Show ' - P THE SALT LAKE TRIBLINE SUNDAY MORNING ' 4 - 4 -- -- ' - 193'8 MARCH 27 ' -- - ' ' Ai - Ne i ' -- - In : the CivilWar Days To Crovd -- Hervey Allen's New Book Is Romance With Basis of History but on No Such Broad Scale as His !Anthony Advirse' By E E HOLLIS 11'4 Folk ' Lit Y I Fisher's--konic:-fCome- -- -- - --- dy' - A Blast at Human Folly - i - t ''' - 4 of the strongly etched masi ssted terful characterizations found in By GEORGE SNELL FORGIVE US OUR VIR'rUES By By RAY B WEST JR novels we have pert- ACTION AT AQUILA By Hervey Allen Publishers Farrar Publishers The the earlier Vardis Fisher paper-thi- n mouthpieces of FOR OF THE HELL IT! JUST patelic By New York City and Rinehart Caxton Printers Ltd Caldwell' the author's psychological predileKenneth ' ' Collings Publishers elOVEIAING hardly more than a half year instead of a inan's thone Idaho Dodd Mead and Co Inc 1sTew whole lifetime and containing less than 400 pages to the Vardis Fisher's latest novel is thTatu strangely telling estyles York City part of Fisher's I200-od- d of his monumental "Anthony Adverse" and without the same vigorous mind plays here Kenneth as Collings' experiences that novel's diversity of scene and interest Hervey Allen's new sense high realism with emphasis embiently across the pages the stands out book is unlikely to claim the wide discussion roused by its prede- an aviator began during the World on the ironic aspects of human same rigorous honesty COIOSSal discessor yet it deals arrestingly with a memorable period in the war when he was chosen as one of Unluckily it presents &Fisher yet It all adds tip to a folly that a pamsix marines to be trained for One feels the and appointment so with Freudian preoccupied 1884 -own and winter of ' country—the autumn history of our He succeeded In flying service derivative paychologies that the phleteer might have done a better ' ' ' - - '' - ' ' ' While a story of the Civil war In but little part is it of the getting to France but as the first ''' who wrote 'Dark Bridwell" job that there just wasn't a kovel novelist " ' ' 1 elk few months were spent in waiting pageantry of battle That "action at Aquila" (pronounced "In and v Tragic Lire" barely glim here t le in fivepartik each '' The book la) at the close of the long campaign in the Shenandoah valley was for planes to arrive (delayed by mere through the tortured lines In with a different setof chaand the last few too small an affair Mr Allen says to have place in the chronicles German sabotage) dealing 1 ' ' ' racters although all in some way I of Civil war engagements It was but that brief "cavalry brush In hospital with the flu he was I ' ' - ' excitementof aerial warknown to the others First we have I south of Luray" nothing at all If one had been a part of the grim denied the he ' " craved that fare John and Jane Smith a pair oft ' of Antietam Manassas or Gettysburg of colossally grisly" battles well be the advennewlyweds whose first year of marCollings might ' 5 ' v- t 4i But to the story's chief characters it was momentous as great in ture lover's ideal for as he ex'"' I ''' '-ried life results in John's wearying ' 4w " -) -' e - '" of his wife and experimenting with "Since I was fifteen years tragedy as any other battle e plains: 'ft0 " 0600 if As recounted by Mr Allen it was an affair to stir the blood' old I have been in but one business: profligacy Somehow neither of the 0 ' '' tor A to lead men to reckless action as it did Colonel Nathaniel Franklin the business of getting the most out two are fully realized nor do their ':''' — '': " 0144 ' -- :4!': '" ' problems grip the iniagination'We commander of the Sixth Pennsylvania Cavalry protagonistof the of a lifetime that is all too beet!' '4- r0“ 3-" :'''' ''' ::' : :rieO''1b1P"i: ' never know much about them what Following the war the author r7book Part of Early's forces under a Mississippi specialist in' "fortheir environment is what they do " ' 61' '''' lorn hopes" making raid on the Pennsylvanians' camp at Aquila ivas transferred to Haiti where he '4'''' ''''''': 111'1-'''e '4 :Ii ' from their inhibitions peseta t04011 In chased bandits 1'6'''' experimented PAM(apartimmature ' AMERICAN GREAT ''''''''' THE : :'' :':' ':: '' 11 4 4 :' Creek Colonel Franklin had played a waiting game to give time blind P‘ '' 4 1 9' and l' 4' a time it was pracprobings into their 1 flying (at i tk3 for reinlorcements to come up But the colonel was a caValryman tically unknown) and finally found IL7' By Lee Shippey Publish- own complexes) t A '''' '44' t ' ' '''''''''' t: i 4 4 Sk ' and when Major LaTouche "mad or just from Mississippi" hurled himself forced from the army