'IHE MICHIQAN DAILY ,. _,._ _ti_..__ .._ FO it SPRING AND SUMIMER WEAR Our Suitingss are the choicest selection of the product ofv ills who, maintainr a repu- tation for honesty of material. WE INVITE A VISTA U I G. H, WILDL( LEADING MERCHANT TAILORS COMPANY S'TATE ST. hI Second 'SemesterI 5, TEXT BOOKS . NEW and SECOND HAND I *Drawing Instruments and..Supplies I. P. Loose Leaf Note Books STUDENTS BOOKSTORE - - - _- DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson. Cars run on Eastern fte one hour faster an local time.t Detroit Limited and Express Cars---8:to a. . and hourly to 7 :1o p.- in., 9 :1o p. tit.. Kalamazoo Limited Cars-S :48 a. /m. and very two hours to 6-:48 P. in.; to L,an'sing, :48 p. m. Local Cars, Eastboutd-5:35 a. in., 64o a. mi. :o.5 a. in., and every Iwo hours to 7-05 p. il., '.o p. m., 9:05 p. rt., ro:45 P.. ;TO Ypsi-t anti only, 8:48 a. mn. (daily except. Sunda.), 2o a. in., 1 2:05 p. n, 6 :05 H. im.,.tir:15 p ., r : r a. ni., 1 :30 a. in1. Local Cars, Westbound-6:iz .a. 11'... 7;.;( a.I nand every two h-ours to 7:50- P. qt.. 1o0:211 Mo., 12 :2o a. mn. - The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Organized 1869 Capital.... ...$ 300,000.00 Surplus.......... $ 150,000.00 Resources over ... .$3,000,000.00 Ba~nking in all branchesj Maio Office, N. W.' Corner Main and Huron Sts. Brancli Office, 707 North U~niv- ersity .Avenue. We Have a FULL LINE OF Cut Flowers and Plunts For All Occasions COUSINS HALL 1082 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. Phone 1 15 TYERITERS SHORTHAD MlMEQGRAPIO "L ery1Iint for thre Type'h'ut r" 0 D.MORR~ILL a~322 S. State St. a. 'AE AND GERMAN AMERICAN Coal Coke*Lube SAINSBAK I Planing Mill Specialties' Main & Washingiton Sits.^J N O.J. S AUE R Csourcesq $2,,50091000.00 Pho e 2484 310 W. Liberty' CliciaJ newspaper at the Univerity- 4 it I higan. Pnblihed eve:y morning except 2Vfnday durpg the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as ,e.oiid~class matter. Offices: Ani Arbor Press Building. Sub- ~criptions: by carrier or mail, .z-5o. Want ad. staions: Quarry's, Students' Suppy Store, The Delta, cor. Packard and State Phones: Business, 06o : Editorial . 24t. rancis F. MIcl'iney.M..\aaging Editor John S. Leonard......... Business ;tanager E. Rodgers Sylvester Niews Editor Toin C. Reid ............... elegraph Edito Verne Burnett .............elegrap. ditor F. 1'. Wright.................. sports Edito J. C. It. Parker..........ssignment Editor Conrad N. Church ...............ity Editor Edwin A. [lyman...............City Editor Lee Joslyn .. ...........City Editor rwin Johnson.......Chr. Ffliciency Board Gonr.on 1. Cooke.......... Statistical Lditor Edward lE. -Mack........ dvertising Manager R. irk White.......... Publication Manage Y. R. Althseer..- Circulation Maage C; V. Seler ............. .....Acountan C. T. Fishleigh . .Assistant Busiess Manager Nigh-t Editrs Leonard W, Nieter Wili= F . Newton KarlIPardee William I11. tort Reporters 11. A.\.Fitzgerald i .I,.Stadeke Waldo FR. -hunt Golda Ginsberg Martha Gray Nat 'Thompson W. R. Atlas R. T. McDonad fi. A. Taungarh L. S. T'hompson Bruce Swaney 12.. 1. Ziegler R. J4 Blum r C S. Iluntley Business Staff \1lhert T:.1florae Roscoe Ra- IX C. 