We vilg ou 'i= Nikl s l a FW VaMui me« f « muà d.p. s usa fit ToI'si, but O ib u $- bla'.MdiAmisi. EU UU SFUSS0.9 US110MICHIAN &TTRESSUS"" Lfemade Lew as$3 95 New INNtERSPI140 1&mbirae« 10 Alfred Àrmnistead and Henry Hinchi- cliff e are pa rt 1ters in. Blackshaw Milis, a cloth-manuüfacturnig firm ini York- sbire. The Armistead -ind,,Hinchcliffe fanijiies differ ini politics, in religion. in social outlook, but with their work- men they are representative architects of the modern social.fabric. Henry Hinchcliffe's children are Ed- ward, the steady man of affairs; Fred- erick, the rebelliQus student; Grace, the reformer. The Arm~isteads are Gweil the enigma, Ludo the compassionate, Laura the artistic. Miss Bentley. makes a pýenetrating and ir onical study oftheir Childhood and adolescence ini the manut- factur ing town of Hudley, amid the' cramping conventions of the period. The famnilies intermar'ry; the war sons the, thircl >y and 1 i of dive rate son. :t Ie d p r o - 1 Phylis l3eutleys latest novel, a stor3' of textile Mailu1factu ring ù, F.nîglanid, show~s the struggle of. sUc- ceeding generations to overcoMé. the handicaps and failitres of ic Parents and grancdparents uwho havle gon beorethi*~. -The l4lle ot4the book, published ~by Macm»illanî, S "Sleep in Peace." Mrs. Tarr Is EIected is rising : d.ivcrgeiit fo rts: Kay, Adele ratin, as W. Tar savs iii its mette,. Howard Spritig probably. bas the largest following of any literary critie in Enlgland. His niothly choice of the Evening Standard "Book of the Month" carnies the weight of an Ameritan book club selection. Sales .news and earlyne.- views from England indicate that the book is the sales leader of -the spring. season. Tbis topnotch London book critic-has received the cheers of the British press 'for bis noQvel.,A. J., Cronini, author of Thle Citadel says: "It, is refreshing.. in these days, to. Aind a, novel whiçh se ts out bonestly and deliberately to tell a story . . . Mr. Spring jumped into the ranks of the major novelists of thle day." The, tale covers a span of the past fifty years in the lives of two fathers and their two sons. It contains a love story,' and ~a heart-warinig "sucess, story" ini the rise of two poor provincial boys who were destined to great riches. The glamour of London, the idyli nf holidays in Cornwall, the hectic W'ar days, the cbarmn of attractive womn lend diversity to a story. told without .literary tricks or flourishes. The London limes says of the. book: "Through scene after scene, character after. character, event after event. the narrative drives on like a beaching: "Hard and Britliant" Irrnigard Keuni, German emigrée anid author of Af ter Midnight,. arrived in ,e reportr r iutjr you iy, magazine of' Roger idence, first prize in a of the ibranch of the orable ty of Anicrica. ald Tr 1vwiter o t Kia year ago wrote wui Viktings which was awarded bon. mention in the New York Hem- ribune spring childmen's book fes- *1 Wtie thse boo"a w0a1g* £001011