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Judge, 1933-02 · page 25 of 38

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THE BOOKS | ply to criticism. Then came the re of the Ludlow massacre and John Jr. called in Ivy Lee, public man. Lee pried open the Rocke- feller lips, took the public into the mily’s confidence and after that everything was all Jake. The aging John grew a halo to supplant the hair | rn thin by early worries and Le s assured him a ringside table in heaven. The book is more than a biography de famille, it is history of the transition of American busine competition to monopoly, sidelights on other indu like Carnegie, much more unscrupu- lous than John D. ever red to be. It was a grand and glorious running battle of forty years by which Big Business enthroned itself and at- tained respectability. We think, however, the dead are sad; and the wounded who have survived tragic. And what are they going to do with Radio City? including trial giants, \ E don't know what vintage poet Robert Hillyer of Hahvahd is but we do feel he’s about to be a first rate novelist, if he ‘isn’t already “Riverhead,” his first novel, left pretty deeply stirred with its etic and allegorical searching for cause and panacea of today. Ordinarily we can take our panacea or leave it alone which we do) one somehow takes it and cares about it. On the surface, the book tells the story of a weakling’s coming of strength and manhood and stepping out of fear and trembling into the sunlight. We can’t help but feel that Robert Hillyer is the John Howard Lawson of the Real Old New Eng land y and tho he is cockeyed as is Lawson about many he has something to it dandily. book not Margaret M ARGARET Kennedy's new rm “A Long Time Ago,” is had, but not good either. a hard time of it, of course, She'll never again come up “Constant Nymph” level. Probably ho one else will either. Maybe it might have been better if she hadn't | written it. “A Long Time Ago,” however, is a good workaday novel about a noble wife who puts aside her feelings and takes back her husband who has slipped a little with another woman—towards bed. Had the story caught, as it aimed to, the | hnitler quality of time past, of the tragic sadness of the grand passion, it might have been something. —TED SHANE to the | s from | of the con- | but in “Riverhead” | Miracle Worker, AGE 8 His little hands hold the instrument tightly; his ident voice speaks eagerly into the mouthpiece. And as simply as that, he talks to his friend who lives around the corner, or small, €c to his Granny in a distant city... achievements which, not so many years ago, would have seemed miraculous. These miracles he takes as a matter of course, in the stride of his carefree days. You yourself probably accept the telephone just as casually. § do you eldom realize what extraordinary powers it gives you. You use it daily for a dozen different purposes. For To save steps, time and trouble. To be friendly chats. For business call many places, do many things, visit many people, without so much as AMERICAN TELEPHONE HOUSE- BROKENe We call him Scotty. When your guests put elg tray HOME GADGETS Dept. 29 200 Filth Ave. New York City AND from the living room of your home or the desk in your office. At this very moment, somewhere, your voice would be the most welcome asic in the world. Some one would find happiness in knowing where you are and how you are. Some one would say gratefully, ing you'd call. incerely—"I was wish- From among more than seventeen million telephones in this country, the very one you want will be connected quickly and efficiently with the tele- phone in your home or office. Your telephone is the modern miracle which permits you to range where you will—talk with whom you will It is yours to use at any hour of the day or night. TELEGRAPH COMPANY VERY great city has ONE hotel whose environment is traditional +++ whose’service Is perfection... whose culsino is world-famous. In Philadelphia It's tho BELLEVUE STRATFORD CLAUDE H. BENNETT, General Mgr Rates consistent with present times. comicbooks.com