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Fort Worth Star-Telegram from Fort Worth, Texas • 17

Location:
Fort Worth, Texas
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17
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a I See 1' FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM 1 BOOKS IN(Dm 1300AEN Sunday July 4 1948 The Techniquel TRIBUTE TO PROGRESS Of Handling Coleman County Siamp Employes Tn Ilp Small hut IntPrPst Coleman County Siamp To Be Small but TALK FROM TEXAS TOWNS By Wayne Sellers Show Interesting i r' fi f-' I'i -4( if 4 i '77' ''1-: Battle of Gettysburg Given New Homefolksy Treatment En go ANNE ITi cl 4-ts-H-A ttriN: P-: 242s $4: Ur1 -r2' cAtiotoo- kt I 41zie)AC4C I Irz 4-'' I 114 44 i i 4it I '7 4 4 4 ''s $)A I 441 THE MANAGEMENT OF MEN by Itonald Shuman: The University of Oklahoma Press Norman $3 FATHER MURPHY ed at Lafayette aid New Iberia La on AM-5 Special cachet will be provided for the two points and the usual treatment of philatelic covers authorized First flight covers sent to the postmasters of the towns mentioned should be accompanied by a letter asking that the covers be held for the first flight and for application of the cachet At the request of collectors the covers will be sent to a terminal or Junction point for back stamping Stamp Calendar July 19 Women's Rights 3- cent Centennial commemorative purple first day of sale Seneca Falls Philatelic Potpourri Paul Gross Box 652 New Kensington Pa will obtain the following naval cancellations: USS Floyd Bay Fort Marion McKean Cadmus Helena Union Turner Perkins Rogers and Winston Send any number of prepaid covers plus 1-cent each forwarding fee Deadline is Aug 10 Larry Allen Associated Press correspondent in Warsaw reports that Poland again will issue gummed and perforated stamps The Polish government has recovered a machine in Vienna which the Germans carted off during the war The Spiritual Redemption Of a Woman GETTYSBURG edited by Earl Schneck Miers and Richard A Brown The Rutgers University Press New Brunswick 350 Sallie Robbins Broadhead had just put her bread in the pans when the cannon roared Young Billy Bayly all aglow over a real war in his front yard took time to regret the loss of eight large stall-fed steers from his father's barn General Meade's charger frightened to frenzy by a whining cannon shot bolted from the field Col William Colvin Oates of the 15th Alabama having captured Great Round Top realized he held the key to the whole battle but with no general officer present he had to follow orders The formal story of the Battle of Gettysburg occupies many large and formidable tomes In fact the decisive battle of the Civil War is known in almost every language of the world As a classic of strategy and tactics it is studied and re-studied in every military school New Approach to Story But Editors Miers and Brown have found a new and exciting approach to the well-worn story Disdaining official accounts and military significance they present the story through the senses of the participants And in many respects the impressions of Housewife Broadhead and Pvt Theodore Gerrish of the 20th Maine i 4--- i iii-: A A 4K--- 7: Predicting the suicide of private enterprise unless management learns some of the indispensable rules for industrial and business success Ronald Shuman in this book tells some of the needed techniques to which many managers of private enterprise today are strangers Shuman was a general staff officer in World War IL He now is chairman of the department of business management in the University of Oklahoma His work in both positions convinced him of the need for this book on a subject which is of vital importance to business and industry but which largely has been neglected by authors and publishers 1 Shuman is the author of "The Petroleum Industry" book that has served a good purpose especially in the Southwest Shuman says that the business civilization of the United States is on the defensive this in spite of the fact that in the United States the private enterprise system of economics has built regardless of its errors and shortcomings the greatest productive order men ever have known lie calls attention to the fact that a generation ago there were only a few persons on the "lunatic fringe" who doubted that private enterprise was the only conceivable way of life whereas today their number is legion And that number is growing fast So he would have business management study the lessons of history and apply those lessons to the end that labor and management may walk and work together both fully cognizant of their responsibilities to each other and to the American public UPSHUR VINCENT one time the most publicized dog in the country Fa's pet of the late President Roosevelt performs for his master and his rations Advertising Pays Further proof that advertising pays is offered by John Rutherford's Franklin Favorite In a page advertisement last week Rutherford announced to the world that a good rain was wanted Like other newspapers the influence of the Favorite is felt over a wide area and probably the people from Del Rio -3 Brownsville along the Rio Grande have been wishing that Editor Rutherford had taken only half a page instead of a full page to advertise for rain Is This Nice? 4 Columnist Maud Green writing in the Winkler