DAILY 7t, nty" Flay That Will Endure Despite Disregard By Publishers (Editorial Note.-Prof. R. E. Cow- den,, of the rhetoric department, has written the following review of "Bunty Pulls the Strings," which will be en- acted Wednesday, March 9, by mem- bers of the Comedy club.)' As I turn the pages of the soiled manuscript copy of "Bunty Pulls the Strings" and renew my acquaintance with the quaint speech, the shrewd Scotch characters, and the amusing plot, I am struck by the contrast be- tween the lowly form in which 1 find the play accessible and the qualities of the play itself. Anhour spent in one of our book stores will disclose numerous vol- umes of modern plays each trimly bound to the publisher's taste in green, or lavender, or pink; and there will be hardly a play in these fine feathers that does not suffer by com- parison with Graham Moffat's little Scotch comedy. ]Mde Long Runs "Runty Pulls the Strings" should have been in book form a decade ago because it is a play of quality. Since its long run at the Haymarket thea- ter In 1911 in London, and its unusual success in the United States the fol- lowing year theater-goers have never entirely forgotten it. Every now and then in the casual talk of play lovers someone comments upon "Bunty," and the talk wanders on about her brother Rab, and her lover, Weelum Sprunt. The speech has much to do with the permanent character of the play. Graham Moffat sought to present mid- die-class characters in the Scotland of 60 years ago. *He knew the Scotch- vernacular, and the Scotch inflection so well that the talk of the characters runs on naturally and spontaneously, and is a joy to hear. The speeches grow freely out of situation and char- acter; rephrase them and you not only obscure the meaning but you destroy the charm of the play. Characters Are Lasting Much more than the speech, how- ever, does the play owe its characters. I must mention Bunty, and Weelum and Rab, and Tammas Biggar, and Susie Simpson, and Eelen Dunlop, and Jeems Gibbs, names only, until the play itself makes them alive. Few dramatic characters will linger in memory - longer than Bunty. She doesn't need a Maude Adams or a Mrs. Fiske (if madame were younger), to make her a convincing character. She is here in the mlanuscript, a wholesome, clear-headed Scotch lassie, simple, modest, almost naive at times and yet quick-witted and shrewd to a degree that turns many a danger- oous situation in her favor. Weelum Sprunt, timid before the trivial re- sponsibilities that are his in the or- dinary affairs of life, always slow to act, sometimes never reaching the point of action, dumb when circum- stances cry for speech, makes a per- fect foil for Bunty's practical aggres- siveness. And yet Weelum has in him enough honesty and solid goodness to satisfy an audience that Bunty is not throwing herself away when she mar- ries him. Rab, and Tammas Biggar Susie Simpson, and the others are all homely Scotch characters displaying no small degree of the narrowness and weakness and very much the stur- diness* and goodness of the true,'Scot. The playwright has not shifted the re- sponsibility of characterization to the actors but has made definitely traced human beings living through the pages of the manuscript. Strings Pulled and Pulled I cannot leave this comment on the play without saying a word about the last act. "Bunty Pulls the Strings" is a very suggestive title, and one tries immediately to connect it with events of the action. In the first act there are decided evidences that Bunty has the ability to pull strings, and in the second act Bunty has more than one opportunity to pull and does so withl DELAY-HOLDS UP MARCH LAW REVIEW UNTIL FIRST OF WEEK Due to an unavoidable delay at the printer's, the March number of the Law Review"will not be out until Mon- day or Tuesday. Besides the usual departments, the issue will contain an article on "The Respective Rights of Preferred and Common Stockholders in Surplus Pro- fits" by George Jarvis Thompson, al .feature concerning ancient Chinese codes and other sources of legal ideal by John Wie, and an article entitled "Does the Constitution Protect Free Speech?" by Herbert F. Goodrich. Get the habit. Follow the "ones who a Trubey Home-made Candies and Box Candies Discount on 3ox Candies 218 S. MAIN STREET Phone 166 I NOWA TAILORING FINE CUSTOM Skeep Anyplae 11 Eat at Rex's THE CLUB LUNCH 712 ARBOR STREET Near State and Packard ,I 11111 i The Quality of our Workmanship is high- er than the Price. See the New Remington Portable Typewriter-Standard Keyboard. G. E. Washington, 8-9 Savings Bank Building.