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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 14

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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14
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CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1938. I 4- I -1- Fire Relic 1 Pi Trnirr 4b InFnAl 174 r' 4. tt -on Adi 11.1 P. ti Fire Relic I 11 VI -t 41k7, v. teo 09 0 417 et is4 ttke- ",4 -4 -ko t4 4 44.411 tv't4 lk? to'ri 1 A E.

ih "ot, et. Best Setters I Looking Over Latest Books I Books Vivid Portrayal of Franklin by Carl Van Doren -71RussellWeighs Social World's Power Concept (Jr Chil 1 I iRE i II YEARS 1 61 'ota5vi Arita 1 1 hitt; kill "11, I 1 I 11Feeple Dazed as 1 as 1 IRF larrkUs3 119 11: (444' tt'it 41F 1.0 04r) 119 47' a jN FICTION. My Son, My Son! by Howard Spring. Rebecca, by Daphne du Manner. And Tell of Time, by Laura Krey.

The Yearling, by Marjorie Einnan Rawlings. The Long Valley. by John Steinbeek. Dynasty of Death, by Taylor Caldwell. NONFICTION.

11 Rh Malice Toward Some. by Margaret Halsey. The Horse and Buggy Doctor, by Arthur E. Heezler. The Importance of Living, by Lin 'rutting.

Sailor on Horseback, by Irving Stone. Madame Curie. by Eva Curie. My America, by Louis Adamic. Doctor, by Arthur Raw- 'Ns 1 A 0 A '47 a I I .1 4, i 5 ...4.

it 1,1 .2: i.E;;;',:::;; A 7, 7'' 4,....,, 4.. A 4.4wah.O a ri Iiir a BY PHILIP KINSLEY. Power," by Bertrand Russell. (Norton, $3.1 Published a week ago Wednesday. Level City.

BY FANNY BUTCHER. "Benjamin Franklin," by Can Van Doren. (Viking, $3.75.1 Published yesterday. October choice of the Book of the Month club. to, Vs' 7 sat 4910115a N.

4 OP ft- Many years ago Bertrand Russell, English philosopher and mathematiclan, who is now a visiting lecturer at the University of Chicago, wrote a little book called Proposed Roads to Freedom." While his ideas of social dynamics may have changed since then, the theme in his latest book, Power," is much the same. He still seeks the road by which the individual may reach his greatest development, with necessary help and without unnecessary restrictions, from governing powers. Writing Is Absorbing in This Moving Tale. The Bridge in the Jungle," by B. Traven.

Knopf, $2..50. Here is another of those strange and powerfully moving tales by an author whose real identity is unknown even to his publisher. B. Traven writes like an American, but his books are first printed in Europe, where they are very popularunless they cause the dictators to frown and are banned, as several have been. The Bridge in the Jungle is not located exactly, but it sounds like Mexico or northern Central America.

The characters are Indians and the action takes place in twenty-four hours. A small boy falls from a bridge and drowns. His body is recovered by a strange procedure rooted in half pagan mysticism, and he is hurled. That is the bare outline of the story. There is no plot in the ordinary sense of the word.

There is, however, absorbing writing and a gallery of unforgettable characters. Of these, the most finely drawn is the boy9s mother. This is not a pleasant tale, but one worth reading. P. W.

Here Are Two Lively Stories of Adventure. Let's See if the World Is Round," by Hakon Mielche. Putnam, $5. "Beating Around the Bush," by Brian O'Brien. Lee Furman, 52.50.

yealed. There is little peace for him among his brutal shipmates. Tragedy is inevitable. This is a difficult book to evaluate. At times the writing is excellent; at other times the author seems merely' to be playing with words.

At its best the book is reminiscent of James Joyce and Ernest Hemingway. S.M.K. Suspense Lacking, But Plot Is Well Planned. A Body Rolled Downstairs," by Inez Haynes Irwin. Random, $2.

