SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1923 T'-iE MICHIGAN DA Advice to some pedagogues: CENSORSHIP 'When ears are deaf, 'tis wisdcm s (Continued from Page Two) -O M A tob ub"has passed. Besides, among-toe pe, -_________________________________ ple of most nations the hatred of Art (Aeschylus and Literature is pushed to the point in "Seven Against Thebes") of lecturing boastfully of that same hatred."0 YOU will be more than satisfied with the food and service at Tuttles Luneh Room 338 Maynard St. South of Majestic SCHUMACHER HARDWARE COMPANY A STORE OF INDIVIDUAL SHOPS '308-10-2 SO. MAIN ST. PHONES 174-175M THE GIFT SHOP OF MAIN STREET where you will -find everything in Novelty Gifts direct from New York A FEW OF THE MANY: Smokers' Sets Manicure Sets Japanese Goods Smoking Stands Electric Heaters Salad Bowls Poker Sets Electric Irons Tea Sets Smoke-A-Dor Electric Urns spooGj- s1Qsa'j Shaving Sets Electric Curl Irons salpuvo DeskSets Electric Sweepers" wOl 1 5PGIfPO Scissors Sets Electric Washers eagstelO 5 ag) Pocket knives Electric Lamps $aS BUM& Book Ends Mahogany Goods sa pidS THE GIFT SHOP OF MAIN STREET fI An adjustable reading lamp $5.50 One of these lamps will add pleasure to your reading or study, for it will throw the light exactly where desired. Adjustable to any position. Finished in mahogany or old Brass. The Detroit Edison Company Main at William Telephone 200 Edited By Scogan ABANDON, CHASTITY, AND LIFE'S CURVE . .. To set the sail and await the wind's pleasure and if it heads me towards a reef and towards a shipwreck, I shall still be superior to those who have never sailed but on the saddened waters of canals choked with dead leaves." 'Chastity is by no means the necessary companion of intelligence and yet it is perhaps one of intelligence's least equivocal friends. The principal pleasure of that-state being the total absence of-sentimentalism, a state upon which souls free from vice can glorify themselves. Vice is sentimental and perhaps. that alone makes its ugliness." ...To live is to complete a sentence begun by another, but the one be- gu by you another will complete. And thus it goes on toward the infinite, following a curve whose beauty we do not fully comprehend." -From "The Horses of Diomedes" by Remy de Gourmont. RELEASE "A spring there is whosesilver waters show, Clear as glass, the shining sands below: A flowery lotus spreads its arms above, Shades all the banks and seems itself a grove Eternal greens the mossy margin grace, Watched by the sylvan genius of the place: Here as I lay, and swelled' with tears, the flood, Before my sight a watery virgin stood: She stood and cried,-'O you that love in vain, Fly hence and seek the fair Leucadian main There stands a rock whose irn-ending steep Apollo's fane surveys the rolling deep; There injured lovers, leaping from above, Their flames-extinguished and forget to love. Deucalian once with hopeless fury burned; In vain he loved, relentless Pyrrha scorned. But when from hence he plunged into the main, Deucalian scorned, and Pyrrah loved in vain." -Englished from the Greek If Sapho by Alexander Pipe. COSMOPOLITAN "There are fine cities in the world, Manhattan, Ecbatana and Hecatomny- plus-but this city of Troy is the most fabulous of them all. Rome was sev- en hills of butcher's meat, Athens an abstraction of marble, in Alexandria the steam of kidney-puddings revolted the Coenobites, darkness and size render London inappreciable, Paris is full of sparrows, the snow lies gritty in Ber- lin; Moscow has no versimilitude, all the East is peopled by masks and apes and larvae. But this city of Troy is most of all real and fabulous within its charnel beauty. "Is not Helen the end of the search?" -From "Leda" by Aldons Huxley. CONVERANCES ..Intelligence and stupidity are, without doubt, forms and not degrees of the mind ...... ..for intelligence is a ladder and stupidity a wheelbarro.w......" -From "The Horses of Diomedes", by Remy de Gourmont. DOGMATIC "Gratitude has a real element of affection only when the good deed is continuous. Look at the dog, for the dog is man incomplete-luckily for him. The dog, it is said, is capable of dying on its master's grave. This no- ble deed illustrates the same phenomenn" ofimbnts-"c. -, +s 11,, ,pn,-(inn its head for an hour against a window an inch thick and thinking: "I'll get through if I try long enough!" Obviously this hypothetical dog imagines that his master is going to come out o his grave some day with a large sup- ply of bones-preferably his own. "What is more, cut off your dog's food and he witl cut off his -tti- tude. For my part, every time that my Fido licks my hand, I suspect that he is tasting me." -From "Teodoro, The Sage," by Luigi Lucatelti. AVE ET SALVE Upon vieving the remains of dead loves. "Hail to you, ladies, and farewel' for you and I have done with love: Well, love is very pleasant to observe as he advances, overthrowing all an- cient memories with laughter. And yet for each gay lover who concedes the !ordship of love, and wears intrepidly love's liveries, the end of all is death. Love's sowing is more agreeable than love's harvest: or, let us lut it, he allures us into byways leading no whither which fall before the first rou;'i wind: so at last, with much excitement and br-ath and valuable time quite wasted, we find that the end of all is death. Then would it have been more shrewd. dear ladies, to have avoided love? To the contrary, we were un- speakably wise to indulge the high-hearted insanity that love induced: since love alone can lend young people rapture. however transiently. in r world in the result of every human endeavor is transient, and the end of all is death." -From "Jurgen", by James Branch Cabell. 'A