beers Houghton Mifflin Company li Next Art Spikemair and a circle ' ''''' 4- trr N 's r of small-tow- n his cavalry forward to capture the gun battery holding the attack cause of an unfortunate shooting f ' Bostod college professors' q one another it length most in check the Colonel could not wait calmly but swung his regiment scrape in which he became involved The Seymours after four years' discuss : are ridiculous All ''':::''' f acrimoniously ' But Collings was not only an out to meet this situation A tactical enbr for which th colonel 1' '!' I 'e: i ' happy roving through Europe and misfits liars dipsomaniacs ''''''' In a bucket He worked aviator dearlYt Colfederates While even the were defeated paid Latin America decided to settle nobodies scheming and peddled insurance and later down in some quiet California place Occupying the first part of the book is the account o1 Colonel shop the ruin of everyone with one a war became plotting for correspondent to write "the great American novel" whom they work Franklin's long ride returning from his first leave to he valley of the Jerry Young's sopopular magazines during which Greg had always meant to devastated by General Phil Sheridan's campaign—which ffords Mr the Artist Interprets Scene of 'Action in an anonymous western Aquila' conflict Howjourn write but had never found time hiurilet is the subject of the next Allen opportunity for portrayal of the temper and tho ght of the ever it is as a flyer that his experiReproduction of the colorful Jacket design given to Hervey Alien's new novel the first since to begin They found the place a section Jerry is an intelligent psyBarnhis famous "Anthony Adverse" country Most of the incidents are not fictional he t 115 us but ences are most exciting little cabin against the aide of a chiatrist who understands but cantaken from reminiscences of veterans of both sides in the conflict storming stunt flying and finally -canyon but instead of producing not correct her own twisted Motive- 4 travel The Sixth Pennsylvania had given valiant service winning title commercial trans-oceanthe novel it was a family they pro- lions and her brief May in the ' of "Sheridan's Eyes" but the colonel had not been proud of his paralleled his career and we get a duced 'Hanging out the white flag town where she attempts to account of the anecdotal human He was Unionist on the backyard clothesline didn't and a genuine fighter but this worli strongly of aviation in his book straighten out iniscastAives ends progress help the stork wasn't giving atten- in expulsion burning of people's homes over their heads sickened him That be expected his narraAs might to signals affair at the Crittendon place for instance haunted himthe tive Back we go toMsnhattan where informal "notes" on what he saw tion style is of the exaggerated This dullness of the stork's nece- inn Jones and Harrison Hawke Theory of Pacific English Mrs Crittendon her husband away with the rebel army and learned in the Mexican republic ssitated g type r ot out of place "quick-moneDad's writing EASTWARD SWEEPS THE CUR- of two fashionable psychiatrists give quietly acquiescent but Grandmother Crittendon carried out on in such an account Occasional atgenuine interest as well as good RENT By Alida Sims Ma Ikus entertainment His 56 short essays stories feeding the "pulps" not the us little case histories and observe a mattress using her tongue cuttingly young Margaret and the tempts at evaluating political syslearnas he planned and Publishers The John C Winston written for newspaper publication "slicks" the final smashup of the Smiths' little ones crying over their shabby toys The colonel had fired tems or contemporary world events AFRICAN GENESIS By Leo Froa kitchen garden is the Lastly Ogden Greb (who In the first place make a volume ing that benius Company Philadelphia Publishers marriage Stackpole little more important than casthe house but in another ten minutes he and his men were help- are street-cornfood lance's source free surest of be hero of the novel figurSOWS York qty would find it very that the tourist New may That On ual the speculation that The is times novel plausible assumption started twenty ing Margaret put out the blaze Sheridan was of sterner stuff— worth his while to read en route to ing somewhat hazily in each seis not the book's ghief Leo Frobenius noted European the next night the family having fled the house is burned a funeral of course clibn) a shadowy soul in search of er thiFbord It aim —the of boys IipureenttathThentap whose explorations in tors of physical geography influence Crittenden at his dying request spoken to his friend goes west to