'Musgrave f'. A. Stter X. S. Mtccoll L-. W. Kemedy C. l;. Camipbe~l SA7TURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1 1. Night Editor ............. R. J. Blum DEBATING AND MUD THROWING The student body shows all possible ,courtesy to a widely known and re- spected speaker, especially ifle comes as a guest of some university organization. But when hie speas for a bonus, and on a vaudeville stage, and whenT he publicly assails a local professor with violent words and untenable logio, it is no longer a question- of courtesy. The qiustioi is partly one of whether or not univer- sity opinion can treat the matter in a big, good humored way, rebuffing petty bravado with reasoned indf- ference. A few years ago it was pretty hard to tell whether Dr. Cooks or Como- dore Peary had the sounder claims to discovering the North Pole. Pro- le~rHobbs was one f the first wh discredited Cock's claims. The proof of time thus far has worked in such a way that Peary is now a rear-admir- al in the navy, and speaks before thousands in the °Hill auditorium, while Dr. Cook resorts to billboard advertising for his talks at vaude- villo houses. Dr. Cook deserves credit for his superlatively daring voyage, in which lie undoubtedly did get somewhere near to the north pole. But Profes- sor Hobbs. the scientist, proved con- clusively the impossibility of some of the details which the doctor claimed The professor Thursday night re- fused to degrade himself in a free-for- all of words with the explorer, and treated the matter with a big indif- ference at the moment the debate [ceased, and degenerated into mnud- th rowing. E IW(' AT{)RS ISIT ANN AR3OR FOLLOWING N. F*. A. CONFERENCE Geo. S .Lasher, '11, of Kansas State Normal College, at Emporia. Kas., Porter Graves, .'96, associated with one of the Kansas City, Mo., high schools, and A. F. Frazee., '12, of Lowell, were visitors on the campus yesterday, as was also Professor Sut- ton of Texas university. All are pay- ing short visits in the city, after at- tending the convention of the Na- tional Education association in De- troit. Lasher, who was on the editorial staff of The Michigan Daily from 1908 to 1911, was in the Union opera dur- ing those years, was a member of the Eremites and Phi Alpha Tau, besides holding a number of cuass offices. He was formerly' assistant state super- intendent of schools. :Frazee has just been elected sup~er- intendent of the Dowagiac schools. Since graduating from the University he has held a similar p~osition at LOW- ell, Michigan. Serious Illness Threatens Dr.:IHammel Dr. H. H. Hammel, of Tecums'gh, formerly assistant in gynecology and obstetrics, was brought back to Ann Arbor Thursday with symptoms of ,ty- ujid a nd pneumonia. elected Editorial EXAMIN E TI] SPRF]SSJfIs 5 (Sat. Eve. Post) They . have been howig upl th !poot colee student again. They ar alwvays at it. iorerly they exlained is vague imnpression that the Pui Wars wore fought in peru onithe ground that hie vitiated his mnind by soaking it with trivial current news- paper and magazine stuff. l ttry they have been testing him on the current stuff and find hie is s indefin- ite about H-anniba, Missoui, r;> he is about the gentleman who oc re O~ that name.rTw~o lEastern tin stitut ios of higher lea rning have onhlted an examination on the E7uropes n a i The average mark in one was fifty- eight; in the other somewhat lower. Of course everybody is duly appalled again over the abysmal ignorance of the average college studtent. Why not be appalied just once for all and be dlone with it? The precllt system must be harrowing to the st- dent. No sooner does he get some little decent rag1 over his mental a:- edness than up bobs a profesor to snatch it away. We wish the test (qustins about. the war could be submitted to tie Cl- lege Faculty and the marks reported We should like to sc how nar fifty-ih h dtr woaeaple over the students could come. The notion that, broadly speaking any- body knows anything acuratly out- side the special ble of work opn_ which his livelihood deends is an un- warranted academic assumt ion. The. things that all so-,aled oducted or well-inforiped men know with approx- imate exactness are astonishingly few- in number. No doubt it would be quit easy