This mystery story takes place in a beautiful old New England home, one of a number that are thrown open once a year to visitors on what Is known as Peregrination day. The au. thor describes the architecture and furnishings of each interior with great detail. It is the owner of the house, Miss Julia Wainwright, herself, who Is murdered. And it is Patrick O'Brien, detective in the little town and her friend, who is called in to hunt down the criminal.

Suspicion falls on the house guests and on her young niece, Susan Orr, and her nephew, Mark, as well as on the day's first Peregrination visitor, a mysterious young woman from Boston who disappears after the crime. This mystery is good reading as a book because it is worked out with such thoroughness. What it lacks in suspense it makes up for in ter interest and scene. E. W.

little peace for him shipmates. Tragedy alt book to evaluate. is excellent; at luthor seems merely! words. At its best miniscent of James st Hemingway. S.

M. IC. But Planned. ed Downstairs," by in. Random, $2.

tory takes place in a England home, one at are thrown open visitors on what is day. The an. he architecture and each interior with of the house, Miss iit, herself, who is it is Patrick O'Brien, little town and her lied in to hunt down ispicion falls on the on her young niece, ler nephew, Mark, as clay's first Peregrinamysterious young who disappears Is good reading as a Is worked out with What it lacks in up for in charac- scene. E. W.

BY MARCIA WINN. Sixty-seven years ago tonight Elliott C. Goodsinith, walking home from church with his family, saw a "very bright glow in Chicago's southwest sky. Elliott, a youth of 17, wanted to investigate the unusual sight. But his father scoffed at the idea and shepherded the family to bed.

Elliott went to sleep reluctantly, only to be awakened at 1 a. m. by the glare of a fire shining into his bedroom. Alarmed, he called his father, then manager of the Walter L. Newberry estate.

The elder Goodsmith quickly realized that the evening's glow which 'was to go down in history as the great fire of 1871had become a serious matter. Whit Father and I Found. i. ight El- home saw hicag()'s anted to ht. But dea and El- 1 v.

only TRIBUNE Photo. ing sunny days. Such a book Is This Is Me, Kathie." It is the story of Kathie, the quiet sister of the village beauty, Kathie who was astonished to find that Daniel wanted to marry her and not the beautiful Shelley, Kathie who had her children with the same wide-eyed surprise, who reached the ripe old age of twenty-five and a fortuitous fame without being tamped down by life. Der old music teacher puts her quality into words. I don't know the English word," he.

says, Ethereal means not of the e3arth, but it IS cif the earth. But not of the world, the way the rest of us are." And exactly that quality the author gets into this unassuming, delightful tale. open to high-powered salesmen, soft-headed advisers and lowdown racketeers. You need a mental zipper to keep your dot. Jars intact.

Whether you have money, control money, or just spend ityou'll find this informal guide to feminine finance a real help. And don't be too sure you know how to protect yourself against the sharks. There are at least 26 basic deception schemes being worked on women right now. They're all listed and described here, front the "fur-coat cleaners" and the "home work promoters" to the little old lady" racketeers and the "photographer's models" schemers. If "budgets" give you a headache, and "wills" frighten you if "insurance" is a muddle and "real estate" a tress here's a book that tells you, entertainingly, what "spending and saving money" is all about.

It costs only $1.90 but it's worth a lot more. We guarantee that you'll find it helpful or, you can return it and get your money back. A 9 f-4 -1 1 -11 A wn lesand a ave iust mat real you self at mes ight ork dy and 's a )nly ore. it It it "FM WM The world has altered much since Mr. Russell began his search, which may be said to be the search of men everywhere.

He brings to it a logic which conceives ef power as a fundamental attribute of social science, much as energy is fundamental in phy3ics. The elements of mind and matter are to him the same, with forms forever changing. -46- The world war and the rise of dictatorships have not dismayed him, although he says that science has made this a social world in which power must be given the right channels or all must die. The mechanics of power have given us new devils. sn Donald Kraatz at Chicago Historical society with fire hat which will be on display during fire prevention week.

