The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 142, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 18, 1961 Page: 39 of 43
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Summer Novel
t
More Promising Than Usual
■y MILES A. SMITH
AP Arts Edlwr
NEW YORK <AP) — American
book publishers are wooing read-
ers with a ¿tittering array of
«ovéis this summer! aw! many oí
the most promsmg ones will be
en the stands before June is over.
"The Winter of Our Discon-
tent.'" John Steinbeck's first novel
iwe "East of Eden." already has
started to appear in magazine
aerial .form and will be brought
out this month by Viking
It deals wtih a man of New Eng-
land rectitude who sees cheap
commercialism ; and business
cheating all'around him. makes a
disillusioned decision to "play
along" for money, and then finds
|i¡«- decision has cost -him dearly.
Mickey,. Spillaae, who abo has
been «¿sent from the publishing
lists for veari — his "Kiss Me
DeadJv" was in 1852—has written
"The Deep" (Dutton). a book
•bout a man who returns to town
after 25 years to avenge a death
and take over an underworld
«gime "" >
Edwin O Connor, whose "Last;
Hurrah" was é best seller/re--;
turns" to the Irish-American. World
fnr "The Edge of Sadness." the
etorv of a middleagt priest, to
be publ'shed bv Litt# Brown
"Rembrandt, to be published
bv Random Hftíse. is r no.vel
biistd on the^artist's life, wstiten
by fitodvs
nother setting, smitf the
te s of commercialism, is
th t of "The Forger" (Ath-
m), by Jiy Williams. And
John Brathby, an English artist
has written a npvel about the
stormy struggles of a success:
artist. Titled "Breakdown," ir is
being brought out by Worid Pub-
lishing.
pares to turn the
over to the natives.
STÉINBECK] (Putn*m)-
p *1 o*er noveu^ w^tch^r -.life jn jour own
Coltsum Slreet"> (K
chide Sur
House on
y
THI
ARDENER'S
GUIDE
V
government
iñ, "Jtmm
COUNTY OAWCN COUNCU I
How would you like to Have a stretch of desert.
forest, or a swamp, all with appropriate forms
li\
- Wt- m Ü tinjg up a
Frank Morris' "At Last; To Kiss" You can have forests with trees
■sura StreetT^Knopf), _ You can,- by setting up a small terras
a
B nimal
ving room or den?
indoors,
high and
Amianda" (McGra
"The Carpetbag
Schuster), the^iecond
trilogy on Hollywood
Bobbins. ,/ tpo
Among the non fiction titles will; \««
he TJw«Jore H. Whites "The Mak-;W V™ Z¡& Horned luards will also eat ants.
to bf£S First, lay down^Sv ColUred luards relish an <*-
hshed bv Mhetwum in July 'inch **P foundation oj^pebbie . rational dandelion or - clover
"!£, cui,'£r° «fcZ&&2**t*-"t *z *™
Today." originally announced for ments !he **** «" ,hf. «*' **«& *** V "** homed
- Hill), and flowering meadows and deep
d t swamps. Children will tho- *****
Harold .roughly enjoy the terrarium, K
by
a* meal worms, adult
and fly larvae, cock-
crickets, and grasshop*
• ']
of the ter- ■
this spring, -will be brought out bv '! *****
Harper in Julv. It'is aa entirely í ° of ,hei * hwMi Water
new book, with the emphasis on ^hjt'dj'fn^Tniu^tion''^ * Vou must provide wat.«r for
"Today" wtwtareper lounoation. syour Iwards; Some will drink fiw
In August Dial will publish "Kid- * d'wrt terra num. spread # dish: others will ignore water
— The Story of the Und-^hm .>yer ^ toil over the. dish but wtU drink drops of the
nap
bergh Case,"
Storv
by 6t
ary Lines
FLORA RICHARDSON
week's Library
a quote, from
Lines ill-
Thomas
Drier in which he pointed but the
kg in library development in the
United State® as compared with
the library pro-
fram in the
.S.5 R.
Perhaps we
should provide
"equal time" for
another Ameri-
can who has a
conflicting opin-
ion relative to
our pacing our
library develop-
ment with the
achievements of
the Russians. ' Richardson
J f rank Dobie has this to say:
"Of late, some people seem to
consider that the chief teammi for
advocating libraries and the read-
ing of books is to enable America
to catch up with the Russians on
sputniks.
