r1w DAY, JUNE 26, 1928 '11-11E SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE .A... ... T_-UME IHGA AL PAGE THRE _ PLAN EXCURSIONS Books of the Day I FOR NEWCOMERS Aiming to acquaint students who Trader Korn, oL 2, ''ie Advenitures old gentleman and his actor-manager are newcomers to the University, a of Harold the Webbed, the boy Vik-j The details of Horn's living during tle sightseeing tour around~the campus ing, by Alfred Aloyslus Horn and and Ann Arbor will be conducted be- Ethelreda Lewis; 1928; publication liast year, o his costuming for the tween 230 and 4:30 o'clock on Thurs- - - -,i II i Warm Weather C LAS SIFIE ADVERTISING WANTED-To rent for summer school a house or apartment with two bed rooms. Will care for lawn and home. Reliable references fur- nished. Address Lynn Clark, East Grand Rapid's High School, East Grand Rapids, Mich. 1-2-3 of the Literary Guild of America. If disorganization is the spice of mod- ern literature, thien Horn and Lewis are seasoning the viands of this mot- ley year somewhat more than is their privilege. It is difficult to agree with those enthusiastic readers and review- ers who declare that the Trader and his books defy classification. Indeed they do not, "Trader Horn," both volumes one and two, is literature in the same way that Samuel Pepys is literature. The books have caught al old man' as he was tottering, baubbling his re- miniscences about the streets of a South African city, and weaving his fantasies amid the squ'alor of third- rate rooming houses and asylums that are not always third-rate. At times -at very many times-tihis old man is excedingly tiresome. His conver- sation often approaches the asinine, and his sea-talk, far from the spell .of wind and wave, has a sheen of artifi- ciality. Perhaps the first volume of the life and works of Alfred Aloysius Horn had a perfect rNht to be La success. But it decidedly did not have the right to give birth to a string of others. And Mrs. Lewis, in her lengthy pre- fiace to the second volume, says that the third is in the process of prepa- ration, and vaguely hints that the fu- ture of readers in tlhe English tongue is to be overshadowed by yet more of the "Aye, Lancashire" and "Au Re- voir, rendered by misspelt words be- tween exquisite bindings. A little of this goes a lung way, and it would be a pity of an editress of the caliber of Mrs. Lewis, after nursing a bad pen ny thouight to be a pile of gold, shOuld fail to recognize the writing on the wall of taste. Stripped of all its trappings, the tale of HarJd the :Webhed, the young viking of the Earoes, is interesting and fanciful. Here is a region that has always remained closed even to the adventurers of the pen and type-I writer, and here are characters that tug at the imagintion-Roger the Bold and Ceasar and his galleys. But the painful thinness of the tale is poked full of holes by the time that its onclusi is reached after several trips of the Trader to the Lewis home. The plot, never too strong, is sland- wiched between thick slabs of stifling platitudes, during which time the pa- tient reader either dozes or analyzes to himself just what will happen when time and Circumsnces allow him again totake up the main story. Probably the most striking feature of this second volume is the introduc- tion, poured out for almost half the thickness of the book by Mrs. Lewis. In it can be seen !a sort of prophecy for the future of the white-bearded FRANC ASSUMES, NEWI YALUE Of 393 CENTS (By Associated Press) PARIS, June 25.-France today was on a gold basis with the franc having a legal value of 3.93 cents in Ameri- can money. Premier Poincare's legislation for establishing the currency was enacted by the senate, 256 to 3, after the cham- ber of deputies had passed the bill 450 to 22. The measure was promul- gated today in a special edition of the official journal. Return of France to the gold basis leaves Spain -the principal European country which has not stabilized its currency since the war. The other countries which have not yet come in line are Norway, Rumania, Turkey and Bulgaria. The French stabilization was on the basis of 65 1-2 milligrams of gold 9-10 fine to the franc. While theoretically anyone now can change the worn little paper notes for bright new gold and silvered coins today, it will be months before the man in the street finds himself re- ceiving and dealing out hard money.. It will take time to mint the coins and France will take no chance of a run