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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 7
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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 7

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Saturday, June 10, 1950 THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Page 7 MAGAZINES BY MILDRED MILLER. EV Truman's "Fair'' Deal: The current LOOK shows how the Presi the current SATURDAY EVEN. ING POST, she frowng upon the conventional counsel of telling those who come in contact with the disabled to pretend the disabled are Edited by Frederick Yeiser Recent Fiction Essentially A Collector's Manual 'Frmkars EHC dent's Fair Deal, in full operation, would add about 70 per cent to the load of taxes the average person hands over to the Federal Govern ment. This has been calculated to mean that a family of three with an income of $3,000 a year would have to pay the Federal Government $863.17 Instead of the present $510.75. A family of four earning $5,000 would have to turn over $1,510.04, as against the $894.05 It pays at present.

Estimates of cost of Truman's program are based on a survey made by a member of the President' own party, Sen. John McClellan, Democrat from Arkansas and Chairman of the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Department. The total tax-take (Including state, country and mu nicipal) from thhe American people then would be about 40 cents from every dollar they earn. How To Make Up Your Mind: William J. Rellly gays in the July PAOEANT that you can learn to make decisions quickly that YOU can be the boss in your business and even In your home.

Every decision, large or small, is Important to your peace of mind, if not to your life, he argues. He gives three simple rules to enable you to get more done, Improve your disposition, protect your nerves, aid your digestion, sleep better at night and just plain get more fun out of life. In the same issue, Herbert C. Rosenthal gets to the bottom of The Great American Upset Stom ach." He discusses causes and treatment of various stomach disorders. How To Wear A Wheelchair: Dorothy Cottrell, who hag been un able to walk since she wa five, blasts busybodleg who tell how to treat the handicapped.

Writing in An Authoritative Biography THE FIGHTING TRAPPER, KIT CARSON TO THE RESCUE. A typical cover of one of the old-fashioned dime novels of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, which could be "read with satisfaction by every right-minded person-i-old and young alike." Some Of The THE LEGACY. By Nevil Shute. Morrow. $3.

Is there a more facile pen in England today than the one that, in 10 years, has given us seven novels, including "Ordeal," "Pied Pipe "Pastoral" and "No And is not the sheer telling of a tale one of the things so much lacking in many contemporary writers? Nevll Shute, JN. tali 111), as hlg host of followers knows, deals with adventure, not with writings as a matter of style. Here he is telling the story of a simple, modest, but brave and highly resourceful Eng lish girl, Jean Paget, and the strange way in which she and her destined man found one another and how they hewed out their future. Caught in Malaya by the Jap anese advance, Jean Paget's is a story of rare heroism (modeled on fact) and it is matched by that of Joe Harman, whom the Japs cruci fied on a tree because he stole a chicken and gave it to the hapless women who were prisoners of the Japanese. Told with fine British understatement, these chapters are suspenseful and exciting In the ex treme.

The rest of the novel moves to Queensland, Australia, the country along the Gulf of Carpentaria, well called the "out-back" country, witn its vast terrain of few men, fewer women, many cattle, and hot cli mate. What Jean does with an apparently hopeless village can be read and appreciated, and, while reading, many, fascinating facts about these parts of Australia arc made known. The book is recommended to all in search of diversion, entertainment, and adventure. Frederick W. Stix.

DEEPWOOD. By Blanche Chenery Perrln. Macmlllan. $2.75. The town of Shelby, had been slumbering peacefully for years until the day Janle Oliver visited Williamsburg.

When she saw that beautiful work of restoration, her 55-year-old soul became infused with enthusiasm, and within 24 hours Shelby was stirring. She decided to restore and make a Southern shrine of Deepwood, a lovely old home designed by Jefferson. She browbeat everyone Into making cash contributions, she nagged the town banker into donat ing the mortgaged estate, and she got a dishonest contractor out of the state penitentiary on his prom ise to do the work at cost. Then she Btarted a few other im provements. She used blackmail to get the proprietor of the Rail road Hotel to spruce up his flea-trap and change It into a pine-paneled inn, to be known as "At the Sign of the White Magnolia." She used feminine charm and her best poundcake to worm highway improvements out of the county road commissioner, and in so doing won herself a proposal of marriage, which she rejected hastily.

