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The Salt Lake Tribune from Salt Lake City, Utah • 40

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Salt Lake City, Utah
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40
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-4 m000oEft tt 411- '10 40 -woe -6--- Sunday Morning 'Reviews ApiiCOOlmoitt 1 0'16' a 3rbt itit It'il-lit'ibttiii 7 Fide Arranges Life' Fa Of Adventure 4 -4- 4 11 1 1940' Zbt Salt gi akell'iltittne- --1--- 9 1 J- Fate Arranges Of Adventme i 4-- -4r I 11P'''' :1 45 0 4 I i I View of San Francisco's (tohemia of Early Century and Giant Trio vie 01 A rancisco's Early -iant Trio Alipe Chapter Extends trenc 9 History By Marjorie Parmelee Cecil raspier I Georges Dithamel Publishers Henry Holt and Co- New 'Pork City Family chronicles have always been an interesting form of fictional presentation and Georges Duhamers latest book in his fine series The Pasquier chronicles" will surely find a place in modern literature The Pasquiers are a family so real so human and so gently depicted that the reader lives works and dreams with them and Is deeply moved by the tragedies which mar their lives The young girl of former books gives title-to this wherein her great musical gift makes her the idol okconcertgoers through out Europe Her brother Laurent has made his puce as a biolog1 cal acientrat engaged In through these two one Mewl the many characters and activities Anymrhere All of the surprising group The entirely unpredictable Papa haa advanced his social position Over House but lost none of the manners and methods which are a strange contd Co- New SI 4 0 In i p' ae ehuman 1 I I sams with heir Lives wherein through biologiOne Mewl activities table Papa I position inners and ange eons ealin ha ter xten By- Marjorie 4 History renchFam i aiarmel ximomaLicismodneaK Edward Davison whose first volume of "Collected Poems" Is a spring Issue of moment to poetry rhaders Colorado eU' Man's Work In Fine Book 4 1 -ii 1 -4' 4 po I 1 Edward Davison whose first volume of "Collected Poems" is a spring tome of moment to poetry rbaders -o ora 1 eU' n's' Work Ma ki Fine Book '4 i 4 I 1: rtfr 4 4 i 1 i 1 71 4 i "1-0 A 4 11 -I 'If 7: -fr '4: 4 :4 1 'A -4 1: i --4 i t-' 4 1 0: 4 -4 Iv 4: By Eve Hollis Footloose in Arcadia By Joseph Noel Publishers Carrick and Evans Inc New York City HIMSELF one of that coterie of literary folk who kept talk II buzzing around San Francisco in the period at the turn of the century and after and among those who' picnicked under the Dingee cherry trees Joseph Noel here records his recollections of those days and of the three who were the dominant figures in the scene A newspaper writer at that period Noel was an intimate of the Titan Jack London and George Sterling the poet and through them knew the Olympian Ambrose Bierce though he met the cynic no more than twice It is because of his reverence for the rare qualities of Sterling whose confidant he was and be- cause of the poet's influence on A )1 his own development that Noel 4 has produced this book' with its zo411 Intimate and honest presentation ---7- Of these men and their relationship -ii To the dominance of the cynic 4 Bierce Noel lays the responsibility ri for Sterling's missing leadership In the new movement in American Tx poetry and he sees in he poet's k4' cfr acquaintance with the social rebel Is'0 i I Bierce detested as 4 l'a transitory voice of the Jew" 1 the one force saving him from the oblivion he dreaded iP Cynic Against Rebel I' IL By Eva Footlool Yorl IIIMSI century Dingee i those dt the seen of the through the eynil It is for the whose cl cause of his own has prod Intimate of these i To the Bierce Is for Ster in the ne poetry acquaintt l'a trans! the one I oblivion Cynic A Carrick and Evans Inc New of literary folk who kept talk In the period at the turn of the those who picnicked under the here records his recollections of were the dominant figures in hat period Noel was an intimate George Sterling the poet and Ambrose Bierce though he met "4 I 1 41zs -1- 3 4 -io i i i Place for Books 11 6 liCel- 'I-- I 1 i Ibuzz! A f-- 1 1 t' I' I 'i 1 0 i 'i 1 4 A 1 1 t- -o: i 'i 1 fi1 A i I Rudyard Kipling one of the author's numerous drawings of celebrities which are among the splendid illustrations of Sir William Rothenstein's "Since Fifty" The Wind of Circumstance By Harold Dearden Publish-on and Hitchcock New York City Proclaiming no Intention of writing autobiography but rather to give account