on the bank until restored confidence in the currency becomes well-rooted. The bank of France and the French government will make some profit by expert bookkeeping. With a stroke of the pen all pre-war stocks of gold and silver will be revalued with a profit of $u5,000,000. This will be used to wipe out all state debts to the bank. The bank's books thus will be wiped clean of a lot of bad war debts owed by Russia and other countries on which France has been paying interest. trip to England and America, and of day afternoon. Thosedesiring to his past life carry the principal in- terest. The attempt to fill up a vol- ume-at which the Trader had 'sovob- viously failed---is so evident that even the writer admits its purpose. Des- pite denials it is perfectly clear that here is a man whose past life and present irregularities-not 'so differ- ent from those of most of us if the whole truth were known-are being exploited at the expense of fhe read- ing public. So long as that public; is being amused at not too much cost to the world of letters, the adventure is excellent. And when that time is up the victim and the conductress can retire on their fortune, the read- ers can seek new sensations and only the ignarant critics who disagreed will make the trip should notify Mr. Carl- ton Wells, excursion director, by Wed- nesday. The tour will start from the %Steps of the library, and students will be taken about the city in automobiles furnished by the Ann Arbor exchange' club. Announcement was also made that the excursion offered through the Ford Motor company, in Detroit, has been postponed, due to an enforced change in working conditions in the plants. The trip, however, will be undertaken on July 11. be left making wry faces at them- selves. -K. G. P. III demands neatness and freshness of linens BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES - Very active sales program offers oppor- tunity to five boys during summer months to make siufficient money for next year's entire expense and to produce a 'surplus for the right kind who will work. Consult Mr. Woods at 515 First National Dank Building. 1-2-3-4-5-6 i i lk Varsity's Laundry Methods as- sure a feeling of satisfaction re- SHORTH AND TYPEWRITING BOOKKEEPING, Summer Session June 25-Aug. 17 Enter any day-why not today? Hamilton Business College State and William Streets Ann Arbor sulting from wearing clothing that is faultlessly cleaned and 11 ironed. Phone 4219 LAUNDIY AT L IB E RTY A T FIF TH -0 TOLEDO MEN-A general insurance igency of your ciy has two perma- nent positions in sales department. $125.00 to start. I ROOMS TO RENT for summer school studerts. Single and double,$3.00. 917,East Huron gSt. Phone 8167. 3 MICHIGANENSIAN WANTED-Phone 8167 between 6 and 7 o'clock 3' I FOR .RENT-A front room, single, $3.50, double $5.00. No other room- ers. Phone 8196. FOR RENT--One room kitdhenette apartment for $75. For sale, dishe's, kitchen utensils, day bed, bookcases, calinet radi-, screens, curtains and drapes. If taken at once, 125. Jef- foiron Apartments No. 23. Dal 21868. 3-4-5" WA NTED-A gra duate Woman to, share, apartment. Summer rate. Call 7275. 3 i+OR RENT-At 311 Thompson, two block -, from campus single room and suite. Contiuous hot water. 3-4-5 FOR f{ A1 ,-Double-declk beds with with mattresses, d-u'ble desk, wide bed with springs, one single bed, f--n s )itory coches. Dial 8544 or 9714. 422 E. Washington. 3-4-5 FOR RENT-Two large double rooms nd one 'suLgle. Graduate students, teachers, husiviess girls or nurses. Also ga-age.tDil 8544 or 9714.-422 - P. ~rshigt~n.3-4-5 FOR RENT-Very . attractive suite. Als single room, beautifully fur- nished and in a nice quiet home. Graduate student or professor pre- ferred. 928 Churdh. 3 Typenriting Mimeographing - Greeting Cars 0. D. MORILL 17 Nickels Arcade nlle Tyjwwriter & Stationery stare I Michigan Jewelry ALARM CLOCKS FOUNTAIN PENS NOVELTIES Gruen Watch Ageney HALLER'S STATE STREET JEWELERS I CLEARAN CE SALE Correspondence tationery A number of broken lots at half price 0. D. MORRILL 17 NICKELS ARCADE The Typewriter and Stationery Store i , SWIFT'S. DRUG S TORE' a' - r r ' r uuryorr r _ a -w P'rso s tyu eronl e-rie'a I -a ihfoksit krsset r " =i l c a i n a d a o u a r c s 340 S. State St. Opposite Law Building for PURE DRUGS NOTE BOOKS FOUNTAIN PENS LAUNDRY CASES ALARM CLOCKS TOWELS RAZORS SHAVING CREAMS TOOTH BRUSHES SHAVING BRUSHES SOAPS SOAP CASES WAITERS' COATS STATIONERY FOUNTAIN SERVICE INKS P%0%0%,%O,0ko