1 The welcome sign is on the doormat at all of Chicago's fire stations. Fire prevention week opens tomorrowon the anniversary of the great Chicago fire of 1871and the firemen are holding open house throughout the week. They invite the citizens to come in to visit and learn about their fire fighting equipment. "Do's and don't's of fire prevention will be demonstrated this morning on the site of the old O'Leary place at 558 De Koven street, where the fire started. An exhibition of objects melted in the fire will be on display next week in the Chicago Historical society.

The articles, none of which has been shown before, include children's toys, buttons, egg-cups, clay pipes, gold watches, forks, panes of glass, pocketknives, carriage bolts, and cork-pullers. A partially burned portion of the wooden window sill from the O'Leary barn also will be shown. "A great and wise man moving through great and troubling events" Carl Van Doren calls his hero in the detailed vivid biography which he says could twice as easily have been three times as long." With a fine serenity these unhurried, but never verbose, pages tell the whole story of the life of a man who lived many livesas business man, writer, inventor, statesman, and philosopherand all of his relationships, economic, social, and amorous. Mr. Van Doren a skimped no phase of his hero's life, nor been lured by the brilliance of one to slight another.

Here Benjamin Franklin lives as he lived in the pages of his own immortal Autobiography." The death of a great man begins 1 another history, of his continuing influence, his changing renown, the legend which takes the place of fact. This is not a biography of the posthumous Franklin. He has here told his story, which ends with his life," writes Mr. Van Doren on page 781, the penultimate page of the volume. As Benjamin Franklin himself thought and as his contemporaries thought with or against or about him, Carl Van Doren records him in wise and just pages, pages not without their own humor, as befits that driest of humorists, his hero.

"It was his nature to be thoughtful, witty, benevolent, cheerful, and homely," says the author, anti he proceeds himself to be just that in his saga. One can give no higher prae to a biography than to say it is the kind which would have pleased its hero. We know from his Autobiography" how Franklin wished his life story told. Mr. Van Doren has conscientiously and with devotion carried on the task which his hero began, illumining his narrative with material here first in any Franklin biography," which requires one solid page of tabulation, facts he did not tell or sometimes even know." Jellersonian Principles and What They Mean.

If Jeffercon the Forgotten Mar," by rantuel B. Pettergill. America's Future, $1.50 in cloth, $1 in paper. ti-, 0 1 '1. EXCHANGE iANGE Vi BooK SALE SALE rqf rn Vi LA A Self-Help for Women: 'Money Without Men! Money Without Men," by Ruth MacKay.

Farrar a Rinehart, $1.90.1 Published Wednesday. This is one of those self-help books that few women can do without and many will find one of their few par big investments. In words of barely more than one syllable, but with such lively style that all its pills Or information are sugar coated, Ruth MacKay explains what money is, where it comes from, where it goes to and why, to those women whom balancing a check book unbalances." With 70 per cent el the nation's private wealth in women's hands, 65 per cent of savings deposits in women's names, and SO per cent of life insurance policies naming women as beneficiaries it would seem the women should be learning how to manage money without men. As the author sagely points out to the minimum wage clerk: You have to keep your eye on the basket, whether you've got one egg in it or a dozen." She illustrates her point with the story of Billy Sunday who, when some one complained that conversion wasn't permanent, said: "Neither is a bath. You have to keep at it!" She says: "Purity or securityit makes no difference." And she tells you how.

All out-of-print. rare and old books in stock. Reduced '6070 and more. These books must be moved to make room for incoming Christmas stock. Add to sour library at practically your own price.

If our prices don't suit make an offer! THE HOME OF BOOKS, INC. 155 NV. Madison-at. Chicago. rare and old books juced 50 and more be moved to make room 4mas stock.

Add to sour ly your own It our make an offer! OF BOOKS, INC. Chicago. M. irt Hakon Mielche, Danish journalist and artist, sailed half way round the world in the Monsoon, an auxiliary ketch. The expedition ended disastrously on a reef off a little Pacific island.

