SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1923 THE MICHIGAN DAILY .P .1. PitY2 To Read or Not to Read Book Reviews MR. DELL DISCUSSES MARRIAGE JANE MARCH, by Floyd Dell. (Al- fred A. Knopf, $2.50). Janet March was the great-grand- daughter of a Minnesota pioneer, a man who tried many jobs and suc- ceeded at none. His son Andrew, on the other hand, was one of those econ- omical, intelligent, and hardworking men of the 'sixties who, because they were intelligent and economical and industrious, became wealthy. And- rew March creatd the elevator bus- iness and became wealthy; merged his company into a combine managed by eastern capitalists and became more so. He put his sons into the business and then, in the panic of the nineties, saw the fortune he had made dwindle. Not that the Marches ever were poor; they simply were not too rich. There we have them at the real beginning of the story. Ike! Featuring Best Co Our reputation for auth ing. When you select your from the pick of the season's during the past few weeks. terest you, and will make u inelusive price range. Sport Co Dressy C Fur Coati Special Silk, We Their styling is such th f tea; all the dominating style f conspicuous in the way they Wool Dre Velvet G Silk Gow In this store you'll find women who will miss a sale r You'll appreciate our en Bradford March, youngest son of viks, or real radicals of any sort.' er' were to be abandoned in favor of Andrew, was at once a practical hand Rather, they were serious, kindly folk 'Pen' and 'Brad'. and a dreamer. Ie fell in love with a of the sort that read, and even con- girl who was working her way tribute to, the New Republic and the Janet, the first child to live beyond through college, thh daughter of a Christian Century. Perhaps they oc- 1 the age of six, was allowed to do pret- Swedish housewife and a futile Yan- casionally glanced at the Nation and ty much as she pleased. As a little kee druggist. Bradford's sister did ,the Liberator, but not often or ser- girl she played mostly with boys; not quite approve of this, for there iously. Pen taught Sunday-school, growing older she confined herself al- was little about Penelope to socially and Brad was a trustee of the college most exclusively to tfeir sports. Be- grace the March fortune, yet she did where he had met his wife. They cause Pen insisted on treating her as not object. If Brad was willing to were not revolutionaires. a girl, she turned her attentions to wait five years to marry such a girl Brad's home training had been Brad, and became his comrade in all she was not going to take the matter narred by undue emphasis on the ex sorts of ventures. In a day when it to heart. Of course it was rank fool- cellence ankgeneral superiority of his was proper for little girls to wear pig- ishness, but. . . . father. Andrew March dominated his tails and play with dolls she wore As a matter of fact, there was noth- bobs and knickers, and spent her time children because tliaer never got to know rwn rpaigbl.A tdn ing foolish about it. Penelope had them, andithey were taught to look up rowing or playing bail, As a student common sense and ideals that would to him as to a hero. Pen's father had in high school she accepted feminine have been hard to find among the tried the same thing, but was too diversions, but with a masculine friends of Dolly March. She, like her weak to succeed. To both of them, vigor. She smoked, drank, and pet- husband, was ahead of her generation therefore, that manner of training a ted, for they were the proper things -the kind of person whom we used youngster did pot appeaL Their cit- to do. Yet she was not silly, and saw to call "queer" or "advanced", and in dren should not be forced to look up the absurdity of many things she did our present poverty of thought and to them, but rather to be comrades. for the brief ton they gave her. language, "bolshevik". Not, of course, Even those time-worn symbols of hon- that Pen and Brad were real Bolshe- or and inferiority, 'father' and 'moth- It is plain that neither by birth nor training was Janet an ordinary gir. On the other hand, Mr. Dell makes it - plain that she was not a brilliantly intellectual one. She frankly admit- ted that poetry was beyond her, and ffp a much serious prose as well. Her principal endowment was good cot- mon sense, coupled with confidence in herself, and ability to analyze. Dr ing the war she had had opportunity The 0hopof Stisfcction to observe love, and to wonder aso;t it.,When she left college.she ?ante 118 MAIN STREET to experiment with it. Her introduc- tion came through an idealistic dis- ciple of the modern theater, whose art may have been good, but whose phil- - osophy was 84mmed up in a parroting the -as n 's of the phrase "It's a crazy world" Janet liked him, and be lPves her,. They experimented folly, and Janet at M odesdscoered'tatthugh toeworld - ight be ray, it was no place for . carelessness. She had investigated ntic styles is upheld in this show- love withogt' caution and, though she Winter Coat here, you choose bad no regret so far asher.own slir it was concerned,.the materigl reaults best modes, personally selected .)appared undesirable. Janet saw no he prices quoted will also in- tsgrace in bearing an 'llegtimatt' e child, but she saw also that the world electio easy because of the all held a quite different view,. sil ws able to enforce it. With the help of a cousin of' ense and' courfe, and a phyeician who was above the pettiness ad dirt-made possible by law, she es- ats...apdw o $ 25t00 to $ 7dwith harm. But it was a ~J.SJ o ~ ' ,risky veture nevertheless, and soar- oats .......$ 49.50 to $150.00 ed her. . . . s ......... $100.00 to $49500 'Janet's next move was to New York. She like the city, and some of the peo- ple she met, bt she saw little to the famous Greenwich Village. At the F best, it was. a rather commonplace Prices Feature These district, flooded with folks seeking what did not exist, and feeliag very O and Velvet Dresses *wicked over nothing "t all Anyho V>Vl.'j the Village was not the real cause of her coming-the real cause was a man named Roger Leland: He had tat they are sufficiently charming for afternoon, the matinee or seen her in the west, appeared to Features, as side drapes, wrap around effects, tucks, pleats are know her, and had-written a note ask- accentuate the numerous smart styles. ing her-to meet him when she came tO isNew York. He ran a Village book- store, so Janet met him promptly and thereon hangs the rest of the tale. sses $19.75 to $50.00 If Janet was the child' of a genera- s .9$tion that has succeeded, Roger sprung ow$37.50 to $751from one that had shriveled and al- OWfs .7.0 most died His boyhood was spent in ....... .$25.00 to $a southern town where Yankees had . . . . $9.0J won out over the original inhabitants, and were proud of their advantage. There was no neighborly kindness or experienced saleswomen to assist you~ in your selections, sales- even toleration; religion had sunk to mere fear of the devil and deter-rin- ather than sell you the wrong garment. ation that others should suffer hia wrath. Roger determined to escape, ideavor to give you entire satisfaction with your purchase. and of course first rebelled against the morality of the village. Here, however, he was not successful, for _, (Continued on Page Six) 'A