Show 1MMIN — Ae'''' : ' "' I ''' - - - ' a i - ' 05 '4 '" ' ' ' t ' : 'I "----- By Eva E Ilollis Literary Editor Captain Paul By Commander Edward Ells berg Publishers Dodd Mead and CO New 'York City Commander Edward Ellsberg who has dealt graphically with t several sea episodes that from time to time have furnished headlines has here turned back the pages of history to resurrect 0 brilliant 'naval figure The story of Captain John Paul Jones has been told often by biographer and novelist but it Le one that bean reteMng particularly when ' bt such rarely capable hands as those of the narrator of tho heroic story Of the "Jeannette" tinder title "Itell on Ice" or of the salvaging of the submarine 1 in "On the Bottom" Ellsberg brings to his recountal of Jones' romantic and 'adven0 turout career not only his knowl-edge of the sea and nautical ex perience that make Of the great 'naval hero's sea fights triagniti cent and breathless passages but also an understanding of the times and conduct of the revolutionary struggle that bespeaks thorough study And more a large admiration for theLberoic i courage and superb seamanship of the man so IU rewarded in his lifetime but who received belated honor and is enshrined as one of America's thiefest naval figures That the author has seen In 7ohn Paul Jones' story a lesson applicabla to our own den and ihaa had purpose in this revivify' tag of Ms life may be inferred train the words of the narrator zet close associate of "the quixotic whose 'thundering guns ' genlui speaking the only language ever tyrants breathed life into the words of : our Declaration of Independ- 1 T' - - ! 1— : ' - - ' — The tw'o - -- t ex-pira- r se Pug te - d By Albert Idea Publisher The Greystono Press New York City Ter young Ifellows who think they-cabox rand who look with the big names of the 'at envy ' and their reported earnings eng ' - Albert Idelts "Pug" should be i reading required -- White?' Phillips liked to fight He was good too with a left that snaked its way :unconopponents' sciously through guard& He led a clean We—no smoking or- drinking girls or late 'hours :no coffee in fact ' Ito rweets fried foods or any thing that would interfere With Vichitey's ambition to become beavywoight champion ' al lie wort his way through amateur tourneys t h n A turned pro Won his first few "pro" fights—but an 'unscrupulous manager wanted quick money — and so 'Whitey was matched far beyond his class But Whitey was game and in good shape—round after round be absorbed a terrific beating funtll finally the end came When be recovered consciousness his manager was gone and with share of the purse : 1 - thins-White- ) If It hadn't been for the wait-ress Eva Whitey would haw s recuperating at the done hands of charity U Eva had had her way he would have fought no more but Whitey wanted One more chance—he could beat 'ern lAnd aq the author paints a faultless character study with a brush of wordsthat leaves no detail( forgotten! It Is a brutal beautiful piece of writing-a- s 'Whitey disinte- 57: trozn 'a Marvelous lighting :grate - machine intoin sodden bleary bum who reaches punch-drin-k the only and Jnevitable conclu ion The story la fascinating if not pretty—P K S - In DelLi I3Iarshes' - New York City ' ldwal Jones hal spent -- 1011As 01 liks 1life away from the rgrt oofvae ttnisalaranhdessuagnadr Egremont and the the trappers to main- vested rights on "the theEgrcehmanogn against the owner's turn the marshes to increase his soy-or- - Mississippi bayou country in New York the west coast abroad he holds its sights and scents In his heart and mind lie can evoke for his readers its lushness of vegetation mosquito - swarming steaming waterways and decayed ports: us Illimitable Moss-hun- g cypress swamps and mangrove jungles Its tepid air "rank with scent of magnollas"ol slime and broth of decaying roots and fungus" He knows well its Cajun people and their the muskrat ' colorful life trappers Here he recreates this wild picturesque life the brooding atmosphere eh ae - - - out of the jungle" by a Breton adventurer who came bearing a Royal grant and set up a baronial court on his Island—is itselt- a dominant personality in the story The Breton strain in the Tones grew slaèk with