SUNDAY, DECElER , 1923TH "HE MICHIGAN DAILY Security May be found for your. valuable docu- ments by using our Safety Deposit Vault. The service will please you. Farmers & Mechanics Bank 101-105 SOUTH MAIN 330 SOUTH STATE r, [ \ \' .I ASer S IN WHICH THE OBSERVER TACK- Terms of Conquest, by Howard Vin- LES THE CHRISTMAS PRESENT cent O'Brien. (Little, Brown, $2.), is PROBLEM the sort of book which Dr. Frank Christmas gifts may be roughly Cranc might praise as a tale of high classified under three heads: things moral, steadfast endeavor, and de- that can be worn or eaten, things served success. Dr. Crane would be that cluter ip the house, and books. aite right-but he should add that Having had no experience with the it is the sort of novel which has turn- first since Santa Claus went out of ed American fiction into a paradise style and being disbarred from the for moralists, Epworth leaguers, and second by a kitchenette apartment. plain damn fools. The hard working the Observer will confine himself to young printer and his wife Ivy;, the the third. Of course, the unkind per- ability and conceit of the printer, his son trying to find a place to lay his will to succeed, and his arrival com- hat in the said kitchenette flat, might ? fortably near the top make up the remark that in the Observer's case material of a typical American story. objects of the third class automatical- There is a practical ti. e. crooked) ly graduate into the second. . . But politician whom the hero conciliates, discussions of metaphysics are out of and a few other minor characters, place here. such as son and daughter, a dreamy And so the Observer will try his "scholar," and a few friends, but not hand at solving the gift problem, each one person in the whole story lives a try being limited by an arbitrary limit life free from the curse of the plot. of $2.50, on the ground that suggest- There is a little variation, of course, ions involving higher sums require and the book makes entertaining read- lengthy explanation and argument. ing. Such explanation is to be found in Michael's Evil Deeds, by E. Phillips longer reviews written by the Observ- Oppenheim, and published by Little, er or his wife, who insists that her Brown & Co., is another variation on position as family treasurer gives her the theme of the stupenduously brainy an inside position on matters of this criminal who is outwitted by an even sort. . more brilliant detective. To the Ob- Let us begin, therefore, with a book server it suggests Craig Kennedy in about books, since it will supply such the days when Reeve was still expert- information as this contritbutionfinenting, but he can easily conceive a lacks. What Books Can Do For You. dozen people reading it to four who by Jesse Lee Bennett (Geo. I. Doran will stick by even an H. G. Wells Co., $2.) is exactly thething desired. -omance. For the right reader it would and possesses the great virtue of be- te "great dope"-and such right read- ing different from anything else to 'rs make up an alarming percentage be found. Its purpose is to survey if those to whom Christmas packages d rn,,,,, itust be sent. A Most Chcrished Gill A DIAMOND Regardless of how mansnota'r jewelstshe may Lave a Dtarmtnd hei always ready This beautifulin 55 hite Gold R ng only Others. w as Schlanderer & Seyfried Wt4Sas MnRS t 304 South Main : treet i The Buss Lamp Will Clamp Anywhere. Only $2. Not just a clamp lamp contraption, but an artistic standing lamp that clamps or hangs anywhere. Gives you light wherever you need it. Finished in bronze or brass. The handiest lamp a student can own! The Detroit Edison Company . it .Ci. t a 5 f Telephone 234 M UIVI13 "VrtS 11 y 1' 11i , 1 V cosmology to adventure stories, to. list the best of theis, and give a back- ground for the reader who may wish to consult them. There are eleven chapters on the general features of human knowledge that call to mind Professor Robinson's "Mind in the Making" and "Humanizing of Know]-I edge." They are not easy reading, but they are profitable, and can sbe taken in instalments of any length; the Obesrver read them on the "L" and street-car. Following these chap- ters are 50 pages of book-lists, be- ginning with discovery and adven- ture and ending with books for chil- dren. They can be used either as a guide for buying, or as finding lists on one's pilgrimages to the public li- brary; either way they will be use- fut. Mtaybe they appeal to the Oh- server particularly because he is lazy; smaybe because, like many other folks, he is too busy to give long and deep thought to the selection of his read- ing. Anyhow, he likes them. . . Having thus praised a boor tsatF recsottmends one's reading, 'e onayE jethroniele the arrival of three voltini wihch Mr. Bennett is not apt to ati- vise, but which nevertheless will en- joy more than a onsall measure of popularity. The first of these, Fannie Fox's Cook Pook (little, Brown & Co.) was both a surprise and a puzzle to the Observer until his wife took it off his hands. Since that time he has eaten biscuits, stews, soups, desserts,E and potatoes, all done a la Mrs. Fox.: He conquered all of them, and even expressed a willingness to meet the group again; an admission which to, biu seems sufficient reconmendation for a book he has sampled deeply, though has not read. The otters are novels, of the sort the Observer reads when his high- brow friends are sure not to drop ink f'r the eveCig. One of thei, The A much better book, since it is both tonest and convincing, is Luther \fichols, by Mary S. Watts (Macmillan, $2.). Luther Nichols is an average American boy-that- is, the average boy born of foreign parents and liv- ing. in a country district, who gets tittle education and moves to a city- Cincinnati in this case. The boy leaves his father's truck farm, gets himself a job in a livery barn that has be- ome a livery garage and while his. est friend, Roy McArdle, is away to the war marries Roy's girl. And then, with Roy back, Luther, who did his bit at Camp Sherman, finds him- self a job in a private family as chauffeur, while his wife goes into the millinery business. There is then an affair with the daughter of the house, Juliet Ordway. So real, so convincingly alive is Luther Nichols that the Observer strongly suspects that only to a small extent is he a boy of fiction. His simplicity and humaneness are part of real life, just as the things he ,ocs are the things done day in and day out, fromtMaine to New Mexico, in villages, towns. and cities. Mrs. Watts does not tell his brilliantly, but she tels it well, and the slowness of her writing fits the slowness of Luth- er. In this sense of realism, there- fore, Luther Nichols ranks with Main Street and Winesburg, since it re- ports honestly the lives of ordinary people. It has more of real stuff than a thottsand volumes such as those by Oppenheim, and the Observer wishes it success. A final glance over the bookshelves reminds the Observer that he should not close his suggestions without mentioning at least one true gift book -a volume that is at once both beau- tifil in appearance and significant in cotent. And there is none which so completely fills these requirements 0Continued on Page Seven) J