| Show s -- s - - k 4 4 StrbiDAY MORNING THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE In the Field of Modern' Writers Art aor Oklahoma Produces A Personality to Engage Attention Latest Art Acq uisitiods at BY 'The Old Willow Tree'" by Flora Davis Fisher - Below- i i ' : Right "Sunset Res" by Rose Howard Salisbury ) k a t 1 )) — I ': S Y 4i -:- 4 ' ' T ') S'' I'3:: i 1 1 ' 1 i 1- - $ t t 7 t : 't 1 1 '' t — - : : ''1: -- t i e 1 1y Y —4 sm ' 1 1 1' '1 0 )): ::i' ( 4 L i 1 '''1 '4f ' :iI 4 - i'1 4 ii I ii :' 4 ' -- :AW: ' 4 :: ' '- A - r ! -- ' ' i - ' ? 't :! :r:!1-7t-- -:- H- '' :? '24 : -- ' (:::- 1: :''' ' :!!- ' 1e P ' 44 ! 1 - ': ti f' 0 -- it-- -- t 44' 0 7 ' -: "— ' :':1 4: 4 4 I ": !I ' ' 11)I i ' i it4 n ( '' ' 4 ' - ' s ' 6 ''Ot - 1 A i It c ai:9 I ::: e k ? t - -k ‘ 17- I r : 1 :': : k 4 ' '' 44 :l 11 - t ii 1- i IN -' " Glib viir Fog E ' ' ' PROVO--Tw- e interesting water colors are receiving special attention in the Girl Artists' exhibition now in the Room D gallery at the Brigham Young university which has been arranged by girls of the Studio Guild These pictures were recently presented to- the Associated Women Students of the "Y" by the artists One is "Sunset Rays" by Rose Howard Salisbury one of the most gifted water colorists of the state according to Professor H Eastmond head of the depart mint of art Formerly a teacher of art at West high school Salt Lake she is now the wife of Cornelius Salisbury The other painting is "The Old Willow Tree" by Flora Davis Fisher an outstanding water colorist of this region who has taught art and Pageantry in tbe "IC! training School The exhibit includes work b'Sr both —Present and alumnae artists and scores of pictures in various mediums are shown the exhibit to continue until May 18 la 1" At - lart ' ' '' ' ''' - 'it go tA ” ri 1A With the I Crime Plotters 1117RDER THE KILLING OF THE GOLDEN 1 — GOOSE By R sterol Hack PublishBy t: Smith Company Philadelphia er! LorinI & Mussey New York friend on——It'lobitsKent deelarea Head of of the this book his wish first Hilliard of darwu page very deliberately — that his wife would die that he wu ing someone to kill him when at a din'sick and tired of her" an ne party for all the reletives who might used gel adivorce—Dbviously the lad Is protitlinerietelly by his death be ntakee to be murdered Equally obvious Is an speech denouncing them fact 'het we are not for a ploment as perasites and declaring the "Golden believe that Stephen's desire for her Goose" (himself) bla laid the last golden death is strong enough for him to acegg for any of them To crown his folly' complish It It might be however that Mary Ellen—the sweet Wallaaa who wu reads aloud a new will fee yet uninotherof Ms two bort and whom he signed) disinheriting thent in favor of had set Ude tor the glamorous Madame his young wife whom they despise as Morel a famous singer—desired to clear the Way knowing Stephen ready antr— at the will it is to replace which anxious to come- back to her gives each a million or so - You aren't a bit surprised therefore This murder of the mistreat of the t when Roger Hilliard that very night is "glass haus" on Ohost'Tree island thorfound stabbed in his study—no right in oughlY upsets "writers' row" a Vaalthe heart with a paper knife—only it's tion colony on Severn river near funny that it's his secretary's paper already agog over the scandal knife and Miss Nancy Knowlton is a of Stephen's affairs Stephen to be sure tad been fishing all that day return very charming young woman—uk Charlie Forbes Well there's the very ing to find his Wife's dead body before her fireplace but there were masculine Augusta and some on the coroner's jury who the cold selfish Laurence with his stris inclined to bold him guilty---Ifident wife and her pasty-facesponging fishing father Professor Cortell and Halbert a companion Billops the journalist who tells the story even hes his doubts and dipsomaniac—a most unamiable family fearstecause of his knowledge of )4ary : none of whom would stop at murder Ellen's presence on the Wand at the you'd say and each bating lovely Mrs time of the crime And with the dia Boger Hilliard of Mary Isolated in the Hilliard country manEllen's blood appearance ' stained sten by a snowstorm that cuts off comocken his own house jacket from the refrigerator( where be had munication with the outer world the them Billow tears art height smooth New York sleuth Christopher King who seams to have no Interest in "clues:' seta I work to ferret out the Mysterious telephone calls a black satchel full of jewels a fake telegram answer to this complicated problem the 'and a'pair of missing servants with e ambitious reporter Charlie Forbes joy deadly assault on the kindly Cap'n Andy fully assisting until it APPrere that this are elements in the puzzle and there Is King suspects Nancy Madame Morel's curious job for a priMr Black has a surprise or two up his vate detective with the odd behavior sleeve tor you and if you can accept his of the drunken Rip and young Ritchie I premises you'll find the methods of his - to be detective of interest explained before a box of matches Besides you'll from the Natalia restaurant leads Cap'n 'Went to meet the exquisite Leslie Bond who looks like an actor but maybe Isn't Andy to the solution ON GHOST TREE ISLAND Publishers MacraeS Delp tea the-Hou- se Ann-spoi- ls vicious-tempere- - d June 30 The theme of the entire exhibit is the home its aim being home improve mint and betterment There wiU be lectures given each day during the week with the exception of Saturday and Sunday to demonstrate the value of art in the home The auditorium of the building when the lectures will be held a seating arrangement for from 400 haSOO to people - eon-coal- u ' 1 O eon-que- st YoungWife ofToday - Who Is Smart Will Have Children Who in Later Years Will Give the Greatest Joy Life Can Provide I I ' To 'ens young wife here in our them Mother's day la going to Mean something from now en In tabniary 1031 this person bad twin sons So Betty 4 -has four babies who ' ' are is I write this on' ler 13 months of age: t somk qr' two infants and two i ' imall totterers at the os' itage when they must ttill be napped and oottled every few flours 'fortunate 'el called - nor Komi of the girls of her own age look 'rather dubious when Lhey bear tho word But time flios fast even when the n urs 't ' Kathleen Nerds cry is overcrowded ' and one is young—even when a student husband and I small income end four babied all make life a rather serious af-fait And in four years With two boys of 4 and tWO of II all trouping off to school together she will begirt to get an occasionli holiday and a few nights bore and there of deep delicious sleep I In obt years she can take four boys on picnics watch them wading running ' digging exploring bear the - chorus elglaughter and talk whistling- stampinbear the most delicious word in the world over and over again and for her ears: "Mother!" J There is nothing se wortis while for human beings as human beings There is no life se happy as the life that is lived 1 in other lives tor a few years we think that we would rather bays It a game of s r I -- wI' 0- 11 ' I ' - 1 1 T - ' - ' t 1 a Guest Today that for happiness there is nothing in this world for a woman like sons and self-valu- e d k the publishers say 4 Lists— I can't raise much of a huzzah for the multimillionaire real estate owners who are now rushing into print with a declaration they would like to get rid of their slum property They have been making huge returns on tenement houses until the slump Too they see prosecutions and condemnations in the offing That sort of noble impulse smacks of a paw broker's generosity - Ted Cook's favorite - small-tow- scat--tote- 1 editor n Arthur JuU of the Lamar (Me) Democrat has written a book called tentstively "The County Seat Philosopher1 s which is summary of a cross-road- town its alms people and purpose pponl Lord Northcliffe's advice to writers: 'Always talk and write to people about' ' radi- - - -- olt 10 themselves" Short shavings: Three American actii flopped in a row at London's Palladitmt Walt Mary Lewis owns 16 dogs Disne9 has become a crack polo player Miller's Marilyn gecretary owns a fashioneble gown shop on Avenue B "The Incurable Filibuster" is a grantl Story of soldier of fortuning by a gentle-- I man (Farrar and Sidebar° Will Rogers daughter Mart is making a hit in Canada Claire Sheridan trouping