of the queer amazing people the curious experiences examples of what he terms "the whimsicalities of fate" that have added interest and variety to Ns life Harold -Dearden has told the candidly revealing "story of a man of the woric according to his own subtitle In truth if one accepts his story as fact and not no doubt it is to be zfeceOted-T-It would seem his life has been more than usually filled with whimsical adventures that It has been frequently and forcibly impressed upon him how: in the language of his native Linea-shire "there's nowt so queer as folk" Having been for some thirty years of life a practicer of psychological medicine Mr Dearden has observed plenty with implication' that life has neither rhyme nor reasonj With such disquieting phenomena his narrative is full and the discovery began back in his childhoosi when he sensed vaguely something wrong between his parents It was merely by chance that he learned of the scandalous marital dereliction of the father he admired and Mr' Dearden seems to beHeve as his title implies that mat of his odd adventures were chance met Certainly it was chance that brought him share in that inexplicable episode concerning Mrs Swanleigh with which he opens his story and what strange wind of circumstance blew the engaging Kitty into his life! Yet it was hardly chance that carried them on through that dramatic not altogether to be explained chapter that comes to its close when Kitty's Illness discloses the consequences of her early dubious way of existence Mr Dearden is nicely though sometimes skirting the danger retailing his amorous experiences from the time when in his 'teens he was seduced by a husky-voiced lady of uncertain age through the seductive practices of the lovely patients who made life difficult through his medical years His stories of oddities met during his war experiences and the stranger inaidents met with during his medical practice make interesting pages The evidence is that Mr Dearden's description of himself as "man of the world" is correct and that on the whole he has enjoyed his adventures Yet that he has been more often than other men exposed to the "wind of circumstance" is matter for doubt Russell DavidButge who tells unusual story in his "Lite In tho Ark" Eminent Figure in English Arts Adds to Memoirs I Have a Book I By George and Eleanor Stewart Publisher George Stewart New York City It is not to insure that every person has a book that the Stew nits have issued this littlevolume But rather their purpose is to tell you what to do with the book you have If you have been a sleepless guest In a home where not a book is to be found outside the library you will appreciate the suggestions made here concerning book shelves for every bedroom with a wise assortment of old and new works for the guest who perhaps has the reading-in-bed habit firmly in-trenched The authors tkplore all the delightful possibilities in dormer windows wide window seats built-in bunks corners or Ingle-sides as nooks for books For members of the "Andent and Independent Order of Soakers" what could be nicer than to find above the bathtub the little shelf recessed into the glass bricks or tiles holding a group of bestsellers With the tendency of American families to congregate in the kitchen or breakfast room here the shelf or case for books is almost as Imperative as the frigidetre The Stewarts have numerous other ideas that will appeal par ticularly the long chapter given to "the amenity of books in the living room" Family Oddities' And Relations In Unusual Book bination of the provoking and en dearing The older brother Joseph whose only criterion is wealth Jai become important in the financial world And always In the backs ground is the devoted mother as untiring in her struggle to make a home as she is lacking In understanding of what goes on in her 4 family Music is beauty and happiness to Cecile and its effect on her the power she makes of it in her life is beautifully presented It is a greater tragedy then when in her Se personal life she can find neither beauty nor any lasting satisfaction Laurent's laboratory life finely plc- tures the ideals and activities of men whose effort is bent toward advaning the sum of human knowledge to find help for humans Al in their tragic struggle against little understood forces The philo- sophical gropings of Laurent and Justin still his dearest friend make a stimulating part of the story Paris is the home of the Pasquiers In which they work and struggle