SUNDAY, AUGUST 8, 1926 THlE SUMMER MICHIUAN DAILY PAGE THPl11jI AV _,, I JORG~ENSEN by Tristram Tupper; Philadelphia, J. 11. Lippicott: $2.00 With the number of nvelists at pres- ent turnilng out hooks there is apt to be a dead level struck, but "Jorgen- sen" rises above such criticism. The writing here is clear, hard, with events presented in broad strokes, writing that is always in command of its material. The story sets out with Jorgensen, "a mere shell of a man" and brings hint hack to life through his conquest of a mountain, outward engineering conquest, inward spiritual conquest. There are great heightS achieved but the defects are so seri- ous as to make one feel the imper- manence of the wiork. enough that we might excuse some of the others. The b)00k would be high-, ly worth reading if only for the strength of its writing.{ -R . I.P. 0 GENTEEL LADY, by Esther Forbes; BRoston, Hounghton ii iffliii Co. $2.00' Young t A uthoress ! Agricultral conditions andledr Southerners are as desirous of pro- Peret Now Dheads are presented in a necessarily or -dueinlg loaders as i,4 Edwin Mlints then I' 'I~eds Sch oln'iate i, Mle ,"inner fotr always the ma sot 'there is a true arousing of th.e best Frnh41h nb i Bei e en eetd b h kof the Month club as one of the best . novels of the month, it also is listit-i- guished by the fact that it is Esther Forbes' first extensive flight into lit- prature. For the milieu of this ex- ploit the author htas chosen that period of American life which the blurb re- fers to as "the dlays of stay.an hustles, of hoopm skirts andl crinolines." The treatment of this period usuallyi is one of two sorts: either a kindly spirit of ridicule is adopted or the ges- . lure is a very -modern sneer at thet'" narrow foibles and customs of yester- year. Miss Forbes, revealing a per- spicuity pierhtaps more discerning than .~ either of these, imagines the age, i the fundamentals, as very similar to , . thte present. La nice Bardecen, the genteel lady and the heroine of the book, is graced with much the same? Sylvia Thtompson, above, author of inhibitions, repressions and animal "Hounds of Spring," a best seller in passions, which -make the life of the' I ondlon and America, has become thef nmodern girl so satisfying and full. bride of Peter kulin,-She and her' For although hter environment is iden- husbandI are studnents at Oxfordj. She tical to that which a uthors have is 22 and wrote her first novel when taught was the current associations of she was 16. a sheltered young lady of the age, Lanice remains, despite all this, the to demnand of any author, and miss woman, and her characterization is Forbes has written a book thtat seems made all the niore convincing thereby. to nmeet the requiremnents with, When Lanice refuses the virtuous pleasing su(ccess.,M. A. H. n ioc ;y presents little opportuitiy f(,: an: 'ysis while the few instaneiw 5 01f - cc(,- 'al agricultural pro'elsar; sent themselves cearily for xanina.- tion. A. large prop~ortion of the book deals with eulogies, of var'ious aot~'i leaders from Lee' to Boolur WV,lii;- toil. This nbase of the x oh i more inipressi x'o than hii;a o frot h:s an immnense appeal for tH e91110Ol'of hc South, thloe p01,)4>for xx hoi tnse mein were P1)( raal heroesr. ETslogy carries into tho field of lit a pature andI here Mar. Minms sese'',.only of the existaflee of ,rains Branch Cabell, Nell BatthleiLwis, and EllIa n J lasgow tias oto? 11f d I g leaderf-,of the e (lay. He isnt't: sure of (Cabell an8a he miust be a frieind of Ellen tlasgoj forI site comles in ast literary ighI light, - I of the er southern spirit. !Although ii. presents but on- si - of Iie ea )eal thant Ihe darke, r, one cannot but thing that such a novel as Stribling's "Teeftallow" with the pow- erful presentation that it gives to the forces of destruction of Southern so- c;ec;, ;will do more to arouse men to alona iid be a, more vahluable (dice- mont. in the history of the Southern l~c i io a-'than will this lengthy trie in Ithe academic m nner. ---R. L. P. A very read(ablhi ook ii hig;hly de- 1)01a ble 50 l)P-; of o;j~azz hais been writ - ten ii)b an authority. Paul Whiteman, thec kinrg of jazz ( has turned to liter-' a an fieldcs and pr'oduced for our edi-' fice tion '",Jazz"', published by Sears, altlt~uith e wishes to claim no lt erarlitinme it in htis work. Mr. Whit- I - -, -- - - ---- -- -, an eternal,. etc. one over' heard Mimis is sorry Emnphiasis su c-Itwa,, no ttan s book Iof her Ireceivin 1'chefo;;e. ,raim, the Southt cannot e'ltii lins of jazz l.ie eivecs the history dud the f fl'om its eairliest begin- says that he