married to an officer of the Foreign Le wears Charles gion only a burnoose Farrell is said to be one of Hollywood's Cecil B De Mille IS best mimics the only director left who uses a meg° phone the necessity of silent pictures Jean Nash was never regarded as the best dressed woman In Paris by fashion experts It was just a press Mn Warren Harding agent plant was told 10 yeari before it happened by a fortune teller that bar husband woald be president end die suddenly rho& nix la to be It top hole social resort next winter unless all signs fail Mrs Meredith Nicholson is turning out a " novel In Paraguay Hugh Wily no one know& But to be at the ringside and see blowfor-blow to the economic opiritual and cultural battle for existence is something ancestors could 'lever dmant could - our hoPPeiL Tbe tommcIr of today- excel" Irc—writinr treemPleter-lurvel-othe early Dashiell Hemp moat any other thst has ever been knows days of Sari Francisco mett when be sells a new novel rushes in America Our mechanical achievements have outrun our imagination and off for a fishing vacation in Florida ' From the St Rev George MacDonald: brought utter chaos How to think Our is "rho Bible gives no ground-seithway out of the dilemma is a universal there a single scientific ergument against jitsaw puzzle that is the most enchantthe continued existence of animals after ing game the world ever offered death $ o while I believe for myself There is something about a man who must hope for them" carries a key ring that is dependable Otto and Also Kahn Mayor Gaynor did (Copyright 1934 McNaught ' Alf !tingling As a police reporter once Syndicate Int) --- i IP l mod-childre- rA er — u - P t - cresting Its predecessor - d id - t Eaten From the Tin Nate" Is its curious title and it has been published in Gem a McIntyre While ! have never believed the ator could in anyway compare to the flame-gildeem not such an hearth do not believe that antiquarian that right now is the most interesting period of human history since the civil war can help believe the next two years are going to see violent changes in our way of living for better or 'worn - - 1 — John Chapman reports that when Jo Schenck wants to reach his hotel the Georges Cinq In Paris he merely says to the driver "Hotel Joe Schenck" And he never mime& - I' J et A new novel by Hans Falladi author of the senSational "Little Man What Now?" is announced for ell appearance u us hot I Thomas Craven's new work on "Mod ern Art—The Men the Movements the Meaning" WaS 1 recent title from Simon and Schuster Mr Craven is the author of "Men of Art" a real contribution to art literature Enormous vecancies in the buildings are thinning The shop space has congealed in what is now the smartest shopping stretch in town The best dressed people the finest limousines and best known celebrities of the time are a part of the suddenly changed picture The beautiful plaza with its fountains rising and falling furnish a vista midtown Manhattan hemmed in and her clad never imagined possible With all the fountains going it is not only beautiful but on warm days It is a godsend Easter it was perhaps the loveliest spot in America No city in the world has such a splendorous throb to its very business heart this new section pulsates All the magazines of lumps and South America are featuring articles luny illustratedII about it Not even its most opitiznistie promoters thought- - Rockefeller center would find its niche for five years and when the depression cams along the ea timazo was lengthened to 10 Now a year after opening it shows signs of being what Richard Carle used to call a "humdinger" in the old musical comedy days to - - ' I u recently silky-heade- - le will have children three or four of them I am not discusling the theological situation I am not presenting a moral daughters aSnug Not that it was always—or even usual merely say that for loy in mid die years for emotional and psychololy successful to raise big families in our grandmother's day 'rhino were differ - gical experiences blissful beyond any others in life for a sense of dignity and ant a hundred years ago An old lady once told ma that when shs was young there is nothing like a family To have a baby asleep in