PAGE SQL IiIE MICHlUAN D.hIL . PAGE SIX ThiE MICHiGAN DAILI. A NEW WALK-OVER FOR YOUNG MEN Gip,' CALENDARSW For Picture Inserts - The grandest line ever shown-made to fit any size pictures- some for enlargements-and they make most wel- come "little gifts." Don't put it off until the last niunte, bring in your negatives now. .-LYT DON- ) "Windsor" Model English Walking Boot in dull black, or Tan Russia Calf. Plump single soles $ .45 & $500 I GYMNASIUM SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN-RUBBER OR LEATHER SOLES Prices 70c to $1.90 per pair Just received a New Basket Ball Shoe for Men ONLY $3.00PER PAIR-HEAVY SUCTION RUBBER SOLE ______ ______ ______ ___-W a a The "Windsor" is especially recommended to young men who want the style of the "hour" at moderate price. A last smart $astern shops are featuring in their highest grade boots at highest prices Our price $4.50 -5.00 HOFFSTETTER'S WALK-OVER BOOT SHOP 115 S. MAIN ST. Makes Photographs with Correct Color Values of Paintings, of Drawings in Monochrome or Poly- chrome, and of Colored Objects. Has Photo- graphed more Original Manuscripts on Parch- 713 E. UniV. Ave. ment than an oeaelse inthe State. Home Portaitue aSpecialty. ii 1SO YOU EVER THINK of the part QUALITY plays in the durability of the goods that you buy? DO YOU EVER REFLECT that QUALITY means SERV- ICE and that SERVICE is really the thing you spend your money for? TAYLOR ATHLETIC GOODS give you SERVICE because there s QUALITY of work-' manship and material built into every article. Supplied by Law '17 1317 Washtenaw Aie. TeL. 1619-M "Goods for every sport." HUERTA PLOT PUTS BOY-ED AND PAPEN IN DEEPER WATER (Continued from Page One.) the safe transport following the re- call of the naval and military attaches, and will also-require a similar guar- antee for the successors qf Boy-ed and von Papen in their trip from Ger- many to the United States. In other words, Germany will insist upon naming the two officers who suc- ceed the two attaches, and will call upon the United States to see that they IARRET CLARK WRITES ON FRENCH DRAMATISTS (Continued from Page Four.) one as a self-made titan, a cosmopoli- tan man of the world, yet withal es- sentially French." A significant fact concerning the modern French audience, which is, as he says, the best trained one in the world, is its flagging interest in the poetic drama. The statement to this effect which the author makes will certainly cause a stir, if not conster- nation, in the camp of the American champions of this dramatic form. If the French, who ought to enjoy poetry from behind the footlights if any na- tion can, are beginning to tire of it, what can we predict- for those who look to Stephen Phillips and Mr. Mackaye and others to save it for us? Mr. Clark has produced an excellent work and one that will be of great value to the student of the modern French drama. Notable features for the serious student are the thorough index and bibliography which it in- cludes. The fact that most of the chapters were previously published as separate papers accounts for occasion- al repetitions of information (cf. pp. 7 and 73) and there are, of course, the inevitable minor typographical errors. These do not subtract from the value of the book, however, and it can be unreservedly recommended to those who care for the field which it covers. L. S. T. SENTENCE KARL BUENZ TO U. S. PENITENTIARY PROU. V. VAN TVNE ATTACKS ANGELL'S PACIFIST THEORY (Continued from Pa;; One.) experience aid not the will-o'-the-wiEp bearing untried theories. "Norman Angell has always been a sort of unit of discontent, unattached, disporting himself in a political vacuum. The practical statesmen of his own country have wisely been aware of him. His very methods of using history make one suspicious of his conclusions, and when one tries to' get from him facts to support his as- sertions, he answers, as he answered me last evening, with a gush of senti- ment impugning your conscience and your morals. Then with the air of having embalmed that fly in the am- ber liquid of his discourse, he pro- ceeds on another subject. When I asked him for a diplomatic precedent, or the name of an international lawyer or authority to support his assertion that we were free when the war began either to sell ammunition to both con- testants or to neither, he answered af- ter a wiggle or so, that his authority: was an article in the New Republic which on examination proves to be his own article. Asked how we could announce a policy in international af-! fairs and then persist in it when our changing parties force changes in our policy constantly, he answered, "Oh, we are going to change your Ameri- can politics." A light and airy way, truly, for a foreigner to tell us that he is going to change what is fundamen- tal in our American politics! I think that it was plain to all that he was quibbling when he said that his oppo- nents used to say that human nature made war inevitable, but that now they say it is the Germans. Of course the madness and preju- dice of war causes men to say pas- sionate things, but such temporary aberration does not destroy the truth of an earlier assertion as that human nature makes war inevitable. One can't get away from the conviction that in Mr. Angell's science and art of oratory, truth is desirable as an ornament, but brilliance is indispen- sable. It is for these reasons that in times like these I regard such a speech as his as a public danger. Too many are trying to make our hearts and our minds soft and flabby with sentiment when the times call for strong hearts and sternly logical minds. When we Wlhec',, of Justice."' Ae;o Charlie Chap~lin tai\"Work",.''two parts. Titesday, I~tC. 7--Julius Steg r it, "[he Masler of thte House." Equi ia?. AlOUniay, Leccibter 13-Charlie' Chapin in "In the' Bank' . Two pails. I ; . . - Quality--Variety--Values IAMONns JEWELERS ATCs SCIANDER E 3 3 1 BERIY NNARBo SILVERSMIS NAR p SCH[ ANMERER & SEYPRLEP have safely ridden this storm in hu- man affairs, we may safely in calmer seas try the experiments of the dreamers." CA-y . I USIC AL CLIA-BS WilL OIVE NOVELTY CONVERT (Continued from Pae Four.) 5. (a) Wild Rose and First Love - --- --- .