-Adv. After the dance you are invited to 11111 t good will; but few the play for the first from these two acts number of strings to, who are seeing time will guess the astonishing be pulled in the Albert Gansle 113 South Main Street Second Floor SH U B E RT 0 E T R 0 1 "Kissing Tme D ETR 0 nieT I R E N E The Sensation of 4 Continents third. Through a maze of conflicting interest that threatens a serious con- clusion of the play Bunty adroitly puls string after string until the sit- uation is clear and she can turn from her family's struggles and finish the Monday washing. AT THE THEATERS TODAY Screen Majestic - "The Inside of the Cup," from the story by Win- ston Churchill. Pathe News and ,Universal Comedy, "Hap- py Daze." Arcade-Hope Hampton in "The Bait." News film and a Bray comic. Wuerth -Justine Johnstone in "The Plaything of Broadway." Orpheum-Annette Kellerman in "What Women Love." I THIS WEEK Stage Whitney- Tonight -David Bel- asco's production, "Tiger Rose." I know" to the Chinese Gardens.-Adv. the Chinese Gardens.-Adv. I liI1l 111N1111111111iil NIIIIIIi IIItIIIIlIIIIU IIIIIINll ll 111111111111111111111111111111li To the Music Lovers and Theatre-Goers of Ann Arbor and Vicinity I take great pleasure in announcing that I have been able to secure Musical Comedy's Foremost Stars, CECIL LEAN and CLEO MAYFIELD, in their latest and greatest mu- sical comedy success, "Look Who's Here," in which they will appear at The Whitney Theatre Thursday,-March 10, . for one performance only, with a great supporting company of artists, and with positively the same production used during its run at the 44th Street Theatre, New York City, and also cr at the Studebaker Theatre, Chicago; the Garrick Theatre, _ Philadelphia, the Colonial Theatre, Boston, and in all the = larger cities in this country. Ann Arbor is one of the six smaller cities to be played by this attraction this season. DON MCINTYRE, Mgr. HOW TO ORDER TICKETS BY MAIL Send cheque or postoffice money order to Manager, The Whitney Theatre, for amount of tickets purchased, adding 10% tax. Enclose r self-addressed, stamped envelope to avoid error. Mail orders filled in order of receipt.- J. L. CHAPMAN WHITNEY THEATRE' TONIGHT DEST SEATS MAIL ORDERS $2.00 NOW Greatest of All Belasconian Melodramas DAVID BELASC, jpreIEntJ i sMAM i i I NNA (' a d Mr. Belasco's Original Production and Only. TIGER ROSE COMPANY with its thrillingly, gripping story of LOVE Truely Fighting Gorgeous YOUTH PASSION Red-blooded Men At Its Highe settings, Rivaling Nature in Charm and Beauty 1 I i Garrick (Detroit) - The latest musical comedy hit, "Irene." Shubert (Detroit) -- "Kissing Time," a musical play with William Morris and Edith Taliaferro. -. .,_, JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST The Store of Reliability & Satisfaction 113 South Main Street ANN ARBOR, - - MICHIGAN, HALLROOM BOYS COMEDY 7A T E R .-thj I1 COLORED PATHE REVIEW I1?] I I -. LAST TIMES TODAY LAST TIME TOO 'A y. TOD A Y I ANNETTE Winston KE LLERMA N Churchill's IN Powerful romance of plain worth and gilded hypocrisy. A story of love that startled the churches and toppled over the gods. of ''high society. "'WHAT WOMEN WELL WAR RANT WEN OUR WORK YOtIVE TIED THAT YOU WILL 8E GauITE SATISMED YES, we're quite able to guarantee the plumbing work we do because we never announce that a job is finished until it is perfectly sat- isfactory both to us and to our, customer. We know that you'll be entirely satisfied with our services. Phone 2452. !#iill#####i# BERENAK & MARTIN PLUMBING HEATING REPAIRING Phone 2462 320O NORTH MAIN STREET 1I C AMOUS PWaYERs-tASKY CORP. .PQESENTS The InOide ot ffie GUuP 99 0 LOVE" ..... r Ct' rsinopolifanjOv uc f M r . a r JUSTINE JOHNSTONE The Perfect Woman In an Hilarious Comedy A romance that grips the whole of life and turns it inside out CHESTER COMEDY "You'll Be Surprised OTHER ADDED FEATURES PATHE NEWS - UNIVERSAL COMEDY - ORCHESTRA C 0 M I N G NEXT SUNDAY ,JUSTINE JOH(NST0NE 'THE pi.AYTH ING OF BROAD'WAY" cR6A NR.X FQRES _w + I NTERNATIONAL "Midsummer Madness" NEWS "THE PLAYTHING OF BROADWAY" 11