His log of the voyage in "Let's See if the World is Round" is amusing and informative. The author's humorous marginal sketches add much to the enjoyment of this jolly and unusual travel tale. Brian O'Brien is a colorful combination of adventurer and yarn spinner. So his Beating Around the Bush is one of the liveliest and most readable stories of African adventure in many months. It's an account of several youthful years in Cameroon after France had taken it over from Germany.

O'Brien lived up to his name and nationality and kept things moving. It's a guess that he'll tell about later years in further volumes, for this book ends rather abruptly. End paper maps would have added much to the readability of this rousing story of the dark continent. A. C.

This Novel of the Sea Difficult to Evaluate. "Horns for Our Adornment," by Aksel Sandemose. Knopf, $2.50. Six men on a freight ship, bound 1 from Norway to Iceland and then to Newfoundland, are the characters in this unusual novel. They drink, they brawl, they are sadistically cruel to each other as they fight heavy seas.

The central figure is a defrocked preacher, on his first voyage. Bit by bit, through a stream of conscious writing technique, his past life is re It is a mistake, he says, to underestimate all forms of power except military and governmental force. If I were to select four men who have had more power than any others," he writes, I should mention Buddha and Christ, Pythagoras and Galileo. No one of the four sought the kind of power that enslaves others, but the kind that sets them free. It is not ultimately by violence that men are ruled, but by the wisdom of those who appeal to the common desires of mankind, for happiness, for inward and outward peace, and for the understanding of the world in which, by no choice of our own, we have to live." In this book Mr.

Russell searches history and biography from ancient times, in the light of the most modern psychology and economics, for some way of taming power, particularly naked force, in the interests of democracy. For democracy, he says, is an essential part of the solution. Ile brings his thought down to the latest war crisis, discussing Hitler, Mussolini, end Stalin in the light of the power concept, concluding that in the end even the military factors favor democracy. While part of his remedy gives While part of his remedy gives ONE OF AMERICA'S FOREMOST TYPOGrapbers. John Henry Nash.

designed and nrinted Robert Louis Stevenson's THE SILVERA DO SQUATTERS which Scribner's nuolished at $30. Front us it is only $75ii Send lor this book and for a list of other flue books available at bargain prices. The Argus Book Shop, 333 S. Dearborn-st. Wabash 7528.

FOREMOST TYPOGLenny Nash. designed and uis Stevenson's THE TEES which Scribner's From us it is only 75. and for a list of other pie at bargain prices. Book Shop, Wabash 7528. ALIMONY IIVIFE'S TROUBLES TOLD BY PEGGY FEARS SALE OF CHILDREN'S BOOKS Library of modem juvenilesformerly sold at $1.00 and 83.00chi1dren's encyclopedias.

etc. Marvelous condition. While they last. 25c and up. Sec our stock of 40.00 books on all CENTRAL BOOK STORE, 16 DEARBORN-ST.

In the Heart of the Loop. Open Every Night ILDREN'S BOOKS juvenilesformerly id 83.00children's encYMarvelous condition. 25c and up. 0.00 books on all BOOK STORE, DEARBORN-ST. Le Loop.

Open Every Night. A flgor and simple. eirelancn of tha things women wcnt to know about money. by RUTH MAcKAY FREE APPROVAL OFFER. 111.

eller 5 days, you decide the book isn't worth more than you paid for it, rOurn it ond your money will be refunded, At all Or Farrar Rinehart, 1111 232 Avenue, New York, N.Y. 0 P1c 5end me I copy Of MONEY WITHOUT MEN. I enciose $1.90. a AcHrecs 0 Send C.O.D. (roctstre extra) re "'reerines wwwww enawayetaisairowo.

50.000 BOOKS. MAGAZINES. MUSIC. AND prints in two giant stores at lowest prices. Lists nielled tree.

This week at both ATIONAL GEOGRAPHICS. -41-O EACH. Open every day and night. ACTIVE BOOK STORES. 102 W.

