Photostat Reproduces Books And Documents At Library] two newspapers-the Kentucky Gaz- of ette published in Lexington, Ky., from 'm, 1787 to 1800, and the -Detroit Gazette, out the first newspaper published in th< state of Michigan, from 1817 to 1830. 1A These have been done for historical adv students and subscribers. r" By John Mitchell NY MARRIAGES by Sherwood An- might hesitate before praising it as1 derson even a mediocre work. It seems to t seems to me, that there is a con- lack the fulsomeness, the broad treat- erable lack of candor in the aug- ment of the valuable novel. In fact,, view of life maintained by some the writer has given us the materials4 our leading novelists. Take, for from which a novel might have beenI mple, the spectacle of Mr. Ander- constructed, but has forgotten to give working day and night for. months us the novel itself. It is bare real- succession in order to produce such ism, to which has been added the a-I york as his latest opus, "Many forementioned flavor of irony. The Triages". Here we see a gentle- writer has, I believe, fallen-'into what a well into his middle Lorties, I seems to be a common fallacy today1 .uld judge, diligently engaging him- -the presumption that a novel has iin the task of producing litera- been written when a few simple de- e. Now, the humor of the situa- tails have been grouped together andI i does not lie in the fact that a placed under one title. Charcoal Idle-aged gentleman should be oc- sketches are .not sufficient to repre- ped with writing fiction-no, we sent the life that should be represent- uld be tihankful to him for re- ed in a novel; light and shade, color, ining on the job for so long-but chiaroscure, are necessary. t Mr. Anderson should be' at his This story has to do with a young 3 so paradoxically serious. It is man by the name of Hicks who en- isual thing to encounter among lists in the Marnie Corps at the time y young men a certain deadly ser- of this country's entrance into the sness of attitude, for they have war. He is a simple, unassuming jhad sufficient experiences to see chap-the type which undoubtedly y far beyond their owxi noses. Ap- constituted the vast majority of the ently, Mr. Anderson is still young, ranks of our fighting forces during there is a profundity and momen- the war. The narrative opens with sness characterizing his endeav- Hicks in France, wondering if he is that is appalling. When critics ever going to see any action. Shortly I greet a work with sizh phrases after that his regiment departs for "It is sincere," "This work bears the front and from that time to the imprint of a mind that is serious," end of the 'tale, there is much lively is a work that should be studied action. The story, which tends to h due regard for the profound in- become monotonous in places ,is vivi- t of the writer," et certera-I sus- fled by pungently ironical passages, t there is a flaw somewhere. illustrating the incompetency of many of the officers, the double-barrelled ROUGH THE WHEAT by Thomas generosity of, the Y. M. C. A. and the Boyd complacency of the common soldier lowever, this review does not as- under trench conditions. One delight- e to discuss Mr.' Anderson's well- fully ironic touch is where one of >wn volume, but rather is intended the protaganists is reading a letter illuminate certain points found in from his sweetheart in the United omas Boyd's first novel "Through States. While this dirty, buck priv- Wheat". (Scribeners; $1.75) It ate is sitting in the mud" smoking the ;he first novel about the great war stubs of cigareetes thrown away by which I find exhibited that sane some more lucky individual, he has to ironic attitude which the novel- read a highly romantic description of must maintain toward life if he the things that she is doing on her going to truthfully portray it. I side of the water to further the cause e in mind another record written of the "great war for ,democracy". :he war-"'Three Soldiers", by John Mr. Boyd is only twenty-five years s Passos-which, in spite of some of age. From one so young, it is a ly lyrical passages, misses being a mystery that h~e has so well caught at work through totally disregard-1 the spirit of life. One can easily for- the fact that if one is to be co- give him the fault of being a trifle ent in his story about life, he must' crude, when one considers what may broach it with the attitude that it be expected- to come in the future a gigantic comedy, an ironic spec- from this writer. If he can keep clear Reproduction of documents and leaves missing from books is effected at the General library with precision and economy, by the photostat meth- od, according to Librarian W. W. Bis- hop. A photostat is produced by a photo developing machine which copies by' means of a camera, any object in black or white. It will not photograph col- ors. To secure a photostat of a chart or page, first a negative is taken on a film which changes it to white let- ters on a black background. ThenI that is again photographed in order to make the letters black on a white! background, just as the original was' "You can reproduce a short article 'for less than the cost of transporta- tion both ways," said Mr. Bi'shop. "It is also a tremendous ttime-saving method. But the best points about! photosta'ting is that you can have a copy without revision and, that you' can keep your copy." If a card list is to be reproduced,. by placing them in such a position that only the data to be copied re-' mains in sight, a great many cards can be duplicated on a single page. A photostat cannot make a mistake and no revision is necessary, nor can one "doctor" a photostat as with a p otograph plate, to produce false results. A photostat of the originMal copy can be eitJer reduced or enlarged to any size desired, the largest being 18x22 inches. "Suppose you' have a very rare books that lacks the title page and pcrhaps one or two others," said Mr. Bishop, "we can supply these from a photostat