THE MICHIGAN DAILY VENS , . pr ARkidtau MAUt FFICIAL NEWSPAP R AT TIlE UNIVERSITY OF M CHIGAN blished every morning except Monday ig the 'university year by the Board in rol of Student Publications. IBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS e Associated Press is exclusively entitled Le use for republication of all news dis- is credited to it or not otnerwise credited his paper and also the local news pub- d herein. tered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, agan, as second class matter. bscriptions ty carrier or mail, $3.5x1 ices: Ann Arbor -Press Building. 4 ones: Business, 96o; Editorial, 2414. mmunications not to exceed 30. words, gned, the signature not necessarily to ap- in print, but as an evidence of faith, and es of events will be published in The at the discretion of the Editor, if left rmailed to the office. signed communications will receive no deration. iNo manuscript will be re- d unless the writer incloses postage. e Daily does not necessarily endorse the ments expressed in the communications. EDITORIAL STAFF ence Roeser ...........Managing Editor The Guillotine fortheeneft of thse inclined to the ----Life History and General Characters As soon as a Medic enters school isticAl cf thc Lower Marsupials as Ex- they call him Doctor. Why not call emplified by the Resent Excavations the paw student, Judge? Or the 'Eng- r Cocoa Butter in the Pussy Willow- ineer, say Blacksmith? ed Haunts of East St. Louis,.Ill. Three Providing that he arrives on the ho first of the month, why not name the CrOatiVe Eavesdropping or flow to baby Bill? Distinguish the Mellow Watch Dog's The city editor claims he found a ark from the Tinkling of Raspberry needle in the soup this noon. Prob- Shrub in the Fingerbowl on the Pan- ably a typographical error. Should try Shelf. Special. have been noodle. i The Subleties and Intricaties of the Think of the expense account of the Galla Lilly when Blooming in it's Na- newcomer who has to wear a fresh tural Habitat two point Abaft the Port toque every day. j Beam of Polly Little's Pergola. Two Well we've got one good alibi. It hours. takes about a week to get a column [i5(overies in Natural History Ac- under way. Think what the Inlander cording to the Works of Princess might have been. Aua Wagon- l gue of the Chick- svw Nation who wandered Eighteen Dlonths in the' Crcenwood Searching fur Wild Pars y to garnish a platter The sky above was Paris green. Al ( Boiled Dog for the Annual (oin June bug chirped blithely from an egg - h nlant and ne tn. thn t m mh p ii Y..W. C. A. cabinet meeting will be held at 3 o'clock this afternoon at Bar- bour gymnasium. Freshman first and second basket- b all teams will report at 3 o'clock this afternoon at Barbour gymnas- ium. The playground class will meet at 1 o clock this afternoon in Barbour gym- nasium. All girls who have assign- ments must teach. Dr. Eleanor Bertine will lecture on Social Morality" at 4 o'clock this aft- ernoon in Sarah Caswell Angell hall. The lecture is for University women only. No admission is charged. A meeting of the house-heads will be held at 5 o'clock Wednesday after- non in Dean Jordan's office. It is important that all be present. More than 8,000 men have left the University of Wisconsin because of the war, according to a report given to the war department by that univer- sity. I r SE O ND T NEW AND SECOND HAND Drawing Instruments AND ENGINEER'S SUPPLIES WAHR' S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE C. L. Jackson..............City SM: Carey.............News e Millar..............I~elegraph on Marx................Associate id B. Ifanidis................Sport guerite lark...........Women's tha Guernsey..........Women's3 E ditor Editor Editor Editor Lditor Editor Editor Charles R. Osius, Jr....... State Editor iark K, Ehlbert.......Efficiency Editor Ruth Dailey ..............Exchange Editor kelen I. Davis..............Literary Editor ISSUE EDITORS . Edgar L. Rice Henry O'Brien Joseph A. Bernstein Renaud Sherwood Jaul G. Weber E. D. Flintermann Paul A. Shinkman REPORTERS Philip Ringer Mary D. Lane Margaret Christie Edna Apel' a