Show ellevM011WMMON6 1 : 10 E s - ' sAtxxilicA '1'HE TRIBUNE SUNDAlt MORNING DECEMBER ' - 26 1937 ' - 11 t: : - - 0 ok Discussion an d News 0 - it :- i lb f - r V ( I 1 i: s Fearless Missourian ' - - ' Writing of America as One Wko Knows Speaks Out With the Vigor and Forthrightness of His Painting Artist Thomas Benton ''" I By E E HOLLIS AN ARTIST IN AMERICA By Thomas Hart Benton Publish- ers Robert M McBride and Co New York City ' INCE this Missouri artist's work has been provocatiVe of much controversial discussion and on occasion of 'bitter attack it is not at all improbable that his book' with its vigorous comme- ntary and revelation of an independent personality will be greetedI with considerable criticism Thomas Hart Benton is one of the most individual personalities of the art world today and has brouglit himself to the eminence of the most important perhaps of AmZrican muralists He is a man bound to be interesting whether or not one happens to agree with his art views or his philosophy of living Benton born in Missouri in the little town pf Neosho around the eorner of the century was son of one of the town's attorneys and He was named after the family most important political figures hero old Thomas Hart Benton who was Missouri's first senator His dad "Colonel" by courtesy served several successive terms in the United States senate and the boy's early years alternated between summers of Neosho's Easy freedom and winters in Washington whose "corrupting influences" the father devised means to offset in IV ' : 74 - !e411 l' s S ' '' pr4 e i s 4- -! 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'4y e‘ 4er -- -- - s - - 1 - Dark Novel In "It's damn funny" Burton bald eighteenth century in the little settlement of Danville "that we Englishmen should have to crossroads He curie into the world with an come to America to listen to an unfortunate deformity and remained American tell the story of a British a cripple throughout life No doubt as Mr Woodley points out 'this exploit" Thomas already booked for what circumstance lent a color of rancor promised to be a profitable Ameri- and defensive reaction to all his cati tour- - suggested terms- - for- - the London appearance which he himself considered impossible Burton however met the provisions an4 the story bf Lawrence was told to an aggregate of over a million Englishmen during a stand The result of all this was that Utah writers continue their ad Lowell Thomas became interested vance in national and international In the story of Percy Burton and Ifields it is indicated by ' reported wrote a book "Adventures Among recent sales by members of the Immortals" is told as though Bur- 1Salt Lake City and Utah chapters ton himself were writing As a mat- League of Western Writers which ter of fact Burton ctid write the are of considerable interest t! chapter covering the Lowell Thanes Further international recognition episode Anyone interested in recol- has been attained by Frank C Roblections of personal association with ertson Springville already well genius will find much to enjoy in known in the United States and this book Sarah Bernhardt H G England for his vivid Wells Eleanore Duse Bernard Western - stories and novels His Shaw Sir Henry Irving Sir James books "Blocked Trails" and "Brandy n Barrie Sir Johnston of Roaring River" are to be transSir John Hare Sir Charles lated into Hungarian while a third Wyndham and Leslie Howard are "The Regeneration of Pecokie" is only a few with whom the indomit- being similarly considered Mr Robable Percy came in contact ertson is vice president of the Utah The book contains many divert- chapter of the League Obe Robertson his brother also ing stories as the tale concerning Bernard Shaw's two prolific black of Springville is another writer of sheep that clothed the entire Shaw "westerns" who finds editorial welentourage in homespun until "G come in various markets a late sale n B S could say in the words of of his being tO magazine a story titled "One Windy's Shylock when asked: 'Is your gold and silver ewes and Heyday" rams?' An article dealing with the busiI cannot tell I make it breed as ness of chinchilla raising called "The Birth of a New Industry" has fast'" Another concerns Theodore Roose- been placed by June Metcalfe presivelt who when asked