AT 1561 N. AT NORTH. tAGAZINES. MUSIC. AFD ant stores at prices.

This week at both OGRAPRICS. le EACH. day and nizht. BOOK STORES. 'RTH-A V.

AT CLAIM. AT NORTH. Elliott is 84 now, a white-haired man busy writing his memoirs in his home at 1288 Early avenue. He has devoted a chapter to the date he terms the most important in Chicago's history, Sunday, Oct. 8, 1871.

In this chapter he tells what "Father and found at 1 a. m. when they started out for the elder Goodsmith's office to protect his records. They found a city in flames and ill flighta flight Nvhich they soon joined. Goodsmith's off ce was a mile and a half awzv, at the corner of Kinzie and Wells street, Et block north of the Chicago river.

Ey the time they reached there, the fire (which presumably had started around 9 p. m. had reached the wooden Wells street bridge. 11-7hile gathering up deeds, abstracts and money from the safe, father and son cast hurried glances out their north windows. As they watched, the water works on Chicago avenue burst into flame.

Turning back toward the river to watch a Ere enelne spray the burning bridge, they jumped in ror as the water supply, ruined with the pumping station inactive, dribbled away. Bridge Catches Fire. Then, "the bridge burning and fire leaping from building to building," they hurriedly set out for home, their arms filled with documents. "Below the office was a wine merchant's business," Goodsmith related. "He had rolled a 63 gallon cask of wine out to save it, but as it reached the street, the strong, hot wind swept it end for end, until it burst, splashing wine over the street.

"Carriages and wagons were blown along. If broadside the wind, they were turned over. The fire was very near; the air hot to suffocation and filled with stroke and hot cinders. As we went along, we saw many people bringing their household possessions out into the street. Near Fri street we met a tall, heavy-set man with a big brush of a beard who stopped and talked to us.

He was the Rev. Dwight L. Moody. who had a mission in the neighborhood. He was so big he could force any one to go in, march him up to the altar and hold on until he was converted." Fear Causes Strange Actions.

From Chicago avenue, they went north on La Salle street, where young Elliott observed a woman, a black skirt hastily pulled over her night dress, emerging bonnetless thing no lady did!" with a porcelain washbowl in her arms. "I was curious to see what she had in it," he said, "and was astonished It) see an ordinary hammer and some nails. She seemed quite dazed and talked to herself as she went down the street. "So great was the fear, that men and women were crazed and had no consciousness of the ridiculous articles they tried to save. Some thought only of saving themselves, certain that the end of the world had come.

In many places, we saw women and men kneeling before altars erected in the streets. JUST RMIGIOIT3 LIBRART 1,500 books. Any book 25c. Bar ga. oish' subjects.

S. D. Book Mart. 531 S. Dearborn.

I RMIGIOICIS LIBBART ny book 25o. Bargs. othm Dok Mart. 531 S. Dearborn.

1 at 1 i I 40 1 i 1 kit4.010 1 I 1 i 1 I 1 1 i 1 i i ma mis 1 1 114 I 24,4 4 RatWIM4M1 moirrwmp Steinbech Proves His Art in Short Stories. "The Long Valley," by John Stein-beck. (Viking. $2.501 This collection of thirteen short stories by the author of "Of Mice and Men" includes "The Red Pony," the long three pRrt story which was publhthrd in a limited edition last yearone of the moving, tender. at times savage, tales of our day.

The comparison between the boy and his love for his pony and the hero of "The Yearling" and his love for his pet fawn is inevitable. Both are classics of their kind, "The Red Pony" touched by a grilling horror which "The Yearling" does not have, but also touched with unforgettable power. The other stories most of them prove not only that Mr. Steinbeck Is one of the best short story writers in America today but. as his novels also have proved, that he is no one-tuned piper.

