Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE IN THE FIELD OF 'MODERN WRITERS SUNDAY MORNING Art and e APRIL 5 1936 rat ur e ACTIVITIES IN UTAH ARTISTS COLONY Further Paintings of Salient Interest in Show "Gloucester Wharf" by Anthony Thieme Below Fare Webber Shear's portrait study 'Oriental Calm' Right ’Mr Franklin’s Housa" Robert Strong Woodward's entry a — K r Vv : 'W i Vr Sc! x v Owv a it ' t vKw 4 ' 'V‘’ A -- “"any1!1 r By E E HOLLIS Cm- - c o thki v v Vr'V iAsM t thr:tUi'6kaar ijr- X ' Ai J m - r - ¥ ' v ' ' 'v&-- y V'' ! S? X N ? A T10US “dividual of It pkture vXTTndrh' while everv naee at thl jXia!?80rblng’ lts P®°Pie re alive and in of the struggle' 1Vminatj°n of the complexities common to every community"11’ Dovertv lllness and attendant problems county coundhomeetiTghosine0 hlth6 activities of the South Riding Miss Holtby Problems portraitizes several ontmemh10'-14034101and penetral tive insight into vTI k"human moUvationairman Snaith wealthy coldh competent hie’ X'Ce fare by n0 means dtinWesfeH Wn!P eSf1Ve ldeas f°r community wei w’hnc? fin8iibau age conractor a persuasive exhorter and full of open to the secret i30us leaving him ’ mires the fiery socialist Joe Act ell Y0st competence he ad- out of y of tuberculosis the n't because t0 mark time in the isolation battle of Kiplington Occupying chief nfnce hning measures ! 0 ‘w r £0 1IMPP:ss Cil X - v f J new novel complete J v ' : Publiste’ "4°“ f Jt1 Winifred Iloltby Presents Ample Picture of English County Government a Rich Human" Document-Tha- t Adds Measurably to Her Literary Repute — w A J' X ildfcutavrifrfcv Yorkshire County Doings Sf - ii&? V A ) v ' coun-terestir- i'g - - X': f sVV: s dtey ’ Sth"VehHalT haTmlmlrf rtme htadS £ expensive sanitarium c1Se ?S'£hv th?!oto?Jf hi 38 The Devil ke?p her n lux“7 “ in ven rnore than a rlUnes m°re than ths disappoint-nUhelson! 1“ Sprite obstruct i In L? big ct be seems to SUk baggE?assaStai Massachusetts Family Pageant Alishers Reynal & England We has been deftly transcribed in “The isrsKSted a°ini‘b'h' sin&'sibia'sffts SSd his ted 53 qS! tocrfS “fefSii lZZeTllenC thf Y1 rtUSJ £ taTw “’h!'""' Sfthddja?' WAA-deiilopmmfi tLsns°Jch i&B tracing th and the business Horatio clung to Bodley Farms at Crownnnrt Massachusetts coast the land had AtVsiiwS s anrr “"dip1 KS? JS’Z&ss Horatio ha packed Horace off to Boston to forced marriage to Idy mate with fcodleya bJ 22 ia aet at nauTht slncridy casf cAski tef cS'LteT £mbtef ir4vnrx° & “d'rd teSmoV IteS Perhaps if there had been " we" " W 29 fruit of Zlllah’s brief Union with Ira Ivm the young fisherman she married despite Horatlo’a anger and mourned for 50 years after the sea had taken him the sturdy breed of Yankee Bodlevs ®ed ° quickly- nd that th in°thp Xri’ton41?-tias deteriorated seems clear even to one of its family members It is Zillah of inheritor much of her mother's quietuda and will out memorabiy ip the story with Jewica proud wd hefdstrng and lovShf whorimafns t2loo°if hbUi! knT‘i’ re?ret a11 her ter Hfe and the years upon the Bod recalling joys and pain and' bitterness long forgotten These two if any are the center of the Bodley story but there are nu- - alSefw marina Elmer Browna ‘life’ of Humorist R(tivpnPPDBCiATI0N OF WILL ?EdS: uy Davld Randolph Mil- - M££‘&2 ‘y°r Co”'""'' t0 Wfting tirades gainst esUBIisBid form ©f government and convention there Is no more Rf The Literary Almanac ct m — merous others who furnish moving passages and whose little tragedies are unforgettable points in a record of life written with imagination and insight As a first book “The Yankee Bodleys" is an achievement WIND OVER THE RANGE By Amos Moore Publishers Ives Washburn Inc New York City It was no mild and gentle breeze but a husky cyclone that swept the range when Lance Delaney after a seven-yea- r absence because of a ‘bit of a dust-up- ” with hia father returned unexpectedy to find sleepy little Cieio had undergone changes the once town now harboring the sort of tough Individuals whose idea of a joke is to set loose a man’s horse and leave him afoot on the desert without Water or food Lemoine the young geologist who had beea the victim said it was a bit of horseplay the gang couldn’t have meant any harm But one encounter with the bunch headed by the hard-eye- d youth who thought himself another Billy the Kid convinced Lance otherwise What lies behind Lemoine’s seems to have connection with baiting Case Lorimer’s interest in Gerry Craig L'Or maybe the Craig ranch And Gerry Lance's old playmate appears all too ready to believe brother Bob's drunken accusation of Lance His espousal of Lemoine's cause does hot help that young man It’s an hour before Lance finds him hardly in his room with a bullet in his back Whereupon Lance goes into action Not for !?r0thl'!? Xve Texans named him Delaney this Ranger who is lightning on the draw and a whirlwind in motion The prairie is strewn with corpses before Lance has opportunity to see that “welcome” sign on the mat at his dad's ranch in there s a time when the odds fact are against his ever seeing it But in no more than 24 hours he has