by Saint Peter dent of the local chapter with This at the gates of heaven: "Say who Week a Chicago magazine Mary-hal- e are you making ail this row?" re- Woolsey chapter secretary has plied: "None of your damned busi- reported sale of two short "shorts" ness—where's God?" And there are to McClure Newspaper Syndicate others of course where less liberty New York City and Genevieve V La taken with the facts Hunt former treasurer of the orIn short this is the usual inter- ganization recently placed a story esting Lowell Thomas volume How- "The Open Gate" with Standard ever one cannot help but feel that Publications Cincinnati Ohio Percy Burton was much more imAppearing in current magazines portant as a manager and press are Frank Robertson whose "Lootagent than as a critic and his evalu- ers of the Lava Beds" is published ations should not be taken too seri- in the January issue of Ranch Roously Also some of the "adven- mances and Sybil Spande Bowen tures" seem not quite complete We given place in this week's Liberty are left a little dissatisfied as with "It's Funny About Christmas" though something remained yet to Mrs Bowen a former member of be told something suggested but the local chapter is now in the never 'quite revealed east Cleone Montgomery former vice president of the local chapter is to appear in Poetry Presents a new Fade-B- ut journal issued at Burbanis Cal with two poems "Cloak" and "Love's Day" The first number comes nine-mon- n Emigrant Rises to Fill Editorship of Great Paper Bobbs-Merr- ar4 th Forbes-Robertso- ill ar Super-Wester- 44') ' Writers of Rocky Mountain West fast-movi- self-conce- ' F ' z work But it did not stop him from climbing to a high place in the SUN ACROSS THE SKY By Elea America of his day nor Dark Publikher The Mao' Taking up pedagoguery firat then Milan company New York City Stevens to law the quickly turning made a place for himself in a small Again in this third novel Eleanor town Then cam e Dark gives 118 as she did in "RePennsylvania work in the state legislature and turn to Coolami" a picture of the finally in the:national congress He Australian country as background f oug IA cons ist en tl y for the rights for a atudy of character She writes of the underprivileged made him- with the same ease and clarity of self champion of emancipation pre- style and the popular seaaide resort ceding Lincoln in thin and has been of Thaiassa 11 beautifully built up called the father of the fourteenth as scene for the entire action of the and fifteenth amendments story After the bitter struggles of the The action however be limited war period he reached the climax to the period of one da3r's journey of his career in the famous im- - of the "sun across the sky" which peaclunent proceedings against An- in a story of nearly 350 pages leaves drew Johnson and Mr Woodley's one almost too often in contemplamoving description of that mome- n - tion only of the mental reactions is probably- the and reflections of the principal act- best section of the book ors The physically gross Sir FredIt is strange that Stevens whom erick Gormley avaricious millionhistorians have almost unanimously aire who looked down from his hilllabeled 'the most evil character in mansion upon the lourishing American histbry1 should have been tourists' recreation place he had crethe first thorough-goin- g Democrat ated with satisfaction and could His passionate interest in horizon- feel that his money meant power— tal government in the plight of except when his eyes must wander the dispossessed of 'his time im the to that shabby fishing village up- fortunes of the "forgotten men" of arated from his smart town only by the 50s and 60s would seem to a lagoon entitle him rightfully to the appelThe fishermen's settlement was a lation "great leveler" that Mr problem with which Sir Frederick Woodley has bestowed upon him had not been able to cope—though The "club-focommoner" as he he had cleared away the intervening has been contemptuously called an- bushland which had afforded a of the view of his ticipated point meeting place for the settlement's successor in great many Bryan — all because of the curious ways In the frequently young people obstinacy of old Nicholas Kavanagh to redistribute the quixotic attempts to sell the land How it power of the