Faksimile

Text

MOl C
box 35/11
14. Littie Novels
THE NEW TORKESUN, MONDÄY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1929.
—in.
Aan.
1
Osborn to Marry
IWAUKEES
The Books of the Day
Marie Montgomery
cam¬
At a dinner party ion Saturday
also
evening in celebration of their silver
al at¬
*Little Novels,' by Arthur Schnitzler—A
DIedERS NOTED
wedding anniversary, Mr. and Mrs.
pub¬
John F. Montgomery of 1067 Fifth
con¬
Modern Master of lrony.
avenue and the Cascades, Manches¬
the
ter, Vt., announced the engagement.
e ap¬
Excavating Machinery Made
of their daughter, Miss Marie Louise
Amazing at what a rate we are appropriating literary
Montgomery, to James Marshall Os¬
born, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clara
Europe. Fifteen years ago Arthur Schnitzler was among
There Takes First Rank.
mem¬
Marshall Osborn of Shorewood, Mil¬
ellogg
tle “iwry, apes and peacocks'’ whose exotic qualities were
waukee. Miss Montgomery was in¬
New
troduced to society in New York in
reporteu, not without some flourish of showmanship, by
with
70 CURB OLD MISSISSTPPI
the season of 1925 and attended Mise
1 bar
literary explorers like Huneker. Nobody thought then of
Spencr's School and Wassar College.
Mr. Osbern was graduated from
putting Schnitzler into English. Some of the poets, Haupt¬
ra
World's Largest Dirt Moving Job
Wesleyan University in 1928. He is
the
mann, Sudermapn, had been translated a little, but a novel or
a member of che Psl Upsilon Club
Falls.
Gets Special Equipment.
and associated with the Guaranty
a prose play could be famous throughout Europe and nothing
Trust Company in this city.
but the rumor of it get through to us. Now several Ameri¬
The guests at the dinner ircluded
The world’s largest dirt moving
mith.
Miss Hazel Osborn, Mr. and Mrs.
Job is under way, says the Milwau¬
can publishers almost specialize in the issuance of English
pthers
kee Journal.
Clarence Whitehill, Mr. and Mrs.
ttend
versions of the best foreign work.
Daniel Schnakenberg, H. E. Schnak-
Industry has been called to action,
Nanus.
enberg, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cor¬
with Greater Milwaukee corpora¬
Schnitzle: is rated as a modern,
Alder¬
liss, Stuart Coxhend, Mr. and Mrs.
tions accepting the challenge. There
but his work is recognizable as a
wife who has feund no true mate in
The
John L. Given. Mr. and Mrs. Rob¬
is being shipped and built there a
product of art as art was understood
ck on
marrlage, and therefore adventures
ert Lee, Robeson White, Mr. and
fleet of donosaurlike excavators
in pre-dada ages. A Schnitzler nlay
f the
more or less unhappily outside of
that will gulp up more than seven
Mrs. Stanley Ineson and Mr. and
y-first
or story always has a headto it and
marrlage, Schnitzler’s Bertha, in
Mrs. Harry Wolf.
tons of earth in a bite. Other metal
lvary
afall. I sedom relesson Dr.
the end, despising herself, can but
trades plant. are turning out fabri¬
bolnts a moral, but like all creative.
reflect on what an enormous wrong
cation steel that will go into giant
of Al¬
work it is packed with meaning
has been wrought against the world“
Miss Frances L. Seymour
barges for towing tons of earth.
SCHHitzler's is voll may. Say A.lter.
s had
in zlving woman a desire for
Then batteries of concrete mixers,
alüré Of the falling inflection, It ac
vears;
pleasure equal to man's withobt
And Fiance to Be Guests
powerful pumps, dredges, electrical
Tam¬
geptk raäther grimin The earthiness. 2.
giving her his immunities.“ Profes¬
equipment and diesel engines, all
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Beals of 1170
which
KuMaf nature and the Troniesof.
sor Bernhardi,“ called a comedy,
going to make“Ol' Man Rivvuh“
Fifth avenue will give a dinner on
fate. The gay paganism of the South
was a searching and rather bitter
behave.
Wednesday night at the St. Regis
ien¬
study of racial antipathies and pro¬
Is strange to I—The.-Lagaries dl.Se*
Mississippi River flood control, as
roof garden for Miss Frances Lord
fessional ethige. Therdäre problems
Tascinate Schnitzler hut he. takes no.
now planned, is a ten year job—and
idents
Seymour and their brother, Donald denght in them. His brow is heavv. Iand ideas not Far in thh padkground
what a jobl.
Perhaps
Marcy Beals, who will be married,
who
Eps droch.- Aa. ha. Teccunta EIih
of both novelhund
More dirt will be moved than was
next Saturday in St. John’s Church,
ets to
these ten Litti#dmore fairly
## Prsclsion these episodes o“
turned in digging the Panamma
Far Rockaway.
pf the
mortal ggotiem, fickieness spiritus) represent Schnitzlet thebartist, the
Canal. There is nothing quite like
Donald Marcy Beals, who is the
Amilies
creator. It is spidhthat mhny of the
fumbling and unsatisfied desire al
it in history, according to engineers
son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John
critics abroad esteem him Wost as a
many
Tha flesh.
of Milwaukee corporations.