rozier sIrene Ellis Hebrt R. Slusser J. P. Hart Carlton F. Wells BUSINESS STAFF Harold Makinson.........Business Manager Agnes L. Abele...Asst. Business Manager Earl A. Cres.......Asst. Business Manager 03rand A. Gaines. .. Asst. Business Manager Win. aM. LeFere...Asst. Business Manager m.A Leitzinge.. Asst. Business Manager Donald M. Major....Asst. Business Manager Donnell R. Schoffner..Asst. Business Manager SENIOR STAFF Mark B. Covell JUNIOR STAFF George A. Cadwel Joel F. Scloerger tRIobert Ky, McKean' R. A. Sullivau Edward Priehs, Jr. Clare W. Weir Curt "P. Schneider Henry Whiting II Eva R. Welsh WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1919. Issue Editor-Paul G. Weber THE NEW SIMPLICITY Streaming back from the fields of !rance, in increasing numbers, are coming the khaki-clad men we bid farewell to but a few months ago. Every transport brings them by the hunudreds, cheering with the same old cheers, laughing the same old laughs. The boys whose hands we grip once ygain, no matter how the same old smile lights up their faces, despite the same old, informal greeting, are not the boys we knew. They are changed, nearly all of them so changed that, could we get benea'th the veneer of their old" manner, we should scarcely recognie them. They are different, and the war has made them so. The intimacy with real, naked truths, the suffering, the sacrifices, the homesick- ness, the heartaches, have all had their effect. Those who left us as boys return as men. The war, has made them so. 'In many cass, too, the war has tak- en from them what they were wont to call ambition. Intimacy with life and sudden death has taught them that the ambition they cherished is ;lot the beginning and the end of a happy life. Some of us may deplore this attitude; but we do not under- stand as they understand. They are soon to find their places again in the niches of our business, professional, and industrial world. Just nw they are happy enough in being home. And, if the prophecy of many, many of them comes true, they are going to be content with the simple, unpretentious things of life. They will be quitecontent to let their lives be molded and shaped by sim- plcity, And this simplicity will not be con- fined to them alone. It is going to spread and spread, until all of us will be living on the new plane. Sim- plicity is the new keynote. A recent exposure showed that the booze ring of Ohio punished its mem- bers for s-quealing. But how could it play square with anyone. Sir Walter Scott used to plan Li novels while he shaved, says an ad. In other words, he was some shaver. The newspaper that printed it "The League of Notions," may not have 1 made si. h a mistake aftet all. The German debt to the world is $35,000,000,000. Kulture comes high. PLI UL rtc or, Ie gOa, m1uncee delicately at a hot ater bottle. A hen hawk hovered over the 'whiffle- tree and Mrs. Johnson dozing on the } piazza with a copy of the Bee Keep- ers' Journal in her waffle hand was dreaming of her youth in the hoe cake belt of southern Indiana. Suddenly she awakened. There was something in the wind. Something was burning. A quick glance. It was not the suc- cotash in the chafing dish, the door, mat or the celluloid dog on the what- not. Ha. Woman's intuition. "Hiram, Hiram, be you hiding back] of the barn smoking that corn cob pipe again?" , Her voice was clear and had a dangerous ring. The lame goose honked a warning from the verbena patch and Mr. John- son started twice for the Tropic of Capricorn but decided to stand his ground. "Angel bread, Elvina dear, no I ain't smoking that corn cob pipe. Just shoeing a horse, just shoeing a horse, that's all." We suggest that the following courses be added to the curriculumi Th - hoar frost sits upon my eqr. y is tinged a deep cerulean hue, IU my cheek there is a tear For ruthless ag;ue- thrills my body through. Alas, our ton of coal is postage due. "Did you ever use Pear's soap?" "No, he never lived at our house." Famouis Closing Ijies Li es there a man with soul so dead Wi to himself ne'er has said I am really oing to work this semest- er? ---LOUIS XvI. Alex J. Rogoski, '1SL, in