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El Paso Times from El Paso, Texas • 8

Publication:
El Paso Timesi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Main 6600. Page 8. PASO TIMES-EI Paso's EL 6600. HOME Newspaper. September 15, 1940 WS NEW YORK DAT BY DAY Around Here CLEARING THE DESK Some Chaff Out Of The Wind-Stacker With PUBLISHED EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR i BOOKS Clandng Through The Ner Marian Howe Broaddus 87 B.

8. Hunter BY EL PASO TIMES, INC. Dorrance D. Roderick, President. Entered the Posmlfic Kl Pna Trxma.

Second Clese Mall Metier. THAT was a fine full-length picture in yesterday's first edition of the Herald-Post. It showed Major Gen. Joyce and Sgt Glen Franklin standing side by side, reviewing an Eighth Cavalry By CHARLES B. DRISCOLL IT IS good to hear from my -old" friend, W.

G. Sheppard, Charles-ton tourist guide, that the old and interesting buildings of the city have not suffered irreparable dam All the many trivial Incidents connected with life during the past two. decades enter into Mrs. Member of The Prrn. Audit Bureau or Circulation United Prew.

Amcricen Newspaper Publisher Aim. dismounted pnrade. And Sgt Parmenter new novel. country Into immediate steps for preparedness, after having been dealt such a forceful lesson. In a foreword, Henry Luce, editor of "Time," "Life," "Fortune." praises this young author's ability to go di-rect to the point of his argument and to recognize the vital factors in its relationship.

"I hope 1,000,000 its setting a small New to endure, more than the average of radio programs emanating from Mexico will appreciate the incident told about Ralph Henry BarBour. well-known Appleton Century author. "Listening io a Mexican radio program from Tia Juana, whe 1 he was in San Diego a few weeks ago, Ralph Henry Barbour was held The Asaoefated Prc exmiatveij entllletf to the in (01 publication of all nrw duoeichea credited to tt or not otner-wue credited tn thu oaprt end tino Ui local new ouhluhed herein. All rtghtt or publicaUon of roecia! dlspauhei herein aim are reserved England town near Boston along whose tree-shaded avenues families As the Seed Is Sown By Christine Whiting Parmenter Thomai Y. Crotrell Co.

New York, 12.50. had lived quietly for Americans win reaa mis DOOK, he states, admitting that they won't. But whatever percentage of America's population do read it will find therein a strikine- generations and where No Political Speeches Franklin was honored for capturing three military prisoner who had overpowered their guard and escaped. It was fine, and military, that function and the picture of the general and the sergeant taking the review was thrilling. But the picture told more than was intended.

It revealed who is getting the rations in this man's army, and it's not the general. By the time the home edition a rarity and a source of common spellbound ty tne Latin fervor or a divorce was the Spanish announcer. Mr. Bar-1 regret. irssun not 10 oe dented or ignored, or the fatality of indifference toward the possibility of war.

Munich startled sleeping England just as France's -HE Senate Campaign Expenditures Committee met vesterday to decide whether President age. There was some doubt about this immediately after the recent storm, which flooded parts of the old city and left wreckage strewn about A very high tide, accompany, ing the storm, caused damage to interiors of some homes. But bour doesn't understand much Spanish, but he was particularly impressed by the pleasant quality and stirring tones of the speaker. When the Winthrops decided on a divorce after 10 years of married life, the real victim was their son, Lee. After his father married "Mrs.

Julie," what had once been home was home no longer. He felt a ir 2 who was putting his soul into an'not-always welcome guest in his newly-built little surrender surprised America. If we awake sufficiently, at present, to profit by some of the errors involved in "Why England we may find, to our satisfaction that adequate defense may allow "peace In our time" without the words becoming a hollow mocKery. M. H.

B. The love of carpentry that makes anything in the process of being built hold a special temptation for address through the ether. FittMlyjroom over the porte-cochere, with its silly fluffy pink Roosevelt's recent trip into th Tennessee Valley region should be investigated fur possible violation ol the Hatch clean politics act. This came about through the request of Chairman Joseph W. Martin of the Republican National Committee.

