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1933 The olC lege News, 1933-05-03, Vol. 19, No. 20 Students of Bryn Mawr College
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Custom Citation Students of Bryn Mawr College, The College News, 1933-05-03, Vol. 19, No. 20 (Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College, 1933).
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The • News� ·
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VOL. XIX1 No. BRYN MAWR AND· WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY PRICE CENTS 20 J, 19J] 10 , • . T. S. Eliot Compares "So Sleep the Brave" Dr.Montagu Sees Mind Poetry to. Still Life as Potent ial Energy.
Moderns Lean Away From Free Mate.rialist ....Theory of Mind dom Toward Revival of Simplifies Universe, Aids
Old Forms Psychologist _. . '
OBSCURANTISM DE DUALISM IS REFUTED
seems o be "What have w tten t "How to relate the curious domain 1 ri vcry l5impie and straightforward," os· of .the psychical said S. E i t n Dr. l to the bOOr," sertcd T. l o in his lecture o W l iam Pep ere M t i p ll on u, Poetry Goodhart last Fri- og l'IJodfJrt in speaking in the Muaie Room, April" "Only a few minor T e day evening. 2<1, on " h Materialistic Theory of things need" explanation." Apy preJu: the Mind," "hi malt challenging, ex- dice about should re- c hi. pOetry be iting, and momentous question Ihllt Mr. Eliot stated,for this lm- the ic moved, philosoph al can r i e " it. r mind a s . pedes appreciation of A poem of The g t ' desideratum for the ntOO. his i ex· ern ea like a etill-liIe. One can to ll but materialist ill find something plain its planes and colors not ]lhysieal j l c c and mat n in hara ter to cr the feeling produced by it. Although de (or ntl'cLthe mand explafning the llr. remarks of such a poem i d beller Eliot a'!J m n than lhe IItoma. Whut if , the re his SWCtptfJ,l AlIIolig NiOMiu. the ul scat of the mind" is, not Ihe " don't-l!Iu J)OS unyone would et lltom� of th.e brain, bu t e h ri Dftle� 1 p che admits that t h e c eall that obscure," medium in which these atoms yet are! it "might almost be said to have no ever)' mental e He (Cl f 1936 I Se'Ad' ) What. i( state d notes meaning at all." Is not sute that mo c tion !tJl4,.>tific difi a in this med. nceds a meaning or that it is ======ass o_- _...:!�p y t o - -n l o_r__ _v_' " SOrs ___ i , and poetry �,:======: � -: _ - """""ll1' um our M!nllations anti feelings � -;; -: Miss Cannon Disc sses= • even supposed to have one. In. any � n �;- I�:=:-:::::-::::::::��==u arc forms of invisible IlOtential different e i Cale"dar I Russia ..Ballet is en. event, an entirely m an ng Nee in Socia rvice ergy in the br in, which the ki. r , 5: L t le ds I Se a into is convey rom t h · F i. May i t �I . m often ed nt wh ICh 11 ..J l Sye n th S s or f A ts netic energy of incoming c rrc l is I A. 1 ,I u . the poet puls his work .or evell Ony, l\l. I - Miss Antoinette Cannon, speaking truns(ormcd? into 7.10Ev t B. GI'CCne w l to put. it. Dr. ar s il t t intended into I'11\ he Common las Thursduy 1850 t Mr Irstem. TOraces rlgon" ' Room From to abou, 1915, he rna- · speak 'on "American 1I0ri7.ons • . t . . His commentators amuse nd nter . K· on he oPl)()rtunitics in J.;ocial service terla a i in D 's o( sh g " . . . • Isllc \e I tanschnucn was strona: the a) Wa in ton From SlaVIC and Orlen k, I· \' est Air. Eliot, for they rend his l wor etrclIsed the need (or a mobi· and flourishing, but into Goo h rt, 8.15 M. now it hal d a P. I tal Background Ili7.Jltion the com n"w poetry allusions which come as a of,all the COI'cell in - taPon� on e\'j] dB"s. Th. ... nh�" i., Sat. May French r8 I c , 6: 0 I munity to 8ccomP lish h , r J ,. � complete 8urpril\.e to him. He has E t � o( h s: swu.ng xam nat o , 9.00 A. M. l , °hf Eddington nnd Jenns a very A tions i i n . D IAGHILEV SET STYLE .. service work , to rnAk· c Itpose read much better expl l a r Varsity ...-illl s met . awa" from the mechani,ti. ·outlook to l Bryn Maw --- odS e of his work than those which he him- Tcnnlll nnd to fill th actual one J n os o c . [ C. C " 10.00 . scientific, idealistic d c mol gi al The Waste Team vs. Merion Ie J. O S III a could have done. "TI R US8lnn b a II et a movcmCll,t tI\'11i tIbl tl b . th e wor y. hil Millikan and the eXI>4!rts on self 1 A. , 'I Id ,odn w e criti-1 1\1. l J t in e has been called a international in . us os i n pos- mutter, "(nce to great ed , May 10: F cl,l ty Russian in origin, m d the goal of who have &cell it umd . W . n e r y e cidetermined f society. He himself terms It I consequence, h as anCC d pro oundl c h nl ll· face," nrl! disillusioned cism o � , Jlh e th is b)' i about its ade- in n. . r c Show, HeBtrai,,' Neccuory. the liCe of all the arts. our t e (l d, Again merely n "piece of h thmi al G a S' . i I ll ill ils gradual deyelop· to explain-the mind. y oodh rt,. P Admi' o . eposl Istml e Ilclilth, quacy e t 8 O . 'nI . r nate I d 110 nleUl, we reconsiderin the grouching" as the r su a per- _0 ur tu I y t prac.tice was in nrc g l of SiOll, $1.00 Reeserv d sea s, I II ted 5 first gaincd_ old. old Chapcl no Parthenoll, and whnt i� h I the I'clation sonal grouch. Because there was a P ffi c ' I , ighly lIopnrale nnd specific fields- robl nl of in $1.25 m d nnd , at ublication O c . e t a l c mo( Th e bri g st of what remains un r definite lind c "fair amount of borrowing" In , � ht is nn in� he battleficld, among lhe b gg botly, n si l qU<'!llion l 7.. ": l e p Mr. Eliot thought calculably. rich deposit of tension, ex· ; temples,110 ('(Ime! o( WOfte La:mJ., i l ______d:ls�cs, in in the devel· which before one us provide Tennis Season Opens cit ment and brilliance in the nri h- .I Ilt tYllesC\'ery best to the poem with notes. e e c "Ilment of social science, the mllny denth. Two of elCJ)lnnntioll eveTyon� With Varsity Victory mind o( ho s e _ He has regretted his action since, for w saw it," said t fiel or social work h(lvC been muy be of er d the matl!riali.lic �- cd tlpccific d f te e nd Lincorn Kirstein, when he talk. , r(.'cc y IlS inM'parnble the notes rri d some people a Mr. "Illy nt l utili%.