Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 6 Jul 1939, p. 32

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Dec Le Edg ECVImSaLinr JUcl Y SPi eClm SaiAL e 100 Sheets $ witih narfe and 100 Envelopes J.addresé imprinted 1724 Orrington Ave. Gis 0227 Going en a Trip? Imure your worrieia and enjoy peace of mind while on your' vacation! make it of lasting value and again and again the basic truths that lie behind its story haunt us. Univer- saiity..of experience, when captured in a novel, lu the quaiity which, makes it significant, for it lu, the usual: that is real and the unusual t h a t carnies a, feeling of unreai- ity. T7he settings* of Black Narc issus are stranige, and the characters are oui 'ofthé ordinary, but in, their lives they exeniplify some -of the differences between th e. beliefs. of the occident. and, those, of the orient. Heré' in fact, on thi s small, canvas, are pictured the lives el the ChrIs- tian world and- those of -the pagan world, as, they meet for a- briet time, and then part, leaving no im- pression on each other. The story is about a company of. nuns travel-. ing from Darjeeling 'in India to a high- p.eakk »f4he. -iayas. qTheïr mother house lu in Ireland, and Sistei, Clodagh, a very young nun, hai; been made superior because of her eomplete competetice and reli- ability. They travel over the hilis to a magnifieent. palace. whiéh has been donated by ani Indian prince to thîs religious order. It was once the home of his wives, and the walls are magnificently decorated, the Disraeli Photo FàaTTT Rhinehart is off ering a new novel, '"Anne Minton's Life," by My ro n Britn ig, loho wrote 4'The $isters" and "Mal) Flavin." It has been called "a movinzg story ... gently ironie." "To Be or Not f'o Be' Turns Into a Science "The Art of Beinu A Person" by George Ross Wells is a book in self-understanding and self -help. It contends that the serene and useful life is an achievement, and flot sim- ply a gift of nature. The art and science of being a person lies in the By John Jenninos. The Macmillan Com- pany, New York. Frorn the quotation- "Next to valour, the best qualities in a mil- itary mnan ar'e vigilance and cau- tion," part of an order issued to the troops before Quebec in 1759 by Brigadier Generai James Wofe, cornes. the- titie, of Next 'to Valour, Macmnifan's new historical novel by John Jexinings., Laid in the same setting. and coverinig ruch the same historical period, (1730-1766)ý as Kenneth Roib- erts' popular Northwest- Passage,, John Jennings' book is essential1ly a. taie of soldiering and scouting in Colonial days, when the white men had the wilderness and Indians, as weii as themseiýves, ýto fight. Jamie Ferguson, the young Scots- man whose autobiography, the book fq. inakes an invaluabie trooper in Rogers' Rangers and a good busi- ness man, but is more than a bit thick-headed when it comes to judg- ing women and unscrupulous men. H~e marries a gildy tufaithful girl and it . takes hlm years to be con- vinced of his error, years to dis- cover a much finer girl right under his nose* ail the time. Jamie, as .a young man, flees Scotiand when t.h e Stuart cause fails, establishes his widowed moth- er and his sisters in Suncook, and eariy Massachusetts settiement, learne scouting, makes monev in Irouj FIRE, THEFT, BURGLARY, HOLDUP LIABILITY INSURANCE ON YOUR,,CARý pound is swept by the .high windstacher are woven into the text.] of the mountains.I The firat four chapters - sessin This place the Sisters turn into a general terms the reality of per- dispensary, guest roorns, a chapel, sonaiity and the necessity of un- scho4.d rooms, all the parts- of a derstanding others as well as our- working c o n v e n t. The Indian selves. Foilowing are discussions of prince's representative, an attrac- the urges to activity, namely, food, tive and theroughly cynical Young self-protection and sex. Next are Englishman who knows the customs chapters devoted to: "Men and of the country, helpu with the hiring Womnen" "Marriage," "Parents o! native labor, and with inducing and Children," and "Schooi and iloui .... Ke t ntuuai, the at- tacks upon Ticonderoga, and the capture of Quebec. Abounding with Indians, intriques, spies., a reai viliain (Jamnie's cous- in), batties and biood ietting, Next to, Valour might be called an ex-. trovert, aý rare flower burgeoning in a dayý and. age of introspective psychoiogicai noveis. Neyer subtie, neyer obtuse, .ai- ways objective, it iu first claus Boy Scout iiterature. ollwaing v~tht> Pv

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