T THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE WORLD OF TPRKINGTON Publishes An flmusing Story Of a Dealer In Accent (Ind Art 'You Have Seen Their Faces' New And Forthcoming Back Again By ETHEL L. NORBERG Himself a connoisseur and coliec tor "af old masters, Booth Tarking ":": ton is certainly qualified to write this novel of an art dealer's methods of raising himself from near-bank- ruptcy to a position of wealth and- .influence. The story centers around Mr.: Rumbin, a kindly old artdealer, well- versed in the subject of art, shrewd { towards his rivals, but honest and above-board with his c 1 i e n t s. Throughout the story he endeavors to cultivate a wealthy Mr. Hollis and his business partner as clients. How to keep a client Mr. Rumbin explains in his expressivre if inarticu- late way to his secretary, . pretty BOOTH TARKINGTON Georgina Hone: "Georchie, how sure BTT pops a client in some odds dealer's hands if you can't keep him near tain an obscure masterpiece only to busted yourself!" How he travels to discover that it is a fake, how he New Orleans in an attempt to ob- wrangles with his greatest rival for a....................... GIFT SUGGESTIONS Books Stationery j Bill Folds Zipper Cases Michigan Jewelry Fountain Pens esk Sets D airies anld many ofthers -WAHR'S' BOOKSTORES - h3 business of Mr. Hollis, how his :ain ambition is to establish a gal- ei y on 57th Street where all the big art houses congregate and many oth- r like incidents provide enjoyable entertainment throughout the book. Mr. Tarkington does not divulge' he past of Mr. Rumbin but leaves he question in the minds of Rum- bin's assistants as well as the read- :rs. All one knows about him is that he has an almost phenomenal knowledge of art and all its sidelines, hat he is slightly foreign by birth and accent and that he knows all "the tricks of his trade. Of secondary importance is the love for Mr. Rumbin's secretary of Howard Cattlet, the assistant, a young man fresh from college, whose only qualifications for an art deal- er's assistant were an honest butt "dumb" look and a cutaway suit. In the end love conquers, boy gets girl, Mr. Rumbin gets his clients and prospects of a gallery on 57th Street, and everyone is happy (except the rival dealer). Here are two of the real-life characters from a new book by Erskine Caldwell and Margaret Bourke-White, "You Have Seen Their Faces," which portrays the plight of the Southern share-cropper. "A man learns not to expect much after he's farmed cotton most of his life," the authors wrote.. The photograph was taken by Miss Bourke-White. ./ James M. Cain Retu With CredulityStr rns At Last aining Novel HEINE Louis Untermeyer Puts Out A Christmas Biography HEINRICH HEINE: PARADOX AND POET, by Louis Untermeyer. Har- court, Brace and Co., New York. SERENADE, By James M. Cain. Al- finally even the Metropolitan fall fred A. Knopf, New York, $3.50. successively at the singer's feet, be- By ARTHUR GILBERT ' cause his voice has been restored to IT probably is grief for his pub-i its p istine state by the femaleness of lisher, but the public should con- his Mexican tart. So far, 'so good. gratulate itself that James M. Cain The tragedy is precipitated by the reappearance of the original villain, is not the sort of novelist who feels and how this is accomplished we pre- he must turn out a book a year. It; fer that Mr. Cain should explain. has been four years since "The Post- -J T wo volumes. $b.0u . . man Always Rings Twice." Mr. Cain By JOHN SELBY has changed some in the interim. Louis Untermeyer, unofficially the M r. C a in out - Hemmingwayed official" translator of Heinrich Hemingway in his first novel. He is tieine since the appearance 20 years now in danger of out-Gideing Gide, %go of his selections from the Ger- because of his choice of subject, how- van's work, has gone himself one ever, and not because of its treat- etter. ment. He is still the beef-blood-and- That is to say, he has assembledE beer writer, calling spades spades, andI hese earlier efforts, reworked some calling some other things spadesI f them, and added a great many which are perhaps merely trowels. In nore translations. Then he has writ- "Serenade" Mr. Cain has tackled en a very fair and readable, if su- erficial, biography of the poet, and; what the lit'ry boys call a "danger- ublished the two books in a box for Gous" subject, and usuallyaavoid like he Christmas trade. poison. In other words, a battle be- I 1 I i E i I Translating poetry is,-of course, a Yery dangerous proceeding. Trans- -ting German; lyric poetry is prob- bly easier than a translatiteration f French, since the roots of Germane re deeper in English than those of rench. Just the same, Heine's often ubtle lyrics are enough to frighten tween a woman and a man for the possession of a man. The "I" of Mr. Cain's hard-hitting novel is the broken-down baritone who has somewhat incredibly lost the bing in his voice because he has fallen for a very wealthy and gently diabolic chap whose hobby is music. Shame, horror. fear and others things drive DIRECTORY ie staunchest, and such a success as . 'e ' singerlto "tr 1a M exican en gg - ;Tr Unermyerhashaddesrve ap 'the singer to tr~o a Mexican engage- [r. Untermeyer has had deserves ap- ment. He even flops in Mexico, but lause. there he meets a kind of super-fe- The biography was, frankly, a dis- male. She is a lady of the evening, ppointment to this reader. It hews but her femaleness bemuses the bari- oo closely to the literary line, and tone to the point where he can over- nisses many of the most inviting side! look everything. laths. For example, it is known that They go away together. Through she gist of Heine as a man lies fare an almost incredible series of coinci- nore in his prose correspondence dences they come together to the from Paris than in his poetry. States. There the movies, radio and i i i NATIONAL DENTAL HrOIENE WEE!)' E 5as -- ml At All Bookstores 11 39c Broiled Hamburger Steak, Tomato Sauce Potato or Vegetable Salad or Dessert Rolls or Bread e Tea Milk I 45c 39c Baked Imported Ham, Raisin Sauce Breaded Veal Cutlet, Mushroom Sauce Potato and Vegetable Potato or Vegetable Salad or Dessert Rolls or Bread e Tea Milk The above saving is Until December possible 1 st. (All Prices Susbject to Michigan Sales Tax) MICHIGAN UNION CAFETERIA The Quarry Inc. 320 So. State Phone 2-3109 ~ w- L .i .I I U U I