THE MICHIGAN DAILY TO JAS TIJ 4 OFFICIAL NlWSLAPLR AT T1iE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every moaning except Monday .uring thc university year by the: Board in. Control of Student lublications. tEMBER OF TilE ASSOCIATI-D PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled so the use for repubication of all news dis- patches credited to it or not otnerwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. lintered at the postoflice at Ann Arbor, alchigana, as becond class matter. Subscriptions by carrier or mail, $3.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. phones: Business, 960; ELditorial, 2414. Coinmunicatio ns not to exceed 300 words, i signed, the sikgrature not necessarily to ap- pear in print, but as an evidence of taith, and notices of events vill be published Ii The Gaily at Lhe disctioi iof the Editor, it ieft at or mailed to the oilice. Unsigned comnunications will receive no consideratnvn. iNo manuscript will be re- turned unless the writer incloses postage. ITe Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in the communications. Mildred C. Mighell.........Managing Editor Harold Makinson..........business Manager ncent H. Riordan...........News arles R. Osius, Jr..............City Irguerite Clark .........Night res C. J. .Martin---------. elebrapli vid B'. Landis--------------Sport rtha Guernsey...........Wonen's rkR . albeit.............Associate Jen 1. .Davis--------------.Literary E(ditor EQIor EdiCxr Ed itor r Editor LeGrand A. Gaines.....Advertising Manager Agnes L. Abele.........Pgblication Manager ' ";onald M. Major.......irculation Manager Wn. M.LeIevre ......O. ice M'anager ISSUE EDITORS Joseph A. Bernstein Paul G. Weber liorace W. Porter Philip Ringer Ruth Dailey L. D. Flitern n R FP0R'! LERS Marsaret Christie EHerman Lustfield Irene Ellis Bowen Schumacher Edna Apel Henry O'Brien Marie Crozier Mary D. Lane Renaud Sherwood BUSINESS STAFF. Mark B. C UEvell Robert i. McKean dward Priehs, Jr. Clare W. Weir Eva R. Welsh < Win. A. eitzinger George A. Cadwell Donnell R. Shoffner Joel F. Schoerger Henry Whiting II 'TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1919. Issue Editor--Edgar D. Flintermann THE CRUX Ajterica's desire to see a world safe for its peoples; to establish a just peace; one that will eliminat the in- justices that have caused mo of the wars of the past, is now being put to the test. The peace conferences have begun. The United States, with its Allies has defeated its armed foes. National unity has been demonstrated and solidified. Th people of the Un- ited States have learned impressively valuable lessons of their capacity for positive action and f self-sacrifice. In all these things the United States has emerged from the war a winner. And the benefit we have all derived from these things is incalculable. But the war will have been fought to a. great extent in vain by the Unit- ed States pnd the Allies unless the peoples have learned to desire a just peace. Especially will the United States have failed to gain one of its most cherished objects in the prose- cution of the war. We did not enter the war to gain material advantages for any nation at the unjust expense of any other nation. We knew that a war of aggression is a dreadful, stupid, crime. We knew that a war cannot bring good. We knew that wars of liberation or of defense are breeders of horror to those in the right as well as those in the wrong; that they stop progress to- ward the amelioration of the condition of humanity; that they suspend the war of man against nature while men war on each other. The people of United States wished that wars to right wrongs should never again be needful, and that wars of aggression should be made impossible. For our own safety and the safety of our child- ren; for the sake of all humanity we wanted wars to cease, and we backed up our wishes with our arms. Now we go to the peace table, to at- tempt to establish this reign of world- wide justice. ,.President Wilson has proposed a League of Nations, and men close to him have intimated that his ideas were fairly definite as to what such a League should be. But all re- ports agree that President Wilson is willing to back any plan that will end the causes of war, no matter what its name or substance. Of all plans that have been suggested the League of Nations idea seems to be best calculat- ed to bring about the desired resu t But opposition has arisen in Europe and in this country to any plan that. embraces the principles of'the League of Nations. The greatest apparent op- position to it is in France. President Wilson says the old "balance of pow- er" idea must go, and within a few days the French premier, Clemenceau, says he favors the "balance of power." Whether the differences between the two men are as real as apparent re- mains to be seen. We read of'secret treaties which Italy is unwilling to annul but which give Italy territory. wherein resides a people that does not want I'talian domination, but Ital- ian crowds shout spontaneous huz- stands. We read that Engrnd will nev- er submit to naval limitation, but Eng- lish soldiers, returning to the home soil, congregate and cry that English troops shall no longer fight Russians, and the government promises to