Show - kk - 44 - - ' t:t 6D 17- -) liLeviews - and C omm ent on e1m Life in Early Wilderness Of America Depicted With Truth and Beaut Y r - blue-eye- Puma Blanca capture treasure the American ldier of fortune becomes ao- prisoner too big neck saved only because Plum& Blanca finds this "Yellow Head" valuable as chauffeur and Besides with machine gunner federal troops wiping out the Yaquis who had buried his treasure only Milt knows its hiding place In the impmenable Yaqui fort: ress Milt's situation is ticklish but his chief worry is "Buddy" reckless young flier who has involved berself in his life but for whose daring he later has reason to be grateful FINE NEW BOOKS II Was tow Wein My Valley "' Richard Llewellyn Chad Hanna Walter D 4monna Citizens Levin $275 Americans All Over Jerome Beatty $300 Benjamin N Carnoza Georg B Hellman Clara nchumann $250 Ji Meyer U B Jut r "'"Ili 4 : I j I11 itj N Burt Chip Off Mg 'Mould's Thomas L Stoke "um VI dw 'Land flog 8200 jt Without Laughter Ah mad Kama' 350 tiring $180 Mourota" '61 Tho Art of 1" Aticifil Dorado Stephen Longatroot 125D '0 1 -- ! Woman Writer Tells Story of News Work i 1 Pub-Luk- er I t k I : - 4 By Edits L Booker Publisher The MacMillan Company New Yvk City No woman In China has known a more exoiting colorful and - i d ' J 4 e---- Interesting experience than Edna I Lee Booker who for 18 years past has made her home in Shanghai and has made the story of those years the material of a narrative as spirited and human and Informing as any we have had out i- By George Snell Russo-Germa- Writers of Rocky Motnitain West Ft 4- 1- struipring Out of a depression and the little business was feeling the ' — ol ! al iisgNt—-- Kai-she- - - Analytical Look at Business And Its Effects Ably Done - i i Is t! Li cut-thro- n high-pressu- re Bobbs-Merri- Iter-of-isei- 1 110 4 pt Portion Jew In American 'Borrowed Time' Used in ew Sangster Novel f't Fabric Assayed g n IP est Iaiterary a rues Offered remt it tit re" War Play Civen Unusual Angle tt " Kai-she- these-14'- ly-4s- Oir i ItV-tr- a:r-sr4t- te er - e "17-c- e- ns trazizsi-eizo-ci- vi-- behind-the-line- -- tr kris-ens--ix 1 1 Points for Readers to Mark On Literary Calendar 144 aacy tzttc7en: orka irt Sttk- - tb tho fl!tovrr: EvcNotri5urt:4!!! try Qt14 143 Tr set1 re! - 14-4-a 41 -a eta oo !!"7:w !to 1- -3 ' Iresairee Sloorma vn Li t- - runare ren-r- ("r" al trocn--r to:31t turent la et I gAzt a at 1t :Nu: a74-r- n $z--- t7 641- n t tit V-- 12 - tet-- lea ti4'IL4411 tsit 4 mrrg tr- - 47-:1- Sas 1 )1srl trOtil : nates1 nnourta-p- L Amon Brewer By Marshall Jonet Company Boston Prominent for many years in the as well as the businesa al1 yva a rPsisient of literary world Brooks More has passed Stale& hi tt eightieth milestone but has Th at IrltrAti not yet laid down his pen His R liN44:r14r qbo rot tho formative years were spent In St -Brighem Young' Louis and during this period one liarru7n" Is now propering of hi major literary efforts Will 114 coty of Llan Itu411 begun—the translation In blank a Xi 10111011 HOW Ail) pub- ‘'etlf of OVIlIA "Metamorphoses" itibtitio the eight volumes of which he has rnmItgltrIne th !1 "The Lovers Romtry" It te1 aL4-- -- of ItvA legen- pletvit tAT-11111nloni XV Jim" tonxidered as his roost Important P- a n1 Suthvsn Tony creative work in poetry More had made and tont a comJammt end othorL 1'tve book fortable fortune In the panic of tor June rturnipt-1R9:1 but was able to reestablish koptasee taratis himself financially to that In 19IR lkte he retirrd and after a period of CIAytt oil Prep" alit JAI 14 of Carod--- travel settled on an tstato just Y0 C4! F7ora1-outside of Bog ton whet he has onlet thp A SItonrer the Houoe" ThIS continued his literary pursuits Ills e ot the ell Ifl remo bioKrapher who it a i InCand In trait) a Prince of includes In hia book with his short W a 41 u Tet tset EurnitiPtinn hiography of the poet the best of NIVO Lrje-1PI a his Poetic' rtngA chiefly short te am bre became a ttact1”ies and narrative poems with 4 CZqttt)4 critical commentary "A Sea Island Lady" New Books Added At Piddle Library Publisher The following to the added Monday boott ramp-- Carter-10- A 0 books will Public Library by be ettesemia Afoot& 40 Mr fl0000th of a during WII1 Animeitt to Listen tot In bitiole conitianil What IPpem10 !Aorta of 1411ht ? Format sod Heater—Wharf Your D- OUtit 11rth-1- In ihe 01 Thinks for the ‘RISWOLD FRANCIS Con be revowed by Bunnell Osmond stance absorbng story tbe is '1bs Iffelf115 NK01:9 flawing homy Lind Clithi —John tinflms 11 11x- j70441 r(brt Wtt l ox'rnoc&-ei- t alit toas More Itvzc-roh'n- a Sr 1- 0! 