every woman expected to lose her first child Even fifty years ago babies all crib upstairs two boys doing bome-wora amill girl on the hearth rug very much had colic and croup colds and levers rashes and sore throats it nothing worse on sufferance es the clock's hands near 8 is to live Children ere so sully made Most babies had yening fits in the night and such afflictions as hip disease brain happy talk of picnics or parties elates fever spasm convulsions crossed eyes them so exquisitely lust baying dinner and various disorders added themselves out on the lawn is to them so thrilling to the ordinary list of measles whoon an affair that they educate the grownOne and scarlet fever promiing cough ups to a true sense of the values of life– nent socisty - woman explained to my they keep us all sane mother that all her babies were "bilious" So let's go on batting Mother's day another lamented that none of hers could reach 31 without going into tuberculosis more mothers more children And meanwhile don't forget that it is today do end it wu true too Not so today Babies are handled like something for your own mother and your soft and adored little machines—but still husband's mother You may not now with machinelike precision Jacqueline know what the pot of flowers the note a friend of mine has never the simple little tea party or the dinner known what even the tiniest cramp or Invitation will mean to en aging woman - snuffle cough or rash means Nausea is The scientists say that first perception —but take my word for it it will change as unknown to Jacqueline as leprosy In In infancy divides all the big world into the color of a whole day It won't hurt bed at 7 Jacqueline sleeps the clock you to make the effort The lives of only two categories "Myself Not my about and awakens gurgling at another self' And "myself" comas first Some younger mothers are richer when they 7 Her dootor—our village baby doctor— include affectionate relationahipa with that true wisdom in timu it would has more than a hundred such Witt those olderwomen whose happy bun' living would take us to an old age in on her list she keeps them well Father needed days are over No son wu ever which that first word would be shorn burned Purged educated away and each than sorry that he went out of his way to find ono of us would be living entirely for And when they get to the converse-the time the money thsirnesaageLto tonal age when they want to try char others What good another—mine was make his mother hippy des and pencil games when they can The newspapers end probably the that kind perheps yours wee—isn't be carried off for long days on the shore happlist ot ell white her children are family of a certain old Mrs Fran reel or In the woods what S delight they are! ter thought it wu a great tragedy last happy? It may mesa holes of wortt in When they board cherry stones and woman the kitchen for her it may wean no year when this line movies vie gowns no Libuty but she hen' they died at the party they gave her transfers and form clubs quietly d doesn't sirs Her children love to get reel panting and panicky through the - on Mother's day They had ell been home to her they ITS well and happy - dusk in the game of "Cops and the' nude special atiort to- and blur and bar cup brim °Int With how enchanting they make life Ur all:8 two soils two daughters seven the hearts that love them- - It is in one grandchildren They bad flowers toasts Good mothers aro really like an army -- of Dorothy Canfield's books I think Mother Once again had her beloved boys n and girls at her knee watched her 'ot saints smong us leavening and - that there is an incomparable description of smalltown children playing sidewalk her children-in-laall together straightening everything that is wrong and heavy end twisted in this tweet two bad dome 611 the way from New games at the end of day after the din- world And after studying many tYPea nor dishes have beekwiped just to read Brunswick the whole group had never of women after watching what dramatio It is to be young again and to realize been together before And sitting in their how wonderful children are Everything midst with the youngest grandson In her literary artistie succeu dose to them else