Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 6 Dec 1929, p. 48

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WILMETTE LIFE December 6, 1929 II KM&\IN JlYAit · LVAMSTON Comment on Books and Authors it are accurate and vivid, and give glimpses of a side of Indian life quite different from those described in the usual volumes of propagandists, travellers, · and novelists. II Wilmette l700 GIVE: In the Evening of My Thought G~orgll Ckmenctau Houghton. MifBin Company. 2 vols...... $12. HARRIET HUME. By Rebecca West. Doubleday, Doran. Rebecca West'~ first novel in five years is a fantasy so beautiful so vivid with things .intangible that belongs to the worl.d of immaterial enchantment from which came "Memoirs of a Midget" and "Thunder on the Left." Harriet with her billowfng dust gold skins, her hands full of cherries from the fruit man's cart, and her sleek black head poised like a listening bird's is a figure to haunt one's memory of b~auty. The book, a shrewd and devastating interpretation of the psychology of love by the author of "The Judge" and "The Return of a Soldier." LIV.I~G.. EAST. King. Du~eld. By David Wooster a so A Gallery of Women Theodore Dreiur Horace Livuigbt. 2 vols .... $5.00 An account of a motor trip of five hundred miles through Afghanistan t0 Kabul, with the noted lecturer Lowell Thomas, to interview .Amanullah, recently Amir of Afghanistan, is the unusual feature of this attractively written book. The sketches of the life of an American in the jute business in India Emerson, the Wisest American Phillip· Ruuell Brentano ........·.·... Ss.oo THE NEW WORLD BOOK. ENCYCLOPEDIA AWonderful Christmas Gift to be used and enjoyed by entire family. Local Representative Special :.'..Low Pre-Publication Price ..-, Murder on Polopel Mason Wright and Willi4m R. JC.ne The Crime Club ...·..... $2.00 MRS. MABEL W. SIMMONS 825 Lake Ave.,- Wilmette Phone Wilmette 965-R Hills and the Sea Hilaire &lloc Sixteen color plates by Donald Maxwell . Dutton ...........·... $5.00 The Rich Young Man G. M. Attenborough Stokes ................ $2.50 New Worlds to Conquer Richard H aliiburton Bobbs-Merrill ........... Ss.oo l\uddenbrooks Thomas Mann's famous twovolume novel in a gift format. Translation by H. T. Lowe. Mr. Mann bas recently been awarded the Nobel prize. Alfred A. Knopf ........ Ss.oo Eyes that have The Maurizius Case Jacob Wauerma~n Horace Livtrigbt ......... $J.oo Rasputin ]fJan NazhifJin "IT" . . . that · subtle something ~hie~ attrac~s others ..· usually hes In the eyes. Don't be discouraged if your own eyes are dull, lifeless and unattractive. A few drops of harmless Murine will will brighten them up and cause them to radiate "IT." "IT" the form of an intermittently kept journal. Gide often forgets the jungle around him in meditations far removed from any it inspired. Their interspersion through the journal is rather distractON THE HIGH SEAS. By E. Keble ing to ·those intent on following the Chatterton. Lippincott. route of the commission, though tv Written without any literary dis- others they will doubtless add value to tinction, Commander Chatterton's sea- the volume. The best of the volume going medley is good ·read.ing after all is what Gide has to say of the psyfor those who have tasted in fact or chology of the natives, of their dances, imagination the hazards of service in songs, and ritual~. T~e book is abundships. He describes the procedures of antly supphed wtth ptctures. English piracy in the seventeenth cen- ~ :. ..~ · AT tury, when it was potentially a genteel MrSTERY SPANISH HAvrofession; tells of the perils of huntClENDA. By Jackson Gregory. ing slave ships off Africa a century Dodd, Mead. . a~o; collects .. :- fine n~segay of grisly J. R. P. W. ]. D. Raptdan-and. when tnals for mut.ny at Samt Helena, and the truth cam~ out he had. more n_ame3 tops off with unedited episodes of the ~han that-arnved at Spamsh Hactenda naval warfare in the North Sea d.uring m a house on wheels draw~ by five the late war. Here much attenton is horses. . There had been stx horses, naturally given to submarine and anti- but he had. lent one to a fugitive from ~ubmarine service, for the author justice, which angered Sheriff Law. Of served with distinction in the anti-sub- course ]. R. P. W., etc. didn't believe marine patrol. What we have is epi- the . fugi~ive had murdered Bill Smith, sod.es of life at sea through three cen- and neither. did Vega Alarcon, the girl ~unes, assembled without much order at the Hactenda. But her father, Don or other bond of relation than the sea Luis, was caught up in one of those itself; ~ne would most advantageous- we~s . concerning ~he family ho1_1or with Jy read tt when anchored in a very safe whtch the Dons are so often mvolved harbor during a very bad blow. and had, willy and nilly, to aid the scoundrels. 