1:7i vt 4! Lila and Poems of Brookes It Tas Ttik ' -: sok:otle LIN1J th aa I trutN h )Z7- vat To let others unravel while the silkworm lies: That was China's simple way - the the lonz view Change not the worbl but let the world change you —From Saturday Itevkvw of ilterattuss r) erti--es- (Helen Foster) To sleep but not to dreanL and not to wake too soon To ask no questions that have no proven replies To spin your sorrows round you in a hard elk00n ' ' shock of corporation growth and 1 t of union wench Fatheta affaira had drifted too f tar upon The rocks to be salvaged the 3Nar1ner in England to sell British ustTs In a computing machine raried the cornplometor failed of ' sz'ocess and Father's attempt at heirs a traveling salesman like fsed Th4 to off already had his nose in the door when Grand-To- t her Ceiiiies came to the rescue baed: Father out of his hotel in a Edna Lee Booker American writer N ho narrates her exsuhilz-rtand set the family on its Covers Civil 'Wara China under the title periences as reporter in war-tor- n feet agan Miss Booker on arrival was 'News Is My Job" a book of large interest The Gasses holly inexperi promptly gathered up into Shang-ha- s liund themselves owners i social whirl of which there and crieraiors of the SA g irlfir Ameris engaging description but with icon Siesin Laundry in Dayton the clash of the war lords in the Ohio sat between a fish house and i Y M C A with no entrance early 20's life became' more adi the venturous Without any concepbut the front even the coal having tion of the hardships of the trip to It carried through the office the boldly set out for the revolu"Ilia vtory 0 t the text five years tionary zone to interview the war is of constart struggle of hones i Manners and Murals pletely Ignored we find business lordm for Internews Marshal Chang by teverses of night a in of turmoil compeTso-lithe "Mukden Tiger" was riarish ill lue k a succession of or Business tition salesmanship deep in war plans no Interview" By Max 114(11114 Puhlkher The girlk otrieo girls washers matrie i ll India- monopolies etc possible officials told Company its highlight being "iniitciBusiness for the most part how met the marshal's her But she t-t napolis week smiling young when everything hapever operates to the best Interests son who said "0 would you like to Business today Is one of the most of the greatest number of people Cac ells it all honestly and influential factors affecting our but when it doesn't the effects are talk with Dad?" and presto! she was received in the marshal's own w t1h no attempt art daily lives yet how few of us are Immediately noticeable In the form home i al style but with a sense of humor of failures depressions unemployfully acquainted with the workings The first woman correspondent It makes a book of this highly specialized part of ment poverty and even war I ever present to be granted interview with the tht worth Mr Itsdin presents here not the price if only for its pic- our social system? national hero General Wu Pet-f- u Ito sJoke Ckambeelithies turf of Father without business book Max Rodin traces views of a disgruntled business —on In this whose study walls hung a poraws oersomitime-- troataiks et lohlIty-- but independently wanting the development of business from man but a concise unified and of America's first president trait TtAp Asoorkoka i to be his emit hosts mild gentle and its earliest forms of tuMr barof and completely objective analysis gift —she was a guest behind the Orexi-aSta 1162 once when the pate-ri- t to of business state and its present ter up high pracdevelopment chid Door in Wu's own house At Monahan's demands led finance lie presents an unbiased tiees—C W Madame Wu's insistence she went ta Falher's marching him to the and comprehensive discussion of to her first war assignment acdzor and adminislering 'a hard the cause and effect of business companied by two amahs and d kick in the place where a kick evolution While the structure of M'S guard! She arrived in Canton to ta go" and of business Is a logical present-da- y interview Dr Wu Ting-fanand Vozher i prev