in life is dead they gloriously and what divorce does what remarriage and lap she simply and quietly died—of joy wonderfui a going away travel and independence end solitary aps eternally live there could possibly bo—for a melba tome the concluaiogr Int SU doe I lasing wile of Way who le smart solitaire have everything that comes trite the house Sot ourselvesall the mail all the telephone meuages all the invitations andihe white meat and chocolate frosting But ahnost always with socks and long division that stage passes for the intelligent parson at leesk And the rare delight of friendship of intimecies of school gossip begins Gossip that much abused old crone is ona of the legithytato pleuure-maker- s of Wei which ens of US doesn't like to settle down on I summer porch or beside I winter tire with a TEO turned friend' and open the ball with me EVZRYTHING about 'win rnw the wedding and Mary's drags and what be's like and what POSSESSED Bill? - and how long you're going to be ablate atay and whether you did manage to au Phyllis and verythingl This interest in others evini from school beginnings is only a healthy sign that the girl or boy Is getting weened away from the first obsorbing childhood chncentration upon himself and only himself Ha is beginning to live in Other - - XY 1EATELIEN 110111113 Be Your Honor :1 discovered that not a prisoner in a year's By O O WINITILS - time carried a key ring While key rings —Boots for the Rockefellers- - and their are not as popular as they once were the were broadRockefeller center—such man who does carry one can be trusted cast in "As Thousands Cheer" and by the with your baby carriage while you go brighter minds—seem a bit silly with the into a shop upward turn of things in this idealistic y area Mother Should IN Rocketeller Center Is Most Beautiful Spot in New York—And This Is a Glorious Age Charles Caldwell Dobie whose "San Francisco: A Pageant" has been St best seller of the winter is to have a new list this novel on the Appleton-Centurfall The "Portrait of a Courtesan" will have a rich San Francisco background Mr Dobie luta been on a New York visit this-boo- 41' 4 made secure amidst "the disordersthe modern world" o Millan In "The Method of Freedom" Mr Lippmann states the principle in which liberty is finding a new incarnation by meant of which liberty can be An I GUGGENHEIM FELLOW Dr Grace Lee Nute author of "The and a Voyageurs" (Appleton-Centurcurator of the Minnesota Historical Soo has been awarded one of the forty fellowship awards of the Ouggenheill foundation tor the year Mac- tly tAt ' is often difficult" Miss Bregy In studying any medieval story man" - Painter's life of Ben Jonson which the Vikieg Press has lust published has a theme the Puritan of the English spirit Mr Palmer holds that Jonson's life and work were part of "a carnival England's farewell to flesh in our time" SCIENTISTS' CHOICE "The Architocturo of tho Universe" (MacMillan) by Dr W Ir G Swarm was chosen by the Scientific Book club as Hi April number Dr Swann has a marked ability to snake obscure scion title matters clear for the laymen end In he deals with the latest dia convict and theories in the field of phys ical science - Two hundred magnificent color 'plates Late In May a book by Walter Lippmann which has not been announced Hurston—a book recommended by the club—and a new remance by Katharine Haviland Taylor "Boulevard" The publishers also an found I second printing of "The Evil Empress" the Russian Grand Duke Alexander novel of Catherine the Great hla kilt4 ments of the medieval legends The poetry and passion of the medieval lifi are revived in Miss Bregy's pages while the emphasis Is laid on "the par ticular virtues" of the times as she finds summed up in the soul of Jeanne D'Are "its absolute and beautiful faith its quiz otically selkacrifieing devotion to a cause its enormous youthful energy and vitality in Action" It is of course the Catholic viewpoint that is maintained that which leads Miss Bregy to find "nothing very subtle" in the great Bun yan allegory whose appeal is "essee "down rightend terrible sincerity" she sees as overshadowed by the morality of "Every Babette Hughes the author of sophisticated tmurder mysteries who engaged