_THE MJCHIGAN DAILY CHIGAN Established 1890 DAILY r --G - ! t' -i I .. love story is drawn when she finds another boy and girl in a similar situation during her Gold Star trip to Jim's grave in France. Suzanne and Gary are in an embarrassing situation similar to Jim and Mary's and again the mother, this time Mrs. Worth, will not allow them to marry. Hannah Jessop, of course, has repented her se- verely Biblical righteousness and aids the two in finding a happy solution to their dilemma. Most significant in "Pilgrimage" is the first Ann Arbor appearance of Heather Angel (her real name), an extremely pretty and personable young brunette, in the role of Suzanne, betrayed girl no. 2. Most boring are the repetitious sequences in which the mothers bring to the fore, old griev- ances and sorrows which are better left untold. Most Hollywoodish of all his the shoulder-to- shoulder crying of Hedda Hopper and Henrietta Crosman near the fadeout. Added attractions: Moran and Mack struggling through comedy plot X-3-that of the magician's house, with sliding doors, belching penguin, and a newlywed couple, haha; Hearst Metrotone News with the usual militaristic portrayal of U. S. troops in Arizona and bombing planes in New York-along with the gushing voice of the ecstatic monologist. -G. M. W., Jr. will be forced to consider, along with Mr. Morley, whether he has not met the author somewhere. Mr. Macdonell is, to this reviewer at least, obscure; there is a certainty that he has never previously written for general public consumption, under his own name, at any rate. But there is an equal certainty that the author is highly skilled at the sort of work which he has done here. He spec- ialises in what is known in baseball jargon as "change of pace." Calm, evenly written irony al- ternates with high comedy in a fashion that is delightfully disconcerting. And at the close, there is a startling bit of symbolism that is telling in its decisive cloudiness; that is out of tune with the book, and yet in harmony with it. The whole story, in fact, is a living paradox, which laughs most of the distance, but pauses occasionally for brief reflection. It is worth the price and more, even if the pur- chaser reads only the chapter on cricket. A Washingto BYSTANDER .451 is9 CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY LAUNDRY Published every morning except Monday during the University year andSrumm er Session bytheBoard in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion a - the Big Ten News Service. ~szo daed &41e ite prQ' 1933 2TIQ~~ALJ A..CVG)13 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively' entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.25. Offices; Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2'-1214. Represetatives:College Publications Representatives, Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL S rAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR.........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR .............C. HART SCHAAF CITY EDITOR.........................BRACKLEY SHAW SPORTS EDITOR............... ALBERT' H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR..............CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS': A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, Wil- liam G. Ferris, John C. Healey, E. Jerome Pettit, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Elanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret Phalan, Marjorie CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in advance-11c per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Telephonemrate-15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 14c per reading line for three or more insertions. 10% discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. Minimum three lines per insertion. By contract, per line-2 lines daily, one month.......................Sc 4 lines E. 0. D., 2 months.........3c 2 lines daily, college year.......7c 4 lines E. 0. 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Careful work at low price. 4x TAXICABS ARCADE CAB. Dial 6116. Large com- fortable cabs. Standard rates.2- 2x WE DO your laundry work for one- half the usual price. Phone 2-3739. NOTICE TAXI-Phone 9000. Seven-passenger cars. Only standard rates. 1x INSTRUCTION in original Spanish and Hawaiian methods for the guitar. Call 9450. 6:00 - 8:00 p. m. Lewis Lloyd. 92. NOTICE - Eleanor's Dressmaking Shop. 302 S. State St. upstairs. Coats, suits and dresses made and remodeled. Prces reasonable. 102 LIRETTE'S shampoo and finger wave 75c every day. Dial 3083. 