He can make his words dance to countless tempos and in moods varying from the macabre to I the frivolous. New York, Oct. tribulations of being a $20,000 a year alimony wife wer described today by Peggy Fears, 30 years old, former Ziegfeld Follies girl and wife of A. C. Ellimanthal, New York real state 'r a or.

She said the trouble With the $20,000 alimony was that she didn't get It Shes suing Blum. enthal for it. I And its hor- tilde the way he has detectives follow me day 1 and night," she '14 said. He tapped my tel phone and had records made of conversations Peggy rears. tA.

r. wirephotall in my apartment and played them for his friends." Miss Fears, who recently announced she was down to her last string of pearls, said she planned to spend the last string, bead by bead, to protect her friends against Elumenthars charges. just published the long awaited awaited more economic power to the democratic state, he argues that careful provision must be made for safeguarding political liberty. A government without hostile criticism might arrange for its own reelection to the end of time. In other words, the power urge operates under any form.

Hines and priests of old march under the author's pen, and he finds in current history an emergence of much that is old in the history of men. The underlying philosophies which have moved men and bolstered up seizure of power, the mischievous concept of the state that is beyond morals, the use of propaganda, and the nature of a liberal education are discussed with clarity, wit, and humor. The book is world-wide in scope and of great value as a background in forming judgments on current events 1 and in shaping the future. LIFE OF CHRIST i4-EilaS2coelit5 114V VII Y1-7 s4 tAlWe flg te01 2 hfte 6,0 494oft The man who has known nine presidents intimately gives an amazing inside pie. ture of what it costs men to be Presidentand to try to be President.

by In speaking of Thomas Jefferson, Mr. Van Doren says Idiscussing the continental congressl: There were row two philosophers mon the politicians." 1-Tow the time honored principles of Jefferson, the great Democratic political philosopher, have suffered at the hands of the present Dernocratie administration is the subject of "Jefferson the Forgotten Man," by Samuel B. Pettengill, Democratic congressman from Indiana. Mr. Pettengill analyzes those principles with the assuranee that even a great Republican Abraham Lincoln, declared that "the principles of Jefferson are the definitions and axioms of a free secicty." The congressman points out that the American revolution "was primarily an economic rebellion against official intermeddling in business" and invisible government seizing economic power in legislative halls." He says the recent great depression was due in large part to mistakes of government officials, but it was not due to our SYSTEM of government." He declares that it is false reasoning to believe the federal government is better than state and local governments.

"Despite any pretended sleight of hand," he continues, every dollar spent by the federal government comes FROM states and from citizens in states." This whole philosophy of a planned economy," the author writes, takes us straight back to the same old tyrannies that our ancestors once crossed the stormy North Atlantic to escape." The men who advocate it as liberal or progressive" are the modern Tories," he says. "Either we go forward to complete Fascism or, WHOLEHEARTEDLY and SOON, return to competitive private enterprise and constitutional democracy," Mr. Pettengill concludes. Charm Is Irresistible in This Pleasant Tale. This Is Me, Kathie," by Julia Truitt Fenn.

Meynal Hitchcock, $2.1 Occasionally a book which has no record breaking importance has such a simple inherent charm that you might as well try to resist it as to feel downcast on one of autumn's uplift Imporkult Bool, Published HALL CAINE INE JUST PUBLISHED ARMY PRISONER CAUGHT 2 HOURS AFTER HE FLEES A. long last Hall Caine's monumental LIFE OF CHMST has been published. Tremendous in scope and imbued with sincerity and power, the completed volume of over 1300 pages represents Hall Caine's life essence of forty years' research, study and writing. It is only by reading such a book that you can come to realize the true significance of Jesus's life. Published by DOUBLEDAY, DORAN.

$3.50 OF CHRIST )e and imbued )1ume of over the essence of lily by reading me significance )01tAN. $3.50 Ica's seventy years of failure to develop a merchant marine. The Golden Book of the Dutch Navigators, by Hendrik Willem Van Loon Appleton-Century, $2.50, Is a revised edition of Mr. Van Loon's fascinating stories of the adventurous Dutch navigators. ABOUT FEMME.