(.od to contribute to monist regards mind fi - d displeased others l team won it c the Comon Room, Apri 24, :I the body and who ike work The Varsit), tennis � in l in science,relating to and not (rom its motions, the to the uuified out the allusions themselves. !'It is lirst game or the senson with his first lecture,. '!The Infiuence' of diverging from p�ychology, psychi- duu1ist makes mind a sub!.tnnth'C in always unwise claim originality;" Cricket. Club team-by a the Russian Ballet on M�ern Art." lind 9Otiology. The its o,,"n r ht to Philadelphia a�ry, economies, ig . 4-1. of heat, movement which was rcsponsi. WOI* he saya. Accusations of plagiarism score of In spite the ' "The has become a whole out of these ll t r i s Th streng h o mater ali m in ee i often was and sat- ble (or the ballet was similar a purts, s m h m ridiculous, since the playing quite fast to adapting itself to individual general is its power to v erify or reo w too meaning of i t e greut historical renaissance, and al it the h le o( a part h s isfying to h few spectat.ors. . needs at the same time is de\·cJop· 1ute the ..fact.s and . · by obset\'alion pas· Although Faeth to rc�apsc t�ou�h none of the a�ti�t eonn�ted poem hinges on the context of a tcnd� � n technical knowledge. . A s sessed l ing measuremcnt materiali tic unal), he has her old habit beIng "Jrald of With It pos the dlvlIllty of MIch. sis sage from which borrowed into of e r Thcre has recently been recognized supplies a marvelous sintplifica. phrases or lines. the ball and scnt it inlo the ael Angelo, one can daim for th i i e v mostly i , the need for tra n d social workerl: lion of the uni e . It achieves: S. net, thereby losing her first colla rat on their..-synthesis o( aU consequently, ban i rse Some of T. Eliot's poetry has set to bo there is less c ce now what n l real science attempts, rcduc. u t c writing, but he Miss Bergen, 5-7, she rallied to win the arts,their creative organism (or serving in been styled a toma i t of an apprenticeship to the g incommensurable qualitiell to the se 7-5, and finally go h intensity, an example of enor- commensurable qUAntities, the het(!ro. himscll (ears that it is no better sc<:ond t, uman work. Also,private wellare organi- t i by the mous than deliberate. He very deftnitely into �er real s r de winning . importance." are becoming a growing prob- geneous to the homogeneous,the be zallons iTh" rkll (or r c set and the match,0-2, o her lnce many lectures uld re· v wo p e ision as, for example,third !" � �v� Icm. E er situation is a social prob- continuous to the continuous. '"It ex. serves and eQ"sy, e y however line·chipping w ll· qUired to trace the origins o( �ho in his use of proper names, . lem, with mental and physical aspects plains the chan�cs of slale in mal. bnllct, .It IS nece;>sary to start wl h irrelevant they �. T placed foreh¥ds. � ons que tl the est ler or co may hese are I c r unci c n y b solution and (orm in chemicul m player of two the end of the nmeteenth entu y e e nd lo glve the I;eader a feeling that, by Collier, a Varsity . would be th socialization of all al>- pou s on the basis of r when a gr III d .....o ce and t memory, the seasons ago, has returned this 8eason Russia, oup of male nn� i s remarriage of the his sort of symbolic au. t e e trD.i ed [ cial organizations and nstitution molecules. When her a�llil\ mal dancers had been � at i is triangull!.ling the parts hi an.d won first two sets � : f c. courts and hospitala. Indeed de ng mind, it endeavon thor of ll e e e for al with the MISS Kurba gh, 7-5, 7-5. Collier e pe th Czar hIS a d g., been: tic up i g b comi}osition. It the reader knew any � I t� x n,s o( n ji w hin recent years, there has to ntan i le, invi!liblc sen!a. er 1M , about the t t ey ex emely h feet and plnys hiS court s pleasure for nearly t�o good melve. more namea than ha th t� qUick o� a 'q,lUch higher degree of organi%.a- tions w th solid body to and ty years . Imper181 i , existed, he would eaSily and steadily. She seems hundred f1! tion� The day of great private foun· menta, for psychology, thus made ob be disturbed and chIldren . be fitting very easily Into the va· schools took of nine years his attention distracted. . dationll is past, and the new social jedive,can go on. The materialistic by Hardenburgb. age, them for seven cancy left of traln� yean worker I interested in community monist finds It hall been lIaid that the purpose . r" s that the mind varies had them admItted to the stage f of poetry is t n te -B owditch. Vanity captain, ,pla�eJ . o planning, in welfare organiution un· with the body in countless ways, " o ommu i experi i "' ea hard·hittlng game,wan· fifteen yean, and then retIred them is il but her Ulual der federal state and city govern- hence he led conclude that mind ences." Thll,Mr. Eliot thinks, Earn· The ballet " to nlng the aet agains:t Mrs. on "pension. presented . theory. The relationship between lint n serves only as a body.function. a act 1 dance interludes in operas, I me t shaw 7.5 In he