Show 101 U'S A TOP NOVELIST I '"777177777775-'777Irinr!""- s AllergicAL LIVEN William Faulkner 11i shouldn't be allowed tc get away with it One Of the recognized intellects among fiction writers a novelist philosopher and student of humanity he is putting out his first long storY since 1940 'Intruder In The Dust" Xt is Mb By to Per ioOs - till to be spellbound by the shades of women atill spinsters and widows waiting even 75 years later for the slow graph to bring them news of Tennessee and Virginia and Pennsylvania battles which no longer faced the street but peered at it over the shoulders of the neat y houses desmall new signed in Florida and California DOUBTERS should try this- -d of one only the final paragraph taken at random: one-thir- one-stor- " and which when even children lived in them seemed i set with matching garages In tedious flowerbeds three and four of them now a subdivision of what 25 years ago had been -considered a little small for one decent front lawn where the prosperous young married couples lived with two children each a and as soon as they could afford It ari automobile each and membership in the country club and the bridge club and the junior rotary and éhamber of commerce and he patented elettric gadgets for cooking and freezing and clea ing and the neat trim coloredl maids in trim caps to run then and talk to one another over the telephone from house to tibiae while the wives in sandals and Ipants and painted toenails puffed lipstick stained cigarettes : - ' 1! 4 706Ve41 1: " I I I Down Lillie Cottonwood Canyon" Thw am-ma- n show is this noted artist's first Is Salt Lake Retraction on Research r Robertson AMONTH or so agol I wrote - Rua rk Whimseys zoo4k 0t iP '7 '7!zoi : : ' 6 :f::: 4k' 1 ' tf 4m47 i 7 itykkowroz40400mg4N1tip:1::'"-:- "Gone to the City" by H Edward Nes len tells the tale of a deserted home falling apart d while the farmer and answered the familiar boys and girls havo urban call fetching 1 one-ra- :4tp4F I To be shown throughout the month the paintings will hang at Ruth and Paul Smith's Little ' Gallery five miles up Emigration canyon as the crow Mes— r ser 5051 on the mailbox The 30 paintings that make rich color throughout the gallery are of the 'present time and recentyears His canvases are known for their picturing the west as it really is—its far skies eroded lands the plains and mountains cattlemen h and horses Superb is handling of color When he as in art classes at B Y U d later at the University of Lynn Fausett dreamed of e st- ern study He headed for Art Students League in New 17ork where he became a membezt of its board of control and eventually its president Thereafter for some 20 years Mr Fausett devoted himself to painting murals for nationally-know- n buildings When he returned to his native state it was murals again for many places among them for municipal buildingS in Price and in Nevada schools nearest to Salt Lake are his murals at Farmington in the L D S chapel Since his spetial governmental art work during the war he has devoted himtelf to painting with gratify- lug easel results to art lovers Among the present show re k Ruark one of this C0111YM'a favorite professional funny men "have come up in the world so far that we are now beginning to shoot them for their political beliefs But I have met no ladies of late who prefer the hot seat to the kitchen I think they will settle for the kitchen" A collection of his wild brief whimsies which have appeared in various newspapers and magazine is for no known reason titled "I Didn't Know It Was Loaded" — it still is singularly As reckless in appropriate his aim as an with a BB gun he spares no one He handles the English language as thottgh it was grapeshot A few of the sketch titles may give a vague hint of the riotous contents—"My Life With Edna Woolman Chase or What Vogue Really Means to Me" He says "Any time I get to feeling real low like my life isn't rich enough or full enough or even firmly packed I swipe Mama's Vogue magazine and curl up in a corner with a glass of milk and my Opium set Mama usually keep$ her copies of Vogue on a high 'shelf where my mischievous can't get at them little but ever so often mice knock one off the edge" Then there are "My Mama' Done Tole Me" "Hit Him Again He's Fragrant" and "Dear Little Deductible You" A perfect book when life grows drear (Doubleday New York) Bo t artists have been one-ma- Mad at eyes look out from comic face of Ken Procket's "Clown" Utah Institute of Fine Arts' exhibit as state capitol "Afternoon in June" In Little Cottonwood canyon "Summer Ranch" "Sunshine and Melting Snow" "P ea cef ul Valley" flower studies and a portrait 'Vickie' daughter of Mr and Mts Lawrence Zirker "Interesting—but both of us will keep on using our own methods with which we are the happiest" writes Mr Wassmer "We have spent the summer in it small studio here much like camping out in the Yellowstone The valley is much i the same as Iltah's Heber and the hills are covered with maples just turn- ing" ': r obi- 4't : - :H ' ov :4 J 'Intwod I ''::' x I‘s Nal 0 ' N - Ole loveliness charm and sacred feeling of 111? 