County News of Kermit says the best thing about a trip to Fort Worth (which she characterizes as "that hot sticky cotton-picking 'back east' is getting back home to Kermit where 106 temperatures are cooler than readings of 94 in that "fur off' land Can Ile Be Drafted? Editor Afton Richards of the Aspermont Star says he was riding down the road in company with his 10-year-old daughter and several miles had been traveled without either saying anything when out of the blue sky his daughter asked: "Daddy how old are you 34?" After an affirmative answer Richards said his daughter replied: "Just think in another year you will be old enough to be president!" All of which caused Editor Richards to observe that he will just have to sit around and twiddle his thumbs for the next year Topical Story Ernest Joiner in the Rails Banner tells the story of the surgeon engineer and politician who were arguing about whose profession was the oldest "The first woman was made from Adam's rib" maintained the surgeon "and that was surely a surgical operation" "But before that" insisted the engineer "order was made out of chaos and that was an engineering job" The politician pulled out his cigar "And who do you think gentlemen" he demanded "created the chaos first?" What No Beading Dogs? IL Weldon Owens of the Teague Chronicle has pointed out in his newspaper that the Chronicle has signed a contract to publish the Texas Fox Wolf Hunters News Owens points out that there are 6500 packs of hunting hounds in Texas but hastens to add that the publication is printed for the owners Regardless of Election Dog' 11 Be in White House BY JOHN SPARKS JR Visitors at the first stamp exhibit of the Coleman County Stamp Club at the Coleman Hotel July 10 need not expect a large show or to see any of the rare stamps which might be displayed by one of the state's larger clubs The exhibit however will be of philatelic interest and will be the effort of the club at Coleman to inform the public of the many phases of stamp collecting and to demonstrate the fun which club members get from the hobby The exhibit also will be a tribute to the progressiveness of the Coleman County club It is to be hoped that other clubs in Texas will be inspired by the enterprise of the Coleman County club and will also hold annual exhibits Small clubs too often feel that because they can not put on a display of 100 to 150 frames of stamps including rarities elaborately prepared exhibits and specialized exhibits that no show should be attempted The large stamp clubs have learned that an exhibit of brightly colored specimens of some small nation often attract more attention than a display of rare stamps This is because many spectators are not versed in philatelic lore but are attracted by a pleasingly presented display even if the stamps have a total value of no more than $10 This type of noncollector interest detracts neither from the quality of rare philatelic display nor from the exhibit as a whole Any interest shown by the non-collecting public adds to the hobby to tbat extent The Coleman County club has 15 members and will present 12 frames of stamps The frames will be chiefly of stamps but there will be an exhibit of Greek stamps and some first-day covers Starnes Jr Abilene has been tentatively named one of the judges Collectors from the West Central Texas counties are urged if possible to attend the Coleman exhibit and give stamp collecting in the area a boost Collectors who wish to attend the banquet Saturday night at the Coleman Hotel should get in touch with Miss Mary Woodward at Santa Anna and make reservations New Stamp Postmaster General Donaldson has announced the authorization of a special commemorative postage stamp honoring the Youth of America Further details relative to the denomination size date and place of first-day sale together with full description of the stamp will be made public later by the Postoffice Department New First Flight The Postoffice Department announces that on or about July 15 Airpost service will be inaugurat are more exciting than field orders and the decisions of generals At the same time the tale is fully and ingeniously told It opens with an account of the excitement of Pennsylvania's rural folks at reports of possible invasion and the feelings of John Cooley a member of General Pickett's ill-fated division as he saw Robert Lee pass their column on the move north Eye on Shoe Store The editors interrupt their eyewitnesses now and then to fill in background Gen Henry Heath of the South anxious to capture a store of shoes at Gettysburg pushed out along the Cashtown Road The advance guard of General Reynolds' Federals was encountered at Willoughby's Run and while no one realized it at the time Gettysburg had been selected as the ground for the warts decisive battle Southern Gen James Archer captured by the men of West Point Classmate Doubleday said dryly: "I am not glad to see you by a sight!" The first day's fighting at Oak Hill Barlow Knoll and along Steven's Run is told by private general and civilian During the night Mrs Broadhead watched the "Johnnies" in the town itself but felt sure "our brave men can hold the heights to the south" The bitter second day's fighting delayed for disputed reasons until late in the afternoon centered around the famed Round Tops Devil's Den the