vote In the sincere refusing irked Sir Frederick that to am desire to bolster the democratic in- had sought to tention of the constitution a de- eminent visitor he had had been disv sire which when it came to con- entertain Thalassa not as Sir Frederick crete instances seemed to fade and tinguished towa but as the place die he was a true prototype of the Gormley's that mad Irish "liberal" mind that is current even where Kavanagh more lived And it irked him poet today Mr Woodley's style is unluckily that money to him almost a divine power to Kavanagh seemed to somewhat against him The book mean Some way—and nothing admirable though it is' has somehow an antediluvian air about it there was a way—he must rid him- There are periods that remind one self of the eyesore of the village! of Macaulay at his most florid and and of Kavanagh Young Dr Oliver Denning had other echoes of a school of biogshown no cooperative spirit conraphy now out of fashion Nevertheless there are many good rea- cerning this matter had said that sons why students of American his- the cottages though badly in need repairs could not be condemned tory should find meaty reading and of as insanitary and that one had a informative detail in this revaluation of 'one of tbe most responsibility to the some two hunpeople who would be homeinteresting figures in our historical dred less should the cottages be conpast demned To the young physician who had married a beautiful woman an out of impulse of pity and had Saccharinity found marriage a mockery KavanBRIDE TO BE By Vida Hurst agh as a friend of far greater GormPublishers M S Mill and Co worth than the ley Inc New York City On this eventful day which Mias Given a heroine who is a very con- Dark has marked on which the scientious secretary to a man whose millionftire had wakened before Illness necessitated her working in davinoIth indigestion from the of the night before Oliver his home instead of his office until had been roused by the sun with h e r "stormy-eyed- " employer's recurring sensation of newness nephew returns from a long sojourn the In Mexico this late Vida Hurst he had felt that morning three novel's theme is love and its com- months ago when he had seen its plicating effects on various lives rising over Lois' dark reclining It's cut according to the best Hurst head For Lois a widow and an pattern without a touch of nov-- - artist by instinct is one of those - ' s::i- :!N: I 'z'& 4r114 41 but I - ' - I - ' I i NSIS -- 4 ' ' I ' gray-haire- Tbe 0 i t I I 1§- - ' I i : i i 1 e or tr? r ---- I tte - ' - 4 cbto111-N--- -- 1 44 i mony Ir II - I j A l 1 4 d : I t e01ir '1 -- ' 1 mdy '' ' ' ) " ' ' 961:41:11'::::kly'::111e:8114:cC'cl:S:11 1g CO ‘ i ! 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I - s nt :- I I I '' :::'"' die-ep- ic 4-- long-overd- Prelude to Today's Struggle ' g ot Joy Comes ' - 1 Dreams 11 r 4 ::: ' !' 10-'- '' 4"::: i 1 ': ' ' ( ' ' assigning Thomas the stable chores Even without this "uplifting" : imp N exercise the boy found Neosho's activities more to his liking afford‘: i -i 177-4ing means for I4 41t71:Colonel Benton disapproved of his son's predilection for draw' ' ing having a prejudice against idle artists but his attempt to interest !: ' ' -- - the lad in Latin or the law came to little The young Benton had 7 : " ' ' oesit:::: ' then no idea of being an artist he just drew—engines and ships and Indians—because he liked to Indeed when he was fifteen and the ' close of his dad's political career brought them home from Wash: ington for good drawing as a means of expression was not at all a But with the beginning of that "foot itch" which was necessity more profoundly he found himself in Joplin later to afflict ob where circumstances almost forced him into a job on the newspaper men town's the prominent cartooning One of Benton's American Impressions Because of family opposition he agreed to give up the job and do a year in military school on the promise of a year's trining later "Oyster House Music" drawing reproduced from among at the Chicago art school From Chicago and his debut as a "genius" the many which embellish the text of "An Artist in of was that many it was a natural progress to Paris where his story America' run to look after you and In the prewar years—"a lady friend you a