THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA -. 1 AsK"'~' (By E. . M.) A PHANTOM OF DELIGHT (Not directed at Mr. Wordsworth) She was a phantom of delight A glow that made his whole world bright, He followed her from work that night. With graceful tread she crossed the street, A nymph quite good enough to eat,' He followed her in close retreat. Like 'music, yet without a sound, Her feet seemed scarce to touch the ground, He followed her like faithful hound. He glimpsed her eyes and lips ask- ance, He wondered if she liked to dance, And still he followed, in a trance. She must have been a highborn queen, The first one he had ever seen, For he was young, ahd very green. He thought of ernline robe, and gown, And what a hit he'd make in town By marrying with such renown. But no, he could not hope for that The head beneath that dainty hat Belonged to an aristocrat. She would not deign to look his way, This thorough-bred young fairy fay, Gold does not mix with common clay. He rued the heartless day that he A rural lad was born to be , AFTER By VAN EVERY r Atrea YOU'V*Z 5WaNCO TH.- PAOkRBIAL Of1- pro aA BLUE BOOK -- - n--i AND A4RE- A4AA sger ro C-[)'"Ir ,4A A'OM-dOO TH ie/ fl T ', w M 8-&cl~v r si s ff l o q o ,QnD C-Er3S YoOv t.Lfv RAPS YOUR POP TQ fHis CA' 4yD H~irs iT FOR A '"8" , *rO YOUA "G"- 'I I 6t 61'- NO Y rtuOvr AsK %03 r ~ ~ b~W 1; I r 14 -I, rilllld®111, . '.. - '.,,-__"_ Rte,:"--- ! "_' . , i ,'c+ rr,. 7 "t So far beneath her dignity. He cursed and called himself a fool For having quit the gramamr school To dodge the threatened dunce's stool.' She seemed as lofty as a cloud, And he, just one out of the crowd, Pursued her still, completely cowed. But these high dreams he had to drop, He saw his fairy figure stop And gaze into a clothing shop. I Then once again from out of sight, ,He watched her in the silent night, She was a phantom of delight. A ,princess worthy of the name, He heard her inwardly exclaim, '"With them togs I'd be some sw dame." ell Today We Start Early Frontier Life Described In Old Gazettes I developments, dated June 13. Special messenger and great dispatch were the only posible means by which such a victory could be attained. With the Detroit Gazette, starting in 1797, a marked improvement is no- ticeable in newspaper technique. Cuts of trees and animated 'horfes" appear on the pages, type is more legible and the make-up appreciably improved, while poems and mathematical prob- lems contrive to make the paper a companion for the lonely hours that must be whiled away by the subscrib-' ers between its weekly -appearances. Historically Valuable This file, secured from the public library of Detroit and formerly a part of the Burton collection, is of particu- lar value in giving local history. Names of localities and old residents that have been long familiar in the neighborhood are here recorded. Pro- ceedings of the Detroit town council are put down and they constitute a valuable reference for old city cus- toms. That the paper had wide circu- lation all over the settled districts of Michigan and the vicinity is shown by the many advertisements from Buff- alo, Mackinac Island, and points of equal distance. The file for the years 1819 and 1820 shows the"region when it was first expanding with the influx of Ameri- can settlers after the war of 1812. French names and French articles are stil to be found occasionally, relics of the days not so long before, when th post was an old French fort. band in the vicinity of the town are adve: tised with much the same ludidity a the modern subdivision. Good Fish Story One advertisement of particular ir terest was that of the new steamboa "Walk-in-the-Water," which plowe the waves regularly to Buffalo in trip that required four days and consiste of visits at all the settlements alon 'the American and Canadiau shoreE An ancedote is told, which must b taken with a grain of salt, of how th boat was detained at the mouth of th river for five hours waiting for a larg shoal, of whitefish to pass by into th, lake. The collection as a whole is a high ly valuable historical record of life I the earlier days in the Northwest dis trict and quite an acquisition to th University. Students of history hav formerly ben forced to refer directl to the originals to secure the neces sary data for their studies, but th posession of these copies will permi direct access without damage to th documents themselves. Daily advertiuing will spell prosper ity for you.--Adv. Have you lost anything that yo prize very highly? The Classifle columns of The Michigan Daily ar always ready to serve you.-Adv. Bust in' Records TRACK RECORDS= LAUGH RECORDS- LOVE RECORDS- WITH (Continued from Page One) ed in an affair of honor who were un- willing to refer their difficulty to the abrupt and too decisive judgment of personal combat. News Up-to-Date The point about which particular pride should have been felt by the printers was the manner in which "time and space were annihilated" by the foreign dispatches. A citizen could receive his Kentucky Journal from the newsboy on the morning of Septem- ber 12 and read the very latest London DOUGLAS MAC LAN in a romance that starts on a big city race track and speeds through country lanes to love. A hundred thrills to every lap and a neck-and-neck finish. TODAY d W, MONDAY TUESDAY TODAY MONDAY TUESDAY Fr 'Te orne Stretch' "Honeybloom wins!-wins! Come On! Come On ! "-The yelling, clawing crowd had gone stark mad. The great brave bay that Johnny owned -and loved-and backed with his last red copper, had leaped up-and up -ahead4 Was stretching out now for the wire when-- A startled sudden hush! A little toddling figure on the track! Then a man-Johnny! And his winner jerked up, fell-and lost! But Johnny won more that day than a horse race! And you who love A Shot - a shout - and a rattle ,d N. ti of hoofs! - and a heart as big as the west. to laugh and things that at1 happy. Big meet real folks, times well up in and to feel in your heart the glow of big, fine a tear,-see this glorious romance and go home Special .Feature THE GAME WAS UP! O1E OF VAUDE- VILLE'S BEST VARIETIES Appearing, at all per- formances.; SHOWS START AT, 1:15, 3:00, 4:40, 7:00, 8:46 NATIVE AND POPULAR MELODIES ON THE STEEL GUITAR PRIdES: SUNDAY Balcony, 30e Main Floor, 40c Boxes, 50c Popular Week Day Matinees All seats, 2sc All night he must face the hangman's rope that would end his life at daybreak. Veteran of, a thousand fights for the law, he must pay his all for his first failure-a fail- ure due to a kindness done a girl. But come and see what happened in the morning. See how the Royal Mounted works! ROYAL FILIPINO BAND IN 30 MINUTES OF HAUNTING MELODIES Distilled Fun With a Punch in it. A Mermaid Comedy In Two Reels "MOONSHINE with LLOYD HAMILTON (YOUR OLD FRIEND "HAM") There's a Laugh in every Ray of Hoon- shine here Li n a Paront Pciam"~' LIE WENT AFTER HIS MAN AND FOUGHT THEN SHOOK HIS PRISONER'S llAND - AND FOUGHT -- AND FACED DEATH -~ AND RETURNED TO HIS CHIEF AL6Ui. See This Pictur by Al Means ISee a Real Western Rodeo AND A GREAT BIG SPECIAL MACK SENNETT COMEDY: "THE UNHAPPY FINISH" THOSE UNABLE TO LAUGH HAD BETTER NOT SEE THIS ARCADE ORCHESTRA KINOGRAMS NEWS PERFORMANCES TODAY STARTING 1:30, 3, 4:30, 7 & 8:30 WHERE FUN SPARKLES MORE THAN "MOUNTAIN DEW" TOPICS MAJESTIC ORCHESTRA AND NOW WE'LL BREAK ATTENDANCE RECORDS