-- -.- -- Debois (b) Swing Alo ub,...Marion Cook Glee Club i. Rag Time ........ ......... Sextet Forsythe, Wheelcr, Davis, Aldrich, Macomber, Scanlon 7. Sunset............Van de Water Varsity Quartet-Baxis, Crover, Wil- son, Hiett 8. Serenade ............ Moszkowski 9. Hawaiian Melodies ... ......... . ....... . .......Hawaiian Musicians 10. Prayer of Thanksgiving (Nether-. land Folk Song) Arr. by Kremser Glee Club 11. The Yellow and Blue ....,.... . ....................Cayley-Stanley Combined Clubs FIRE IN BAN K DISABLE S T'IE TELEPHI'ONE EXCHANGE (Continued from Page One.) through the north wall, it is probable that the entire wall will have to be torn away, making the work of re- TE A DANSANTS Beginning Monday, Nov. 29, we are institut- ing our Afternocn Parties. Dancing will begin at 2:30 P. M. and continue until 5 P. M. A very appropriate Luncheon will be served during the Dansant for 60c a couple. NEW DELTA CAFE Entrance on Packard Street E. LI 17 TY l 7 ' M~c ou ~pp meks ith as 86002 as possfible for the MICHIGANENSIAN PICTURE (You'll have to do it eventually; why not now?) 334-336 So. STATE ST., ANN ARBOK SKATES AN0 HOCKEY SUPPLIES See the Comobination Outfit Shoes and Skates Comp le, only $4.40 BASKET BALL AND INDOOR BASEBALL GOODS GEORGE J. MOE Exclusive Athletic 711 N. Univ. Ave. pairing exceedingly difficult. Men will be at work the whole of today and to- morrow, but it is hoped that Tuesday will see the exchange again in work- ing order. At 1:40 o'clock men were reported to have left Detroit, bringing a new cable on motor trucks. B asiness Opportunity Just right for two students. $4,000 takes established business clearing over $200 per month. If you mean business; write Michigan Daily, Box XX. nov27tt 2255 2255 2255 2255 are permitted to get to Washington in safety. Reichstag Discusses Peace London, Dec. 4.-The momentous decision reached by the German gov- ernment to permit peace discussion in the Reichstag is regarded here as the clearest indication that Germany is preparing to lay down her arms if acceptable conditions can be obtained. The government's decision follow- ing the authorization given to the German press for a free discussion of peace possibilities, and the discussion of the almost unanimous decision to end the war along with governmental sanction to bring about peace in the Reichstag, lends to Thursday's ses- sion of lthat body the importance which it is impossible to overestimate. The entire world is waiting for re- ceipt of news from the imperial chan- cellor, Bethman-Hollweg, while these rumors are current. The last of these coming from The Hague, obviously from a German source, is to the effect that the Kaiser intends to proclaim peace on his arrival at Constantinople. Submarines Sink Two More Ships London, Dec. 4.-The British steam- ers Middleton and Clan Macleod have been sunk by submarines. Four of the Middleton crew were killed and the Middleton was sunk in the Medi- terranean. Nineteen of the crew were landed at Malta. Russians Capture German Commander Berlin, (via Wireless), Dec. 4.-The German commander of a division has been captured by the Russians in the fighting southwest of Dvinsk. It was officially admitted this afternoon. The war office, however, denied that any other German officers were captured at the same time. CLOTHINe from the House of Euppenhemer on sale by N. F. Allen & Co., Main areet. wed-eoa Seniors, don't delay. Have your Michiganensian pictures made at Hoppe's -studio. dec4,5 (Continued from Page One.) by Judge Howe in the United States for Germany, and ex-consul general at District Court today to serve one and one-half years at the penitentiary at Atlanta for conspiring to defraud the United States government by obtaining clearances falsely sworn to. Dr. Buenz is now in his 73rd year. George Koetter, superintending en- gineer of the Hamburg-American line, and Adolf Hochmeister, purchasing agent of the line, also received sen- tences of one and one-half years. Jo- seph Poppinhaus, the youngest of the convicted sonspirators, was sentenced to one year and one day at Atlanta. CAMP DAVIS MEN PL AN NOVEL DANCE (Continued from Page Four.) The men who go to Camp Davis, in the northern part of the state, each year to learn surveying are, when they return to the campus in the fall, a body of strongly organized enthusiasts of the Camp Davis season. Each man in the class is able to call any other man by his nickname or to tell hi party number by hearing the party yell. The result of such organizations as this and a desire to keep it alive has resultcd in the, camp dance be- coming a permanent insttiution. It is looked forward to by the men while they are still at camp and is the' main topic of conv ersation just now ano2 the senimr civils. "'TENTION S IDES!" For quick :EtSENGER CALL see last ad or, PACK OF TELEPHONE DI- RECTORY. Phone 795. 17E Buy your Mazda lamps at Switzer's, 310 South State. oct23tt In future all cars stop at Goodyear's Drug Store. tf Yes. Tenderloin Steaks cooked right before you at 911 N. University. I I call on Hoppe for your up pictures. dec4,5 EXCLUSIVE young men's haberdashery on sale W, F. Allen & Co., Main street. by i a lem I I in