second how�1 appeared s t S ar as prescn b s arc concern- The dualist replies with a caution experience and poetry i uneertain. ,. d' ver Is menta at court (.unctloM o { t one of hill n ever, she easily outplayed her 'Ioppon� 'in I r· � I cd, JO' vaat e · In ow poems-which he with unemployment. a mer lest his opponent fall into the "path. ent with her fallt servcs and long and at partIes, and performed grand I d personally I Ie( . S ftlled an flam· oo'glcal hllacy" of conceiving nature dislikes-La. Fil1lia CAe o rf a l mim and danced plays. The girls � ency 'e r corps . , . p ul forehand_ drives . Wilh I his theme came h m front we we are agencIes are open. after the pattern of hi. own n de i on her · es o Ig . w 'I te t,r I I l IItlll i lli Pio.nl1l, to little more accuracy back a �ays w � b' h et�n II Y in the medical field the dellcription that his friend had r the scene I. Few jobs are free stuft', and objects that his conclusion hands she should �ome ne of the skirts, and If were laId In premille. Egyptian o und there. has been a deplor ble unwaTranted from the given him. of an design of a is m st the Scotland, for example,they would l . ' I ' formidable memberll t o of a t lona F .' om 'h,·, d-'en,. a weepmg glr th e museum a \C1)ntlnueC on I ump In settl emen an d reerea , I "·on. h. ad- He 111 tea . l e vances to la . Milan. was unable to find the � of c· J'.g� .sIx) leadership work. The etilld we far a more positive atand. He l The thou Little showed some lack pra pointa to e • ••• design in the mU Cum. ght . field is fairly stable and a hopeful c ain clear features of lice in her ame s , t League Arranges Tr p ' rt t his � with Mis We t bu i . • c I e tendency to that do t of it, however, lay do an In ' tend n y is noted n th mind, no fit as merc adjcc- rm her main diffi. culty wall lack of con to State pemtentlarY i until or seven months · entral ze organi%ationll for this: pur· tival aspects of atqms in motion, for some six trol. Her l - c i mind form wall even better than A later,when he worked back to the social worker, trained in example,the privacy of mental that ot hcr opponent, b t ahe served Under. sponsorship of the IlOIII!. l\C states, (r.ontlnued on � the Bryn j e pr ti e, after com· the purPOBJfulgess n . th ory and by c witb wilicJ1. many fault. r drives e awr League, e ty t •. Pan Three) and h� were x- !t� . tw lgh student pleting a regular courle, should . the mind acts for the future, it! r------:---I I MISS the VISIted -e be tremely wild, West took the new Eastern Sta�e Pelll· so well prepared to direct auch commun. meaning.fulncu, the unity of ideu in Train Schedules match, 6-0, As the sealOl1 . 24. The prison, 10' (Continued on ad- tentlary on April ity 8S m ili1e ... Pennsylvania Railroad 6-4. planni will aoc.ial The vances, however, she should stcady cated on a hill ne r Graterfotd, il ngma ke it com.i ------ra Thr... a In work and a in has announced the f Uow ng to 'fcc , i make an exccllent number the old·(aahioned -,� o down sharp contrast to muni�y _ . , ita Paoli time-t e • Speci4l Moyie changell in abl four man. penal ins tutions. ___ : ti t l Priers leaves Mawr • Un college train Bryn Collier and Faeth seem to work to- Mr. Fraser, the PennJlylvania r-...:..------otherwise noted, A, of lite. i at 7.21 M. l:eague Elec!,onJ student. will be charged only for Philadelphia gether in tennis all etiily 811 they did Prison S�ety, and Colonel Thelman,I , M. P. Presldent.-Josephme Roth· tt'.ti e instead of 7.15 P. doublet ex a n, conducted the twen v cenll,ins:tead o( in basketball, and won the an -W e group I rd thirtr·five centa, l e B�ad , n Mias n tour ermel. (or admission A train v ll Street against Min Kurbaugh a d o a of inspection. The pria- Suburban eat i Bryn S Treasurer- ar Seville Theatre n n S at on for West., 6-2, in quick time. The oners themaelves have tonstructed ecretary &! · to the i Br 6-2, and )' at 11.42 P. instead of tocether in most of which jorle �: Mawr tbe Anthony Wayne Mawr ?d, (act that they had played the buildings, are very Chairman Bate. H u e Com- 11.25 P. M. the forward bertha on the Vanity mooern and well.lighted, with t"Un- o Theatre in Waynf':. Identiftca· . a train leaves Broad Street baltketball in each mat. mlttee. - Marraret Manh. lion ticket., which ar�, obt n- A team was a distlnet ad- nine water cell. A. a i Suburban at A. M. Sey-v;;- aethe Station , vantare to them on tbe r fact, when the prisoners tint Chllirman of Sundayf- PubTfufro'n 7.48 tenni, te of . able O-ftlce, thus connecting with the Quak· The s good tourt.ten l. old prilOn In P Ices-Polly Barn tz. muat be presented to both the prospect of a n arrived from the hil. � er, which arrives /from Bo ton ha.l an of SUD� cuhler and the doorman a e s season can be seen from Saturday'. adelphia, the walls were not yet built t th dayAI.latant C rm Flanden. theatre. 7.43 A. M, keep up t a d under Serviee&-Sarah at matcbea. May they ' he n ,althoulh the worked rood (C1)ntlnUe4 onmen !..------' wor k- � �. F1v.. -I
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.1>age Two THE COLLEGE NEWS
, All our routs and rings and roisters. .Jr� 'pHILADELPHIA On the green and in the c.1oislers• WOQJ.ly sh�cp and_&nO)Y·white- oxcn, ... Theatru. NEWS And the. nee
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THE -COLLEGE Page Thre.
Mrs. Smith Discusses T. S. Eliot Compares , Montagu Sees Min
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Page Four • THE COLLEGE NEWS
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tk e lVltcelbClrrow and Other Storie. \,, $2.50).