Idaho For Mr O'Brien saw everytining could of problems— and the primitive life He meets pealing particularly to readers who anthropolgist ' Sheridan areas of Africa the movement of the earth's popula- on the usual - tourist itinerary und and thefurnish plenty revel in a vicarious reliving of lives the been born Seymours hadn't Dale a kind of Idaho Rims tion Mrs Malkus has to the much more- He visited Mexican From these intolerable scenes the colonel had sought furlough they envy—of such adventurers as have contributed much to knowl- South Pacific and on gone thrifty Poverty doesn't daunt them Sylvia the "natural woman" dethe broad homes both aristocrats and evidently But back in his home town he had found a hatred and violent war Collings v culture-dhicoresourcea however they're merry edge of prehlikdric of the Black Current and void of pose false virtues or any industrial with 'talked he sweep to not in crew talk more even ful more than was there's fun and Quaker Philadelphia spirit ered remnants of the Stone Age other movements circling endlessly heads school teachers hotel men of the psychological warping' bein It's when stowed virulent The colonel—who might know about war—had said that She and by civilization this vast ocean has recre- laborers and with the children But worry is the 'household African North the culture through among Curious Piece 17 deteHank Dad that any victory now would be defeat for both sides and a hothead had Greb fail in love gambol in the evidence of a relation- ated a romance of Polynesian voy- Mr O'Brien Ls not one who Jumps rmined onnearly and peoples with a talk flung the term "Copperhead" in his face Thereupon Colonel FrankAmericana ship between the cultures and aging beautifully told and carrying at conclusions or looks upon every this incorrigible youth and 'possessed pines burrow in the snow talk lin sets out on the ride south down the Shenandoah to his camp and fulfill themgibberish The the weight of diligent research faiths of Africa and Egypt conversation as the expression of of a bright original idea gets the selves completely by some inexin his pocket that package to be delivered tomajor crittrdon's Katherine Mayo In her new book Prehistoric Rock Picture gallery in In the centuries before Columbus common opinion—the truth is not surprise of life his Hank's response so easily arrived at it must be a to his dissertation a collection us- when the commerce of the plicable erotic legerdemain widow if she can be found "General Washington's Dilemma" a Frankfort-on-Mai- n brings fitting This writer yields to no one in Harcourt Brace Issue relates a embled under Professor Frobenius' civilized nations was confined to composite of "what is seen and Varied are his adventures—a visit at Wheatland with ento a is that amusing hie admiration for Vardis Fisher's but most of tertainmentstory Buchanan meetings with inspired politicians 11 delightful in- very remarkable incident curious in direction with his anthropological fearfully undertaken brief coast heard and experienced are accepted by scientists wise excursions these hardy 'Norse- all 'felt"' - The one conclusion he There is a throughout genius but believes that only when terlude in a remote valley town where war almost could be forgo- that it seems never to have been studies gay human quality to Mr Fisher returns to consideration com- men of Ithe Pacific were casually permitted himself is that Mexico Leo a of evidence as occurred that hitherto convincing makes published that single-handed tten: his capture of Morgan Vprings from the hands during the last years of the Revolu- mon prehistoric culture of African and unerringly sailing on voyages like the rest of the world has its for Shippey's writing If the Se- of character and story as in his engaging reading books will he produce the of 'Union guerillas and winning of an eager young recruit There In 1782 u Miss Mayo and European races totaling hundreds and thousands of Right and Left wings "the same ymours are a bit too individual to earlier novels of which he is capable is romance intermingled with the military activity at Aquila tor tion 'It began the atpry between the haves and great from the famDuring Professor FrObenius' rock miles across open water This much cleavage American "the taking reports great of course the Crittendons are discovered in their hiding place at history of Monmouth county New picture research he found it neces- history records The peopling of have-nothe same tangle of represent the their and ily" experiences "Coiner's Retreat" which is to become a haven for the colonel too Jersey One Jack Huddy Amer- sary to study And to transcribe this