Martin asserted two speeches were made. They also were bniadcast by radio. Martin asked he turned to a friend who uncwr- curtains and feminine fripperies and experience had stands Spanish, and said 'That's altaught him-to be on constant guard lest his father's splendid talk. Is it a politicaljbitterness and his step-mother's jealousy turn them. speech? A patriotic oration or an selves toward his mother, whom he felt it his duty to 1 u.

-1 1 Charleston, which has weathered many a storm and lived through appeared the picture had suffered a 50 percent amputation. General Joyce had been cut off at the slender waistline. And Sergeant Franklin at the equator. TAKING IT IN STRIDE How the English people are taking the war in their stride and are calmly determined to see it through is revealed in a letter re- I a small boy will be defend. dfjjiraL aui 11 1 uu nulla iui ikcuj Mexican children? 'Oh, his friend replied IL3U 'The announcer is reading off the This Is the Way We Build a House By Creighton Peet Henry Holt Co.

New York, f2.Q0. amply indulged in Mr. Peel's delightful story, told in a combination of simple text and photographs, of all the steps that go into the build- for an accounting of the funds spent during the journey and a revelation of who paid the bills. The White House had said the President's trip was non-political. Martin thought otherwise.

But although he asked for the investigation he did not respond to the Senate committee's invitation to bombardments, sieges, plagues and earthquake, remains the same quiet, courageous city as of old. Even the famous gardens, I'm told, will be in shape for entertainment of seasonal visitors. I egg market For some reason a great many travelers have been under the mis ceived by John B. Watson, of El Paso, from a relative, ing of a house. The author took his photographs with Datience C.

J. Cawood. The Cawoods live in a London suburb. The letter was written August 21st. with German! apprehension that a passport is re- One of the best autobiographies appear yesterday, tie was not present wnen me meeting was held.

quired for an American citizen to oyer a period of months, following, with almost daily diligence every step in the building of Billy and Tommy's new house. Obviously a craftsman himself, of the year is "Country Editor," by Henry Beetle Hough, editor of the ill rifts nis ieenng lor xne satisfaction derived from working speech made by a candidate during the cam- bombing raids getting well under way. The Watsons had written, offering safe refuge In their home here to the London relatives, but the Cawoods declined in these words: "I am hastening to thank Margaret and yourself for the very kind invitation von have sent us. It is Vineyard Gazette, on the island of Martha's Vineyard. Editor Hough has the rarest of literary talents.

He ANY paign NY ign enter Canada. This is not true. Regulations which may account for this belief that went into effect in July applied only to aliens. In his new travel book, "See Canada Next," Larry Nixon stresses wiin tools neips to enliven his de period is open to political implications, can make little things and small in scription, maki 111a aiuijr U3 cidents seem big and important to lus readers. tertaining as it lsf ji II III instructive, i JOt First Billy and Tommv heard mlt at CHRISTINE WHITING PARMKNTER Author e( "At the Seed la Sawn." (Tbemaa Crewell Company, Sept.

II.) ir only rumors of ar if lf new house one 1(1 a most generous offer, and had we contemplated leaving England we would most certainly have accepted it. But we will just stay put and see it out. Nevertheless, we are all most deeply grateful to you both for your kindness in thinking of us." The letter tells of the Fifth Column roundup, which the writer thinks has been carried to extremes; says the Ministry of Information is too reticent about telling the people the facts of war developments, so that "I regret to say we get more accurate information from the German wireless than from ours, and sooner. no matter how assiduously the randidnte refrains from any direct relerence to h.s candidacy, or to campaign issues. This must be what Chairman Martin had in mind, for The Times has been unable 10 find anything of a directly political nature in ihc resident's addresses.

If. then, the Republican leader's contention were upheld, the President would be estopped from going anywhere to deliver dedicatory or any other kind of addresses although that is a normal and non-political function of the Presidential office at government expense. The Presidency carries with it a fund for travel expense. This is proper. the fact that American citizens are permitted to go back and fourth across the Canadian border with the traditional freedom that they have 3lwayi enjoyed.

