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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 13
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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 13

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Asheville, North Carolina
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ASHEVILLE CITIZEN-T1MF3, ASHEVILLE, N. SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1941 Section It Pate FTVt PEOPLE'S FORUM Lend-Lease Ship Goes To War THE LITERARY GUIDEPOST linatlon is not going to eliminate hay-fever or asthma, but it will do much to make more comfortahli. our home-people and visitors who Newsman Makes Trip On Vessel From New York To Canadian Port Book Production Cut But Quality Offered suiier irom these diseases. If we are to penalize the destruction of beauty, would It not be consistent to penalize the growth of weeds? WILSON PENDLETON. Asheville, N.

C. OMRS. C. D. BEADLE Editor ol The Citizen-Times: Will you Kindly grant space In the People's rorum for the following public expression of appreciation? On Tuesday, officers and section presidents of the Needlework guild held a special meeting to express officially what we have all been leeling concerning the untimely passing of Mrs.

C. D. Beadle. Those of us who worked with her know It will be impassible to replace her. Her charming personality and her unselfish devotion to every cause in which she was concerned IFHtor'.

Hrri I. thf tint and ett-lu-tlve rif-wllntfi ittn of In. rn-trr Into tb. blllr of I he Atlantic of on Ainrlron war vrl. now a fiihiini unit of tho rlrlllth narir.

A writer for th. Ap Traturo S.rrtr. and Tho riUion-Ttaira rofto Iho to anad to lira job thta anphic arconnt.i Decrease Is Seen In Works Concerning War Subjects i rill 2 i STRATEGY IX THE NEAR EAST Editor of The Citizen-Times: The tide of this "World War 2" changed on June 12, '41. British-Hebrew Arabic troops reached Sidon, Syrian port south of Beyrouth, and their French compatriots attacked Damas, Syria's an By MORGAN M. BEATTY (AP Feature Service Writer) ABOARD H.M.S.

AT SEA. The lights of metropolitan New made her an inspiration to all who Here's Some More Summer Fiction ALBERT LEFFINGWELL, who has written a great deal ot advertising, a number of mystery novels under various and at least one saleable sonnet, now has to offer an International adventure novel which tt excellent. Nine Against New York" concerns the adventures of one Mike Pope, newspaperman, who had no par ticular desire to mix into the gllt York blazed a friendly farewell. Steaming close, the rest of our cient political center. Thus the PUBLISHERS, as usual, expect you to read fewer books this summer.

The number of new titles Is already dropping off, but there seems to be little wrong generally with the quality of the books now being offered. The war and Its problems continue to occupy many writers, but Near East shnwnWn hprupen squadron was silhouetted against were associated with her. In her honor the guild is establishing a memorial table to be featured at the Ingathering in the fall. Articles contributed to this table will be used to assist some group in which she was especially interested. Some donations have already been received and many others are expected to make this a fine testimonial to the respect and admiration with which Mrs.

Beadle was regarded. To know her was a privilege, to edged intrigues of a suffering world. the current tendency is toward a definite decrease in this type of but did. It concerns his adventure book. Instead, publishers are finding new interest ln escapist mate rial pure fiction, travel, adventure, mystery and biography.

ahare In the variety of her service True Believers in the Almighty and "stem horizon, their running the mighty" Devil Worshipers (as lighis "'Inking nd weaving back of represented by Vichy, Berlin. as we sn'PPed out of the harbor pest, and Rome) came to its Ahead thf dark Atlantic. The stage. The desert army of the B. brldBe our leadlnS hip buzzed E.

F. held the upper hand, emc'ent orders and responses, continued to push forward. from New I York cast dull streaks along the The Independent Djebel Druse barrels of our big guns stripped Mohammedans demonstrated their for action on Ule decks below Ex bravery and stalwartness by open--cept for those deadlv guns lt would ly defying the craven, corrupt Vichy have like a pleasure trip. regime. The Druses are upright, tK tough Arabs.