saga has been the author's in- Idealism and political chicane" youngsters' adventures are typical Mostly °though not ignoring its of families everywhere Neither sentimental nor dramatic adventure however seem ican sympathizer wu captured and many of the myths and fables of teresting task uglier aspects of poverty cruelty Starting with the famous Mr Allen's sole intent but rather to present the conditions of war bung by Tories banded tinder the the natives as a means to under devolof Mrs Ignorance Mr O'Brien liked what Malkua Tahiti In this the of Associated name pictures standing Loyalists its glamor and its frustrations the feelings of fighting men and nonhe found in Mexico and encounand mans constructs of her ume a he assembled fund has this of death Business Booklets ship signs at the Huddy Enraged combatants as experiebeed to suggest perhaps how war with all - folklore little of the trouble others tered a characcrew tales with have a it of which nativehands General appealing at Washington Tory its tragedies can become "a mere mellifluouatale" to seem have experienced—perFor Average Citizen and his followers made reprisal by great ethnological and anthropologi- ters and sends it on a voyage north Cleone Montgomery Salt Lake to Hawaii and thence eastward to haps because he learned promptdemanding that one—to be selected cal value "Nowhere lesson City writer and editor of the poetry the that ly Americas—to the tales the These civilizations are 15 and of among lots gathered the of English With drawing by presenting purpose of the Utah Magazine does politeness pay such dividends" Scotch officers then held as prison- the Berbers of Algeria and Morocco of the Incas and the Aztecs Mr fundamental facts about the department has been awarded the first prize of visit with El Presi- the ers by the American army should the Arab tribes of the Sudan and Familiarity with the customs and dents O'Brien's economic and American business $25 in a short short story contest Cardenas bred in him a reA part of the psychology of the natives gives in the aame manner as of Southern Rhodesia a series of small neat book conducted by Writers' Markets and spect and admiration for this gen- system MASADA (Lady King) The Auto dreadful little girl" She was born suffer to credence them Berber and the of the who The drew conception unfortunate give picture reality been Huddy prepared and pub Methods a Hollywood publication tleman and his dream of a new lets have biography of Elinor Mordaunt In 1872 but there was nothing Vic- the lot wu the young Captain the creation of man and the first and to its actors Association fished by theNational Publishers The Greystone Press torian about her upbringing !tor Rori he of the false teeth sal- Mexico That tired old man in exile of Manufacturers ea the You and in conjunction with the Palmer Inlie of the Coldstream Guards animals told with a candidness that Leon Trotsky was visited too but stitute ofis Authorship Mrs MonNew York City was hers a Victorian spirit Reck- Asgy from illustrious some a ancestors startles of them in vaged express officer this languishing prison Industry Series tgomery perhaps best known for Elinor Mordaunt English author less courage and determination for months while his fate and moral philosophy and many of them and compatriots Mataafa sage of Mt O'Brien was not so charmed an American Way" her verse product alvera impressed him as "one Titles areof"The of many books most of them suc- have carried her through situa- Washington's action was discussed a high sense of chivalry or as in marine lore Noa whose ancestors Diego and the system "Men exmition "Ten Easy Lessor's" the winning tions trying and disheartening by congress and across the seas by the "Improbable Stories" the humor hailed from China seas Evi heroine of the weighty men of our times" Machines" ma with the thesis that cessful has known a richly varied sometimes of about 1000 words tells of Daniels and Ambassador Josephus story often hazof sea chase—these a of are a embarrassing great France exaggeration and Spain It England in which the painful ardous on Mexico chinery makes jobs rather than an experience in the life of a woman as having "the experience few of rock facsimilles the Numerous whose characters of genuRochambeau who was the French destroying them "Taxes and You" teacher of a charm school and unpleasant have often out7 ineness is as distinct as their Tragedy ending an early romance the situation by suggesting to paintings from the Frankfort-onMai- n the relation of taxes to daily living weighed the happy Change and her fiance falling to return from saved collection a 'and of number dividuality