Show r'4 O3— 1 4 — Sunday Morning I- - - -- - I Piquant Verse Work of One Past Seventy newt Holt ' Itçcent Novels T Please Vein 'at - ' post-Wor- 1 ' nits-frien- I '' sudden-springin- Red-head- -' tnnshidi nes : the which chronicles Saga" "The Valorous Years" t h e J Cronin running serially before book publication in a prominent magazine h a s been acclaimed by critics as another "Citadel" mew novel by A I Speaks have been compared to the "Forsyte As prime minister of Great Britain Winston Churchill speaks for the British empire His comments on men and affairs daring the past two years worthy of Britain's Man of the Hour are contained in his new book "Blood Sweat and Tears" an October Putnam book Books of General Interest Found on Summer Lists Guatemala: Modern I Ancient and By Joaquin Munoz and Anna Bell Ward Ptiblisher The Pyramid Press New York City For the colorful land of Guatemala home of the ancient Mayas this volume combines a complete travel guidebook an account of the history of the na tion with particular reference to Outstandins Father Was an Editor sot 50 Joshua IC Bolles as Final Edition: Memories of People and Places $100 IL F Benson The Family S250 Nina Fedorova (510000 Prize Book) Sullivan S256 Clyde Brion Davis Nappy Valley 125(1 Patrick White w"" ri No Other Man Alfred Noyes 11150 The Mines Billot St Geneva Warren Bunting 8100 Nester Boon Norah Lofts $150 whw' NOW is the At thne to select your Christmas Cards! 01 eukilvA t'o 4 l iqq44 ow ea 1 gtq the Spanish conquest and an account of Anna Bell Ward's personal trips in search of the exotic and beautiful Even the smallest villages and most remote waterfalls apparently have been noted and described by Miss Bell Kentucky writer and Senor Joaquin Munoz who isa native Guatemalan and representative of a travel agency there It is the detailed care and minute study both authors apparently have expended in preparing the volume that gives it its chief value Combined with photographic and numerous Illustrations charts and tables the text undoubtedly presents a full and thorough-goin- g of description this "tropical Switzerland"—H F O Wink Fast America! By Lambert Schuyler Published by the author Hollywood Cal Lambert Schuyler contends that civilization h 4ssk:$''''t? ('''r"5'"'''''''''''':''''': : I 1 : as economic smallpox a disease caused by the bacillus credit-deb- it The symptom Mr Schuyler says a r a the "festering sores" of the unemployment tax housing farm and kindred problems After diagnosing these Ills the author prescribes this treat' ment: "Society must be entirely freed of its credits and debts When that is done it will be found to respond quickly to large doses of cooperative own- ership and equity financing" His idea is to do away with "money lending and its whole edifice of false security" to cure America's ills To say the least his argument mill be widely chalionged—M R : '''--' ' 1 '':- ' William '"' ir '4k :- Alit'' i: I( swarming) Reading to south an carthborn star Invades the silent spaces the high places of the skies The droning dies The transient fades from sight Only such upstart stare concern themseives with manand with the wars be wages in this day They only they drop death on sea and coun tryside and town Rigel and Algol and Aldebaran do but look down Oregon in Toto Covered by W P A Volumes Oregon: End of the Trail Compiled by Workers of the Writers' Program of the WPA In In the State of Oregon American Guide Series Publishers Binfords and Mort Portland Ore Supplementing a former work "The Oregon Trail" in this same series this new volume takes complete all the information desired concerning conceivably Oregon its history roads and places of historic interest In accord with other volumes In the American Guide Series this book outlines a number of tours covering every important highway route in the state with full annotations regarding the background and interesting facts surrounding each route Because Oregon is one of the oldest of far western regions with a past that goes back' to the days of the Hudson's Bay Company it is a state rich in lore More than most Guides then this one has a fascination Its inherent in Its material chapter heads (apart from the tours section) reveal the ground "Indians" "Agricucovered: lture" "Industry Commerce and Labor" "Transportation" "Tali Tales and Legends" "Social Welfare" "Religion" "Literature" Nuinerous bleed-of- f plates of Illustration enhance the value of the work thus giving to the whole effort an inhesion° that seems particularly appropriate New Books Added At Public Library The following books will he added to the Public library Monday: MISCELLANEOUS Adams—Motion Pictures in Physical Education Bauer—National Wettare and Bull ness Stability Bell—Successful Parties Bowers—Advanced Tennia Cos Children's Brooke — English