i THE MICHIGAN DAILY .~ t tour Ease of Mind Self-possession and personal" effici- icy depends largely upon the clothes you wear. we are your tailors you Will always have that ,eling that comes with Clothes of Character G. H. WILD COMPANY LEADING MERCHANT TAILORS STATE ST. 1, mom S ECI' ,AL For this Week only all Grawiord McGrogor SGOLF CLUBS IICH6XDAL Official newvsp)aer- at the Univervity of Michigan. 1 Iblished leve:ry morning except Monday d oriw.g 1'e univ ersity year. j Enrtered at the post-ofliice at Ann Arbor as second-class 'oat ter. Francis F. McKinney..,Managing Editor Jchn S. L eonard.......... business Manager Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- d~ltt o.;-Curys ~uc soSpl Store, The 1)el ' , cor Packard' and State.1 P'honies: i;.,,ness, 960o; Editorial, 2414. ('uniutctio~snot to e.xceed 30o words it length, or of e. 1 vents will be published in T he Daily i f lft at the office in the Ann Arbor P'ress BhtJg., or in the notice box in the west corridor of the general library, where th de notices are lletetd at 7:00 o'clock each E, Rodgers Sylvester News Editor T011 C. Reid.............'Telegraph Editor Verne lwtnet.............'legraph Editor ' f . f'. W'righ.................Sports Editor J.- C. B. !'a:rker.......... Assignment Editor Cnad N. C urci)...............City fEditor Edwin A. Htyman....... ........City Editor Lee Jo~lvn............... ..City Editor Gordon I). Cooke........... tnl itical E.itor Golda Ginsburg .............. Womren's Editor Edward E. Mack ........ Adverising lanager RI. Kirk White.......... Publication Manager Y. R. Althseler....... Circulation 'Manager C. V. Sellers........... .Accountant C. 'T Fishleigh . .Assistant Business Mianager $2175 Drivers, now 2.5Brassies, now 2.25 Irons, Popular Model .. $2.25 - 2.2'5 1.75 GOLF BAGS at REDUCED PRICES SEE 'SW STUDENTS BOOKSTORE Nly ,I:t Editors '. I Leonard W, Nieter L, . S.Tlhoinpson Ilenley hill Earl Pardee J. L. Stadeker II. C. L. Jacksonl DETROIT UNITED LINES I Between D-troit, Ann Arbor and Jack son. Cars run on Eastern tinge, one hour faster. than local time. Detroit Limited and -Express Cars-S:io a.I mn. alld hourly to 7:1u p. 51n., 9:1o P- In. Kalamazoo Limited Cars -8:48 a. mn. and every tNo hours to 6:48 P. in.; to L~ansing, 9:,j8 p. Il. Local Cars, Eastbound-5 :35 a. mn., 6:40 a, m, 7:05 a. mn., and every two hours to ' :05 p. n., 8:o5 p., Im., 9:05 p. i., 10:50 11.nm. To Ypsi. .anti 11onl, 8:48 a. Inl. (daily except Sunday), 9:20 a. tm., 12:0; 1p. n., 6:o5 1p. n., 11:45 P. Ell., I:10 a. inl., 1:20 a. 11. Local Care, Westbound---6 :os a,.in., 7:50 a. 11:1, and every; tw'o hours to 7:50 p. n5., 10:20 p, nm., 12 :s a. in. The Ann Arbor Sayings Bank Organized 1869 Capital ...........$' 300,400.00 Surplus.... ..$150,000.00 Resources over .... $3,000,000.00) Blanking in all branches 1111n. office, N. IV. Corner M~ain and Huron Sts. Braneb Office, 707 North, Univ- ersity Aye tue. STATE AND GERMAN AMERICAN SAVINGS BANK Main $ Washington Sts. Rle,~V~ $295:0090OO1OO FRA'TERNITIES Let mie figure with you on your next year's supply of coal. N*%ow is the time to loots after next year's coal supply. Juo. J. SAUTER Phone 2484 '310 W - Liberty most tolerable kind of warfare ac- " cording to the feelings of our {ld-y * * Present day warfare has al '-bso;lutely nothing in common wvithl knightly warfare. To burn out the enemy's eyes or lungs, to 1 bombard unfortified towns and villages from the air, from the depths of the wart's to rip the bellies of defenseless ships car- rying men or goods, to kill or maim women or children, old men and sick people with air bombs! 