THE MICHIGAN DAILY NAGAZINE WM. GOODYEAR &c COMPANY Sring freezes In ! ;0 it HESE new costumes are not in the abi one notes at the Easter promenade. G no! They are a select few brought toget those most fashionable young women wih pleasure in donning the latest while it is y very new; still in the bud. The ew Frock Graceful, Easeful Here are fro'cks fashioned so ingeniously th will stir up a style swirl wherever worn. De of chiffon taffeta and Qanton crepe, with like bodices and skirts just on the verge of th lar idea. Japanese embroidery motifs lend' touches of color a gay nonchalance. A new shade, rather prosaically termed cot serts itself with the more familiar browns an blue. Individually and collectively they're we with enthusiasm. $25-$75 Second Floor New Hats Snug Fitting They've come-the first spring hats, and the thrill you'll get from being among the earliest to effect a gay new chapeau-- well, we know what it will be because we've seen the hats. They are snug fitting turbanis of faille, cire satin and taffeta.. Many of them flaunt frosted fruit trimming; the color range is wide. Second Floor By the way- A newspaper man speaks of the fashionable dropped waist- undance line as the sub-normal waist- racious, line. If that isn't a clumsy, ther for back-handed way of expressing o take it. Imagine calling anything so et very, unqualifiedly.smart-sub-norm- al. Was someone rash enough to S suggest that the bateau neck- line was going out? Not a bit of it, although it has sunk a at each little-that is to say, the best veloped designers have dropped the basque- neckline a -trifle to reveal the e circo- shoulders. mystery, flee, as- ad navy * elcomed SUNDAY, JANUARY 8, 1922 "SOnG'S FOR PARENTS" (By L. E. W.) John Farrar's "Songs for Parents" (Yale University Press). is bound in sophisticated orange such as a flapper might choose for her boudoir, instead of in the pink and blue appropriate for nursery songs. RAnd it hasn't any pic- tures. Oh bread pudding without rais- ins! No matter how gravely grown- up one may be there is always a pricked-balloon sensation on opening a book of childhood rimes and finding it uniltustrated. Enthusiasm drops, it is true, but falls butter-sid-up this time, for after all the author has done the artist's work. Using only precise black characters walking primly across a white page, Mr. Farrar leaves an impression of color and brightness. He shows the child's love of shining things: gold rings and silver stars, "seas of spray- ing jewels," dew, the moon fireflies, "dancing crystal ships," rockets and tinsel and candle light,-all the flash and sparkle of the world that intrigues young eyes. The colors are frank, ob- vious as a kindergarten paint box- the blue sky, the scarlet trumpet flowers, the yellow moon. It is some- thing of a relief to be spared amber and umber and mauve. Such a collection inevitably invites comparisons with Robert Louis Stev- enson's "Child's Garden of Verses."* That the two have much -in common is no adverse criticism of either of them. They have the pure accent of childhood, candor, simplicity and naive wonder, with a recurrent note of un- troubled sweetness. These belong to the early days bf the sensitive human being. Any little lad may be interester in toys and frogs, in Christmas packages and circus clowns, but it is unusual that the boy when he is grown should be able to recapture the clear treble speech. Whereas in Stevenson's ver- ses the voice is always the same, the authentic tones of childhood, in Far- rar's it seems to falter now and then into a flat older note. "Sin" has no place in the Golden Age, and only a sociology professor's son would be likely to meditate: "There must be respectable flowers, I suppose!" For the most part, however, the lines ring clear and true. The verses are divided into four groups: Songs of 'Desire, Songs for Out of Doors, Songs of Circumstance and Songs for a Christmas Tree. The first group is made up of seven little poems of which the most appealing are "Summer Explorer," the expression of a child's desire to be a gypsy, with a relutant admission in the last stanza that if and if and if-he might come home again; "Spring Wish," his envy of the frog's happy existence; "Inde- pendence," his longing to run out bare- foot into the night, away from nurses and parents, and dance, with the wind in his hair. Several of the seventeen verses that compose the second group are about the garden. Others are of rabbit- tracks, the rainbow, chanticleer, birch trees, castles of sand. One quaint con- ceit called "Windmill" is especially pleasing. In "Songs of Circumstance" such en- tertaining things as a cuckoo clock, the drum and dragons appear. Most of the verses have a fresh flavor, but "The Sentinel" is unfortunately rem iniscent of Eugene Field's "Little Boy Blue." "Songs for a Christmas Tree' is made up of four merry verses and a Christmas dream poem in more grave and tender mood. This last poem, "Prayer," contains a figure of unusual beauty: "At midnight twenty angels sang, The stars swung out like bells and * ranig." The volume would hardly be com- plete without this note of childish rev erence, but the true tempo of the verses is allegro. Fancy and wonder and whimsy patter throug the book with light steps and easy laughter. t 1 I I