In her spare time she Interfered in her daughter's love life and suc ceeded in getting her safely married (with a reception at Deepwood) to Shelby's leading young doctor. The bobk ends with her happy and busy in a project to make Deepwood over into a convalescent home for soldiers, and the reader is left with an idea that Shelby Is in for more and more exciting changes. Blanche Chenery Perrin writes in an informal, chatty way that is CROSSWORD ACROSSi 41 Exist 1 Anglo-Indian 42 Deprives pot 4" international -Backs of feet language 11 Courteous 46 Vein of leaf 12 Erratic 14 Former 48 Seed Integument 49 Fireplace projection 60 Plant of legume family 52 Galahad's mother government agency (abbr.) 15 River ducks 17 The heart 18 Prefix: away 19 Wove together 21 Note in scale 22 Scoff 24 Executs 25 Italian Answer to THE HOUSE OF BEADLE ANn ADAMS AND ITS DIME AND NICKEL NOVELS. Albert Johannsen. University of Oklahoma Press.

Two volumes; $20. BY GdRDON HENDRICKSON. (Aetinr Dean, gammer Sehoel, Unltenitr 9t To lovers of Americana the dime novel of the 1860s and 70s exert a powerful attraction. In the paper-covered "yellow-backs" which sold for five or 10 cents are stories of Indians and trappers, desperadoes and detectives, sailors and pirates, the great plains, the Kocky Mountains, and the Southern swamps. Produced for a mass market, these novels were written by men and women who recalled the tall lales they had heard as children, or who themselves possessed some background of actual experience on which to base their flights of fancy.

Although dime and nickel novels were often read surreptitiously behind geography books in school, or hidden by children in haymows to escape parental confiscation, adults also enjoyed this form of literature. The first important series of these books, the "Dime Novels" of the publishing house of Beadle and Adams, began to appear in 1860 and provided much of the reading matter circulated in Civil camps. Today there are many collectors of dime novels, who are as thrilled to locate a first edition of a desired yellow-back, especially one in "mint condition," as are collectors of autographs to find a "Button Gwinnett" needed to complete a Bet of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. To such enthusiasts this work by one of their number will be most welcome. Essentially a collector's manual, It answers nearly all the Questions that would rise in forming a collection of the books published by the most prolific producer of dime novels in the latter part of the 19th century.

Doctor Johannsen's book has been given a sumptuous two-volume presentation by the press of the University of Oklahoma an appropriate publisher in view of the history of that celebrated state. The work combines a brief history, Jn chronicle form, of the Beadle and Adams firm and its publishing Ventures, meticulously compiled and annotated lists of the books and magazines appearing in some 80 series of publications by this house from 1860 to 1897, and an extensive biographical section devoted to the authors of the Beadle and Adams books. It also includes reproductions of first pages from many of the books and illustrative quotations from the leading authors. Many Western characters shared In the creation of the dime novels or served as subjects of the stories. Buffalo Bill (William F.

Cody), whose Wild West show people aged CO or more may recall, and who is currently seen in "Annie Get Your Gun," was an early Beadle author. Johannsen says that in a letter to his publishers Cody once apologized for his outrageous lies, but added that he understood that that was expected in stories of the border. A scout of an earlier generation, who lived long enough to find himself the hero of many Western tales, was Kit Carson. As the story goes, Carson, an old man, was ehown an illustration for a novel In which he was depicted as slaying seven Indians with one hand and clasping a fainting maiden with the othdr. Carson adjusted his spectacles, studied the picture a long time, and at last remarked, "That there may have happened, but I ain't got no recollection of It." Others who played roles in the Beadle novels were Texas Jack, Ston Houm Mon.

12:00 to 8:30 fr'Jrt is like everybody else. The keynote to success, she declares, is to train the seriously disabled to be as un like as they can. And to make ac ceptance of difference so natural that both the disabled and those who love them can find laughter In It. She notes that, calmly appraised, the actual act of walking is only a very small part of life and that It's far better to be lame in the foot than the head. Free The Atom! David E.

Llllen-thal, former Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, urges In the current COLLIER'S that government end Its monopoly on the atom and give American competitive industry a chance. He envisions potential benefits development of the industrial atom could provide, with another wide upswing in everybody's income and standard of living comparable to that which resulted from the stimulus of electricity, the automobile and modern chemistry. Hopatong Hits The Jackpot! The current LIFE tells how America's children the country's most ruthless pressure group have brought In a bonanza for a middle-aged actor, Bill Boyd, better known as Hopalong Casslcly. Though white-haired and 62, Hopalong, for the children, combines the dream of Ideal parent, big brother and national hero. Friendly and Informal, Hopalong discloses how he pleases not only the children but their parents, as well.