They know clearly on ZL .1 which side they would be the most 1eprred blnoculars. Issued effective and strong. Being, as it I oroers. were, neutral, and located between' 'Darken ship! Show NO lights! the opposing forces, they considered Executive Order! their own position in this fight for) His voice was quiet, almost casual, freedom, and quickly realized the But instantly the bridge went inky danger to their families and home-; black. Signal men rushed to sta-land Hons with long-barreled flashlights If, In the future, the Nazi Axis and Pjn-Pints of light at should conquer, the evil wng train, tic policy of an arrogant Hitler! Jn aIew moments all our war-would persecute or dictate the dark" tire Semitic.

Hamitic, and Japhetic tnat remained of warm, area of this planet. The Turks, i btistling America was a faint yellow wun tne Nine. and at the end bursts in a highly colored and probably an unforgettable climax. And it. reads with such speed that (as Mr.

Lefflnjfwell doubtle-ss lDtendei) you reach the end too soon and hope that you may meet Mike again. You may, too. (Holt: Some experience of Cape Cod inclines me to doubt that it really la the homey, warmish, serene place that Sara Ware Bassett seems to think it is. But Miss Bassett's Belleport novels are dedicated to the proposition that the tourists have made little difference, and "Cross Currents" is an excellent 'Darkness At Noon' Grim, Foreboding GRIM and foreboding is Arthur Koestler's "Darkness at Noon" (Macmlllan: $2.50 1, a fictionalized account of one ot the Communist purges. An old Bolshevist, Nicolas Rubashov, one-time leader in the an nouor.

MRS. W. M. BENZING. Publicity Chairman, A-shevllle-Biltmore Branch Needlework Guild of America.

SIDEWALK TRAFFIC Editor of The Citizen-Times: At one time, the self-regulated sidewalk traffic in the city of Ashe-Tille was superior to that of any city in the South and was often a aubject of favorable comment by many. But. for some unknown party, is forced to confess that he plotted the murder of Stalin. His example seiws. Miss Bas- story of prison experiences provides SPtt Is so experienced romancer one of the most powerful novels of that you come to believe a bit, and the year.

Though gloomy, Koest ler's treatment is eflective and the to enjoy greatly the conflict of Robin and his brother, and the helpfulness of Sabrina Baxter and her delectable daughters. (Double- picture of Soviet intrigue is terri Egyptians, Hebrews, Dicbel Druses, fying. day. Doran: $2) Trans-Jordanitcs, Iraguans, the freedom-loving Nejdian Arabs, would then have to bear a yoke. Here was blackout for you in American waters! Practice?" 'Hardly I moved closer to the shadowy Barre Lyndon's "Sundown" Is at the opposite pole.

It Is set in Africa, of the historic domination of the0 where for the purposes of Mr. Lyndon's book a small group of whites reason, our sidewalk traffic is now' far below par. The people of Asheville and Bun-! combe county have at all times' shown a desire to co-operate In any movement that would be to the best interest of the city; and I am! sure, with our splendid newspapers, radio stations, chamber of com-! merce and other civic organizations. I that a concerted effort can get our eelf-regulated sidewalk traffic back, to Its high standard. Pedestrains should be cautioned to walk to their right and go orj else stand aside, in order that! others may go.

At no time should hn-sphnll nrpnment.s. nolitical con Is living against the murky back ground of the whispering deserts and so on. The native "telegraph' works mysteriously, and (as you may have guessed) the whole thing will be on the 'screen shortly. "overlords" (the Egvptians, Meso- potamians, Hittites Persians, and! fa'd-, ship takes it for granted the enemy Th tLr may anywhere? There's no point corned stranger would again be hurled at the "decaying 'shl government has turned Western Asiatic lands. 'r It will indeed by a Holy war; Target'" when the Semite, return the false vou see.

a submarine Is compliment of the ignorant "Cru- ratn bUnd nt Unless 6ome. saders" with interest and regain: lves hlm tQ alm their honorable reputation through at out the world, which they have up-j No need to flnlsh the Kntence held for so i long a time. That iThe 5ub commander wno could (Stokes: (2) European Government Taken Up In Book DR. R. TAYLOR COLE, associate professor of political science at Duke university, is co-editor with Prof.

