WiWh' '*AX1-F1WM DETROIT, operation consists in making an inci- anuary iies-- A COMMUNICATION g ed sion through the neck just below the A Review by G. D. E. (Continued from Page 5) - "Adam's Apple," so that the patient 'ycially o those who 'ent their poison- ack to L fe rates thru the openig in the neck (Continued from Page 4) ous opinions through the press-are (By W. Bernard Butler) instead of as normally through the The above doubtless has, a meaning. convinced that this adaptability, of mouth or nose. From that time, on In fact, with certain permutations, which you are so obviously fond Is Dr. Bradford Seeley, '16M, 29-year- until the sixth day, everything went combinations, mutations, and outright to be regarded as a sort of vegetability, old resident physician of the Keifer well, until one morning the boy gasped saltations of the words, and a change a kind of creeping towards the cab- hospital, Detroit, has restored life and apparently died. The bluish tint, or two in punctuation, I did get some bage They, strangely enough, have like that noticed on the body of a sort of sense from the business, but an idea that life is a becoming, not a re than four times to a small boy drowned person, covered his skin. By Od's splood! look at the construction, being; that life, when it becomes sta- who "died" several times not long pumping up and down the arms of the the phrasing, the punctuation! Sad tic, ceases to be life. . . . Perhaps it ago. In onie day, four times, the lungs lifeless body, Dr. Seeley was at last to relate, such phrasing is the only is that a fear of stagnacy drives them of the little patient suffering with able to restore the vital processes. originality fobs found in the poem. on; perhaps the roar of the machine laryngeal diphtheria had ceased to Four times during that day it was When the thing is readable it is also has made p sycho-pathological tesysbgnonecessary to bring the boy back to hackneyed: "dead-grey skies," "heart's them. But they, at any rate, are i- function, and blife content," heart's desire," "dead-grey" tent on constant change, even if their darken with putrified blood, and four Last Tuesday, however, the tube in again; all as archaic as hoop-skirts. shifting brings them into contact with times, through the persistent efforts the boy's neck was removed and the But, as has been charged against me, 1 the normal, and the healthy-minded of Dr. Seeley, the boy, apparently lungs were again directly connegted am surely lacking in chivalry and adaptable. with' the nasal organs. The little pa- surly ackng n civsry. andadatabe.dead, was restored to life. In order tient is now able to cry only, softly, "A Coyote Hunt with Russian MURRAY N. GODWIN, Detroit.th te bc st oal co rey lsoened Wolfhounds," by Wessel Smitter,ta hyug because the vocal cords were'loosened is an improvement over his Novembes BALZAC, REALIST, BY doctor performed the operation known during their idleness. Dr. Seeley says contribution, surely. In spite of its SAIUEL L. GREENEBAUM as "intubation," in which a silver tube that it will not be long before the "Hunter-Trader-Trapper" atmosphere, (Continued from Page 2) was placed in the trachaea to all'e boy will have fully recovered. the account interested me. It again The operation of tracheaotomy is shows Smitter's ability with the pen. Skin;" how it disgusts us. The death- the breathing, which had been cut off not an unusual one, Dr. Seeley said, Come, Smitter, a story! It may not bed of Cousin Pons;."comme elle nous by the diphtherial obstruction in the but rarely does one stop breathing as have enough perfume on it to suit the serre la gorge." The awful suspense throat, to be continued. On the next many times as did the little boy and local pansy-bed taste, but I am con- i "A Paesion in a Desert;" how it day, breathing again stopped, and the still be able to resume respiration. fident, nonetheless, that it will amount quickens our plses. mtn wst___odh di ih to somehing.Master painter of enmotion he was. little fellow would have died within Impartial observer of life, to be sure. two minutes had'not two or three new Joseph Hergesheimer's novel, "Cy- "The Organ, Grinder," a poem by Despite his mistakes, a genius always tubes been inserted, the last one pro- therea," has again been sent to press, Ruth Lechlitner, is full of orange peel and forever. By emulation may we for the fifth time, making a total of ace of eys. Moreover, t repay the debt we owe Balzac for Th e ext s . 32,000 copies printed since publication, g r tten making us see, for deflecting the blind- T day, after tubation was January 3. This has already passed poorly written. ing rays of sentimentality, for opening proving unsatisfactory, Dr. Seeley all previous figures for any Herge- "A Flower of Old Japan," a transla- to us the infinite vista of life. tried tracheaotomy as a resort. The sheimer book. tion from the Japanese by Clara East- lake, is something far above the ave- rage. This one-act play is really first rate. I commend it to your attention. If this is taken from Japanese popular literature, I must say that the apa- nn n the Arrival o ein "Uncle Tom's Cabin" is as near as o i anything else to our popular master- pieces." "Road Song," poem by Rosalie he Im por Dunlap, is also good. < If I remember - correctly, her poem was one of the few worth while things of the Novem- ber issue. With coming we we "Sprigged Muslin," by Adelaide Ad- ams, is fifth rate and full of sobs, something that will interest every young man in "The Unbeliever," a poem by Darrel L. Dwight, is a fine piece of rhymed Ann Arbor who is in any way in need of a light' irony. The transition from the second to the third stanza is hazy, but a sec- overcoat for spring and summer wear. It is use- ond reading brings out the idea. This kind of poetry should be more in evi- less for us to try to tell you all about these smart dence. While the most of our young poets are disporting about the pool new coats through the medium of advertising of the Muses,.blowing about the good- ness of God, tying knots in the shirt but if you will come in and talk with us we will of science, and making mermaids of tadpoles, Dwight has said "Pish!" to be only too glad to show them to you and then the whole gang and has taken long strokes to clear, deep water. In case you can decide for yourself. of emergency, I volunteer as life- guard." I first classed "Tale of a Star-Gazer," Remember that you are in no way obligated by Robert Batron, as rhetorical puffing Two or three of my friends argued to us because we show you our goods. We are mildly with me' about it until a brace"of policemen appeared. always glad to have you come in and look over After-reflection leads me to believe that I was probably wrong,' and our stock whether you make a purchase or not. further, that this little sketch of Batron's is the finest thing that Whim-' Infact, we encourage you tomake a comparison sies has ever printed, f w e r age y t m In conclusion, I urge my readers to of the values found here and elsewhere. - buy Whimsies. It will never amount - to anything unless it is read and criti- M ake vour selections now while our stock is cised, and contributed to. It is trying to do something in a literary way. The p and we ill deliver goods old Inlander tried to do this and failed.co t e nd we wil.deiv rthe gat your It was- not bought, it was not publicly criticized, and it pined away. Yet, in reading over an old number, I find-in one issue, mark you-twopieces of fiction of real literary worth. I defy any other campus publication to sayKW E as iuch. But with literary interest on the campus at a pitch which it 604 EAST LIBERTY STREET has never reached before, I do not see why something cannot evolve now. "QUALITY FIR - ECONOMY ALWAYS" Whimsies, by virtue of its exclusiveFA aim, ought to benefit, but the editors must be more careful of what they accept, and of what they reject.