tume Robertehaw° — SulOhated Burton Oil and Allied Product' Carlson—Twin Stars of Chins Clarke-4-Na Planning and Build ing Egner A Walter—DirectsiMail Adver Using and Selling Gill—White Water and Black Magic Golding—The World 1 Envie Gould—American 'Youth Today 111 liver—Pattern of a Day Living Religions and a Hughes—The Big Sec Jones ed—Short Plays for Stage and Radio Fables and Fancies Kierkegaird—The Point of View Lundwall comp—Inspired Prophetic Warning to All Inhabitants Of the Earth Mack A Sawyer—Our State: Nevada McNicol—Amerindians Miller—Boys of 3917 Norling—Perspective Made Easy Poetry Digest—Annual Anthology of Verse for 1939 Pools—The Bridge: ikhiesinger—New Deal in Action Siegfried—Suez and Panama Thorndika—Life Drawing and Anat omv teew—Deawing Without a Master Wilkie—This is Wendell Winkle lAaroyd—Physician's Fare nulintreCrullera—Taa Heart la a Lonely Mann—Beloved Return' Neuman—By the Waters of Babylon Seymour—Unquiet Field Sinclair—Spirit of the Range Stern—Lion in the Garden Defenses fitawart—lour ' ': ' - ': s Princess Paul Sapieha Publishers Carrick and Evans lac New York city It is easy to see why this book Is one of the most discussed of the season It is first of all a document of such absorbing interest such restrained emotion that it grips the reader with all the power of great drama Added to this intrinsic merit is the particular appeal of the subject at this time PrincessztPaul Sitpleha Amercan-born wife of a Polish prince and business man has painted a vivid portrait of the country whose valiant Opposition to tragic fate roused the world's admiration Most of itet story deals with the six years before the war— with the quiet life on her husband's country estate or with his relatives ancient noblelattDies still clinging to an almost medieval way of life Or the life and conditions in modern Warsaw and Krakow —withtheir attempts at western living modified by ancient superstitions and their devout Catholicism The various factions—pro-Germa- n -e i k' t — FICTION Gruber—Laughing Fox Harris—Make Way for Romance ' '"- night inairs bumbling on its peaceful flight from hive to hive (Somewhere tonight the sound's tanning Somewhere tonight are deadlier bees Hocking 'IJ: !::-:::-:i One'might- almost trace her path in life through the poems collected here which are rarely and sharply flavored often rising out of deep personal experience Imaginatively expressed: Her poems are allusive and provoca-tivalive-witl- t humor and with an air of modernity about them As an example we quote this: - World Faith 1 i '''' ?:S - The Henry Jackson who Is nearing the century post and who has clicked his shutter in all parts of the U S reviews his camera in !"rime - - —Exposure" she-pictu- --- -- : -- Id ' ik unity in try just harmony day are but only Camera Expert at 97 Sets Up 'Exposures of Long Life Time Exposure By William Tritenry 'Jackson Publishers G P Putnam's Sons New York City "Time Exposure" is just that It exposes some of the most interesting incidents and exploits of a career which has been linked with American photographic history for the major part of a century No casual recital of an ex- citing week end of a modern-da- y miniature camera fan is this autobiography of William Henry Jackson Rather it is a saga of pioneering adventure—a real life story and one which is also the history of American growth and American photography "If I were at the beginning of my career I should wish to do everything in color" writes the man who for nearly 20 years e has been described as The photographer" "The elderly explorer" and the like And therein lies the strength of the book Nearing 97 Mr Jackson —already a photographer for more than 80 years—still had old-tim- Knight Authors Rare Doff Yarn Lassie Come-Hom- e Publishers By Erie Knight The John C Winston Co Philadelphia Once in- - "The Flying Yorkshireman" Eric Knight wrote one of the rarest of comedies and now showing his versatility he gives us a dog story that takes top rank also It is wholly realistic told without sentimentality and with an understanding of dog nature that makes it as moving an animal story as we have come upon for a long time Lassie is a tricolored collie by whom a Yorkshire mining town set its clocks Only dire straits could have persuaded Sam Carraclough to sell Lassie but when the pit closed down and starvation faced his family Sam finally accepted The offer he had refused many times and the Duke of Rudling became her owner 'loyal Lassie couldn't understand and more than once she escaped her wire pen to return to her young master At last the duke had to buy a man in order to keep the dog he coveted It is the story of how Lassie "walked back home" from north Scotland—a matter of 400 miles for a man for a dog some thousand of strange varied terrain —that Mr Knight tells a story