riches and ease and alter the Ovil war revenues diminished With Bonamy Toni choler alnd solitary the family had gone to seed When he died he left the estate to the warden ship or his Wendt the Bells under whom tome of its old splendor was restored Dr Egan Bell four years before had put Egremont into the bands of Rishey Aubaln hi a protege a lad 'born and reared In the swamps where he had himself trapped under the tutelage of Papa Espinola and when with blue Papa Espinola filled from h is gin fell overboard house-ra- ft ant failed to come up Rishey had trapped and poached on his own until the kindly doctor had rescued him sent him to agricultural college to learn new ideas about cane raising and gave him responsibility Then Captain Hosea Tone the nep4ew Bonamy had sent packing 30 years before takes over bia Inheritances and - 2 ' ' 41N - nWhotOe eMror it adladtemiltiredn:lnThiuitcrpalluomtelPfro - - ' i t ' - I - - ''''k' I 4-sA 1 ' - - ! - - : j t ' er I 1 ck fig-ur- Writers of Rocky Mountain NVst ea top-flig- - cane-beari- ng Jtily-Augu- st vcr of Southern Neighbor trappers-sympathize- eviews Her Visit There s the-harde- r -- - - or H- - - 7' ie --- hiorti-Cultur- al s i è :''-- ' i ' ' 4 s : ' i k 4 ' - ' " 1)' ' I r— ' '- 3 ! '' 1 4 'ki - t - - ' 1 ' - - - i " j which ' ' 1I - - Shridaman '' jealousy of : Nanda's loveliness severs Ms own head i and Nanda upon discovering I ) him doe likewise Site empowered by Mother Goddess Dura-Di'rew stores them to Me but In the i restoration theic heads are trans iI posed Now the great problem i : arises: Who is Iher husband? The Than who carries his original I ' head or his original body? Does !the mind dominate over the I body or visa versa? Although on the surface this appears to be rather a Ittd11 1 -crous situation there is a deep tragic meaning underlying it Shridaman with Nanda's body II t becomes a husband of outstand ing charadter and for while he and Sita spend their Alma In much bliss and happiness while I poor Nanda retires to the woodi I for II1 It is here that Dr! Mann leaves the original legend and i goes on to prove the many re- lationshIps between the rnInd and body the significance of the et I " fort to unite opposites and the impoulbility of achieving 4166 t sires at someone else's expenses In this legend dressed up by 1 Dr Mann there Is a deep magi nificent irony which takes in the whole range of human hope and helplessness In this mete physical riddle this great man of letters has once again given I us a philosophy worth delving f Into and giving thought during through - 1 - - - ''' ' the-Worl- vi E i era is 'virtually natiolui Jot Ate t - ! i i i a list of toml- ' tall of fame of the put decade Anctstride by stride they are matched In the writing field by such names as Isaac F Marcosson Ioula Adamit W B Courtney Arthur Krock Carleton Beals and others It theuld be pointed out that the volume is more than an anthology of previously-publishe- d news 'stories and interviews While severali of the chapters have appeared previously In various publications many were written especially for the pages of "Dictators andDemocrats" In addition to its political interest the volume has a definite value for student' of journalism whether undergraduates or vetm exrens of assorted perience And Its pretty good reading for anyons providthic background for the headline-Conscioand lively reading for literaryl appetites Jaded with fiction and fancy—H I' O t - ' 7- t - - - ' city-roo- us 1 on ' 4 ! - f- ' j American Affairs Chief Topic In Miscellaneous Volumes: i 1 1 ' The first chapter has a dis4 '' oussion of the proper interplay of ! By Home YOU1114 !Pub Witten 1 the legislative executive and American Publishers Ina dicta departments Tim JumsI Washington D C hail no $ear that our Reviewer 11MeLeod 'I will-bt tion destroyed Ho r Lest Chapman Young If to amended from time must be Washington attorney has had a time Second chapter about two lifelong interest in the political thirds of the book deals with I and economic affairs of his counremedies for better I ' try awakened and fostered at suggested government a subject en whichilI an early age by his banker anyone might become voluble father He believes that almost Here are views