1;>0 WHAT YOU WILL By Aldous By Booth PENROD JASHBER. Huxley. · . · Tarkington. · The 'brilliant author of .Point CounPenrod is back! After 14 years' ter Point comments wittily on the cur- absence, the favorite boy character of rel_lt sce~e in .a collection of essays two generations of readers is bursting ~pte~~ wtth . eptgrams and deep with with funnier ideas than ever, resulting mtUtttve wtsdom. Mr. Huxley is in the most explosive escapades that preacher, prophet and jester. He was ever rocked the Schofield neighbornever more provocative and penetrat- hood. Humor, ranging from the droll ing than in these essays. As The Am- to the hilarious, is packed into these erican Mercury has -said·, "He docs not joyous pages of the "deteckatif's" adotfer any panaceas for a sick and sui- ventures. Illustrations by Gordon fering society; he performs the far more difficult task of analyzing its maladies." · " I; . FQR THE CHILDREN ·. An American in the Making, Ravage -The story of a young Roumanian TRAVELS IN THE CONGO. By who began as a peddler and finally Andre Gide. Translated from the succeeded in putting himself through Fren.ch. by Dorothy Bussy. Knopf. college, with humorously critical sideIn ptckmg out' Andre Gide to accomlights on America, and those "who pany a comm.is~i9t.'l : sent to investigate know only America." administrative conditions in Fren..:h Pony Tracks, Remington-Describes possessions in Africa, the French Government paid a deserved tribute to his rear adventures in the early northwest ·extraordinary powers of observation with General Nelson Miles, scouting and to his equally great gift of sym- e_xpeditions in the Bad Lands, ranch pathetically understanding what he llfe, hear· hunting, and police duty in sees. His "Travels in the Congo" tlw Yellowstone. Lad, a Dog, T erhune-Short stories which has probably served as his r~ port to the French Government, takes describing a wonderful Scotch Collie. Routledge Rides Alone, Comfort-· Story of a war correspondent a'n d his adventures in the Far East during the Russo-Japanese war. Graphic pictures of India under British rule. Covered Wagon, Hough-A westbound wagon train journeying from Missouri · to Oregon furnishes material for t_ his story. Plenty of adventure. Newer Ways With Children. 'By W. V. O'Shea. Greenberg. English Prose of the Nineteenth Cen· tury. By Hardin Craig and. J. W. Thomas. Crofts. Ultra Violet Ray Lamps $35.00 up Knopf-1 volumes ....... $6.oo Woodfill of the Regulars A true story of adventures from the Arctic to tbt Argonne. LoWfll Thomaa Doubleday, Doran ....... $2.50 T ;,ousands upon thousands of clever women use Murine daily and thus keep their eyes alway:. clear, bright and alluring. . A month's supply of this longtrusted lotion costs but 60c. Try it! HEALTH AND HAPPINESS IN THESE MAGIC RAYS PJ.o,.e Today Free llome tlemo·stratio" Hawthorne Newton Awin l:ittle, Brown North Shore Talking Machine Co. ·a Co....... S3.50 71 2 CHUitCH STREET, EVANSTON Univ. ·,.523 7-t2 ELM STREET, WINNETKA Winnetka 347-t Lord't--Firat Floor ·A SKILLFUL READER (1) . Reads wtth a definite purpose, a problem in mind. (2) Grasps the author's point of view and central theme. (3) Lays hold of the or.der. and arrangement of the author's ideas. ( 4) Pa'u ses·. occasionally for summarizing and repeating. (5) Constantly asks questions of his -reading. <6) Continually supplements from his own mental stock. (7) Evaluates the worth of what he reads. (8) Varies th~ rate . of his progress · th_rough h1s readmg. (9) Ttes up what he reads with problems of his own. . Rollo L. Lyman, U. of C.

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