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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 23, 1919 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1919-04-23

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

l

,, Al

FFICIAL NEWSPAPER AT THE
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
blished every morning except Monday
g the university year by the Board in
rol of Student Publications.j
lEER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
B Associated Press is exclusively entitled
ae use for republication of all news dis-
as credited to it or not otherwise credited
his paper and also the local news pub-

W -A rirrr

tered at the postofiice at' Ann Arbor,
igan, as second class matter.
bscriptions by carrier or mail, $3.50.
ies : Ann Arbor Press Building.
ones: Business, 960; Editorial, 2414.
mmunications not to exceed 300 words,
gied, the signature not necessarily to ap-
in print, but as an evidence of faith, and
es of events will be published in The
y at the discretion of the Editor, if left
rmailed to the office.
isigned communications will receive no
deration. No 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
y M. Carey.............News Editor
e Millar...y........ . City Editor
on Marx... ..........Associate Editor
nas F McAllister......Feature Editor
k K. Ehlbert......... Telegraph Editor
id B. Landis.........Sport Editor
guerite Clark..........Women's Editor
ha Guernsey..........Women's Editor
rick Kimball.......Guillotine Editor
Ies R. Osius, Jr.............State Editor
A. Shinkman..........Dramatic Editor
aApel ...........Music Editor
Dailey............ Exchange Editor
ard Wohl............. Literary Editor'
ISSUE EDITORS
,ert R. Slusser Paul G. Weber
aud Sherwood Edgar L. Rice
h W. Hitchcock J. P. Hart
William Clarkson
REPO RTERS
nas H. Adams John E. McManis
ard B. Marshall C. H. Murchison
e Ellis Mary D. Lane
ina Schermerhorn John L uDakin
tur W. Brown Logan Trumbull
Emerson Swart Stewart'-Baxter
e Crozier Muriel E. Bauman
BUSINESS STAFF
)ld Makinson .........Business Manager
es L. Abele......Asst. Business Manager
and A. Gaines...Asst. Business Manager
M. LeeFevre....Asst. Business Manager
A. Leitzinger...Asst. Business Manager
ld M. Major....Asst. Business Manager
nell R. Schoffner. .Asst. Business Manager

SENIOR
ark B. Covell
bert C Mclean
yorge A. Cadwell
aynard A. Newton

STAFF
Edward Priehs, Jr.
Henry Whiting II
JDuane Miller
R. A. Sullivan

JUNIOR STAFF
Curt P. Schneider Isabelle Farnun
Harold P. Lindsay Geo. R. Strimnbeck, Jr.
Harper Moore Arthur L. Glazier
James A. Kennedy, Jr.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1919.
Issue Editor-T. H. Adams
ARE YOU ONE OF US?
V-ictory Bonds will give you your
last chance to lend money to the gov-,
ernment. There will be no more
loans.
I-nstead of wishing you had
bought, get busy now. You'll be a
quitter unless you have a bond.
C-redit won the war. Your govern-
ment has deposited six billion "I. O.
U.'s" in the banks. They MUST be
paid.
T-his money has already been'
spent-and it is up to you to make
good. What would you say to a bus-
iness man who didn't pay his note
when it came due? Are you any dif-
ferent, if you don't buy a bond?
0-n many a service flag is a gold
star. Have you the slightest concep-
tion what that star means? No matter
how much you give, you haven't given
as much as the man whom that star
represents.
R-emember, you're not giving any-
thing away. You're investing in the
most attractive investment ever of-
fered.
Y-ou can get a grip on fortune
while you have a chance. Put all
your surplus and all your bank sav-
ings into United States securities.
B-e a bondholder of your country's
wealth and keep money d'ee for bus-
iness. Money invested in the first,
will help the second.
0-ur soldiers have done-are do-
ing-their part. God, knows we never
wanted them to do more. But what
of us?
N--ever once did they whimper.
Can we be less the men they were,
when all we're asked to do is to
LEND our money?
D-etroit went over the top the first
day, and oversubscribed its quota by
five million dollars. This sould be
the spirit everywhere. Jump into the
campaign and deserve your personal
share of the glory.
S-how Detroit and the world that
we can do the same. Victory is cer-
tain. Failure is impossible-if all
Loan workers plunge in the campaign
with the glory of Victory in their
hearts and the shout of Victory on
their lips. SUBSCRIBE and SUB-
SCRIBE and SUBSCRIBE.