103 FOR SALE TENOR banjo and case. Excellent condition. Reasonable. Phone 3236. 101 FOR SALE: A good Xylophone. Call 22866 or write box i8A, Mich. Daily.91 FOR RENT FOR RENT: Furnished 1st. floor apt. for young couple. Also large dou- ble. 426 E. Washington. Dial 8544. 98 LOST GIRL who claimed wrong purse at The Den please return it or call 6944. 95 LOST: Fraternity pin, set with em- erald and pearls. Reward. Box 10, Michigan Daily. 34 SOCIETY HOLDS SMOKER Adelphi speech society held its an- nual smoker for freshman last night at which Prof. John Muyskens of the speech department addressed 20 prospective tryouts on the subject, "Old and New." The speaker disclUssedi changing values of the past and present and traced the changes in literature, a st r o n o m y, cheIistry, and art through the centuries AT THE WHITNEY "WHEN STRANGERS MARRY" TROPIC PASSION; UNDER PAR Steve Rand ............. Jack Holt Marian Drake .........Lillian Bond Hinkle.............Arthur Vinton Antonia........Barbara Barondess "When Strangers Marry" begins in Paris and ends in the tropics of Java in the town of Sara- bong after much excitement and gun fighting. Jack Holt, strong ma of the movies, is in another typical role and Lillian Bond, the English actress (so they say), in her first lead, does as well as anyone might have. But the picture lacks suspense, drama, good direction, and photography. Micky Mouse goes fishing in his cartoon; Goose Goslin hits a home run in the news reel, and Lois Moran dresses up as a man in "No Women Allowed" in the group of added attractions. -R. E. L. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Marjorie Western. REPORTERS: Caspar S. Early, Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski, Manuel Levin, Irving F. Levitt, David G. MacDonald, S. Proctor McGeachy, John O'Connell, George I. Quimby, Floyd Rabe, Mitchell Raskin, Richard Rome, Adolph Shapiro, Marshall D. Silverman, L. Wilson Trimmer, William F. Weeks. WOMEN REPORTERS: Frances Carney, Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florenc.a Harper, Marie Hed, Margaret Hiscock, Eleanor Johnson, Hilda Lane, Kathleen Mac- Intyre, Josephine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Mary O'Neill, Jane Schneider, Ruth Sonnanstine, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER...........W. GRAFTON SHARF CREDIT MANAGER.........BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.. . Y .."......... .......... CATHIERINEMHNR DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- trick; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Contracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson. ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Willard Cohodas, Van Dunakin, Carl Fibiger, Milton Kramer, John Mason, John Marks, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, Richard Schiff, Robert Trimby, George Wil- liams, David Winkworth v5aa NIGHT EDITOR: E. JEROME PETTIT They Don't Fool Here ... A N OFFICIAL, prominent in Wash- 1Ltenaw County law enforcing circles, once made the statement: "I don't know how they treat 'em where you come from; but we don't fool down here in Washtenaw County." This statement was made to a transient who was on trial for a misdemeanor. The man was subse- quently convicted. The public official was right. The lion's share of the credit for Washtenaw's quick apprehension of criminals large and small must go to Jacob Andres, the county's able sheriff. He has never yet failed on a case of any moment. The Ann Arbor police have more than upheld their end-keeping the city free from elements breeding organized crime, and seeing that all in- cidental crime is quickly paid for. These two law enforcing agencies, along with Ann Arbor's two justices and Circuit Court Judge George W. Sample have all done an inestimable service in keeping Washtenaw County, and in particular Ann Arbor, free from the stigma of "wide-open." In recent county history, from the celebrated torch murders on down to the brutal killing two days ago of an aged ironworker, this locale has gone methodically about its business of scotching crime. The killers of two days ago will get theirs, too. There will be no appeals, no delays, no "stays," unless such action is warranted beyond the shadow of doubt. The killers will get stiff sen- tences. Washtenaw will not banter with them. Neither Sheriff Andres, Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp, Judge Sample, or Chief of Police Lewis Fo- hey sympathizes with, the stratum of society which is brave only when armed with machine guns, bootleg whisky, or binding straps and strong arms, as was the case two days ago. We should feel fortunate indeed, that, in an age given to corruption and bribery of police powers, Ann Ar- bor is honest, quick, and vigilant. Screen Reflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars edfinitely recommended; two stars, average; one star, inferior; no stars, stay away from it. AT THE MAJESTIC "PILGRIMAGE" GRIM STORY OF GOLD STAR MOTHER Hannah Jessop... Henrietta Crosman Suzanne ............ Heather Angel Jim Jessop..........Norman Foster Mary Saunders....... Marian Nixon Gary Worth.......Maurice Murphy Mrs. Worth..........Hedda Hopper In rating "Pilgrimage" one star, it should be borne in mind that this picture has an extremely limited appeal. The stern set of Henrietta Cros- man's lips, the tragedy which befalls Mary Saun- About Books ENGLAND THEIR ENGLAND A. C. Macdonell (Macmillan, $2.00) By JOHN W. PRITCHARD These Scots! They can laugh at jolly old Eng- land even more efficiently than can the English. Futhermore, in their laughter there is not the concealed bite that one finds in American cri- tiques of the staid island, or the not-so-well-con- cealed snap that the English themselves insert. There is, instead, a sympathetic appreciation that is bound up in sly dry chortles - chortles that bound from page to page in a manner that is nothing short of devastating! The English are perfectly willing to rip their nation to pieces (provided that the ripping is done confidentially between Englishmen), but they love their island. Mr. Macdonell, a Scot, does no ripping; he merely laughs, laughs with his whole body and soul - but he loves England, too. With one or two notable exceptions, the entire book is one huge chuckle. The Story Perhaps the book is a novel. The names of principal characters, at any rate, are fictitious. Donald Cameron, whose nationality is obvious, makes his origin even more evident by allowing himself to be blown nearly into the next world by a shell which explodes near him as he stoops to retrieve a franc from the bottom of a muddy trench. This slight peccadillo proves fortunate, for It is the start of a series of incidents that cause him to become a free-lance journalist (starting from scratch), with a side-motive of studing the obscurities of English social life and writing a book about them. As a result of several calls upon London newspaper men of starting personal charc- teristics, he quickly is introduced into the upper circle of English life. The people he meets proves more and more inex- plicable to him as his acquaintance broadens. The dominating figure - a sort of Duchess of Wrexe - is Lady Ormerode, who has an ambition to cap her series of munificent patronages by giving money to "do up the Stones in that Henge of theirs that they're always talking about." Others include Es- meralda d'Avenant, nee Jukes (she is-unmarried), a cinema actress who mistakes Donald for a film magnate and conducts herself accordingly; Miss Perugia Gaukrodger, whose novels "were mostly about suppressed desires, and were written in a style that made even the simplest of actions seem perfect monstrosities of abnormality;" Patience Ormerode, sister of the countess, who "had no topic of conversation and only one adjective at a time. At the moment the adjective was grisly';" an American lady by the name of Mrs. Poop, whose husband dominated the stockbroking firm of O. K. Poop and Artaxerxes Tintinfass, Inc.; and Rupert Harcourt, the poet, who spends most of his time shocking the other members of the party because he is the only human being pres- ent. Sample shock, delivered as Miss d'Avenant retires and directs her steps toward bed; "I wish someone would tell me if this is the sort of week- end party where I offer to come with you." Donald, in the course of the book, manages to find out almost everything about English customs except a reason for them. He takes part in a cricket game, and has his ideas of cricket seriously revised. He acts as secretary to a delegate to the League of Nations convention at Geneva, see British diplomacy do practically what it will, but is unable to discover just how the manipulation is accomplished amid a perfect stew of transparent stupidity. He attends a game of rugger between Oxford and Cambridge, in company with 60,000 other spectators who cheer madly in a drenching rain; a few days later he and 4,000 others silently By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Oct. 6-Indiana not being one of the 