SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1923 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TI-RKN SINIJAY, MAY 25, 1923 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGF TURKI ROBERT FROST (Continued from Page One). And shout from where I am, What is it? No, not as there is a tinia to talk. I thrust my hoe in the mellow ground. Blade-end up and five feet tall. And plod: I go up to the stone wall Io: ,tfriend : visit. Mr Frost was like that here. When you came to his house, he didn't say I't working on a poem," nor look in at a pile of unread ptroof, nor say "What can I do for you, youg man?" Ile came u)) to tte' stle wall for a friendly visit. Edited by Scog'an LA31ENT After tis or., .Jol l mouth, and curss ,lhis day. And Jolt nake, an(' ate -Let the day pr h--Nerein I was torn. and the night in thich it swo said 'Thir is oss,..,id conceived.' -Le that dad be darke!s: let not God regard it frot above, neither let t1k light shine upon it. "Let darkncss and the shadow of death slain it; let a cloud dwell upon it; let the blacknets of the dat' terrify it. "Ar fe. that nilaht, let darkness seize soon it; let it not be joined unto the days o' the year, let it not come into the nutmber of the months. Lo, let that night be solitary, let no joyful voice come therein. "Let them curse it that curse the day, who are ready to raise up thei-r mourning. Let the stars of the twilight thereof be dark; let it look for light, but have notte; neither let it see the dawning of the day: "Because it shut not up the door of my mother's womb, nor hid sorrow from my eyes, "Why died I not from the womb? Why did I not give up the ghost when I came out of the belly? Why did the knees prevent me? cr why the breasts that I should ceck ? For now should I hare lain still a.nd been quiet, I should have slept: thee, had I heen a: rest, With kiugs and eotuseltors of the earth, ws hich built desolate places for ' themselves; "Or -eth prines that had gold, who filled their houses with eiler: -Or as an hidden untimely birth I had not hesn; as infants whieh never sa light. "There the wicked cease from troublin.g; and there the weary be a- rest. There the prisoners rest together; they hear not the voice ol the Copp)e-o "The emanl and great are there; and the servant is free from hitt mastee. !Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery, and life unto the bitte ir soul; Which long for death, but it cometh not; and dig for it more than for hid treasures. "Which rejoIce exceedingly, and are glad when they can find the grave?j "Why is light given to a man whore way is hid, and whom God bath hedgest in" From the Book of Job. DEGENERATION "The Globe" is extinct, the "St. James Gazette" is merged and submerged in tb , "Esvening Stansard:" there are no naners of such metal now in e- istence. The difference in them and the evening pners of the day is a very simple one: the former were meant to olease the educated, the latter are designed to entertain the uneducated, and the uneducated may be equated, very larelv. with women. It ic an odd paradox: there is no doubt, I sur- pose. that the instruction-cr. If you like, education-of women has made immense strides in the last thirty years; yet it is true that when a news~ paper editor says to himself: 'We have an immense number of women read- ers and we must see that they get what they like,' the result is drivel." From "Things Near and Far," by Arthur Machen. ARTI? . Perfumes, in fact. rarely come from the fowers whose names they bear. The artist who dared to borrow nature's elements wculd only produce a bastard work which would have neither authenticity nor style, inasmuch as the essence obtained by the distillation of the flowers would bear but a distant snd vulgar relation to the odor of the living flower. waftin git fragrance into the air, "Tlauts. with the excention of the inimttable iastnine which it is im - possible to counterfeit, all Powers are perfectly represented by the blend- of arcoaftie spirits. stealing the very personality of the model, and to it ;ddinc that nuance the mere. that beady scent. that rare touch which en- titled a thing to be=calied a work of art." From "Against the Grain," ty J. K. Hssmaovs. SUCCESS scandal ever seeks Q shining mark. No sooner doe3 a person- ality manage to set itself off from the group than the intelligentsia inme dlately wishes ta now who, how and why." From "The Titan," b' Thoodore Deise:-. EPHEMERA "The tenocence of a girl is like milk which is turned, by a thln-derciap, kIy an evil smell bi a bot day, or even by a breath." Fron "ModestMignon," by lalsac',- FAME ou base escaped the romsdy Of swift, -pretentious pyaie and blame, Antt smashed a tavern where thev sell The hariot's wrine that men call fame. From "Blackguard," by Maxwell I odehn -ira. FIRST NAmTIONAL BANK 1 1,:;: OLDEST BANK IN ANN ARROR : OLDEST NATIONAL BANK IN MICHIGAN I 11rocks for. the SummerTime lWhat a joy to find sumrrst frocks that are well mae- as are these from Woohtex and other famous makes that come in fabrics that will wash, that are cleverly styled, and priced so mod- erately that you can easily afford several. Party-time frocks in soft, sheer voile, like the one shown here, country c frocks in summer silks, tail- ored models in imported linens and ratine. $5.75 to $29.50 The Mills Company Tc Store that Sells Woo-hex 118 MAIN STREET