wnov -bave the latest - ,et-sU'sof Mach. Try out Rentais! CAEDS stationéry Be First to Use t È. New efufl PIyi.g Caadà 2 d.c&s $1.75, Single'docks 90c. Auto.mdg.ePlaym Bords $3s00 1724 Orribyton Av.,we, Evansfon Orrngin t,, HI M. Gre. 0227 ioesand ,mrines. Pl C T URýE IFRAMI NO Frum R.psired of several years is suftucient evidence of thpir' populaity. Eight of the operettas bave, been piresentedi'the Evanston sebools. stage Direct oa The -new releases ar e 6White Gypsy." an original story by Miss Paynter;. Ci6 drelas Slîppe," based on the oli fairy. tale, and ."Rip V an ,WinkIe" adapted and dramaizdby M iss P ayn- ter froni Wasbi *ton 'vng's story.- The bookietscontaini full direcions fur stàging, for -costumes, and for dance ete.ps4 witb complete vocal instructions and score: Mr., Grant-Schaefer was for eleven years bead of the vocal depart-, ment in thé Northwestern Uuiversity School of Music, and bis *ide experi- ence -fits bim adniirably' to adapt bis music -to the range of C.hildreW's voices. Miss Paynter is a graduate of North- w estern, and also studied at the Univer- siity of Illinois. Columnbia tiniversity. andi n the Goodnian Theater Playwrit- ing class. For- a number of years she bas been employed in the book depa rt- nient of Cbandler's in Evanston. Correspondent She dévotes part of ber time to writ- ing for the Daily \-ews education page, and is education and socioiogy corre- spondent for the Chicago area of Newsý Week magazine.. Forrnierly sbe edit'ed bthe junior journalismi page of the JEvanston L)aily News-idlex. eso cial sororit), is Pi Beta Pbi. and she belongs to Phi Mu Gammia. allied arts fraternity. Issue a Fragmenit of Barrie Autobiography Sir Jamnes Barrie wrote, a few years before bis deatb in 1937, a book called The Grèeenwood Hat, which was privat- ely printed and distributed among bis friends. It contaîned a.numnber of ar- ticles tbat Barrie bad written for the ýSt. Jqmees Gazette when he first came to London, and gives a new pcture of the Scottisb boy breaking into the Iiterary world. Then, looking back1 %J't-r fotv-r.five' vers. Barrie added re- This month MVacrnillan brijgs orit the aiitobiography,'of Harriet Mon- roe under the title, "A Poet's I.ifr." or "Sèvessty Vears inr a Chia.igieig Word.>' Miss Monroe > ,aç- the founder of .4rv Magazie of Grives Instruction to .Nature Photographers, The people who are nature lovers and. amateur photographers will be interested in PercX. Morris' Nature Photo g- rapIî' - v rouind the Year (Appleton-Cen- turv . It is at once a rnonth-by-month. almaliac of nature subjects and a manuail of instructions and suggestions for the nature photographer. The book opens with a general chap- ter on equipment and procedure, giv- ing expert adyice, on the various types of cameras and. photographic devicès. In the remaining twelve chapters the months are passed in review andMr Morris gives a wealthof advice on the specialties that each bas to offer to. the nature photographer. He tells how. where ,and. when these subi ects caîî be found and'gives explicit instructions for pbotographing theni. Mr. Morris, who is on the technical staff of the Peabodv Museum of Natural History, Yale- university, bas illustrated his book with bundreds of striking photographs and pictures. Flarriet Moniroe, wbose long await- it1 liograihy, A Poet's ie, wa, mb Ilishied in Marcb, is of Chicago pioncer stock. She saw the city grow up from a frontier town, whose chartei- was Ie>s than thirty years old.. to a worlcl metropolis. Her trav~els .east and wvest, to; the literary salonls of. New York anid Europe., to the une,.plor&ed beauties of the Rockiies. gave her éarly womanhood its dramnatic character.ée*en «.before she wo'n faine with ber "IColumi:bian.Ode"' i 1893. I 1912 a new phase of this vîgpr- ous -career began,' when M.iss Mfon- roe founded 'PoetryAMgzieo Verse.', the'- famious monthly which jimmediately became .the .focu's of onte of tbe most brilliant iterary. moments the United.States lias seel., Eminemt Figures 'Miss, Monroe takes ber reader froni the literary world of Gilder. James., Stedman;' the stage. of Booth. : the artist.ic influence of Whistler. through the turbulent decadés of théeeW Poetry,7 anidber later travels and e-ç- plorations. The autbor's correspond- ence mitb the poets of our treý- Lindsay. Sandburg, Pound, Mlasters. Robinson. and otbers-alone are of importance f romi a doc,unuti(t.arv s ta ndpoint. Miss Monroe's narrative cones dovn to 1923. Twvo later chapters. giving an outline of the last,.fiteell, years of ber life, were ivitnby Morton Dauwen Zabel, associate editor. of "Poetry" from 1929 to 1936, and editor until the fait -of 1937. Rising Poets \Ir. Zabel recails ber continingIII leadersbip on the magazine and her uniaiIing~ interest in rising young- poets. ber travels in Europe, the Far East. and Mexico, witb extracts f ron: ber letters about. places and l people she %vas enjoying-and fnl w visit to Buenos Aires in the flu oi 1936 as'delegate to the annual meet- ing of. the,ý International P. E.N. followed by ber sudden 'death on the wa% borne. In the final section is h er suunmnarv of ber career and statemient of ier ,personal beliefs and ideals, as writteil Alex ander' Woollcott is ertit about Warrant fôr X by Phil »onald, just published by th( club. Mr. Woolkcott says War X is the best detective story ev ten in any language.. Srrangers, anc the Pirate, wh on the screen Buccaneer." usu I j LJCWeCiU ý ltus' iu; ý,