* ~%Ifd lft Son, I ft.50o OrvlogI,., Av.. GM. 0227 Up.d.J CAR~ E Evansto. SOMceyour lofe> «Y réé> with Such bMa of Scofland byMixwell Andersen Converstion Pioe by Noul Coward One%: Company by Feter Fleming Conquesi of Tlb.t by Svn Redin WIld â?y Fr ankUc as otten as ilot,. have micoverits 5K their fingertips. In order that they- and ail those others' who now fid leisure hours on their hands-may put their time, and' effort into actually makingmoney, he bas writttn a clear, absorbing, and informative., book, Research:. The Pathflnder« of Science and -Indueir.- In this he :flot. only bas providtd, a guidebook for the aümur but, by. describing tht fic.ld of research as a whole, illuminates, from a vocational standpoint, tht field that awaits, tht would-be inventor. First tht author defines . and il- lustrates what research. is, drawing a distinction betweenpuirely scientific research and. applied'research iii tht. service. of industry.. Next he -ex- plains how the field of research evolves as industries develop , de- scribes how rescarcb is organized and financed how laboratoHres are plan- ned, etci. He then deals witb the training and rtcruiting of research spécialists and the qualifications that1 are needed for the work In another section he summarizes -the achievements of organized. re- search under tht heads -of products, improved, industries originated, in- dustries destroyed, and tht economic, educational,. and humanitarian di- Mr. Pitkin 'will speak at a luncheon being sponsored by members of Sigma Delta Chi, national professipnal jour- nalistic fraternity, nceertino their Founider's day anniversar.. Because of the wuidespread interest in the speaker, ýthe luncheon has been opned toawo are. interested in the fleld of journalismn and who would like. to hear Mr. Pitkin. Reservations must be made in advance. A professor of jouenalisml at Colum- bia university, Mr. Pitkin has long been noted forhis writings. He has become esp-cially famnous in recent years for bis psychological writings in theé vocational fields. His most re- cent book is New-Hlorizons for Youth. May Publications TH E ESSENTIAILS OF PABLIANENq. TANT DENoCEACy. by PL Bassetit.. P C (ew eitin wth new mate- rial), by Owen Lattimore. BU IUY JUSTICE, by Mary Stevenson Callott. NOTJIINO LxiNE LEATER by V. S. Pritchett. ]LINGO0F Tu£ EEAT CLOÇI TOWE]Es COMINENTABIES AND POENS, by Wilia~m Butler Yeats. THE PAETNEESKIP, by Phyllis Bent- ley. GOD'S SOLDIERt QENEBAIL WIL- LIAM BOOTH, by St. John Ervine. NOT BVILT WITH HANDS, by Helen C. Wht. gether aelignrzul tale as at once lught, shrewd, wistf ut1 satiric. "As the Sound of a trumpet to a, war horst or the. sight of the baccarat table to'the inveterate gambler, so0 the aspect* of an awning, a uine of, cars, a police- man,. and a knot of idlt spectators, wvas.to Bond", On the one hand, the man nourished an'o bsession to move in the circles of high society, but on tht other, there was the, plain fact. of tht matter:.Bond was a.nobody,«. thé son of an Englisb auctioneer. Yet if he had ýno remarkable talents, no spécial éducation, heiwas smiled upon ont- day by Fortune. .In. short, Bond, At tht age of thirty,, suddenly foünd himself 'independent with an inctome of L 1-,000 a year. And here is tht story of what ht did with bhis money, of how in' Italy and France he repaired bis education, and thten rettwhing to Lôndôn, begarn at the foot of tht social ladder and scaled it to tht heights. It is also the story of his secondary existence, bis quixotic marriage to tht lower uiiddle-class .Hetty'-a marriage more considerate than wise, as things turn out eventually. Suffice it to say that after following' Bond's carter through its victories and defeats, its piteous moments, its humorous aspects, we~ are left with a Isearch, remuntration of rescarcb Aa> là, wirn .41ina at .3o'cîock,.()n workers, and the penalties of pioncer- other days at tht same hour sub jects ing i industry. Every aspect of tht wiil be: Tuesday, "Indians of Plain subject is thoroughly covtred. Tht and Plateau"; Wednesday, «"Jewefry author's own statements are liberally of Many Lands"; Thursday, a general. supported by quotations from others. tour of anthropological, botanical, ge- ological and zoological exhibits, and To Vsif n GemanyFriday,. "Monkeys and Their Rela- To VisiWole.ray o fTictives." These tours, conducted by staff Thoas o3e, atho. o 0 Tiwlecturers, are open to all museum and the River,_ writes to, Charles visitors, withnnt charmet Parties as-. mIai tiuinpi----ana rU . VVyice DURU.- "Entertainment of thternost admir- able kind."-_Ralph Straus in tht London Sunday Times. "A brilliantly satiric notion. Original and ýenter- taining."ý-Gerald Gould in tht Lon-. don Observer. oft very whosec ............................ M ......... tte*** . * . cpxs nvros easo entertaining way. (To be pub-, science, and the guesses that have in tht faîL) 1 been made as toi tht answtrs. "«The Greatest, Bargains in Biooks e.. A - - .- - '-ýp