PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAii SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 1924 SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 1924 THE MICHIGAN DAILY -- u ., . , .. .................. Books So BIG, By Edna Ferber. Doubleday, Page, & Co. 1923. When Edna Ferber wrote about petticoat salesmanship she was amus- ing and well liked. Beside her place in periodical fiction, her yearsas -a short story writer netted her some- thing else-a certain facility of tech- nique and a sure sense of the popu- lar pulse; at the propitious moment she came along with "The Girls" and established herself as a novelist, It has been interesting to watch Edna Ferber grow and in her latest book, "So Big," one feels any optimistic. earlier prediction justified. She I: still the thoughtful yet sprightly ob server, large with sympathy and sure in perception... . more than tha we find in this novel a breadth ant depth which our paper jacket an nouncements call "truly American." There are spots in the book wher Bliss Ferber's early mannerisms o the cheap fiction days assert then selves: the improbable is made plaus- ible stark reality is apologized for . . . It is as though she forgets thai I er r' aders are now a mature and ultie lot . . . as if once more she is wrting for the "happy-enders," Selina Peake is forced by sudden poverty into teaching school in th country-High Prairie, drab, heavy hopeless, a community of Dutch truck farmers, servitors to Chicago's maw, which makes of Gopher Prairie an enviable place. Here Selina, a crea- ture incredibly fine and superior to circumstances, falls in love with and marries Pervus De Jong, a stupid blond giant. The general muddiness settles about her. Pervus dies and the story is that of Selina, against whose kind "life has no wealns, left with her baby "so big", ahd the run down De Jong farm. Endowed with high courage and a belief in beauty she finds prosperity in High Prairie and a place in the world for her son. The last part of'the book is concerned with Dick, outgrown his nickname, now, but it never loses track of the transcending little figure on the De Jong farm, 'Whose clear conception of the spirit of things en- tirely penerates and 4illunines the empty shell which irk's successful career had told hien was life, There are other characters in the story. .. types definitely drawn with. that precision and consistency which sems so native to Edna Ferber. But most noteworthy are her keen 'darts of irony, scarce bitter enough for satire, none the less amusing because well-aimed. "She talks with whole-I some relish of Chicago's pork aris- tocracy riding to hounds in pink jac- kets while ' the fox'=a 'worred and somewhat dejecte-looking ' animal- had been shipped in -a crate from the south and on being released lia away of sitting sociably in an fllinis corn field instead of leaping feetly to cover. At the finish you had a feeling of guilt, as though you had killed a -ock- roach... She criticizes what is elegant and fashionable in Chicago architecture, with genuine amiablty. "Those French and Italan gimcracky 'things they-they're inco'gruous. Its as if Abrahatn Lincoln were to appear suddenly in pink satin knee breeches and "buckled shoes and lace iff le at his wrists. . . . Those Italian vil- las and French Chateaux-in north Chi- cago suburbs are a good deal like a race evening gown in the Arizona desert. It wouldn't keep you cool in the daytime, and it wouldn't be warm enough at night. I suppose a native architecture is evolvtd from building for the local climate and the 'needs of the community, keeping beauty in mind as you go. We don't need turrets and towers any more than we- need draw-bridges and moats. It's aight to ke p them, I suppose, where they grew up, in a country wherethe ,eu- dal system meant that any day your nxt door neighbor mtght take jt into his head to callthis gang -around him S I , , a' d' i ' .p . . ; k 1' o and sneak up to steal our wife and tapestries and gold drinking cu~ps." Since I have fallen to quoting I feel I must include that pungent com- mentary on the University, Miss Fer- ber described two classes in the in- stitutions, the Classifieds and the Un- classifieds. "The Classifieds and the Unclassifieds rarely mixed. Not age alone, but purpose separated them. The Classifieds were, for the most part slim young lads with caps and pipes and sweaters, their talk of foot- ball, baseball, girls; slim young girls. - . . - with pleated skirts that switched delightfully as they strolled across the campus arm in arm, their talk of foot- ball games, fudge, clothes, boys. They cut classes when ever possible. The Student Body. Midwest turned them out by the hundreds-almost by the link, one might say, as Aughempel's sausage factory turned out its fine plump sausages, each one exactly like the one behind and the one ahead of it. . . . . Football, fudge; I-said-to- Jim, I-said-to-Bessie." Contrasted to these