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July 28, 1928 - Image 3

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1928-07-28

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SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1928

THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY

'1

SATURDAY, JULYla 28, ~ 1928 -'TI aalY1

i

VANDENBERG FAVORS
RLEF FOR FARMERS
Senator Predict sLegislative Action
To Provide Price Autonomy And
Crop Surplus Control
LAUDS HHOOVER'S ABILITY
(By M ioudP re s)
EAST LANSING, July 28.--An in-
telligent co-operation under courage-
ous governmental leadership is the

Books of the Day

G(corgie
272 pl
$2.00.
ham's
If you
tales of
bottom c
Georgie
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and rev
Life's ac

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need of present day agriculture, U. shameles
S. Senator Arthur H. Vanderberg yes- enance o
terday told Farmers' Day visitors at futile att
Michigan State college. ter into
Early congressional action which depths o
will provide for price autonomy, then bya
crop surplus control, stimulation of by Maxw
co-operative marketing and a sound author t
protective tariff were predicted by glare of
Senator Vandenberg. He declared it .(Georgi
imperative that the tariff on farm ineation
products be increased to save for denizens
farmers in this country some of the the scum
$2,000,000 now being spent annually rug dry
for agricultural importations, lives of
Side-stepping partisan politics gen- practises
erally, Senator Vanderberg declared, a southe
however, that no progressive farm nineteen-
program can be successful unless it Into the
starts on a Republican protective acters, a
tariff. The problem, he said, is one lins, "he:
for an "economic engineer," adding chum," s
that Herbert Hoover "will soon dem- physicall
ohstrate that he is the greatest of cessive p
all economic engineers available for such oth
this job." panions a
"There is no formula which can be ?1the sordi
guaranteed in advance to restore pathos in
American argiculture to full partner- The boo
ship it American prospertity," the utone

May by Maxwell Bodenheim. trict of any American city, and his
p. Boni & Liveright, 1928, easy familiarity with the language
Book by courtesy of Gra- and haunts of his characters does
Book Store- away with the fault often found in
are easily nauseated by books attempting to tell of the under-
the muck and slime at the world, that of an observer standing
of Life's stream-don't read on the outside looking in. With no
May! j reflection on his character, he ap-
you are thoroughly modern pears to know whereof he writes.
el in vivid descriptions of This is refreshing in this age of slip-
tors scratching and clawing shod and inaccurate writing.
sly at the forbidding count- In spite of our inborn aversion to
of Morality in an almost the licentious sensuality of a girl
tempt to keep alive, no mat- such as Georgie May, her character
what filth and abysmal is depicted in such a way that when the
f wantoness it may lead- book is finished we have a feeling
all means read this new book akin to affection for her. This is
yell Bodenheim, the latest brought about largely in the last few
o feel the soul-blistering pages of the book when Georgie May,
public scandal. after years of "hustling" and living
e May is a character del- as the mistress of several men, falls
of one of those parasitic deeply and purely in love with Char-
living on the under side of lie Pemberton, a scion of a wealthy[
of American society, suck- family. The inevitable inconsistency
the well of morality in the comes when he reciprocates her feel-
all she encounters, as she ing.
her trade of courtesan in In the last few pages, showing the
rn city between the years illicit, but true love of the man and
nine and nineteen-twelve, woman, we are brought face to face
story, as supporting char- with the true Georgie May. Cynical
re brought Emmy Lou Mul- and "hard" on the exterior, we find
r only real, true-blue girl that her wanton life has not killed
trong in spirit, but weak the last spark of womanhood but
y from consumption and ex- that she is capable of the love of a
practise of her trade; and chaste woman for her true mate.
er male and female com- Even though we know it is coming,
s are necessary to bring out it gives us a real heartstab when,
iness, the glamour, and the Charlie's mother visits Georgie May,
Georgie lay's life. and tells her the usual things.
ok is woefully weak in plot, , "The body on the floor no longer
readily forgives this in a heaved in its torments of pain-

Sunday Church Services

C 1ASSIFIE
ADVERTISING
LOST-A Parker pen in woman's rest
room at University Hall. Reward if
returned to secretary's office. 23
MY "Old Kentucky Home" Tea Shop,
1216 S. University. Open every Sun-
day evening. 19-25.
OST-Pair of shell rimmed glasses
somewhere in vicinity of campus.
Finder please call 6624. Reward.
25I

II

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
lluron & Division Sts.
Merle H. Anderson. Minister
Dale H. Moore, Associate
Minister.
Mrs. Nellie B. Caldwell,
Secretary for Women
9:30-Church School.
10:45-Morning Worship. Ser-
mon by Rev. Warren E. Hall,
Wyandotte, Mich.
5:30-Social Hour and Supper.
6:30--Young People's Society.

.

FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
Rev. R. Edward Sayles, Minister
Howard R. Chapman
Minister for Students
9:30--Church Bible School.
10:30-Morning XWorship.
Brief organ recital, Mrs. Mc-
Gregor.
Sermon by Minister, Mr.
Sayles, on "We Would See
JeCsus1."
12 :00-Student Group meets in
west transept of Church. Mr.
Chapman will be in c'harge.
5:30-Friendship hour for
young people at Guild House.
Refreshments are served.
6:30--Devotional meeting. Miss
Etta Henry, leader. Topic,
"Making Religious Adjust-
ment'i in a New Community."