studio some work and a lot of talk"—a helpless floundering without compass in revolt against all schools with disocvery that "my 'genius was purely an imaginary afair" Some years of New York wavering "in all the winds and isms of the times" dallying with various concepts and formulas in the Intellectual and art Bohemias of the day saw him wandering "a purposeless void" from which the war saved him Drawing airplanes blimps dredges shipsfor the Navy shredded him "of all aesthetic driveling and morbid developing an art that was personal and that interest in the plain American environment JAMES KEELEY NEWSPAPER- grant train He was dirty and MAN By James Weber Linn weary He knew nothing of America which has given it definite objective Publishers He had come direct from London The All of this personal history Mr Benton hastens over It is when except for a brief pause at Ellis Company Indianapolis be begins "going places" for a"mors bland He had gone on to Leaven1918 a Throughout of American the propagandist Intimate study worth because Chicago seemed to dollar-a-yeone of thousands of world that his chapters lengthen him to be the meanest looking prosmen was turning hi& knowledge of perous big city in the world and become of such fascination that the public's reading habits to the After doing odd jobs including even the person who does not like task of putting over the cause of the "train butchering" and sign writMr Benton cannot afford to miss Allies in the World war He was ing Keeley began his journalistic thim As he travels the back coun- ' career in Wyandotte Kan by sendnot as successful but as described furties all over the country he ing in items to the Kansas City tishe3 us a pageant of American brilliant in the role of propagandist Journal In 1899 he landed a job life that is vivid and vigorous and 0044 :( That was James Keeley news- as a reporter on the Chicago Trib''41""4 une original presented in a style down- Years later he told a senate paperman He right honest and of humor committee: investigating was in the summer of It early sought authentic material and he "I reaohed my majority on the thin-fac1883 a lad that English found it he was interested in tyPes years of servof not quite 18 years arrIved at Tribune twenty-on- e ' and wherevet he was he recorded Leavenworth Kansu on an emi ice In December 1912" This would : "his discoveries Not in circles of re- have put him on the Tribune in 1891 -4 finement did Benton find his chief but reporters still alive remember of Interest as his murals have shown him doing "night police" in 1889 but in the cruder life of the back- Phenomena Bright Keeley liked to think that his strugwoods among the ignorant degradmanAURORAL DRAMA By Harold gle from a cub reporter to the THE ed and tough took '4e'' ' E O'Neill Publishers Burney aging editorship of the Tribune In fact there may be complaint I) '4 Brothers Publishing Co Aurora only six years instead of eight that Mr Benton inclines to delight 1 In toughness in his book It is a part Mo Marries Employe of his superb egoism and his gusto 'L ' With a devotion and love almost Romance budded while he wm 1 e 4' ' for life Yet that he has a genuine (Continued On following part) obsessional Harold O'Neill here tells on the Tribune Gertrude Small was feeling for this part of America he Bothe of Aurora of the the ‘ phenomena Keeley girl reporter paper's depicts this book is proof And in realis and Aurora Australis in 327 cut her copy ferociously then apolo' telling why he went back to Mis- -pages of rather poorly constructed gized in brief notes She kept scores '''k souri he has something to may of tonarrative Like the auroras his book of these notes signed "Jim" or un''' k day's art of esthetic twaddle rack- flares unexpectedly into radiant signed On June 5 1895 they were ‘i:' :0V:kNe: :f::':1!:'M'''!::''':::::':':1 'ci' 1 eteering in art the preciousness of' paSsages only to drop into dull and married - ‘ arts hangers-o- n that it takes cour- ' clumsy prose inadequate to his emo1 ' As a city editor Keeley could not age and sincerity to aay It is postion to leave his desk ' 'Bible that Mr Benton is not entirely In an explanatory preface Mr resist the urge cover 4t'' 444 Iti4r'' a story Even fair in his attitude: nevertheless his personally O'Neill states his