iously would have accumulation of the most effective N Dr Sun Yat-sejust in time for if 0-- had spent five minmethods employed In tim es past heon a "scoop" on Chen Chiang-mina broom working all day he further explains these methods 41 coup: and going to see Sun Yat-se- n at It marigie and never succumb- - have not aliVays been and are not hidint on a gunboat in the now accepted as ethical or always I Pearl river her boat was attacked Reluctant Star Mr Smith Meet Mr Co proper Pub- The boatman was shot only Miss By Margaret IL Sangster Avarice or the desire for more By Janata VI skerimem u 10 111M4 IV Booker's own knowledge of steerMacrae-Smit- h lisher been is has than Company em necessary perhaps Lee JL tfriittty reptaistqie ing enabled them to gain the gunforce in this evolution the Philadelphia greatest New sad Itiarbiesck leo Keyes' It When Mildred Carey who all her boat and at times the most obnoxious Yerit When this profit motive becomes 30 years contented herself "with Brings Record to Present JA 11A PAIL' C4pvr1u n if tor novices In so great that the moral values of the crust at the end of her half In the intervals of covering civil state desTer ref loaf" saving her pennies lest her wars thie r!pl1 hare been 'en- the means to the end are corn the earthquake disaster in ema the trawzig old age know the worry her own In the Seriond Mary Robspread of the Russian mother had known was told by Japan the R npl)ati Mystpry Novel Prize In China the "New Life" Ideology her doctor she had but six months revolution Iron:est Farrar and Rinehart offer suot a bsxits ttts k inspired by Chiang more of life It had seemed actually a SliVsl pr-ron amount of toy&1she found time to a release t!'-For 'that six months to make a home and raise a marry t'ett mloluwrIPt subs ta family she could live—no need to uve at times to At in the first contest the ttets t 0111z et Ito fir A visit America and to Americans The for tomorrow since iil be there wasn't Mrs Rinehart vho the Annerlose Tthe social life Her final chap1111larn Lobel! Publisher to be a tomorrow With the $6000 enjoy 1 tho final word And the task cautd IsKit have best's' ters are devoted to the Japanese New York e The Reeder Press she had managed to save she Invasion which hand Lsmos water:n-4aril ed tiArs of Farrar and Rinehart has turned her would have some of the things the loved F pc- rn nt Aprd City the contest from a city of adcolWilliam Lobel! who In the had never had And for the first ventureShanghai closes Itt 1540 and is open kava to a city of refuge and jrarr ta eit-a- to anyone ha ties not before pubs- lection of short pieces "The Fire time in 14 years Mr made Laze Sigel' capa- the reports of conditions in the Door ble and Other Stork'" is late! pictured What did she Japanized areas are of a horror secretary I rrAstert rtoveli ok'to4iirv &mit of the "WOO In the first some Of his war experiences with care about a sob—for six months? unbelievable WbZss thtr a le I though Miss Booker touch has and authentic So Mildred smartly dressed In has Clanssa Fairchild fieriness the esse bote tstat oes vb! blue penciled the letfreely on his based a smart ear is promptly on her ters introduced lest plot hose ''I Wanted to in this war play Mr Lev-71narthwet of 11sha Crszrtatt she shock her )444:4:ler" stI appear this fall Two the entry into the conflict of "the way somewhere letting circumand M Was et Cscv-vreaders too greatly Americamea" and their reception stance decide her destination honorable men-ruZesric mytvis "The story et It Vivid and effective in its presrrk nk Cruher's "The French by the wearied fighting men of was the sunset that first night mid entation of polities and social backIA a thread s YAM and A474:-:erid England Ke'" "westward" the boy in the drug A'nexperited Night" by throues the it is a book notable also In his foreword the author tells store who suggested California— ground at !"2:alseth Da!y have already aphsrsrrys44410:iraro for its sharp character sketches and its a Iturd lone Sandberg of the plays inception and the "Rolls RAber" signaling they poi el Pit t of the women of China fat Peered andli0814 round of managerial offices her from a parked car on a lonely especially tn resoLforiarir Lays Over Heels in the Is unThe cold reception however Murder" A ram in April name et flare road as she had been warned to f 1- derstandable