stoy, written Lee 51- ______B00 k R·eVleWS l arid by the one who was Somctll!r�Mauiham'�" adaptntion or and "It's supposed to be going to be ______marc(Knopf, He Is -being read closest to him, his youngest �ughter. Luigi Chiarelli's comedy. L marvelouS ow Ws."h ite Repr oduces -' wid!!),. tr,tn olJr opinion. ,AUixandra. The 116e1l n I Eimi. tsook- haa been well bird,monson ha.5 d('Signed {he lIe LOngsf'iJ'f'- and Spir t o F.... r Tale $3) I bne ofGlITden, the moat interesting ot the tranllaLed by Elena Bnrncck-Aladar. and is Judith Anderson, last in i f y be 'Tit.youn ger authors . TILeHis 'Prcvi�u!lFountain. book, signed by the &1.4.thor. will head the cast. by e. e. cummings (Covic.i . SCllr- "I ; can to Friede' may superficially de- ok.' be· e/ comparedlL rt the Y k Th a �es 'etJohn Drew Cvll, with whont we ' Charlel Morgan's S Stori" NCh'S of o SiBtn scribed aa diary kept for thirtY-'lx I have had little/IIUI1}, sympathY 'aince {j didn't know there was a witch, days by a poet-painter during his ' The Furniva B o We New r e t has at last shown but wercn't the dwarfs · funny?" was Kiev, i3 well worth y esr wae!J!tte ntio n. Previ- dccided last week to come out that journey from Pari. to Moscow, somewhere in his veins flows the I)robably the reaction ot most of the Constantinople ously these sto brought out of hibernation and . w,h is going and Odessa; thenceEimi to at ramlly genius. His portrayalLittle of a delii:hted and horrified young audi express to France. separately in mited editions by the on in the theatTical world, ami the 01' doy and by Orif!Jlt .particularly unpleasant inhabitunt or en� of I 'Snow White and the Seyen constitutes the f3110wing authors : Ltam O'Flaherty, tlnswer is "plenty," although it' not Fundamentally. S. inf\ution-or, the reformatory in betterhas Dwarfs," as presented on Saturday SteJla Benaon, Rhys epic reaction of a human being to a James Hanley, of much value. on all the critics cheering. Incidcntally nrternoon Goodhalt II U in by Ihe New Davie., T. W rner, A. E Coppard, Wh'lC," transcendent experience. The Paian a . The gn.ut play Delig" ono the I)lay is one o[ the monUl's York Children's Thealle. "SIIOW G F Ipirit.-world had its living viaitor In David Garnett, T. H. Powy.ll , H. E. Lhe Idea th::l IHtle can go a long contribut ons it is concerned with Living, 1 - · as dramatizedn tand direetetl Chri Da�lej to- Bates, John Collier, L.$2.75. A. Strong, boy'a reformator Aeneu; theby.th:= tian, in way, othClwise known as r y, an� all that gOCll by Clare Tree Major, from Grimm's U!l8ia.-worrhipping lIeie-nee as H. A. Manh . The cream of the on therein. Albert day, R ..tl,'- Blood"ood. TMr/ $2.50), went into ita lust rour wcekfl Bein, who wrote Fuiry Tales, was I;�t all the Oll� eel tot English crop aU �or it symbolized r.. aehine--hu plac- H. Monday, and we feel pretty badly .. e,pcnt lOme years of his own life we remember CrOm out chil hood, but nver-emphallizcd � WIHl- "the beyond" humanity', dis- (Knopf, about iL. In �pite of Alr.8crlpts George relting uncomfortably in the arm ot it Wa! nmusin, nnd t! . dcr had all of th • Udl, Tar- the posa.!; accordir:tly it is bto, not . by C. TILeSquire. Lf)ndcm Eleven MflrnH1/. amuling, Jean Nathnn's nlttlmllt to claSH it law, and sccms to feel quite Ilf unreality and WtlS but a realm of o'l st ongly about it. tarus and not I satiric, and colorful Jtorles by the aJJlongilnd the ham vaudeville we r people, thein Talea. machine-tortured, ideal-ridden gholta,E,ml Editor of This slill think it's nne the most chnrm- _The really big pic<:c of allnews con- .... The high point of cfthe show
al'lU. incredible but real world• cal�� is the 1924.firlL . volume of. stories by Mr, ing amusingpay piecca that ('vel' cerna Radio CitYl and or uelll.:d lhe unties HUSllim lind his 0 S. S. R., that the auth�r or SquireHi.:z O'ttltTto be Ths published Mal/or in America graced\. Broadway. WeVunitll hope F aMr.ir Max Reinhardt. The Illan is to turn Uussim, the qucen's ""ttwnrfsl.JVho, beall - plunges. Sharing descent and re- :,Jince C owerd didn't much attention to the R K Roxy TheatreQrphe". into a unknown to the Urothcrs Grimm, turn to Ufe, a.we exchange the negative (Private LiCe Mr. Nathan's opus in , legitimate buainess, and to have Herr came very important and were in materialistic epoch for � confticta of ot Jimmy Walker), by Jocl Sayre, the because, although admittedly clevcr, ReinhardtHamlet do Gluck's as the tuct the cousi!lSdir(!ctcd of the famoua �ven. the 80positive and timelen raith of art. Rackety Rax boy, is one of the most he'a growing bitter over Lillian Gilh inauguralto offering. As Reinhardt is They listenooto the cruel queen'. participate by doing, we directly ilal'iOUS bita o[ hokum we've$2. come and losing his senSe of l)rODtllignl)f)rtion. For do at Stratford-on-AOrpheus von plots and Gertrude, the lady in one of the most Cearless affirma- acrosa in a dog's age. Published by Consider Mr. Nathan \ Living in the audience this Bummer, he will not be able- to in-waiting, who replaced the tradi tiona of spiritual values which litera- JohnUxion Day Square, and priced at Not to and his attitude toward come hefe until fall. If lional huntsman, to their cousina'Ht- too. ture can boasl be mileed. $2.50), is forgivable. He prob'ably succeeds, it is planned to have Rein· house, where they might leave the {he We have jl3t.