"See Canada Next" (Little Brown) does not fall into the armchair travel book class alone, being, in addition, a book that can be reail profitably by those with an actual trip to Canada in mind. The fourth and final volume in Though the atmosphere of the Day home, in Boston, 111 tin I held my breath for lines at a time, and actually broke out with goose-flesh over the' moving of the Gazette plant, the setting up of a linotype machine, and the starting of the new press. Yet I have worked in newspaper offices when 16 linotypes were being moved at once, and have hejped nurse along a cranky press, that was supposed to deliver 40.000 papers per hour. Those incidents did not seem so very important to me when I was living through them, and it would never have occurred to me to write about them. Here comes a literary big enough forf Kfc them to have sep- arate rooms, with, ikj some day, a playf room a 1 1 1 very own.

Then The Germans told us about Narvik and Dunkirk be where Cara lived with the new husband she had married on the verge of his going to war and who had returned to her shattered and broken in health and spirit, was less strained, curiously it was Cara who made her son suffer most often and rarely Robert Day, in whom Lee had found an understanding friend. The household across the street from the Winthrops, where Barbara lived, grew to be a refuge for the lonely boy, but the affection and contentment so apparent between Barbara's parents and "Honey" Gregory's father and mother, Lee assured himself wtft the exception and not the average rule of married lives. Thrmiirh thp varinuctv eiiepAArtinir rna of nmt.war the architect's sketches arr I and they were initiated into the fascinating secrets fore our own B. B. C.

was permitted to give out the George Santayana's "Realm of Be-news. ing" series was released this week hv Charles Scribner's Sons under Also there is mention of a son going to King's Col- the title "The Realm of Spirit." lege, Wimbledon, and of a daughter in the Royal Col-1 This book brings to its conclusion SO LONG as a President trip is made fur an official and non-political purpose, as this was. artist, and, with a stickful of such tribulations, elicits the interest and of blueprints. When the founda- tion was drilled' and dug, remem-jij and so long as any speeches delivered contain noi'ege of Art; of another son working on a Yorkshire the philosophical system to which political argument for the Present's re-election, and experience, the internationally famous phiioso- nhnr nnftt an1 niirn let hoo Hauntivl sympathy of a reading audience. For the writing of a good book the work and thought of a lifetime, history.

Lee and Barbara and Honev erew tin. bound ering auuui cor- one doesn need to come to New York and live among tall buildings, as many literary folk have sup hv the warmth of their mutual pffeetion until T.ep it seems to The Times that the trip is a legitimate charge on the Presidential travel fund and is no violation of the Hatch Act. There is no way of preventing inferences being And here are two paragraphs which, although of course they do not reflect the opinions of all English people are, nevertheless, typically British in their psychology: ne 1 0 they filled a box with a supply of small- III a book called "The Pulse ofjturnpd away in bitterness at the turn of events in Democracy" (Simon Sc Scusterihi, famiiv and gave ud the idea of marriage for posed. It is not the bigness of boy treasures and things, but the ability of the interpreter, that makes a story great. buried it in the I'm I.

the War We Bell $2.50) Dr. George Gallup, founder of the American Institute of Public Opinion and one of his collaborators, Saul Forbes Rae tell the inside story foundation tcrifbi Feet.) drawn, and anyone can read into any speech, even about the weather, whatever implications he chooses, political or otherwise. But GOP Chairman Martin must have been hard put to it to find politics in either of those Tennessee Valley addresses. with fitting ceremony. Gradually the house took shape first a skeleton form followed by floors and partitions.

Billy was of the public opinion oll, making; "We are getting a good many raids and alarms. We had three alarms yesterday. So far in this district we have escaped. There was a big raid last night but I go to bed and sleep through it. I say, one may as well be killed comfortably in bed as anywhere.

We lived in Hull during most of the World War, and Hull was a target for the Zeppelins. I used to do the same then when I had the chance. "We have several foreign "armies' in Great Britain these days, Poles. Czechs, Norwegians, Dutch, l.elgian and French In my opinion there is that precise ruim- awed at the dexterity of the plumber's careful fitting good. It was his father's death that brought him final awakening to the fact that in most people loyalty was a lasting virtue and that happiness might be his for the taking.

