SUNDAY, JANUARY 6, 1924 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE THE BONDMAN I tion should be confined to clerks, and She plucked a thread of golden hair ! even them it drives to drink. Will To bind my hands in merry glee, the world learn that never we learn And first I mocked the fetter fair anything that we did not knew be- Frail sign of brief captivity. fore?" But ah! no might could set me free; George Moore, "Confessions of a As triple brass the bond doth hold; Young Man" I follow where she guideth me, ! Led by a single hair of gold.' I"The poets have never done any- Paulus Silentiarius, Greek Anthology Ithing for the people except increase their sentimentality." "Education is fatal to anyone with E. It. Howe, "Ventures in Common a spark of artistic feeling. Educa- Sense" F the Buss Lamp, $2, Clamps Anywhere Not merely a clamp' contraption, but an artistic standing lamp that will clamp or hang anywhere. Throws the light's rays exactly where you need them. Fin- ished in bronze or brass. The handiest lamp a student can own! The Detroit Edison Company Main at William Telephone 2:300 Books and Writers - T E Mreason for coming to New York at THREE WOMEN I about the time she did. He knows a AND ONE MAN good deal more about Lew's work, pay, and habits than does Jessie, and LEW TYLER'S WIVES, by Wallace sees a chance to use his knowledge. Irwin. G. P. Putnam's Sons, $200. One evening he takes Jessie to an ex- The marriage of Jessie and Lew Ty- pensive restaurant for dinner where, ler was the outcome of a summer: quite by accident of course, they see spent at the University of California. Lew and the woman of the flat below. Jessie is little, red-haired and fiery; The net result is that Jessie is more Lew big, happy-go-lucky and lovable. disgusted with Meech than with Lew, Both are ordinary human beings. If even though the latter does lie to her someone offers Lew a drink he ac- about the way he spent the evening. cepts with "Yu can't make me mad Shortly after this, Buster, whose that way." If Jessie, doing some job health never was good, dies; on that Lew should have attended to, falls off night Lew does not get In till after a step ladder and nearly breaks her midnight. On the day of the funeral neck she -'asks of the world, "Now he goes out to get a bracer, and final- what do you think about that?" They ly returns to find the procession half have a baby, na ed after his father a block down the street. Lew attempts but called Buster, and he and the cot- to square things with Jessie, but finds tage absorbs most of Jessie's time and that his excuses do not work. While interest. Lew helps little; he takeshe is away getting some fruit to ap- life easy and moves from job to job pease her wrath Jessie takes what she without the least concern for doctor's needs and leaves the apartment. fees unpaid and overdue grocery bills.I This upsets Lew considerably, and se means well, of course, but he sees he decides to brace up and show Jes- no reason for ory ing. They'll betjslie that he is a man. The bracing up g . . . accomplishes ut he does not find Then comes a job with a New York his wife. Giving up the search lie joIwthjoins the armsy and spends some tisme importing house at a fair and certain in Fr an d ew ork and salary-a "wonderful chance" in Jes- r returning to New York and sie's words. But the change from going into advertising. California to North Broadway works At this point he meets Virginia, a no great improvement in the home sit- society woman who condescends to cation. Lew's work prevents him fall in love with him even though he from spending much t'nie at the flat, lacks ancestors. Their married life and Jessie becomes lonely. An ac- is quite successful, even though Vir- quaintance with a woman on the floor ginia does not approve of Lew's pro- below helps out, and at the same time fesion of advertising. She is ambi- Lew comes home a bit oftener. Then tious and Lew makes a good follower, one evening Jessie sees him enter the and apparently she has him headed building early-and come up to his well for the diplomatic service-which home an hour later. Which ends that may not pay, but which is highly re- friendship. spectable. There is, of course, still The situation is not helped any by some question about Jessie, and Vir- one Meech, a mouse-like little man ginia wonders greatly as to just what who fell in love with Jessie before she Lew still thinks of the red-haired wo- left San Francisco, and found a handyiman who left him that day of the funeral. p. , Wishing the best success possible in your ventures of the New Yearis U N' 1 Try Our Sp -Iichigan )k I Ilil W ETS 0~4--" SOUTH I-VLIISI TY-' The book closes with an obstetrical scene, with Jessie as Virginia's nurse. The device, while handy and wholly natural, is by no means new. One ap- preciates the irony of the situation, but he wishes Mr. Irwin had found some more novel means of bringing Lew and -Jessie together. . . . The most striking things about this book are its seriousness and its real- ism. Perhaps the impression of the first is heightened by the fact that Mr. Irwin is the author; one does not expect seriousness from the author of "Letters of a Japanese Schoolboy." The realism, however, is a matter of itself-of skillful treatment. There is no attempt to give the reader the in- nermost thoughts and motives of Lea', Jessie, and Virginia. Instead he meets these people in the book as he might meet them in life. He knows no more about Lew than Jessie or Coleen did; no more about Jesie than Grandma Salz could find out in a conversation over the back fence. Nor is he both- ered by plot; these folks act and live as such folks do act and live. The result is true realism. Susan Fenton. ecial failed -15C A