of unmatched courage and endurance and fidelity Target of Critics Has Pay in Court' Reviewers Reviewed By Otto Eisenschlml Publisher William L Clements Library Ann Arbor Mich Back in 1937 when Otto Eisenschimrs book presenting evidence in answer to the query posed in the title "Why Was Lincoln Murdered?" was brought out many reviewers were highly critical Mr Eisenschiml quite naturally resented some unfounded statements and certain distortions of his writing of which numerous reviewers were guilty He prepared a paper challenging these "historical critics" whick ing was- - given a public hear- at the William L Clements whose specialty is American history The gentled men of his audience believed his remarks should have a wider public Hence this book —That Mr Eisenschlml makes' his points telling one must admit and his book should be read by those who write reviews whether or not they are It among those challenged would seem that reviewers are apt to violate the code Library hand-picke- -- tAe res — that disrupted the unfortunate coun- as they have disrupted in other countries to mentioned in passing German-Russ- the energy the ambition the vision and the"strength to reach for something new He undertook to delve into the probleths of color photography It was that same gusto which led Mr Jackson through the world he played with as a young man It was the flame that beckoned him into every part of the country and of the world In fact It 4111 was calling him to eFtion horseback riding and such when at 94 he cracked a vertebrae Arid at 97 during 1940 he was lecturing visiting world fairs always on the go "Time Exposure" gives a picture of this country sine the Mexican war days Westerners especially will view with Interest his pictures of the Great Plains before a railroad spanned the continent of the settlement of Great Salt Lake valley of the Yellowstone and Teton country For "Time Exposure" gtVes all that—plus Jackson pictures taken in what Is now Yellowstone National park led congress to establish the area as the first national park Some of the negatives— even Mr Jackson forgets how many more than the 25000 now collected at Dearborn Mich he has taken—are absolutely irreplaceable 3agcson has traveled more than 2000000 miles—horseback from Los Angeles to Omaha by camel across Egypt through India atop an elephant over the Great Plains with an bye sled across Siberia through the Rockies with survey parties and of course by train automobile and 'plade Always a pioneer he had the knack of being on hand with a camera wherever new territory was beAnd he didn't - ing opened up miss a chance for a picture Nor does he miss a chance for a picture in words when he tells the story of his life—a life that held cherry) adventure excitement value It Is all as truly preserved in his book as were the scenes captured by his cam era "Time Exposure" is a most interesting- exposure of time as it touched the life of one of America's most colorful L E -ters—C L E - de- stroyed Poland in spite of des! perate opposition Of the actual Invasion —the bombing and machine-gunnin- g the refugees the reactions of men: women and children to the awful menace from the skies she writes with surprising clarity and lack of sentimentality This very gives greater emphasis to the horror that grips the reader as he lives through these experiences with the quiet unoffending people The author has shown an exceptional ability to select from the multitudinous Material those facts and details that serve best to convey to others the picture of this country—old and quiet and slow and superstitious proud of its heritage yet humble among nations valiant but not aggressive suddenly torn from its quiet life dismembered destroyed This is one of the intensely personal yet grandly universal stories such as "Forty Days of Musa Dagh" was of the last war an altogether human account of what war actually means- -0 W B matter-of-factne- ' pact and the o the blitzkrieg that Invasion ss Much Exploited Theme Dealt With bütTadly Review by Isabel Gagian ' The Forgotten Family Ann Burkhart Publisher By Pyramid Press New York City Disclosing a 'consistently naive tone throughout written in the style of a high school student who does badly in English this book is full of grammatical and rhetorical errors which however are the least offensive of the book's faults Flagrant inaccuracies of time and fact occur constantly The story harps on the now rather-trittheme of a respectable Arkansas family who lose their possessions as a result of the now equally trite 1929 depression Their experiences of the next five years which the author amazingly rips through in a brief 160 pages amount to just another hard luek story of migratory workers Autumn''s Little Joke - In far too rapid succession one young son is injured in a lumber mill