The narrative is told, alternately, by Lee and Barbara, in the first person, thereby giving the reader an intimate feeling of being actually present and part of the scene. The author makes her points forcefully, yet with a welcome oblique approach. We are grateful to her for making as much of the virtues of family ties as of the bitterness and unhappiness that arise when those same virtues are lacking or withheld. M. H.

B. at the plan for electric installation that preceded the wiring. Mixing mortar was fun and plastering walls was even more. Even the final touches the How would you like to live in a place like this: "There are wooded hills not far from town in three directions, where is displayed the untouched elegance of Nature. Each spring my sister and I go deep within the lush fragrance of their shadows and find yellow, while and purple violets.

May apple, deer tongue, Dutchman's breeches, ferns, redbud, and, if we're lucky, those delicious King Carol will occupy a unique place in history as brim the dictator who only thought he was one. wall paper, bathroom tiles and linoleum were subjects for debate and personal enjoyment. By the time the finished home is exhibited to the reader, he feels almost as proud of its beauty and workmanship as Billy Tommy. Here is a book that any child will read for pleasure and use plain the exciting new method of sampling opinion which has been termed "the most practical contribution to the cause of democracy since the time of the founding fathers." In giving the details of how the public opinion poll works, Dr. Gullup shows why the Literary Digest failed to call the turn on the 19.16 elections: how his poll demonstrated in advance what the Digest poll would reveal and how he was able to predict that the Digest poll would be wrong.

"No poll" he says "lias ever failed because it did nut take enough sample vutes." A bo-ik on the Morrow fall list about which advance readers have assertedly gone mad and not so sponge-like mushrooms. I hope as In the early 1800's. when Yarbrough and Gerda Whetstone yielded to the tempting call of a rich new land In far-off Alabama often for information and reference. M. H.

B. 11 Ml I I I iber too manv. We shall be lucky if we do not have NO Criminal UnpreparedneSS TOr U. trouble with them before this business is over. It is GERMANY gains confidence and a corresponding certain the Germans will have placed some of their degree of arrogance as the Battle of Britain pro-j in bod.l.M-, "I do not trust DeGaulle (French general Eng- gresses.

Therefore, Berlin dispatches become or Slkorski (ncad of Pllljsh pxit.s) an im.n creasingly revealing of Nazidom's real thoughts. is now leaking out that Petain was a suspect in 1918. In yesterday's authorized dispatches there was Why they trusted the French always beats me. I i infnrmoH nfv-r liked or trusted them. The French are a de- they were like that land Among the many recent books of reminiscence, this one, which recalls a small boy's long as I may live there will always be a narrow, dusty country road, that I may go down its winding lane between weed-choked fences where wild roses flourish, to young and full of foundation btone By Leila Warren Alfred A.

Knopf, Inc. New York, JJ.00. promise. And though visit to his Dutch grand- ikii uuwicu ij a onuuuo.u parents some 30 years Gracey and Miz' Lizbeth may have left the ease cudent race." ago deserves a place. It Jacoby's Corners By Jake Falstalf HouhIi ton Afilin Co.

Boston, J2.50. and comfort of their Carolina home with regret, remembering that" their forefathers had first tilled its is both wholesome and heartwarming and as now worn-out acres, Gerda and Yarbrough welcomed the letters Lemual must SEE THE MAN ON THE MOUNTAIN? i If you go out to the plant of the Nichols Copper east of El Paso, and look at the Juarez mountains, considerably to the southwest and some miles away, here is what you will see. the opportunity to use their strength toward making have written at the time to his parents back in New York find the soul-satisfying silence of a wooded place." That's a paragraph from a fine letter written me by Lola Donnel, of Whitesville, Mo. What a blessing it is to be able to appreciate and love the beauties of one's surroundings, instead of always straining to get away from familiar things! What a gift, to be able to appreciate the fact that the familiar is not necessarily the commonplace! 1 On the train trip, while Lemual's identity is made quietly either, is a novel about a 'a new country come alive and yield to their labors, horse thow circuit in At Wlwtstone Stand near Thurbervllle they built It is cailed "Green Entry" and thej their home and built it strongly and with thought for author, F. Ruth Howard is a native future.

