isehold - Litte. Eroxvi IEngland's mOst gited, versatile and SIPECIALI TVSSAY. elonuent leaders. He stands up in MO*NT DINNIR ...... 65C Parliament and makes a. genufnely an eiiuPý great speech, and then ambles home j 1401 BHMIDâ%N MR@D to keep.five or six secretaries busy as. he dl ctates a neW book, a mag- MARL -LQU1819KERCH a zinc article or two, tunies In.to get f: ,oIttiàon Resord »no. the> latest, radio news from the con-. c@ATB.o.PARmo tinent,, telephones to some of the Romearch; reproduced au àhsnd- capitels of Europe, rushes out and mtaomry- ad ooplae. ,,~plays- tennis or makes -a. politi cal in ,esdiag andi nterpreiag waas. speech.- just to comfplete the day. SHORT TALKS AND LECTUIRES For the, past tbree years be'bas 1i4t Orriaglo Ave. UBL 8798 written a fÔrtniehtly l1etter mainly about Foreign Policy and Defense. And bere are the letr.To read themf is to hear a, powerful volce e rvinat in thé- wildernesssbotin- "Stop Herr Hitler and -stop bu now, before be really gets goin«.." He secs, in the spring of '36,: "the tiger, the marks of whose teetb and claws no0itm' o? BAL have scarred every limb of our CAKbSmadmSry bodies, croiiching for the inevitable eprinL,."1He-specs far'back in-th ART 'US ACTION past the obligation of Great Britain under the treaty of Locarno, to put A discussion of mine arts in a modern al ber force bebind the support of world. Sy BAKER BROWNELL, S2 th-- international law. He watcbes 1724 OrrIng*on Ave. Ge.. 0227 witb apurehension the steady rearma- ment of Germany proceeding nieht -~ and day. He registers the disregard Iof Germarv for al ber treaty obli- jgations. HIe sees that if something Comin#,fromn a stateaman of IntelUectual caLibre and longex-. perience "Democracy Today and. Tomorrow" by Eduard Benes,' this restatement of the Demo- cratic credo, carries weight. It is inspirig document, in the 'e- s ur ge nt tide of Democratic' idealism. Since the World War, when a free Ozechoslovakia was only an idea in the mninds of a few exiles in Pitts- burgh and Paris, Eduard Benesý fougbt for.Demnocracy in his own land and in the world at large. HIe suc- ceeded Masaryk as president of Ozechoslovakia and played an impor- A story' about a British sportsmarn who is captured in the act of taklng a pot silot (pre-War). at a dictator. is. tortured, 'escapes, is Pursued, be- sieged,' and eventually ý caépes again, should have the Imaklngs of a wonderful yarn.,.Geoffrey House- hold's Rogue Male is the storýy of such a man, and it is a wondertul yarn, filil with suspense, action, ani the varlous other comnionplace but stil r remarkably elusive ingredi-. ents of a Western thiller.. But in- addition. Mr. Household', book has-andlI swear it-the most important characteristics ,o f the gfea test. stories. which have, ever been told, by whicb I mean such things as the legends of Promnetheus *or Qediputs, Lear or Hamlet. ý Wbeth~- er they will strike you when yolu read the book, whether even Mr. Household tbougbt about them, 1 4otkow, but Rogue Male lias ~ele- nintskof universality, of symbolism. of character developnrient which ac- count for the tact that wben you arc finished with'it and the thrill wears off, it will stili leave you thoughtful an-d, unless I'm very wrong, some- what disturbed. Our sporting Britisher, you see, i a good deal more than a thrill-seeker out for big game, in spite ot the tact that he himself doesn'.t realize it un- -CLUARANCE SALE!. WALLPAPER Tou co MiliIMalte àsawanq on high qast.modern aipapers .but the se ttinq imail-so HURRYI egaRi, vOéoea et 5&k #0$1.1.0 pet roll 81e ls.33C #$ Si.Uteoll British Cabinet and made, as he was twenty tive vears ago-First Lord. of the Admiraltv. These forthright messages, brief. stirrin&,, sensible, strong, are flot contined to Angle-Germnan relations. They are on such other subi ectq as "Spain's Road to Peace," 'IWhat Japan Thinks," "Palestine," -The N~ew Phase in India;" "Mussolin's ahofre." and .so on. mn a word, bere are eighty messages, every one ful Reading intereste of members of m oene:0 isprîua dictator. (Mr. Household, incident- Northwestern university's football aîîy, graciously declines to, name bis squad cover a wide range judging dictator, but manages to leave us from thle favorite authors listcd by witb veïy littie douht as to wbo the the playcrs. Mark Twain was select- gentleman is). But what is' even cd by eight players while Shakes- more important, our big game huni- peare was pickcd by six. Other er is the epitome of the indiVidualist writers wbo receivcd mention were the individualist who retains a sense Tolstoy, Emerson, Zane Grey, Si- of decency, of sportsmansbxp anid of clair Lewis, Charles Dickens, Poe, courage wbich are in commun with Kipling, Dostoievslçy, Tboreau, T. E. those of most ut bis fellowmen. but Lawrence, William Faulkner, H. G I.. 1 - 11 ...1--- - ~1 u\a/j 1 . elescope in thev ig bilions of new