to by the Seattle Bremerton party slayings made a plausible recoil structlon of these crimes is to be on the Appleton-Centursummer list with a new thriller "Murder in a Church" last the place perhaps which the crime inventors have left for the staging of murder another Farrar and Rinehart title "Anthony Adverse" as its last July book May books from Lippincottli include "Jonah's Gourd Vine" by Zora Neale Aft to tell whereliterature ends and life be gins—or where life ends and literature begins The soap and water of fact get themselves habitually transposed into the large and luminous bubble of imagination Still there 'was' this essence of fact at the root of even the most gjamorotut and extravagant bubbles' It is this essential truth that is drawn out in Miss Bregy's dealink with the romantic e will be included in the "Survey of Persian Art" which the 'Oxford University Press announces for fall publication Arthur 'Upham thee plates reveal the high degreeof perfection to which the art of reproduction hos been carried A plate by Jaffa of Vienna illustrating a velvet from the Macy collection is so perfect them ie difficulty in distinguishing between the representation and the original meta- rial "Stars Fell on Alabama" Carl CarIner's story of the south which was scheduled for the month by Farrar and Rinehart has been PostPonwi until June 26p as it has been selected for the July book of the Literary Guild which chose - d - Mark Hellenger's "The Ten Million" presenting a peocession of racketeer brokers chorines beggars queens lawhe yers bootblacks and others likely-tmet by an enterprising Broadway oolumnist is smother May title scheduled by Farrar and Rinehart In connection with the Modernization Exposition being sponsored by the chamber of commerce jointly with several city and slats organizationa an exhibi that of art is to be bald in the auditorium of the old Sears Roebuck store building corner of Broadway and State street The committee of local artists arranging the exhibit of art which is to he divided into three sections: painting sculpture and applied art is headed by Miss Mabel Frazer of the art depart mint of the University of Utah Her assistants are Frank W Kent Florence Ware and Carlos Andergon The expositlon begins May 11 to continue until I writes THE LITERARY ALMANAC ART SHOWS FEATURE MODERN EXPOSITION after-dinn- God" "It matter-o- Wine and Physic" is the title Of a new volume from Alexander Laing which is a May book of Farrar and Rine-hart It contains a philosophical poem "The Flowering Thorn' in which Mr Laing's credo is expressed constituting it has been said a challenge to "The Waste Land" T S Eliot's statement A series of essays accompany the poem & FROM DANTE TO JEANNE DI ARC BY Katherine Bregy Publisher The BrUCO Publishing Company Milwaukee Wis KatherineBregy an essayist and Poet becoming well known to tlie Catholic world possesses a graceful literary style that makes her book delightful reading And more these essays which represent "adventures in medievaklité and letters" are founded on a scholarship of breadth and richness Her intepretive artistry and Insight are attested in this series of medieval studies First of the eight papera included in the volume is her "Dante's Dream of Life" which won the Leahy prize of COO in 1927 offered for the best essay on the Florentine poet and which has been widely read and discussed although now for the first time within book coy era From Dante Miss Bregy's interest has ranged through that period of the mingling of romance and religion the legends of the mystic chalice and the Grail knights King Arthur's Round Table and the faultless Galahad the int mortal lovers Tristram and Iseult the lady anchorites of "church and cloister' the lovely individualist inflammable Eleanor of Aquitaine the Puritan eple and allegories down tai the canonized Maid of Domremy climb ing "the ladder of flames from France te r ( ' Widely Explored S' c411 r: )s :1: 4 Life and Letters of Medieval Day tV flillie"'4"44161444 r ?t7''': p::tJ::f i4i1: ''::': '' ''i' J ::::':: e or' :i-::- :":t ' 7: ta”:7 -- e') t:) 4 :4 :::: e' ?:::::e::::::): 1::q I' r'' ' :li ' :: ' t'' ti::'!'