Peach Orchard and Wheat Field The accounts in here are sometimes as disjointed and frenzied as the fictional "Red Badge of Courage" and point up the genius of Stephen Crane Pickett's Charge The third day of course centers around the story of Pickett's charge on the Federal center John Dooley fell shot through the hips only 30 paces from the Union guns Union Officer Frank Haskell could hardly believe his eyes as the Confederates came on and on through that storm of shot and shell Later General Pickett poured out his story of agony in a letter to his sweetheart signing it "Your sorrowing Cornelia IIancock was the first nurse to reach the field She reported the spirit of the Federals so high they asked: "What is an arm or leg to whipping Lee out of Penn?" Haskell slightly wounded visited the ground again on July 6 He concluded: "A full account of the battle as it was will never can never be made It is not possible" Editors Miers and Brown while making no claims have come pretty close to telling the tale from the viewpoint of those who took left any evidence at MELTON i George Eliot Depicted Anew MADEMOISELLE LAVALLIERE by Edward Murphy Doubleday Inc New York $3 Eugene Feneglio had about as lowly a beginning as a child could have but she scaled the heights to become one of the most acclaimed actresses in France under the name of Eve Lavalliere At the peak of her career she forsook the stage for a religious life wherein she played her greatest role and under her own name Father Murphy has told the story of Lavalliere clearly and well including all the glamour of the theater against a background of Toulon Paris and Perpignan with the "Divine Sarah" herself playing a small role However the purpose of the novel is not to present a picture of the French theater at the turn of the century up to the time of the First World War but rather to show the spiritual redemption of a woman who having made a great contribution in one field of endeavor and on her own terms went on to make an even greater contribution in a field adjudged by most to be far removed from the theater There are only a few characters in "Mademoiselle Lavalliere" who stand out or who are developed beyond their immediate uses in the telling of the superficial part of the story The exceptions are Jeanne the illegitimate daughter of Lavalliere Leona companion of Lavalliere in her latter phase Pere Chasteigner her spiritual guide and finally Fernand Samuel her director during her most brilliant years on the stage and the father of her daughter These figures are sufficiently developed to bring life to the pages of the novel but Father Mutphy's attention never wavers for more than a moment from Eve's spiritual development "Mademoiselle La alli er should please readers who are looking for a novel with a definite feeling of spiritual uplift nicely spiced with a soupcon of worldliness and a dash of Paris before the wars---F PAUL ROSSETTER READERS' NOTES John Tyler William Henry Harrison and Andrew Jackson all were dog lovers and had pets at the White House As becomes Southern gentlemen which they all were they favored sporting breeds such as foxhounds coonhounds spaniels and retrievers Monroe's Daughter Had Pet James Monroe whose daughter Maria was the first child to live in the White House had a spaniel for a pet Thomas Jefferson and James Madison as true Virginians were fanciers of hounds although both had setters and spaniels at various times None of the presidents loved dogs more than Washington As a country gentleman Washington had a particular love for foxhounds and when Larayette sent him seven French foxhounds as a gift Washington was delighted and commented most knowingly about their good points in his diary comparing them with the type then being bred in Virginia His dogs apparently were more than just a source of sport for he is pictured with them at Mount Vernon and they evidently were members of the household Julian Messner Inc have four outstanding fiction titles scheduled for late summer and early fall Shining Mountains" by Dale Van Every billed i as "a love story with the most startling twist in years" due Sept 10 "Something Gleamed" by Theda Kenyon an exciting romance laid in New York in revolutionary war days Sept 15 Stephen Longstreet's "The Crystal Girl" described as the portrait of a woman of the world "etched in acid and Chanel No 5" Oct 19 and Frances Parkington Keyes' "Dinner at Antoine's" Nov 8 William Pene du Bois is winner of the Newberry Medal for 1948 with his "The Twenty-One Balloons" (Viking) a delightful tale for children and brilliantly illustrated GEORGE ELIOT: Her Life and Books by Gerald Bullett Yale University Press New Haven $375 Mindomor A novelist himself Cambridge-educated Gerald Bullett in his recent book "George Eliot: Her Life and Books" attempts (with how much success remains to be seen) to revive public interest In the Eliot novels "The time has come" says the author "when her life and work can at least be usefully reconsidered" Very skillfully though briefly the background of George Eliot's life and times is unfolded Quotations from her own letters and journals as well as those of friends and acquaintances give depth and color to a personality too often presented as a lay figure Bullett writes with sympathetic discernment of Marian Evans' religious revolt