"MARIA CHAPDE (A Review by R. Louis Hemons 'Mar -aine (Macmillan) iso rare novels which ares ten thatthe reader finds ualizing the entire story incident and character 1 as he reads, the printed by ever intruding upon I ness. This effect Hemon a rigid economy in the details, by an unaffected that is not natuialism, a by a clear, concise, an diction. The result of presentation of material: piece of literature. Hemon was a Breton the Lake St. John coun Quebec, in "1912, ands year and a half amon folk of this bleak region harshness of their lives, cle of their pleasures, working of the soil throi summer that they may the long winter-all thi orded admirably. Here illiterate for the most pa ously religious, drud plainingly day after da the. coming of a visitor a holiday, a time to be ward to for a year, a tri occasion of momentous yet, modifying the ess ness of their life, is a pr ty, a sort of gentle wis This wistful quality noticeable in the noble Maria, the daughter of l delaine, a Canadian She has grown up in th vironment, used to the1 the long distances, the h labors. She has come t as the only possible life comes the time when lo seek her hand. Her ra bilities is necessarily finds, however, a man w ly loves. This is Franc manly characterwith a romantic and the advent But Francois is lost in the priest tells Maria th for her to mourn.his de was not betrothed to him enzo offers to take her to matograph and the othe the 'great cities in the S brief time she entertain leaving her isolated homn ing Lorenzo. But Madai aine falls ill and finall household duties natur Maria, the eldest, and that escape is impossibl dreams come to an end practical matter of accep remaining suitor, Eutro neighbor of the Chapdelg Thus the 'story ends quietly aceptingthe m short youth is over. S down now and attend to chores of her househol her mother, sh can no up under them. A sad beautifully told with ch straint. The present translatio smooth and clear Engli Blake. "THREE OF T By Maxim Go: (A Review by C. In his novel "Three new edition of which been published by K Gorky presents one of pictures of the life of lower classes. He is, a lentless and cruelly ho -realistic portrayal of t THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 1922 too low for, among the people he has Gorky's treatment of the story is, a n -A u t o looked up to, there is neither truth on the whole, good. It is true that a n t'I0lt ' nor cleanliness.I he sometimes puts philosophical and Life among the poor is frankly evil idealistic speeches into the mouths and vile, and Ilia finds the lower AINE" conditions under which the poor live, middle class far worse. The wife o f characters entirely incapable of D. S.) but throughout this work he shows the Commissary of Police is infinitely uttering them, but in the main his d touches of a restraint that was want- more degraded than a courtesan he people act and speak naturally. Curs- n. of those lng in "Foma Gordyeeff," "Creatures formerly loved, while the business ing, praying, drinking, and brawling, inell it- That Once Were Men," and other of and social sham disgust him until they are real examples of the half- shimself vis his earlier novels and sketches. he cries, "I feel as if nothing were savages Gork gre u among and "Three of Them' is the story of the of any damned good whatever"; and kwthoroughly. The book abounds rincident by i oddsrpin.Te r l by character, lives of three boys, Ilia, Jacob, and again, "Pillage, robbery, theft, drink, a gor descripthens.are y olorf lfor page scarce- Pashka, who grow up together in the all sorts of vileness and disorder-- whole li e port ayed is bleak and is conscious- squalor and vice relieved only by the our lives consist of nothing but that. the oly pca y ile and achieves by fleeting moments of pleasure which As the year pass Ilia is finally no fdas. Only occasionally will Gorky selection of they derive from the religious -stories longer able to stand the hypocrisy fon aebrightlit, and then but selecton offor the brief instant that some char- naturalness of the devout Grandfather Jerimiah about him. He finds truth nowhere, acter nd, above all, and the songs, of the drunken revel- sees dishonesty in everything. Even is life d unadorned ers of the house. in the courts of justice he dis- this skill in The paths of the three lead in dif- covers . thieves condemning honest For the middle class with its thin is truly a fine ferent directions. Pashka escapes men. "Generally speaking, justice is veneer of pretense Gorky has no and begs his way about the country a light comedy, a tiny little comedy," pity, but toward the people of the who went to in an effort to free himself from the says an acquaintance. Love is lowest depths of society he exhibits try, north of dreary life of the house. Jacob, a honorless nd business fraudulent. a feeling of sympathy and fraternity, stayed for a physical weakling, remains with his When Ilia had once been discharged for experience has shown isim the g the simple father, dreaming, between blows, for honesty his employer's parting utter hopelessness of their lives. The n. The cruel over the Greek philosophers and the advice had been, "If one man is hon- three boys he depicts cannot rise the tiny cir- mysteries of life. Ilia, the leading est and nine are rascals, no one wins, above the station of their birth in the constant character and the "smug eitizen" of and the man is lost. The majority spite of their half-conscious yearn-' ugh the short the story, takes the middle road. He are always-in the right-that is how ings and desires for something bet- live through wants truth, commercial success, and you must treat honesty." At a din- ter. Heredity and enyironment hold s he has rec- physical cleanliness; and the story ner party, in a fit of protest, Ilia de- them down, letting them think at are a people, is the tale of his struggle for these. nopnces society, tells the company times that they have broken away, rt, superstiti- Finally, by means of work and crime, that the hostess is his mistress, and and then, after giving them a taste ging uncom- he becomes successful in a way and confesses that -he is a murderer. He of what they might have been, pounc- y. For them is able to set up a shop with the is taken by the police but escapes to ing upon them and drawing them is an event, money of a man he has murdered. dash out his brains; and thus dies back much like a cat playing with a looked for- But he finds he has put his ideals the victim of a false social order. mouse. p to town, an import. And ential rough- 'imitive beau- tfulness. is especially figure of Samuel Chap- frontiersman. is,simple en- heavy snows, eavy physical o accept this for her. Then vers begin to nge of possi- small. She hom she real- ois Paradis, a touch of the urous to hire. a storm, and at it is wrong ath since she . Latey Lor- see the cine- r wonders of tates. For a s thought of e and marry- me Chapedel- .y dies. The ally fall on she realizes e. Thus her in the more ting the only ape,' the one sine's. 3nwith Maria an. Her too he will settle the drudging d until, like longer stand tale, but one arm and re- n is put into ish by W. B. [EM" . rky S. P.) of Them," a has recently nopf,- Maxim his greatest the Russian s always, re- nest in 'his he revolting A Scarf of Color to Complete Your Costume mAME Fashion has expressed a ; favor for color this Spring and in keeping with this decree are the many gay colored scarfs of silk. A delicious blue with Roman stripes on the edge will wear nicely with a grey, tan, or blue wrap while the brighter reds, hennas, and orange color tones are be com1 ng with ' tweeds and chinchilla wraps. There are many scarfs to choose from and the prices range from $3.50 to $5.50. The Vogue Neckwear for Nelv Jelvelry Expresses a Spring Theme HE black and white vogue finds delightful NCHANTING riew neckwear has been expression in the new jewelry. There are fashioned from checked gingham and fin- strings of beads to adorn frocks, new lighten-fished with a bit of hand-work: Silk rating has been used for vests to wear with a suit., In ing ornaments for hats, and favorite Chinese the Springtime. there is nothing more smart in . friendship or good-luck rings without which th pigieteei ohn oesati appearance than a fresh-organdie collar on Milady feels but indifferently dressed this sea- your frock or suit. There are many new ideas son. worked out in Spring neckwear. (Main Floor) r