Anne's coming is only the begin- ning of the f1reworks. But her grand- mother llnds her always honest, the chief merit of the tUpper, perfectly ready to acknowledge the new and simple code of life by which she lives. Anne is indeed a "fiapper." Yet as any class has as many kinds as it has individuals, she is not all fUpper, but only "FUpper Anne." She has beeni brought up with the maximum of, freedom by an indulgent father who becoming the victim of a paternal' qdalrn on his deathbed, wills her his, fortune only in case she goes back' to his old home in Georgia. arriving on or before her twentieth birthday/ to spend a year with her grandmothers It is on this little old grey silk fltrure that the rocket of Anne's personality' descends. But not even descends un- til exactly one hour after the appoint- ed time go that her little trrtuuimoth-, er, whose reputation for truth har been kept clean through these many" years. goes about turning the' hands of all the clocks back an hour. But in the end the he-man comes along to tame the undisciplined Anne and we end on the hopeful note: "She imisted mildly that she believed Anne was a good girl " tteart--whieh is precisely what I think of her my- self-and saved from being a bad one by the skin of her teeth." Whether all the (upper: nre thus snatched from the burning or not, we are un- nble to “y. The style is sprightly, the analysis' is fairly keen. and it holds your in- terest. Yet there is that element of talking about the characters instead of letting them talk for themSelves, The writer even enters " "I," a for- eign Roating element not in the story and entering, for me obtrusively. " a scene shifter accidently caught up- on the stage. ' Cora Harris has gone about the dif- ficult tank of interpreting the "ttap- per." She is quite frankly interpret- ing. as explained in her "note to the, reader" at the beginning. and inter- preting to those of her own genera- tion, just beyond the "pper. As if they all sat down to tea together and talked it over, in a very kindly ppirit, and tried to realize what was the meaning of this strange youthful phe- nomenon. If you like that sort of thing, you will probably like the book, for it is quite Well done. THE WAY OF THE FLAPPER Little Brown & Co. has published "Craie's Wile? the play which A: well u'hnvingj ttreeeutAwinur'tt run in New York has just been awarded the-Pulitzer prize for this year's best drama. ' Dodd Mead Co. Announces a an book by Stephen Lucoek, "Wrrutowed Wisdom," for publication in June; 'here in in the book, any in publish- in. 1 recipe for dandelion wine which Is worth the price of the volume. Which in all very well hut will Mr: Lucock dig the dandelion: , 'F New Summer Shirts . By Corn Harris “cushion Millin Co. "FLA PPER A N NE" PARAGRAPHS YOUR CLOTHIER' 13 S. St. Johns Axis. Phdne3ttT Rich in texture, tailored to a finish- ed smartness arid pleasently at- tractive in patted design and color combinations - the kind of shirts which ybu should have at least a dozen for the summer months. Madras, light English broadcloths and poplins - with or without eol, lars attached. F S.FELL ! “Clovercin. a young Harvard profes- sor, in the eye through which it is y,' seen, chosen by the author perhaps " because against his academic buck- J' ground the great commercial, money- i raising. education-spreading universi- ‘ty is thrown in sharper relief. It is the old versus the new in education. ! the thing for which Harvard' stands 'as against the ideal of the dynamic. I unkempt, self~made president of Eure- j ka University. Here women are taken ,in on the same basis with men, ind I education is for the many not for the ; cloistered few. V , It is very flttirte that the hum of a great Middle Western Univeriitty " which is in "Chimes" the University (tt Chieatro, should be written. ‘And ( Robert Herriek, having undertakeh the "ask, executes it with thoroughness, 'perham too much thoroughness for the casual reader, He has tried to give the development of the unher- lsity in thought and deed since the ltime when from a raw prairie, there rage half a dozen isolated stone build- xngs. Mr. Herrick his taken one person- ality after another and attempted to make it clear, though he does so i lit- tle stifrly la has not sumeiently 'welded them into a whole. The ele- ment of the story does' not weigh heavily in the book, the stilted ro- mance of Clavercin and Jessica Mal- iory, wife of a coileagué and a woman scientist. T This seems to serve a slight purpose except as a level to lift the book from the class of history where it would have been a more influeptial work, into that of fiction where it does not quite belong. _ UNIVERSITY L-PAtyr AND _ PRESENT ( LITTLE, BROWN & CO. DOD BLY A PRIZE A NOVEL PRECIOUS BANE E. P. BU". 203V t co. m YORK By â€Y "a" French Committee ' Annual Prize for "the Best Work of Mon" THE GOLDEN BEAST r Fun!