to framne fifty questions, satter- ed over the feld of kowlede but each one concerning a fact of prime importance to mankind, that nt five college professors out of a hundred could answer correctly. We do not think it is right to kee pulling the poor student's clothes off this way. If he does not know any- thing. whose fault is it? ('OMINEI) (LEE ANDI) ANDOLIN CL1UBS STAGE D±NE THIURSD)AY Plaborate arrangements are being made for the formal dancing partyl to be given next Thursday evening at' Granger's by the members of the com-1 tinied Glee and Manoln' clubs. The "conmittee in charge consists of David 3allentine, '16), chairmani, Prescott Smith, '18, Willis Brodhead, 'IE, and Rex St. Clair, '17. Mr. Theodore Harrison and Mrs. Harrison, Mr. Earl V. Moore and Mrs.. Moore will chaperone the party and attendance will be limited to members i only. PRIOF. (CANFIEILJ) TO GIVE CERCJ1E FRANCAIS 1LECTURE Prof. A. G. Canfield of the Romance i Language department will deliver the i sixth of a series of lectures, which are being held under the auspices of the Cercle Francais, In Tappan hall at 5:00 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Pro- essor Canfield's subject wil be "Jeanne D'Arc dans les Lettres et dans les Arts," ALUMINAE DISCUSS P'LANS FOR HI1'lIIA'_ WOMEN'S IN FIR MARY At the afternoon session of the Asso- ciation of Collegiate Alumnae yester- ay, plans for. an infirmary for Michi- an womenl were discussed. Announce- anent wi;as, made that there are already two* donations, and also that the Ann Arbor branch is about to raise $1500 to provide temporarily for a house :accomnmodating seven or eight women. Mlajor Wilson, of the engineering college, gave a short talk on prepared- ness at {the dinner of the Yo-.ng*sUoWn club Thursday evening. This club is composed of men fromn Youngstown. Ohio. Plans are being made for a,: number of informal dinners in the near future. I -_. ___ _ TEXa7' K FORl ALL DEPARTMENTS W&ORM. A Camtp~eo I.n of Drug r~rc, d k 2.15 saod-.& t lP-jrftm ; c _ir:ALC B E. T 3¢ ,'?kL9arnl- N ,:C: ? k ' r-:a:.i6g '5 +'T6Je'6& t NoeLeaf Nt okadFuti es I' N' and Second-hand Teasies n'h ar dn build ngmaeia ta THE BEAUTY OF MY BSNKP- Visit my store antd gee, , ~e ~tiiinVFt - "rs--1},l f tdil Orcheds, Tulips, Narcissiis, Violets, Sweet Penis, Roses, Carna- 'tions aiid Jbillies of the Valley. Full Line c Pant MRS . FLAN RS Fxw r shop. Phone 294 21.. ESI'BI Y S TV E T FAN= ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Aa sr.a&u tit ^c c: s -r aeai a~ z aflaT vsr tre ~PAPEI SLE All Department Paper 35c per' Pounds Now .25c SCULEEDE Mmorli Do you drip{ an automobile ini tie winter? 340 S. StateI You should. It's co nvenie nt. N.OW READY usual showing o new Foreign and' Domestic 'oolens for Spring. Market conditions make an- early. selection, desirable as all go od patterns will be hard to duplicate D. E. GRNNAN REAL CUSTOM TAILOR 606 E. LIBIERTFY STREET You can heat your garage safely and economically with a SAFEiTY :GAS GARAG E HEAr ER. Approved by insurance com an es. Wash tenaw Gas Ca.- .el i7 .:,rnin eszu- ,;miM :ntasnn r;Lr. c:.aa -- - SAM BURCHFIELD &Co., Fine Tailoring SHORTHAND, TYPEWRITING BOOKKEEPING Best instruction and EquIpMent Hamilton Business College State ad Williams Sts. ~iis Chaimani of Tight's IDance. IN CHFISS CONIVTEST T I(9-,u I' DISA9GREES WITH WODD To Thle iEditor of the Michigan Daily: General Wood and Admiral Peary have come and gone, and apparently the members of their audience are still ' spell bound," for as yet no one has undertaken the refutation of the oh- :ious fallacies in their argument. One of the most fundamental of the assumptions upon wvhichi these two gentlenmen based their argument was the false one that wars are