Artis with "forces greater than them- I it stands also for the I modern world in which we all seek for an understanding of failure and success That the present story is lean set in the immediate post-World lowec war period gives it special significance today when the same lack He SI of cbmprehension shadows all ac- Myer tivity and thought sutot The "Chronicles" as a whole de- light "Cecile Pasquier" is a novel "I' complete In itself but those vho ones read it will want to turn back to Onl the earlier books to know its two series appealing characters as children Myen The new book develops their char- toWar acters without solving their prob- time lems rather adding to them as did they become mature and compre- yet're hand how difficult it is to find a not Nil course to be followed without tea- precis ervations art at Georges Duhamel proves again the A his understanding his deep human- ity and the faith in the individual soul of man as an important en- Po( tity in a confused world As Laurent says of his family so the To reader will feel: "One can excuse nothing in one's own people for BIT they show us up to ourselves and give us a glimpse of our own ugly depths" CH1 Po( To By 1g and env ter Joseph vealth bas financial the back mother as to make mg' in uns on in her 4 appiness to her the In her life It is a then in her Se nd neither atisfaction finely plc- 1 sttvities of int toward of human or humans Al aRainst lit-The philosurent and iend make he story Pasquiers id struggle Artis hart for the we all seek failure and ne story is lean post-World lowec signifisame lack He SI )ws all ac- Myer autot whole de- up 13 is a novel those vtho ones rn back to ow its two series children Myen their char- tower their prob- time them as did pompre- yet 're to find a not Ns tithout yes- precis art at eves again the A sep human- individual sortant en- Po( I As Laur ly so the To can excuse people for selves and own ugly more scholarly use of 'their material" he has no condemnatiott for aesthetic experiments but recognizes that many of these essays may have to be scrapped "How surprised and dismayed Cezanne would be" he says "at the sight ti10 of strafige offspring which cl 's him as father!" Since Fifty" is a book to treasure also for its many examples of the author's work and because In it we draw close to a man great of heart as of talent tES Collected Poems: 1917-1939 By Edward Devhon Publishers Harper and Brothers New York City There 13 no poet writing today possessed of a purer instinct or exhibiting a finer craftsmanship than Edward Davison the best of what poetry is collected In this volume That the book is of less than 200 pages indicates the selectiveness shown in its assembling Its contents have been chosen from his earlier books "Harvest of Youth" and "The Ninth Witch" with a hitherto unpublished group added Altogether a choice collection in the best tradition of English poetry it marks the poetic integrity of the writer A native of Scotland though now an American citizen Davison was writing poems that attracted attention before he was 17 Barely 20 when the World war broke he served Britain from its first month to its close yet afterward going Alpo to Cambridge as an undergraduate he already had a book of verse to his credit He has a wide experience as editor critic lecturer and teacher Coming to the United States In 1925 his lectures on poetry and his unpublished verse brought prompt recognition Five years later he was awarded a Guggenhelm Fellowship the first accorded an Englishman which resulted in two new volumes For several years past Mr Davison has been professor of English literature at the University of Colorado and director of its Writers' Conference Mr Davison's is a quiet poetry there Is deep emotional content but it is a disciplined emotion Sensitive expression of' some experience of the spirit for the most part there are objective poems here and whether In sonnet or lyric his work reflects that which he counsels the discouraged poet: So keep your little inch of that great field Where Shelley fottirIt and died and never yield The poems here are little concerned with contemporary world crises but in the ballad "Cobbett's Ride" there is a seeming prescience of what may be in store for his England Collected 1919 oecte Poems: 1917- By Edward Davison Publishers Harper and Brothers New York City There is no poet writing toda'y possessed of a purer instinct or ex- hibiting a finer craftsmanship than Edward Davisom the best of whore