- IfL::::':i 4 $ -- :'::::4' :''124iit''4-::-:- ' ''':”' ': : :::::- -:'' i'''--- ' - -- Wins Praise h I It li I 1:'i1:'?::i ?A "NJ '4 7 ''''' ':°' - 7 1 t :?4150 ' 0 ' i i i 't :: & Activities in Utah Artists' Co lenx By MARJORIE PARMELEE THIS MUCH IS MINE By Nola Hen Publishers Harrison Smith derson ancLRobert Haas Inc New York To understand children enough to 4 i :0)1 know how little they are understood— this is an art and one not often enough AArdriori14 It is this art which will encountered 14 bring success to this recent novel by t' 1 4Vt '411 Nola Henderson whose first novel it is The story is in two sectionx"The Child" '' '- 4 and "The Woman" and both together c! of Jo portray a great part of the life f Terry 0 At 6 Jo is a very definite character ''' IIIM:16014 or'" whose antics dreams and strange emo tions make her a little person to be C : reckoned with and remembered i A4t ahe ' '' 4'1 ' ' '1''? and her mother are equally fiery and ''' t '1- -' : stubborn and so are lifelong antagonists firm strain of respect but each with -' 7 ) :)f for the ways of the other A gentle but I t:t e 11 slow too submissive father and the but kindly ''hired girl"rret Surround the a eN1441t conflicting forces to strange child-wit'N' if on an Oklahoma farm work out her life There are laughter and tears but alT NOIA HENDERSON ways 'the proper balance is maintained fate had shown her and the lusty vernacular makes a story Is unique as it is Interesting Miss Hen For anyone who wants a story differderson uses her ability to depict childish ent who wants to forget for a time 'the commendable deeds and feelings with urban world and the machine civiliza-I restraint so that our envy for Jo's agtion this novel will offer some very in-I gressive independence and our pity for her lack of the child's rightful heritage teresting hours The Terry farm and love-andJo's experience there are entirely apart understanding are genuine from any other life and offer a picture in no way bordering on entimentality of the rural world from a different angle Jo as a woman is as unusual an individThe farm and its daily round of small ual as her We must have made her Her incidents are Seen through the eyes of mistake in marriage la as lypital of that a Mail girl to whom they are the whole life of harsh experience which has sal t world a world of blunt reality and dom been touched with Joy and theten f-fact attitude Such a life is an inderness of love But her straightforward nature and her ability to see to the heart teresting subject itself hut 'doubly en-I of a situation helped her to solve her thralling as we watch its influence on woman's problems as they had helped - the child Jo and the woman she becomes the child Jo to make her neglected days Min Henderson adds to this presenta- iHer educa- interesting and educational tion the ability to analyze character and tion was only what life and cruel facts could give her and she was long in depict incident The happy result of that combination is an excellent novel that learningthat life could hold- beauty and should have a Wide public loveliness as well as the harsh aspects 4!in " '' ft ''' I: ':::s" ''' ' :0:44 :"' '' i' '041 ')4 Ili :::7 - ' - ''' 7 ':i:p:::::24::::::4: :: r0 ? -- ::::::' :: ' iii ft ' ttr- : '(' W4Kt !)1' Pi -- : 5'4 )fi)i)::!::')':):))'4')1'?:)))fil '!:"::':n::::'"-':::'':"':'::4:':i:::i::- Vr t::i - p'1' 07'i - '' - k ' : :IS'' k l ' ( I - I' -- 'i ' t' - f5 - ' ? to s?5 I ) t i 4I” 4''111 00 ' '' t i d14 I '' g ' 401 I '' 4 "t'ijr- rt '!: i :i 41 - I I I t i !i iit' ' 'k I 1 9'fi ' 1 191 t )S1 ' t s i' ::t t 1 - ' - i fI i' '1 ! T 1 A i ' 4' ' i (:)' - fi 4 t f ': iA - ' t' 1 tric'e ' Iti ' ''''t - -1 v T1 !: ' v g ti I - - --- rA' :::::' r F i :4:' ''' 2t ''1''l t) 1 i1 11 :' ' 41' t t4 F: i)::-i-- ii v 441 : ' -- 141 3-- t li 1 v tt g ::r!' - 7 :::'':?34:::7:'!:'4:'::::-:'::':'::::T:::::"::?::e:::'::::-!:c:ii:'7:-::zig': )4 :::::" '' t) ' ir'''41'1' '1 i'i:- ':':::!' -- ': 'ti i ' -- '5'' 1)N ':f 't e: 13 - t - I ' igl fr'':' 1 :' ::::: ::: ::: i e A t :? :F:4:(:::':lz 4!:? - :F 4 :):st :'' A I ''') '''i''''"t '''' ' 2? "'''''' i' i 1 : 1' :'r 'At ' ( i : 3 r' " '':044 L'j 1' t f i 4:' 7 7— frrtr::: :: t:4' '4 It:ii!'''i'-t 1934 d L1ter41 ture 1 1 - 3 MA1(1-- i ' I I i - II ' - 10 d t |