With old Gran, Gerda's New England of California and, obviously, a lover! Dutch grandfather to offer counsel and wisdom, un known to the delighted conductor and interested passengers, one can feel the prickly plush of the car seats and share that feeling at the pit of his of horses. stomach born of the fear that no one will be at der Gerda efficient guidance and Yarbrough planning and diligence, they prospered and grew in numbers and in importance. Through those danger-ridden Oscar Serlin Life producer' of the station to meet him. But Grandma is there, looking queer and standing aloof from the crowd in her old-fashioned clothes, with F.tther" has acquired an op-j times of trouble with the Creek Indians, in which Yarbrougn, realizing nis part in bringing tne Dloody but, as Lemual discovers, a highly respected citizen of the small community for all her individuality, A poignantly sincere Utter comes from Mary Alice Lallande, an elderly resident of San Diego. It is too long to reproduce here, and I am German quarters." In other words it was an authorized propaganda handout.

It said "the German air force will ruthlessly continue its attacks" against London, undeterred by the fact that for two nights there have been no British attacks on Berlin. The stated purpose is to visit destruction on Britain until the latter is forced to surrender. There follow two significant passages. The first: "The German attacks witness the conscienceless-ness of Churchill and the British government in a ar they cannot in and for which they never were morally or militarily The second: "It is not a question of whether one German life i worth 10 or 100 British lives (a characteristic assumption of vast German superiority to any other people but a question of British criminal unpre-paredness to defend their own population." Of such "criminal unpreparedness" to defend our own country, we of the United States have come very close to being guilty. We would bo in precisely that situation, in fact, were we to be attacked today.

But if we have a year, two years, we shall be ready to face a challenge from any foe or combination of foes, and beat him or them. Grandpa waiting at home in an invalid chair intro tion from The Macmillan Company on the dramatic rights to Anton Roothearfs Vet." The whereabouts of the author, a captain of infantry in the Netherlands Army are at present unknown. duces Lemual to the. joy of books and the constant not sure- that my correspondent satisfaction to be found in reading the Bible. would be pleased if I were to pub Lemual meets his relatives learns to milk a cow, to hitch up" the horse and buggy, to ask the blessing.

lish her letter. But this point in it seems to me quite worth reporting: Those were the days savored now only in recollection struggle to a head was troubled and sometimes afraid, the Whetstones played their part. With cotton's growing supremacy, they lived through the "Jubilate" days of the fifties, through the barrenness and bitterness of the Civil War to weather even its vicissitudes. And during those years that state that Yarbrough had so loved because it was "lustier, tougher, clumsier, realer" than any other was tamed into a land of gracious hospitality, of growing elegance and culture. A multitude of unusual incidents and descriptions have gone into the making of this novel Nowhere else have we encountered an equal to Miss Warren's picture of the "whole cavalcade of Whetstones moving full strength toward Alabama, fagons full of of "gentlemen callers;" of "twenty-three skiddoo; She and her sweetheart, long ago, of postcard albums, when a meal was something to exchanged letters daily.

Then they were married, and when he was pitch into and remember. A purchase of a nickels worth of candy offered a small boy the tempting privilege of selecting his choice from a counter of away from -home, as he was a great deal, each wrote to the other every day. "peppermints and wintcrgreens, three kinds of licorice, So says Ira Ware, veteran El Paso peace officer. Mr. Ware looked at this figure of a man lying on his back on top of the range that he made a picture of it.

It iooks to him like President Roosevelt. Personally, I don't see much resemblance to the President. To me, nature's sculpture in this instance looks more like the late President McKinley. I think Mr. Ware must be a staunch Democrat of the old school, and has Mr.

Roosevelt very much on his mind. But, anyay, it's plainly a likeness of some person. Reminds one of Cochise Head over in Arizona. Mr. Ware yesterday took cognizance of the fact that the day was the 11th anniversary of the date he started working for the Nichols Co.

He is guard and assistant chief of the plant's police force, numbering, he said, about 15 men. I GIVE YOU TEXAS. (By ROYCE HOl'SK) jaw breakers, gum drops, candy kernels of corn, He went away to the war to make the world safe for democracy. She- "Dutch Vet" ($2 50. which is already in its fourth printing, though published late in August was reprinted 27 times in Holland, where it was a best-seller of long duration, under the title "Dr.