In the samo Issue, don't miss the conclusion of "A King's Story," revealing for the first time a full account of the anguished last days of a King who gave up his throne for the woman he loved. 4 la1" 4.4 fit i ir Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, Civil War hero and President of the United States, is sketched as a junior officer shortly after leaving West Point. to win fame on the battlefields of the Civil War.

After the close of the Mexican War, Grant returned to the sometimes dreary routine of peacetime army life and the concluding section Of this book deals with Grant's drab decade, tho 1850s. Shuntod from post to post, he finally re signed from the Army. Venture af ter venture to attain success in civilian life failed miserably. Grant's personal honor was always held high, his love and devotion for Julia, his wife, and his growing family, always held a beacon of hope before him but money con tinuously eluded him, During this period his reputation for excessive drinking spread about among his former army associates. With the outbreak of the Civil War, Grant offered his services to the country which had provided him with a military education, For a prolonged period It seemed that these services were not esteemed nor wanted.

After vainly waiting for an offer from General McClellan for two days In Cincinnati, Grant returned home. While awaiting something better, he acted as a civilian aid for the Governbr of Illinois. Finally he was offered and took command of an Illinois regiment, Grant's dreary decade was over and the deathless fame of the Civil War was just ahead. An absorbing and authoritative biography! Any Book Reviewed on this page for sale at 626 Vine St. MA 0213 Daniel Boone, Simon Kenton, Davy Crockett, Big Foot Wallace and Calamity Jane.

Some of these prob ably owe their fame to the dime novels in which they were featured. However, not all the main char acters were real. Deadwood Dick, the desperado of the Black Hills, was the creation of Edward L. Wheeler, who looked like a theo logical student but had the title "Serisational Novelist" printed on his letterhead. Wheeler ran the Deadwood Dick series to 122 members in his lifetime.

Ninety-seven Deadwood Dick stories were published under Wheeler's name after his death; the ghost-writer unknown. "Seth Jones, or The Captives Of The Frontier," one of the books which started Beadle and Adams on the road to. pros perity, was a tale of an Indian fighter unknown to history. The dime novel had elements of appeal comparable to those of the 25-cent reprints and the comic books of today. It was cheap, lurid, and easy to read, and It offered escape from everyday problems into a romantic world of high (or low) adventure.

On the other hand, it knew certain restraints which current cheap literature has cast aside. Beadle issued a set of instructions to prospective authors which pro-i Anthology THE THOMAS MANN HEADER. Selected, edited and with Introductions by Joseph Warner Angell. Translations by H. T.

Lowe-Porter. Knopf. $5. The editor expresses the hope in his prefatory note to this fat collection from the works of Thomas Mann that all who read It will turn to the originals from which its pages come. It represents a solid cross section of his creative output of the last 50 years, including, as it does, two of novellas complete "Tonio Kroeger" and "Death In Venice" generous selections from "Buddenbrooks," "The Magic Moun tain," "Joseph And His Brothers" and "Doctor Faustusj" likewise, four of his short stories and all or parts of nine of his literary and political essays.

The editor has pref aced his choices from Mann with helpful and intelligent comment. New Editions THE BOOK OF MODERN COMPOSERS. Second edition, re vised and enlarged. Edited by Da vid Ewen. Knopf.

$8. Two composers Benjamin Brit ten and Walter Piston have been added to the original 29 of the first edition. The editor tells us in his preface that he has gone back to the method used in his book, "From Bach To Stravinsky," of using the writers best qualified "to discuss the different phases of modern music." Most of the articles on the individual composers follow an identical pattern of presenting a couple of pages of biographical matter, a "personal note" by someone who knows or has known the composer "to speak to" and, wher ever possible, a word from the composer himself. Following all this, the essay by the authority in question. By way of introduc tion Nicolas Stonlmsky reduces the styles and techniques of mod ern music to kindergarten level.

Most important of all are the bib liographies and dlscographies in the appendices, for a book of this sort Is primarily one of reference and its information should be right up to the minute. There is no excuse therefore omitting such facts as that Bohuslav Martinu is Pro fessor of Musical Composition at Princeton University or that Paul Hindemith last year occupied the Charles Eliott Norton chair of poetry at Harvard University. Frederick Yeiser. Antidote. PUBLIC SPEAKING WITHOUT FEAR AND TREMBLING.

By Mark Hanna Macmlllan. $2.75. Wanna make a speech? Well, I tell ya what you're goin' to do: Startle your audience. But that's only part of it. There are certain very definite rules that should work.