Harold Zink of DePauw university of a volume on "Government in Wartime Europe." Just been published by Keynal and Hitchcock. Of the distinct sections of the book two relate to England, two to Germany, one to Russia, one to Italy, once to France under Petain, one to the Impact of the war on the Bnlkans, and one to effects of the current war on governments ln Norway and Sweden. Professor Cole wrote the section on "Wartime Theories and Policies of the Third Reich." Discussing FORMER U. S. WARSHIP IN CONFLICT At the top is an exclusive picture of an English crew taking a former U.

S. warship out of New York harbor. It and other pictures used with this article are the only ones ever obtained for publication under such circumstances. The British navy accents signal work of all kinds. Signalmen do no other work.

On the left at the bottom a signalman is using an Arnnrican device, flags. U. S. ships, painted white, have white anchors. On the right at the bottom a British tar paints the anchor gTay, removes last bit of peacetime identification.

According to the rental library people ln my neighborhood, westerns are now a drug on the market. But somebody must read them, for they are being published right and left. Now there is one by the late Dane Coolidge called "Bear claves and family reunions be held in the middle of the sidewalk. Asheville is not a "hick town." It is a city and its sidewalk traffic ihould not reflect otherwire. Try out the above suggestion and 'J every one will be more than well nleased with the results.

nave noi occaea in ine scales oi slnlt a "Lend-Lease" ship before lt fe is demonstrated by the fact had been ln Britlsn hands more Paw." Mr. Coolidge was disting uished for a number of things. that contemporaneous historians than a few hours would a na. the Royal Navy. They told me the room.

And her decks were coated plank, I was greeted by an officer, claim that the Syrian campaign ner0 ln Germany. And so ceremony was impressive. with crushed granite for sure-footed and taken tlle ward TQOm be (ln which Semites are engaged) is we were dark Wnat had been a 55.3. became actiton against an enemy. one of the most difficult in world Tn nri'o hms AmnHpen Then a ouiet.

disciplined EnKlish wnere 1 my S11'P mates among them accuracy of back P. V. HALL. Asheville, N. C.

ground and credibility of incident In his stories. "Bear Paw" is good "The executive officer reminded me Coolidge. (Dutton: $2) And in A four-pronged attack Into Syria ence between a world at war and Gone was the gleaming white coalmen before, spin her wheel, turn that formality was absurd In war- trends in Nail theory the Duke will meet with results, because the mv own united States so close be- of a Coast Guard yessel. They had her knobs, snap her switches, oil time, bade me make myself com-1 specialist ln comparative govem-EnelLsh have stifled Germany's 1... hnr rtnn.

tt rasiml- fortable. Soon the commanding of-! ment summarizes significant writ- "Red Clarke Takes a Hand," Red dispenses western Justice with need, some humor, and a lot of flank attack in Iraq: and. wheni had'eome aboard this former for automatic blackout's at night. 'ly and confidently as I'd turn the Ier came down me the same ing in Germany which reveals the violent action. (Doubleday, Doran: 2 the British reacn tne TurKisn iron- Coast Guard cutter the night was complete down to the spigot on mv shower at home.

greeting, 10m me 1 naa me mouves 01 muir ana iuK.t. tier, thev will be ready and pre- fore- soon arter lt nad been trans. last knife and fork evfn to the A Poker Game end of forces which are driving him pared for any eventuality in that f.rrPri frnrn th. iinitpri stntp tn wtrin Tfrirrrntir in the ward When I steDned across the gang- Turn To Page Six, on. In a section on German labor district.

EXPORTS PACE RAPID GROWTH and the war Professor Cole shows how the German laborer recently has been "showered wtth promises which will be fulfilled 'after the war'." The Oerman Axis has, up to the present time, been using the flank attack system, as shown, first of all. ln Holland, then in Norway, and ln France. Roumania, Bul W. ORTON TEWSON AT SAO PAULO Attic Salt Shaker BAO PAULO. Brazil (UP) The garia (which were used as stepping-stones into Yugoslavia and city of Sao Paulo, described by lt As to church and state relations in Germany, the author points out that the Protestant churches, except for minor sects which were bitterly persecuted even before the war began, have fallen in line, and that the pope "has avoided any open authorities as "the greatest industrial center of Latin America," has Greece).