- abouL rcae.btd_Tr ibunetbe by Albert Halper would like to wear red pajamas, 'ust- hardt do Shakespeare for----.. dear . old J.illLtic princel!Spjyy mimicry in safety. {lC .tQllsThey openeda,la&e_ limit of our patience ..Mn. laabel l (Viking Press, Is- one of As ror ti1l1atrGlatr,-'etm-tms: Roxy. " .with " ru!ih the Nef)�rPaterson, A.1t of the the End New York $2.50). most realistic an� u.npleasant books sllutedNino Pinemurder,ing Street, her fathcr ami Further pians for next fall include :lnd their of the queen and "Books," haa written her third novel, published lately. A bitter attack on step-mother tor cash and the critics the play Philip Barry is doing for their wild sword play convulsed the cd though�f (Morrow, r. theTh preacnt� Enchanted problem Winter, of the unemploy- in the Lizzie Bor- Maude Adams. Earl Carroll's com· young audience with appreciative We have attempted to read thia well- and the RUlSian$2.50), situation. den murder mystery, that collapsed in bined murder mysteryMllrder and in theintim Vani-ate laughter. item and find we can't ietl by Martin Philadelphia last fall. It must have ties.revue which il to sport Bela LugoAi Hex, the witch,on was a marvellously beyond page fifty-three. The book Is Hare (Harper, ill well worth been bad to find dra1!'a-"tarvCli Phil· and be known as wicked(Contlnn.a old creature, pageand berFlv.) cackling /'.fut yo.. r 'frit 'lds lit t"t written in the Virginia WoolfMan'. vein your attention. A charming novel of adelphia unfriendly, and even after What we'd like to know is, "Why andMorto./it. that explains our trouble. $2.50), Irelansl,The which Ct:mIl4nt Is having NlIfnplL. great suc- its renovation and body-building haven't there been any before this?" Bryn Mawr Confectionery . (Nut to Michael Arlen's new book, cessCompau" with readers K, of WilliamMargaret Ken- treatments,Nine PUlePercy Street Hammond !my�, And lastly, IGeorge Kaufman,T/lee Si'll Morris{1, St"illt Thtllttr BId,.) be 01 / The RenckJ:vow the Colltle (Doubleday, Doran, nedy's . $2), "Pcrhaps I am wrong in myI bclif'C RysklndL etand 'E mthe EGershwinsat Ca k e. willWilliam pre- &: I TUIY Sandwiche Girt. Is to retommendcd. Aot story con- by MarchAll that is April'J:I; sent a seque to en- . 'I of cerning a future war and the world's Quiet(Smith on tJieHaas, WeJtern is Front. one of the worst pay. "A! Beatrlee LiBroudway lie would titled schcdu cd Mu. c-Dperi rci Sod.for Se.rviee r . ) i ano ..n Deliciousi l Sundlt..on It Is unlike any hi. other best war books we've read lince say, "V01·I a, th ere." Gaxton, V·Ic tor., oore an d Lois Mo- reaction, Best Su , boo1rs and not for the person who ex- eide The Sellers.Ernelt 'f.ruex is baek on to ran are all to appear in it, l peet. to find Mr. Arlen's London life first decent chronicle written by an in Lee Shubert's prodUction of and doin" of amart12. people. AmericanT NortlL, that gwes our of what He has'Peggy Wood help $2.50went ),tAeon. A book that will �ive. him and everything should go pret- The brightest event of theRain spring in 80- camethe DOOMUaI/ out April Thorne Smith$2)., o by ElizabethTile Hotel. (Knopf, ty well. Peggy Wood returned� to that mad hatter, has written is a new novel of English Broadway from London with the I in/lf!lJtion. (Doubleday,1931, Doran, ciety by the author of A optimism thatNigkt, would have dene credit Sotllrdal/ Line formaBdlet at the For right. Tk ree J atory of an impact, the violent col· to n pilgrim father� for her vehicle,and JtilUkt, Seekerby ($2.7 Jamel5), Cleugh, Iiai�n of two personalitiel traveling was very shaky inA! , author of in opposite directions at fatally high deed. Several wheels came off . publishedThe. SpetUit byor, is for a speed. The attraction towards one rolled down the theatre alley, so she limited public. L. A. G. Strong, in anotherGod'. Littleia disastroua Acre for them both. gave up and hitched hersell to 'fro eays: "The most ac- Recommended. Truex: comp1ished1 novel J've come acrols is2 : a50). pleasant lit- NextTlLt MondayMask aJld the Theatrethe Guild . since began reviewing. . . . I tie bit of writing by, Erskine Cald- will open ita final offering ofPace, the sea salute Mr. Cleugh with admiration ..thorwell (Vikingia Pressl the- The au- son, W. and more than a lquch of envy.".G-rent freah from Hemingway and Faulkner Sctiool and carries on GREEN HILL FARMS Circle.Late this monthBiNe Val/age Scribner publish- used Line and unCl.er Ave. be where they left off. We're slowly cd Conrad Aiken's new novel, Overbrook_Phil.delphia TILe to this IOrt of thing, but His will re- gettinJ RCllJIL Act City $2.5really0), aay we like it very&: much. Lunch l memberedGrra by everyonet Circle interested in can't �. $1.00 Smith, the stream of conaciousnesa achool of (Long ...... writing. ia frankly for ia Ford Madox Ford's new �...... 1.:S0 the lophlaticated, but to judge by novel that is cauaing comment in Dinner Shore Dinner eyul FridllY ICISAiken'l former work it should pos- I New Tile York. Ra.1L Written Act witb the dis $1.10 enough driv over and above the tinction for which Mr. Ford is fam I "No Incr.... In prlc. on diatinetion of writing, to �nlilt a ous, is a 'paychologieal I ....or hC?llday. frontlarger againpublic. Human. novel of the firat·imporlance, perme- SaljU3{e LLo" to the NatureEdith Wharton has come to the 1 ated with the irony of which the au with a ncw52). book, thor ill .master, and lure to engage �;:=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====::!l (Appleton, There help-are yourTile intereat Trogedllfr.om 0/ Tol.tol/,begi nning to end' I . five stories In the opus and we feel For the aophlSticated. home [fo lks at $3), by Coun that this new effort_ ought to (Yale Uni her reputation, as her last two booksTile · tess Alexandra Tolstoy 1'01- venity Preas, il the intimate wereLt/t a bi1- dull. The ...... ___ ...... FirstKaye Lover Boyle, our favorite from story of 'he laat years of Coupt e P. M. Bo'ftk.