen F. Noble, their city editor, end is now their chauffeur because plant links and es, "missing connecting cover og a In the wouldnt think of sending the two the chain, sp-- s. the on separate assignments. He- - says half dozen assignments a day press lineage evolutionary of man, the development them to transport her into service they're both the same to him. of the rain, and the evoluuoa ot The girls write their story to- from story to story. the mind As newspaper reporter. Helen gether. Helen tells Olive what she "With assurances that nobody's The faith is thinks and if Oliva doesn't like It, and Olive ar, in demand. going to be wrecked by it, and often she doesnt, she tells Klwanis club must have them one provided it is a faith which does Helen the correct way of saying It, day, thf Masonic club the next not totter at ths impact of facta and vice Versa. The net result Is a and to on until the week Is filled this book may he confidently recby with special invitations for them ommended to all readers who want signed compromise story. both and published under their and Noble wishes there were four to know something about both the names and they have a lot of luck of them Instead of two. Their tpe-- fact of nature and the evolutlon- them.-rrand.J- s - young-report- em BAYER ASPIRIN SAY. V-- ? " ,3 . Uee-T Colds Pain" 'Headache Neuralgia con-irti- oa - I - and -- INSIST! Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians y v so The Accident and Health Review (Chicago) for August has ma article by Louis Ward, pen name of one of our Salt Lake writer who Sr year, been a con- row who eomributea "The Crater, abator to that JournaL Hie pree- Creed. Value of - ent article J entitled .ur Wyoming forneighand deals onerot. also have written the with Ah Example of Insurance subject poetry magazine, a well as other against accident and sieknesa. Mr. westerners. The Lariat, by the way. a number of is now being published quarterly Wardaspresents arguments for Insurance. instead of monthly as formerly,)-- ' Mr. Ward te actively engaged in and it haa also undergone a change commercial writing, his articles sp '19 - U 'L p H from time t time In non. Zl0,:1-form is designed small bearing eroua trade journals under both enough to fit the pocket. his own name and hla pen name. this" One article he has written Agriculture tea subject e beoed month In "Western Con- that there is usually someth trg te fectlonerappears In which he feafor July say about it. Among local writers tures tha new Ostler Candy Comon agriculture for this month we number of Illustrations aca pany, find that V. L. Martlneau. tha agricultural agent for Salt Luke county companying the artlce. lias rlttea an article on Preparation ot Fair Exhibits" for the July 2i Utah Farmer. J. C. Hogensun of the CtaH Agricultural coue;e has written Perrennial Sow Thistle"1 for the same magazine. In the July Sugar Coasett, Mark Austin, agriculture superintendent o of the Sugar co tetany write on grossing the sugar beet, fKE C1FT his article being entitled "Keep Thera Growing" M. W. Ingall,, of Safeon write the same company this gift. Tour YOU touched ty First" In the issue. hands Laid bos and tissue paper out. A Life of Thomas Hardy. And wrapped it with these silver' hands. Plana ar under way for a meThese silken ribbons wound morial to Thomas Hardy in his native Dorsetshire and his biograabout- ia to be published early this phy fait by Macmillan. The material Ton thought of me; of my defor this Book was gathered by his wife. Florence Emily Hardy, from light his own words and diaries, and When I should cut the seal most of it waa actually read and and stnng revised by him. And come upon this gracious Mr. Hardys latest poems, mad ready for publication shortly besight. fore bis death, are alao to appear This gift from you, this lovely shortly, under the title, "Winter Words In Various Moods and Mething. tres." Compensation. I thank you, friend. But had In the strength of the endeavor. Ellsworth Huntington author of you sent In tha temper of the giver. The Charatcer of Races" and . An empty box, I still should In the loving of the lover, coThe Pulse of Progress" Is Ues tha bidden recompense. see author with Leon F. Whitney of In the sowing of the sower. The Builders of America" which