send no more English troops to Russia, In the United States, interests urge that we must have universal military training, which would be contrary to the disarmament idea of a League of Nations. So the two forces to which we are accustomed, the force that favors un- restricted individualism, and the force that favors relinquishment of as ,much individualism as is necessary to relinquish for the general good and the general peace ;have begun their contest, with nations as individuals and the world as the stage and the happiness of your dear ones and my dear ones and the dear ones of nearly two billion others as the stakes. THE MODER* WAY TO KICK It has come to be recognized in civ- ic affairs that cl4an-ups and reforms come only when the plain people unite in demanding them and go after them through responsible agents and in a systematic way. This is being dem- onstrated in this University commun- ity through the efforts of the health service to secure something like stand- ard sanitary conditions in dooming and boarding houses. For generations the hoary hash and landlady jokes have been passed appreciatively wher- ever students foregather and while oc- casional indignant groups protested against unusually distasteful condi- tions, the present dignified and impart- ial survey marks the new era of com- munity efficiency. It deserves the sup- port of students, and needless to say, will get that of all better-class room- ing and boarding house keepers. Parliament is not the most august body in the world to admit women to membership. The ex-Kings' club has just taken in the duchess of Luxem- bourg. If we have many more of these balmy January days, the young man's fancy is going to turn several months too soon. And to think that in a few short weeks the new boad walk to the Lib- rary will be as thronged as Atlantic City's.- Being a member of the Cabinet is evidently not as profitable as most political jbs. SCHOOL OF MUSIC STUDENTS TO GIVE RECITAL WEDNESDAY Advanced students of the Univer- sity School of Music will give a re- cital at 4:15 o'clock Wednesday aft- ernoon in Friese hall of the School of Music. The general public is in- vited to attend. The following program will be pre- sented: Lotus Land ..............Cyril Scott Caprice espagnole........Moszkowsky Marion Bath Adoration .................Borowski SophiaWolczynski Prelude and Fugue...........Bach Edith Staebler A Pied Galley B. B. A conscience is a terrible uncom- fortable thing. It clings to one like tuberculosis or a bunch of silly letters that have been sent. It haunts one like the smell of blood or creme de rose. It makes one afraid to answer the telephone or the doorbell - ini short, it is a hunch that someone is go- ing to babble. The Sophomore Rosary 'IThe hours I spend with thee, old top, Are as the hours of jail to me. I think them over every one apart--- Anatomy! Anatomy! Each gland a vein, each vein a nerve, And somewhere there's an artery; We follow up each muscle to its end, And there a bone is found. Oh memories will stay with me, Until this fleeting life is o'er, We study hard and try at last to learn; To meet the Quizz, Sweet Quizz To meet the Quizz. --The Minnesota Daily. Confidance of Long Acquaintance From good old Lunnon to New York -thence to Toronto and to us in the wilds of the middle west comes this tale of the national pastime and its hold upon the Allies. An East Indian approached the plate at a crucial moment and cried aloud, "Allah, give me the strength to make a hit." He struck out. "The next man up was an Irishman. He spat on the plate, made faces at the pitcher and yelled, "You know me, Al." He made a home run.r MICHIGAN ALUMNUS RETURNS TO OFFICES FORMERLY USED Offices of the Michigan Alumnus were moved back Saturday to their, regular quarters in the southwest corner of Memorial hall. Due to the3 temporary use of that building as a hostess house, the Alumnus was in- stalled across the hall on Sept 23. No inconvenience was suffered by the' temporary change of quarters except that the improvised office was some- what darker than the regular room which they are again occupying. Thirty-seven scholarships have beeni awarded to students at Harvard., In this way students will be granted aid for the next two terms. VARIED WORK FOR NURSING COURSE Miss Dora Barnes, professor of the newly authorized department of public health nursing in the medical school, will begin her course in that subject with the new semester and only graduate nurses and seniors in approved training schools will be eli- gible. It will consist of lectures and discussions until spring vacation, aft- er which a new phase of the work will be introduced. Trips will be made to Detroit and other nearby ci- lies to study clinics, school, conta- gious, tuberculosis, and city nursing. Miss Barnes is a graduate of Mount Holyoke, and the Johns Hopkins -xo plf svil auS -sasinu . 