case: To make the and Keeeditor Thomas Hart Bnnton book demands to be considered (athis month !:::'y" auroras more widely understood and when he was managing :::71:?z:w1:::::?::::::'v:rxk'k::):!:':f:- ley sometimes left the office to go :appreciated This would seem a com- out :: on a story as in the case of the '71:1' mendable purpose It is a small ::::::::::::::'5:::::::::::' $:'::' failure of the John R Walsh banks BXCIC DOOR TO HAPPINESS Censors Advertising proportion of the world's population ih 1905 The official history of the By Ruth Cross Publishers John POISONS POTIONS AND PROFthat ever witnesses the phenomeH Hopkins & Son New York City Chicago Tribune of this event: "On non ITS By Peter Morell Publishers the morning of December 18 1905 Any young woman just turned 20 REHEARSAL IN OVIEDO By ports and the climactic scene comes Certainly after reading his own the New Knight Publications Inc on whose the a scored dream bubbles Tribune of scoop ' fame and when the hysterical crowd gathers and quoted accounts of the mysJoseph Peyre Publishers Knight York City R fortune the John of failure banks on pr of 2r&r"'::':::::)H:::::::I:i':e::-1::i:::!ii:':in of the soaring wings Publications New York City opersquare safe from the sharp terious lights one cannot doubt his The advercraze for debunking :::': atic song have just bursted will do :?:::::i:' shooters in the cathedral tower to sincere and scholarly interest in Walsh" '''''"::' "711 :::: ::":::::-W'-: This on Titled most aptly this trenchant' watch for the Red tising claims still goes : Keeley had barged Into a meeting well to ponder the experiences of book :0' aviators from his But as with all phenom" ''' ci:1:?-0is similar in tone and purpose He Jessica short novel by Joseph Peyre whose Leon who are to bomb the cathed- ena subject of Marsh '' I distinguished gentlemen depending upon visual effects to "100000000 Guinea Pigs" but It 14::::::::'::: ' Golden-haire- d 1 1 and gollen-voice- d Death" was the 1935 rat The aviators come—but are for right to fame the auroras seem found himself among high finan1'' "Glittering1 so Is nor neither so well written 1441 ''''''' "" ' Goncourt prize novel tells a story government bombers whose white difficult if not impossible to de- ciers He knew many of them They —but not robust enough for a prima '' subPl' looked askance but Keeley only re- donna—Jessica hears thd verdict of compendious a review of this of struggle and violence which was toxpedoes drop into the aquare in scribe clearly with mere words matter Special emphasis is but a prelude to the greater con- - a mass murder of soldiers and civilIncluded in the work are inter- marked: "Well gentlemen since you the great maestro which sends her ject over air castles tumbling and her dreams given to radio advertising and the Aftict which has centered the world'e lane esting tales of Eskimos Indians have sent for me I have come of many years dissolving into a author's fervor in attacking allegedMorenu's beloved comrade Par- trappers and explorers who live and what can I do for you?" eyes on Spain in these recent false claims sometimes leads him No one knew exactly who had sent hopeless mist Unwilling to return ly znonths It is the October revolt of rite is one of the victims After- work in polar regions Jacket siomign for "Sun Across the Sky" to a drab little village home in the to great exaggerations as the bewildered miner 1934 that is recreated by M Peyre's ward Having snent-- a lifetime studying for him so they told him what the It is doubtful if there is anything waS about Keeley got the !Mississippi delta lands to admit her new vivid talenti a istruggle of Rebeislmoves through the streets of the his subject both by personal in the book: anything that the He failure and defeat after the years of If valem and Loyalists rather than as the shattered city following orders that iservation and through datta gath- whole situation in detail average person did not It ered by others Mr O'Neill has com- yawned quickly made his way from pinching and "going without" her intelligent roles atand today with the Warocmf csozol1tsckvw "no rime nor reason" on I know I in Mel really (as Frequently l trot duty that is senseless or lies piled a book that should appeal to the room and ran a block to the family has