PACVE sX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 13, 1923 i-- B 1 SOAP-BUBBLES OF as a peculiarly provincial attitude, a most courageous attempt to chately LONDON GOSSIP gild the fig-leaf. T1 lE NINETEEN HUNDREDS, By This is a book for the initiate, Horace Wyndhan. Thomas Seltzer, those people who have lived in Lou- $2.50. don at the beginning of this century, Reviewed by F. L. Tilden who knew the little clubs and re- Lured by the similarity between its taurants and the frequenters of them; title and "The Eighteen Nineties," I they are the ones swho will read this pounced upon this conipendium of with the greatest feeling of pleasure, good white paper and printer's ink but for the somewhat overestimated with an avidity equal to an imaginarv younger generation it is merely a di- brook trout making way with a to rectory of tiames. Arnold Bennett, tally ethereal fly. I cannot help think- sar ant Wilie Wilde, Frak llarrs ing that Thomas Seltzer did the same.f Sir Herbert Tree, Sir Henry Irving Outside of the fact that very little and Lord Northeliffe are mentioned transpired during the first blush of familiarly but nothing is said about the nineteen-hundreds really worth them. A host of others whose clay recording at great length, the book has passed are reviewed without the might have had value fro a hi- reader gainitgany enigtenment - tirtalviwpin, ttugs d nthe e hi are nattes proveth ' torial iewoin, toug I o nt iremaitn at all. Titifs is upon the as- think that it would have been com- msuption t hlt yous remain cold and parable to Holbrook Jackson's opus. un igue at the prospet of If the reader has a penchant for muss- f tie tr-ed atdtemprpetbofathe ex ing over names of men and a fewtacted anecotetmultiplied by all its women, names upon names, it will litle brothers, sisters and poorer re- gratify his appetite, though to most lations. It that appeals or if indefi- the diet loses its charm long before nite gossip and glorified generalities the book is finished. are to your taste. by all means get the book, evet read it. Mr. Horace Wyndham has intended his volume to be related to that fan- MR. IAINES CLIMBS ily of intimae memoirs and riandom reminiscences with which the liter- A MOUNTAIN ary stork has blessed the market SKY-LINE INN. by Donald Hamilton recently in the form of Mirrors, Con- Ralnes. houghton Mifflin to. 112 fessions, Recollections and Portraits, $L.t0, all with varying charm and appeal. Reviewed by Leo Jay Hershdorfer The degree of relationship, is in thIs If you are weary of tales of war case, however, rather dubious and and intrigue, of the problems of life probably is scanned with little en- and sex tangles and triangles, if you thusiasti by its new reatives. The are bred with murder and mystery 1 os' starts out in a most promising and hove tired of tragedy and drama, I rin-ne, tter its kind and is for the recommend to you Donald Hamilton first chapter. as it shoull be, in- liiane.' "Sky-Line Inn." formal, candid and, in a rather placid It is a tale which will make you way amusing. The author remarks forget business worries; it will make pleasingly enough that the book is you think of the Ruhr as an unknown aboat no-bodies and persons instead quantity and of the League of Nations of somebodies and personage: All as a new baseball federation. It will that of cour. , is granted as being transport you to the High Sierras of 'erfectly good and many an interest- Central California. There you will ing story has been told of people who meet Theophile Gelas, who, as we are were, as far as the outside world is told, "is an ex-soldier of the French concerned, not even topping the lIst army who did most of his fighting- of mediocre. But this does not con- with pots and kettles, but who won done the pyramiding of anecdote upon more fame for himself than most men anecdote, such as the following: 'carve with a sword," ... .While we were waiting, Theophile is the sort of person with an apparent stranger walked into the whom one likes to spend a long vaca- (club) room. Instantly Garvice went .lion. He is of a confiding nature, so up and shook him warmly by the that it is not long after you know him hand. that he has unburdened himself to "'How are you my dear Lord Bug- you, and the story of his life is yours. gins?'-or Huggins or whatever his You will also want to meet his wife,! expected guest's name was-he said Celeste, who delights in wrangling effusively. 'Very good of you indeed with her husband, taking great joy in to honor us like this.' . reminding him that from the first she "'Thank you,' returned the other, had been strongly opposed to his pur- disengaging himself, 'but I'm not chase of Sky-Line Inn, Lord Buggins.' . . But Theophile is' of that type which "'Then who on earth are you?' de- is spurred on by failure, so that ere manded Garvice, looking for the first long we find him engaged in a finan- time in his life, non-plussed. 'What etienterprise-a prie-fight. The; ace von doing hereT' mention of fisticuffs brings into the "'Well, I happen to be a member,' narrative a red-headed hero, Adam "wasteldrepoens e mmbe Norton, who comes to the aid of the was the mild response. Frenchman just as the latter's re- Now this is splendid perhaps as a Sources are about to be sunk in the specimen of dinner conversation, prac- well of speculation. The account rt tigularly if you are acquainted with the battle is so well done, so realistic, one or both of the principals con- that I doubt if Irvin Cobb the versa- eerned, but when the book is coo-I tile, could have done better. posed of an endless chain of that cal- Then things start humming. Aunt bre of anecdote and depends almost iJulia Hawk, seeking a place of refuge solely on it for its merits, it is some- in order to save Niece Daphne Edge thing of a losing fight, though the from several insistent but undesirable fight continues through 2?1 pages- suitors, stumbles upon Theophile's ta- If the reader's endurance is good, he vern, and then-yes, you have guessed should win out. lit-Adam, the invulnerable, falls in Adverse criticism is easier and ad-d love with Daphne, the beautiful. F'ol- mittedly more fun to write than the lows a simplo tale of love-makng. favorable sort. unless one is well sat- though the story is not devoid of en-, urated with the worth of a hook and tertaining complications. Daphne's wishes to form a laison betwen it suitors will not be thwarted; a rather and the reader in a missionary spirit: ingenuous girl of the Sierras persists But I do not think that I am unfair in proclaiming her love and. adoration in citing the above as a typical speci- fo Adam; Theaphile's inn becomes men. Distinctly it needs the person- fauous; hs wife becomes more impet- ality of tremendous type to tell it ous; Aunt Julia's worries increape successfully to an audience and i;tenfold; and in the end everything is- takes colorful writing. - prefer to have you read the book In mentioning Oscar Wilde the fer yourself and find out what does writer apologizes for reminiscing about happen in the end, for you will enjoy him by referring to him as "an indi it more if I do not tell you. vidual about whom the less said (and There are in "Sky-Line Inn" node- written) the better." This .strikes tge olable evidences that Doal.Hamilton CLOTHES DON'T MAKE THE MAN But they often go a long way in making other people's opinion of him. You will find that to keep your clothes in the best of condition will be a mark in your favor-now or when you go out into the business world- Now is the time and Dettling's is the place to get the "well-pressed" habit. D E T T L I N G "The Faultless Tailor" 1121 S. 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