"I consider such reasoning puny
and lopsided.
."Bookit. and therefore libraries,
contain the inherited wit, wisdom,
humor, life, cream of all the tests
or sll the centuria during which
man has left a record ol what he's
thought and done. The 'immortal
tesiour' of the human rata lies
in books. *
"The great reatan for ' reading
books and valuing libraries it to
huye IK* more abundantly, to think
more justly, to be in fove more
delightfully, and to use the sput-
niks more wisely when we get
them." .
Many Paint Shack
ROCKPORT. Mass.— Probably
the most-often-painted object in the
United States is a red lobster
ahack at the end of a pier at Rock-
I - port, on rocky Cape Ann. Artists
' call the building Motif No. 1."
One artist's paintings of it have
aold tor a total of aiore than
1150,000.
;lish writer, using the Harper has scheduled
i lan Brook, satirises an by former-presidential aj
tfsh "colony in Africa as it pre- man Adams.
Young Moderns
Job Hunting Tt^s Offered
eorge Waller/fl undat*on and then several inches fat has
sprayed on
ef sunlight and a dry.
f J-i<t M
Han's Manual
Full of Wisdom
UFE WITH WOMEN AND
HOW TO SURVIVE IT. By Ja
aeph Pack, M. D. Prentice HalL
PI
Dr. Peck to a wit, and an enter-
taining one.. He is a retired family
physician who has had the clinical
advantsge of observing the human
race when it Is most human.
Having written "All About
Men." he now turns his attentiui
to the voracious sex, and he does
not miss a trick.
Being quits methodical, he pro-
ceeds to dissect the female emo-
tions — mind is not the word —
from the little girl staae through
adolescence, maturity, the 4Q's, the
SO's and oM age. He uses the are-
die on our feminine friends with
surgical skill.
On page 36, as he is about! to
get into the subject of beauty dnd
marriage, he says he assumes
tliat female readers will have
thrown his book into the ash can
bv now, so he can address himself
the rest of the way an entirely
male audience- Like fun he dock.
And therein lies the double nat-
ure at this book. It is funny, and
á'l that. But Just among us males,
there ia a secret weapon coiceat'
ed amid .the quit — actual tips
cn "how to survive H."
Husbands may well keep t h it
volume carefully hidden in a fish-
ing tackle box in the basement,
and consult it rather frequently a*
the years go by. Thoy will find it
a valuable handbook for decipher-
ing the enigma of the, eternal fem
inlne, and that is no'Joke.
Of course Dr. Peck «often in his
final chapter and pays tribute to
"the greatest woman 1 ever
knew,' who happened to be a iVIcr-
mon midwife named Aunt Jennie
But all the same, he ends with
o me wise words of cauticn about
the natural superiority of women,,
and don't say we dida l warn you.
A. S.
^ of clean white sand overthe U lh<, pUnts Take care, however.
I Wtfr FT '""?*** i that the desert sand is kept dry!
sand or vellow. brick broken into. . Kr-JUk ^"n
very small pieces. \ * w ■ « *i.br^fh *' J
. g ve the collared hiards and
•" swifts « place to climb. Your
Vmr imagination and pocket- desert reptiles ,a t have several
book ean be your guides aa to hours d
what desert vegetation \to use. j wa
Most kinds of cactus will thrive in degree
a terrarium. So will many, sue You can insure the
culent P ants: two <* ■ * be* of frtr crculation of air bv leaving
th«e are the aloe and the plant xHt ^rranum uncovered or b*
called erassula. making a covering of screening.
To start 'a miniature forest, go
o the woods and cut out a moss.
|a moderate amount of light. and j^^r<^^,h'°^)(^i4lh*(*rOUWt*
j it will send up a straight stem with ¡ rariutaTtifi up the
A simple tailored dress or suitj^^^ring^ row'5 WiUl * lrow*1
a always correct attire. Flouncy. ^ wh side- Al the s#m<. time
(b^s.
Many eager graduates are foiled
in their quest for work, however.
By VIVIAN /-BROWN
AP Newsfeetures Wriii .