Now thev are being forced' FIRST diplomatic dinner to use wide-spread side tactics Oslo, given by King Haakon of Harriman "It was after dinner, when I stood by her chair, telling her stories, that I discovered her true character and especially her sense of humor. grown in population from 31,000 ln Llbva, Crete, Bulgaria, and Nor Norway, Mrs. J. Borden Florence a 1 1 a Harriman United States minister to that 1870 to 1.380.000 in 1941. ten minutes, her majesty will be delighted." "But," said the young clergyman, "what can a preacher possibly say In only ten minutes?" "That," replied Disraeli, "will be a matter of indifference to her majesty." This expaaslon among cities ot break with Hitler, although pro A DISGRACE TO THE NATION Editor of The Citizen-Times: In September.

World War 2 will be two years old. and Americans still consider themselves neutral. Although we are not actually engaged in battle, we will have to admit we are playing a major role in this conflict. Every American should know what this very important part we are playing is. News of it travels the ether every day, lt is the topic of conversation of millions, it often makes the headlines.

American production and labor Is the answer. Labor and production that is the headache of the whole nation. Labor and production that, in Its present stacc. is smiled upon with satisfaction bv the Eurooean war-monrers. We all agree that labors trouble Is the brake of the whole national de-lease program.

At the beginning of the war our president started by calling the Qnation to its feet, and there was Whttle or no response. Strikes swept the country, saboteurs went about their work. Communists, with their Infamous activities, did their part ln trying to throw the country into confusion, nnd with some success. We have seen very little good in the labor unions. Some of the union cfficials have proved themselves unworthy of performing the tasks assigned them.

Not one labor union can say It has been a great help to the defense program. the Western Hemisphere is exceed way. The Svrian and Abyssinian fronts can be considered lost by the Axis. Tough desert troops and a modern, well-equipped army in country, found herself, ln turn, toasted by the king, along with the heads of the other missions. The testing with varying degrees of vehemence many actions ot the ed only by Los Angeles.

Sao Paulo Is situated at an alti SIR LIONEL PHILLIPS, who, like John Hays Hammond, was sentenced to death and afterward released ln connection with the Jameson raid, tells this (in "Some Two travelers ln a railway train were joined by a third at a station. Looking at him, one of them said to the other: "1 am sure that Is the Archbishop of York." His friend said: "You had better ask him." He did so and received the offensive reply: "What the hell has that to do with you?" On reaching their destination the two innocents present regime." tude of about 2.600 feet on a plateau of the Brazilian coastaf range, ac- Concerning the Nazi revolution in general, Professor Cole notes a cessible to Santos, its seaoort. by rrnwine agreement thafc "National ht nn that "I TOLD HER one story which made her shoulders shake with laughter and I said, 'But I told you that story, Ma'am, to make you cry and not to "'But it's so funny, Bishop she said. "So when I was asked down next year on the same Sunday, I did I WAS REMINDED ot that story when reading the Rt. Rev.

A. F. Winnlngton-Ingram's account of his first sermon before Queen Victoria (in his Inspiring memoirs, "Fifty Years' Work in London" Fngland will be enough to conquer, ceremony Is a simple one. The king the Nazis Axis. lifts his glass, and the diplomat Iran, a Moslem nation, seems' stands, sweeps a deep bow, and capable of defending Itself against drinks.

a German flank attack (directed "The king lifted his glass, I start-towards India and Arabia), until ed to rise Dut he motioned me to the B. E. P. should aid them. It seated," reminisces Mrs.

Harri-would be foolish for the Nazi (in "Mission to the North," to start a war ln Iran, between ganant and almost gav story powerful Semite and British armies her three vcars, stay ln Norwav, In Iraq. efc. and the Native and ending after the German Invasion.) British Indian troops in BaluchLs-, comDromiscd bv mv thirty-eight of which he was Bish Socialism represents a fundamental mountain sides, and by a railway revolution in a social and civlliza- with such extreme gradients that tional sense" which Involves "a steam-operated cable lines are used complete reordering of the lives of for about seven miles of Its course, the individuals ln Germany and the The majority of Brazil's coffee, imposition of a new set of values." cotton and other agricultural prod-The type of mass state which has ucts and a large part of Its manu-resul'fd Is called a new phenome-1 actured goods pass through Sao said: "We do not know even now nn nf nnrtnn i Tt. in man whim not icei at an airaio ana preacnea It was the Arch- he was Blshoo of SteDhnev. that across chapel in my Informal whether or not he was commanded to go to Wind-: al sne seemed bishop!" to like much sor to preach before the queen.

IV tiif riAV Wfnr r.irtriiile Hon in history, whose course can Paulo for exports. "I was fairly frightened the first tan and India. It would be a repm- knees whicn me haf back nuci-a iviiii.ii kuv me nan u.u.h Slit GEORGE AltTlll who; Bell eainrri one of the not he predicted in the light of past ln nf tn- B.l.an AA ,1.. front, Lord Kitchener during the first1 nf Arnhin" nnri Kir! Sao Paulo has received eighth ranking ln point ot population among Western Hemisphere cities, and third ranking among cities of Latin America. During the past 10 years the city has grown at the rate of 4 2 per cent annually, compared mounia.n ran aim of antl.talpnt diplomatic re- mr ramer, ai ursi siSiu, aiarm-desert wastes would be their routes mBrkS! gaye one ft m( and ing face of the queen of whom I World War and who has written a good biography of his old Chief Percy Cox were the others shejjew Forester Book sat next to the fabulous Aga Khan had heard so much." he recalls.

says of the present British Prime at a London dinner party. Now; 1-11111 laming tiuiit and India. A teti. retreating an(, t( hu coUcagu t)lat was Minister (In "Concerning Win- the Aga Kahn. besides being the1 Then came Mr.

noosrveii mc-tide chat of a few days ago. He declared that a state of emergency existed throughout the nation, and -m th, little resnonse. More a re- direct descendant of the prophet LTHOUGH the fact that C. S. New Yorlt's population growth ut-miHii null; uiuii uitcv mercy from their "non-aggression "Wln- ston Spencer ChurchiU vealing portrait ot gallant ridiculous for me to be treated differently from the rest.

Was she a minister or was she not? If she was, pact" friend USSR. The German's Monammed. is a "bon viveur ana wrote Fr0m one of the richest men ln the world. 1 It p.n- to direct front with the ussk is 1IM1V -1111 "Mr. Churchill revealed himself.

When she told him that she with his eve on the serial market Is tS TEAPOT perilous. The Nazi Axis now points as the Governments Number One thinking of going to Baghdad 1 1 nirlv obvious now that lt is Dub- Northwest (to England) and South- "BUT I FOUND OUT afterwards that I need not have been frightened at all. for behind her rather alarming appearance there beat the kindest heart ln the world. Being very short-sighted ln her old age, her brows contracted in looking at her prayer book, whicn might have been mistaken for a frown. I need not say that I had carefully written a sermon for the occasion, but I have no recollection rf what it was all about or the text.

relate uonaid uomey ana uimi in hnnk- fnrm th. mrv h. Broadcaster. Lacking the Oxford accent he spoke as a Briton to SOON MAY GET 'SHOT IX ARM' Hearst On their timely biography 0(fcr exacll wnat a otner "Gertrude he remarked: hmk i. disputes have arisen, and the army has taken a hand to keep industry on the move.

We Americans believe we live in a powerful nation, but we also believe that it will cease to be so if labor continues with its slow progress, which Is almost disgraceful to this country in the eyes of other world powers. What and who is to blame for this situation? We don't know Whether it be the unions, the employers, the employes or forei'm agents remains to be discovered. nlv 1 nr the tiollce Britons. 'Monty Vlddio' was Just what the man ln tire pub called that South American port. The Churchllllan 'Narzi' sounded Just as one imagined such an outsider should sound." "Let me know if you go as I excellent entertainment of thei mvnnw would like to give you letters to Zane KnooI.

AlthouCh Mr. to mSv the teat than lte lat- nil ituptainXhVad- Club" one of London's motl a little of something else-and get clubs "always finds exclusive me." GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty ii a secuiiu urt-w oui ui ii uetier man evident in the new book as it was, the first. for example, in the Hornblower se-1 The war office wanted to know ries. But in tpite of its swift move- What to do with 16 tons of spent "HE SPOKE in Finnish, and my amiable Portuguese neighbor had to translate for me. I had a moment of embarrassment, but their majesties, by their tact and kindness, tempered it later.

It was explained to me that, of course, the king would not let a woman stand without standing himself; that if he stood for the American minister he would have to stand for all. It seems I had "played ball' ln Just the right way after all. "When the meal was over, we went into the ballroom and his majesty came to me, and addressed the 'Are you ready for your cigar?" and then laughed that hearty, characteristic laugh when the "woman" managed to say, "Not yet, IT SEEMS THAT Mrs. Harriman himself declared' Gertrude and general competence. "The ieaVes left behind every day la fl.

i I Captain From Connecticut" does the armv eamD let the army camps. or the F. B. I. but for the people later.

"His father used to give not equal eithT of tlle three Horn- and the United stales cuhbic Scientists said they would take ters of Introduction to the Angel It' i. in that our presi Gabriel in order to secure for his 'A tne lea Ior "Pwunents. ana now clients a good place in Paradise: 15 Rt of have told the war office that the son with his English education prodT l'. the army keep lts leaves and his familiarity with European 1 -n instead throw" them awa" h. rnm anybody.

Die other is that Mr. after use. adds a little chemical and east (to the Near East), and this position forces them to employ encircling tactics asaiast the British. A clean-up of German (etc) traders nnd men in Abvssinla, Svria, Libya, Italy, and French West Africa will cause the establishment of a definite front against the Nazi Axis, and the British (nnd allies) will be on the road to victory. When their homes are In Jeopardy men.

even though of different nationality, will unite In the cause of liberty for themselves and their country. The Greeks and British did the "Free" French. British. Arabs, and Hebrews are doing it now. WILLIAM WALDMAN.

Asheville. N. C. RAREWi'cOPY OF SWISS BIBLE FOUSD IX VAULT HUNTINGDON? Pa. (UP) A 24-vear-old German refugee librarian has discovered a rare pre-Luther edition of the Bible In a vault of the Juniata colleee library here.

Identification of the book by the refugee. Gerhard Fricdrich, establishes the 52d known existant edi clslng this privilege, though he has! 'resl" almost. with hot water they will i thwinnh ntt; ttnrv hAtiirn wim nmpm. have their tea again as good as new. i dent means business, we know the army means business.

We also believe the navy stands ready to defend our coasts. Now, if we could be assured that labor and production mean business, then would the world look upon us wltn envv, then would the dictators and would-be conquorers tremble! WOODROW BRYSON. Cullowhee, N. C. not ceased to ho in the opinion of his followers, the keys to hcav-i "love and a first heard of her appointment asi minister to Norway through thei en" 15 Iorrea IO rusn 0UM The secret mav be made available and bring In a suitable girl with a to tbe publle lf of the TO GET ON with the storv: Years The proceeding is, at times.

CUftoms and excise department can later. Gertrude Bell, while on a a'lnvt 11 tunny, if you caravan Journev. fell in with a "dd the extraordinary lack of The department has told the war couple or Druze tribesmen. One was 'cn ould 'denuI' of fee that old acts of parliament very talkative. Here is part of their aPt''m Pea body as a Yankee.

I lorbt- the dyeing or fabrication of conversation as reported by her: If this sounds captious, let me any tea leaves which have been 1 rnc.ES rrrriNO of weeds AVI) GRASSES Editor of The Citizen-Times: In the Asheville Citizen-Times of June 8. appeared an announce- nf the ROSC newspapers. "The news had leaked out from Norway, where there had been some delay ln granting their consent to my appointment." she relates. "I fancy the idea of a woman minister was not quite acceptable at Oslo at first and. also, a funny contretemps had arisen.

My iiven name is Florence, but all mv "t.ariv ladv." he asked, "have uiai uu vuinam uett you Journeyed to the land of of those shrewd Ralph Hind? Pa'ma U5ed to handle a racing Scientists say the chemical that must be added to the spent tea leaves is easy to make and cheap. mem me -ijffin hnnlpvnrd. This onr. iiir Mup in mis car is United States frigate By using it, millions of pounds of "May God make one it ira a-hich slinned out of Lone Island 1 it Yes upon you! Have you heard Uiere of a' 7 nurnitm sonnrl ln the course or th. war nf life I have been called Daisy, and! great king Mohammed? 1812, ar.d did all sorts of damage to Acaln I was able to reply In the tion of the rare two-volume Swiss I Bible, and makes the Juniata li-ibrary the sixth ln the United States to possess such a Bible.

The Bible, which belongs to the transition period between manu-i script and movable type in the pio- the British, chiefly in the Carib- WULL-ll. VlllCllJ 111 111 -AA 11.... jaruen on Is a most praiseworthy undertak-ng and will be an asset of distinct value to the city, providing beauty for our visitors and townspeople. The roses are to be looked upon only to cut any of them becomes wilful damage to public property and punishable by law. As one rides i in whatsoever Dart.

lu neighborhood. Captain Pea- I myself knew him, for their Kin? body's problem is a tricky one he Buyers Of 3 Motor Cars Hasn't Courage To Drive SEATTLE, Wash. IUP Frea most of my friends never knew me by anything else. The Norwegian minister in Washington, asked by his government who 'Florence Jaff ray" Harriman was, replied that he had 'never heard of her." When the state department pressed him about 'Daisy' Harriman, he said that was quite another matter." Mohammed was no other than my fellow subject the Aga Kahn. "Is he not a (treat kin?" must certainly keep out of the hands of the British, and therefore he must avoid battle under anv jneer days of printing, has been 'described by Wilhelm Walther, outstanding German bibliographer, as fifth of 14 pre-Luther Bibles But I answered cautiously, for nuviih me one is convinced that the same re Steiner.

58 has owned three new automobiles tn the past 20 years striction mast apply 10 weeas iuiu though the Aga Kahn is something of a great king ln a modern sense. but never driven any of them. 'printed ln High German. According naliilatinn it. WAS He bought the first car in Jacksonville, ln 1921, but sold lt circumstances which would entail the possibility of defeat or capture.

And yet he must, in order to plague the enemy, stay always in reacn and take every sort of chance. Eventually this lands Mr. Forester's astute hero In Martinique and in a very ocd predicament in nine days later. The next year he bought another car and sold it after grow rampant. These grasses and weeds are sources of wind-blown pollens that I make life miserable at this season for many people who are so unfortunate as to be victims of sea- AT.1 asthma printed somewhere in Switzerland! A biUKir about a about 1474.

I young clergyman who had been I The discovery was part of a mass commanded to preach before Queen of uncataiogued material which Victoria at Windsor. He went to lt would have been difficult to explain to his disciples exactly what the polished, well bred man of the world was like whom I had last met at a London dinner party and had given me the Marlborough Club as his address. it had stood three weeks in his garage. had lain ln the library vault for 40 see uisraeu. men prime minister.

Last year he bought his third car deed. He emerges from a good deal fa- iav'Tyr fllUfUariion.AAKulu years. It originally was a gift to the who gave him this piece of advice: of nice clean prose with a wife and here. His son drove it awhile. "If you preach thirty minutes.

it I British "uncle" and his colors Sterner sold It, too, because he said college fro-n the late Martin Grove Brumbaugh, wartime governor of i k- i mn iiunurarv lsociot or numane Leueri amta ior ii n.ts The Asnriarpri Pm. mnn ri.nl lit, Tha symptoms of these patients are ln proportion to the pollen concentration ln the air that they must breathe. Keeping tt-e grasses and weeds cut and preventing pol- oreach fifteen her mat- my notable and constructive contribution to liberal thought in Washington. Edwin M. Hood.

Tiholul Uyuut-and if anvtody thtaks he never could tip. r.st swiv Pennsylvania anl former Juniata college president. lesty wfl b. pleased, If you preacniand education for 1940-bow much did you give the KhoolVi -Tutn T. si! one aSaffT ddenT.

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About Asheville Citizen-Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,691,147
Years Available:
1885-2024