on the spoils I everyone would like an answer the revision of the civil to questions about prOsperity and system service the tariff the monetary Como depressions whetheelthey system nationalism of commodi and go of their own accord or tal ties defense labor and whether human intelligence can a dozen and otter Immigration regulate them equally important publle clues Although much hal beenlwriV ona It would seem that the ttin on these and related topics I are presented clearly II a great deal of It is icouched in problems and an ideal solution outlined i technical language and few auBut no specific taint is irteett for I thors have the temerity to do achieving this solution Mr Young So much forecasting Chapter three is a statement of Ir restates these topics in the siminternational situation from I the plest phraseology hoping to pro1918 until late this! spring Al t to the of valus duce something some criticism- is made lir though average layman Only in the of England's and France's di i final chapter be allows himself plomacy in the interwar period the fun of aome forecasting the NMIn purpose of this survey is to prepare the American mind for the three courses he se I open to us: W? appeasement or-- I adequate' preparedness' and intprovernent in government- - The book AS easy reading and the au Salt Water Daffy thorfrankly expresses' his own views but you may not always By Philip liry Ile Publisher Farrow Rinehart Inc New agree with him: In that case it will make you Ine211111 oupport York for your own view" I t The adventures of Crunch Ad- ams and Des Smith la the Fogel- don are well known to army' chair fishermen to that clan ocline rod end the who forget casionally to read up on the latest experiences of Philip ' LE NORTIINVII Wylle's deep sea fishermen ' the finds BOOKS! "Salt Water Daffy" pair in Hollywood a bizarre pace ifTS or Tyro yit for two unaffected fishermen to IILINGDOPat 1St) ' i land Needless to say there is A J Cronta : ' a from moment the never dull riLLARs or GOLD or Lucile time they land at the airport un121110 1 all's Zdgerion til Crunch socks the heroine to : save her from those wicked old I B ' INANKOW' SETVIN' 1 C S SS sharki and marlins ' 1 I ink oo o Archer But read It Following Wylie' : EXIT -- LAUGHING: far' smooth easy style Itmakes very Irvin E 0350 choice light summer reading In Cobb addition to the Hollywood advenICABL0ONA—Gon $100 ture numerous short stories trod do Poncino 2? in' es are ' and about Crunch THE DON' 'LOWE HOME eludect-1-11- 3 H TO THE IRA— 1 America's Today and Tomortow - e - - - 1 - t - ! - ! - ' $ 1 Pair of Anniers See Film City - cijnnth 3 - 4 ? f I - - '' - - 1 I ' '41111 it i - r Club Selections t B I August book for distribution club will be Dr J Cronin's The Keys of the Kin g do- m"! (Little Brown) The club- has also announced as its September selection Margaret Leech's "Reveille In Wmhington 186145" The author is Mrs Ralph Pulitzer in private life by Book-of-the-Mo- i NOkhall Hbolokhoo 1360 SHELTER IVO Jane Nicholson" NEUTRAL GROUND Frank O 112711 Rougti THIS TRANSPOSED L U READS—Thomarn 12e Mann k - ' — – - iti 4 Ir' I N i - - 1 - 1 bt - ' t 1 - J III1 i 1 - i ' ' As Tilt ‘ I i - ryanimuta lendars:twit tht 0 ii 'I A I eir:ga : man art11 en t - ' - 41 t t ' i g ' ewes are doss companions-The- y both become suitors to Site a luscious bronze beauty with beautiful hips but Shrida man the wise wins her over 'Nand the strong Six months after the marriage takes place these three go on a long journey i 1 1 ' 4t ' Teo-d- w i 1 1 I- :- Jourillist 4- f t : ' Pair of Poets Join - 1 ' s ': f - - - ' 1 m Dr Heinrich I Zimmer who originally- outlined this legend in a lecture on Kali the Mother Goddess of India: 1 and be has dedicated his book to il this great Indian acholar i The legend of "The Transposed ft Heads deals with two young t men who differ notably- - in physique and tempetament Nan da has a handsome body but a 1 simple mind Shridaman on the other hand posseues Intellect but a weak soft body 'These li two men through their differ ' E It - Agiee- able iA ' us ' -- - : is 21 iMall eua - 41 By Thomas Mann Pub Heber Alfred A Knopf Now Torii City t N- o- - ' ' -- - 1'( 7 '''' A I ' ' ' 1 - At Public Library ' I — -- -- New