1 10 I t tfiletlift ask SV014 WI so see the td&p'P on the air for FRIGIDAIRE every Sunday night 0:00 P M—KSI 4 our foremost artists!" tr si I ik v Ji! owira 1 as her birthplace—but never been able to prove it When she mentions the town she thinks she was born in or nearby as the case may be she receives incredulous looks from residents Utah Artists In Display 'At the Capitol : ' A N INTERESTING feature oe he 46th annual exhibit of Utah Institute of Fine Arts now A t current at the capitol is the number of new artists all of whom have produced work above the average Miss Maud R Hardman supervisor of the show and chairman of the exhibition committee comments on the fact as an indication of the steady growth of art appreciation in the state In additign nearly all of Utah's esablished artists have sent fine examples of their work "Because of the large number of paintings entered — 225 of them" she said "we- - were obliged to augment the banging space in the corridors 4Panels were set up against pillars to add room" That the Chinese always have been centuries ahead of us in new art forms is evidenced by Jessie Larson's ancient "Chinese Bell Tower" It distinctly is of the present and most modern school of streamlined architecture A complete life storyi is told in the desolate little farmhouse scene "Gone to the City" by H Edward Neslen done with sympathetic understanding Altogether different is the ribald "Clown" with sad wise eyes looking out from his comic face Ken Procket is the artist The art committee headed by Miss Hardman includes Mrs Arthur Beeley Prof Reuben Reynolds of Logan and Mrs Stuart P Dobbs of Ogden The show is open to the public dur- t: ing regular capitol hours r tràr 4:1 visiting It seems am NOW comes Mr McCullough without ever dreaming of my wife's problem with proof that such a place did exist It wasn't on his list of ghost towns and he didn't see it but he does bring in corroborating evidence My wife has always been sure that she was born and relatively sure of the date but until now she has been subject to challenge on both points Of course the research isn't yet complete To the best of mya- wife's belief she was born in timber camp where her father was hacking ties or cutting tim ber for charcoal or something of the kind but there was a post office within reach where they got their mail even if no doctor so she ( has somewhat uncertainly given the name ofhat post office as her birthplace I HAPPEN to have the advantage of her ia that I have an older brother who was able to point out the its of the slab shack up in the panhandle of Idaho where I was born back a long time back A year ago I was able to get a birth certificate Now if Mr McCullough will extend his researches and locate the exact place where my wife thinks she was born and nitely establish her claim to be an American citizen in good standing I promise never never again to make light of do weighty matter of research n Morgan Returns To USAC Sets OGAN—Eack at Utah State Li Agricultural college after spending the past year working on his PhD at Stanford univer- sity is Prof Floyd T Morgan He specialized in drama and English literature An expert in set designing Prof Morgan will be in charge of designing sets for all of the nine plays to be produced at USAC during the coming yearr In addition he will direct three plays—"The Male Animal" by Thurber and Nugent "What Every Woman Knows" by James Barrio and a third yet to be chosen- - Prof Morgan studied costume design at Stanford and reports that he hopes to have the drama production class at II 11 A C make costumes this year for the first time El We invite you lb an -I AUTOGRAPH PARTY i MONDAY OCTOBER 4 1948 gi from 10 am to 12 noon and 2 pm so 4 p to meet ORA PATE STEWART k author of "Pages from the Book of Eve "God Planted a Tree! e "I Talk About My Children" "Gleanings" who will autograph her books for all who desire the- a '' CHRIS TM A S fle: '1::'1'4-'"- 1 W 4r ::: !!ifiotti 4! 