While its incidenta determine Ilo113rwmd as the end of A chatio to in $2500 is presentrr4- loominz kirn‘seta account ed no doubt its being o f Justify her road For the handsome road Szves ivy ansb!outt )(lung tile rl ho tte tgratins "war play" it would Peem to have bandit wasn't—but that's traced tad Vtie itsis:trirs is prodve a rranuscript suitable abeen s a struggle Sangster's story and she must be 'them" the re sr e lot-esiihr sdtri a's a) the directed 14111 against serms The life story of rather than vtr'cia their allowed to tell It—what happened And the Incident which In Hollywood arid a man (Nt an of any profession Huns how Mildred most greatest:M hiss j tit le tts Cfi1 ea t es almost became a star et:74illoil may to ac- gave inspiration for the play reluctantly MONDAY 2 Pr In little riss7ided the Import reality ara at!tri one what she learned about motion picqualitiprrt the 1)1 be rg that it shall be a true 1 'L eat authors tr tseir ture idols and her own desires Audtoum—ssca poor "Ntr0--vA 4 amount of life 1 In that six months after all could AftWt't-1l'oet of Eighty Seen I A'rAr be too short A Book Material tau: teraesopni The Ohl Chinese Manner 4 of China As a newspaper woman during this period Miss Booker has been very close to history in the making has been eyewitness of events of import not to China alone but the world has had that familiarity with the Far East picture to make her cognizant of gripping drama preparing Going out to China as correi spondent for International News Service with a Job as reporter on ) an American daily in Shanghai Miss Booker's anticipatory romantic delight in her "Flowery King1 dom" in the color and gayety of Shanghai has com to be a deep love for China and a sharing of Young China's hopes and aspira1 tions This has come in part I through her intimate friendship with that intense patriot Madame k who as May ling Chiang Soong was her first acquaintance Chinese women among upper-clas- s - Chamberlain Conside3 AN'av of Solving Eéonomic Ills The American Stakes By John Chamberlain rubitslsera Carrick and Evans Inv Now York ('fly Quondam book reviewer for the New York Times asaociate editor of the Saturday Review of Literature Journalist and currently on the staff of Fortune John Chamberlain has for a number of years been having his say about Mere and national affairs In his latest book he has collected a number of essays related to our political economy which are as refreshing rind realistic as any now being written A few yews ago Mr Chamberlain was bitten by the virus of Marxism (along with most young American Intellectuals) but the Moscow trials the Spanish war n and the pact together with many another dose too hard to swallow have InocuYet he retains it lated him seems to this writer a large share of conviction in the desirabihty of production for use attained by whatever means It is this empiricism and willingTIPAS to accept the solutions at hand which make Chamberlain's views so pertinent Be is very near in spirit to the New Deal philosophy while dissenting from much of its mechanics That the machinery of distribution has broken down he tacitly (legumes and without even arguing about It That some means must be found of setting it In running order again is his whole - -- f reiate a candid picture of a section of everyday American life In I rtrtod ben the country was Reproduction of jacket design 0)41164 arpeeranes treaties et Anserkask Conrad Richter's masterly neer life "The Trees" - ' happenedi It is such a story as many a famith gallant spirit riy that faced the financial crisis of 1393 might toa I I News Is My Job i t these correspondents' difficult job to report America immediately accurstely arid fully "You Americans" gives only an Indication of the exhausting proportions of that task but in so doing makes it necessary for us to revise our fixed and rigid ideas about ourselves concern -- J T of ThorsteinVeb‘ lenTheandtheoriee of William James stemming out of American problems and arrived at almost independently of Mill Adam Smith or Karl Marx may point a way By ameliorating the lot of the disorsessed and by setting up controls of inROCK SPRINCS Wyo-- -A volume detailing tho history of the dustry and other sentinels to look Union Pacific Coal company the after the public good we may let result of several years of research unravel our economic