D. Beals of New York, gave his
writer of short starles.
rought
Short storles these 'novels'' are,
cata¬
bachelor dinner at the Harvard Club
Althird work of his to be presented
Use Milwankee Machinery.
according to bur American definition
on Saturday evening. Those present
in English recently is called“ Little
The biggest part of the titanic job
included Mr. Beals’s brother and
—nouvelles rather than contes, to use
Novels“ (Simon & Schuster; 32.50).
of moving the levees, building new
best man, John D. Beals, Jr., and
the French terms. Some of them are
The twoothers were“ Professor Bern¬
flood walls, erection of spillways
old, a
his ushers Marius S. Beal of Chi¬
very short, but all are complete.
hardi,“ issued last year by the same
and dams is to be accomplished
cago, Alfrei U. Elser of Milwaukee,
ember
They have been assembled as a rep¬
publisher, and" Bertha Garlan“ (In
with Milwaukeg machinerg. for that
Robert B. Coburn of Hartford, Bur¬
hange.
resentative group for English read¬
the Modern Library']). The theme
clty is a national leader for exca¬
ton M. Parks and James 1V. Harris
sice, at
ers, from various periods of Schnitz¬
of Bertha Garlan“ has been treated
vation and concrete machinery.
ot of
of Boston and Roswell O. Fich. Rich¬
ler’s career. Most of them have to
a hundred times in current fiction:
The preseit allocation of work by
ard S. Aldrich, John B. Hempstend,
do with the relations of men and
Dor this
the weil-meaning but temperamental
the Mississippi River Commission
Lawrence W. Snell, Morris Wi Sey¬
Pollege
women, with love in all its guises but
calls for an expenditure of 8325,000.-
mour, Louis A. Sturcke, Renwicke B.
aves a
chlefly as a visitation or obsession.
000 from 1929 to 1933. There will be
Dimond and Richard W. Burgevin of
om is
Looking them over agaln, the re¬
Miss Dorothy M. Hall
something like 824,000,000 used this
New York.
ass of
viewer finds that there is not a
year and 830,000,000 in 1930. The
To Become a Bride
o’clock
happy love among them, unless it be
largest experditure this year will be
Ehurch
the happiness of perfect self-saeri¬
for the Bonnet Carre spillway. EachGreenwich Women Plan
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Griswold Hall
kave¬
fice that attends the death of the
year there will be between 60,000,-
of 1120 Fifth avenue and Greenwich,
wife Mathilde in The Greek Danc¬
Musical Fashion Show
000 and 75,000,000 cubic yards of
Conn., made known at a dinner¬
ing Girl.“ And there is the love of
Tearth to be moved.
dande Saturday night at the Green¬
brothers in Blind Geronimo,“ so
Under the auspices of the welfare
Old practices are not adequate.
wich Country Club the engagement
strongly and purely surviving all as¬
committee of the Woman’s Club of
bratedThe old hand shovel will not play
of their daughter Miss Dorothy
saults of slfishness and doubt and
August
an important part in conquering theGreenwich, Conn., a musical fashion
Marion Hall, to Jefferson Ferrand
privation. The Death of a Bach¬
of her
Tood. Rather there will be dragline Ishow will be held on the evening of
Armstrong, son of the late John
elor“ is coldly sardonic, almost a
Addy¬
October 4. The entertainment is in
excavators weighing 100,000 tons
Knapp Armstrong of Denver and
denlal of the posslbility of fidellty in
charge of Mrs. I. Newton Lewis, and
yor of
that will run a bucket out and pull
Mrs. Richard G. Brown of James¬
the sexual relation, though assenting
fter a
its proceeds will be used for the
up three and a half cubic yards
to the existence of a sort of comfort
town. N. V.
tive in
club’s charitable work.
of dirt each trip. Power shovels will
Miss Hall is a graduste of St.
in the domestic business of marrlage.
eArds¬
The following sub-committees have
wreck the old levees, scooping un
Mary’s School, Peekskill. The mar¬
rch al¬
been appointed: Shops. Mrs. William
tons of earth into barges and rall
riages of her sisters, Miss Norma
In The Murderer“ a, man kills his
Sagar: models, Mrs. Anson W. H.
s born Scars, to be moved further back for
Hall, to Harry Lee Keel of Winston¬
as the
Taylor; tickets, Mrs. Russell) Rey¬
wife in order to gain another woman
the new line of flood defense.
Salem, N. C., and Miss Lucie Lee
hirteen
nolds; music. Mrs. James N. Ether¬
and is mocked for his pains. At the
Hall to Henry T. Skelding, now of
Will Deepen River.
idge, Mrs. Alanson Enos, Jr., and
moment before he deliberately pol¬
New York and formerly of Pitts¬
Mrs. Boyd Reed, and publicity, Mrs.
soned a trusting woman +he felt a
was Cutter dredges will chew up the
burgh, took place recently.
Sherman Woodward. Tickets may be
to the
sort of secret envy of thé young Crea¬
bottom of the river, sucking up the
Miss Hall and Mr. Armstrong will
reseryed by teiephoning Mrs. Russell
short¬
ture at his side who was so soon to
silt and sand, despéhing ihe river
probably be married in November.
1 war.
Reynolds or any member fthe com¬
find release, without paln and with¬
and obtaining earth for levees.
Mr. Armstrong attended the Uni¬
mittee.
Besides
out foreknowledge, from the perplex¬
The flood control plans call for
versity of Utah and received his
ities of living.“ In The Fate of the
kley is
the introduction of long haul into
TO RETURN FROM HER CAMP.
bachelor of law degree at Fordham
Baron“ a man is deliberately mur¬
levee construction,“ says one of the
University. He is a member of Phi
Mrs. Herbert L. Parker, who has
as and
dered by fear in order that his mis¬
engineers.Revetment construction
Delta Theta and Gamma Upsllon
been passing the summer at Parker
tress may be free of him. Here an
great¬
in most cases is being changed from
fraternities. He served during the
Camp in the Adirondacks, is e
element of the ghostly comes in,
willow mats to permanent concrete.
pecied in a few days at the Ritz¬ wer in the Navnl Reserve, and Is
e Rear¬
#em.re strongly developed in two cther
PPrem Tan A
al„. „„