were the Unclassifieds. "If it had been physically possible they{ would .have attended two classes at once, listened to two lectures, pre- pared two papers simultaneously. . . Most of them had worked ten years, fifteen for this deferred schooling. ." -Dorothy Sanders. PROHIBITION (Continued from Pala T r) 411!10 Is Your Watch a'Timepiece OrOnly an Ornament*? TRADE IN YOUR OLD STYLE WATCH FOR THE NEW FASHIONABLE RECTANGULAR; This beautiful rectangular watch-the latest style- f 17 jewel gua anteed $. BULOVA Movement; 18 Kt. 25 year white gold case ... , ULOY The Reviewer Is Reveiwed'Mr. Cowles 0 DOROTHY TYLER "A player shall cease to beain ama- THE REVIEWER, one of those lit- Gynt," which reveals Isben's humor teur by... playing for a mony prize erary quarterlies which pay "in fame more fully than any other of his plays not in specie," begins its fourth year in translation, precludes the possibil- From the By-Laws of the United States Lawn Tennis Associa- with somewhat minor contributions ity of ruling Iskben out of the running. I tio, Article II, Setion 5. from authors .for the most part well-1 l known. Margaret Emmerling, using Ben Applying this fundamental tennis Hecht's Fantasius Mallare and Sher-. maxim to the situation in which I more Evening Sun, tells of the cBesa- wood Anderson's John Webster (in find myself, I become a professional peake Bay people in "Mare Nostrum." "Many Marriages") to prove her points humorist: for I receive part of the "On ire Cheapeke B y," Mr. Owes well taken, writes that .the madness of 'gate receipts of the Michigan Daily "On thre Chesapeake Bay," Mr. Owens ns t t ken, writes that .themadnss for turning out what is technically thinks,d"one may live happy, and contemporary literary heroes is akin ou whatc cl dying, die happy." to that of Hamlet: "The suspicion known as a column.' Ergo, whatever arises that the authors use their he- I may say about the art of Mr. Stephen Julia M. Peterkin in Over the;' Leacock must be interpreted as the River" proves again the effectiveness roes' insanity as a mask fromx which Laokms eitrrtda h ofiusingrfor literature maerialefos-they can criticize society's standards reflections of one professional humor- of using for literature material for f morality and what not Anticipa- ist watching another professional inerly rejected. A negro serving wo- .nohumorist doing his stuff. man goes over the river to find the tng rebuke and dismay, they plead fater of the child she bears while madness, like murderers on trial, but Mr. Leacock was certainly doing ther; sthe scoed, ash ers child they do it with a wink to the initiate."'( his stuff. I have no idea how much there; she is scorned, allows her chid of his public perceived the various to die, and then home over the'river. David Bruce's "Et Cetera and Wine tis pubic ereie t e os Carl Van Vechten's "Pastiches.et Glasses" is a prose ode to wines andi tricss their rit plyhd on wt 1---- them-twisting their wits by his voice, T n Mr manuscript his discour: through his Some pe Leaoock on is not all o these peopl 3e MA STeyfried Jevelers 304 S. MAIN ST. L-'Il Pistaches" are comments upon the tnc Ways of wines in glasses. It is Sabbath Glee Club of Richmond, Ar- so well done that it suggests Keats' t1iur Machen's "Ornaments in Jade," draughts of vintage rather than post an incident at the Al Jolson theatre, prohibition triviality.} Anna Pavlowa, and things of equal' The thesis of Hansell Baugh's "The interest. Tie That Binds" is that fraternities) Apparently to prove that the Re- gather together strange bedfellows. viewer is not afraid of Gertrude The literary trifles included in the "At Stein, "An Indian Boy," in Miss Setin'sI Random" section, corresponding some- ..' . t% vLI~tUitmn age iwo) , lar medium he contemplates using, so that he can decide what type of appeal and argument will be most ef- fective. To one class of people hisi appeal might be Quality while to an- other Low Price; to one class it might be Beauty and to another Utility. The effective advertiser classifies and mar- shals- his arguments of greatest ap- peal to the group of readers he hap- ' pens .to be addressing. On all oc- casions, and especially in demonstrat- ing the evils of liquor and the bene- ficent' results of Prohibition, the Pro-j ' hibitionists ought to do likewise. Not as a rule to the vast undifferential: General Public but rather to the groups composing it ought the Prohi- bitionist direct his arguments. A! specimen grouping is (a) Men, Wo-' men; with these subdivided into (a) Employers, - Employees (b) 1\arried. Single. The possible groupings are numerous and often overlapping, there are no tight boundaries; yet as a gen-. eral rule there are certain types of argument which will have the great-i est appeal to a certain group, and itt is to this group that these arguments, ought to be consistently directed. { Common-sense demands that oneI sends -one's appeals where they will C prove the most effective. I,-Plenty of material is already avail.