$2). has jUlt given us LUNCHEON. TEA. DINNER 0 TO 8:30 STANDARD • b It and other storiell (Smith r. P. Mt yligbt Saving T;me) and Op� Sundll)'J t (9:30telephone D at Haas, A writer whoae repu Chatter.On Tea TillIE give'c1 your home telephoDe number to the op r tor tation aa one of the most talented o[ 918 Old Road a Laneuter 'Ttltphont: HouK In leas than minute it will he "Hello, Col.k& !" and Pla{1"cdAmerican BII women tke NigItH"{1ale auth9r1 haa been e a . Y (,or Beforesteadily Last,increasing. Hel' two novels, .... . _. thrill _ .. Bryn Mawr I IU you'll enjoying the oC the week . and - --- - rHE MODERN MOD!:: he a have passed the endur· What CUD you'll have to share the family newl. ance test.. of both critic and public. TO This volume contains fourteen short BOSCO � joy for Mother nd to hear your voice! Keep Dad What J. EUROPE stories, two of which recently appear "TOURIST CLASS IS TO' CLASS" re&ul4r date with Home to call each It', one a week. ed in Ed.ard O'Brien'aDo� antholon·Juan and ;,, es millt delicious a -:J , Campw Pleaeure that really , ilfie t L. A. G. Strong has jUst had pub- Alert- th.coDtg. y h.v. folk. fo und out that haw made diJcovery on the a • lished in this country Malres milk mort digestible Mi1lMWIIJU. Mittrt.tton�. Pn.,.f' flnll end the aat s 0 And don't M. (Standard IkyIt Mawr '" Wdf'c,II£mJ.Toun. · the world" time-8:30 P_ JOHN J. McDEVITT _ •• ia"topof 19)), th.y BOSCO CO. • mel in the mode he Time). Low Night then go into on Sta PIUNTING .t ratt, forget Rates elJed oft'...t. the low T oun. au. for Shop; 114' tion to Station calla. It's worthwhile saving, these Camden, N. liftlr, inrert:stiDs Tourista...is J. py, dut00 at • R.. Lo.nQlfIH'mont AVftlt,. hiahac: ,he theIhi p! typical r.ateI mow. The chargee, of coune, can be modern ••• a It'. the idM 11M lowTouriIt P. O. A�: ,Bryn Mawr, .. J' rata on revened. foe the finest the ahip-the bat .w.oornt, dedta, the Nn che �_ o( tb.•• hip. notice Ihu. no. Just00. rtCH: COLLEGE INN AND TEA ROOM _106.300, &om .189, :owad _y; SERVICE TO 7.30 P. lr'ip. • St"Uon to 5t,,\lon 8 A. M. M. 3.M1Aut. Conr. -tlon . ... •. D.uy ..J S.ruI.y ".d.r.t 1 ,lnclude.1I.d. Wh.re u,,. .ppllc . bl A CARTE BREAKFAST LA from D.y Aat. NIght Aat, BRYN MAWR to nftOOfI ' _ II • LaIlCUO., A T� ..J -Din.�r READING, PA. . ... ':.3'6 p, MOI' ...______� I ,\on . ... ��.!.�I!.!:. , ...... r' � • , • • � . I . THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Five • • or th� meet, between Manship nnd next year's English curriculum. turn. up, We also "'!ppreeiatc thc Snow White Reproduces Manship a nd J��I�'icoll l ! 4 was holly Coolesrcil nnlI finnl- 8 not t e situation one ofl1iel ight J,idcft of eliminating or .5 wcek�nd Spiri Fairy 'fale . . T t of --Lea F c Iy won by Manship on a beautiful ' shining in the darkness and the dark. bags-it has always been question d Junior en ers NIColI. :i. - , Jstraight thrust. Berolzhcimer, runk- nesa comprehending it not! Ibctwet:.rl us whnt- was in (he bags (Continued 1'.C. Four) trom � • anyway. •. . l ing third, look hcl' cue (rom Manshi)), KATHERIN8 M. PEEK. I ___ laugh caused shivers of excitemf'nt. Championship Meet- Winners! and illsi ..tcd too much, but deserved Truly a "new deal" is umJerway, Who cnuld think of a runnier bit than Achieve Right t� E�t«:.r her place for alcttnesa and pcrse\'cr- New.: and Bryn Mawr students are to gain , To the Editor the Col/tge to have her pet. bear ana cat nearly . c en of Senior 'Finals ance. !hough neither l\fu � zie I From editorial advo- heir place in the sun. ,. . your recent frighten the..-mean qucc1l to death? A,,_klns has had much expcrle�ce" I . . cating milk-lunch-suits we gather new 'FOUR PRINCETON SENIORS. The queen W8l, Cor her part, utterly they must be ct'i!\hted With keeping . ABILITY IS INDICATED . encouragement that B ryn Mawr 18 P .S -We hope yout' editorial staff IIeflJl cnbie and the - perrectly noble _ . "h·oenr hea d s ut:...Io, ore tlI e r urlOU8 on- . 4 --- - . t. C reall� pulling Itsel! together sarto,t will concentrate next on the curling prince dill some very soulful love � .. . ---. augh t f 0 those wh 0 h 80U Id hav e oJ ,' AI a l'C8ult of the Junior FOiIS I i lY t.his nlatter haying been of paper problem . Kccnes. better. of the College, fenc(.'ti � c:onlilderable concern to four of us tor ______Championllhip I l Snow White was 8S aweet and off Thursday night, April in the Monsieur Fiems' abTr direction k<,pt some time. last the "lesser forms . 27, At League Arrangcs tp graceful as might ever have imag_ knownhe c-'tt ited fencers in control ; the ap- Gymnasium, ltanship and Nicoll :of intellectual life" �r.e to be correct- � to State enit�ntiary ined her and had quite the right air placed Rr�t and sc<:ond. respct tively, pcaranee of Miss Pettll toward the ed. We agree. with you-the "iQh youth and freshnes!!. litUo. thus. gaining the right to enter thc fnd of the cnnte�t added zest to the. pression of tareful ca relessness" is ' of Her l --- brothen, the seven dwarfs, wero 4. fi nal b�uta.. Result. are as follows : - 1<>:ltlnUed Senior compe\ition�ay The far superior to that of careless care froM r.",e Onel ,' . 6-0; c nditiQllS growly and frightening at tirst, but �ve contestanLS ran ed the fallOW- def ted AskIns, Mac-!fulness. � offering many opportuni- Alurl.h rp :� in their own little home proved more . l s to run away, none Berol "uni_ tle of thcm at- order: ManshIp,,k �Nic oli, Berolz- kenZie, zheimcr, 5-3; While we commend this new l 109 0-2;-4. kind and rriendl� to the 'easily heimer, Macken ie, and Askins. Nicoll, 6 Cornl ga rment" lor wcek-end wea r,!tempted to escape. The construction z rrightened audience. Nicoll is not yet completed, but each cell The usual deleds or inexperienced I defeated Askins, 5-0; Macken- we woultl like to ask-why limit j The simple SCCRery was very effect ie, 6-1 ; Beroh:heimer, 10lt it to week-ends! The milk-Iunch- block of the six Is planned so that it fencing appeared throughout the _z �-l; will contain five hundred cells. The ively used except for s� ight trouble meet. Fencen oCUn failed to keep to Manship, 4-5. suit would have many advantage. with the lighting In the combination Bf'rolzh.eimer deCeated Askine, 5-1; over the present campus styles area inside t.he walls covers about their distance, inevitably precluding l IG 5-0; aeres and is laid out in such a man- forest, - dwarfs' house scene, which neat. execution ot strokes. They dos- Mackenzie, I�st to Nitoll, (9r la ek thereof). Of course, we 1-5; 3-5. ncr as to Include. huge athletic field required just the right amount ed in upon each other continually, 1000 t to Manship, have noticed with pleasure the tweed l a d 5-0; at nne side. darkness and light to blot out the net wrestled too much with t�c blades, M(lckenzie dereated Askinl, lost skirts and sweaters or the English l r, forest of the room behind iL There