Young people whojobs aft- in their quest for work, however,; ^ •to* grow#more luxumntly
er graduation fpotfji^gh school because of their appearance whenj thy. Other desertplan'ttn
may be in for^ishock They may meeting an employer-to-be for the my gia gardm, ChW It t ne and
have to change to impress a pros- first time.
Hew Ta Dm
father says that even a
■job is too much for his
darling daughter. She has threat-
ened to quit the job before it has
begun if he doesn't drive her to
work because she doesn't like
buses. A pampered type should be
left in the nest rather than be al-
lowed to' become a bother to a
your ter-
ca rpetlika
ruffled dresses are in poor taste, numerous small plants sprout from
Deoolletage styles or sweater en
sembles may make an interviewer
wary. \ |
He may reason that this sort of
dress would distract male
ployes.
Beige, navy blue, and summer
pastels are more acceptable colors
than white or the new "hot" colors
best left in the wardrobe until
after you have clinched the Job.
Ba Conservative
Dark shoes are preferred font-
gear for Job seekers. Whe*her
pointed or rounded toe the heel
should be medium height.
Avoid the two-and-a-half > inch
dress heel, a favorite of party-
the base of the old one, prodjgpg
a luxuriant thicket
It you want your
to grow rapidly, you can
a somewhat thicker layer «
ed soil or make pockets of enriched
soil here and there! It ia important
to have plenty of Hght. particular
iv if you want, your small cacti to
flower.
Try Tiny Flewerm
Most Amerteaa deserts have
enrich- ^
brief rainy season in which they
become fantastic flower _
If you are able to obtain seeds of
some of the desert "belly plaats,'
vou can try growing them, or*you
can plant seeds or cuttings of
small flowering weeds orgardee
or sandal. Wear stockings no mat- plsnts. These will be more inter-
ter how tan your legs are. esting if you confine them to
A small handbag is best on this area of the desert.
occasion to avoid tné temptation of : Part of the sand or
loading it. Put hi only the thingsibe left unpUnted tor the sake of
that are absolutely necessary. contrast.
If a potential employer j The best animals tor your minia-
glimpses a loaded handbag, he ture desert will be horned liaards,
may figure that he would hsve s collared lizards and desert swifts,
clutterer on his hands. You can feed these reptiles living
Should you wear jewelry? If
jewelry is suitable to your clothes
and type, it may enhance your cos
turne. But a rhinestone necklace
has no place in daywear.
A little girl looka ridiculous in
large, chunky dramatic pieces of
jewelry. Simple tailored gold jew-
elry, a strand or two of pesrl* or
conservative string of beads flat-
tering to your cosjume is ideal.
Slim gold or silver gangle brace-
lets snd a claaa ring are other
good choices.
Chadelier rtyle earrings, flashy
rings snd bracelets ars hideous in
the daylight.
Bast Faca Forward -
Makeup should look natural no tions with
matter how you achieve yot
ttrlng look. Your foundation crefm!aaked.
should blend into your
stick should be blotted ca
Use s light shade of nail
preferably no darker than a
melon pink tf yon use a
ad.
Hair can aeil you short. Mea are
mora hair conactous than you
would imaglae. Be aura your
treeaes ara ahampooed day be-
fore you set it. Loaf, stringy hair
could indicate that you ara care-
less just as saussie-curled hair
may give the impression thai ywi
Answer the interviewer^! wes-
achleve your flat- snd donT digress
LANDSCAPING ESTIMATES
By GRADUATE
LANDSCAPE DESIGNER
(AMP GRAIN and GARDEN CBHIR
90S HtONT — FHOflE TU 1U
aad nrap it carefully in aluminum
fo:l, waxed paper or moistened
newspaper tor the trip home.
DID YOU
;'?-j
í¡
4:
I
- ij'|
tk
the
several days? - .
Rhodriguei (Graen 1
' Club) C
Oar.
f
V
■ S: S
-\
GARDEN GUARD
vtistsbles from
garden psSts. Apply
It safely right up ta
harvest Urns. Ne
tode rssidua. Us«
alaa an flowers,
shrubs,Mall fraita.
V
FARMERS
709 W DIVISION—TW J-1M1
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 142, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 18, 1961, newspaper, June 18, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143064/m1/39/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.