Marlborough, by Winston S. Churchill tScribners, $2.751, is the sixth and final volume of this monumental biography. Cesar Ritz, Host to the World, by Mme. Ritz Lippincott, $3.50, mirrors the rise of the man who gave the world a new word for luxury. Lillian Wald, Neighbor and Cmsadee, by R.

L. Duffus, Macmillan, $3.501, pays tribute to a great social worker. FICTION. Rebecca, by Daphne du Maurier Doubleday Doran, $2.75, October Literary guild choice, breathes an atmosphere of impending disaster in a portrait of a glamorous English woman. What's a Heaven For? by Percy Marks Stokes, $2.501, concerns a poor youth's happy college life and his disappointment later in his hard-earned success.

Fox in the Cloak, by Harry Lee Macmillan, $2.50, is a portrait of an artist as a young man. Fray to the Earth, by Evelyn Eaton Houghton Mifflin, $2,50, is the story of a French peasant boy. NONFICTION. Life of Christ, by Hall Caine Doubleday-Doran, $3.50, is a posthumous monumental narrative biography, fruit of a famous author's thirty-nine years of research. American Shipping Policy, by Paul Maxwell Zeis Princeton University Press, $31, is a factual study of Amer Sentry James Le Neve, just big enough to get into the army, ordered three military prisoners to descend from a truck at Fort Sheridan yesterday.

Nicholas Nedhoff, a giant deserter, came down on the sentry with a leap and wrenched away the sentry's riot gun. The little sentry looked into the muzzle and charged, knocking Nedhoff down. The lead slugs just missed the sentry's head. Nedhoff got the gun, climbed a fence, and disappeared into a dense woods. Police and soldiers searched the north shore.

Two hours later Chief John de Smidt of the Highwood police and Capt. Temple G. Holland of the military police captured Nedhoff ten miles away, near Wheeling. ear-- tPg- Zn1 on a-, la Pri 1 1 4 'M ti 0 i A.1,,, I TORE 7.1 -WI "11 C. I 44 r-v rig ft 'Ye 1 4 '4 Ar La I 4 L.

LI LW' By Henry L. Stoddard Author I Knew Them" Hundreds of incidents the public never even suspects in the private lives of the men who succumb to the lure of our highest office are related in exciting detail in this amazing new book packed with anecdotes and personalitle.s. Illustrated. 3.5o eP4 1710 ro sTA. co-2i LiV IP a24- -1 r-7.

ABOUT PLACES. The World Was My Garden, by David Fairchild EScribners, covers the lifelong explorations of the author for new fruits and foods that could be grown in America. Furniture Is Burled. Many people tried to save their furniture by burying it in the ground, he recalled, but many, in their haste, left the leg of a table nr chair protruding. This caught fire, causing all to be destroyed.

Others, seeing that the horse cars were being removed from the car barns Pt Maple and Clark streets, put their household goods inside them. Both cars and goods were saved. When they reached their home on North avenue, near Wells street the fire, jumping ahead a block at a time, was so near that a neighbor, whose child had died an hour beforehand, had to flee with the dead child in her arms. Before noon the Good-smiths too, were running northward, pushing before them a small hand truck, laden with their possessions. "And the next week," Mr.

Good-smith mused, smiling, "I was helping give out food supplies for the commission and some one pointed out Mrs. O'Leary to me. She was just an old woman dressed in black. I waited on her." 1j 0 i ee, i ,,14 0 Aert; i2 y6.5.!Fcl. e' 11'4444 8 CALLED CATTLE THIEVES.

Ecn ton. Oct, Willi am 48 years old Edward Curley, 42, and Charley Logsdon, 30, farmers who live near West Frankfort. re held by Hamilton county authorities at McLeansborn. They arc wit rattle, W.ItAMM,AW1INNI101.. 1 ols 4 ivi, orli.i's it ir, HARPERS qrt.4' Renewal of Spirit )trit S' I Dr.