0 looiPs perience in city nursing in New York and during the recent influenza epi- demic she was in charge of 150 cases of the disease among' men in the serv- ice who were stationed in New .York city. As professor of public nursing at the George Peabody college for teachers in Nashville, Tenn., she su- pervised a course similar to the one of which she will be in charge here. MAZDA LAMPS MAY ILLUMINATE CITY The whole system of street lighting in Ann Arbor may be changed, ac- cording to Mr. E. T. Cope, of the De- troit Edison company. This company has already installed 600 mazda lamps along State street and other neighbor- ing streets. If these are found to be better than the old arc lights which are generally used, it is expected that the city council wil, order the whole city system be changed to mazda lamps. The mazda system of lighting has many advantages over the arc method, declared Mr. Cope. Mazdas give great- er illumination and do away with the spots so often seen beneath the are light and, he said, the cost of operat- ing and maintaining the new system is materially less than the old method. CARNEGIE FOUNDATION PLAN DETAILS TO BE PUBLISHED Copies stating definitely the propo- sition of the 'Carnegie Foundation's new plan in regard to annuities and insurance, are now being printed andt will be mailed to each member of the+ several faculties of the University.1 The plan is that which was recently THE "Y" INN AT LANE HALL Cream of Tomato Soup Chicken a la King - Ma4ed Potatoes Candied Yams - Buttered Peas Cranberry Sauce Fruit Salad lce Cream - MapleSauce - Home-Made Cake Milk - Tea - Coffee STARRBEST Represented by Pete e. F. Burns showing SUITS O'COATS SHOES CAPS SHIRTS IMPORTED NECKWEAR FRONT ROOMS OVER CALKINS DRUG STORE JANUARY 12 13 14 15 We habe a fell of our very best trimmed hats left which we wvill dispose of at a great sacrifice to make room for our Spring Stock. STEVENS & PERSHING, 618 Packard OFFICE COMFORT 'FOR 1019 One of the particular joys of an office is- A HandyDesk Calendar. PRICE...75c "Excelsior" and "National" Diaries, Blank Books, Card Cabinets, Typewriter Supplies, etc. WAHR'S UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE I recommended by the executive com- mittee of the Board of Regents and adopted by the Board. This year's Mask and Wig show at the University of Pennsylvania will consist of a review, outlining the his- tory of the club through the 30 years of war and peace. IOpen for Business ALWYS WELCOME CAMPUS LUNCH BILL AND MERT i 338 5. State. Next to Cushings I C9S MN G HRISTM ANuN6,, CLU Try our HOME-MADE CANDIES They are both delicious and Wholesome The Home Dear Little The Lark Sonata for Road ..........Carpenter Boy of Mine. .Ernest Ball Robert S. Buol ..... .....Glinka-Balakireff ,Hester Reed Violin and Piano, G major..................Grieg Neva Nelson and Edith Staebler Variations serieu-ses ....Mendelssohn Dorothy Newell LIEUTENANT HORNE, '18, VISITS ANN ARBOR; WAS IN ARTILLERY Among visitors to the University last week was Lieut. AlbertE. Horne, '18, who received his discharge from the artillery branch of the service some three weeks ago and has been taking a short vacation preparatory to accepting a position with an ad- vertising firm in Detroit. Lieutenant Horne attended the second officers' training camp at Fort1 Sheridan and was then assigned to Camp Custer. He remained there for some time preparatory to being sent to Camp Zachary Taylor, Kentucky, where he was stationed at the time the arm- istice was signed. Laeutenant Horne is well known on te campus, being a member of the Chi Psi fraternity as well as of the sphi-x and Michigamua honor so- cieties. ILe was also efficiency edi- tor of the U±aly and a member of the board of dirtOr of the Michigan Union . During hiz visit to Ann Ar- bor he spent considerable time at the Daily office and returned to Detroit last night to take up his new duties. The University of Illinois paid $42,- 000 as a total expense for maintaining d IT IS NOT HARI TO GET THAT $63.75 OR $127.50. MADE AND SOLD AT THE SUGAR BOWL Phone 967 109 S. Main St. DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (October 27, rg18) (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars--7 o a. m., and hourly to 9:1o p. m. Jackson Limited and Express Cars--8:48 a. rn., and every hour to 9:48 p. m. (Ix. presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor.) Local Cars East Bound-6:oo A. in., and every two hours to 9:o5 p. m., o:5o p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 1 1:45 p. in., 12:20 a. M., r :1o a. m., and to Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7:48 a. m.,' to 12:20 a. m. WAT KING LOO Open from 11:30 a. m. to 12:00 p. iM. Phone 1620-R 314 S. State St. Ann Arbor Courteous and satisfactory TREATMENT to every custom- er, whether the account be large or small. The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $550,000.00 Resources.........$4,000,000.00 Northwest Cor. Main & Huron. 707 North University Ave. O. D. MORR I LL I BRING IN THE 5 CENTS OR 10 CENTS NOW AND EACH WEEK INCREASE YOUR PAYMENTS THE SAME AMOUNT, OR YOU CAN JOIN OUR 50 CENT, $1.00 OR $5.00 CLUB, WHERE YOU PAY IN THE SAME AMOUNT EACH WEEK. IN 50 WEEKS: 10-CENT CLUB PAYS $127.50 5-CENT CLUB PAYS 2-CENT CLUB PAYS 1-CENT CLUB PAYS 68.75 25.50 12.75 ALL THE MONEY YOU PAY INTO THE CHRISTMAS BANKING CLUB IS YOURS. THERE ARE NO DUES OF ANY KIND. COME IN AND JOIN TODAY. YOU WILL RECEIVE 3 PER CENT INTEREST. ~J~r 3Iarnu~r0& I~rnA,~ & Typewriters 'typewriting Mimeographing 101-103.105 SOUTH MAIN STREET 330 SOUTH STATE STREET ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN i I 'i