- able for developing our third line of advertising, which is, the arousing of, the public to the prime necessity of the enforcement of all law (which would of course include the Prohibi- tion lawes). The New Republic (a magazine, incidentally, opposed to Prohibition) in its issue of Sept. 13, 1922 admits that "When a law is not Senforced, ... to that extent govern- ment is oyerthrown." President Hard- ing in An Appeal to Halt Law-Break-- ing (Literary Digest, March 15, 1922) says, "If people who are known as leaders, as directing influences, as thoroughly respected and respectable members of society shall in their re- spective communities become known, for their defiance of some part of the' code of law, then they need not be as- tonished if presently they find their example followed by others, with the result that presently the law in gen- eral .comes to be looped upon as a} set of irksomeand unreasonable re- straints upon the liberty of the indi- vidual." It will not prove so very difficult to. demonstrate the necessity of law en-r forcement if government is to exist; and in this phase of their propagandaj and advertising Prohibitionists will find themselves aided by a large num- ber of citizens, many of whom are op- (Continued on Page Five) - { - . y \ J .. l } - '. - (h .. 1 tt 1. u-sual repetitious prose, is included. - However, inquiries concerning "An Indian Boy" will be ignored, accord- i- g- to the editors. Edwin Bjorkman in "Isben Here and Now" contends that the attempt . to relegate Isben, with his supposed se- verity, to a pre-war past, argues a - desire to relieve ourselves of the dra- matist wbo reveals Main Street (in-I O uding our agglutinated Main Streets; the cities) to itself. According to Mr. Bjorkman, however, the revival byf the New York Theatre Guild of "Peer what to Harper's "The Lion's Mouth" and the Atlantic Monthly Contribut- ors' Club, are interesting. Ambng the book reviews there are excellent considerations of Cabell'sj "The High Place" and Conrad's "TheI Rover." Beverley R. Tucker protests that Professor Joseph Adams in his new life of Shakespeare has attempted to change the quite human poet into a model puritan gentleman. The poetry includes one of Amy Lowell's Chinese poems, and Robert Nathan's "Since She is Dead," his actions, his words, his hair, his trousers, his feet. Nor have I any idea how conscious Mr. Leacock was of the effect of all his wares. But I' do think that he was much more in on it than the audience: if he hadn't' been, he couldn't have done it so con-I sistently, and the customers certainly4 couldn't have laughed as steadily as they did. In the course of his long lecturing. I career, Mr. Leacock has inevitably be- come conscious of certain of his as- sets, just as he early became aware of his shortcomings. And in time he has gotten to the point where he plays up his good points just as far as he can, and I suppose that he has also crushed and concealed his defects. He now knows that. when lhe -reads. one thing, he must do it in such and such a voice; that at this point he' must slap the reading desk with his jest. unwor stick. Fron fend him. I am sure, very good t he went onti ing to bet sour cracks a matter o. of bum stuff always som will laugh a who have n rest. H1ie m people an < And then t. important r. thing quite business. S were of the ty as his ve> steady laug want some couldn't ha- fully manag came in wav the crowd temporize w rate matern other good a sort of thing But still, to go and things so d edly, for all ior. The h how, a mu than this L But if a ma game, the I able. Nathan's "Since She is Dead," -I, -4 Whether jour hair is "bob- i bed" or not---we have your size in the light, new cloche. We are offering an exception- al varety fstyles and sizes or rspringwear. $7.50 to $22.50 i' I Persanw when Tere is a noiebe diintobat =hena fine string of pearls is worn. These are guaranteed indestructible In-- r* r - dila Pearls and the price is eXCeptionally low. r *_ Twenty-four inh length, $.00 - r s Sixty inch length, $1Q.0() re u vd -d~ a rr a w - _ w _ w - = STATE STREET JEWELER 30 -S State St. S r _ . a w 'llnre i a notieabe. -dditon~a be au _ ".fh~lhIfhII~llIl1IfhlllflllhIIfhIlfh~lIIuIJI IhUIUh~i~IIIftfluf~nInijl PROHIB (Contini posed to Pr lieve that 1 with strict F -forcement , Tormer is b A 'resume this paper of conclusi showed that the enactm law depends aid intensil hind -it and tnore vigdfo hit~ition law 'winning of P hbitionists. then found, in Prohibit # in these citi colonies Pu thier law via lve counter foreign, un- Opinion is - zation mov movemnent if ter enforeen Prohibition bent upion -u then as Pro encotrage t] turned our a the 'Public people as a best means sistont a-dve rected. We that'this adv ive ought tc IFirst, the k~ 1in a vivid o evilsresulti from intoxi< casting thro beneficent - since the lw. 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