Bierce's followers "spent their time writing (epitaphs in the grand manner Their concern over posterity's interest in lives with which they were never greatly enamored while living them is one of those vagaries of the artistic temperament Caring not at all for posterity "so long as the groundlings of his own day gave applause" London won the antagonism of the man who in his hatred of all constituted authority sought compensation in exercising his own After their first meeting at a Lake Temescal picnic Bierce was to the tall gangling poet "the Master" and his dictum never much later when Jack's influence was in the ascendant At that Initial meeting of London and bringing them poet dined them on truffles and vintage wines at Marchand's haunt of epicureans then London took over and they visited the Barbary Coast where Sterling was "like a tourist on a slumming trip" Late supper at Fisherman's Wharf and Jack's raw whiskey and mayonnaise that ate the sliver coating off George's spoon when he forgot it for a moment nearly finished him Pair of Strange Friends Yet the incongruous friendship persisted After his first real dip as participant not onlooker into the life in which Jack reveled the Puritan-bred poet and mystic was well on the road to sensualism: and the speed of a rake's progress sometimes appalled him neither mother nor wife could stay it Its course is traced by Mr Noel the while he notes the poet's constant Quest of an elusive ideal This intimate view from a reporter "footloose in Arcadia" with his habit of making notes of pressions and conversations at fords us new knowledge and understanding of these three giants in Bohemia of what made them what they were as well as interesting sketches of numerous others who were drawn into their orbit Joaquin Miller Edwin Markham Frank Hamilton Every page engrosses and that final section termed "The Cavalcade of Death" beginning with the suicide of a young London a "commendable us the end of these "cultists of sensation" Bierce' time writ manner posterity' which tl enamoret one of til temperar all for groundlir applause tagonism hatred IV soug cising hh After Lake Tel to the I Master" uestione Jack's in ant At London ing them them on at March then Lot: visited ti Sterling alummint Fishermt raw whit ate the spoon moment Pair of I Yet th persisted as partit the life I AUL11111 I stand! Bohen they 1 sketch were Joaqul Frank Crosse termel begInt young mendt end ot Writers of Rocky 4 Mountain West An article on "Capitalizing Upon Teachers' Out-of-School Interests" appearing in the June issue of The Nation's Schools a Chicago publication is the work of Dr Deta Nee ley of Tremonton Utah Dr Nee ley who is author of the novel "A Candidate for Hell" Is also an education research worker This is the fifth in a series of articles Dr Nee ley has published in various educational magazines of the country as the result of an investigation of the problems of rural teachers and supervisors' procedures for dealing with them This study has significance for supervisors and administrators hi rural districts as it is the first time that trained workers have made an intensive and exhaustive study of these problems Within the original 301-page report copies of which are found at the Lange Library University of California Berkeley is much other data In this' Held of Investigation with charts and tables of value- Modern Romance In Light Mood By Maryhale Woolsey Jam for Breakfast By Winifred Halstead Publishers Kinsey and Co New York City Bostonian Nun's Verse Pleases anis Since Fifty By William nothenstein Publisher The MacMillan Company New York City Continuing the reminiscences begun in "Men and Memories" in two successive volumes Sir William Rothenstein covers the years of his life "Since Fifty" the period 1922-38 Rather than autobiography his book might well be mile a record of friendship so great the array of figures he shows delightfully sketched wit her thumbnail studies or full ngth portraits Sir William is a painter of no little renown for a nu ber 'of years principal of the syal College of inci ed in the period of the book but these memoirs reveal muc less of his achievements with the brush than of his achievements hi friendship The man's great capacity for winning love and warm appreciation Is seen again and again in the letters that are so large air part of his narrative As the German Hauptmann wrote him once: "The older one becomes the less there remains in the sieve with which one sifts the sands But the