Arthur E. Hertz lees exciting and witty best seller --x4 11 1 I 1 I Dr. Arthur E. A rY Hertzler's exciting and witty bezt seller gir OUT OF THE HEART ,1 OF AMERICA I 0 OUT OF THE HEART of AMERICA I I-7771 1 jli- 1 0 E. 1 ill---.

4 ---1 I. t- 1 ef. I --It "Fascinating ratty( PUBLISHED August 20 First 2nd printing--107000 3rd 4th 5th OF AMERICA in tne that all America is rcading. 59 of siit1 flowtig 1 vie.i PUBLISHED September 13 First 2nd 3rd 4th 101 1 11 I 111111 .7 .1,6 -11 saisivria ue nil 41. try ifqi COMPANY LL ILIA.4.4.1k.ito.2.6.1.,10101.s.16001,06110101.1hastplouva.sor-9,,tps,41,101.161.1.0kgolookubt.

(3 rk.ab.1(..b.i9gr4phy:::0 fa i .1 r.r, PUBLISHED PUBLISHED August 20 September 13 First First printing-7 500 2nd 2nd 3rd 1 3rd printin 000 4th 4th 5th pt i 'te-- i .4 cvigy i ii, 14 4 .47 i 1-) -t-J, 4- Ilk s' (--' 4 'Ti ii :1:,. 2 ji x.x..t..:...,....::::,:. A 1 1 1,, i 11 .1111 11 ditill 11 Ilii11V.X MITI villilluill: 1.111.1,111 ILL161.4eillotit.thoUt.1611116,0161Itolltwiolwlhole5,0obViqUeAlstiolv;pip1011.16,"toilarwItoktillblibt.1.11 New sights, new places, new people, new ways of look- ins at fifewhat bigger value can you get for your money than travel? It is more than a respite from work. It is a refreshment of the spirit through eon. tact with the new.

Start planning your next vacation now. The Sunday Tribune Travel Directory in the Society section tomorrow will be filled with news and vays of look- get for your respite from through eon aext vacation ctory in the th news and a 1 1 a 7 14M Artg t7s Now kV I TO RENTAPARTMENTSSOUTH 2, and 3 Rooms UNTIL JUNE 31Am). tile bath: netvlv drcer. I. tram, Will See mi1 iler.

i5309 or phone 1e Park 11. HORSE, AND 71 DOCTOR 15 love V4 a kal il i4 a navel by wt. It taytor Caldwell "Dramatic and LA. Times $2.75 everywhere in advertising of vacation itrrY,) 4 IT- 't 44 i ow-, tt, Clorence Router, 1523 E. 63d it.

rented his apartment to one the 14 prospects who answered nis Tribune want ad. recchinn more people. Tribune wrnt eet better results. vicnt ad users get batter resntts the Trine, they rk'ro cl.fru 'front odYerking in no Tr; lxne than in any other la newspaper. Ct.ii terest.

In addition, you will find many helpful suggestions in the Travel and Resort Properties columns in the want ad section. "What Stories! Night rides through blizzards in II his old buggy, with a gun for the wild dogs, and a horse who could crawl out of ditches; and at the end some woman with a stomachache who didn't intend to pay her Month Club Newf. Illustrated. 4 Book-of-the-Month Club Choice 0 II What Stories! Night rides through blizzards in 1 his old buggy, with a gun for the wild dogs, and a horse who could crawl out of ditches; and at the end some woman with a stomachache who didn't intend to pay her ri Month Club Newf. Illustrated.

el A Book-of-the-Month Club Choice 9 POWERFUL MIDGET" A-1 In 1.1 411 1 II 1', .11 11 tit r7.P. A (Czechoslovakia) by OCTAVIA GOODEAR CLIFMENT HISTORY for Ott lber atA 4L. fp, fp 1104 7 27 27 27 S2.75 HARPERS a.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1849-2024