Tour hands, your form about it In the fleeting of the flower. William Morrow published Septembent. In the fading of each fcontv ber 24. The authors define the lAtrks eternal recompense. And love thegift you thought Builder as the positive element In ANNIE ADAMS FIELDS. a people; thoee who contribute to of me. . progress and advance civilization. In their Investigation of facta they have analyzed carefully the entire list In the latest "Who's Who" and have studied a long succession Chaucer wax appointed of troller of customs In 1274. college classes, chiefly from HarThe post of comptroller of the vard and Yale but also from the custom and subsidy of wools, women's colleges. . h dee and woodfells and the petty customs of wine one of the fattest Jobs hi the city of London was not the only prize that Chaucer managed to gather during e career of diplomacy; for the writ- 2 being collected hr the Infpvr- Dne spoonful of RhiltlpW Milk of j rjtij k of Maoraia"'(ne been Hiv way oeAf them tecs Med their) yesr cottrse fori SB A." B.''arre. f ! War Museum. neutralises' South Kenslng-manMagnesia with highest honor st Oglethorpe I "Ton may break, you may Instantly jo. & Registered Trade Mark of Tbe times its volume In arid. It Charles H. Phillip Chemical Com- - ton, London. Mrs. Kellys book. and expect to enter in ter the vase If you will. But the Is harmless sad rasteles ao4 It Ipeny and Its predecessor, Charles H. American libraries eastern school for master s work I scent of tbe rose will cling 'round report, is in is quick. T will iBS J834, IFMUj dccwid. fo tbq fUy this UU, rtapt jrhlfib foynd jtn HsoW J his own. I used to think that Bunny Brown was awful tame and slow. Of all the boys of my home town that lived long, long ago, this Sunny chap, it reemed to me, was lackin most of alL But now my He used to wear the eyes can clearly see they had kind of grin that never wears away. It seemed to me a deadly sin But when the tellers scattered out and for him to look that way. tried to make life's plan, I found this rough and ready scout was go in to be a man. The sun Is shlnm In his face and it I red and e brown; he hasn't got the springy pace of Bunny Brown; bat.' just the same, he has tbs grin that keeps his temper cook tn one that was a deadly sin when w was both in school. My hair Is bald and- - we Srt imsTtvrmrv. Tht morntn f white; his pste-ts upon him called to buy from him a cow. The eame old grin was was .smilin' he on hi face and through I've never knowed a time nor place nor work we had to do that ever drove the grin away or chocked the tones of Joy that come Into the world to stay when Sunny eras a boy. His oldest boy wag killed tn France: the mother The Best Book chance- - tha doctor said, to pined away: she only bad a rightin'' t - the- - bout end Bunny 1 alone. -Sh fought the f.kht. stay. V0lafi0n Qn If be had been a weakllh scout, his heart would be like stone. But I believe that 8unny Brown te in the world to bless. No other man This is what one of the leading ia this hull town, when folks ars In distress, can give ths comfort religious weeklies says of Creation Sunny gives to them that are ia need. The kind of life that Sunny by Evolution (44.49) edited by lives reveals his simple creed- Frances Mason. H ' in tha al-k- e House of Happiness. Reunion. and NewsIeU About Worker Local Literary Field. Excellence. Ouaide, tha heat radtatas from tha pavements A forlorn sparrow cheeps in tha duaty allanthua Trucks rumbla by, taxis hoot, and gutter, urchins play at one of the 40 variants of street baseball. But Inside this book is tbs coolness of ths woodland, and ths summer city is far away and almost forgotten. For Felix Balteq, in Bambi. takes you out of yourself. Ho baa the gift of a tender, lucid style. His observation ia next door to marvelous and he invests ths fruits of this observation with pure poetry. His comprehension makes his deer, his screech owls his butterflies grasshoppers and hares far more exciting to read about than hundreds of human beings a ho crowd ths pages of our novels THREE - Aquas k As trade Neuritis Toothache for Lumbago" Rheumatism " "'.s'hich' contains proven directions. Handy Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. wut f Bsm Massfsctam rt IteiwtteMtt rt tettejlksril 11 |