35 states to elect a governor next year, the Chicago republican sound-off of former Sena- tor Jim Watson was given quite a different mean- ing on the political front than otherwise might have been the case. There are conditions in Indiana, by all accounts, which might make it especially attractive to re- publican eyes. A good, smashing republican gu- bernatorial victory there in 1934 might go far toward indicating where the party is to turn for a presidential candidate two years later. GOVERNOR PAUL McNUTT, democrat, is in the saddle in Indiana until 1937. However hopeful republican Indianans may be of beating him or any other democrat then - and they are hopeful - it is a post-1936 matter. If there is to be a republican dark horse for 1936 groomed as a governor next year to break the speculation market, some other state must trot him out. MUST FACE FIRE DEMOCRATIC governors will be exposed to attack next year as never before. Twenty-six of the 35 governors whose terms expire are demo- crats. Half of them, to be sure, are from congen- itally democratic states, the south and southwest. That leaves 13 as special republican targets in usually republican or always doubtful surround- ings. Aside from the big eastern contests in New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts, the interior offers attractive opportunities for republican 1934 spade work. Ohio, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri and Nebraska presumably will have democratic gov- ernors seeking re-election. All are proven terri- tory for launching presidential booms. Republican party history may well hinge on what happens to one or the other of those 13 democratic governors next year. Every contest will be worth watching for the politically minded. SOLUTION BY STARVING T He patronage snarl reached a point for the White House in October where novel plans to clear it up were in order. One proposal was that all available jobs and all politically important demands for them be listed. There are many more demands than jobs. The idea was to sit Chief Patronage Dispenser Jim Farley and Presidential Secretary Louis Howe down behind locked doors to put the jigsaw puz- zle together - and not let them out, even for food until they did. Collegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD A Peanut penalty is levied upon members of the physics department at the University of In- diana who are tardy or who are absent without an acceptable excuse. A member who commits either of these crimes must treat the club to a pound of peanuts. Just think of the circus atmosphere that would be created if many members were delinquent at any single meeting. And we suppose that mem- bers of the physics club are of college age and mentality! The two big honorary clubs on the Univer- sity of Oklahoma campus are called the Ruf Necks, and the Jazz Hounds. Add this to your list of definitions -"A gen- tleman farmer is one who loses money he has in the bank --not money the bank has in him." - Daily Cardinal SO THEY SAY "Louisiana was considered a bargain from the French until Huey Long happened along to cast a shadow of doubt." - Ohio State Journal "There are three types of men that go to college today: those who are willing to be educated, those who want to be educated, and those who are determined to be educated." -Newton D. Baker Michigan's rushing chairmen may find some doubtful satisfaction in the fact that the eight nationals at Beloit College pledged the grand total of thirty-four men. The sale of beer has been prohibited on Northwestern University's campus. Which calls for the old slug about "misery likes company." - JOE PARKER ARBOR INN Michigan Road 3 Miles East of Ypsilanti Hot Barbecues Our Specialty TALL SCHOONER OF BEER FOR A DIME Orchestra Tuesday - Friday - Saturday With New Atmosphere-New Management, And the Chef That Made Joe Parker Famous -i Look who's back- i 1 1 '{ ' i Dancing Every Evening No Cover Charge Music by the Rhythm Boys Hottest Band in Town - r. al If FLOWERS from GOODHEW'S Printed Stationery 200 SINGLE SHEETS 100 ENVELOPES Printed with Name, Address, Town $1, There is a world of dif- ference in, the fineness of flowers. . . their su- perior quality is further revealed by the test of time- GOOD H EW'S - FINER - FLOWERS 14 Nickels Arcade 225 East Liberty Street 500 SHEETS 81/2x11 BOND PAPER. . 5 C..O The Mayer-Schairer Coo Stationers, Printers, Binders, Office Outfitters 112 South Main Street Phone 4515 III 2 ., II I , GLAMORkOUS #p' . 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