be "The American Standard of Li- George Snell's forthcoming book given excellent vicissitude have been her portion an African expedition sent her to Washington that Argylle Values Scenic In all Mrs Malkus has written portrait drawings- ot naving" said to be the highest in the from The Caxton Printers at first any place that came to seem like Mauritiuk for a year Then sud- to the French as a prisoner of war tives by Praulein Kate Marr illu- a book of charm and interest: com- FINDING ME WORTH :WHILE world "The Future in America" 'home" must soon be given up un- denly she married a Mauritian sug- to do with as they saw fit as a juvenile publication IN THE SOUTHWEST By strate free the work from artifice and mendably with the conclusion that this is planned til her writing talents brought ease ar planter to regret it for the rest the title of "The under PubSaunders' Charles Francis a with is that a simplicity step "still the land of opportunity" "At and freedom She has voyaged in of her life Once he offered her as Audubon Exhbfion Company" is now to be brought lishers Robert M McBride and School—Not toward prose perfection—E D H at Work" a treatise out as a book for adults The cargo steamers a dirty barque cut the stake in a card game and aftertitle Works of John J Audubon will Co New York City on the decrease In child labor has been changed to "And If Men down from a a cabinless ward her friends her es- be placed on exhibition at the Acad- Bound for Africa helped Because of the greatly increased 'Pattern of Progress" of an average schooner in the South Seas or na- cape Her third child (two died in emy of Natural Sciences in Phila Triumph" and is to appear on the Chemist Airs Views tive ketches only regular passen- Mauritius) was born in Melbourne interest in the southwestern region business "What Is Industry?" on April 28 to mark the Dr Victor Heiser whose rAn POISONING early fall list delphia PUBLIC While the author's name is' given The book which deals with the By of the United Btates within recent ger steamers bored her She has where she spent seven and a half centenary of publication of the American Doctor's Odyssey" has RILSSell C THEPublishers DorIn none of the brochures the view Erb lived in Mauritius Australia Africa of the) Donner most of the time overworked folio "The Birds of America" The sold close to the quarter million tragic adventures rance and Company Philadelphia years brought about in large meas- point throughout is naturally that company America and once reigned over 60 years is to be- - illustrated and underfed But she found love collection will be comprehensive mark is now on his way to Cairo its of of the men who head business and Paul S Clowes Salt Lake City illu-by cannibal islands in the Trobriand& and kindness there and 'almost re- material gathered from museums Egypt to preside at the fourth inPoisons—in foods beveragu to- ure by the artists' discovery Which might make English life the field for rich of interest painter' industry strator andcollections Australia after she was universities ternational conference on leprosy bacco alcohol the air plants aniprivate somewhat tame yet England was gretted able to return to England with letters written by Audubon as from which he will go to study the mals metals environment of home Charles 'Francis Saunders' descripher homeland always she returned disease in northern Africa Life has been exciting for her- --I a feature and factory even in the cosmetics tive volume of 1918 has again been to it 1 seem to have lived so lives milady applies to her face or the completely revised and reissued This lb no conventional auto- been so many people" many a she lays— toxic waste materials accumulated making a precious guidebook for ' biography no more than Mrs Mor- and her book is continuously so In the human body—are the causes the tourists who are flocking to the daunt is the conventional sort of and often amusing Xt follows no - of man's relatively short life span region person She writes with candidness formal pattern—how could it when according to the author of thiS inNo one perhaps knows the wonof her experiences from the child- life seems to run "in a series of par' formative book s' e derland of Arizona New Mexico and hood when she was known as 'a allel threads"! Not written with any intent to southern California better than Mr s ' k A injure sales of any manufacturer's Saunders and his information is i' I f'' ' viewfrom 'of but the rather in reader product the at the ' put disposal ' New Books at -' Several point of the chemist Russell C a very attractive form N101 ' 1t ' ' book calmly tells the reader good photographs illustrate