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Judge, 1924-05-24 · page 32 of 36

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Yes! This wonderful set ct twelve HOMECROFT Goilies and centerpiece, FREE, tointro- ce in tal cove rings in homes, \ Read our amazii Order oneof our Homecroft Flannel Back Table Covers, suitable for round OUROFFER Home “Arts Division, L. L. Le Dept. 15, 218 W. 40th St. New York They all say GLOVER’S does the Business Wherever you go you hear men and women ask : ge ne at any good drug store and use irected ce Booklet “* Treatise on the Scalp,” by H. Clay Glover, originator of the Glover Medicines Madte only by the CLAY GLOVER =O., Inc. H. as 127-2 West 24th Street New York City w Fi ea Cloth binding 40 pares—many iestations din plain Table of ments, and commendation AMERICAN PUB. COMPANY, “509 Winston Bldg, Phila, ta ket, Outiasts a igata‘$10:00 valve. oo oat honey. "Pay pestinan ooty $1.00 when pert Lure importers, West 2383 Evanston. le Write for our tree Guide D OF BLANK" ‘betore diss tions, Send model or sketch of your in our Examination and Instructions. le Sexes Books and ene ion fo "No Charge for the Above Information. | Terme reasons VICTOR J. EVANS & C VICTOR J. EVANS & CO.,.813 Ninth, Washington, D.C. oF (ZD FOR g MEN gf OF BRAINS IGARS “MADE AT KEY WEST— FoR MEN | States, “Will you take ten pounds for that cow?” “Can’t be done; she belongs to my wife, who would sob her heart out. Show. Krazy Kat Among the Kriticks (Continued from page 23) have been issued, and there are 110,- 000,000 people in these somewhat United no appreciable decline in the public morals is to be feared. Judging by our own experience, even the 999 who | get a copy are unlikely to start sowing | wild oats. | domestic | about the ga: We ourself, after finishing the book, planted a row of perfectly proper peas and set out ten dwarf apples. After that we fed the calf, went to the dentist's, staked out a new bunker at the golf club, and on returning home were struck with our wife's appearance in a new spring suit and kissed her on the front steps. Even Brother Sumner could hardly object to this program. “Merry-Go-Round” is just about the kind of novel Sammy Shipman would write if he deserted the stage and tried to imitate Schnitzler. Purporting to be Vienna of pre-war days, | and then the Vienna during the war and in the sad after-times, it is full of cha pagne, Lehar waltzes, enormously rich and irresistible alry officers, astonish- ingly degenerate countesses, prostitutes, seductions, and sentimentality. No serial in the old New York Ledger ever piled up the coincidences, either, so patly for the plot. If the courts had hopped upon this book because it is such a bad book, we might sympathize with them. But as they hopped upon it because somebody thought it a naughty book, we can only wonder. To be naughty, a book has to be convincing. pD now we have done with Krazy Kat and Viennese countesses who with their stable grooms, consider literature for a moment. of My Youth,” i elope and Votes by Pierre Loti, translated by Rose Ellen Stein (Doubleday, Page & Co.), is made up of extracts from Loti’s journal hitherto unpublished, and written between his seventeenth and twe ighth years. It is a slight but precious legacy. Loti, the romantic 30 But I tell you what—make it fifteen and we’ll let her sob.”’—Passing Orientalist, who breathed exotic perfumes thr his who trafficked in strange dreams from the far places of the globe, was afte and imaginative play the ashore, prose, 1} but a mere sensitive youth, with shipmates who could play the clown in a circus, who was fond of boxing and walk- ing, of novelty The: who could also rowdy his nd excitement, of women are Bohemian passages notes, and they make the eroti- “Merry-Go-Round” look like the cheap stuff it is. Loti’s is a real, a joyous, a normal Bohemia, touched with m, with wistfulness, with poetry and laughter. You, who always thought of yourself as rather a decent fellow and flushed for some suddenly cism episodes of your past. realize that you, too, could make notes on your youth which hitherto you have been inclined carefully to sup- press—if only you could write the way Loti could write. That is, after all, the function of literature. The high and the low, the good and the bad, the dream and the desire, are hopelessly mixed in all of us, and true art, true literature shows us the beauty and the value of our undivided common. selves. True literature is. the shaft of sunlight through the fog of our incomprehension. I wonder if Mr. Seldes will think me a horrible mid-Victorian if I confess that I actually Pierre Loti more than Krazy Kat or even Ring Lardner? | shall confess it, anyhow, even if 1 wither under his contempt. enjoy Prey “The country that got the most out of the war was the United States. She got prohibition,” says Mr. Lloyd George. Perhaps we haven't got so much to grum- ble about after all.—The Humorist (Lon- don). sae ‘A man’s greatest troubles and money—a wife if he 1 money if hasn’t got (Warsaw). it—Kabaret he comicbooks.com