Certainly if anybody knows how to do it, Mark Hanna should, and he tells you and me how in this new book. This reads well, too. It's a pleasant antidote to a lot of books I've read the ones that make you an orator instead of a speaker. This isn't the miracle-worker that sells you the power to make a President-elect speech with every copy at $2.75, but it's a good book that should do its job well. Minna Bardon.

History." are the moments that sink Into our deepest being." The reader of this book, I think, will be left with the urge of hopping on the next boat or plane for Italy or, if that cannot be worked, of staying home and reading every thing else that Mr. O'Faolain has written. The next of the books, entitled simply "Italy," which I have tagged above as description, belongs to the "World In Color" series. A decora tive affair it Is, too, "profusely il lustrated," as the saying goes, but useful chiefly as preliminary read ing for historical and artistic background. Its style tends to be discur sive and, I am sorry to say, a trifle pedestrian.

But the book is ex tremely comprehensive and a good one for fishing around in. The chapters on art and history, which occupy the first 120 odd pages, are most informative, and better done than the sections on the several provinces. The book is a companion, mark you, not a guide. Horace Sutton, the Travel Editor of "The Saturday Review of Liter ature," has produced In "Footloose In Italy" a guide along the lines of the others already published in the series. He tells you how to travel in Italy, with the emphasis on pleas ure rather than duty.

He writes brightly, dropping names all over the place, but tells you how to get there and how much it is going to cost you. The book contains many splendid photographs, most of them his own, but no really good map. It is most helpful on food and drink, shopping, tipping and other practical matters over which the average tourist usually feels at a loss. "All About Italy" likewise follows the pattern of the forerunners in its series, "The New European Guide, edited by Virginia Creed. It is sys tematic, compact and up-to-date.

The author, Carla Castaldl, a Flor entine, obviously knows Italy and the Italians, so the background ma terial covers the essentials. She tells "what" and "where" and "how" with a minimum of fuss and a max imum of practical advice. Map of Italy (small, on endpapers) and dia grams of Rome, Naples, Sicily, Florence, Venice and Milan. PA 4214 thoroughly charming and she presents Janie Oliver to her readers as a delightful and bustling busybody who demonstrates perfectly "the power of a woman." Maxlne Baxter THE SUNLIT FIELD. By Lucy Kennedy.

Crown $3. There is something refreshing about this story of a young Irish girl by the name of Pocohontas O'Reilly, but known as "Po." Her father, a strolling Irish musician, and he came to America where "there wag no darkness, or trouble, worry." Po found trouble and despair. Her father died In a short time. She did not like Fall River. There were "Eaters" waiting to despoil young girls.

Her cousin Frank was not an Eater but she did not feel safe with him. She went to Brooklyn a stow away on the packet "The Red Tanager." She had two stowaway companions, colored Juba, hunt ing his wife and baby from whom he had become separated while engaged In underground work, and Larry Wainwright, escaping from the life planned for him by his parents. They landed In Brooklyn right, in the midst of excitement over a game called baseball. A bright sunny field was the scene of this game played by men. Po found haven with her cousin Brian Brady, owner of a garden.

Brian was a kind, gentle, sympathetic man. His wife Mamie had ambitious for a genteel occupation for Brian. When he did not give in to something different, he was so unhappy and discontented he had to go back to his old place. Interest in this game seemed the life 'or Larry and it held a fascination for Po. Meanwhile stowaways Larry, Po and Juba had become suspicious of the objectives of "The Red Tanager," They found evidence and proof of its evil missions but withheld this winning a ball game and becoming champions seemed more important just then.

The story is full of the incidents of the competition between the New York and Brooklyn players. It Is the story of how Po became a success as a ginger and entertainer. She realized the feeling she had for Larry and felt she knew his feeling for her. But she had to pass through a period of suspense. The time comes when they do expose the shady work of "The Red Tanager" though there is bit terness In some of the revelations, There is entertainment in this story of life In America at the begfnning of the 19th century, "the story or how Po and Larry Brooklyn, baseball, and America all struggled to grow up with their hopes and dreams." May C.

Nichols. BLACKWATER. By Frank O'Rourke. Random House. $2.50.