the Erb's 4 Mr T Albert Hooper ' Public vio he is being systematically poisoned work Library -ril' Personally recommends CO the following in his daily contacts because of the 1 I t The following books will be added to the 1 i'Vle) es kV "Andittrivi and materials intendedto Solidity March 28: library 1 I I I I Ipublic sec GARDEN 114 Scientific Faith MISCELLANEOUS ' -I q11'-r" ' In a sense jhel author is an alarm-- 1 and' Catledge—The 108 Dela I I I 1 I 1 I I Alarm MI(V‘køc BOOKS IT GOD Wentworth Rose LET DO Annual IVO American 1938 By — — Lst At least be examines each of Banies—Intellectual and Cultural History the above topics in the cold light of Byron Winslow Publisher Dodge of thWeaten World VV1 01001 Garden Questions t ke'c' evs ‘A(11 14)6 V Belloc—The Drumm of Civilisation " Publishing Company New York often basing chemical symbols Answered" xls Sot Aft ' Builders and Hama 5 te eit?' ‘3 ? Rrtwley—Negro k City Alfred cart nottessresull claims to toxicity of a given Sub- Carlson—Brisbane 4 4 4r Cieion—Frail Fragments (verse) :te VP Written by one whose' own faith ject on one Or two reported illnesses cen't "Garden Gossip" DoroV1011504P34 Cradit—Bookkeeping St1tC‘ 0811 Feher—Portrait of Old Goorgetowm arising from its use Concerning Li secure this is a plea to othersthy Biddle "ct $1 to- J on Ica 00 " Dorothea Blom t Elleberg—Hell Ii"c‘tle soo doe his chapters on Industrial disease to accept the iystem of mind heal4‘11 Garland—The Youngest of the tinnily 00 ' it ome remedies" ing which he has found efficacious te Ntl "questionable Herndon—The Hidden Lincoln Irv" 4Landseaping the Home EiW3 4 A rictiod Its central thesis A that the Grounds" 5 ( I W Lamm— argument O Hunt—Ou American SV 014 o 00 C of Dreadful Night and free true in that to could short no In one fall Flowers I in Color" lliplingy o ck "Garden ‘te of the Stewarta O Mackenzie—Fusing is the salvation of the 1 r kcl Marshall—An Autobiographical Sketch profit to a degree by reading Mr Net ke ‘0 G A Stevens Price—Children of the Rising Sun book His facts are in most world Erb's 4 9c 4‘ s ‘1 Slocombe—The Dangerous Bea 1o00 ' teach- thbis an the It of a 0 Instances exposition sUbstantiated by I' Over Snow—Red Star Art of China "The Home LandsAe tivi 01 of Sketches which Baker et Eddy 100 of ings Stark—Baghdad M K Mary llography o 00 approximately scape" Iv $ rtft Btock—Mu Weeton INto wu published privately at first but ' authoritative texts—C M 144- - &Olt' 204210 Bottornley Van Week—Our Changing Church& ti —le' the inspirational value of the book Whitman—Bread and Circuses or "The Garden Primers" e ' ' Ge a silw ? kN‘ As21q(11 A"4! Wittenberg—Protection and Marketing of has brought this wider distribution1 Cecile Hulse Literary Property ) - 41 SI 00 Mexico 0 ' Matachal on FRENCH BOOKS Report woe 4 C" f 1 ocoGionn—Nalatance de l'Oelyeseti NOTES FOR A BOOK' ABOUT Essays of Charm ale° bare many ether notstii Chadourne—Dleu crea d'abord LUIth 410 oloqt I We "Mr choice Howard MEXICO books "1 exceptionally Vincent HAPPY NATURE 'ADVENTURES Colette—La Vagabond By for the Home Gardener ssstvO'Brien Publishers Willett 'FICTION ' Publishers and lover of flowers By Mary C Butler ri Baldwin—Hnehanted Danteand Clark i Co Chicago PhilaDorrance and kl Silence Company ' ''' -'''" '" G"oiduee 44r 42 Antt'aTta: -Ade 7 1 a as reporter with delphia Writing purely I i Farnol—Crooked Furrow Iti7110 te A4 kj ve "4' ' A' ' I nb desire to pose as an authority These cheerful little essays have Fireeter—Ship of the jIne e i Larsson—Fatherland Farewell TIT 7 Mexico I on tI Howard Vincent O'Brien to 'do with exploration not to farMorton—Return of the Blue Mask a'v : Elinor Biordaunt : - - (Continued on Following Page)- manages nevertheless to make bis vb Sandos—Slogwa Boom' ' 1 1 ' -- a ' ' ' Life With Adventure Author's Aim - k ' d t 0 ' ' ' a WS CUSSI9 ' : fs - U Evasionswhich I ' s s ' 4 Ak-wy- 1- Ts ‘-- '-' 1 - 1 P Dauntless Crew ' wt - 1- - -- -- 4x ' 4 l) :1 v - Average Family 1 t ' I Not Entirely -- p-- — v - 1- t ' '" 0 : :::::::H ge at Italo-Ethiopi- ic gooks of 'General Interest African Folklore 4 Aid to Science swift-movin- e ii er ör "twenty-mule-tea- for-Maj- rock-pictu- re slum-dwelle- rs of it I i man-to-m- 11 t )? ts Writers of Rocky Mountain West -- boat-builde- rs J ' Living Hardly and Excitingly - low-dow- ' Sand-Walki- t 1 4 (4 full-rigg- er t I 0 I — )J r1 ' — ' IP k) 0 0 $0 0 ' e " ' -' - - tol ff ' 1 r 0 A W13et s" 198 ' -- '4 N ''Christ-mindodnes- vg gg 4 1‘ ' - fr t 1 1 " ( ! 1 4 I I - ( t - - 1 v -- ' - B's ' ' ' ' — ' - 4 - -- - ' -- - 1 3 ! t 4 C I -- -- i - - 0 a 1 f i:4 - - - - A - - t ' ' 'Imonnuollimilimmimmool 1 - 11 ' i tr 6 C |