losing his leg (later becom– By Claire Stewart Boyer The hills today are pageantry ing miraculously strong enough to work on the W P A) another With dancing maids In gold and son is thrown into jail for a reascarlet son in which the author is not They catch my heart and hold it even remotely interested the high Until I see the Autumn harlot:- father dies and the two youngest children a boy and a girl make Reclining on an open couch astounding successes respectiveThe Poison Ivy smoulders ly as an artist and a torch singer In mocking The one amusing paragraph in She droops her irimson shod' the whole book is a tiers scene in which the AmazSo I am lured from aspen-shin- e - ing Young Child Artist is exFrom sumach bronze and maple pelled from school because be ochre sketches a picture of a negro To where the flushed sophistipickaninny who poses for him cate in the nude—and at that on a Will make of me a joker rock like a black mermaid! m e ‘ th Oil Business From Angle Of Wildcatter ex-'te- nt -- H 90-ac- re - Provo Educator Given Honor 1 1 1 AT ZCMI e this structure Her book Is a September title of Wilfred Funk Inc New Zweig Title "The Tide of Fortune" Is a new novel by Stefan Zweig which Viking announces for October appearance It is a book of dramatic episodes of history A second October volume is to be a 'collection of the poetry of Jean Untermeyer including Starr work from three separate vol- Today And Yesterday Two biographies of the month from Viking furnish coming striking contrast First is Fells's Seyd's "Romantic Rebel" which carries the subtitle: "The Life and Tidies of George Sand:" the other being "Gossip: The Life and Times of Walter Winch-ell- " whose autttor is St Clair ume& McKelway REVIEWMON 2PM 17WHITEOAK HERITAGE" BOOK 0 be reviewed by Marba C Josephson Another delightful Jalna adventure by Mazo de la Roche will world-shakin- ARTHUR GAETHTUES 2P "IS ANqRICA SAFE?" Plan to attend this vital v I M: and unbiased discussion on topics of international significance conducted by Mr Geeth n radio commentator - well-know- — Auditorium—Second i ) 1 IS MARY LEWIS WEEK American Reformer Forrest Wilson has written a biographical work "Crusader In Crinoline" the subject of which Is Harriet Beecher Stowe author g "Uncle of the Tom's Cabin" whose life from childhood proved to be eventful From New England to Cincinnati then the raw midwest )1r Wilson follows his heroine's family and on to the tumultous later scenes of the author's life ' Cuba describes the Provo educator as "one of the most expert Agronomists in the Amer' can union" An account of his service as agricultural adviser to the goy- ernment of Iran in 1939-4- 0 Is given with a large photograph of the subject accompanying it PROVO—Prominent place Is given in the current number of America to Dr Franklin S Harris president of Brigham Young university who recently returned from a year's leave of absence spent in Persia This litezry magazine published in THIS WEEK Romance of Bridge-Builde"Webs in the Sky" titles a novel by Marjorie Roberts In which she Is concerned with the romance of the bridgemen the lusty crew that construct such new roadways as the Golden Gate abridge Mrs Roberts a navy officer's wife lives in the of rr I Points for Reader to Mark On Literary Calendar shadow - - k!?::i::::: ty rs nay By-186- 5 In passing as deep 'Underneath floWed the real current of racial unity Then came 'the E P Dutton and Co most of the New England Olympians—Hawthorne Longfellow Emerson Thoreau Melville and Holmes—had done their work and lapsed into silence ot rested On the laurels they' had already won The new generation Howells Henry and William JamesrHenry Adams Thomas Bailey Aldrich scarcely had begun their labors but by the 1880's it was clear they were ' hardly as robust in genius as their predecessors Besides the axis intellectual ferment had swung away from Boston and while not yet centered in New York was spread more generally about the country Mark Twain Ham-ra- nt and lin Garland StePtien others from the west were -c country with speaking ie power and authority The Boa- ton Brahmins' as Oliver Wen-- II found dell Holmes called themselves discredited at large :: their arrogant assumption of superiority in letters as being successfully challenged ( fjlifo 4 And by the turn of the cen: : k- 0 New England had definitetury ' ' -ly to acknowledge that leader- k '' 4 1' ship had been wrested from her 7 Writers had appeared in Sarah y ''' Orne Jewett Mary E Wilkim ' 7 sl Freeman and others who admit- - ---i ted the paucity of genuine talts ent in New England and the ''''''' k :: flilf'' ‘ sterility of its life The older historians Parkman Motley and Prescott had given Sfr way to Henry Adams Barrett Wendell and lesser talents Edlknonsooskova4011NowowA4 tors like Lowell had Oeen suq' ceeded by such