"Blackwater" is an exciting story if you like Western stuff. It is extremely well written, with good characterization and clever han dling of the rather stock plot. A gambler, on his way to take over some property he hag won In gambling, meets a beautiful girl, daughter of the head of a great cattle empire. She warns him away from the place, but he -finds that the land he has won is far more valuable than he at first thought and he Is out to find out why. After a lot of struggle and conflict, with enough excitement to suit any adventure reader, the hero gets the deal he wants, although It was not quite the deal he had planned to get.

Minna Bardon. By Eugene Sheffer 54 Hinging into 9 Varnish strong action Ingredient 55 Repairs 10 Explosive DOWN. nasal sounds 1 Galloping 11 Seed slowly containers 2 Palm leaf 13 English actor 3 Note In scale 16 Halls 4 Rose perfume 19 Regained 6 Attend to 20 Cancels 6 Exclamation 23 Folding 7 Gaelic frame for 8 Symbol for pictures erbium 26 Type of auto 28 At bat 29 Paid notice 31 Staten Island (abbr.) 32 Negative 33 Metaphor 36 Feebleminded persons 87 Solid fruit refuse 38 Open 39 Trlts 40 Loose garment 43 Roman road 44 Arrest 47 Spar 49 Secreted 51 Odin's brother 53 Indefinite article 6-IO lolulion: mlnntei. 10 13 17 2o 21 25 26 32 35 Ho 44 Vs. 45 49 A 53 0 55" I29 36 CAPTAIN SAM GRANT.

By Lloyd Lewis. Little, Brown. $6. BY FREDERICK A. BREYER.

Hiram Ulysseg Grant was born at Point Pleasant, Ohio, on April 27, 1822, the son of Jesse and Han nah Grant. An accident of name recording translated Hiram Ulys-geg Grant and undor this name the future General and President became known to history. Gran has always degerved a defl- nlflvn hlotrranhv and it is easy to believe that Lloyd LewlS' death has deprived Americans of a fitting picture of the great Civil war uen-prn 1. The author, who told Sher man's story in "Sherman: Fighting Prophet," hag well begun me nront mtnrv with this full and ab sorbing account of his protagonist's pre-ClvIl War life, and it Is easy to believe that Lloyd Lewis' death has deprived Americans of a fitting picture of the great Civil War General. The author, who told Sherman's story in onti-man: Fighting Prophet," hag well begun the Grant story with this full and absorbing account ot nis protagonist's pre-Civil War life.

Thin volume divides naturally into fnnr nections. each leading effort- lo.oiw Into Itn successor. The author flt-Hf traced Grant' immediate an cestry and follows Jesse Grant from Point Pleasant to Georgetown, ana describes the boy Grant as a quiet, student, expert horseman, unwilling hand in his father's tannery nnd and participant in youthful adven-tiirpu Next, is related Grant's com paratively undistinguished career at West Point with an accompanying clear picture of life at the Military Academy. The third and most vivid section of this volume deals with the Mexican War with not only a detailed account of Grant's participation as an nhln sinrl tnr.fful officer hut a colorful and comprehensive description nf the adventurous routine of the American Army In Mexico, of the impact ot tne war upon tne Mexicans and prevue portraits of many American officers who were Not As Messiah. THE MYSTERY OF THE KING DOM OF GOD.

By Albert Schweitzer. Translated and with an Introduction by Walter Lowrlc. Macmlllan. $3. First published In Germany In 1901, this important book is now brought out in a new completely reset edition.

Dr. Schweitzer hero studies the reason Jesus conducted His ministry not as Messiah but as Prophet and Teacher, endeavoring to understand and to explain why it was not until the very last days In Jerusalem that Jesus revealed Himself as Messiah. The book sheds significant light on Jesus' use of the title, "Son of: Man," In a futuristic sense as1 de noting a power which is not yet His because He was the Messiah designate. This explains Jesus' attitude toward John the Baptist and points out the nature of the secret which Judas possessed and wag In a position to betray. Paul B.

Clark. "Everywhere Is A Grain Of hibited "all things off ensive to good taste the repetition of any occurrence which, though true, is yet better untold (and) what cannot be read with satisfaction by every right-minded person old young alike." Whether the Beadle authors always lived up to these injunctions is questionable, but present-day readers generally find the dime novels of 75 years ago as prim in certain respects as they are exaggerated in others. As has been indicated, Albert Johannsen has performed a major service to collectors. His training as a researcn scientist ne is a professor emeritus of petrology of the University of Chicago has led him to make his canvass of sources thorough and his catalogues of books and authors complete. Since Beadle published reprints of books by Dickens, Scott and even Milton, Dr.

