WILMETTE L·IFE April 5, 1929 ·Comment on Current Rooks "Litany of Washington St.," Here's a Travel Book That Vachel Lindsay's Latest Boy of Yours Will Demand Vachel Lindsay maintains that "Hobnails and Heather," ·by Clifton George Washington was a poet, writing Lisle, is the story of the first internot in in~ but in blood. Lindsay says national hike ever made by American boy scouts. In the summer of 1927 in his new "Litany of Washington Major Lisle and a group of scouts from Street": "I welcome all evidence to his troop walked through England and prove that Washington was not a France. They camped on the moors of reader of our best magazines, nor yet Devon, spent a day with Sir Robert one of the twelve apostles. I welcome Baden-Powell, pitched their tents in the all evidence that he was neither Daniel cathedral close at Canterbury, vi·3ited Webster, Noah Web5ter, nor the ob- the battlefields of France, missed by a scure author of that famous poem, 'The narrow margin being caught by the tide Star Spangled Banner,' Francis Scott on the treacherous sands of Mont St. Key. But let me add at once that 'The Michel. Star Spangled Banner' would not be This travel book for boys combines waving on Washington street nor any- the funny and exciting incidents of a where else, if it had not been for this camping trip with descriptions of £ammysterious and inaccessible mountain ous place·3 as the boys themselves saw th.em. It will give to other boys, as the of a man, George Washington." This "Litany of Wa-5hington Street," tnp gave that group of scouts a new he says to the historians, is a work of feeling of international under~tanding the i~agination, and yet on its pro- and friendship. Harcourt, Brace and vocative pages will be found not a few company are the publishers. startling truths, and keen ;-.nd humorous comments on certain of his con- Sinclair Lewis Leaves Off temporaries-Carl Sandburg, Harriet Acid Satire in "Dodsworth" Monroe, Edgar Lee Ma·sters, H. L. Sinclair Lewis has written about an Mencken, Sinclair Lewis, Mary Pickford, and Rudyard Kipling, with inci- American he likes In "Dodsworth" Hardental sparkling references to Henry court, B~ace and cot?lpany publishers, Ford, John Dewey, Gamaliel Bradford Mr,. Lewts leaves behmd him thati acid and Thomas A. Edison. · satire for which his earlier novels are fa~10us, and strikes a deeper and more . "!he Li.tany of _Washington Street" ts JUS! bemg pubhshed by Macmillan. umversal n?t~. T~is qu!et, slow-spoken, reserved mtlhonatre bmlder of automobiles, Samuel Dodsworth is not the A MEATY BOOK booming Babbitt, the an~ious ArrowProfessor Ge~rge Wrong has written smith, or. the bl~tant Gantry, but like t~·o meaty volumes on "The Rise and them he ts pecubarly American and he l·all of New France." His study is at ~ill take his place in that gallery of on~e . a copious revi~w and a pungent tmmortal types created by Sinclair pomtmg up of a ptcturesque colonial Lewis. adventure -Philadelphia Inquirer. RM«AAN rNMt. tvANSIOWilmette J700 · The Land That Is Desolate An interuting record of a tour of Palestine, by Sir Frederick Treve& Dutton .... ~ ........... $4.00 The Ladder of Folly Appleton The MacMil~an company includes i'n its array of spring book anouncements the f~llowing of especial interest to boys and girls : "Prince Bantam"-by Lynd Ward and :Mav McNeer. "Gree;1 Pipes"-by ]. Paget-Frederick5. "Nanette of the Wooden Shoes"-by Esther Brann. . "Pusty Pete"-by Nina Nicol. "Jimmy Quigg, Office Boy"-by Harold S. Latham. "Holidav Pond"-bv Edith M. Patch. "The Haunted ·ship" - by Kate Tucker. · "Jimmie, the Story of a Black Bear Cub"-by Ernest Harold Baynes. "Mad Anthony's Dr\tmmer" - bv Reginald \\Tright Kauffman. "Hf:lrbor Pirates"-by Clarence Stratton. "More Boys and Girls of History"hy Rhoda and Eileen Power. Hoove·r, "a birthright Fnend, figures, of course, in the pages of Lester M. Jones's book, "Quakers m Action," which recounts the stirring story of the humanitarian activities of American Q.uakers during and since the World War. Mr. Jones tells not only of the relief work of the Friends in Europe, but of their new efforts to aid in the solution of social problems here in America, and their efforts to bring about inter-racial understanding both at home and abroad. ~resi~ent We Present a New List of Books for Youniaters Muriel Hine ........· ·. . .. $1.00 QUAKERS IN ACTION The Lioness F,rdinand Ouendowski Dutton ··.............. $2.50 Red Tiger Adventures in Yuutan ~nd Mexico. Phillips Russell Brentano's ............. Ss.oo A LIVING PERSONALITY Professor Joseph Redlich, author of "Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria," had the advantage of being free from bias, and he engaged in his work with the dispassionate curiosity of the analytical historian. The result of his labors is a well-balanced volume in which the absence of dramatic tension is more than compensated by the dynamic power of a living personality.-The New York Times. The Buffer Alice H egan Rice -author of Mn. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch. Century .....·......... $1.50 CAROLINE GILTINAN'S POETRY \ . Poems and the Spring of Joy Mary Webb . Introduction by Walter de Ia Mare. Dutton ................ $2.50 · Jehovah's Day Mary Borden Doubleday. Doran ........ $2.50 The Last Home of Mystery in Nepal, together With accounts of Ceylon. British India. the Native States. the Overland Desert Mail. E. Alexander Powell The Century Co .......... $4.00 ~adventures Joyce Kilmer called Caroline Giltinan "the least artificial poet living." Her poems spring from a fine understandmg of the beauty in life, its sadness and t~e joy \\·hich often comes through expcnences whose radiance could be c.aught only by a poet of deep percep tiOn. Miss ~iltinan has a noteworthy gift for turmng her thought in a small space, so that in Ler new volume "The Ve~led Door," one comes upon' lines whtch are almost epigrammatic in character Yet rich in cadence. DELTA DELTA DELTA MEETS North Shore alliance of Delta Delta Delta will meet in the home of Mrs. Delbert W. Poff. 739 Walden road, Winnetka. Wednesday of next week. A comedy is to be presented by a group of the alliance. Carl Closset. nephew of Mrs. 0. \\T. Schreiher of 1742 Washington aveoue. who recently underv.·ent an operation on his leg at Evanston ho:;pital, returned to the home of his am1t Tuesday morning, where he now is convalescing. Eves that have "IT" "IT" . . . that subtl~ something which attracts others ... usuallv lies in the eyes. Don't be dis'couraged if your ·own eyes are dull, lifeless and unattractive. A few drops of harmless Murine will brighten them . up and cause them to radiate "IT." Thousands upon thousands of clever women use Murine daily and thus keep their eyes always clear, bright and alluring. A month's supply of this longtrusted lotion costs but 6oc Try it! · He who says that Life is short Has never suffered pain. A night can hold eternityAnd night returns again. As God Made Them Studies of Webster, Clay, CalGreeley, and Edwin houn. Booth. Gamaliel Bradford Houghton, MifDin ~ Co .... S3.50 Slaves of the Gods Katherine Mayo Harcourt, Bra~e ~ Co.·... $1.50 This Side of Jordan -a story C'f plantation negroes, happy and cardree, on the banks. ROMl Bralord Harper's .........·..... $1.50 Lord~..-Boolu lwt Inside the West Davia St. Door IJRIIVL f.ORyouR EYEs