Da oauM« ouIyl >bog o 1Wwor6t Stenosgrapblo ii100days-aaared qdiuté attainln for o»nemfe. The popular tntenSive oourue wlth superlor colhg, PeoPle. Rerwererly. vswrite or pho i ldoipl. 5Mi for dotalka Also regular.buinesçouree]Day ad venüg is leaving ýwith his faniily for ant ex-ý tensive European tour., after wbichbhe will résume b.is% studies at Lawreiceville. He bas ritten a nuniber of poems, twbicb bave received recognition, but the verse wbich he -read at the timeth award was imade .as follows: T/l Golden Stair, OUVINT & UTUITTONCOLLIE mS sum .. m mAvoeff. , CiM lm Read the WântAds, .1our bosom's black as blak as eipal 0geI's 30111I But staii you've gott an .Tbe aw uyou 11win oir<1w o moer r mtsno utnCdi ye ann' l'y Po' hn . anduron Cedric Smtith, Son of lsx Yor >appy'sgone and àcheek, at ear, What-,ar that ow yourchcata.l adMr.Cdi Ük23Ésx ,Kitl,Yow déo't yoti cry m3,honey chiler road Kniwrthi r-cently Wi& fth-. Fou .wn>t be thore -f07rqiite awie ound4ation Award for Excellence Il efr arn t h es i Nota 1ush your inoise and get ft steef'. Jesey inNez Siiroo ree andtensloly he Befocý rlol uNeaalry.te skis n -'*Jwly' R od ititdlsm ~ skes ditanthui Roun a*d weter eyes. To sprinkle sand into yolir You b>eathe so sof t, and stir no nmore lil Iay you at his open door. The Lord is kind, I've off en said, But why flot take sonie one *nstead' Friends of the late Edwin Arlington Robinson are planning to collect and Who's .been as bad as bad ca)n bc, edit a volume- of bis letters and bave *Instead of taking yo,< froin inc made arrangements with The -MacThe likes of you are very feu millari Company for their publication. too ts Nota yoli are gone, and Pap Anyone who has letters which might )ne take please high, inost Oh Lord, -___s 1 -_________- yond Sin.g the Woods be ranked witli the best in novel writing. -The author, is Trygve Gtibranssetn. anid the. transiator Naomià Walford. Guibranssen, a Norwegian in his early forties, cornes iromà an old peasant fainily.. Self -educated after the age of nine. when bis 'fatherdied, he beca -me first a master craftsmnan, then a tobacco. trad esman., Sport was bis one hobby, and this ýled 'hlm« into journalistm. To-, day he is.recognized as one of the best sports reporters inbs country. story eulogizes the Norwegiati j peasant type, and is said, to be reminisadbyGi iis cnto bidô basetoe1ltvsu tefr pi hrnsntorltve regions. These regions, deep, dense. ýand forbiiding, constitute the most pwerfùl >factor 'in. the book and are more impressive than any of the granitepeasant pearsonaiies' pasing in r ~view. Wild beasts stili inhabit the vast- Requesi Lellers for Ariingtofl Biograpny ,îess, making man by: coniparison appear faladiefeul Gulbranssen's bobby, sport, accotunt> ior bis apt descriptions of buniting, %vild animaIs, deep forcets; bis family straîn accounts for bis'passionate admiration for the sound peasant character. bi, education in the scbool of bard kilock, accounts for a keen understanding oi *fi lf ý_ý__ _ý __ _l .. t. _ :_ _ l .' nn , men- for Your 1 Summer Cottage $2.50 and $2.00 Mann Works rgsee natoanme 1 The idea for Thomas Mann*s fortbi- 1rornptIy, and the originals returnied their Owners 'with a typed copy. coming Stories of Three Decades, a" omnibus volume of al' bis short fiction, Mr. Hagedorn is making a colleccame from Alfred A. Knopf, Dr.- Mand's. of newspaper. and other clippings tion be that writes Knopf publisher. Mr. Mr. Robinson, whicb wvill. concerning outsîde borne bis in was visiting Mantn aZb e motinted and ultimately deposited, Zurich one afternoon in januaryP, forteueo colsithWdnr iee h coari rteueo wben it occurred, to hini that Maxn University. He Harvard of *Library. Borzoi onuthe would flot be .represented be grateful if anyone wbo lias -- Iwould 'to *of Tbomas Old . manor house ot the,. jiornclal's.. Their personal appearances are clearly (lefined, their fates inexorahly bound tip ini their characters and stîrrotindings. Old Day, enmeshed in a tradition of revenge and swept away by the love of power and money, frees himiself before bi s deatb and becomes acquainted with Dorothea, a~ sister-in-law, rnercy. spinster and little more than recluse from the world,* shows biin the way. Convincing and refresbing, the book stands out fromn mucb of th'e superficial of Natural lof June.- id vu or aeocrai wbether istitutions 'some form are of soutism will develojp. I