'or torpedoes, is this more chival- rous than our attempt to cut off from the enemy the opportunity of buying and selling, and so com- pel him to cease his shell fire?'" We might have avenged the wrongs of our trade long ago "if Germany had not been doing us a wrong that affects us far more deeply, for almost a year, by the murder of American citi- zens. The sorrow of the widowed, of the orphaned, of mourning par- ents, cries more loudly to heavena than the loss of merchantmen.", "The submarine war does not v Iolaite any of the soveoreign rights 01, men andl nations. It can not. but violate them if' it is not con- fined to warships." Our feeling toward Germany was embittered by the plots of her na- turalized partisans here: "~From their error arose the second element of poison. To pick and choose all the tasty morsels from our country (the United States) and at the first storm to behave as a raging German or frious Irishman---that would be an intolerable. piece of presump- tion." Hie then reviews at some length the conditions and incidents which led to the diplomatic isolation of tche Cen- tral Powers and the cementing of the ])resent Entente Powers, next launch- ing into a bitter attack on the "nili- tarism" of his nation. "That militarism alone can guarantee constant readiness of every limb of the body politic for the rapid transition to war is Iroved by Germany's achievement, which is unequaled in the history of the world.. That is, in the ma- terial sphere; as a spiritual achievement many will p)lace high- er the voluntary enlistment of three million island and colonial 1 ng"lishmen, the heroic endurance and self-sacrifice of the Serbians and the French, fighting in the very face of the enemy. T~wenty million heroes area fighting be- tween Antwerp and Trebizond, and the majority grew, up in tin- military countries." Harden demands "no armed t but a firm peace" and prodicel downfall of the military or-de(- -1 1 ariiing that "the days of comptI armaments are deyad," and that K' a rms are ma~de be taken outofW reach of private buisiness, and be V wholly a goveornment industry. j looks forward to a pooling of > even large ones aftel, the wa , makes some attempt to soWN qIuestion of the huge war deficit:. which he says it will take 60 i . to recover, unless these can be i4~ talined by some credit arrang . . ' re sult will be "what has happ31e'1edt befoi e anydAthere on P ( 't" 'tiuiiitlcd on Page @' it ' ;,. ... Seniors! Time's Flying Order Them Now CallingCad Price $1.50 to $3.50 per hundred with plate Aw1 R'& W ~m KfVNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES Hot Water usually stops when the furnace goes out. Hot Water 'all summer with a Gas-Fired Heater. Wash tenaw Gas Co. rimma"Mmm We Have a FULL LINE OF Cut Flowers and Plants For All Occasions CUS IN"S & HALL 1002 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. Phone t115 1I 'Reporters IT. .\. 'Vitzgerald Cecil Andrews Tintotn 13. Dinotd .,". A. Baumgarth Blruce Swalney 'E L. Ziegler W. 12. Atlas F+ rank 'Taber Nat ,' lhoms,,t)1IHolland Thompson Phil P'ack 11. C. Garrison Allen Shoenfield D. S. Rood C. WV. Neumann Jas. Schermerhorn, Jr. Business Staff Albert E. Borne Roscoe Ran E. C. Musgrave F. .M. Sutter K. S. MfcColl L. W. Kennedy C. P'. Emery Bernard Wohl J. E. Campbell 1, t I I , W., 'I mmmi . 2 -1 SATUJRDAY, JUTNE 3, 1916. IHAVE IT! Wea~xbetter tihan Leather VA N'1S QUALITY SHOE SHO The Nlew Shop, 1114 S. Univer-Sily ASK FOR and GET THE ORIGINAL +c d_> substitutes cost YOU same price. I- TYPEWRITIG MIMIEOGRAPU"ING I MULTIGRIAPRINGI Hamilton Business College State and sW ilan'sI . II You know there's a difference in clothes; it's in the genuine and lasting distinction of appearance- due to reel knowledge of fashion and design with real care for the nit'eties of dress. I , Mmks Capper & Capper Furnishings D. B.GRENNAN REAL CUSTOM TAILOR 606 E. LIBERTY STREET