Ann Arbor Alex J. Rogoski, '18L, now prac- ticing law in Muskegon with Prof. Robert E. Bunker, formerly of the University faculty, is in Ann. Arbor on legal business. He will be here for a couple of days. Every graduate student in the liter- ary college at the University of Iowa is required to take military training. For Traveling Anywhlere Anytime You will enjoy using the A. B. A. Travelers' Checks as issued by this bank. They comge in denominations of $10, $20, $50 and $100, are cashed by Banks, Hotels, Railroads, etc., without identification. ASK US Dependable, Scientific, Drugless EYE EXAMINATIONS Phone 590 for appointment Eml H Arnold Optometrist 220 S. ain St Farmers & Mechanics Bank 101-105 5. Main 330 S. State St. (Nickels Arcade) 1 SHEEHAN & Co FIX UP THE OLD ROOM EYE SHADES MAKE WORK EASIER PENNANTS AND WALL BANNERS MAKE YOUR ROOM INVITING I A XI Here's hoping you have a fine New Year.-Sheehan I t - - . j 9 1 S ' / N .1 ~ - j/ for r Phone 2700 At your service day and night Price 25c Special rates on parties, etc. I A RCgD4ED DANCING CLASS The advanced dancing class for college men and women, to be held Monday and Wednesday at 7 p. m. is open to those who know the modern dances and wish to learn, the newest steps and their variations for the J-Hop, etc. Lessons are exclusively for class members, and only a limited number can be accomo- dated. Register at the hall, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 7 p. n. There is a beginners' class on Tuesday and Thursday for which registration will be Thursday, Feb. 20, at 7 p. m For particu- lars call 166-J. I I INDEPEINDENT TAXI CO.I I.1 il I i I r ii All our new Spring weight woolens are in ---the complete assortment of fashions and fabrics, ready to be tailored for you into bright, new clothes. Of course, lye 'l1 not ask to take the clothes until Spring arrives inearnest---but it will be comforting to know they are Ready when you want them. G. H.ILD Y Laboratory Supplies Chemicals tudentToilet _____ _____Articles Sundries The Eberbach & Son Co. 200.204 E. LIBERTY ST. Shorthand Typewriting Bookkeeping WE ......... as Hamilton Business College State and William St. DETROIT UNITED LINFs, Between Detroit, Ann Arbqt and Jackson (October 27, i191) (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. i., and every hour to 9,:48 p. M. (Ex. presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor,) Local Cars East 'Bound-6 :oo a. m., and every two hours to 9:o5 p. m., io:5o p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:4 p. M., 12:20 4. l. i:io a. In., and to Saline, change at Ypisjlti Local Cars West Bound-7:48 s. I11.. to WVAI KING LOO Open from 11:30 a. -. to 12:00 p. m. Tailors for Men Who Care State St. I i An unusually attractike line of Spring Ilillinery nolv on display at the parlors of STEVENS & PERSHING, 618NPCKARD Camkins drug Co. What's Missing? I I S14 S. State St Aun Arbor Fr = _ -- -- -- -- _ -_ rj r ." _ _ _ -_ _._.. -- - _ _ - .-, a 1 Fill your toilet wants from our Stock. Tooth brushes, paste and- powders,hair brushes and combs, Manicure tools and preparations Razors, Soaps and shaving-lotions Cold creams and Talcum pow- ders l Look at this one. Aork- ing piece of, genuine French Briar, sterlin; ring, vulcanite bit, the smoothestworkimanship -a shape that makes it mighty convenient to have i your room. r At MARKa " YOU will see W D Y Pipes on every campus in the country-American pipes for American men, and not bettered anywhere. You can get any shape, size and grade you Want in a W D C. The best shops carry them t $6 down to 75 cents. Courteous and satisfactory TREATMENT to every custom- er, whether the acer- 1e large or small. The Ann AI U jU &t --- , Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $550,000.00 Resources........$4,000,000.00 Northwest Cor. gain & Huroi 707 North University Ave. 0. D. MORRILL Typewriters s typewrting Mimeographing 111 WM.DEMUTI & CO., New York IWorkr's Large'st ipe i~ma ufw-Iurer 324 SO. STATE STREET 1123 SO. UNIVERSITY AVE. 711 PACKARD STREET to be a tax on soda Has moved to Niokels Amcade P -First Floor Pborie 1716 Jl . . ...