4r who does a good job of article writing and is an always on the ground searcher for his facts has recently been up in Wyoming loolcing over ghost towns For many years the wife of my bosom has claimed Wyoming of Wyoming just ain't no such place ed Christmas portrayed by 111 z Dunphy does all equal skill his landscape painting on location and so obtains a freshness and spontaneity of coloring to- :::k 'welhalr- a - erom00 iz O - ever-lurin- as Wrong By Frank C Robertson :? - AoI 1HE About 35 paintings are hung For the past three yetasMr d Dunphy has been studying th Lake Salt after City working his return from the navy A the scenic San Franciscan beauty of Utah has drawn him from his native heath In addition to many local landscapes he is showing along the Califorg coast and amid the Teton mountains around Jackson Hole Wyo His landscape range through the seasons from gray winter days to Still brilliant fall colorings life studies of flowers fabrics and accessories are harmoniously put together and handled with - mo ii A MOST comprehensive onman show by GeorgelDunphy is being presented thrpughout October in Utah Power and Light aUditoriurn at Ogden sponsored by the Palette club rAet gether with atmospheric effect that add up into beautY Noticable among the present showing are his 'Lilacs" which won honorable mention at Utah state fair in September 1"Muir Beach" "Roses and Old Velvet" — yellow roses against a green velvet background "January Thaw" and "Winter Wasteland"—a view across Salt Lake valleys from the east bench g ": 17--- ' Pe lot''AA a At Ogden art show in New York n "Queen's Garden" at Bryce two '5:: :::':: Dun hy Show snow-cover- : 1 a work- - 0 iL- AM HAPPY to be able to report a job of researching which all unwittingly has resulted in good to my family C W McCullough of Park City ing i the New York Art Stu- dents under the modern artist Yasuo KtmiyoJape shi—elso with Sigmund Menkes from !aris who recently had a :M:::-:- At I painting madly trying to capture all the first fall turning of the leaves around Woodstock N Y Some of the results will be shown in Salt Lake this :' At pot-shooti- ng Wassmers— ABOUT now the and Judy — are :: S41 f make-believ- News From Wassmers i - or less tongue-incheek article for this paper which to my great slurprise Mr ELS taken more seriously than I had intended it to be1 I titled it "Research M a k:e s Me Tired" It 'was really a pseudo e sort of research indulged in by certain literary pretenders I was shoe Wig at I have no objection to a good honest job of research no ter how false the cox they may come up with ac-so long as the researcher has tually worked at his job But a number of honest researchers have seemed to think at them I I was didn't feel that it was necessary to draw a diagram for readers to see that hIlf the significance of the title was at my own expense Anyhow I have learned that if I pour anything at all in jest at least somebody is going to drink it in earnest C -- ONE of the oddities of the day is the fact that with all the kudos showered on Lynn Fausett throughout the years and his eminenc as a painter of murals as wel as landscapes and portraits this n October sees his first in his native ahowing he was born in Price stile— - 113W Fausett s First It LS UST 1 e - York) "WOMEN" observes Robert j 4"' &10-4- Being shown at Paul Smith's Little Gallery in Emigration canyon is Lynn Fausett's "Looking um' I 44 - OF BREATH? "Intruder In The Dust" is a tale of the south a study of murder and the mass mind of a community caught between decency and barbarism when Lucas la Negro shot a white man in the back—or was so accused Faulkner has a power Oven to fewpenetrative novelists—even though he does hurl his reader into a rat-rac-e of frenzied reading speed (Random House New !f 000" - overi ahoppingbags in chain groceries and drugstores" V " 4 y::J::"::'::?::: neat plots of clipped grass and Maud' Robinson the reader Plowing a way through one of his paragraphs is equal to climbing Mt Everest Hoping for the end of a sentence is' as useless as trying to dam a mountain torrent his 17th novel-- It is a Major literary pontribution This column's gripe is that he always is so deep in his theme that he is entirely obliviouS of -- :'::q:''!''4::!::':::g':':g 4: "Aspen Pine and &IOW' 'give George Dunphy full sweep for his shoW at Ogden Palette club color brush Shown at his one-man CARDS Mk available at the better stores S to 25 eents mDESERET BOOK Co 'Book Center of the htterM0010thilX West' 44 East South temple Street ilk Lake City 10 Utah MI Sunday 'October 3 1942 S |