Vlimmen" 1 the name of its hero.) It is an unusual story of a Dutch veterinary a "romance of a fine life and also an eloquent plea for fair treatment for animals" according- to Frances E. Clarke, another Macmillan Author who states that she intends to place it in her notable collection of animal books. "Kitty Foyle" has provided the inspiration for nation-wide merchandising campaign for clothes and motto hearts or wafers and a kind of yellow marsh-mallow that was shaped like a peanut rnd tasted like wrote to him every day, and he wrote to her as often as conditions permitted. He died in that war that was to end all wars. white children and black slaves, feather beds, mahogany dressers, fans, peach preserves, seed corn, salt pork and silver waiters." She makes the reader appreciate the deep feeling of responsibility for their Negroes that guided plantation owners, as Hamilton Basso did in "Cinnamon Seed." Yarbrough's dream She stilt writes him the daily let of establishing a "college" finally bore fruit And ter; has never failed.

Some of the letters, intended for no eyes but his, she tears up after a day or two. Gerda's desolation, during the war. over seeing her fields bare of cotton, causing the "feeling as If she lived in a rulerless land with a vacant throne" is Some she has kept and these will How do you go about writing a book? accessories for the White Collar go to her grandchildren. A precious record, I should say, of romance that cannot be killed with bullets Well, in case you're figuring on doing one. he 'Girl C'W.

C. according to Furious Bundist Reaction GERMAN-AMERICAN BUND spokesman fays the conscription bill is a "damnable and vicious declaration of war on every German-American." Which shows just how angry it makes our Nazi nundisU to have the United States take steps for self-defence, even to bar Bundists from replacing drafted men in employment. If that spokesman wire in Germany, and made a similar angry protest against a government act, he would be shot before morning. In ours, he aays it and gets away with it. bananas." Lemuel joined the town people who milled around in a happy crowd on Saturday nights, went to a "sweet corn supper;" helped at threshing time, saw a night fire and a twister threaten certain parts of the community.

He entered a contest that promised him a pony when he had sold sufficient "Blu-Pow" (bluing) and finally, in discouraged disillusion compromised on ordering a berry spoon for Aunt Jen. Some time during the summer Lemuel wrote a letter home. At the time he had a stone bruise on his foot burned fingers, sunburned ears, a. cut on his hand, poison ivy on his neck, a loose front tooth from being kicked by a cow, a scratched shin and prickly heat around his middle. And he closed the account of his summer adventures with the statement "I'm feeling fine." And we have no doubt that he meant every word of it! M.

H. B. Far removed from the turbulent background of African history, to pre-war London where even, the or bombs. assured it's a lot of work at least, this commentator 1 a 1 1 Associates, advertising ha found it so. I counsellors, who are running the Take "Were You In Ranger?" for example.

Upon campaign. More than 75 depart-returning to Texas in 19'JO I had spent several years iment stores are selling the Kitty Going and coming between Can ada and the United Slates seems to in the State during my boyhood), it was my determi Foyle W. C. G. Classics.

Ads featur be no trouble at all for Americans. When I was visiting in Minnesota something the reader can understand with real sympathy. The Whetstones were proud of themselves as a family. "You're Whetstonlng again" was Gerda's term for the families' bragging among themselves. But none of them had the strength of Gerda and Yarbrough.

After Yarbrough's death, realizing that her family and land needed her more than ever. Gerda held the reins in a firm grasp, recalling, proudly, Jerrard Malone's words "You take on measure as you go along to meet whatever comes up." But when, at a crucial moment In her daughter's life, ahe realized that her abandonment of the role of matriarch would mean her child's salvation and healing, she relinquished it without a qualm. Though it must inevitably be compared to "Gone With the Wind." except for the Southern background. recently, a party of us went far up into the Ontario wilds in a launch nation to write about the romance of oil. So when, in response to a bunch of letters sent out to newspapers over the Stale, R.