cleaned up tlrned the bles on the Gila Lonmer’s attempts at double-crossia pal proving to his advantage and taught Gerry the folly of believing drunken statements while saving her valuable cinnabar mine -- ui Early chapters of the book are devoted to Rogers’ forebears his schooling and childhood friendships Th “Her part pt tha book deals hie rlea to fame with omphaels onwith his Mllsten paints Rogers as th kindly man with whom all news-pareaders and moviegoers arc familiar It is tha addition of intlmat phases of the man’s life however that fives tha book its value One sees Hogef or the flret time as a rounded Fr°nJity’ and 1arna of the great friendships which in part made him so remarkable a character The stamp of approval has been to the book by Mrs Sallia Rogersgiven sister of the humorist who has said: ‘I feel that it is the only authentic review of the life of my brother that has bean written’’ 'An Introduction by Tom Mix and a lottsr from Amon O Carter Texas editor both long-tifriends of Rogers givs evidence of the profound admiration in which tha humorist was held by his friends Twenty-sevs- n illustrations hav been included many of them never before published— R D - Whirlwind Action Fixes Gang Scheme law-abidi- profitable literary endeavor than writing th life of a fam?d national figure it naturally follows that thar is an enormous amount of drivel written When one finds work that is praiseworthy such as this intimate account of the beloved Will Rogers it is a pleasure to recommend it And David Milsten’s life of the humorist eminently deserves recommendation to lovers of Rogers and his homely kindly wit The author of this Interesting volume knew Rogers as a child and followed h s unusual career with interest Since the book was In great progress two before years th untimely death of "Tha Charokea Kid’’ It is distinguished a precision and thoroughness that by has ®"Jack'fl ln other recent works on wtllch wr rushed ! into Mllsten is not a stylist and the print book written in spots He is how-?v- r’ kf0°rly observer of cause and effect and this quality eoupled with the warn regard in which he held his sub-J0hat marked the work men-toiio- tiveness s Thumb’ George Childhood Friend Records Intimate " " “ P°ltiv untidy Lydia Hollv of “the !hark THy4NcSENewDYorYkSCit?f Na°mi LaneBab80 by cl St'ng1" iUfSHPS stand out as that of the - - ASi SSJKS? fi h?d3 mu?1? son sorrows over his accumulating ments of her as ' S“ brP£rtTa' ‘I1?:""? life Rose Wilder Lane has a new book fascinatingly mixing drama folklore history and description coming in April from McBride ’Tin From Missouri’’ Might hs termed a character sketch of a state — the author’s adopted state- It Is in effect the story of a week's motor tour the author pausing for description of each section and its people as she passes -- A novel by John Evans “Shadows Flying” which Knopf is bringing out In early April deals with the kind of theme that predominates in Robinson Jeffers’ poetry inverted sex relationships A Carmel valley scene the setting for many of the JefferS poems hqs also been chosen by Evans for his I book A lat March title from Knopf is "Mirror of China” by Louis Uloy Who rteords his impressions during a trip through ths Orient The author a dlatln(ulshedFrench scholar in picturing modern China commente on ltt hietory religion culture arts Important new novel on the Simon Schuster list la “Malden Castle” another Dorchester story by John Cowper Powys In which ths distinguished writer tells of men and women whoee first youth is Over and of their struggle to readjust themselves in life when first love and first faith are gone A Announced for April 20 publication by Knopf is the new Edition of “The American Language1' of which H L Mencken has just completed the rewriting and revising" It is a’ much enlarged work an enormous amount of new material having been incorporated The book nov runs to 750 pages and its word list Includes approximately 10000 terms “Farip on the Hill” a collection of children's stories just issued by Scribner s is the work of Madeline h' Horn wife of an Iowa univerThe book has the dissity professor tinction of being the first to be illustrated by Grant Wood the famous artist and leader of the midwest school of painting It has eight full page edior illustrations as well as lining paper and jacket design by the artist whose “American Gothic” and "Daughters Of the American Revolution” are masterly expositions of his painting Ideas Dar-roug- “Listen for a Lonesome Drum: A York 8t ate Chronicle" is the successor to Carl Ctrmer’s ‘'Stars Fell on Alabama" and will be published in May by Farrar & Rinehart Mr f fills his new book with anecdotes of strange things: Indian tribes and an extraordinary isolated people cock fights and wild parties in the Hills rattlesnake catchers religious cults I-'?' i The Bookaneer Sage It Isn't Much Trouble But— To sond an Easier greeting to omeone you esteem is very little trouble But your remeth-branc- e will warm that person's heart We have a wide e e c I J o n of cards greeting 1 for Car-me- ALL sions y IHwSr' occa- |