THE NEW BOOKS
"THE BELOVED SINNER" by Rachel
Swete Macnamara, published by G.
P. Putnam's Sons, New York and
London.I
"The Beloved Sinner," is a charm-
ing romance of modern English life,t
in which the heroine indulges in the
sin most distasteful to her lover and
undergoes misunderstanding that
threatens their happiness. True love
overcomes the more material view of
worldly matters, and finds a broader1
devotion at the end of the road.-
The author has given her charact-
ers realistic passions that are true to
life, and the truly interesting incidentst
are framed in delightful and appro-
priate scenes that will appeal to the
reader of fiction.
- Buy Victory Bonds-
"THE UNTAMED" - by Max Brand,
published by G. P. Putnam's Sons,
New York.
A weird fascinating taledof a prima-
tive man-animal like and untamed-
who has three friends, a girl, a wolf,
and a horse; and one enemy, Jim Sil-
ent, the "lone rider." -
He is gentle enough with the girl ne
loves and who understands him, but
he hates fiercely the "lone rider" who
brings back the taste of blood to his
animal nature. Like the panther he
follows his sworn enemy t6 the end,
and satisfies his blood lust by kill-
ing him.
Not even the girl he loves can save
him from his animal-self and the tale
ends when the snow falls, and the
man, the wolf, and the horse go
"south afte the wild geese-south
with the untamed."
It is a wfestern story, a story of
dreary desert wastes, but also a story
of mens' passions; fear, hate, lust and
love, which never change in any set-
ting.
--Buy Victory Bonds --
Jilood And Heart
Study Of Profs.
How long it takes the human heart
to pump out its blood is the question
being studied by Dr. Warren P. Lom-
bard, professor of physiology, and Dr.
Otis M. Cope, acting assistant of phy-
siology, in the hope of finding some
test for the condition of the heart
muscles. Up to' the present no sat-
isfactory means for this tet have
been discovered.
"The length of the period of con-
traction of the heart," said Dr. Lom-
bard, "varies with the pulse rate, and
it is the intention to determine the
duration of the systole,, as it is call-
ed, for every pulse rate from 50 to
150.
"This means that a great many men
have to be examined and the work has
already extended over a period of a
year and a half. In the course of the
work it has been found that the length
of the systole depends not only on the
rate of the heart beat, but also on the
position of the man, a longer period
being employed in driving out the
blood when the man is sitting than
when he is standing, and a still long-
er time when is lying down.
"Because of this it will be neces-
sary to ascertain the length of the
systole not only by different pulse
rates but by different positions of the
body, otherwise the test, should it
prove to be satisfactory, can be of no
practical use."
-Buy Victory Bonds -
REV. E. A.,HANLEY WILL TALK
AT LAST MEETING OF GUILD
"The Nation and Its New Moral
Assets," wilt be the subject of the ser-
mon to be delivered by the Rev. Eli-

jah A. Hanley, pastor of the First
Baptist church of Rochester, N. Y.,
at the last Wesleyan guild lecture of
the season, to be held at 7:30 o'clock
Sunday night at the Methodist Epis-
copal church.
Buy Victory Bonds --
DE AN EFFINGER TO LECTURE
ON "NOS INTIMES" IN ENGLISH
Dean John R. Effinger's lecture be-
fore the Cercle Francais at 4:15 o'clock
Wednesday afternoon in room 203,
Tappan hall, on "Nos Intimes," the
play to be produced May 1 by the so-
ciety, will be given in English. This
will be the last lecture of the Cercle
for the year and will be open to active
and associate members.
Buy Victory Bonds --
DR. STOUFFER TO ADDRESS
YPSI WOMEN'S COMMITTEE
Dr. C. B. Stouffer will give two lec-
tures, "Lessons from the 'Flu' Epi-
demic" and "What Parents Should
Know to Take Care of Young Chil-
dren," before the Women's commit-
tee at. Ypsilanti 7:30 Thursday even-
ing.
-Buy Victory Bonds
Science has proved that newspaper
advertising pays best. You can reach
all the students and faculty through
The Daily.-Adv.
- Buy Victory Bonds -
LOST? Advetise in The Daily.-Adv.

Music Notes

Mrs. Robert MacDowell, wife of the
late well known American composer,
will give an informal talk on the Pet-
erboro colony of musicians of which
she is the founder. She will alsogive
a short recital of the MacDowell com-
positions after the annual banquet of
the Symphonic league which takes
place at 6:30 o'clock Wednesday, in
the third floor banquet hall of the
Michigan Union.
All students and the faculty of the
University School of Music are invited
to attend. About 200 tickets have been
sold. A few are left which can be
procured at the office of the School
of Music.
Mr. James A. Hamilton, of the vocal
faculty of the School of Musi will
sing "Aida" at the next faculty c cert
which is scheduled for 3 o'clock, Sun-
day afternoon, May 4, in Hill auditor-
ium.