K. Phillips publisher of the Eastland Daily Oil Belt News wrote that he needed an editor in that oil town, "Here," said "is my opportunity." Here is an odd thing: It was necessary for me to owned and driven by Carl Harrison. International Falls druggist ing these fashions are using the words "Kitty Foyle" in the same script lettering as that used on the jacket of Christopher Morlcv's novel, and a small picture of the book is included in the ad. Harcourt Brace has added tn Its fall list "The Wave of the Future: A Confession of Faith" by Anne most successful middle- The Source of Radicalism THE conclusions of a Columbia University study of the sources of radicalism in the United States that prolonged schooling is more apt to produce Crossing the border, which runs aged business man may suddenly find himself satiated with the plushy The Happy Highway By Francii Brett Young Reynal Hitchcock New York, f2.S0. through the middle of Rainy Lake, was so painless that we never would have known which country we were leave Eastland County in order to get the perspective quality of his surround this mental attitude than is unemployment-should but, during this research in rort Worth several trips give educational leaders something to think i)oUt.

back to Ranger had to be made to talk to people about Morrow Lindbergh. Mrs. Lindbergh ings (both business and in not Jotln, Giles local geo- there Is tittle similarity to be found in "Foundation domestic) we meet Owen Lucton at tne exact mo it The report is the more remarkable because has just delivered the manuscript and it is scheduled for publication early in October. Willi wiicii I U.11.U aM 9- day while living there. You've got to have some lurk, too.

By coincidence, ment when he admits to himself that, so far as his own personal enjoyment of It is concerned, his lite is a vacuum. Stone." Here the Civil War scenes are incidental to the wider sweep of a state history in the making. One recalls more often that thoughtful, penetrating quality of Laura Krey's and Tell of Time'' in seeking a standard of comparison. Miss Warren has emanates from a liberal lii-tiintinn of learning. Dr.

Goodwin Watson uf Columbia nays the in fllicnce of Joblessness is tneunsequental, while post 1,1 agouti rApeii, jmurmra us 01 ine moment when we slid over the imaginary line. Arriving at the secluded camp in the woods, we landed without ceremony, without examination of our bags, without in fact the slightest (Continued On Page 10) I ran into Gene Reynolds on the street in Fort Worth Stokes' publication of "Yankee Owen was merely the generous provider in his jatid, in a long interview, he unfolded the information Skipper" this wrek nearly coincided a wealth of material at her finger tips which she has household. His wife. Muriel, who had lost till re- about the melodramatic Police Chief Byron Parrish with 'he award of the Navy Crossi nd to turn nut dramatic semblance to the quiet wife and devoted mother of encouraging economic radicalism. wti carried Bnd the criminal element thitt Parrish conquered in to the Ski per.

Captain Joseph rical narrative A story without a dull moment, their early murried days, regarded him with not on graduate study, it was said, include ten times as; Ranger (Gene himself was desk sergeant there and Gainard. himself. The award is contuin many passages that one will want to always tolerant Indifference. Young Leith had proved business. The nronnrtlon hn hurt "iUr ponce) and mis ininrmatton was the; distinguished services as master 01.

finj fr re.readin himself troficienl at managing the the City of Flint during its seizure basis for the must exciting part of the story. -l I il. i and delighted contemplation. M. H.

B. other children had little room for more than a casual feeling of affection for the man who shared none of SPECIAL The wreiy wniM.ru c.Knu. cneoulllered DlCK jIodrll )n Kort Worth I and detention by the German Navy generally is to be interpreted as "leaning toward he told about the time he was offered S-WKH) Just last spring and the citation reads. Communism or Fascism or some 'ism' which is nb-i lor his photograph. Then I ran into J.

W. in part: "His fine Judgment nnrmal to the democratic wav of life" mitlit there railroad man, mid he related the forcible and devotion to duty were of the few short yet eventful vears that have passed interests. With the sale of his old home and inston Churchill wrote "While England removal al the family to larger quarters and a Winston since h.v rvalerl the more lasnionaoie neiRnournuuu, uwen i-eivu IN THE SOUTHWESTS LARGEST BOOK DEPT. highest order rind in accordance have lost ail ties with what had once been a pleasant crossing of the T. P.