gold which remains only becomes the more valuable When annoyed and depressed by the wretchedness of the epoch I think of men like you or when you write us a few lines we feel well and despite all life is worth living again" These letters too add no little to our knowledge of their distinguished writers and often with Sir William's comment or sketches enable us to envisage these late Lawrence for Instance who "liked to disappoint and to disappear" and amuse himself with odd games Lawrence told Rothenstein that at the time editors and publishers were offering large sums for anything he might write he was sending pseudonymous articles to newspapers at two pounds the article all of which were rejected He writes charmingly of country life and in Italy of neighbors and guests there are delightful glimpses of Max emerging from his cottage scrupulously dressed with stick and gloves to walk 100 yards to an Inn for Barrie caught walking up and down with a perambulator (he so loved babies) but the pram was empty! A Housman Shaw Kipling Robert Bridges George Moore Yeates "A Helen Waddell the gay 80-year-old Ranee of see taem all and how many others! It is a rich book in personalities and greatly of value and Interest also in its art commentary While Rothenstein himself declares for the artists who stand for "a more dignified richer content a By Edna Park Life in the Ark By Russell David Burge Publishers Harrison-Hilton Boo Inc New York City The Mid of Russell David Burge's novel might lead one to expect a lightly humorous story But quite the contrary It is a thoughtful story of human relationships and emotions under rather exceptional circumstances Amos Button one of the ablest criminal lawyers of the Northwest frequently mentioned for high office never received these honors because rumor said his private life would not stand publicity His home a huge old wooden house high on a hill at the town's edge was well named "The Ark" with its strange family of females So the townspeople gossiped and chuckled There was neurotic Deborah his wife member of the powerful May clan whose -father had seduced Amos' first wife For 20 years Amos had warred with the Mays Deborah in his home as hostage A May in spirit she stubbornly remained with Amos some said in retribution for her father's act After the birth of her sixth daughter Deborah sulked or primped in the seclusion of her -rooms while her home and children were neglected filthy and ragged No hired girl would attempt to cope with this houseful of "willful ungoverned small females with the voices eyes and temperaments of alley cats Finally the desperate Amos put "the fear of God and a willow switch" officially in the hands of Josephine the and Josephine did not fail hint Eight the youngest girl Judyq Deborah had a soh Eugene a mental and physical weakling who snapped snarled and broke into violent rages As the long-wanted boy mother and sisters humored him Jo becoming a slave to his whims Only Judy reallied the burden Jo Isabel was engrossed with her music Jane and Susan with their studies Dorothy with men Yet with Eugene's tragic death the inmates of The Ark were at once a family united against the forces that would tear them down "Life in the Ark" is an unusual story especially well told that hold one's interest from first page to last Licrr5 htHearted Yarn of Range Rodeo Han on Horseback By Bower Publishers Little Brown and Co Boston While hardly more than one gun Is fired in this breezy western yarn Ikl Bower's West being of this modern account of Andy Green's adventures does not lack excitement Andy's own pulse flutters considerably whenever that tall lady-pilgrim Trudy is In the vicinity It was all Trudy's slighting comment' anent cowboys being just "farm hands on horseback" all looking alike to her that roused Andy's dander leading him to enlarge his repute as a teller of tall tales sending his boss's guests on a wild expedition after the ruins of a Spanish castle built entirely in his imagination or at a fool poet's prompting That the party actually made an archaeological discovery didn't make them feel kindly toward Andy Anyway Andy thereafter finds himself more at home at the old FlyingU though hi a propensity for yarning made him target of that one bringing another sad encounter with Trudy This cow waddy'erexploits at a I rodeo where Laramie Girl hands him a stunner and is let in on the secret of his wild bronco's twin lead to the smoothing out of his perplexities In Anthologies Jean Tripp a