Johannsen includes biographt cal sketches of these worthies along with those of some scores of lesser writers of dime and nickel books. Perhaps without a deadpan approach to his hobby, the compiler of these volumes would never have carried through such an arduous project. May the comic-book collectors of the year 2050 find as able and patient a historian and bibliographer to prepare a handbook for them. proach. Two of them are out-and- out guides; one, a travel book (there is a distinction).

The third does not fall directly under either of those heads. Perhaps we had better call it a description. I should like to talk about "A Summer In Italy" first. That Is the travel book and it is a personal, a very personal, account of a leisurely visit which Sean O'Faolain made to Italy in 1948. Since Mr.

O'Faolain is one of the most gifted and perceptive of writers he has turned out a work of literature quite In a class with some of the best that has been written by visitors from the British Isles. And there have been some fine ones over the years. Mr. O'Faolain gives us not Italy so much as his reacation to what he saw and heard there. He reacted, it would seem, to practically everything.

He does not try to persuade us that he has captured the places he visited and put them in a bottle. On the contrary, he says early In the book, "The details that the traveler cannot recapture seem to him the most precious, though all that he has left of them is a gleam I think that what we remember is not so important as what we half forget; for these Juvenile MOOSE COUNTRY. By Sam Campbell. Bobbs-Merrill. $2.50.

Another book in Sam Campbell's forest life series. I have seen others In the group and have given them to children. Invariably the boys who liked them were Scouts or boys who wanted to be Scouts because Sam Campbell tells about adventures in the woods and in animal sanctuaries. He talks about small animals and about his family and friends. I understand that Mr.

Campbell also lectures and takes movies of his travel experience's. This book is better than the last, I think. It tells of some pleasant or dramatic experiences of the naturalist during a trip to take pictures of moose for lectures and movies. (Ten to fourteen or older naturalists.) Minna Bardon, A SUMMER IN ITALY. By Sean O'Faolain.

Devin-Adair. $3.50. ITALY. Edited by Doree Ogrizek. Whittlesey House.

$6. FOOTLOOSE IN ITALY. By Horace Sutton. Rinehart. $4.

ALL ABOUT ITALY. By Carla Castaldl Rava. Duell, Sloan and Pearce. $2.50. BY FREDERICK YEISER.

Italy, it appears, is not suffering for lack of coverage during this, the Holy Year. The titles listed above are only a few of many available to pilgrims, tourists and pleasure-seekers. Each of these books has its All of them differ rather widely in their ap- Tues, thru 9:30 to 5:30 remember dad on June 18 yesterday's puzzle. I pIIr spected ElOO-N som Als Tjye sffiiiAc Sli if iH I Ak! WlO sieieimjpIeInIsIMaIp "HELP-YOURSELF" BOOKS DELIGHT DAD ALL YEAR! Store Houri: WSWyySySjJt 10 A. M.

to 5-30 P. M. 'SSSS' c77 book YBr svvo? I mil sw L0 princely house 27 Aeriform matter 28 Biblical city 29 Malt drinks 30 Withheld 33 Prefix: parth 34 Thus 35 Scotch cap 37 Measure of distance 38 Bone 39- rSpanlsh Avcrate Urae ot gentleman "Vs. 14 IT 15 16 IT 23 WA 24 28 So Vs. 34 37 28 4T 143 46 47 If 50 51 Vs.

54 Compefe Home Handyman's Guidz by Hubbard Cobb 1.95 195 ong. Very popular, complete guide at a new low price! Tells how to make repairs on plumbing, wiring, furniture, a great subject and a great reporter make a great book ROOSEVELT IN RETROSPECT A Profile in History by John Gunther Because book treats objectively and impartially the character, background and career of Mr. Roosevelt, it is interesting to every reader. 3.75 Any book on this page can be purchased or ordered through our book department. Books, Sixth Floor THE n.

S. POGUE COMPANY To make your good vacation better books for your reading pleasure at V2 marked price in special diplays at Acres of Books annual vacation sale. BERTRAND SMITH'S ACRES OF BOOKS heating systems and many other parts of the home. More than 1,000 illustrations. How I Raised Myself From Failure To Success In Selling, by Frank Bettger 3.

75 Your Dream Home How To Build It For Less Than $3,500, by Hubbard Cobb 3.75 100 Years Of Baseball, by Lee Allen 3.00 Mo7 and Phone Orders, Filled, Call Nancy Harper, DU 7000. Shllllto's BOOK CORNER, First Floor, Elm Street Side 633 MAIN ST..

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