Illinois News Index

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 23 Jun 1928, p. 41

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

WINNETKA TALK June 23, 1928 odd ANB fo FOVNIAIN SQVARE - EVANSTON University 1024 Rogers Park 1122 Wilmette 3700 NEW BOOKS Patrons of Lord's may be glad to know that the book department is prepared to send the new books on to them this summer, with no charge for shipping. Pursuit Rosita Forbes Macanlay: 0... 500... $2.00 Unforbidden Fruit Warner Fabian Boni © Liveright ........ $2.00 Dawn Captain Reginald Berkeley J. H. Sears 8 Company ..$2.00 The Battle of the Horizons Sylvia Thompson Little, Brown 8 Company, $2.50 Two Flights Up Mary Roberts Rinehart A Love Story, With Just Enough Mystery. Doubleday, Doran % Co. . ..$2.00 Oberland Dorothy Richardson The tenth volume of the series originally called Pilgrimage. Alfred A. Knopf The House of Sun-Goes- Down Bernard de Voto Macmillan The Closed Garden Julian Green --the ninetieth thousand of this remarkable novel has already been sold. Harper § Bros. ......... $2.50 Sunset Gun Dorothy Parker Boni © Liveright ........ $2.00 Eva's Apples William Gerhard Duffield. ......... Lo. $2.50 LORD'S--BOOKSHOP First Floor--Just Inside the West Davis Street Door Esther Gould's Book Corner JUST PARAGRAPHS "I will give $25000 to anyone who will kill him," screamed one of the delegates to the Baltimore convention, leveling his arm towards Bryan. But although there was always someone wanting him assassinated and always someone defeating him, yet Bryan bobbed up again to fight another day. The ridiculous elements in the life of the Great Commoner, give spice to J. C. Long's book of his life. That was a new one, when S. S. Van Dine, much advertised mystery or detective story writer, made a dis- tinction between the two. Instead of comfortably classing them together it seems that those who know analyze them, and if the appeal is to the emo- tions the story is a mystery, if to the pure intellect it is a detective. That explains why so many high brows have of late been broadcasting the fact that they enjoyed detective--or was it mystery stories? GOOD VERSE "SUNSET GUN" By Dorothy Parker, and "Poems in Praise of Practically Nothing" By Samuel Hoffenstein Boni & Liveright Dorothy Parker is, as usual delight- ful. Wit, a clean edged sharp wit, cutting here and sparing there but doing all with perfect neatness, sar- casm, satire, and here and there an unsuspected tenderness, are here in her second volume, "Sunset Gun," as they were in her first. It is not easy to make short verses Soothes and Refreshes Motorists' Eyes Eyes strained by hours at the wheel and irritated by exposure to sun, wind and dust are instant- ly relieved by Murine. It soothes away the tired, burning feeling; clears up the bloodshot condition. Carry it with you on motor trips to refresh and protect your eyes. Also keep a bottle of Murine in your locker at the country club for use after golf, tennis, swim- ming and other sports. A month's supply of this beneficial lotion costs but 6oc. Try it! Write Murine Co., Chicago, for FREE books on Eye Beauty and Eye Care IR ING EYES and make them neither dwadling or too clipped. One is ineffective, the other forced. Miss Parker is neither. Her verses step along in a sprightly way, like an old lady going to market, but the old lady never gets rattled in the midst of traffic. Here is one of the kind at which she is brightest, "Thought for a Sunshiny Morning." "It costs me never a stab nor squirm To tread by chance upon a worm. 'Aha my little dear,' I say "Your clan will pay me back one day.'" Quite a different mood is the one on "Bric-a-brac," beginning, "Little things that no one needs" and ending, "Those are made by lonely folk." Dorothy Parker gives high praise to Samuel Hoffenstein whose "Poems in Praise of Practically Nothing" are somewhat more solid fare than her own. Mr. Hoffenstein essays into more than questions of mood, his subjects are social as well as personal. His also sharp wit is turned on road- side signs, noise, Fords, radios, in fact there is little obnoxious in this great America of ours that doesn't come in for its share of drubding. Then he can turn from purposeful spite to that sub- lime silliness which we maintain is the best antidote for nerves. "From coast to coast the railroads roam : Yet every inch of rail stays home." He can speak in much the same terms as Miss Parker herself, yet his tone is one of more maturity, a trifle more studied. They both make good reading, the kind it is very hard to put down. THE BOY AND THE RIVER "TREVY THE RIVER" By Leslie Reid E. P. Dutton & Co. "Trevy the River" is a strange book. It's author, Leslie Reid, is a competent one, "Saltacres" and "The Rector of Maliseet" were both of them good CHANDLERS for BOOKS T he most complete book stock on the North Shore Christiansen-Huettman Wedding June 16 Event Miss Fae Lorine Christiansen be- came the bride of Leslie Harry Huett- man Saturday afternoon, June 16, at Christ church, Winnetka. Miss Chris- tiansen is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E A. Christiansen of the Linden Crest apartments, Wilmette, and Mr. Huettman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Huettman of 845 Michigan ave- nue, Wilmette. The Rev. Morton C. Long of Monti- cello, Ill, performed the ceremony. He had read the service for the father and mother of the bride when they were married. Miss Gladys White of Chi- cago was the bridesmaid. Royal Gun- nison of Seattle was best man, and the ushers were Ward Green of Norwalk, Conn.; Arthur Haven of Highland Park; and Robert Wick of Evanston. After the reception following the ceremony the Huettmans left for New York City where they will board the Carmania for Europe. They will return in September. On Saturday preceding the wedding, Mrs. H. E. Pollard, of Winnetka, gave a shower for the bride. Other enter- tainments during the week included a luncheon given last Wednesday by Miss Natalie Redfield at the Lake Shore Athletic club, followed by a matinee party. Miss Gladys White gave a linen shower for the bride last Friday afternoon at a bridge lunch- eon. Friday night the bridal party was entertained at the Stevens hotel, Chicago at a dinner given by the par- ents of the bride. books, books which deserved more attention than they received. "Trevy the River" is a book likely to be less understood than those because instead of dealing with a large and more or less normal group of English people, it deals with one character who is far from normal. Trevy, born on a night of storm in a little mill beside the river of that name is christened thus by his mother. She had almost identified his father with the river which had finally taken his life. So Trevy grows up in his turn identifying himself with the river, find- ing peace and joy there when his is little understood by any human com- panions. After his mother's death, a breaking of the only bond which held him, Trevy goes away and tries to find a place for himself somewhere else in the world. But he cannot, and one day in his wanderings he finds himself at the source of his beloved river. He wan- ders down its course, finding the greatest happiness he has ever known, and realizes that at last that being almost one with his river he, too, must find his end in the sea. FOR VALOR By Covington Clarke A great story of avia- tion and war, for boys of eight to eighty. Authentic -- adventure- some -- thrilling. $1.50 At All Bookstores REILLY & LEE Chicago New York Going Away Presents gagement Gifts Showers BOOKS for LULU KING Books Sold and Loaned 728 Elm Street, Winnetka Ph. Winn. 1101

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy