r_ Durant Re-Creates Story of Greece Marked by Rare Qualities of People - Youth of World Shown As Period of Brilliance Ancient History Becomes Poem of Perfect Form In Arid Prose of Years By Mary-Carter Roberts. The Life of Greece , By Will Durant. New York: Simon & Schuster. With this volume Dr. Durant’s history of civilization, in the prevail ing idiom, marches on. It was four years ago, if the reviewer remember* correctly, that he brought out his volume on the Orient. The period, apparently, has been filled with an immense labor of research. The history which results is not a particularly profound one, nor is it marked by any special attitude. That is to say. Dr. Durant has not at tempted to give any “new interpretation" to his subject, either by reason ing or by point of view. He has told, instead, pretty much the story that every one knows, the story of the rise of a brilliant, proud, eager, curious people, their dispersion and their disappearance. But, in telling this familiar tale, he has used an exceptionally broad method, and into his volume he has gathered more general information as to the contributing elements of Greek culture than one can find in any other recent accottht. His concern apparently has been to present to his readers the life of the successive periods of Greek history in a living picture, comprehensive and animated. And he has succeeded in doing so. His book, though factual in material and journalistic in style, is consistently vivid. It shows us that distant civilization fairly bubbling and pushing with life. It con cerns itself not only with the temples and citadels; it brings us the homes, the streets, the factories, the clubs and market places as well. It brings Us some of the grit that was Greece as well as the glory; yet the glory shines the more dazzingly for this broader view of it. The method has been to devote a section of the book to each of the successive periods of Greek history, from the Cretan ascendency to the coming of the Roman conquerors, and, within each section, to give study to all the significant aspects of the culture under examination—as the government, the arts, the moral standards, the conditions of labor, the conditions of commerce, education, standards of living, manners and so on. This plan is carried out with great detail. Within the frame of each sec tion there are shown the great men and women of the time, their careers, characters and accomplishments. And back of them is the picture of the whole world in which they lived, its customs and expectations. What re sults is not so much in effect an unrolling scroll of history as a series of separate canvases, each so lively, so realistic that it has a downright per sonal quality. His Method Is Orthodox One. The method has been used before, of course. It is indeed the ortho dox one for history writing today. But we do not often find it carried out with such closeness to its subject, such an agreeable absence of general terms, such intimate detail. Take, for example, the passage in which Dr. Durant describes the presentation of the classic drama; the reviewer for her own part found this bit particularly delightful because, when she had finished her undergraduate course in “Greek Culture,” her chief problem, she remembers, was to try to imagine how any plain human feeing could regularly summon up that profound reverence which, according to her professors, was the requisite Greek state of mind for attendance at the play. She decided privately that there must have been no plain human beings in all Hellas. Such is the scholastic tradition often used in ap proaching Greek history today. But Dr. Durant gives a much more cheerful picture. “The audience,” he says, "is as interesting as the play. Men and women of all ranks are admitted. . . . Women sit apart from men and courtesans have a place to themselves; custom keeps all but the looser ladies away from comedy. It is a lively audience not less or more man nerly than such assemblages in other lands. It eats nuts and fruit and drinks wine as it listens; Aristotle proposes to measure the failure of a play by the amount of food eaten during the presentation. It quarrels about seats, claps and shouts for its favorites, hisses and groans when it is displeased; when moved to more vigorous protest it kicks the benches beneath it; if it becomes angry it may frighten an actor off the stage with olives, figs or stones. . A musician who has borrowed a supply of stones to build a house promises to repay it with those he expects to collect from his next performance. Actors sometimes hire a claque to drown out with applause the hisses they fear, and comic actors may throw nuts to the crowd as a bribe to peace. If it wishes, the audience can by deliberate noise prevent a drama from continuing and compel the performance of the next play. . . And so on. Reverence, indeed. In this healthy spirit Dr. Durant carries out his whole examination of that people which today we are apt to approach with Byronic senti mentality or overwhelming awe. And the Greeks survive his irreverence very well. Theirs was the youth of the world. Knowing nothing of the universe beyond their own narrow waters, they had the limited horizon which pertains to youth; they also had the self-confidence, the passion, the curiosity, the courage and the beauty. They lived wastefully, not knowing their luck, spending in a few hundred years a fire which still lightens the memory of the human kind. This is the picture which Dr. Durant gives of them—not a nation of youth, but a youth which was a nation. Greece was a poem in the ever more-arid prose of Europe's history, but it was not, as we are apt to dream, a poem of perfect design. There was much violence in it, much willfulness, much unreason. Yet the beat of poetry was there consist ently, thrilling and high. That a book written in an essentially prose mood only confirms and repeats this pulse, is proof again that there were wonders in man's history somewhat in advance of the invention of the Diesel engine or the rapid-fire machine gun. Egyptian inreriuae By Jolan Foldes. Translated from the Hungarian by Alexander Kenedi and Irwin Shapiro. New York: Farrar & Rhinehart. The impression which the reviewer had from this new novel by the author of the prize-winning and best-selling “The Street of the Fishing Cat" was that Miss Foldes had heard somewhere of Frau Vicki Baum and, having for her own part tasted the famous prodigality of Amer ican royalties, was determined in a spirit of national pride that Hungary should not lag behind Germany in gathering the Yankee dollars in. Anyway, we have here a novel which seems to have been conceived lawfully, but brought forth in shame. Or, to amend the biological figure, Miss Foldes has had an idea right enough, but has embroidered it with all the sensation-making devices of the market. It is to her credit that she does such literary fancy-work very badly; in praise of her, one can say that, even with her pantingly earnest efforts, she is not as vulgar as Frau Vicki. But this does not help her book. Better a frank article of literary commerce than a good book merely trying to go wrong. As said, there is an idea in the work. But it is really no more than the idea already set forth in “The Street of the Fishing Cat,” where we had the story of a family of Hungarian expatriates trying to get along in Paris and finding that the way of the denationalized is a hard one. Here again Miss Foldes shows us a Hungarian in a foreign land. Here again she makes her plot deal with the difficulties which beset this Hungarian because of her expatriate status. And, even as before, she concludes in melancholy unreason that no one who has left the land of his birth can ever attain genuine social solidity again. But this time she has pitched her theme in terms of the personal emotions of her heroine, rather than on the strictly nationalistic grounds of her pre ceding novel. Not political. Heronie Is Her heroine, then, is not an exile for political reasons. She leaves her native land voluntarily when her marriage to a congenitally unfaithful young baron comes to grief. She is determined to be independent; she gets a job in Alexandria and goes there to earn her living. In that city she mingles with the somewhat limited white colony, some of the members of which are there, like herself, to work, while others are genuine exiles. The young woman moons about among these men and women, trying to draw conclusions about expatriation from their lives. She thinks of herself as one of the outcasts; she does this because of the purely personal failure of her emotional life. She decides at last, very profoundly, that outcasts can never get back. Then, with perfect unreason. Miss Foldes has her husband summon her once again to his side and she rushes joyfully home. In the meantime she has had a love affair which is represented as containing all the tenderness and faith which were lacking In her marriage, but this the young woman continently abandons. It is, as must be plain, a muddled plot in which the exile theme seems to have very little real place. The only way to tell the young woman’s story would, on the story’s merits, have been as a straight exam ple of feminine folly. To try to give it weighty implications is to mix lead and thistledown. But that is what Miss Foldes has done. Maybe she has not heard of Frau Baum only. Maybe she has been reading our own Dorothy Thompson, too. In addition, the thing is written with amazing sloppiness. It is full of vague maundering meditations on the nature of love and, again, the nature of love; it is full of episodes concerning characters who have no relation to any of the rest of it; it is at times grossly ungrammatical— though one must blame the translates and publishers for that. Yet, there is a vitality in it. The central character is alive. She is a fool, but she lives. And she is not so much a fool, either, but that she deserves a better book to live in. Journey Proud By Thomasine McGehee. New York: MacMillan & Co. This is another Civil War novel. The story—how a proud Southern family met the war and was en gulfed—is essentially romantic and melodramatic, but Mrs. McGehee is satisfied to write in a vein of under statement. She writes as though she is aware that the story has been told many times. The Impor tant thing is that she has some thing new to contribute to it. It Is the story of a large family— too large, in fact, for the reader's comfort. The Mackays love the land and their plantation way of life was the good way for them. They were substantial, upper mid !V dle-class people, who worked hard and feared God. They were less moved by political upheavals than the hot-heads one ordinarily en counters in novels of this era in the South. They lived their lives and expected to be let alone. But they were not. First the war, then the reconstruction. They lived as sur vivors in another world. How they fared in the new world is the latter and most moving part of “Journey Proud.” They were de feated, of course, but there is hardly a more appealing picture than that of pride surmounting defeat. Mrs. McGehee writes well, with restraint and quiet eonviction. X. T. I DR. WILL DURANT, Author of “The Life of Greece." Volume two in “The Story of Civilization." (Simon & Schuster.) A STUART CLOETE. Author of "Watch for the Dawn” (Houghton-Mi ffl in.) Watch for the Dawn By Stuart Cloete. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin Co. This novel, for some weeks now on the best-seller lists, is Mr. Cloete’s second book. His first one was “The Turning Wheels,” a Actionized ac count of the great trek of the Boers into the Transvaal of South Af rica. It was an arresting thing, done with a somewhat heavy hand but undeniably talented. Reading it one thought that a second book would reveal whether its author really had something to say or whether he was just a clever copy ist. The second book being now here, it can be said without hesi tation that Mr. Cloete is a first-rate story teller. “Watch for the Dawn" is, like its predecessor, a tale of South Africa in the last century, a tale of the border w'here the white settlements scattered out into farms, and the hardy Dutchmen who owned these farms lived in constant apprehen sion of raids from the natives. It is a scene of plentiful picturesque ness, and the skill with which Mr. Cloete makes it come to life is ad mirable. One has no sense of read ing a historical novel as one goes through it. The telling is so vivid that one seems to live in the very midst of the colorful, violent action. The story is of the adventures of a young Dutch trader, a man of good family and gentle breed ing who, through the accident of being in a certain place at a cer tain moment, finds himself an out law with a price on his head. By befriending an old farmer in diffi culties with the law the young trader brings the full wrath of the law upon himself. He takes refuge with a band of similarly outlawed men and subsequently with a native tribe. Prom then on the story is pretty much one of a running fight. But the scenes are of such force and clarity and of such exotic pictur esqueness that a reader has no sense of the device. It is just a story, no more, but it is a story told with the very maximum of effect. M.-C.R. America's Old Masters By James Thomas Flexner. New York: The Viking Press. Here we have, written in an ex traordinarily pleasant manner, the biographies of four early American painters—Benjamin West, John Sin gleton Copley. Charles Willson Peale and Gilbert Stuart. Mr. Flexner has not attempted to do a profound job of art criticism, or ; for that matter to criticize at all. He has instead told us the laborious but romantic personal histories of , four men who lifted American I painting above the provincial level, | treating his subjects as human be ings first and artists afterward. It was amazing to the reviewer to realize how little she knew of these early makers of American art his | torv, and she suspects that her ig 1 norance is not unusual, either. 1 How many of us know anything about Stuart except that he painted George Washington? Or of West be yond that he was the first Amer ican artist received abroad and that he did a sketch of his sister’s baby while still a child himself? Such shreds of fact and legend have for long done this reviewer service in lieu of more substantial knowledge. To those similarly benighted she recommends Mr. Flexner's volume as a pleasant school by which to shed some of their ignorance. Of the four histories the most in teresting is that of Peale. who be gan life as a saddler and took up painting because he found that' he could paint. Knowing nothing of I the mechanics of his new vocation, | never having seen even a palette, he devised his own tools and methods of work. He had a narrow squeak escaping debtors' prison in An napolis, was subsequently sent to ! England to study by his proud fel i low-townsmen, was received in i West's London studio and called on Dr. Franklin, whom he surprised (and sketched) with “a young lady on his knee.” He served with dis tinction in the Revolution, devised designs for stamps and patriotic pageants, studied natural history and founded a museum in that science, created the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and intro duced life classes to the great hor ror of the prudish Philadelphians, exhumed and mounted mastodons, was a friend of Jefferson, executed 14 portraits of Washington, mar ried three times and set out to look for a fourth wife in his 80s—a brilliant, insatiably curious, inde fatigable fellow certainly, a com plete American, a forerunner of such latter-day types as Edison and Ford. His history, even thus cur tailed, is immensely good reading. One suggests him as a subject for a sympathetic full-length biography. Not much less wonderful are the stories of the other three, all self taught, at least to some degree, all deriving from modest circumstances. By all means get Mr. Flexner's book. In this day. when young artists say that they cannot work unless they have a dole, it might be worth the general attention to give some re flection to the hard schools in which their forerunners exercised their genius. M.-C. R. * Nature-Lore Books Interest Young People in October October, with its multi-colored landscapes and brilliant forecasting of winter, leads young people irre sistibly out of doors. This emphasis upon the world of nature brings books about the out-of-doors and animal life into the foreground. The Public Library, at Eighth and K streets N.W., and its numerous branches have collections which cover adequately the wide variety of interests of these young nature lovers. To the boy whose mind uncon sciously associates a walk through the woods with the thought of his dog companion, Mazo De La Roche’s "Portrait of a Dog” gives one man’s reminiscences of his lively and amus ing Scotch terrier. Pox hunting at night in the Missouri hills is de scribed in “The Voice of Bugle Ann” by Mackinlay Kantor. A tale of the devotion between dog and master in the sheep country is the ever popular "Bob, £on of Battle,” by Alfred Ollivant. Another great sheep dog and his part in the big drive from Australia to South Amer ica is in Charles J. Finger’s “A Dog at His Heel.” “Red Heifer,” by P. D. Davison, gives readers of high school age a vivid picture of cattle grazing in Australia through the eyes of a restless, wild red calf. In “Smoky, the Cowhorse,” Will James tells of the adventures of this prize cow A pony out in the Western United States and how he became an un rideable. Just as fascinating as these stories are the true adventures of men who have made the wilderness their home. Constance M. Rourke's “Au dubon” takes the reader in the footsteps of this naturalist, artist and voodsman through frontier America in search of birds. In “Master of the Wilderness” John E. Bakeless retells Daniel Boone’s adventures with the Indians and the elements. Dan Beard, famed pioneer in the Boy Scout movement, has given all boys an understanding of the work in his autobiography, "Hardly a Man Is Now Alive.” An outstanding book on small animals is “Animal Treasure,” by Ivan T. Sanderson. The observa tions and drawings by this young English zoologist and artist of the ticks and shrews, ants, flying squir rels, frogs and other less-known animals of West Africa make this book exceedingly interesting. Again in the realm of fiction is Marjorie Rawlings’ very real por trayal of sensitive, nature-loving Jody Baxter and his tame fawn, Flag, who roam the Florida forests in “The Yearling.” Aniong the older favorites is “Paul Bunyan,” super-woodsman who built Niagara Falls in order to take a shower, whose exploits are recounted by James Stevens. STELLA E. MORGAN, ^ Author of "Again the River.” (Crowell.) Brief Reviews of New Books Places. FARE TO MIDLANDS. By Henry C. Beck. New York: E. P. Dutton Co. A well-written account of some towns of New Jersey, their history, their one-time prosperity, their de cline, their personalities, their houses and landmarks. Very interesting to the person with a taste for local an tiquities. ESTONIA. Edited by Albert Puller its. Tallinn. A handbook to the little country that is now in such a parlous situa tion, giving the facts as to popula tion, education and economic life. Might well engage our attention at this particular time. INVITATION TO ROUMANIA. By Derek Patmore. Photographs by Herbert List. London: The Mac millan Co., Ltd. Travel book on Rumania, written with superior style and discrimina tion. Can be recommended. The Soil. FOREVER THE FARM. By Mar ion Nicholl Rawson. New York: E. P. Dutton Co. Another of Mrs. Rawson's fine volumes, a collection of farm lore from New England to the Far South, Illustrated by the author's own de lightful pen and ink sketches. Not a book to attract the common mind, but a treasure to a lover of the odd and intricate. Novels. AGAIN THE RIVER By Stella E. Morgan. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co. Story of rural America centering in one man's fight against a river that would not be kind. Artless. DALES ACRES. By Florence Ward. New York: E. P. Dutton Co. A novel of an American family— one of those fictional American fam Shakespeare By Mark Van Doren. New York: Henry Holt & Co. Mr. Van Doren has not very much to say here—and yet the reviewer would not be ungrateful to his vol ume either. She set out to read it. she got as far as the essay on Henry IV which, to be exact, is on page 116 —nay, she got to the sixth page of that essay. But there occurs the quotation in which Hotspur expresses his opinion of politicians. That was too good. An automatic action took place in the reviewer's frame as she read it; she rose slowly from her chair, wan dered toward her bookcase still reading, withdrew a volume from the shelves and put Mr. Van Doren’s back in the place of it. She re turned to her seat and spent the rest of the night there, astonishing Bill the red setter from time to time by unrestrained peals of latsghter. The volume which she exchanged for Mr. Van Doren's sober book of criticism was the collected plays of William Shakespeare. And she re-read Henry IV. Have you read Henry IV lately? If not, do you think perhaps that you remember it? And that it has no surprises for you? Get it out then. There's always something in it that you were not looking for. Consider, if you please, the passage in which Hotspur comments on the modern poets of his admittedly golden age. Says he; "Id rather be a kitten and cry mew Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers. I had rather hear a brazen can stick turned, Or a dry wheel grate on the axle tree; And that would set my teeth nothing on edge, Nothing so much as mincing poetry. Tis like the forced gait of a shuffling nag.” TT-H, the reviewer submits, is criticism. / But to get back to Mr. Mark Van Doren. He does not deserve to be left in the bookcase (in Shakespeare's shelf) indefinitely. He should be brought out. He should be treated respectfully. And so it is duly re ported here that he has given his public an essay on each of the plays, as well as one on the poems, and that the said essays are perfectly sound and scholarly and no one need commit suicide or challenge Mr. Mark Van Doren to a duel over anything put down in any one of them. In the meantime there is still Shakespeare. And here is Hotspur speaking again—this time on the subject of bores: ••*•••• j.ji ^11 you What: He held me last night at least nine hours In reckoning up the several devils’ names That were his lackeys. I cried ‘hum,’ and ‘well, go to,’ But marked him not a word. Q, he is tedious As a tired horse, a railing wife; Worse than a smoky house. I had rather live With cheese and garlic in a wind mill, far, Than feed on cates and have him talk to me In any summer-house in Christ endom.” As said, there’s Shakespeare. But our Mr. Van Doren is sound and per fectly scholarly v—M. C. R. 4 ilies of great substantiality and little imagination. Saved by the genius of a lovely young girl. Typical stuff ONLY THE YOUNG. By Elliotl Arnold. New York: Henry Holt ii Co. Story of young newspaperman anc how he came to realize his sou through seeing the hope for humar betterment which is in America, a: compared to the lifeless fascist rule: of Europe. Sincere and workman^ like, but you have already read it ir half a dozen other novels. Foreign Policy. GIDDY MINDS AND FOREIGI* QUARRELS. By Charles A Beard. New York: The Mac millan Co. A tart, vigorous review of thi waverings of the Roosevelt admin istration in the field of foreign af fairs, and an even tarter suggestioi that we have reason to mind ou: own business. A magazine article now in book form. People By Henry Pratt Fairchild. New York: Henry Holt & Co. This is a book by a scienific en thusiast. which means, of course. ' that it is written from a point of view which all of us do not share. It is a study of population, its in crease and decrease and the reasons therefor: its distribution, its relation to prevailing conditions and a thou- j sand and other matters, for all of which Mr. Fairchild obviously has a tender, prideful passion. To the plain, average reader, however, to the man or woman who has been hearing about expansionist urges and the need for national living room and overcrowing and all that, the work Is probably fated to be a disappointment. For Mr. Fairchild is too much a scientist to commit himself rashly. He admits that the science of interpreting population statistics is as yet not fully developed and he will not go beyond his bounds of certainty. So he contents him self by proving with great accuracy points which most of us take for granted anyhow, and leaving the future to itself. This is too bad. The reviewer her self hoped, from the buoyancy of Mr. Fairchilds beginning, that he was going to give her the lowdown on the world at last. But he only concludes that when and if vital statistics are read in the light of per fect understanding, people will be able to plan their families intelli gently. He does not even say what an intelligent plan will include. Presumably it will mean a family of such size as to allow a healthful standard of general existence to all its members—but do we not know this anyhow? Science, it seems, has let us down here rather badlv. M.-C. R. Best Sellers ^ Washington. Fiction — “The Grapes of Wrath,” John Steinbeck; “Es cape," Ethel Vance; “The Bride,” Margaret Irwin; “Queen Anne Boleyn,” Francis Hack ett; “Next to Valour,” John Jennings; “Captain Horatio Hornblower,” C. S. Forester. Non-flction—“Inside Asia,” John Gunther; “The Pressure Boys.” Kenneth Crawford: “Not Peace But a Sword.” Vincent Sheean; “Wind, Sand and Stars,” Antoine de St. Exupery; “Let the Record Speak,” Doro thy Thompson; “The Revolu tion of Nihilism,” Hermann Rauschning. Boston. Fiction — “The Grapes of Wrath,” “Watch For the Dawn,” “The Ownley Inn,” Joseph and Freeman Lincoln; “Children of God,” “Next to Valour.” Non-flction —“Inside Asia,” “Let the Record Speak,” “The Revolution of Nihilism,” “Not Peace But a Sword," “Country Lawyer,” Bellamy Partridge. Chicago. Fiction — “The Grapes of Wrath,” “Children of God,” “Shanghai ’37,” Vicki Baum; “Watch for the Dawn,” “Capt. Horatio Hornblower.” Non-flction—“Not Peace But a Sword,” “Inside Asia,” “Days of Our Years,” Pierre van Paassen; “Country Lawyer,” “The Revolution of Nihilism.” New York. Fiction — “The Grapes of Wrath,” "Christ in Concrete,” “Children of God,” “Escape,” Ethel Vance; “Black Narcis sus,” Rumer Godden. Non-flction—"Country Law yer,” “Days of Our Years,” “Not Peace But a Sword,” “The Rev olution of Nihilism,” “Inside Asia.” San Francisco. Fiction — “The Grapes of Wrath,” “Escape,” “Black Nar cissus,” “Children of God,” “Watch for the Dawn.” Non-flction—“Not Peace But a Sword,” “Inside Asia,” “The Revolution of Nihilism,” “Mein Kampf,” Adolf Hitler; “Coun try Lawyer.” Well-Known Scientist Does The Effect of the Atom on Your Home Life Is Explained in . An Entertaining Fashion ✓ Atoms in Action By George Russell Harrison. New York: William Morrow A Co. By learning the secrets of the atom, building block of the material universe, science is unlocking the doors to a better physical life for all of mankind. Wealth consists ultimately of the control of matter and energy and the wealth of men and nations increases as science learns to put to ► useful purposes more of the energy that is available. Science is finding that thera is no better way of eliminating poverty than by well-directed “atom smashing,” according to the author, who is a professor in the department of physics and director of the Research Laboratory of Experimental Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His pursuit of the role of the invisible atom in modern life and the life of tomorrow has yielded for Prof. Harrison facts out of which he weaves a fascinating story. Though the subjects with which he deals are among the most complicated facing modern science, his book is remarkable for its simplicity and clearness. He tells how knowledge of the atom has made it possible for tele phone companies to pack into one copper pipe—not wire—a mixture of perhaps 100 business and personal conversations, the laughter of a radio comedian entertaining millions, telephoto currents carrying the j picture of an airplane completing a flight across the ocean, currents sent by a stenographer to work two dozen typewriters in as many cities and electric power to operate the vacuum-tube amplifiers which set free the electrons making it possible for them all to travel at 50,000 miles a second and be unscrambled at the end, The self-answering telephone, he says, also is at hand. Automatic Gadgets Explained in Detail. Glass frying pans, building bricks, fireproof cloth and even spring boards for swimming pools, drinking fountains which turn on automati cally as one bends over them, spectroscopes which can tell how much lead is in a man's blood, how much the core of a helium atom weighs, < or a distant star, whether a greenhouse contains enough carbon dioxide to support plant life or whether a certain type of cloth will wear well all these are described The author tells how new X-rays can ferret out and kill disease ! germs deep in the body, how a spray of electronic gold shot into a mold of ; soap is used to bring the magic of great music to your phonograph, how i a telescope camera may be made to jump around automatically like a .1 flea to follow the shimmering of a star image. ,He tells how the fact that cows eat mustard made possible the ■ development of photographic film from the skin of calves suckled by those cows. And how a derivative of mustard oil nifcv is being used— at the rate of one drop to a ton of emulsion—to make gelatin from ’ rabbits, who eat no mustard, good for photographic film. ■ I New- methods of making silver atoms spread themselves more finely, ■! he says, may make possible a camera so small and light it may be 1 mounted on the lens of a pair of spectacles so that the wearer need only ' j press a button to record what he sees. ' * i The shooting of a stream of electrons through vacuum has made I possible television and may make possible phonograph records printed ■ on paper, to be played v ith beams of light instead of needles and dis A/) a e oVioonltr on rilu oc n vtonrcnonar Ua rn vp He envisions for the kitchen of tomorrow a cabinet which will cook food on top and freeze ice cubes below in a single operation. He shows that some day the sunlight falling on the top of an automobile may be used to drive the car without cost or sun on the roof of a house may be used to cool and air condition the rooms within. . Here is a volume of absorbing interest for those who would know better the world in which they live and the doors which man's conquest of his physical surroundings may open to every human being.—J. S. E. Value and Distribution By Lewis H. Haney New York: D. Appleton-Century Co. With good reason, a fair number of the dogmatic economic theories of the Blooming Twenties and before have been discredited under the pitiless demands of 10 years of “depression.” This is not to say that all the quack ideas which have flowed into Washington from the big and little Greenwich Villages of the Nation have been of merit. In many of them, however, has been considerable more realism and practicability than there was about the formulae taught to an earlier generation. In his study, Dr. Haney, professor of economics at New York Univer sity, has cast an analytical eye on both the old and the new. For the most part he makes clear that he prefers the old. He does it, however, without passion and with a wealth of intelligent argument: at the same time, he acknowledges some of the shortcomings so apparent in economic thinking of another day. Particularly challenging is his critique of current economics, conveying his own belief that an excess of nationalism, romanticism and subjectivism is coloring the thinking of today, clearing the way for a swing backward from new extremes—but perhaps not all the way to old ones. J. C. H. Financing Government By Harold M. Groves. New York: Henry Holt & Co. Few influences so close to every citizen are less understood than that of