of another copy from the iibrary and you can have the book rebou'nd and it will then be complete." This, the University is ,doing now for other libraries. One particular enter- prise the University has undertaken is the rep'roduction of more than 100 books, in .ten copies each. These are all books of which only one printed copy is known to eist. The Clements library here is one of ten libraries re- ceiving a share of this enterprise. The University has rendered by means of the photostat, complete file of tside of the University. A very direct and cheap f vertising-classifieds. STUDENTS' LUNG 409 EAST JEFFERSON "Commercial photostating is done in the large cities at fairly high rates," explained Mr. Bishop, "but the Uni- versity does the work at cost. The charges are 25 cents for an ordinary page and 50 cents for a page the size of a newspaper. This is what it costs the University to do the work. Mrs. Alvina M. Woodford is the photo- stat operator but applications for photostating must Lz obtained through Mr. Bishop's office. A large amount GARRICK is & S 25-50c i4th Annual Season Nights 25-50-75c-$l THE BONSTE L L E CO. THE ABSORBING MELODRAMA "LAWFUL LARCENY" By Samuel Shipman. NEXT WEEK-"THE GOLD DIGGERS" HOME COOKING SALADS - LL VISIT historic 2.Walher Cavern (coR. CHIcAGO AND MONROE PIKE Hatukay to Irish Hills CHICKEN DINNER E [R, I CLOSING OUT ALL TAILOREJD, SPORTS, AND PATTERN HATS AT A REMARKABLE REDUCTION\ Puyear and Hintz , ' 328 SOUTH MAIN STREET Today- "JUST LIKE A WOMAN ' With Marguerite DeLa Motte, Ralph Graves andl Geo. Fawcett, Stan Laurelin "PICK AND SHOVEL" Sun.Thru Wed.- Barbara LaMarr, David Butler an(d zast Pitts in "POQR MEN'S WIVES''" Charlie Murray141 , TE PILL POUNDER" Today- Elaine Hammerstein in "THE WOMAN GAME" "A HOWLING SUCCESS,"'Century Con Sun. Thru Tues.- Nazimova in Ibsen's i "A DOLL'S HOUSE " Bull Montana in "A PUNCTURED P Wed. - Thurs. - To be announced in the Dai S iI I IF / I' I to which one must not attach . great impoxatance. It is because' Boyd seems to catch the spirit is attitude that I believe his book be significant. twithstanding the intelligence writer has shown in telling his - in this fashion, he has not writ- i remarkable novel. Indeed, one: Classified Adverising Rates: Two cents per word er day, paid in advance ; fif' :en cents per\.reading line per ay, charged. of schools, creeds and other pit-falls 1e has an enviable future. A T ATTHE TIJEATRRS I Screen-Today{ "4 I, Majestic-Emerson Hough's "The Man Next Door." Orpheum- Elaine Hammerstein in "The Woman Game;" com- edy, "A Howling Success." Engineering Sells, Too ' I i i i FOR RENT RENT-Three rooms in Nickels' rade. See O..D. Morrill, 17 Nick- s' Arcade. 24-c-2 1 RENT- Furnished roomns for ght houseekeping. 710 West Lib- ty. Phone 930-J. 25-c FOR SALE SALE-$75' Victrola at $35 with e valuable records. Call Ching, 75-R between 2 and.4. 25-p z SALt-Chevrolet Roadster, good udent car in A-I condition, cheap. all Watt, 727. 24-c-2 TYPEWRITERS est models, high grade machines, nted and sold Hamilton Busi- ess College, phone 342-R. State id William Sts. 10c-21 TYPEWRITERS ewriters of standard makes' ught, sold, rented, exchanged, eaned and repaired. O. D. MORRILL Nickels Arcade Phone 1718 1-tfr WAWINED )LOST AND) FOUND) Wuerth - Marguerite Motte in "Just Like a "Pick and Shovel." De La Woman;" h . r i fi . Stage-This Week A whole lot of the make-believe has been eliminated from selling operations in the past ten year's. The old idea that sales- me'n were born to the sample-ease, that they carried some sort of a special diplo- ma from the University of Pooh, has had to break camp, along with the other exploded theory which insisted that a salesman must be a "good fellow", a-man of strange habits, tremendous stories, and unquestioned' qualities both as a mixer, and as an assimilator. Now we believe-nay, we know- that, the best salesman is the man who knows most about his goods, and can talk most interestingly about them. This being the proven case, it i6n't so queer thatengineering should find a real and effective application in the selling field, especially if the merchandise iar- keted is an engineering pioduct that is, bought and operated by engineers. Every engineer who now engages in the sale and distribution of Westinghouse products feels that 'he vis doing work worthy of his training-for he is carrying Service and Sincerity to Industry, and to mankind! He is out where the fighting is often the fiercest, and he is putting up a battle for the things that he believes are right. And a man can't expect, nor ask, a bigger chance than that! Sixty percent, approximately, of the engineering graduates who come to Westinghouse find their way eventu- ally into some phase of selling. And -we are prod to have them there-and they are 'glad to be there! I' I I " Garrick (Detroit) - The Bon- stelle company in "Lawful Larceny." No Lectures No Written Work At Babson Instit'ute they make a business of teaching busines to college' trained' men who wish to fill positions of responsibility. and and trust without spending years at routine work. Standard office equipment through. out. No cuasses or lectures, but a business scl;ule of work from 8:30 to 5:00 o'clock, including daily con- ferences directed by men with years of business experience, and discus-, sions with active factory and office executives at their plants. This re- movesthe instruction from the hypo- thetical stage and helps the student to look at things in the same light as a man actually engaged in business. Babson Institute, an educational in- stitution endowed for the purpose of fitting men for executive responsi- bilities, invites you to send for the booklet, "Training for Business Leadership." Write today. Babson Institute Wellesley Hils, (5"1bu"bBf) Mass. SUPERFLUOUS FACIALHAIR S Removed Permanently by S E -ECTROLYSIS I* ectro- Cosmetic Service S ACHIEVEMENT F OPPORTUNITY Dunn fountain pen. sa ,gift. Call 679-M. Value- 25-p ScienceI I