“ Vic Hm PHI! to! "the But WNW By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM " 00 at "bore- “It b one of the Ion; stoHeC'--The Boston Transcript. $2.00udl Booksellers _By Robert Herrick The MuMIll-n Co. Oppenheim Vat . His Best Publutseen Bom- by. Wain" “CRIMES" Polydtretylism, or extra fingers, Miss Lloyd's studies reveal "has A strong tendency to be inherited." Many variations of extra fingers and toes, Were found to exist. but the anomalies appeared to be in close re- The young woman’s research includ- ed anomalies of the skull, the trunk and extremities of the body and their transmission from generation to gen- eration, in many instances, according to the Mendelian law. Extra thumbs and fingers, web-toes or web-fingers and similar anomalies Miss Lloyd in- vestigated thoroughly; also osstflea- tion of the cochlea which causes par- tial or complete deafness. In the mat- ter of deafness in children, she quotes Shambaugh who surveyed the Chicago schools in 1925, finding 50 per cent of the deafness to he congenital. with 57.9 per cent of these children to- tally deaf. _ . Summer Clearance Sale / at both shops ttp N. Michigan Ave. ' Mui, " i _ Chic-go Lake Forest Miss Lloyd in her studies investi- stated the physical histories of many families and traced certain defects over several generations. She receiv- ed co-operation from various hospital! and many medical authorities. A Cen- era) oninion which she formed by rea- son of this research was that "traits appearing in numerous members of the family may be assumed to be of hereditary origin, if they occur with a frequency which corresponds to the' exoected mode peculiar to the Men.. delian law of inheritance. Those traits which occur intermittently according to no law of frequency may be ob- served to be of somatic origin and considered as congenital characters." "Hate-lip and Cleft palate appear to he congenital in origin in the majority of on“: and were found to be so ir- regular in distribution, when there were several members in a family, that'no definite mode of inheritance Couldhe determined." T Studying other malformations, such as hue-lib and cleft palate. which are more or less prevalent, Miss Lloyd says of them: l a dome of Doctor of Philosophy u Northwestern for research work in biology.. She is reputed to be the, youngest of her sex ever to have won this coveted sword at Northwestern, and doubtless one of the youngest per- sons anywhere to have worked her way to that high educational pinnacle. The title of her dissertation was "The Inheritance of Skeletal Anomalies" and in it she demonstrated that dislo- (ation of the hip is congenital in oricin in a maiority of cases. ' Miss Bess 119ml, of Genoa, Illinois, who wag (animated from Northwest- ern, unmet-:33 in 1921. has just won' man PECULIAR FACTS Common Human Malformations Are 8mm of Investigation For Poet-Graduate at Northwestern MAKE STUDY or. l mummy LAW ' Summer Clearance Sale Smart Sports Hats; Coats. Dance Frocks Importations Gifts Italian Potteries, etc. TEMPORARILY stopping a leak sometimes makes matters worse. You want the pipe fixed to stay fixed-so call us in on the job. The Sport Shop of Lake Forest We sure know wimp-mi we speak. Never try m (In? a leak, m HIGHLAND PARK mas. HIGHLAND mm mm from the proverbs of Mr. Quick Even1if only as a low tort of pun, it does seem Worth while to ndd the footnote that the run is on the hm. - With no many new woman favoring abbreviated; skim, Mee- cessity" might easily be rumba for the mother of hosieryllnvention. lor where is the pride'that canjurviye . run in the stocking when it: coniplete exposure is assured by fashion’a ultim- piness with skirts? Truly prlde met]: before a run. And 'who has not keen surprised at sight of a silken ladder ascending from evemthe best regu- lated clocks t But from now pm Amer- ican women mar expect every shock- ing to do its full duty. _ A machine has been invented by Monsieur Serra of Lydns to make run-proof hasfery from silk, rayon, or cotton. m patent rights in England are heldby tht M. C. Foister company of Leicester. htion. After maï¬a: troll western, Mill Lloyd; 'oolt ta wor.k " Wauitteto.a0sisiyyryitr.i then studied two years It and 'G'i'l"ari'; of Illinois Medial trehooCtset4 My n- turned to Northwestern to I†for her doctor's degree iwhich IM, has Just won. . l T A writer 'in "Nntion's initial†pens as follows upon g new2 inee1trtmt'. KNEECESITY MOTHER 3 F ROSIERY f INVENTION THE ART GALLERIES is interested in rendering to its customers the' very best gas servitp possible. You can eo-operate with us by using economical and efficient gas binning ap- pliances. l i INTERIOR DECORATING PAINTINGS - BRONZES Welcome as Sunshine I', There isn't a member of your h'ousehoId-frorn two-year old Tommie to his three score-and-ten grandfather-wh? hasn’t daily use for running i)iot water. Not until you have running hot water at your faucets, justas you,; now have running cold Water, will your home be thoroughly modern. 'i' Let us install a Gas Water Heater in your home without delay. ‘Wihave var- ious types and sizes in a wide range of prices. Any one of them wi instantly end your hot water.ioroblem. ‘ iii":,,":,,, ill _ Only $10.00 Down I y I . _ . :91 ' _ '. “i _ . , ml; 0, 12 Months to Play it 1.1 . Running Hot Water F otAll 360 No. Michigan Arie. Wacker Drive It Bridge Chicago, Illinois North Shore Gas Compaiéy Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. _ . Evenings till 9 o'eioek It Will Be to Your Advantage .. sxu-A\ 'tc \.,/ /./. y, thtX?lt5 Si? will install one of these wonderful (gm Water Heaters in your home, so that your manly may enjoy all the advantages that our Seer makes possible. Why continue to wait for water to heat --why try to skimp on hot water when}. its abun- dance is essential to your family’s eomltsrtt Telephone aw pm: @194 Have our representative call ind give you full particulars regarding your hot water require- ments. This service is free. _ ' Your Gius Company Repairing and Remodeling Old Houses Tel. L. F. 485 EDWARD A. KUHARSKE 81' Imported Maid Solving Tm fpp & Colmrn Co. Jeweler: and Silversmith; ' 91f' Marshall field Annex q Buildim .Main Floor. Wrigley Building Chicago Telephone (both stores): Randolph 2562 iii' , kxiwogya "a lathe Bluff, Illinois 'a")',;))".'?')',;??',','.".))"] “Sham Are. Céncrete Work I. JUNV, "" 95:2"? am i'd H Iii It