W ome n I
Senior baseball practice will be held
at 4 o'clock Tuesday and Wednesdays.
Juniors will practice at 4 o'clock Mon-
days and Thursdays. Senior girls who
intend to play baseball should report
Wednesday at Barbour gymnasium.
Girls wishing to earn their board
or to do housework by the hour should
interview Miss Louise Potter at Bar-
bour gymnasium.
Preliminary elections will be made
at a meeting of Wyvern to be held at
7:30 o'clock Thursday evening at the
Delta Delta Delta house, 718 Tappan
avenue.
Vocational conference will be held
at 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon in
Barbour gymnasium.

Mr. Kenneth Westerman, former IMasques will rehearse Act III of
member of the vocal faculty of he"Quality Street," this afternoon at 4
o clock in Sarah Caswell Angell hall
School of Music, is in Ann Arbor on a 7:30 o'clock tonight in
furlough, awaiting his discharge from s ail.
Camp Custer.WBeforehis transfer to -- Buy Victory Bonds
Custer, Mr. Westerman was a song
leader in Camp Merritt, New Jersey. Tennis Racket Restringing very
Buy Victory Bonds - promptly done at Wahr's University
Advertise in The Daily.-Adv. Book Store.-Adv.
AVALON FOX TROT BALL

f-
For Traveling Anywhere Anytime
You will enjoy using the
A. B. A. Travelers' Checks as issued by this bank. They
come in denominations of $10, $20, $50 and $100, are cashed
by Banks, Hotels, Railroads, etc., witiout identification.

ASKA US

Farmers & Mechanics Bank
101-105S. Main 3 S. Stat.-St.
4 Nckels Arcade)

I I

p

ARMORY

Thursday, April 24th
°Ike" Fischer and his Jazz Orchestra

McGregor Golf Clubs
Lee, Wright & Detson and Spaulding
Rackets

Tennis Bils

Rackets Restrung

$1.00 per couple

Dancing 8.12

- Tickets on sal at War's Bookstore and at the Door -

GRAHAM, formerly Sheehan & .

,

Tennis Players Listen
We are at your service with
100 TENNIS RACKETS
Wright and Ditson's Strong line, also H. C. Lee
& Co.'s "Slotted Throat" Racket
Special attention to Restringing. Peefect work
and prompt delivery guaranteed.

I WHR'S

Our After Easter Sale Starts Today
We are offering some bery unusual balues in
TRIMMED HATS

HELEN NEWBERRY RESIDENCE
T& ENTERTAIN MRS. NEWBERRY
Mrs. Truman Newberry of Detroit,
national president of the Needlework
Guild, will be the guest of Helen New-
berry residence at dinner Thursday
night.
Mrs. Newberry's purpose in coming
to Ann Arbor is to establish a branch
of the Guild here. She will address
the girls on this subject after dinner.
Mrs. George Patterson will hold a

during this Sale

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

STEVENS & PERSHING,

618 PACKARD.
NEAR STATE.

'They Gave for a Lifetime

-the: men who came back
with wound stripes

Did these men stop to argue?
you do so.

Then don't

reception Thursday afternoon at her
homee nHill street in honor of Mrs.
Newberry.
Helen Newberry residence was
founded in honor of Mrs. Newberry's
mother-in-law, Helen Newberry.
THE RAINY
SEASON IS HERE
WITH
2700 I
Call Us
A Trial Solicited
INDEPENDENT
TAXI CO.
Shorthand
Typewriting
Bookkeeping
Hamilton Business
.College
State and William Sts.
DETROIT UNITED LINES
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson
(March 30, 1919)
(Central Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-8:ro a.
m., and hourly to 8:1o p. m.
Jackson Limited and Express Cars-7:48
a. m., 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., 9:o5 a.
m. and every two hours to 9:o5 p. m., 1o:5o
p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:45 p. i., 12:20
a. in., :1 o a. m., and to Saline, change at
Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-6 :48 a. m. and
11:20 P. in.
WT KING LOO
Open from 11:30 a. m. to 12:00 p..
Phone 160-R

Thank God the war is over ±nd show your
thankfulness by helping to pay for the over-

whelming preparations that
fighting unnecessary.'

made more

You are not asked for anything like the
sacrifice that would have been required had
the struggle continued as was expected.

We cleaned up

quickly over

there-let's

clean up quickly over here.

The good old

sign "Business as usual"

is waiting to be

hung out.

Settle up and settle down.

You

invest at substantial interest.

Victory

Liberty

[Space con)ftribLu ted by

Loan
GERtANY S ENDERS!
Ateyou Still glad today?

314 8. State St.

Ilalulton Busine SS Colalege
Prepared by American Association of Advertising Agencies cooperating with the United States Treasury Department

Ann Arboz,

Courteous and satisfactory
TREATMENT to every custom-
er, whether the account be large
or small.
The AnnArhor Savings Dank
Incorporated 1869
Capital and Surplus, $550,000.00
Resources ........$4,000,000.00

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