endured to give her the dominant I Ilk of many patent and ": I other "auroral romanticists"—C li—:A":71-2":77The presses were !great chance Jessica decides to bury ease M 'Tribune office I "Rehearsal in Oviedo" reads like wounded in a hospital where dubious i " of the past and seek !Ant false in Keeley and the Tribune drama albeit it is written in a cipline is forgotten and surgeons stopped I 7 the rosy dreams spirit if net in the letter a scoop on a financial had scored employment in the only other me- The intelligent style more reportorial than of tic- - (suspected Fascists) carry on under buyer should not ' dium in which she feels accom- - need tional character The author is a guard or accused of disloyalty be crash A another guide to lead him out plished—housekeeping Prenchmanyet he has spent such- cause of the sympathy he had shown of the wilderness having been proYoung Manager naa to as the hie know in deserted for she suspected by priest -Ironically years Spain enough applies vided already with sufficient of ture of these Spanish people and last friend knowing Marti° has Keeley was promoted to the man- the job of housekeeper at the bache- them—G e S be pictures with vital power the gone to her death he makes one of Waldemar aging editorship in 1898—ht was lor establishment -1 V t He looked like a boy Sterne the same famous maestro events of the Asturians' heroic but superhuman effort to Complete the barely 31 1 but acted as a commander lie bit who has branded her operatic ca- New ineffectual rebellion One feels- the destruction of the cathedral—one 8N() Books ' Ag "like Library said the author Into reer touch of pity here but no false men- - sees him a doomed figure of traghis a total loss—and the job" gets job— I 'v will be added the t Is f he bit' into his cigars and Keeley only this time disguised as a d e4y Even his strange affection for timentality mars his pages public library Monday December 2 7to ' vAso To Morenu an Arenales miner of the fanatic young Marife has a middle-age- d and his cigar were inseparable He A mISCELLANEOUS Hetty Padgitt tAtt 40 who has been made leader of tragic quality The adventures that befall her in dramatized the Commonplace in life n—errcaretilutrvoctirt ocnon:fitirdynersity Pro'I t r He abhorred deceit and dishonesty this role pack plenty of thrills and fessors—Depression Recovery and Higher the shock troops is given the role As a piece of fiction "Rehearsal I ‘Itr' 4 41-0ID' 4 00 of hero of this novel His orders at Oviedo" has faults of construe-hav- e and prized loyalty Even his foes ad- - excitement even though smacking Etattn act 0'" ' c Z povN The Faicist been to capture the barracks tion St1011 ASV vol to Banning—Went 0 of the Civil Guard and then to join of that October uprising It is a tell- cartoonists who became famous Al- mix to excellent advantage a hectic Beale—America South co IIIA 0'1 e Binkley—Powers eof the President tC° r' the march on Oviedo be never heard that a share scramble with Camilla LeMo3rne Bones Sergeant ing and artistic work though ed—Fifty-onNeglected Lyric' S11:1S ' eve Colophon Vol 4 No co Javier commander of the treacher4 of stock In the Tribune was for sale famous prima donna and fiancee of I k e Fosdick—Successful Chrisilan LiVIIIC ' st kOt O's' INl'''''19 ous Guards is Morenu's brother-in- toV' and himself owned hone neverthel- her employer with the escapades Frobenius and Fox—African Genesis NAP 461: o a '111000 Harris Organisation—Almanac of Office ' ess he maintained that he was the of his young nephew Camilla dislaw and when the barracks collapse Art Titles NAa' 0k I 6e ‘ 101 r - t'N 61'''°150 1' ' before the fierce attack Noll IIbv3 10:: OC' 40 Vie s (A '' r0 boss "in absolute control" Jessica's disguise uses it Equipment Heine—Heinrich Heine: Paradox and E have covering new works on art IN‘e 'tte toc13 as g '01 IVO 35ciNe7 James Weber lAnn's sketch of Mr as a blackmailing shield to protect P 61TM 6 Poems fusing to leave lot husband is been issued this ' the ()sC' o11 6 My Leetures riarere killed ' 805t0 Afterwards Noll's death ford credit to the "newspa- her own sordid secrets Finally in does CtOPS Keeley 0 Red of Societies—Our oW' M3' Im: League I's "The Press: jo "1's 4- 0 No a 0 University ' reBook eats into Morentes heart he feels of G‘l° - Bilk