finally achieving touches orten only to Bera zheim� 0-5; to Nicoll, women-but these same IIweaters The system of allowing t.he Ilrison- I, I, 1-5; 2-6. was a rather Itudied but nevertheless aiter prolonged insistence. The par- to ManshIp, wnrn hindside to and skirts long since ers more Creedonl is working well. 0-6; good etrc:ct or the lady-in-waiting ries were apt to be heavy, taking the Askin, lost to Mackenzie, to shapele" are only natty to the initi- The cells are locked only aL night; 1-6; 0-6; rramed in 'the doorway against the blades out of line, and making the Berolzhei�er, to Nicolf, ated, of WhiCh, alas, we arc not. IIUI1l- the men working in the fi elds are ui- Manshlp . blue sky and garden. lungcs. clumsy and unbalanced. Nicollf-:-- to � bered. _ .tJor bas a hasty study at re- imost unsuPet'Yis.ed, and, f\llh.ough the . I displayed far ffie Dest form, guardiilg cent fallhion books revealed the hid- "rison gntcs are closely watched, the -Vie were sorry 110t to hear the well_ well and making her t.hruflts clean den nppeal of faded wool' socks nnd guards inside the prison carry neith- remembered lines to the queen's mir and swiCt. Pcrlormances, on the LETTERS ancient sneakers. • r firearms or clubs. ror, but the voice of the mirror, in whole, however, promised well fot So may we respectfully urge tbe The prnblem oC work still awaits spite of its new song, \lias very Page T\\'ol charming. And then instead of danc next year, when the Juniors will (Conllnued from Iadoption nf milk-lunch-suits. It would oll1tion. Hundreds nf mel! arc idle , have had more practice in competi- day. Other modern, even more mod: take even less time to jump into ICenusc lhcre is barely enough work ing in �he nhviously impossible iron tion bouts. crn, poets are studied in the course these outRts, and a mere glance at or half o( t.he prisoners. Nevcrthe- ahoes, t.he cruel queen wss changed into a silly green frog, which �opped Mnnship won all her bouts on a in Venification. A carerul study of the owl design would assurf: that this this new Eastern State Penitell CIIS, quite clumsily acr4S!! the stage, to the speedy attack, in which she bore down contemporay drama is made in con- garment was not put on backwards. tiary is a tremendous . improvement I huge delight of the youngsters. "Snow upon her 6pponent apd drove her to nection with the course in Playwrit. We do ,hope that this helps the over the old-tashionctl penitentinrics, Neill. White" "was quite in the spirit if the wall. Nicoll, the runner-up, useH ing. In the same issue of the house parties problem, but plcasc do whttre the inmates nrc locked up at not in the letter of the (avorite fairy nn entirely different method, prefer- your editorial appeara the nn- not be too disappointed if when you Icast hair the day. as tale." ring to remain most of the time on nouncement of an elective in the mod- are "chic and attractive" aDd "cool ern novel and a new elective in con- and neat" and "ready {or anything Advcrtiscra in this paper are rcUa- the defense. then thrusting when she , • saw her chanc!;. The deciding bout temp6rary poets to be include4 in that might turn up," nothing does ble merchants. DeAl wit,h them. Read the advertiaempntt l ....e = , to --- .ay ___"_R0 7 A (rieo-d of CIIESTERFIELD write8 us of sale man wbo lind ftsometbing to 8UY": a s "I dropped into a little tobacco shop, and wbeo I asked for a pack of Chcst erfields Lbe mao smilcd aod told me [ was the seventh customer withollt a break to ask for Chesterfields. 'Smoker ( after smoker,' he said, 't.,clJs me that Cbesterfields click ...rseU five times as many Cbesterfields as I did a while back.' " .i YC8, there's somctbing to say about Chest erfieltls and it tukes just six words to suy jl-�tTbcy'rc mild and yet they sutisfy." • • • "n. LIOGaJT a NnII TOIIoMXlOCo. ' - . Page Six THE' COLI .EGE NEWS categorics. There wer ye (or what is mos� eiTective on the Mter thia lIucceas Diaghilev went ' sis upon raw tones ita passion for RussiillbBallet is e e , ahet to bt ge. p8as tll gold and m ta s and iuvic who wl l u ami n i {or Gret.'Ce and and made the t e predou! e l ita sen Synthesis of Arts Jr IllltionDlishs, the Russian 1 l onward ballet h , ;":) a or to perpetuate, the !;ty )c o o I 8u lty Ona of the truly lreaL f ...rsia. Diaghilev als o ni splendid instrument that our parents � " rc\·jvc, J rgll u..ocJ . kciill t itional u l n 1n- s i u achlc,'c�tmh wae cre ted b -- i.ht!· i hc r1W lt !4s u . of live evenings o( hi tor C mu- IIeKe)'it .JYr-sup ","ith PII,:ade" � It •'OnunulKI lI'Oin I"n OM) k unce CrQm Byzantium, nnd the Kl.riCIl went to ,€e. the uIlon of the g. cmuscs, Dlsghale. v Ili c.l ri during which' he played nu"iun the artistic developments in Paris, ( . . st h i ribbon ncrOIl their • 1. I u R'usslans hi'IUu .. to :;IC, an s , Ilg h ThII rttc. '8 '.;c.!huo ot w 0 .'en whose composers were fame many d P a o l toge� er. •...... prot>. and literally made the ot le s . . WOI' 'k o� M unich or had slutlil.'d Itlect:s, wa a CUblljtle representatI n o( the .b�&!It.a. ('ada i ulJly not even names to these Purisian an artist when he selected him to do � It m n Florence, The.te men stylizoo nus-n exc tem nl O • had bec6me, through a Ve . Diaghile\l'[I his sets. The origina! "Rus!lian Bal- l � o( a Jack-In-the.