r Fen cken AND HIS LATEST WORK--"PREJU. DICES-SECOND SERIES" (Continued from Page One) 1 'Mencken is the greatest American critic since Poe. It seems that the French remember better than we that Poe was somewhat of a criticin his day. G. K. Chesterton of England, Benja- min DeCasseres, and James Huneker of America have paid him due tribute. I might mention that the University library has a number of Mencken's books ,therein-and that one of them bears the shocking title "Damn." Thus fortified I proceed. Mr. Mencken's new book is "Prejudices, Second Series," and of all the critiques I ,have ever read it best sums up the literary abasia - of the country. One seeks the cause of our fruitless, spum- ing efforts and one generally goes down, kickin'g convisively. A great -confusion assails the searching per- son, a welter of nonsense, the humbug of idealists and right-thinkers. But not Mencken. 'How he breasted the terrific current of bosh is beyond me. Says Mr. Mencken: "I describe the optimistic, the inspirational, the Au- thors' League, the popular magazines, the peculiarly American school. In character creation its masterpiece is the advertising agent who, by devis- ing some new and super-imbecile boob-trap, puts his hook-and-eye fac- tory 'on the map,' ruins all other fac- tories, marries the daughter of the boss, and so ends as an eminent man. Obviously. * * * Sunday-school drama, puerile and disgusting drama." No Mollycoddle Personally, I always enjoy the flay- ing of the near-great. Wherefore I enjoy Mencken, for he is no molly- coddle, as some of our national mal- kins of rhetorical pursuits can attest. No rolling, platitudinizing sonorous- ness is Mencken's; he uses the scourge more often than the laurel wreath. His language is sharp and quick with an acceleration at the end of each sen- tence; there is no dropping off, no questioning inflexion marking the end of his missile's flight. It crashes to the mark in. deadly fashion, and the game struggles weakly and lies still. "Prejudices, Second Series," dis- closes the three strata of American literature: the upper stratum, none too good, the middle layer worse, and the lowest level worse yet. 1 i "". ARRICK Wed. Mat. Nights Sat. Mat. 50C to $1.00 50c to *100 50C to $1.50 ROBERT MILTON PRESENTS "THE CHARM SCHOOL A COMEDY With a Wee Bito' Music by Jerome Kern A Dramatization of Alice Duer Miller's Fascinating Saturday Evening Post Story TCHUBERT D ETROIT Wed. Hat. Nights Sat. Mat. -50c to $1.50 50c to $2.50 50c to $2.00 THIS WEEK A. H. WOODS FRESENTS THEDA BARA IN PERSON In a Thrilling Spoken Drama Behem Blue F ame A PIPE'S the thing with men. Under the spell of W D C Pipes. men relax, fagged brains are relieved. The specially seasoned genuine French briar breaks in sweet and mellow. It will not crack or burn through. The W D C Triangle on the bowl is your guarantee. Ask any good dealer. W,. DEMUTH & CO.. NEW YORK WORLO'S LARGEST MAKERS OF FINE PIPES