young Missourian now resident in Salt Lake City at 1482 Sixth East street Is to be found in the "Caravan of Verse" an anthology issued by the Caravan Publishing Co of New York Her contribution was titled "Dusk" She is also to be represented In the Worlds Fair Anthology with 'Rendezvous" these being her first appearances in national publications Stan Are Shining By Sister Rita Agnes rublisher The Christopher Publishing House Boston With this slim volume of verse SisterRita Agnes adds her name to the long list of Catholic writers Several of the poems in this group have appeared previously in poetry magazines Of delicate charm her verses reveal an original talent For the most they are reflective of her faith but a quite wide range of thought is shown and many of them are touched with a whimsical humor To the quaint fancy that often moves her: she speaks: "Had I a husband I would be bone of his bone But you are blood of thy blood Neither keys Can keep out You ride I wheels of my bei Mediocre Poetry Selected Poems By Sister Benediction Publhher Exposition Press New York City of the nearly 150 verses collected Jere but few engage the attention It would seem that a facility for rhyme has been dangerous for the Writer and in theme and expression her verses are trite and commonplace Unlike most of the Catholic writers Sister Benediction deals but seldom with religious subjects Me Selec By 1 Ezp oft here It wo rhytm write lion monp Catho tion subje4 condit a chi Georg Pu Utz of Po Ch contri 11 Eng 111 buylm literal suspet cause of pul much attent Poll 10 pol tingui May of ot Issues the lo tura just I No I Amer forme forced an a Arsier were poem they A that of 'pu the al cry what this the ti "yet are be Con Eng111 expre Unite consid the I branc world Eurol suits' have we hl many the accep' to Pr Eurel is ove Marl In of a Stoke Lettel would Now If tho posit condit a dil Georg the al cry what this the ti "yet are be Con Eng111 expre Unita comae the I branc world Eurol suits' have we- hl many the accep to Pr Eurer Is ove Marl 4 in of a Stoke Lettel would Now If th poet Guggenheim Awards Two poets Demore Schwartz of Cambridge Mass and Lloyd Frankenberg Mew York City have been recipients of Guggenheim Foundation fellowships Mixed Identities Base Intrigue Dangerous Young Man By George Worts Publish-ors Kinsey and Co Inc New York City Like another Lochinvar Peter Banyard came out of the Nevada mining town where Dad had struck it conquer a girl Well his original intention was to knock down the ears of New York on the plane he saw the beautiful Franziska who scorned his friendly overtures Yet she seemed to know unpleasantly It was a riddle Peter had to he does with the aid of Oliver the perfect gentleman's gentleman Peter has more to puzzle Shim when he crashes Jane Griffin's deb party with that amazing young woman's connivance where he observes peculiar conduct on ziska's part anVolis a blackm ailing schenie -By the time he has saved Roger Van Tyle from machine-gun might have been meant for has learned about Charles Dunkin But what's he going to do about it? It's all light-heatted skullduggery but flimsy of plot and not very credible Stimulating as a new swing tune "Jam for Breakfast" is content to be entertaining and to leave serious problems to other pages It is a carefree story for a carefree after-noon's reading Eliza James newly disillusioned when Andrew West successful young publisher and latest heart-throb proposed not marriage but an unconventional adventure in Normandy ponders how to run completely away from Andrew's charms and his incredible confidence as to her ultimate surrender At this moment comes Sue Nicholas" with 'an two days later Eliza becomes the sixth memberof Sue's delightfully disorderly holisehold In Leaping others being besides Sue her husband Bill his father the Negro maid Beautiful Faith a disciple of Father Divine and Bill's friend Joe Turner What with the men's absorption in Bill's chicken farming and antique furniture hobby and Joe's avowed allergy towards marriage and family life the Nicholas home appears an ideal haven for a troubled young woman concerning her tendency to fall in and out of love She and Joe come at once to a "rational" understanding and thereupon proceed to behave most irrationally until the inevitable and perfectly rational denouement The varied Idiosyncrasies of Leaping Hollow neighbors play over the pages with refreshing gayety particularly Harvey Munn "drowning in a sea of leisure" whose daughter Mary