her education her friends and her embarkation on a journalistic career in London He clarifies amiably her "marriage" with George Henry Lewes and her subsequent emergence as a novelist and her adoption of the name by which she became better known than by her own Her necessity of being all in all to some one person and her need of having some devoted admiring person on whom to lean are demonstrated time and again from her letters The author practically ignores perhaps because there is so little to tell her marriage to Cross 21 years her junior 'whose veneration for her colored his biography of her and caused him to omit passages in her letters and even letters themselves that might have clouded however slightly her reputation as a moralist despite her unorthodox union with George Henry Lewes So stimulating is Mr Bullett's criticism of George Eliot's novels that the desire to reread them probably will strike most of the readers of this new ARTEMISIA BRYSON Hors Is a Talking Dog Even though the hunting hounds around Teague can't read one in Hereford did talk accorling to Hereford telephone oper tors the Hereford Brand declares In response to a flashing light on the switchboard the surprised operator heard in answer to her "number please?" only an excited barking Dispatched to find out what was up the troubleshooter for the telephone company discovered a dog locked in a home had succeeded in pulling the telephone receiver off the hook and was telling the telephone company his troubles Cleburne Teacher to Instruct in England CLEBURNE July 3 Miss Pauline Tidwell of Gran-bury teacher of social studies in the junior high school here will sail from New York for Great Britain on July 24 for an assignment as an exchange teacher She will devote a year to teaching in Monmouth England Miss Nancy Whitcombe of North Newport Monmouth will take her place in the Cleburne school Rene Kuhn Does Character Novel Wives of Scientists Write Of Travels With Husbands THROW ME A BONE by Eleanor Lothrop Whittlesey House New York $3 NEW SONG IN A STRANGE LAND by Esther Warner Houghton Mifflin Co Boston $350 BY HUGH COWDIN No matter who the nation's voters select to reside in the White House during the next presidential term there will be dogs as members of the nation's No 1 household If the Trumans go back for another four years there will be two cocker spaniels Mike Miss Margaret Truman's personal pet and Feller a dog presented by Mrs Peter Marsden to President Truman at Christmas 1947 If the Tom Deweys go to Washington the White House kennels may have to be enlarged for the New York governor has kept a pair of Great Danes for several years A dog as a pet in the executive mansion is not anything new for 23 of the 33 presidents have had dogs Perhaps none have achieved the fame of Fa la the Scotty that was the almost constant companion of President Franklin Roosevelt It is said he often slept in the president's bedroom and was present at many world-important conferences and meetings He was the subject of many columns of news and pictures in the nation's newspapers and particularly when he was ejected from the president's third inauguration Hoover Owned Several President Herbert Hoover was no one-dog man for he owned at various times while president German shepherds a collie an Irish wolfhound and an English setter The particular favorite of the family though was a Norwegian elkhound called Weejie that made the news columns by presenting the president with a litter of puppies When the Coolidges followed the Hardings into the White House they received a half-brother of President Harding's famous Airedale Laddie Boy The dog was named Laddie Buck but because it created so much confusion with the former White House pet Mrs Coolidge changed the dog's name to Paul Pry The Coolidges also had a white collie and a chow while in the executive mansion Laddie Boy President Harding's beloved pet probably the most publicized canine resident at the White House until the time of Falat was not the first Airedale pet of a president for Woodrow Wilson had an Airedale named Davie The White House was full of dogs during the administration of Theodore Roosevelt With six extra active children in the house it was inevitable that dogs would clutter up the place There was a bull terrier a rat terrier and several dogs that could only be classified as mongrels The best known of the family pets was Rollo a St Bernard The president a great hunter and sportsman loved the sporting and hound breeds Grant Not Particular Grover Cleveland another hunter and fisherman brought several dogs to the White House during his two terms His favorite breeds were beagles spaniels and bird dogs Ulysses Grant had an all-embracing love for dogs and it made little difference what the dog's antecedents were Abraham Lincoln's great humanitarianism overflowed into the animal world and there are two recorded instances where he befriended stricken dogs Once he found an injured dog in the woods and took it home and nursed it back to health Then there is the story of les rescue of a dog marooned on an ice floe His love of clogs is recorded in the statue called "The Hoosier Youth" by Paul Manship at Fort Wayne Ind As president Lincoln kept dogs and they often were the subject of conversation with visitors to the White House Zachary Taylor