Books Added ' ' :- - : ) ' I ' - Meet Most of Today's Here Aloiig With Master ' - - bs: ' - - Trio Fictional Works Rani 9 Widely as to Theme allid:SettlitgLi - - ox-dra- ' ' ' ' -- of-Rece-nt t ' -- bt! 1' meet again when Cap-te-n Paul—whom strange circunistances hat made - master of a Spanish privateer that is no more than a corsair and with 'Jones" tacked to his namo—puts Into Nantucket to bury his former captain Folger sails svith him' And their two Alves are joined In their f vicissitudes' ' ' Events ti:ko them to Virginia and I this Scottish ladven- turer former midshipman of the Royal Navy exslaver hobnobbing IOW with its aristoc- -' racY Yielding to the oharma of Dorothea Spottswood Dandridge and becoming fired with the patriotic Ideals of VIone1 Wash Ington Richard Henry Li the fiery Patrick Henry Dr Joseph Read that Quaker Carolinian Joseph Hewes who WAS to stand his friend with the congress and finally win 'hint' a berth In the new Continental Navy which was his heart's desire During the succeeding chapters fortunes Captain Peas In the American Navy—with Its supreme examples of nepotism In appointment of officers from the IncompetentCommander-in-Chl- et traced Ezek Hopkins on-e- re with meticulous tare The dissension and Indifference of the congress jealousy and envy and in-capacity of his superiors disloyalty and cowardice among brother officers that militated against Captain Paul's rise are ably treated but It la in recounting of his sea battles his splendid seamanship and skill In outmaneuvering the enemy with the engagement bf the little Bon Homme Richard and the Seraphs as glorious climax that Ellsberg gives the most gripping pages of an absorbing and illuminative ' book a-- di ' ' ' - IL II - - The Transposed Heads - - undrstand ' Black Bayou Jones:Idwal Publishers By Datil Sloan and Pearce Inc ' - 111-fat- ed - ":-- ' Al ' - - - '01'"1 ht u I f - v- - - - kAk- - I : - - - - ' - -- 'I ' rt A ' - - ( " -- ! ! - - - 'f--4- - -- ' r - 2 ' - ? 1 - k This narrator who In the year 1808 looking upon the crowding tIdie hulls in Nantucket harbor and warehouses empty of merchandise because : of Jefferson embargo futile remedy for England's new injustices is moved to recall Jonas" story is one Thomas Poker- - 'The lanky young was but-Iand set for career ill the printshop of his a ' distant cousin the eminent Dr Frankiht when his father first mate on a whaler was lost in a whaling venture and the youth must take his place as breadwinner Thomas' first voyage was an one—the battte with a mammoth of the deep stirringly told by Ellsberg costing the lives of captain tnate and five sailors but it brought the youth's first encounter with Captain- raut at Tobago where the young ' captain only In his middle twenties Lain trouble Thonuo is witness to his killing in the mutinous drunken tar who -ties assaulted him The captain's friends counsel him to escape - from Tobago at once since he cannot expect justice in the court and Thomas hi able to aid his so 'cret departure 4 - - --""- --- nce" - ' - : - - self-defen- s 4 ' 1 - — MamiAnnhes Irony to Point Theme - -- - 1 -"- 1 - Dr Thomas Mann famous Novelist who turns to Eut Indian legend for basis of his latest story "1 ' I - i ti::4 L — P The Books of Charle Fort ' AA Eminent German Exile - I 2Eugust3 — Publisher Henry liolS and Co New York city In an hysterically enthusiastic introduction to this volume Tif'' ' lany Thayer & confirmed "For-tean" lays: "Great twiolts have this in common with the sea and with women—that they are all things to all men Tht book in ' k your band has that i'common I i t with all other great bOoks and ' to me it is a catalyst Throw i' : & paragraph of it into any compoetry pany and stand well back" Recently preoccupied with isi Well it all depends - on your study i Of southwestern history ' ' taste Fort published fonr books Paul Horgan has been caught collected are and here they by the Stirring drama of thisal and t reissued: "The Book of the ' enterprise to which its Captain-Gener' Damned" "Lor "Wild 'Talents" 1 bad been moved by "the i 'described He "New and Lands" habit of empire" Not greed of 4 himself as a modern phtlosopher wealth orr power- nor the pious Ms books certainly colitain the ' ''''' purpose of the priests motivated de Oriate so much ai the' neetk most 'preposterous hodgepodge i of unrelated and irrelevant in ' - N of "settling the cast of Spanish 4i i since the catalogs of formaton business and life upon new peothe medieval monks But they ple and strange ground the (JJ haven't much in common with ) mark 'of :those things in which ' ' i'' ' --any great book I knoW or with ' ''''''- bebelieved himself" ' — the sea except for the erodlgidus In the year 1591 the project Phserein had RS inception in April of the miscellany contained Actually they are a& endless next year the long train of ' recital of coincidences iunsolved armored ! soldiers 113 ' — It ? disappear'''' : — wagons and Many cattle came' murders mysterious 6-second-sigetc cases ances of to the great river With the 44 culled ftbm the newspaper files General were' his nephews the of half a century and embelde Zaldivars Juan and Vicente some verbal lished with pyrotech"as handsome as Juan was — nics Let Me Thayerstand a as second in command sharp" little farther back whenhe tosses Pacification of the land came t any more paragraphs (his way easily: 47 the pueblos w r —G S De Onate as he sfriendly marched' took their allegiance 1 with him—only his own men Hist4rir-Maker- g mutiniedi when punished for heckling the Indians and there were deserters ' r-----------' Establishment of his capital ' ' San Juan de Villagra's terrible t privations on the desert the ryks Manuel Quezon! Manuel Dictators and Democrats sending of expeditions to seek Avila Camacto—the list of lead FemoEdited by Lawrence the buffalo of the east the M Publishers worth Robert pearla of the west are part of McBride and Company New the pageant unrolled and then York City ' Aie Zaldivar visiting the Juan Most of us have ooMrto realton Rock the of Acoma puebtO -i where- - the General bad sensed atiOn within the past two years learns the truth of it treachery that history is being manufac!Tha following books wflI ba t The vengeance that Vicente asseMbly-lin- e at tured to the public library Mon added speed his takes 'ior brother's murder a! handful and that these days day:' the siege of the sky fortress as of political tycoons situated in Misc' humans the sOldiers discover the backAloop—Thla Off to Work: strategic points around the globe Marx Warier door trail and the ceremony of :Rarsun—Daravinj for sr the production managers Reety—Naturs Is Stranger Than Motr surrender are vividly pictured as tion the stepped-u- p output Bryant—Pageant of Roglind (1940- the climax In this volume Lawrence 2940i double-spread Ths Hurd paintIrernsworth a onetime news pairco:ohne—Beeping Tour Holum Is Re ings conveying the spirit of the la a Changing 011ts—Telephonto gatherer of Salt Lake City has text greatly enhance the book World collected a series of notable inEarly—Island Patchwork Fraser—Famous American Plyere terviews personal sketches and for Outdoor Lir Goldsmith—Designs brief portraits of these history-Makers Ifslio—Rivott of Ruins written by master craftsnewt ' MaeCempbell—Reading men of the journalistic profesi:crt lik ' Mnjoy6 ' 1 ‘0(0"4 anent or sion trained intervieWers Maritain—Irrance Country My of Aragon leading biographers TO call the rMattintly—Catherine I owes—Antarctic Ocean of the inteirvtewed or roll either in Armc :Palmer—America Came 1- the interviewers vronld b Phillips—On White or Iktfie ' Howarfr—Terror in Our Time Br Iau1u Vt'beden itZ of to claim the attention lo enough Here I I I Smith—Devil of the Machine Ate Dusty Shoes reader with an stvCrage in- i Sayera—Beein any Walpolte—gemantica Aloud Ludington Cala 'Idwof Iironeois sWhose west By an terest world in affairs apOr 'Wier ed—Pittno Concert40 Of Bach 'tither rho Kaleidograph tresaybe novel Sityeu11- bee Beethoven and Brahma 4 preciation for able viritIng and Williams—Mr ' tiontortouo dolts thakeepearo of the Dialos61 Tessa clear-cu- t 'country of reporting Globe : This duo of Kaleidograph poets Melho—Our Countra N110021al Parka iioldoklusa'os background 7 Hitler is treated in three intiVO VOLUM sprees ::themseires well and tOrviews—by Dorothy:rhompson MeleeDAV while 4)erhaps of real proH R Knickerbocker slid Loth Beator—Corpse Came Catlin& 1Cartrao—Rhapeody