__ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ THE MICHIGAN DATCY~ 3 I Only Madame Gandhi Is an Active Leader Among The Women of India "Madame Gandhi has earned her leadership," said Mrs. Frederick B. Fisher in an interview yesterday, "not only because of her illustri- ous husband but through her tre- mendous sacrifices to the cause of Indian freedom." Mrs. Fisher had spoken about Madame Gandhi be- fore the Colony Club of Detroit on Tuesday. "She was a Brahman woman which is the highest caste in In- dia," Mrs. Fisher continued, "but she and her husband took up a life in which they lived on a peas- ant's wage which is about eleven cents a day." Mrs. Fisher explain- ed what a difficult matter it was for a woman of Madame Gandhi's standing to grant her husband's request when he asled her to adopt an outcast girl. She finally did it because she has such an intense belief in Indian democracy, and today the girl is a member of Gandhi's family. Mrs. Fisher told of the Gandhi family in South Africa where Ma- dame Gandhi was an active leader among the Indian women. She was one of the 3,000 persons who marched from Natal to Transvaal in an effort to free the indentured Indian slaves in Africa. At that time they were living at Phoenix in a cooperative community. Today Madame Gandhi lives with her husband in a small group of about one hundred and fifty families which are drawn together because of spiritual and political beliefs. the Prime Minister of England, is tess to political and social London. described by Marjorie Tiltman in , It was no secret that the Queen the Delineator magazine as the bestowed her approval on the Prime typical "nut-brown maid" of the Minister's daughter and consider- Gaelic song. ed her a "thoroughly nice girl." She is the hostess of Downing She is still single, her time being Street and Chequers, as well as absorbed in her f mily of four bro- partner extraordinary of her busy thers and sisters, as well as in her father, Ramsay MacDonald. His work. In regards to marriage, she greatest praise of Ishbel was to say, believes in biding one's time until "She is like her mother." one is perfectly sure. From a girl's school at Hamp- "Ishbel has imprinted herself on stead, Ishbel passed on to a large the public imagination more than public school in North London, for her interesting sisters and brothers. a short time, andthence to King's Is it the glamor of the position she College to study household and so- has held, or is it an unconscious cial science. Thus at the age of acceptance of a remarkable per- twenty was she self-prepared to sonality? Still she will never carry on the duties of playing hos- change," concludes the article. 9 FLOWER FOR PRECIOUS MEMORIES I: Rill -r, ! ) Y (G Fah .......... I 4 Just Flip In The Top Of Your birthday. Gold Stripe cAdjstables*99 to the 1eigti you need and fasten your garter there! Perfect adjustment. per- feet comfort rpsults! Now Reduced to $1.65 and $1.35 the pair Rpm. U. S. Pat. ON. Pats. Nos. 1728924-1824636. I year. To mother it is a day of poignant, precious mem- ones of you. You were the tiny child she held in her To you just the passing of another arms. You were the hopes and lears, the joy and tears, the enduring pride of all the glorious years of her I i motherhood. What could be more fitting than for you to remember her on your birthday with the loveliest gift a man can give? FLOWERS. Ann Arbor Florists IINC. I 122 East Lberty Street Phone 6215 4 r The E. F.MILLS Co. 118 South Main Street C.EAR HO . { i . } ' f. . _ 1 i LEPR 0 0 F HOSIERY CLEAR is tinted like November; skies-a grey-beige shade, that consorts vith thpse vigorous reds and blackest blacks in woolens. And in the subtle mood of chiffon-weight, CLEAR is lovely