James Polk kusy VI IL I VaL VC VI a kaug SIM' rooned on an ice floe His love of clogs is recorded in the statue call- ed The Hoosier Youth" by Paul Manship at Fort Wayne Ind As president Lincoln kept dogs and they often were the subject of conversation with visitors to the White House Zachary Taylor James Polk CHARLESGORENiONBRID GE Verse Collection Has Gay Fanciful Items SONGS AND VERSES by Elizabeth Goudge Coward-McCann New York $250 Elizabeth Goudge author of "Pilgrim's Inn" and "Green Dolphin Street" collects in this volume some of the original verse which has appeared in her earlier books There are pieces reprinted from "The Little White Horse" "The Middle Window" "A Pedler's Pack" and others Most of them are gay and fanciful lyrics but a few have a deep spiritual value Their structure is disarmingly simple and they are faintly reminiscent of the poetry which Hardy wrote Students of contemporary literature will enjoy these poems from a more or less technical standpoint as a musician might enjoy a Bach prelude and fugue Casual readers likewise will en joy them for they possess motion sound color sentiment and humor in addition to technical perfection Children will love them for their lilting cadences and the stories they suggest vulnerable Both sides deals fsiL 44 4 7 414 1 4 7 ii ir1 l': CORNELIA by Rene Kuhn Random House New York $275 In "Cornelia" Miss Kuhn pictures the problems of a clever successful career woman whose marriage ends in divorce leaving her with two children a boy and a girl to rear She sees to it that they are properly fed housed the surface obligations are fulfilled but she's too absorbed in business and pleasure to give them the companionship they need Thus through the years they come to rely more and more upon each other until one day this arrogant self-contained woman awakens to find she is utterly alone It's a new sensation and most devastating In her frantic attempts to escape from boredom and frustration the youngsters become emotionally involved and only the timely reappearance of their father straightens them out Miss Kuhn's previous novel "34 Charlton" won the Hopwood award and her portrait of "Cornelia" is bitingly South Iture this hand provided a pitfall to many of the players who held it In all cases a club was opened whether North or South was declarer This was a fortunate break inasmuch as a spade opening would have made life a complicated affair for declarer When the hand was played at no trump the diamonds were tested first When it was learned that 'East held a singleton in that suit declarer took it for granted that if hearts failed to break the length would be with East and a finesse against the queen was therefore planned With this in view the king of hearts was cashed Then and there the contract went up in smoke West could not be pre-Pass vented from taking two heart tricks JvA) ELEANOR LOTHROP Picasso Famed Erratic Artist Seen Through Secretary's Eyes Margaret Baptists To Dedicate Church I Any Book Published Is Available Through The Fairs Book Shop 9 Here are two books written by wivers of scientists whose jobs took them to the remote places of the earth "Throw Me a Bone" is a humorous account of a tenderfoot bride's adventures with her husband in the wilds of Central and South America on a combination archaeological "dig" and honeymoon It was written in response to the exclamations of her friends back home that "It must be wonderful to be married to a famous archaeologist' and "Isn't your life thrilling?" The author does not leave a doubt as to the thrills and along with a chuckle every paragraph or two is some interesting information on how an archaeologist goes about his business "New Song in a Strange Land" is written in a different key Esther Warner visits Liberia because her husband a boatanist for Firestone takes a two-year assignment to the company's Liberian rubber plantations She is an artist in her own right however and her purpose in accompanying her husband is to study native art and her interest in the jungle people stems from an artist's desire to observe them in their native setting Her genuine interest in these people and their arts wins their confidence and she is able to penetrate their hidden villages and learn a great deal of their customs philosophy and history Mrs Warner's story is more seriously pitched than Mrs Lothrop's but so well written and so richly colored that it reads quite as easily as the lighter "Throw Me a Bone" Both books will prove acceptable additions to the armchair traveler's library ANN MAE THOMPSON tory Mrs Warner's story is more se- nously pitched than Mrs Loth- rop's but so well written and so richly colored that it reads quite as easily as the lighter "Throw Me a Bone" Both books will prove acceptable additions to the arm- chair traveler's library ANN MAE THOMPSON NORTH 6 5 9 4 0 A 9 5 3 4 A 4 WEST EAST 10 4 9 8 7 2 10 7 3 5 8 4 02 4987 4a 10 6 5 3 SOUTH 46 A 3 A 8 6 2 10 7 6 2 The bidding: South West North East 1 heart Pass 2 diamonds Pass 3 diamonds Pass 3 hearts Pass 3 spades Pass 4 clubs Pass 6 hearts Pass Pass Pass The safety play so frequently featured in this department does not enjoy the same degree of popularity with tournament players that it does with those who aim for the negotiable stuff The enterprising trouper will sometimes risk the comforts