in Orem okinson 1 n Coyer fundity is discoverable Intheir Stoddard Goeritigireceives top Culley—Rante Justice collections there is much- to attention of Mildred Gilman Zsgetrand—hpring 1940 buttontil announcement of a pleuOrs the reader who likes a the 0oudite—Oolden kylark4 HAM Beach Conger Emil Ludand of Hapetein—Something autumn of volume of verse to pick' up now: wig writes of Mussolini after publication for the HeeAe liann—Tranapneed Vines Our Martin—For Havel Helen E:Hokinson'sfirst book inter-Vieand then Lulu Whedon being received for a daily Orates a Collection- of her drawings title Implies tha range of over a period of 12 days Reilly—Mourned on Sunder fitetner—Fire and Ice will be welcomed by admirers her Impreuions—down the way Galleasso Clam talked ':to Clare White—River of No Return of this artist The book is tenshe has come "from youth to Boothe Winston Churchill reBest Girls" titled "My tatively age" Abe things caught "in nets ceived both Mr Fernsworth and : t :f'' by memory and fancy wrought" : i Ralph Ingersoll Marshal Lyauono likes especially her unfeara tey met with Pierre van Paas1 trig 'fro 1 a Shadow" a sonnet seri Stalin granted Eugene LyWhich closes "So share my camp -orui an audience and Chiang Kai-stirtinti“ bright morning Death" talked with VincenfSheean PROVO—Arthur Kreismain of A Morepoignant emotion Is That gives a brief pitture of tyg Boston Mass a student at felt I4om of Maud Ludington what to expect in the contents OLIO lyrics and ono and again Brigham Young universitypl has and there are other leading Dr Egoin‘a' trusteeship Is ended an had a poem accepted for! apevanescent of touch World old both in and the magic the It IsAtishey who bears 'Iloas such new 375 for beaut$t pearance In Poetry Review a fill who 3n the the t'Song pages brunt All the conflict when London publication The poem ht Paths" the nostalgic pie of this current history sea set ea turning the muskrat LatIe "An Open Letter to Walter Ciro in "Wild Blueberries"' or "A Roosevelt Hull Mackenzie King land swortips intoLat Who Died for the It A P7'i will a Lark" is Kemal there Ataturk Prince Fumi that quality his tceyincrease This funds for in the found be will Maks mar them remembered Mass Thomas G Konoye rouses and drinking gambling The issue Poetry Review was led the enmity of the trappers The termed by Literary Digest "'hoc:truculent 'old l'oleon a giant "the outstanding magazine of who Is a- - 1 a w unto himself International eminence" strong Pere: Roulet Ruiz the The young writer his also had Rishey crafty n arIC dweller a poem "Song for a Lost Love" understands the swamp-boraccepted for inclusion in the with their 1942 edition of Poetry Digest volt but has his responsibility Co !Muhl: Gateway to sections oil great grass-lan- d annual anthology of iferse pubis to Egremont All nd a modern minerals hotels lished in New York pity BeSouth duties i his America fulfill to him it for huts fore coming to the Provo instiprimitive Is IL Poleon's PublishBorn° because there Myra ByKalbleen Kathleen Romoll has detution Mr Kreisman studied the rs Doubleday Doran and scribed this great country ably and poetry at Harvard under Robert New Inc York Company and fascinatingly in This handHillyer Pulitzer prize winner In city some volume companion to 4934 a la land of' Colombia many J Allen's "Venezuela" Henry ' A RobSPRINGVILLE---- 0 Her work Includes much of a Contrasti with jungles 19000- znbreayilesngwofnhosineouewildquenlityturoef guide-boo- k nature for the tourfoot peaks vast rivers shelrtson local author Wednestered valleys bustling cities ist and the traveler with glowday had received an airmail lethis ter from the Wright i& Browne ing descriptions of eve!) nook Publishing company Of London the links the lives of a murderer in and cranny every city a n d England asking for another every isolated rancho It :teems bidinC an unemployed archltect and his wife who wilt& less than manuscript of his novel "Rag of contrasting the old with the bayou countr to give his story Reef Range" which they acceptnew the streamlined With the 95 In- their pockets are expectvivid background ' ' --' d for publication in 1940 ing a child a Wall Street oper— primitive i: volSince receiving the first