inevitable, that they. ares part and parcel of the natural order and governed by laws which do not differ materially from the laws governing natural phenom- ena. Let us examine, for example, the answer of General wood to the "silly question" "Againist whom is the Uni- ted States to prepar?"ie said, in ef- fect, "If you will get the captain of, a Cunarder wAha is, refitting his ship ,in port to state what particular gale of wind he is preparinhg againist, I will tell you against whait nation we( are to prepare.' Clearly' here is ani argument from analogyi"; is. it a good one? It is plainly evident that storms are governed by laws which men as yet cannot control. Is it. equally clear th:at there is a similar natural law, hihis equally incapable ofc,"(ontrol by m--en, controllintg the recurrence of that, phenomenon which we call wvar? No one 'contends for the existence of sl(ch a law,; wars are begun, continued au-, endedy the conscious action of me. -cectime comparison of the preparationr of a sea- captain to meet pos~ibkstorm s vith the prepoaration o:= a n1ation1 to meet the possible conl- tingncyof. war is thoroughly falla- c ous and in this case calculated to evade a pertinent question. If one applies, to this ship analogy anether of the fundamental assertions of the speakers, the futility of its rea- sonling becomes still more apparent. They reiterated the assertion that "pre- paredness" has no other aim than the prevention of war.' Ask the Cunard, captain if he expects to prevent storms ~by his preparations to meet them. His answer will doubtless convince you that in asking such a question you are as foolish as the "sentimentalists" who hope, in 'part at least, to prevent w'ar by opposing "preparedness." I have dealt with but one of the mnore striking phases of the argument. This glib -bit of reasoning from analogy, however, by no means exhausts the fallacies which appea~red in the course of the addresses of these two gentle- men. It is indeed to be regretted that "preparedness" must comne before a university audience wvith an appeal based so largely on sentimernt and such superficial reasoning as this. L. In. CROSSMiiA\, Grad. Whether you want to take a train or make a call, we w-ill get you there on time. Our service is just as prompt in bad weather as on pleasan~t .lays. Stark Tajccab Co.,. phone 2255. e following hiave. been chosen to e on the committee at the weekly e held at the M.~ichigan Union. ~ht: II. 1H. Pkillips, 116E,, chair- 1). F. Me~ane, '17, J. I.. Driscoll, W., A. Stevenson, '17. Prof. H. A. ion and Mrs. K~enyon and Mr. and H. F. Adams will act as chaper- for the evening. Members of the Chess cltub will meet a picked faculty team in Uni- versity hall at 7:00 o'clock. this eve- ning. The faculty team will be head- ed by Prof. L. C. Karpinski, one of the foremost chess players of the country, who has alread ,y given sev- eral exhibitions at the Chess ,club. He will play four games siirnultaneoucly for his team. Other mnembers of the 'faculty tea~m are Prof. Louis A. Strauss,, Prof. Walter 13. Pillsbury, )r alter W. Kusteria,)i Dr. H. F. Aidams, 1Dr. NWilliam 1). _1or;1arty, and M1r. Wolber. Miss Gertrude Googin. national sec- retary of the Y. NV. C. A., who is thre house guest at Newberry residen.ce hall, will be the guest of honror at a tea, given by Mr's. Jordan and time Students of Neawberry residence from 4:00' to 0:00 o'clock today-. The annual social tax of .50 cents for junior girls nmust be paid before M-arch 1 to' Olive H'artsig, '17, or at Mr's. Jordan's office.. There will be an important rehears- al of the Junior Girls' play at 9:00 o'clock this morning. womnen's organizations re all cars stop at, Good- .ir store. -tf P;mtroui::e Pally Advert i'zers.., **