difficulties Whatever road to freedom is and compilation by executives of the company Is to be published taken cannot be an easy or imThe panaceas of within the next 30 days accord- mediate one anarchism syndicalism and other ing to announcoment from the ofsystems for achieving the perfect fice oT Fugene McAuliffe president of tho company It will be a State are incompatible with a realistic approach to o u r economic limited edition What advances are problems It tolls tho story of the company made must be achieved by a procfrmin the building of the Union Paess of gradualism hir Chambercific railroad the opening of the lain thinks mines at Rock Springs and other Needless to say this hook Is full and tho transition from poinis of brilliant and trenchant comwood burning to coal burning loment on specific current affairs comotives and will include the on and on the prosstory of several ghost camps of tle pectspersonalities of American area in the war "The American Stakes" might ho characterized Masasine Contributors as a highly intelligent handbook Pwo of Utah's xsriters are repin resented the current Issue- of for American liberals today American Prefaces a collegiate publication issued by the Univer- Provoan Speaking sity of Iowa under auspices of the School of Letters with Wilbur At Logan Meet L Schramm as editor Ray B West Jr of Cedar editor of the Rocky Mountain Re- hasCarlton Culmsee Utah poet hes spent the past two )ears at the view has a short story of five Writers' NVorkshop of the State pages '"I'he Princess's Little Girl" University of los a ill be the an imaginative story of childhood which is en excerpt from klonger speaker at the April meeting of the salt Lake chapter of the League piece Of of Utah W'riters at the Art Barn "Blue Iris" titles a shost poem 54 Finch lane Tuesday at 8 p which Is the contribution of DrewMr ster (hisehn member of the facul- Cross-road-Culmsee'sforsubject will bp "The Utah Writers and ty of the University of Utah after his address an open dscussion nd question period ill be 'A rar a lionorett held Violin solos by Jolt F Woonrit Ylgin Groseclose's splendid story of an oppressed people In "Ararat" accompanied by Miss Assnelie has been chosen by the American Woolley will complete the pr)- Booksellers' association as Its "dis- grain The meeting is open to all Published last interested in professional Nariting covery" for 1919 fall by Carrick and Evans the book has been genezally recognized on Loon' Work DelaN ett g 'precariously p pr oit In the words of John genius 3 C !Ariel 'Mr Pitt a nd AmPrCournos because of Its universe' iraa Birthright announcel tor lat and and historical truth theme March by Stokot las been podalso for Its high literary rt(Iality poned to April 18 By Nym qk ilk s 11105 1 t Beretta & Midweek Inc I 'New Tort City F Without any conscious purpose i In that direction this story of a -Irrart1! criirle manage to bee a document of real sociologic import and in its picture of how one family met an earlier depression than t the 19'29 debacle has economic val- t ue& It is not fiction Sherlock Broriaoa Cavi professor of English at the Isniversity of Nebraska has LI a VI elt from actual life a chapter tram the Cass family fortunes during five years of his boyhood but it is snore engrossing Mast most firtion—and has this advartare—Mr Cass didn't have to tem out the 'miracles" that mi 0 hard-heade- By Dane Coolidge Publishers E P Dutton and Co Inn Taking a legend of the war activities of Pancho Villa and his war cheat containing treaaures looted from churches and mines rut basin of hie plot Dane Coolidge hat told a rousing yarn of battle and bloodshed of treachery greed and romantic adventure below the border that equals anything he has done recently And Mr Coolidge haa earned title to top rank as a writer in the western field Milt Seabeck young American lured by the thrill of war adventure —and the many pesos the bandit chief pays a skillful machine gun operator — served with Pizano's army through its vIctorious march When revolting from the north d Yaqui warriors under the Report Illumines China Scene First-Han- d it another Yaqui Drums 7Ateráiy Folk' Crisis 1'hObla SI n oted by rt orel 011 Guests American Mixes In Guerrilla War in 31exico Family Fights 'Gamely With 1111Tolf at Door lky Sherlock gronsioa Gall& 0 I 40 44 ! So the Lucketts moved along 