desperately strives to avoid a like fate: or Gertrude Van der Bloom diligent In the Interests of restoring Leaping Hollow's original name of Woompawocknock Nor is an occasional "cadenza of catastrophe" allowed to dutterthe sparkling sequencei not even the untimely appearance of West Light romance as spice for summer "Jam for Breakfast" 2 I 1 1 i I 0 i 1 1 4 gale Elia la 0 i i i 4 I ill I tiAll THIS WEEK AT 1 CMI 1 I Summer Travel Ileadlluers National Parks of the Northwest $150 ktartelle Trager we American Vacations lArry $225 Nixon BOOK REVIEW MON 2 Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" by Carson McCullers will be reviewed by ConstanceOsmond Bunnell A story of friendship between four lonely people tree once- four New Books Added At Public Library The following books will 43e added to the public library Monday: Bleu Halmos Pictures in Adult Educe Hon Road to Learning Administration Motion of the American Dietetic Food Serw Ice Recipes Alton and Off to Col lege in MY Job and Steel Today Childhood of Civiltzation Wilde and the Yellow Nineties of a Biologist Meditations in Wall Street of London Fifties in the Reich Rickett and Hood Do Some Gilbert and Sullivan Off Island Contribution to lOt entail Hon Ballads This Day of ths Growth of the Steam Eluting of the of Theodora Byzantium as a Profusion Metals and Gems or gss- cation 'this' In History and Modern Lite to War Yale Clinic of Child ply Tears of Life lirivitek Books nmsleme hours d'Are Bleiles Bide of Glory 4 Pawner Monday of Venteance as Carol Bell COMM l'Irighttn 0 Kyo Plus the KM of the World Thomas Beer Life Material is being collected for a biography -of Thomas Beer who died in April and request is made by his mother Mn Martha A A Beer' who is also his executrix that anyone holding material of any letters recollections or any data relating to the author br his communicate with her at 133 West llth street New York The Arkansas $150 Clyde Davis Capitals of the World Marguerite $2" Vance i -I ARTHUR GAETH TUESDAY 2 Amateur's Butting In Solves Riddle Mr Sandeman Loses His Life By Eugene Healy Publisher Beery Holt Co New York City Yes "Mr Sandeman loses his life" and Paul Craine unorthodolt crime investigator having had a difference with him on the very night of the fatal deed becomes Involved in the complications ensuing But as a matter of fact 'one hardlyieeltany concern at the loss of the obnoxious Sandeman and young Mr Craine appears a "buttinsky" who richly deserves what befalls him In this affair of the difficulty at the 111-odored Bridge Tavern and the crime that followed at the swanky Heights Towers one's sympathies are definitely with the tong-suffering Detective Rocheleau and we would have cheered had he smacked the young man down However though when Sandeman's life is snuffed out there are dwell Recollections Sir Hugh Walpole's latest work "Roman Fountain" (Doubleday Doran) described as the "recollection In tranquillity" of the author's Vislt te-Rorne1 yearqago toyer the Installation of Pope Plus XII Is a summing up of Walpole's career though not a formal autobiography 4v The Hudson $a150 Carl Carmer Alaska" Holiday Barrett 11100 California $50 Aubrey DrtiryTbe Vacation Guide Robert EL $2" 3enjamin "The invasion of Great Britain" Hear -this absorbing end timely subiect thoroughly arc1 impartially discussed by Mr Gaeth Come early AUDITORIUM-SECOND FLOOR in" end Biography Authorized Vernon Hampton president of the Edwin Markham Memorial association was given authorization by the poet his friend and neighbor before his death to write his biography Mr Hampton la now preparing his manuscript and is seeking letters and anecdotes concerning the bard for Inclusion in the book His address is 92 Waters avenue Westerleigh Staten Island tIslew Yotic SEE- OUR GIFTS AND GREETING CARDS FOR EVERY 'OCCASION Hoo Ic Delayed Owing to the uncertainties of the International situation "The Struggle for Colonies" Hendrik de Leeuw's work on the Harrison-Hilton list has been indefinitely engin the apartmea house not to mention a lady visitor and the partners in the gambling house for which he had been "front" with reason to itish his death evidence Is lacking to connect' anyone ivith it and it is Paul's "hunch" that leads to the surprise solution ZCLII i 1 1 1t 1 t4 4 4 Os I '4' 4 Os 1 i 4 -1 1 4 i 1 4 Joh111Ate1tonk.

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About The Salt Lake Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,964,073
Years Available:
1871-2004