Nigh:. Editor.....,,.Leonard W. Nieter~ OF THE kIGHTEENTH INTPR- ' .SCI iOLASTIC M\ichi gan holds this week-end her eighteenth Interscholastic track meet. Hiigh school athletes have gathered in Ann Arbor from all parts of the tmid- dle west to compete for athletic hn- orns on Ferry field. These athletes of the secondary schools represent the best in their institutions. They are the college men of tomorrow. Michigan undegraduates are hosts for it(day. It l5 out' (uty anld i-- Iege to entertain these boys, and nt ')nly to make dhini eel at home, but foeil that Ann Arbor is the place for them to come to college. Tell them whly you curve to Michigan. Tell them why you have enjoyed your years it Ann Arbor, and whry you are ,glad you did not go elsewhere. Point ot the opportunities for work alichign and some of the opportunities for pleasurc', and don't forget to go to the mass-mneeting tonight in Uill au- ditorium. Be good hosts! Wlll+,4ILL 1,PEACE COME? Everyday finds discuson of peace in the press of our country, the forum oif the world. Pr'eident Nilson, by his spe citbes, makwi it } nown h) desires" to act as mediator whien the proper time appears to be at hand. The strongest appeals conecrot from the Allies, but front Germany, whose chancellor, despite bitter words of caution from public mnen of his state, talks in conciliatory words. The following points of view may be taken as representative H-err von Grafe recently said in the Reichstag:l "Give the German people their right (to conduct unrestrained warfare at sea) before It Is too late, before the pen and ink have sp oiled and lost all that our bloody sword has won" Answering; this demand, a sociali:Nt speaker, de fending the government position said: "Under no circumstances the socialists in favor of the continut- aition of the war for the sake of nitre or less insane objects of con qutet. Annexation of terri- tory is in no 'ray consisten with the true interests of the people." W'e may assume that the most dis- tingulmahed of German publicists, Maxi- nmiflian Hiat-den, represents pretty well tnle most enlightened opinion of his coint'yrne. On. April 22 in his news- paper, "Di1e Zkunft," Tie *u~lisied a most remarkat1lo article called "If I Were Wilson," an Imagined address by our president, urging th; belliger- enrt nations to peace. The artile is striking because its sentiments are very sang, very much like America's, aird indicate h0: profound desire for peace, beside suggesting the funda- mental conditions of settlement. lie accept, President N+, jsn as mediator with this comment "Attempts are made to lower in public opinion the president of the United States as a tuilon'os ani contemptible fool. Muchet greater men have borne In silence Isimilar insults for decad&." JEvery warring warring natiorn as- sails 'us (the United States) w^ith its arg~umntls and justifications: "Great Britain is carrying on an Industrial war against Gem- many, prevents- the importation of provisions, and ays: This form or warfare is not only per- mitted and has been customary from olden times uip to the pres- ent against beleaguered towns and counries, but it is also the re e denor goldndecor din' to what-youApui n 'em. A little V LXI'Twifpt a lot o' a y' ourS N ->,"A- A~et-. 13 i 0 SAM-I BURCHELELD &CO* Fine Tailoring LOOK INI'O THIS ". IM'ay Fcstiva l artists make The policy taken out in ~the Provi- l lRecords. chache crle & Son. denTf' ~t ( ife Ind Trust Co. at an early ......-...._m__- -...._._ Victor t ufl a J1 ! into b- t k.nhe-t ' 'Four w ' ' sity ~;tAW1i itseli ~ lii('h v. 'i';i{l 1cC~a :. a- , - .t(('eptant e a~ a m-igk tai'o . 1~ - HauLer, Distm-~ Ag-- at - ~1e 1 'i w halO ~utt1 Trast to. - U. - ;- -An; tf 1:1 g W" .!. :"Y l. o F; i. . a , lh' t Sc'A ''-" _,a