THE MICHIGAN DAILY be worn out, for he has been in constant train- ing since early winter. During the indoor season he competed in ten meets, entering from one to four events in each. Outdoors the 21-year-old sophomore has had one Saturday of rest since April, competing in ten meets since then. And in those ten meets until last week he had never competed in less than two events and almost in- variably in four, as he did here when he set three world's records and tied another. Such a program is obviously too much for any athlete and especially one who must be as keenly trained as a sprinter. If Owens is allowed to repeat that program next year there is every reason to believe that he will sacrifice his chances for Olympic titles, a blow to 'American and especially Big Ten supporters. Larry Snyder, Owens' coach at Ohio State, once remarked that Owens would make him the great- est coach in the world -if he does not use better judgment he may very well become one of track's prize duds. A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON - The House of Representatives' decision to look into the lobby activities, both for and against the utility holding company "death sentence," promises a summer side show on capitol hill while developments in the wealth-tax fight and elsewhere unfold themselves. How far the investigation will go, either into ef- forts of real or self-appointed White House lieuten- ants to induce votes for the death sentence or into the "back home" drive to beat it, is another ques- tion. That Senator Wheeler and Representative Rayburn, joint sponsors of the "death sentence," are prepared with a mass of lobbying evidence, is well known. That the House committee is pre- pared to dig clear through it, back to the last con- gressional elections campaign if necessary, is not so clear. The scope of the lobby investigation may hinge on other circumstances. Should a compromise be- tween the House and Senate on the "death sen- tence" question develop in conference and a bill emerge assured of presidential signature if not en- tirely satisfactory to the President, the lobby investigation would lose a lot of its steam. Or should the Republican effort to postpone action on taxes to a fall special session gain ground, it could curtail the lobby hearing. BOOKS Iiiiim Classified Directory I nc FOR SALE~ ben CLASSIFIED ORIGINAL ETCHING BY DUBAIN- A E TS GNW-(FRENCH ARTIST) SCENE ris LUXEMBURG GARDENS - $10 te tm swith asFRAMED. U L R I C H'S BOOK- th Advertising epartment. Phone 2-l"14 The classified columns close at five SOUTH UNIVERSITY. o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no WANTED extra charge. Cash in advance lie per reading line --__E on basis of five average words to W ,ANTED: STUDENTS TO SELL. th line) for one or two insertions STUDENT DIRECTORIES. RE- l0c per reading line for three or ct more insertions. PORT BETWEEN 9-12. STUDENT Mininmm 3 lines per insertion PUBLICATIONS BLDG. Telephone rate - 15c per reading line for one or two insertions. -, - ----- __ 14c per reading line for three or LOST AND FOUND more insertions. 10% discount if paid within ten days LOST: Keys on campus or south Uni- +from the date of last insertion,.OT eso apso ot n-. Minimum three lines per insertion. versity. Tag with name inside, F. By contract, per line -- 2 lines daily, on - month s X. Roellinger, 1912 Geddes, Phone 4 lines Ey.O.D., 2 months..........3c 2-3171. 34 2 lines daily, college year ..,......7e.___ lines E.OD.,college year........7c LOST: Lady's wrist watch, Michigan 100 lines used as desired ..Ldy'..achMi.9ge 300 lines used as desired ..........8c League rest room. Reward. Phone 1,000 lines used as desired ........70 2-493e 2,000 lines used as desired ........6c The above rates are per reading line based on eight readirng lines per inch. William Todd, a Maryville, Mo., Ionic type, upper and lower case.Add barber, received a shilling in a chain Ge per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for letter from East Finchley, London, bold face, upper and lower case, Add ,- 4 10c per line to above rates for bold face England. capital letters. The above rates are for 71%2 point type.MICIGAN LAUNDRY EXPERIENCED LAUNDRESS doing NOW student and family washings. Will call for and deliver. Phone 4863. Ends Tonight .2x.. JOE E. BROWN STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- in Ring Lardner's sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. "ALIBI IKE" 4x LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned. -Tomorrow Careful work at low price. lx TWO FEATURES ALICE BRADY PERSONAL laundry service. We take in individual interest in the laundry "LADY T U BBS" problems of our customers. Girls' silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- CHARLESiRUGGLES anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. n Call for and deliver. Phone 5594. 'People V iIT 611 E Hoover. _3_ I! ' By JOHN SELBY "THE PURITAN STRAIN," by Faith Baldwin; (Farrar & Rinehart). FAITH BALDWIN, whose last name is Cuthrell if you're interested, is now in the midst of her saga. Miss Baldwin deserted her metier, which is the bright and shining, thoroughly competent, modern novel for entertainment, to tell the story of an American family some months ago. Or perhaps she has deserted something which was merely a good living for her, and found her metier, which would therefore be considered the serious study of life as it reacts on persons of sound American stock. Her readers may settle the matter for themselves after reading "The Puritan Strain," second of her saga of the Condit family. The first volume was "Ameriean Family."