Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 31 Aug 1933, p. 28

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Others at 50é 1724 Ortington Ave. Gre. 0227 Orrington Motel Sidg. Who'.s ,Who Maior Lbague BAS'EBALL Compiled by Harobld fSp..d) Johnson (NàtiotalIy KE own sports Vrter) Founte.in Square. IERS 1Evansfon1 N ;e hi bokwhih as o cratîie stàte senator in a New- York to 0&C. o lhs ok wihba oPlot, no10 republican Étronghold by taking bis Any ageý is reflected ini its leaders. tpsYchoiogical ana lysis, no progression, case directly to his constituents. The leaders t-eflect the ideas andi en1- 71 a- appear rnnotonos to certain read; :zn e was 35, as, assistant sec re- VI roneof:bheir youthA:ording- 7 eshtoohr s t îl b wlcmetar y ofhe navy, during the war y Pofsor Swain, in his excellent boo which has the poetry, humor, !land as* a man of action. He lookeci settieetof theWodWasecs high spirits. of a liveiy, good-hearted, alto the future, saw what was to be ni an ientodut orchapter etchndis and. so..far as poetry and story-tellinig doue, and. did( it. tons of th seod h f of h. n- go, a. cuitivated .people.' And it hias "Red tape be. hanged," be, said, teenth etr udrwIcho ýthe.sats soniething else besides these> qualities wr a arfow.' Men, writers, andi people of 1914 grew Surprisinglv it reproduces the style anti His fight for bis friend AI Smith, omnod eam ogve the his-' Jlicm of Irish literature of eigbt. or hsvcovi h e okgbr tcry of the generation of men Who nmade nline, hundrecl years ago-the sif n atorial contest in the. face of an-th waa aacde prdedh othe r national republican avalanche te.wr- Cvlae lîunorus mpessonim hic maesandi other notableý achievenients areaposina historiani insteaci of iv. certain of the early Irish 2stories 50stiitofeh ntemnisoHes Iollywood.. living when. compared , with otherstil ofehinhemd fnw- Domestic "Progr0 e" paper readers to need 'reeounting Floig h n rodcoycatr inedieval literary creations... here. lown.th itrdcÈy.hae, Th'le scelle is the Blasket Islandis Al through the book, îrte in Part I describes effectively the domestic off the. coast of Kerrv. Where about ly andi primariiy. for, the: youth ofdvlpet fteegtchfcon two hundred i people, speakinig Irish Ameérica,- one discovers. that. Roose- tries f rom about 1890.to 1914. It was andi carrving on the tradition, of sev- veit is not the opportunist mauy i11 this domestic fieldi that the men wvho enteenth- centurY Irel'anci, that is to0 daim hie is. Radier, he is carrvinig to -made the* war achieveci their great * say,: the tradition of1 fifteeuth cehtury conclusion on -a. national, scale bis triumphs in industry, sciencep andi ail, Europe, live without shops or mar- policies as state senator, assistant tlîat wvas optimisticaily .bailed as kets. and are bon and: go to their s§ecretary of the navy -andi governor "progress." flu PartclI 'cornes the sad graves without:seeiuig a building oeo ew Yo"'k. story of their.itrainlrltos than 'oie story, high. "Franklin D. Roosevelt., fa f Their siîîc eeèffrts to cratea peace- T oS.urce of*the Modern Action," is a, fine book for young. fui world comminunitylwere more than people, 'et carnies euough betwveen offset hy the couniter'-factors of increas- Tolive with these isiauders, using the 1 nes, to be of interest to the iug lnationalism. militarism,' economic their speech and folîowing their avo- aduit reader. irnperialisrn', andi mutual fears andi sus- cations, is to go back to that imnagin--_________ ation, faith, and bumor out of which picions, which resulted in, the interna- miodemn art and philosophy have conie. Prize Winner WritesÙnlaacyo 94 es, Professor Swain rightly shows the The excellence of the translation of Provincial Art Story -constant- interpîay of doinestic poliîc "Twenty Years A-Gro,.wing" should tc * fot e verookd.Traslaio frni The Hlarper Prize Novel for 1933, and foreign relations, mnost notahle in.' Irish into Engîish is singularlv ciffi- "The Fault of Anigels," by Paul Hor- the, case of Engiand and France. -He cuit for the reasén that Irish is an gan of Roswell, New Mexico, was an- therehy gives a fairer and truer picture unsophisticated andi English a sophis- riounced for publication on August 24. Of those men who strove foôr peace ticated language, that mnoder Irish i"'Thle Fault of Anigels" is the sixth and yet brought on the most terrible isan unwritten and English anj Harper Prize Novel. The juciges for of wars. And in the crisis of Julv, *over-ivritten language. To get the the 1933 contest were Dorotby Can- J914, he "makes clear how uujust is spirit nyf this countrvsjde. oral, terre- field, Harry . Hansen, and Sinclair to stand over theni (the diploinats) wîth a-terre speech into Englislh. or M- ILewis. Writing- to the publisliers as aso-accrpligteit c *deeci intô an.v of the mietropolitan one -of the juciges' committee, Mr. Cotint for every move. and, assuming languages of today, is. a That wýhich Lewis says:, "I arn glaci that the vote that. when sbo.wn new telegrains. they demancis not onî.v great skiiI in the bas been given to 'The Fauît 'of ait once 'understood. thenii althi handling of Engliish. but. an excep- liAgels.' 'The central character isý brilli- bearigs, as fully as, do. mnodemn scbolars troua litrary act.ant. nd eocatîe. .As a story t a with ail.'tbe acivantages of bindshtai t.is ýcompletely objective, 'a nd jhé a plan andI gets. s(>rewhere. Furtber- 1,aite .ersOf study." oniy continuity it has is througb one more thiss is one ot the -first American , Watchingý the Diplomnats. d av.of a man's .life foilowing another. 1novels (there bave, been others, not:very lu Part I iloresa. dear accounit o f An, chaPterý cau be reaci as a sep.- successful) wbich portra«ys that ex- the niilitary and -diplomatic historv of arate narrative. But, the wbole is tremely interesting and increasiugly.iin the war, witb emphasïs on the opening held up by an unflagging interest and ortat phase of Ainerican life; the ac isn apin and theeffct delight in the worid. art,, in a provincial cit V.11 of tbe Russian Revolution and Amier- can participation. This is followed hy a severe analysis of the Peace Settie- AngIo-Saxons Surpass BEAVERp KINGS AND CAIBIN5 by e osac ida kne. a ment anid.some features of the subse- French in Mysteries Consan ce Lindy Sine: a iilent liquidations of..the xar cluring Tangle" bas just appeared inl this coun- DOdàd, -Mea-d. Lt isa novel that try, has been elected a member of the with laughter and action. The Frenchi Acadeiny. He was born, in is the French Riviera; the ch, Bordeaux in 1895. His first volume four American expatriates. Wr of verse appearcd in 1910 and bis first the author of the famous.'fl novel-in 1913.. Giencgnnon storis. :115 temeCiJFi. j t ers, Coale and B by enter bis sopi m». and Horton academy. i veu, îs rettiming aves for school Sep- er two boys are jack a Johnson. jack willI re year at New Trier, go to Lake Forest

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