111 "the bobbing springy gait of ik family that followed the woods as some lemilles followed the sea" Iso on They packed their l ittle allones their backs—even the littlest of 1 Wyitt and Sulie had a burden ax bullet mold or clothes only fever” slow the with Jary "poorly carried little After crossing the- You Americans Ohio on the pole ferry the youngliAlited by B P Manic Pub-Piers wild to be tramping the same lishers Funk & Wagnalls Co as trace their father had tramped New York City a boy with Colonell3oquet they Another book by an American were far from human habitation known wilderness foreign correspondent would take In that unbroken as Northwest Territory in those nobody by surprise But presumyears at the close of the eighteenth ably on the century theory "You Americans" Is To few readers has it been given - the analysis of life and politics in monforests—of the know to deep ster trees close enough to touch - the United States by 15 correspond-dar- k pines and hemlocks crowd- - ents of foreign newspapers among ink so the sun never pene- us as Intimate observers trate the only roads deer trails The editor has wisely refrained coaxing one on twisting and turnlog and petering out in some- from trying to make a cohesive swamp But Conrad Richter's pie- picture Each of the 15 authors tura mikes one feel he has ex- - wrote Independently choosing his perienced it has known the own subject without knowing or of too these terror the beauty the contributions of his dense woods of pale green day- - reading fellows The result is a hodgestood with he has feels One light of highlights with topics podge of awe in on the ridge Sayward ranging from the seriousness of a that "sea of solid treetops broken political analysis to a only by some gash where deep whimsical astonishmentforeigner's at ' our beneath the foliage an unknown mores and notions this lonely stream made its way The book has casforest sea rolling on and on till ual entertainmentconsiderable is value It broke billows against Its faint blue curious for example that one auan incredibly distant horizon" thor considers we have a "propagandOn the bank of the stream in a-phobia" while the thickest stand of timber where thinks we are dangerously indifwalnut trees grew so large three of ferent to the propaganda at work the young ones could not span Interests The pleased their trunks Worth chose to build against our with which most of the his cabin—a choked up place incredulity mention what is called our where no sunlight fell until the writers is an amusing indication wan version that came when win- - "idealism" of the tenacity of the d thinned canopy the leafy had ter - businem man myth current in Eubotat the was felt she and Jary of a deep dark well from rope The main and most illuminating which she could not escape But impression of the book however she found a way and it was not IS the reiteration of the enormity (Continued on thip Following Pao) and 'variety of this country It is vit t h M1 ks and News 1411L' ' By Eva E Hollis The Trees A Knopf New York By Conrad Richter Publisher Alfred City Luckett hunter and trapper had said that the WHEN Worth was leaving their Pennsylvania wood and foretold a woods famine Jary had made no demur though she guessed he was aiming to cross the Ohio into the wilderness while she wanted the settlement life about her Like a dutiful wife she must follow her man Worth was a "woodsy" ando when! the settlement came be moving further Into too close to his cabin his feet itched-t- the forests "Trot 1910 March 31 reibunt 41141 Sunday Mornftig England NPVI CA War Plan times to attend 14 Housewife rioitarhalk t solvin Wattiog Jaoor l'otroitmin itatining And II( anti tartnriit Procsame woo riclttv of Krt ro itsk if WOW $acra garde N whota —(iro h of A merican 1)tmo()- ra v tteroed hook of ircatioh Vfatt 1250-19- 1 9 1t-cfoosr W 0 —Throoph 111O anti Application of race froo Tobit Polls—The 11f1In ?Imitation 41ento" Noterook co--rntloI Nw iiado to Rirtis tut tb - 1 Tiv Othr Amattra 1"Yllt— attiV f fitsitery Kim Came of Men emlatemk i I B anis 'att iell'TioN Methe—lIce —Valiat Ileac! prow' !too' to holly 3 1”itntlic Htt of Marl (rr - pi 00 ly st I 11 t I r: yftir w 1 of Ilea ainittio tifits-- - Paola Mc icroat Ose teil Motettoa la Nne Mori-tarA fliiird of I) Maliov ttlid Canymt I J F' t I ' - s 0 - :f - i 1 ' " - - 'r 1 t ' 4 |