PAGE SIX THE A.aV The district of Back Bay, near Bos- come in for a very caustic ton, is having its own little comedy cause of their conduct in of censorship. It seems that the mor- And now the police are als of the readers of Back Bay are innings. They have arrest guarded by two organizations, the Bay bookseller on the cha Watch and Ward society and the com- tributing Impromptu, an o1 mittee of Boston Book Sellers. When- improper book. There prob ever a book is published, representa- be little to the affair were tives of these bodies pass upon it, if the Book Sellers and the they approve word goes to the dealers Ward peOple are much nett that the book may be sold; if they judgment has been questi frown, even though their frown lacks where will their prestige legal authority, the offending work police, a mere bunch of un simply doesn't get a look-in. flat-feet, can disagree an Idealer for selling a boo Recently they conferred the seal of Watch-and-Warders havek sanctity upon Impromptu, a novel by 10. K.? For once the hand one Elliott Paul. Mr. Paul does not ship is not against the bood like the society of Back Bay, and author, ut is digging dows treats it most discourteously. For ex- spectable jeans to pay fow ample, he describes a raid on a Back fees. Boston achieves indi Bay house, and his account is so clear spite of itself. and detailed, so much more like fact than fiction, that several people seem mightily offended. Most mightily of all Dodd, Mead & Co., the P are the police of one Station 16, who view, and Famous Players-] For Co/leg College wear is exceedi all college women will materials and good tail That's why you will be i week of Wooltex Tai of the best French Poire and brown, in all sizes fri price of s2~ These desirable dresses here retailed at $37.50 sale price are an exceedingly good investment for th durability combined. The New CE Wrcq are shown in Wooltex and other leading makes, in a favored styles for both utility and dress wear. The $ 25 to 1 7he ftYills -118 South Mai THE SHOP OF S MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, t923 poration are offering a rather unusual full. But Henri's ideas have no such competition to authors who have net scope and vitality,-and his secretary yet lat a novel published in bock lacks good literary taste. There are form. The manuscripts will be grad- many fine things in the hodge-podge ed according to their usefulness as that makes tip the volume, and per- novels, serials, and stories for the haps those who know and admire Mr. moving pictures. The winner is as- Henri will take the time to search sured of $13,500 immediate return, them out. There is, for example, a with the chance of several additional stratg message for originality snd thousands in royalties. Such munfi_ force. "You will never get form till rcence should extract a best seller youi ant it", says Henri; "And want- . se .. without much trouble, even though it ing to want it is not wanting it . . . is not apt to restult in the production It will not do to have your fine thought lashing be- of many pieces of literature . . . yesterday and paint your picture to- the affair. A new Chicago book store celebrated lay." There are other fine things too, after their Friday, October 27, by a reception to even though restricted to fields of ted a Back the Aridland Authors . . . This painting. . . .Perhaps we should be rge of dis- and other events has led Harry Han- glad that the Messrs. Lippincott have bscene and sen, critic of the Daily News, to re- published these notes, even though ably would juice over a very strong drang naci there is an unmerciful number of it not that Westen among American authors. waste pages in them . . . Original Watch and . . , Maybe so, but it seems to me voices of any sort are none too com- led. Their that there is growth rather than move- 0on. sued. And ment . . . Easter authors are not be if the coming West, so much as the num- The season has brought forth sev- iforms and i her of western writers is increasing. eral good books about the ancient d arrest a , . . New York will be the coon- history 'and evolution of man. One of that the try's literary capital for many years the smaller of these is entitled The tronounced to come, unless some fool legislature Coming of Man, written by Dr. John of censor- wrecks things . . . And then there M. Tyler and published by Marshall kseller and will come a real migration,. . . Jones at the very possible price of n into re- $2.00. Those who remember with r lawyer's pleasure Dr. Tyler's New Stone Age iduality in Much as L admire Rober Henri's in Northern Europe will find this new paintings, I cannot get very enthusi- book quite as interesting, though astic over his new book, The Art Spir- much less detailed. Its scope may be it. The immense fecundity of Leon- estimated by chapter headings-The ctorial Re- ardo da Vinci's thought amply justi- Coming of Life, The Rise of Land Life, Lasky Cor- fled the printing of his notebook in The Coming of Savage Man, The Rise of Personality, Man and Eviron- ____ment. The style is clear and even brilliant. Dr. Tyler does not enter into details, nor burden one with ex- anples and proofs for his general statements, yet he slights nothing that r he treats. For the person who knows little of man's past, or who wishes to reyiew hastily th'e things he has learned, here is the volume he needs. And is a human being who does not as siadmit the descent of man can be con- Sagree. It takes good vertdbThe Coming of Man should do agre . t a e goo thejo. wring to stand the strain. In Emergent Evolution (Henry Holt nterested in our sale this co Professor C. Lloyd Morgan continuesfrom about the point where Dr. Tyler stops. Professor Morgan is a philosophic biologist with a flair for mysticism and big words. Some red D resses of the latter are quite showy, and b r d r ss sby no means in common use. Do you know what 'projicience' means? And t Twill In Black Navy elicience'? Dr. Morgan will introduce ~t T ill in Blac , I avy you to both of these handy words, and om 16 to 44 at the special several others beside. 'Emergent'e , olution, he says, differs from other varieties in that it lays stress upon all things that are new, such as a new molecule, a new bacterium, or a new process of thought or action. I can't see that the distinction amounts to a great deal, though I admit Dr. Mor- gan's discussion of it to be masterly. Like some other evolutionists, he holds that the doctrine of evolution is thor- and $35 all the season, and at our oughly naturalistic wthout being atheistic. The reasons do not con- ie college woman who seeks style and vince me, any more than the argu- ments of Haeckel and Vogt have con- vinced Dr. Morgan. I'm quite willing for Einstein or Newton or Harkins to rule in the physical world and phil- osophic; Dr. Morgan admits them to the first and politely but firmly closes the door of the second in their faces. ?cuS and And the manner of the closing de- msands serious thought from his read- er, even though agreement may not follow. The time line since arrived when the publication of a new number of the little blue books in the Haldeman- wide variety of cloths and in all the Julius Pocket Series became an event for thousands of readers. Yet the lat- prices are very reasonable-- est colume, Literary Essays, by Mr. Haldeman-Julius himself, is more of an occasion than most. It contains es- says on Wordsworth, George Eliot, 65 "Sophomoric Ben Hecit", Anderson, Hawthorne, Saintsbury, Masters, and Saraha Bernhardt. I sympathize with Mr. Haldeman-Julius when he char- acterizes Ben Hecht, even though I admit to studying up late in the read- G ing of The Florentine Dagger. Like- wise, I share with him the view that Sherwood Anderson made a mess of I avery fine theme when he wrote n Street Many Marriages as he did write it. I The estimate of Masters' Children of the Market Place as a book which A T I S F A C T I O N "lifts from the term historical novel the reproach with A hich puerile rom- ances have covered it." I do not for (Continued on Page Seven)