FACESIX HE ICHIAN D ILYSUNDAY, OCTOB3ER '31, 13 w CRIMES (Continued from Page One) s me time been conceaing a clever Bo k anW it r artist in the- person of Angus Bab feet'a in chiaroscuro with apparentlyN nothing hut a pen and a bottle of ink.________________ The art editor or whoever is re- -nNmrafa H or so. The hero of. Lucy Futrman's sponible for the two-page spread of yI G NT5 L,5V5 OF, TH-' novel 'The Qare Women," lbs thrill- movie stils should be complimentedl MOUNTAINS er of feminine hearts whose stirring fo' his choice. There is not, one pc- conduct aorse and stot causes tore that can truthfully=be said to THE QUARE WOHEN. by, Lucy Fr- muds palpitation in the hearts of the shack even the most punitanical.. man. Atlantic Monthly Press. $175. "furrin" women from the world e-f ThleLiterature Dashing, romantic hemos bred ond, is to the initiated something of 1.Chimes frankly implies that itsmyh Tepotatcudlos intntin s ohe abe~ubic Ipulictizifraon civ illofheeenkstand r e taken for a satire on the omen of is habitual with this ablepubicaion ou for vztotheir , rightsr gun in ensand; the mountains. it, achieves its end. (Iandsome, chivalrous devils, raised A group of female social settlement e. There are two things weule should in a country where serious diseases workers come to a small -mountain like to know about Pauline -Benedict are common, the product of the inter- town. One of these young women Fisher's play "A Picture. for the Pa- breeding, of people of tainted blood falls in love with a young mounain- perough" through a space of a hundred years i r of the dare-devil, carefree type. a. How, when -it was success -________________________________ fully presented by Dodos, did the actors 'get across the description of the hero's face, which descrip- tion, occurs in a stage direction; ! m+tJ without the ad of a close up? SE-A tk, d Us£Cona b. How long-ewould a ."hopfe. ~ l re--write man" last- in a newspaper --t-Po non~ thoese 3. Sue Grundy onnter's poems . (ssffeing under the general title'S ar .Line frOm a paint Pen"')would pro-ondJ 0 O d C q babW have ; Trutty a farless-attitude, in some respects over the others. -All that need be said ini cnclusion The universal use of silk hosiery today, and the unsatisfactory wear ofmany of thebrans, is what Us -authrof-thsarat-icle told- a Chimes salesman who solet ed not coupled with the increased expense of this kind of hose has made women more critical in selec- subscriptions. but -an opinion of the - magaine: It is a' remarkable per- thon. formance, The enterprising business department- has a good thing In Its1; - Yr it oenaete-agstues -fsl hosiery and the most critical in their slogan, "Chimes, the campus mind-it Ne YokCtwmnarthlrgsuesofik Thnsl selection. Their enormous buying of GOTHAM GOLD STRIPE HOSIERY - -Chimes does represent the mind of o h the campus, ]For the reputation of te. amot ruing to over fifty thousand pairs a mox +h-tells very plainly their approval o h school it is far too clear a mirror, excellent -wear, the splendid fit, the reasonable price of this popular hosiery. Ann Arbor -is a n.Pnre fortunate in having an agency, as this bran]: has heretofore been always confined to the "Victor Hug, he Is a painter on lre iis porcelain; his verse is mere decor- lre ihs finn, long tendrils and. flowers; and' th smethngovr ndovr gan, - - GOLD STRIPE HOSE-All Shades ....,......... ......., ,,.,... ,, $2.00 (GogGHoe OLDJ STRIPE iHO E-All Shades ,..........,,..$2.7 OUT SIZE GOLD SfitIPE. HOSE- Block Only ,,,,,,,,,-,---,, 20 GOTHAMI INVISIBLES-A Wool Spat to wear under silk hose for winer,....... $1M0 -ITH E MILLS COMPANY 118 MAIN STREET The Shop of Satisfaction Fe. .. .. v .."