does not Jorgensen has escaped from a peni- tentiary to come back to the conquest of Black mountain which he started but which is in other and ineffectual hands. He is at home on the moun- tain but he is in dlanger. He stays. First as the shadow of the reservation engineer and then as the recognized director of the reservation he carries on the work of tunneling the moun- tain.Fiis position is mtagnificient, al- most inhuman like a putppeteer, he lifts his hands and the tunitel pro- gresses. The handling of the con- struction work is one of the most successful elements of Mr. Tupper's writing. His use of the chanty, "Muckin' cars is runni' " creates a powerful effect not easily forgotten. The greatest single passage in the book is the one in which we have a graphic picture of Jim Hart, station- ary engineer, working the conttrols of bils donkey engine with his eyes on the end of the boom high in the air and bringing up safely three loads of men in five minutes front the bottom of a caving shaft. The chief defect lies in the fact that although the writing moves with the precision of the work on the tun- nel it fails to make its characters convincing. We cannot, as in Norris' "Pig Iron", for example, where the characters plod, yet are memorable, be sure of Jorgensen, or Ellen and certainly not of any ntinor charact ers. d-art lives in the one episode mena- tioned but aside from that we know nothing of him except his tendency to silence. Rosalee is an exception and his mit ton, As of lth fails' Solth lug a fac(ts t ude fenry btit 's a tact that be-ii o art in New York and not in Day- Tennessee. a conti'ibtution to theli 'atr ic naitiont, a, c ti 'l)lou 10uo standing of the South, the-boo beecause it Itries to w i -!(,l'orte hand( mkethe pi('1 lre e.11, C'Jt"_ Id Yet present the depr sin; as well11 with the restult ta jumping is lhemost ,it rc IIwr i a)ieit >Vei contfusr !7 by-this doazble t andl one is nro :;;ire'(' ta t ,,hi - just Where the Soithwa atI iisi U abot its ?)tiS' Iif All care whether jazz is an art or a sport a Jon~ asit brings beauty into life. Tb ais ~s o tdnienta 1 aimi, he claims, and'' r.tht to' sonit will continue to Ii xe a !ad to i vlop unutil it becomes a I ii 01a r~t of our society. i ai ilaostospenld $3,000,000 to oria eGtttt ae esof good land that Raoul Peret, above, former minister of finance and proponent of a tax levy as the solution of F'rance's financial problem., is the new president of the French chamber of deputies. He serv- ed as finance minister jin one of the Briand cabinets. ' Augustus, her erstwhile admirer in -- ki the (lays before her mother's dis- THlE ADiVANCING SOU'T, lby Edifln h(etn grace, while she knows that she will M )inms, Garden City, N. Y.. Double.' optini deny him, she yet is possessed with day Page & Co. $3.0 -) the feminine instinct of makintg him "The Advancing Soulth" is comnpre realize what he has lost. Tempering liensive and it presents two sides of, her refusal, "S]he stood up with her the South's position hut ra ther than hoops swaying delicately beneath her presentting them in an objective glossy skirts. It was a trick of,,hers, draw-your-ow n-"oniclusion manner W learned fromt Mamma. She could Minis has hopped fromt one side of tile start this flower like swaying by giv- fentce to the other, presenting now the se ing the skirt a secret little ihushi in darker sid e' of southern conditiolr, a k " T e ef c s s e i g y m d n r a i g o f w t n " a t n 't Bening on the vulnerable Augustus. Icxplaint" and then following with to Later it life when she is safely nmar-; sugar coated account of isle bright; d'' 1I- e re,4ato rbe you iai hen you reia , i Ann A rbor. Tuttle's ILunch Room 338 Maynard St. f i , i 'I, ried to the eminent Sears-Ripley, with 't woman's customary unscrupulous- ness it the affairs of the heart, and her husband asks her about her ad- ventures with the dashing Captain Anthony, she is able to lie, gracefully and unflinchingly, that "nothing ser- ious happened.", Whether or not the picture Mliss Forbes presents of the period is true, probably is impossible to prove. But that the story be wvell told, reasonable, side of affairs. The treatment of t le statt of education especially in the colleges shows i ht inmany cas 11th South is makin-', a real break from the mobe control over thinking and writing and if teaken with the gradin of salt, that i ms is himself a profesr is one of the ini oortant accounts of fthe book. f , i:: f i ' f 'r ~L JRIC COOKERS HOT' PLATES, TOASTERS CUR LERS IRONS r jus s necessary at the lake Cottage! 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