-Box' of a I y IIlU.. IC 0 next inva- , ell.r a highly sly�zcd, almo rit aian o 1 'lj show d d,spla circus y sl · painting in - an academy ( sion of Paris took the t the " S ori_ wm ow- l y, or of, a ., form o let was lav in inspiration and ualiz:!d ceremony. The plots mighl competent story-telling. The revolu- parade. It �.d no plot, l S at o- opera. Finally, the only thing which ental in subJcct matter, but the b1� ! � � • be taken from classical Ruman or [ion t Delacr�lx, or ourbet, reached qJhere was plot, In It a I ttle gl l o C he haa not shown the Weslern world leta that Diaghllev produced at thel - ! � mylhologiea, Racine; throurh . Itt n h l'!le ride even from only was is impossi- might mount a_ r �e- o a bl Gretk itu:-I!5in Cermuny. In the ballet. It quite height o( his power were cosmopoli- , , later Gautier wrote romnnlic I>tol'ic:o; W �stern knew Ru a music, Europe hie (or us to imagine the that tan costumes, cycle, and qUiver !Ike a picture on C i in their scenery, , t 'and the erm an rch log ul only by Tchaikovkky and by Ru-... sur�ri�e music, 8Cr�cn Alter :Ica�o had stopped tot- the Par sians got at that first per- and dancing, When the ballet waa i , inspn cQ lee �iu : discoveriel in Egypt red n bu l t +t end the i c n r - Cz d s gn g tor D ghllev, the st of the be ause we orc il ami no longer ependent 011 the a;r and � l ln IB r� i P JCllstciu. or century, fOl" ance d called "The Daughter of hnr.ooh." a blur ot impressionism, liarm WI , "modern his repertory Bounded lIke a history /rancc, q( th mUllic," I:!uch os His court for 8UpJ)(n't, it could alford . mod At the end tj'le nirieteenth century, i!:llgland (ollowing close as Ol! sey, w h of to 0 ern FJ't!nch .pa lRtin,g. Andre of �1lI1 DlI bu it absll'act painting abandon the inherently Slav over_ 1 f the ballet had ol ost petrillctl Into .ible France, were totally Deraln and enr Matisse were m I't.l oCter cubism, and with the dancers or a tonet for a more local reference. They . H i . a on worked for a superb technical instru:ncnt which uJlprepared tor the D!ftnllhlhment a La t It suf- could European as well as Ru g.. � � the IllllRtc who Degas or u rec picture. be � repeated itself in all its eRsootinla for they were to re eive in the I thIS tireless RUSSian. which c flees to that this first ballet, sian;. what Is more important ..!.... \hey Hussia the onl)' t e Russian Ballet.. IIUY form of h which ':Vas the a un versal. ,!,he greatest In the s�ond J�tur? on, Wcdllesda¥ fi fty yean. WIIS IIOt. I Pavilion D'A n,�i(lc, could be i I place where there were ballets About this S 'o( changea fi s were made afternoon, Kirste In dll�cussed the ; time ergei Puvlovitch revivifying the France of the at r t in the Mr. her Academic tionale lJ w C , rly h story the }o�rance had Nll i lhi v, an aristocrat from rand Sietle, was more Brun than scenery and costumes. An important Lu f of the ballet before e u Sl. Le UlU I nine enth c ntu ry, stressing the d la Musique et de la Danse since .J�clzraburg, visited Paris and atlw the \Vatteau, �he characters of which step l been taken, for example, l c ' tact But Rusaia (rom France nnd thut exhibitions of the Impres�ts were the people who danced in th the -I the Russian ballet took ita clc 1643. e wben costumes were finally dc It ly ha kind o st wi gan e ( m th a d created a ' t le Monet, Picasso, Gaugin and Van court ,masques \f Versailles, and the signed th an eye to the stage on e � e French, its acrobat whic w t)'oo p ics Italian, then com h u neither formal or Cogh He brought a number of theM. general tone of which was a lIIixture which they were tQ be worn, Ste (rom the and ga t too no . the m re pe fectl ele n on the one hand, r too works I)ack to Russia, and 8ma%OO pastorale and (etc galante, rece v- by step the baUet progressed. onward bined two O r y to ex on other, styl of 01 i an idea, was its aim. acrobatic the a e the academic artists. Then he sent cd tremendous applause. Never from the orientalism of Bakst, whORe press which He suited to be used, be- the dancing admirable Rus.sian art to Paris, and Leon Bakst, (ore hnd Paris seen n dancer who sets were a riot of color in blue blues, told the dancine- history of i do e rig tly, the exp ession late y insky, a t n ll (or r n young Jew, who had become at- could make a .series of astonishing and green greens. "It has been said N j nd showed a number o( dramat c ideas. t of slides showing i lnched o Daighlev's group, designed turns in the air, leap perpendicular- that his art was too often vulgar, different choriogra- ng The arts of paint whiCh nstur- the installation, B;l.ksl was 0 great Iy his own height, cross his feet ten barbaric and effective only 8S phy positions... i , a blow nk ------• nlly influencoo the settings of the luminary in the constellation of the times in the air, and si after paus- between the eyes, partly because it ballets, were divided into two big Imilet, an oriental, with an amazing .. "t the cre8t ot his leap. . was a Jewi8h art. with its empha- Rea • , ILLUSION, Josie, the lovely trapeze artist, stands upon a small platform. . At the wi ll of the magician she leaps twenty feel into the air to reach her trapeze. She uses no ropes, no ladder phe nomenal leap fo woman or a man 1 A r ••• I a FUN IXPLANATION, uS TO BE EbO£EIJ Josie didn't jump •..she was The twenty-foot leap sprun,! is not dependent on J06ie's ability, but on a powerful spring mechanism hidden beneath the stage which propels the i FUN upward through the air. The force is viol8n that theart ladyst .... IrS MORE TO ..£VO W so Magic has its place ••• but not in ciaa· Such magic, however, seldom hoJas wean a light steel jacket which protects her from injury � as • .,be 'tarts ber astonishing leap. reUe advertising the audience. Your tasle �nally tells Consider the illusion that there is you the truth. a mysterious way to give cigarettes Thecig arette flavor that neverstales, superior HOovor." 8 never.varies, never loses its fr esh 0(:" Cigarette flavor can peal, comes (rom mild, ripe, fragrant, IXPLAHAnONI be controlled by adding artificial flavor� tobaccos ...blended to ujJenJiu ings. By blending. And by tbe quality bringmore out the full, round flavorof each of tobaccos used. type of leal. It's the qualityoftbe to Cheap, raw tobaccos cen be "built bacco that counts! up" or "fortified" by the lavish use � fact, wen known by of artificial Havorings. It ...... 1....-' ..., leaf toba«o experts, that Camel, are made from finer, MOR.any other lXPENSIVI papular tobocco. brand. _n _ 1tIPr Because Caritet actually pays millions more every year fo r choice tobaccos, • you find in Camel. an appe1llingmild· ness, a better flavor. And Camels cooler because taste Humidor Pack of tbre� the w.ldtd ply, AiOlSTURB.PROOP ceIIopbane keeps them fr .... HO T.lU CKS •• JUST COSTllER • TOBA CCOS ,