men s Higginw - — whose Van Wyek Brooks son Preachers like Channing had — "New England: Indian Sumsuccessors like Phillips Brooks semer 18651915" September The mantles of the elders were lection of the far too large to fit the slender club Is successor to his talents of the inheritors notable work on "The FlowerNew of ing England" Superb Literary History Van Wyck brooks in the most fruitful and creative of criti- cism brings all these figures their background and their works to brilliant life in 'his second volume of a projected series that will present the literary history of America If the "Flowering of New England" was a more heroic book that is because its figures had a grander stature "New England: Indian Oil Is Where You Find It Summer" is equally as fresh perPublisher By Sam Mims Marshall Jones Company Bosceptive and readable It is literton ary history of the very highest caliber Coming as a change from highIts most brilliant portraits are those of Francis Parkman and ly technical books on the "black William Dean Howells Parkgold" Sam Mims' volume deals who patently wppeals tof with the oil game from the huall Brooks Mr above other fiVman angle Shifting from art hisures is shown devoted to his ' torical account of Láulsiana beideal of history and praised for ginnings to a personal biography his his painstaking accuracy of "Rebel Oakes" n famous basestoical endurance ofr physical ball player thence to stories of handicaps his imperviousness to lawsuits and Negro fortune-tellin- g public indifference Mr Mims occardpnally loses trace of his original subject Fine Portraiture Rebel Oakes the main charaeHowells O'rn the 'Other hand is ter was a big league player and full credit for being one of given manager until induced not by the most receptive editors and dreams of fame and fortune but critics America has produced by the taunts of his brother to a great novelist he wu a Not oil in a He into go brought dy keen reporter of American life before-Laof "dusters" couple and in his personal and literary Luck smiled but the author — life the best of men does not make 'clear to what work and In the delineating he lives ot Henry James and Henry Frequ yiceededof Negroes and Adams Mr Brooks does almost oil game couptheir equally as well but these men led with Oakes' anecdotes liven Alhardly deserve the attention or up otherwise dull spots perhaps even the sympathy though there are surprisingly which their more positive and few statistics one amazing comcontemporaries representative parison is that the United States receive In 1803 paid fifteen million dolBy 1915 New England was enlars for the whole Louisiana Pur joying a "second March" in the chase the same amount the Gulf work of its renascent writers Refining company paid for Alice Edwin Arlington Robinson Amy farm in Gussy Taylor's Lowell Eugene O'Neill T S 1920 Eliot Conrad Aiken E E CumThe book is easy reading and and most of all Robert entertainment mings pleasant enough Frost were about to demonfor anyone who likes such a — strate or were already Showing blend of history technical matter In were still oil that there and fiction The entire giants game Li characterized in the oil workthe earth and that New England was not to repeat the pattern of er's remark "Only God knows Athens as the years after the where to find oil under the Civil war might have led one tO ground and He won't tell nofear body"—D M B -' " 1‘14-0- ' 1865915 By Van Wyck Brooks Publishers New York City anti-Semit- ic pro-Fren- ch - Review by George Snell New England: India Summer tit ir- 3 Wartorn Land Brooks' New Contribution In Vividly To Literary History Real Portrait Holds Brilliant Portraits Polish Profile r ' half-centu- e D - By Publishers and Co New York City Here Is revealed a highly orig inal talent speaking in a lyric voice that captures the attention at once Amy Murray we are told began writing after she had mark passed the and then only for her own and her friends' pleasure not for publication Yet one needs read no farther than the delightful "Now it's November" and "Winter Hereabout" of the first pages to know that here is a genuine poet Although Miss Murray is not bound by poetic traditions fol lowing her own way entirely as to 'form and construction the "oder of integrity" in her work is unquestioned Perhaps poetry was breathed in during hereirly years in the Hebrides the Island of Eriskay in her study of the Gaelic Her sojourn on Eriskay she has put into a book "Father Alan's Island" of such originality that it ha s become a collector's item An accomOlished harpist Miss Murray has concertized in America and since an accident forced her to put aside her High land harp has devoted - herself garden of herbs and flow-ex- it nt in Veteran Photographer By Amy Murray P4 - 1 z Septembir 22 1940 1 November Hereabout Boston