SUNDAY, MAY 7, 1922 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE 7 A FEW NOTES BY G. D. E. , MIDLAND EDITOR VISITS US A New Book on Sex Her new ideals of worship are freely (Continued from Page 5) (Continued from Page 1) Miss A. Maude Royden, England's expressed and people of all classes Christ, Dante, Galileo, Nietzsche, Poe He commented that the writer of son- foremost woman preacher, daughter and beliefs attend. Since college days and numberless others. Some men, nets had the best opportunity of judg- of Sir Thomas Royden, has written she has been prominent in debating of course, can oppose the rabble, but ing the success of his work because a hook entitled "Sex and Common and scholarships and these talents she only after first cloaking themselves as the sonnet standards are much more Sense" (Putnam's). has devoted folly to social problems, idiots and winning the rabble's favor. definite than those of the lyric. Free She is the first woman to appear in which she is and always has been Even then their subsequent snubbing verse he considers the most subtle on a lecture platform of the Oxford deeply interested. of the mob finally brings them to and difficult form of poetry. University Extension Course. In 1917 Miss Royden enjoys the distinction grief, as with Caesar, Napoleon, Dis- Mr. Frederick first novel has just she became pulpit associate to Rev. of being the subject of a chapter in raeli, and, dropping a peg or two, been accepted by Knopf. It is called Joseph Fort Newton (now of the "Painted Windows," by "A Gentleman Woodrow Wilson. "Druida,"-accent on the second syl- Church of the Divine Paternity, 72nd with a Duster," and is the only woman But mark me, I am not saying that lable, long "i"-and will appear in St. and Park West, N. Y. City) at the so discussed in that volume. She is the two freshmen are men of such January, 1923. He is beginning work City Temple, London and was the first at present in this country where she calibre as the first three mentioned, on his second novel this spring. It of her sex to preach there. will remain a short time. nor even as sunerior as the fuddled is not to be a story of college life, During the war she established a Wilson. On the contrary, my obser- but it will include two or three transi- clinic where she discussed moral, re- Shane Leslie who, a few years ago, vations of men in general lead me to tional chapters concerning the hero's ligious and domestic problems with wrote an interesting book, "The End believe that the young fellows are undergraduate career, and this part of women and girls. She is now ai of a Chapter," has written a novel, probably but little better than their the story is to be located in Ann preacher in the Guild House. London, his first, "The Celt and the World," persecutors. Flying in the face of the A conducting fellowship services there. (Scribners). herd alone shows that they lacked a deal of foresightedness. That the gi#IIi#lllllillilllllli1#111llllli111~111llfii~illllfili111#111IIn n11i11lll~i Constitution of the.es United States gives them the right to wear a "frosh pot," derby, tam-o-shanter, or no hat The Constitution also gves us afeA newcomer in wash frocks = press and free speech, and other things which have been denied since the you'll w ith time the document was written, hat greet open In sum, the young men should have known that any flouting of the super- stitions of the mob is always sure to meet with certain and sudden pun- ishment, that any departure from the norm, meritorious or otherwise. any innovation, or any deed of daring not decorated with gold braid and pap, W o always reaps a sa d reward. olealrd ah Fo k For those who are getting red in the face and indignant, as they read, allow me to state that all classes began wearing special class headgear They have three qualitiea that will endear them to you immediately. They in 1908 and that the wearing was not the'll lben compulsory with the members 2 are so attractive in style; they are so beautifully made; and they'll leash. of any class. The spirit of thus hii- stle mer-o.eutrly ;n nitiating the freshmen did not break = The styles are unusually clever; in fact, we believe, you'll be surprised at the into its glorious traditional blossom = until nearly four years later. Al, the = smartness these frocks have achieved. sacred and venerable Iradition! Ali, the dear old observance, handed down from generation to generation! That it should be violated is ntoler- = The tailoring is Wooltex, which means of course the very best. And to able! Even If we should, by any rare = chance, get a young Archimedes in = match this style and workmanship there are beautiful pre-shrunk wash fabrics this school, let us by all means kick him out if he should refuse to wear a = that are guaranteed as fast colors. Somehow you'll find that tubbing will "pot!" almost seem to improve the looks of these frocks. They are wash frocks in I recommend without stint Edwin . fact as well as name, pre-shrunk, fast colors, Bjarkman's first novel, "The Soul of a Child" (Knopf). It is the only wholly real description I have ever read of a boy's life. Necessarily it is not for There are dainty whites, summery blues, pinks and prudes. Besides being a delight to any person of intelligence it is some- tans, with trimming in white or contrasting colors, thing which should be read by every father who is not a complete ass. I Clever styles in all sizes that will give you "That hope to review the book in a week or two. Well-Dressed Look" for summer. Hepplestall's, Harold Brighouse's new novel (McBride) is a story of which the real hero is Steam, shown ~P7O$ T 1 O as a force not only to dominate men's U t fortunes but to control their hearts. = Beginning in the early days of the 2 Industrial Revolution, when Reuben Hepplestall built his cotton mill upon the ruins of the hand-power and water power manufactories of his less pro- gressive contemporaries, it tells of the feud that arose between the Hep- plestall's and the Bradshaws and how = after a hundred years, in post-war England, that hatred was buried by an- other pasTHE MILLS COMPANY H. G. Wells and Henrik Van Loon have probably done more to popularize The Store That Sells Wonltex history than any other two men. The publishers claimto have sold over 118 MAIN STREET 35,000 copies of Van Loon's "Story of Mankind" in 15 weeks, while "The Outline of History" continues to be of the biggest selling non-fiction books. 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