manuto more is But the there ator watched detectives being by social picture inthe letter stated the ume than merely guide-boo- k wife script an employed by unhappy it may formation intriguing building housing the publishing Episode anCi West ilth Streets and the exotic beauty who plays company had been bOmbed and Dr JulaBrousseau Publishers her lovers against each other be in an intriguing Country resultant fire destroyed a awnviews- Of both Smith and Durrell New York for a double stake with front-dobervf manuscripts The company 4 oceans Mn Romoll has capThe picture painted by Mn bas just now been able to begin outlook Is and not brush !trousseau's tured the sensitive the Sarubscic spirit Melon leVlewer — anew their publishing business leaders and one of a the their violence people Intrigue pretty which- - brought the request for J'atle Bro' Usseau's- first novel And despair are main and has woven through her actragedy another copy of Robertson's count a thread of Alit backelements with only the slightpresents an' interesting social book of drama about a group of People the st color of comedy or fulfilthe and hopesground linked together through an tans Colombians lmentin the whole picture Jule West 8th Mrs Romoll says she Is prejuBrousseau has a flair for creatfortitnat suicide on Floral Novelty i 'street int New York She shows ing suspense and a dimension of diced about Colombia rand its — lives into the is Well Is she which itudght :an'amazing 'Who's Zoo in the Gardenexperienced only people perhaps depth of many AYpes of people and In the tragic realities- - of exisbut her prejudice has Produced Putnam land By Jean-Maran entertaining and Interesting tence' Perhaps It is because Mrs along with her complete charaoPublliher Charles Palmer terizationsshe has managed to Broutseau herself hu been both travel book which will give any The Greystone fleas New 'link their )1lies together in a plot rich And poor successful end unreader a valuable hew insight York City successful that she can digdeepinto an important member of that Is oftin'difficult to handle Whether you regard thii gay into human lives The main character if any Volume as a floral gueasing the American family of nations little ly H on West 8th Street" oneican be called that is a poor Ir O as a handbook on the Iped"Episode game Is definitely a book worth readRussian gLrl daughter of a coal Igree of garden favorites or miner Her:father is put In Jail ing and Jul Brousseau a novelmerely as art amusing picture The Great Short Novel' by and her sister In a reformatory ist worth watching Although book it will offer you some moments of charming entertain Itis these Unhappy social tocircum-to this first novel lacks a sense of Edward Weeks (Dobbleday go stances thatjorce her ment and add to your Doran) is the August aelection continuity it has a quality rare New York to become maid in the In many novels—a quality of for distribution by The )Literary knowledge Lynette haute of :1a beautiful but unGuild which has chosen Mar truthIf Mrs Brousseau's poMount is the artist Who cc:Operates ably with the 1coauthors tential talents develop her name scrupulowi Russian woman and garet Steeds "The Sun Is My should become important among her husband It is this timid It's designed for both'adululand Undoing" (iTildng) avits Sepsuicide that the vrriters of Americas tember book Inlignificent-maid'the youngsters t - z Nan--tuckete- - 1 191 c 3' - '1 l"""""k"—"m""---m---""- ? ‘ For Fort's' Mix Unshdied By Paul Horgan Publishers and Brothers New ' Harper ' ' ' ' ' York City General of 'This Onatstoels Juan de expedition northward from Mexico City to extend the Spanish King's domain possesses an austere beauty matched by the Peter Hurd lithographs which Illus trat 'it It is told in sharp colorful prose that has something t of the quality of epic 1 S-5- I The habit of Empire d? 4 - - Pléture's AcPina's1Fail - " ' ' awn ' - 4- j i - r:0k4nNáv41Hero: Re New Portrait 13rilliant Of Pertinency : 1 4 - t rbe Snit gttittr!ibune 9 1 Hoygan s Tale Thayer Ardor - Cámmandpr Edward EllibergL who adds a superb blo-- :graphical novel "Captain: Paul" to a! splendid list -- of' L books ‘ - : i' - - ' $tmilay Morning '' ' ' : - : " - :1--'- ' ' : I d I |