His coo t he perinan" style Jessica 400") clarity po' 41 desperation lotolo ' the resigns Fide with introduction 111t1 vi by ‘31 atonement Ruth- - pressionists" 0 need flects the thoughtful effort which sition but is persuaded by her ema 001'e VA 0316 tet' "" Palmer—General von' Steuben Wilhelm Uhde "Cetanne" within 01‘ me kc'e' I - elW:1 't lees as he must be in carrying out of this Moyer to first take a vacation trip Robbins—Economic planning and Inter- has been put forthto-tna- ke bes Fritz and s‘40 ps eP national Order 0140 orders be cannot shut his heart en- "Thet Disasteri of theNovotny t to a volume not Bermuda B Is sugarcoatidrtli6ute ' Roosevelt—Thia My Story with War" "(1 ' Ite'si N31 Precious Stones but a document of accuracy with Here in the land of tropical sun‘Ae-tirely to pity 85 Goya etchings and an Elie Faure mercer—Keg to e Sir Roland Storrs 0 Ca a fine insight Into the character of shine and sea breezes and with ber Thomen—Don't of -- 4 CO h During the futile besiegement of preface Believe It: Says the 0011 03t O ii)e Oviedo where the massive stone "Jim Kepley" It is a book which middle-age-d disguiseocompletely dis- Doctor tllto G‘i o I Timmermano—Heroes of the 5ia ' cathedral :those who have lived In the atmos- carded Naomi Jacob a MacMillan occupied by loyalist comes I Sterne apd his Untermeyer—Heinrich Heine Meow 44WWI I -- "09' ' White—Moral History of Women stands impervious to the thor whose latest novel "Fade phere Of the city room will appreci- nephew—both to fall in love with it' AO ‘01 sk 4 ' FICTION rebels' bullets or dynamite the story Out" comes in late December will ate most Those who have known the shining-haire- d 1 c ' siren little Benson—Old London four VOIUMIL ' " iewoly 910 s c0" of violence and carnage grows more arrive early in the new year forber ' their newspapers only as a reader dreaming she is their housekeeper le' Dodge—Pointless Knife w ' - Franklin—Dangerous Tears ' IIDP" I horrible There are chaos and con- - first visit to this country and to will gain understanding of the part The romance charming and whimsi0 SOCS'' 2 Jane of Deadwood Hues:on—Calamity f1' ' a ' fusion of civillanshdemoralized by fill a few speaking engagements IQ' journalism plays Iin this country calI enough if you shut your eyes to Gulch 1 Mann—With Apure the fighting:the dead and wounded "Fade Out" carrieiron the story of which ha a prided itself on a "free its illogical elements provides a Takes Cards MulfoM—Hopaions Cassidy Man Leading blocking the streets of 'orders and Jane Pinto a character of n'imeJ press" by reading "James Keeley happy climax to an entertaining bit Pritchett—Dead Wilder—bet Winter Go eounter-order- st of contradictory re- - I Piece" Joseph Peyrs G of iw C I Zweig—Buried Candelabrui& Newspaperman"—N I reading—G - hi ( historicevent ' ' We''' 4': ' :' ? I - :iizi ‘i:-i- ) - 4 ''' 4 :4' :(t ''s14 " '' ':: ? V Li 7 ::: ' ' 1 ti ik 1x4 ii ' - - : 1 Literary By GEORGE SNELL GREAT LEVELER: The Life Of RAY B WEST By JR: Steven& Thedleus By Thomas ADYEN'rtTRES AMONG IMMORFrederick Woodley Publishers TALS By Lowell Thomas PubStackpole Sons New York City lishers Dodd Mead and Co Inc The name of Thaddeux Stevens New York City may be little known today but Lowell Thomas met Percy Burton 80 years ago it was on every man's In New York in 1919 just after the lips Just before the Civil war Stevens Was one o( the most' in- war while Thomu was inlay telling political figures in Amer- a curious Manhattan audience for fluentiadl the neglect into which his the first time about Lavrrence's name has fallen is due to the greater effulgence of the names of Lincoln Arabian adventures Burton who Lee Seward Breckenridge and the ' had most of world's the managed like In the present authoritative great actors from Sarah Bernhardt work Btr4 Woodley has made a to Leslie Howard considering the valiant attempt to resuscitate the fame of the first °great cOmmoner" l Thomas lecture both Interesting and Thaddeus Stevens was the bastard to Lonoffered a timely sponsor son of poor Vermont backwoods- - i F 0 IIK Neglected American Figure Psycho logic Aspect First Given Belated justice The Great F 1 0 L4:t - 77elo :f kr- Episodes - With At Firsthand - 0v wi t!:'s40” '14 r '' -- 3!: ' i l - r- ' 4 ste I ' - I 1 ' -- " i I I -- -t Pa |