LOST-A pair of tortoise rimmed WANTED-Student help, part time.
glasses on State or Huron Sts. The Port Cafe, 108 E. Huron. Dial
Dial 5978. Holmes. Reward. 25 6813. 19-20
TYPING-Theses a specialty. Reason-
able rates. Dial 9387. M. V. Hart- SITUATION WANTED-High school
suff. girl will care for children, after-
noon or evening. Dial 9758.
LOST-Large brown pocketbook con-
taining valuable papers. If found, - -
return to 'secretary's office. 28-29-30 CLOSE IN-West side, on bus line,
3 and 4-room apartments, furnished
FOR SALE-Lange library table $20.' aind unfurnished; newly decorated;
Fairbanks bathroom scales $10. Ma- large airy rooms, private bath and
hogiany piano lama $5. 9Tdrawer private furnace.,$45 and $50 per
Icard file $2. Dial 4391. mnonth. Dial 116, a'sk for 732-F3.

(Missouri Synod)
Third and West Huron

®®a

C. A.
Res. 1005

9:30-Bible School.
10:30-German service.

Li

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w'

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speaker said. "But we must experi- series of carefully portrayed episodes Georgie May was dead." R. P. D.
ment until a formula is found, be- which show the struggles, ignominy
cause not only agriculture but all and heart-throbs of a woman who RESERVE O ICERS MEET
America is affected when one-third sells herself as a commodity in the AT BATTLE CREEK TODAY
of the people, owing one-fifth of the open market. The author frequently
property, enjoy but one-tenth of bores us a little with too many dis- (By Asociated Press)
sertations on the inmost soul and ACJuly 28.-
A rti ica's income.. i W e have found o1 hisThroinREsu deniarbi
artificial means to stabilize economic thoughts of his heroine, sudden arbB-J
tary shiftings from action to sym- Brig-Gen. Roy Hoffman, of Oklahoma
law, as itr relates to banking, to pub- '
lie utilities, to labor and to protect- pathetic meditations; but he more City, and Rep. W. Frank James, of
ed industry. If big business methods than compensates for this by his Hancock, Mich., are to be the prin-
are good on Wall street, they are poignant * word-pictures of the dives cipal speakers at the seventh an-
good on main street." Senator Van- frequented by harlots and dope- nual convention of the Michigan de-
denberg insisted that any aid must fiends. In the course of the ook i;partment of the Reserve Officers' as-
start with a Federal Farm board. Bodenheim runs the gamut of the'sociation, to be held here today and

FIRST CHURCH
OF CHRIT, SCIENTIST
10:30 A. M.--Regular morning
service. Subject, "Truth."
11:45 A. AL--Sunday School,
following the morning service.
i:45-Wedn-esday evening tes-
timonial meeting.
The reading room, 10 and it State
Savings Bank Building, is open
daily from 12 to 5 o'clock except
Sundays and legal holidays.

i

FIRST METHODIST
Cor. State and Washington Sts.
10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship.
Sermon by Rev. Wm. S. Per-
kins.
10:30 A: M.-Student Bible Class
at Wesley Hall.
6:00 P. M.---Wesleyan Guild De-
votional Meeting for students.
7:00 P. M.--Social half hour
and refreshments.

C r. Division and Catherine Sta.

Rev.
8 A.
11 A.
Sern

11

I 1 1

r
J
1
,+

STAWi'I

TO IORIOW

It's On the Way
THAT 'Fl AI'11G FILM
DNAMA OF

"Modern Youth"
THE PICTURE THAT WIlL
MAKE ALL ANN ARBOR GASP
"THE
ROAD
TO
Produced from
Police Records

I-
1*
1*

Farmers and Mechanics Bank

Cornwell Blk. (Temp. Hdqts.)

rgot of a

wide-open red light dis-ktomorrow.

Watch Your Step
The small investor is all too often misled
by fancy air castles others paint for him as
to what he can do with his money. And
instead of seeking competent advice he'll
play his last dollar before he wakes up a
poorer and wiser man.
Our years of experience are at your dis-
posal.
Member of Federal Reserve System

330 S. State Street

Jenwr*f
fee
EUROPE
theno
$18450.
FOIiTHE ROIJNDTRIP

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1

A Daring Drama of
This Jazz - Crazed
Pleasure - Mad Age.

ARE WE DRIFT-
ING INTO FREE
LOVE AND TRIAL
MARRIAGES?

Graduate Candidates
'WANTED!
For Positions in Universities, Colleges andt
ffi Schools
i
WANTED TODAY:
Graduate Candidate for Head of Chemistry
Department, College of Pharmacy. $275.00
Supervisors of Music.
Public Health Nurses.
Allied Professi'onal Dureaus
742 Marshall Field Annex Building
Chicago, Illinois
rs rrrs rrvr rtww~r~lw~~rM / l /pql / / r w/ i / yr1.// Y_}.1 /

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&I
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Tats A
The vogue this summer is to dress beneath in the newest and
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Smart women are discarding all useless underthings, all hot
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