taxation, the means by which all our subdivisions of government are supported. One reason for this lack of understanding is the casual acceptance by us all that taxes are as certain as death and that there is little we can do as individuals to shape their course. In consequence, why puzzle over something apparently quite dull and quite difficult? A second reason to that the worlds of literature and economics have given us few from their ranks who could write about taxes in an interesting fashion; invariably those who wrote with authority wrote abstrusely, those who wrote with clarity lacked authority. To a very welcome degree Prof. Groves combines the qualities of clar ity and authority. Accurately, concisely and in readable fashion, he grounds his whole volume in an historical chapter presenting the develop ment of public financing. From there on he writes not only as a tax law maker. but as a taxpayer, a spender, a tax administrator and one who has learned each phase of the taxing problem with equal thoroughness. Not content with the relative superficialities of what taxes are in^ posed and why, the author writes pointedly about the social implications of many of the levies imposed in recent years. It is one of the best books of its kind now available—and its avail ability should be a matter of interest not only to those who know little of government financing, but to those who do or think they do know much. J. C H. Technology and Labor By Elliott Dunlap Smith. New Haven: Yale University Pres3. Few publishing firms have brought out better and more sympathetic discussions of the problems of American labor than has the Yale Uni versity Press. This one from the pen of Dr. Smith, professor of Industrial Relations at Yale, is ^-worthy addition to the list. Technological developments in industry have been generally accepted as progress, as improvements in our machinery of production and in our entire economy. It would be a rash thing indeed to dispute this theory* and a flood of legitimate evidence would soon overcome any serious con tention that we should turn backward to a horse-and-buggy motif. It is no secret, however, that the speed of this technological development has frequently been the master rather than the slave of our economy, throwing out of all balance the proper relationships between the labor of men and the labor of machines, between employe and employer. Not for the purpose of solving this whole problem—if any'solution exists—but only to present some authentic data on which a measure of future industrial planning might be based did Dr. Smith and his research associate. R. C. Nyman, spend weeks of exhaustive interview and study of the effects of imposing technological improvements in 18 cotton mil's. The similarity of reaction on the part of employers as a group, emplo^fc as a group and interested observers was surprising. Beneath the reaction was an element of panic demonstrating clearly the necessity for constant reconstruction of industrial policies to keep step with its mechanical American Social Problems By Howard W. Odum. New York: Henry Holt & Co. This is indeed an ambitious volume, directed, in the author’s own words, "first, to present a comprehensive, authentic and vivid picture of the American scene with the chief emphasis always on the people and their dilemmas; and, second, to set up a realistic framework of inquiry * through which the answers to many of their questions may be sought.” That Prof. Odum succeeds in this objective may be conceded. Cer tainly he fills the mind with challenging questions, turns a reader'a thoughts into the jungle of problems which beset us in this complex eco nomic era. Despite its emphasis on youth, however, and his assertion that he inscribes the work primarily to youth, it is easy to believe that his ma chine-gun fire of provocative questions will succeed only in baffline further the growing minds of those now seeking reality and security In 'Hie volume is excellently and effectively illustrated, for the most part by pictures credited to the Farm Security Administration. J. C. H ■ Just Off the Press! If it’s fiction ... if it’s non fiction ... if it’s a new book Just oil the press . . . you’ll find it in Our LENDING LIBRARY fconveniently located, dr it door) JL _m DELUSIONS VENISN by Myquoll Morgun (A Pseudonym) A book, relating significant ex periences in the supernatural, that should be of interest to those who expected the fulfill ment of the prophecies and who seek eternal life. Price fifty cents. Delivered C. O. D. in Washincton and Arlincten. ^ M. E. Millar, P. 0. Box 112, Arlinftoa, Vo, A