- This time Miss Baldwin's story is a modern one. Elizabeth Condit is the wife of Alex Gates, who is one of the lucky men made wealthy by the motor car. There is one son, David. There is a beau- tiful house in a midwestern city, social position, ease -even luxury. The Gates family, at the beginning, is just about to move to New York be- cause Alex's business makes it necessary. Just before the move, however, a.handsome and magnetic Swede goes to dinner at the Gates house. And although Elizabeth is not at all dissatisfied (or if she is, does not realize it) Arne makes an im- pression -that never fades from Elizabeth's mind. Much later she realizes that the attractive thing about Arne was that he was like Alex had been as a youth, before his success came. But when she comes to that conclusion she is the wife of Arne, Alex has married again, and Eliza- beth is buried in relief work in China. China is a kind of leit motif in the Condit saga anyway, for Elizabeth had been born there, and her family never really had cut away from the land of the little yellow men. "The Puritan Strain's" great virtues are sim- plicity and clarity. It is probably neither original nor striking. But it is sincere. Miss Baldwin is interested in her saga. Washington Off The Record By SIGRID ARNE DR. ENRIQUE BORDENAVE, minister from Par- aguay, had just finished a long talk with Sec- retary Wallace of agriculture. He came away enthusiastic but in telling of the talk he became entangled with an American idiom which has been used here frequently since the advent of AAA. Bordenave wanted to assure his listeners that Wallace knows his subject, that he is a true "dirt farmer." The diplomat led up to his climax, and seriously pronounced his opinion: "Your Mr. Wallace is, I be- lieve, a very dirty farmer." The expert bill counters at the treasury can make a better record working with new bills than with old ones. They can run through 40,- 000 of the new bills in an eight-hour day, but only 25;000 of the old ones in the same time. ,HEAD "G-man" J. Edgar Hoover personally led a man-hunt through the department of jus- tice building. He had been explaining the work of the division of investigation to a group of visiting newsboys when one of the group disappeared. Crack "G- men" sought the boy high and low, but he remained lost. Then Hoover returned to his office to phone around the building for more help. There he found the lad sound asleep in his leather chair. UNDER-SECRETARY Rexford G. Tugwell of agriculture is busy organizing his new division of rural resettlement. His job seems like a big one in Washington, but to a correspondent from Iowa it must seem huge. ** * * COMPROMISE DEFERRED CUESSING at possibilities in either connection is the more fascinating because there is so much doubt about the controlling factors. Lacking a de- velopment of popular sentiment to support the idea oF putting off the tax bill until fall, are its Repub- lican Senate sponsors ready to employ parliamen- tary delay tactics in the Senate to achieve that end? Or is the attitude of the White House against anything less than the holding company "death sentence" so fixed as to eliminate a conference compromise? Compromise, usually held off until the last mo- ment, has been the method of all Presidents who actively strove to assert and maintain legislative policy leadership. It has been Franklin Roose- velt's method. Except in the case of the bonus payment, which is not comparable to the holding company issue, he has avoided head-on collisions - until the holding matter came up. On the very day the House so decisively reaffirmed its rejec- tion of the "death sentence," an administration compromise with Senator Glass and his banking committee colleagues on the Eccles Federal reserve system reorganization plan was soothing the Con- gressional ways for the bank bill. Lydia M -GEOR Single Admiss O ENDELSSOHN Theatre r WeRl 0r~o As Others SeeItt Modern Chnese Art. CHINESE ART is changing. After centuries of adherence to the old mystical, rather literary tradition a new order has appeared. Nym Wales, who treats of the phenomenon in the July number of Asia, points out that the ancient Chinese art was concerned with nature in the larger sense, and not with mankind, either in mass or indi- vidually. The human body was never "looked upon as the symbol or sources of aesthetic truth." This art found expression largely in solemn, brooding landscapes. Even the rush-coated fisherman, who was often there, figured only because he repre- sented a philosophical mood made familiar in many a poetic utterance. This resulted in an art emi- nently for art's sake, and one in which technique was of prime importance. The very nature of the materials employed as painting surfaces -silk or soft paper - necessitated that. Every brush stroke had to be pondered and right. No change was pos- sible. Mr. Wales says: "Until very recently nearly all the new painting in China was purely art-for-art's-sake, concen- trating on technique. But in the 1930s a new mdvement began. In all creative fields, the van- guard of post-revolutionary youth became socially conscious and began to demand a significance for its art in the resolution of the pressing social prob- lems of the day. Painters came down from their ivory pagodas and plunged into the work of rein- terpreting art in terms of life. For the first time painting in China turned its attention to man as a living organism in whose changing destiny all creative art must share." Under the new orders, the artistocratic silk gave way to canvas improvised from plebian flour sacks coated with paste, and the more vigorous and flex- ible oil medium replaced the traditional water color of the old Chinese masters. Thus armed, the new art turned to expressionism and propaganda, and technique went by the board, as it has pretty much everywhere else. The subjects treated underwent as violent a change. The artists now paint stu- dents in clashes with the police over the right of free speech, workers and students being put to death as Reds, revolutionary generals seizing pretty country girls as concubines, workers bent under their burdens, the starving holding out empty rice bowls, and, naturally, scenes of war and incidents of violence generally. But the significant part of it all is that this new art finds its most enthusiastic exponents in stu- dents from the interior provinces, from purely na- tive schools. Their teachers have been for the most part Chinese educated in Japan, and the direct influence in the development of this type of art has come from westernized Japan and not from Europe. The foreign-educated - which us- ually means those trained in the school of Paris - and the mission school products, it appears, in- cline to empty imitation, which would seem to indi- The Iowan had addressed Tugwell in care "The World Resettlement Administration." "That's just too big for us," grinned Tugwell. of Even on the subject of gardening, Mabel Walker Willebrandt, the former assistant at- torney general, is very practical. She is still such a busy attorney that she gets home to her quaint, colonial house only in the evening. So her garden has nothing but white flowers, for they can be seen in the moonlight. IE I I -- --j --