of the hearth-side in answering the call of greed even where only a few additional points are involved As witness this hand from a recent tournament The bidding is given as it occurred at most of the 15 tables that made up the final round At some tables the final contract was six no trump which was reached by those who wanted the last drop in the day of the additional 10 points that the higher ranking contract yields This is no consideration at all at rubber bridge but in tournament play where each deal represents a separate match the 10 points may prove decisive Simple though it is in struc 2 53 East Pass uy III0ZU Vie AW vvotaaLLa as "1 in the day of the additional 10 points that the higher ranking contract yields This is no con- sideration at all at rubber bridge but in tournament play where each deal represents a separate match the 10 points may prove de- cisive Simple though it is in I 1 Ali the now Rooks I i while they're newt THE FAIR'S i i Lending Library i I i MARGARET July 3 (Sp1)-- The recently completed Baptist church here will be dedicated Sunday Dinner will be served at the church Rev George Smith pastor announced that the following former pastors or evangelists at the church here will be present: Rev John Williams of Hillcrest Baptist Church Wichita Falls Rev Bradford of Abilene Rev John Stout of First Baptist Church Hagerman and Bev Baggett First Baptist Church Ryan Okla Declarer should not concentrate on the idea of trying to make all 13 tricks The safety of a slam contract is the prime consideration and a method of play should be sought which insures the winning of four heart tricks This could have been done by the simple device of playing the ace of hearts first Then the deuce is led toward the North hand If West follows with a low card the nine is played If it should lose to the 10 declarer's troubles are over since the queen must drop next time If West inserts the 10 the trick is won with the king and one trick given up to the queen If West shows out at trick two that trick is won with the king and a low heart lead toward the jack holds the enemy to one trick in that suit It is to be observed that In following the preferred line of play declarer does not abandon all hope of making seven which will still be the doubleton queen of hearts low heart lead toward tri holds the enemy to one trick in jack that suit It is to be observed that In following the preferred line of play declarer does not abandon all hope of making seven which will still be the doubleton queen hearts mother his cult of love says Sabartes The author recalls Pleasso in his very first garret rented by his father He tells of friends who "hung" some of his sketches (he was always surrounded by stacks of them) on the walls of a cafe for his first exhibition and to attract attention to him Later Picasso didn't need the help of friends to gain attention and Sabartes recounts the saga of his artistic success from the time he was painting in his "blue period" style in a Montmartre studio in Paris until 1936 when Sabartes became his secretary and on to the German occupation when Picasso was in Paris and Royan In fact there is such a jumping about from Spain to France and from the cities therein that the reader is apt to find himself exhausted at the book's close The volume was translated from the Spanish by Angel NEDRA JENKINS the German occupation when Picasso was in i Paris and Royan In fact there such a jumping about from Spain to France and from the cities therein that the reader is apt to find himself ex- hausted at the book's close The volume was translated from the Spanish by Angel Flores-- NEDRA JENKINS PICASSO: AN INTIMATE PORTRAIT by Jaime Sabartes Prentice-Hall Inc New York $5 Jaime Sabartes in this his fourth work about Picasso uses the eight portraits the famous and erratic artist did of him as the central theme for a narrative of recollections Sabartes who first met Picasso in Barcelona in 1899 when the latter was 18 begins his account with a brief summary of the artist's early life and the influences which shaped his career In Malaga where Picasso was born his father had been a teacher of drawing in the Esciiela de Artes Oficios de San Telmo From there the family moved to Corunna and then to Barcelona From his father he inherited his taste for painting from his maternal grandmother an extravagant imagination and from his laga where Picasso was born his father had been a teacher of drawing in the Escuela de Artes Oficios de San Telmo From there the family moved to Co- runna and then to Barcelona From his father he inherited his taste for painting from his ma- ternal grandmother an extrava- gant imagination and from his Academy Professor BRYAN July 3 Military Academy has been notilied by 4th Army Headquarters at San Antonio that Lt Col Charles Urban has been to duty as professor of rilitary science and tactics here 4 rt IL 1 I a day Academy Professor 'I i BRYAN July 3 (SO) --Allen 4 th Military Academy has been noti omo oo 1 1 Ponny-A -Da Librar I fled by 4th Army Headquarters I at San Antonio that Lt Col Th FY I a i oo ozzon no I Charles Urban has been as- i signed to duty as professor of military science and tactics here struc-of I.

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Pages Available:
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