by the Jake llanion railroad not be closer scrutiny of the type of individual who at midniuht tragedy of popular indifference to the message that Mr, Churchill, whose party was then Why England Slept Bu John F. Kennedy Wilfred Funk, Inc. New York, t2.00. with the best traditions of the Naval Service." Tine book. "Yankee Skipper" traces an exciting career in which Captain Gainard' own in the descendant, tried Is guiding the thinking college students7 College! professors generally and therefore quite unfairly After filling a fat notebook, it was necessary to have been blamed as encourage of -parlor pinks'' M'nv material to take shape in my mind for a and -American Nazis." But many reader, doubtless -'n 10 ot ana fields, one year of concentrated research and Inter- know instances of young mmds being influenced viewing, one year of study-before a single word was traditions and experiences are tn! John a dis- char strange ice cruKe of the Citv of Flint Kennedy's book "Why England blcpt offers he A h.nilcu.

I passionate and detailed analysis of the reason, bchind existence. And so, when opportunity too easy and too fool-proof to evade offered itself, he set out on a holiday, hoping to recapture the taste of the Joy of living. He rambled over the English countryside, sleeping sometime in a deserted barn, working with farmers, talking with strange people who artlessly revealed all manner of unusual qualities never before sufficiently respected, drinking deep of the forgotten beauty of England and found, to hi joy, that he still retained an open heart for the enjoyment of small and imple pleasure. Mr. Young is usparing in his treatment of the self-interest of spoiled youth, the half-baked theories adversely to the democratic trend by a college pro-; written.

The actual writing took only six months of England's unpreparedness and her totally Inadequate fessor. Therefore American university trusties may 1 Cmidge. author of thelmean ot defense at the outbreak or tne war. u.i --11. I Jonn Kennedy is tne son 01 Amvnun accept Dr.

Watson's study as warning it. now that the manuscript was comblrted. could the Tree" has written Coward Me-ibassador to England, a student of ntnaonal rel. tt. Tu.

k- Two facts appear to be outstanding 111 tin survey: -A publisher he found? looked as tnotigh the answer 1 ei 1 timid aim rM'pni ornniiHif ui imi vmu. mat nt wu 1 First that the highest percentage of and would be "No," for Pix house- rejected it. Finally, a weateVUnd a little village lived in England during the past few years and has the lowest pcrcenUigo of ctmscrvatifin wrrc noted MnaM company Dallas accepted it. Then came the! jn tVvil). jample opportunity to study and observe, still main- iniesti.m wM i.a I'cvon.

toward Communism. His i 'f rollece-bred tendencies "The Yearling" $29 New edition, at a bargain price, of the Pulitzer Prize Novel of 19.18. The White House 1 among" those Individuals rated as dT yt "Ul rZS I. of Mur.el. greedy shallow, grasping the that J.

neither Trotest-nt. C.thohc, Ml War. he remnant of youth with vivid clutching finger, re- Jewish; that the long of cl ling five weeks, however, the book wa, ou. of print; every ,1 rowlh of public opinion galn girdles of the price Is as unsympathetic a he can which I- extremism a MM Printing had Id! 'K Z-cV tr I. though war to Its final prepondcrou, strength mnk.

it The tically without contact with ,1, M- "'Hrr 0 waSiT Two procedure, that might be counted on to co.nba, hi), accompanied servative party were the final result, of this at- rr-Her'. eye. 7u Mdicalism, therefore, are a proper religion, for "Were You in in the f)nl, of her mv Htude and. In a later chapter when he treat, the peace- he woods, roll imr and part-time schooling which permits the ll fouplr of month. bee.e of this columnist "-a Juvenile that Munich rpis.Kte, he offers no criticism of Chamber- mid villages.

The su a understanding of i.roblcms o.il-l",I,,",J"n big Trxaa oil movie, Boom tells of a fam.lv of Ei.gl.ah eh-ldun Iain's action at Munich, fcclmg that, under the c.r- like response from lludrnt to ain an iindersjandintf 01 j.rom.nis Tlmn h(irojrrd VMr, he could have followed no other course, proves a happy holiday for more than Owen Lucton. Side university Scirnre Monitor. Anyway, there Is the story of how you write a book, be published In October. Irrscrving hi indignation for hi refusal to throw the1 n.n.u..

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