i is like meeting with dear- old friends to pick up a book It ii the delightfully engaging Mazo de with Roche la dealing by family life at Jena This seventh book in'the Jalna saga is however rather like hearing a Whiteoak 'recount a tale from the past since it belongs in point of- time between "Young Benny" and "Jena going back to the childhood of some of the family members we have known in their adult years The Whiteoaks as the previ- Otis chapters iti their chronicles' I have acquainted us are not an orderly erew and their family aquabblings stormy romances good fortune and bad furnish the same Interest to readers as to the Jalna neighbors Miss In-Lig- ht de la Roche Itu that rare fac 4 ulty of taking us right inside the family- circle and making s us at home there - When There Is Love -this volume we are baEWPub By Alice Ross Colver — in Withimmediate ld War Macres-Smit- h the Corn- Usher - pany Philadelphia when eldest period Benny grandson of the Captain Philip They fell In love when thg Whiteoak who brought the Irish i y'oung airman dropped down ouT Adeline Court to Jalna in the of the sky to pick up a weary 1840's is Just returning from girl trudging through a Texas & service yith the Buffs to take broccoli field and their seventh 4 his place as head of the house- meeting was at the altar They hold in which the Indomitable were so sure of this love at first is old Adeline still a foremost sight they married knowing so figure deferred to by all the little of each other In actuality family even the new young mas- misunderstandings were inevita ter and with her nose into every- ble There had been the gay thing It's not easy for Uncles Nicho- but spoiled Barry charming I 4 las and Ernest—who having whom Dorrine might have mar-spetheir middle years and red—as Aunt Maria end Barry most of their patrimony - inEng- wished—had it not beep tor tha land had rettirned to- Jaina miracle of Scott Haviland How where It cost practically nothing could Scott understand his bride's to live—to step aside for Renny running out on her own wedding Apparently it was high time the party to meet Barry The near master was home for things had fatal accident that ended it not been going well under their couldn't setter the fact—so with I extravagant management And the bride in hospital Scott is there are the young brothers away alone to his "dusting" job the sensitive poet Eden Piers in Florida But marriage cannot really unruly and headstrong to be taken in hand the baby Wake- end like this "when there is field whom Renny had never love" The two come together seen and who declines to make again only to have fresh with this soldier brother understandings this time Dorto win over rine the one to know unreason- 0) The routine of Jalna life goes ing jealousy because of the fas- on with Renny gradually tight- cinating Elsa—who may be a ening his control and planning spy after that "precious inven- to bolster Jalna's declining li- tion" which may make Scott nances by raising-sho- w horses rich since the U S army is in- and hunters It is Eden's infat- terested This adds an element 'i nation with Amy Stroud the of mystery to this light romantic widow who seeks affair all being ironed out 2 a compensation for what she has neatly I missed in life on which much of the action hinges with the Something Special ' 1 growing enmity betweqn Amy By Faith Baldwin Publishers and the strange pair he has Farrar and Rinehart New York City taken Into her house but the revenge her distracted mind plots "Something Special" refers to is less that Renny breaks up the the symbol of perfection in martlA !A unhealthy affair by sending riage exemplified by Gay and rich and Eden away than because he Andrea Meredith V g scorns her pas- t charming New Yorkers who for 14 years have been happily in lion for himself love Renny has his own emotional problems for the un-- Faith Baldwin shows skill and conventional Chris so capable in uhderstanding in handling then ' glls gr I:st i sttha laspulge hrebwgeMaurice g ostfornotmhaen ideal reconciliation them tthrough the trials of impending life miser- divorce and then to the brink able for the adoring Pheasant of a greater family happiness The problem of divorce—how it illegitimate daugh- shattered the Meredith!' world ter Meg cannot forgive him Pheasant's state of mind fur- and that of several other people as well—provides the interesting nishes some of the story's most theme of this light novel—M poignant pages This has the R J charm of all Jalna volumes and while telling nothing of great significance adds a needed link umurchill ftwaf ' ' I ' ' ' Salt gakt irtibunt Vile : By Eva Hollis Literary iditor White Oak Heritage By Mazo de It Roche Pubhshers Little Brown and Co -- - I Entertaining Back Pages Picked Up to Augment Canadian Torsyte Saga' i 14 Floor ' I |