onday during the Univer- udent, Publications. asively creite l news nn Arb ED PRESS titled to the use for to it or not otherwise ihlished therein. Michigan,.as second n. Arbor Press building, -Maynard street. 3usine, 9g6o,;*Editoriarld2414. rations not to exceed 300 words, if sig'ned, the sig- essarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of ices' of. events "will be published in The Daily at the the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily oe miunications will receive no consideration. No man ereturned unless the writer incloses postage. does, not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- communications EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 EDITOR ...................HARRY M. CAREY rge Brophy Brewster Campbell ar L. Rice John I. Dakin mias H. Adams Thornton Sagnr. .....C.Campbell ............ ........ .J. P. Hart tment....... . .. ...Margueite Clark. . Joseph A.( Bernstein 1 A. Shinkman Mark K. Ehlbert Hardy Heth 'Assistants JJE. Johnson Dorothy Monifort od Wliam H. Riley Minnie Muskatt Paul G. 'Weber Anna McGurk G. E. Clarke Winefred Biethan do Robert C. Angell Samuel Lamport tiff R. W. Wrobleski Robert D. Sage Thomas J. Whinery BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 ANAGER ...............PAUL E.CHOLETTE ..LeGrand A. Gaines, Mark B. Covell assified Ads-.....................-...Henry Whiting . , , .. , .&Eward Priera C.....Curt P. Schneider, R. A. Sullivan Assistants cht r h. M. Heath D. P. Boyce Sigmund Kunstadter Robt. Sommerville Arthur L. Glazer ishing to secure information concerning news for any aily should see the night editor, who has full charge be. printed. that night. tors for this'week are as follows: Joseph in, Monday night ; George Brophy, 3rewster Campbell, Wednesday; Thom- nms, Thursday ; Thornton Sargent, Jr., "Know people." This is the admonition and advice of Frederic Van Renselaer Dey, the author of the famous "Nick Carter" stories and one of the most prolific and popular writers of the last decade. It is given in a recent article contributed by him to a maga- zine and forms the basis for his explanation of why he has been so unusually successful. College students may well heed the admonition. For nowhere is it easier, perhaps, to lose sight of the human element than, in intensive academic re- search. It has often been the complaint of the world off the campus that college graduates know books but are ignorant of men ; that they are men- tally crammed with facts but that their knowledge of life is elementary. Of late years this indit- ment has gained less crederce and yet there is still need for a more general realization that the only way to accomplish the most in the world, or to enjoy it fully, is to learn well the ways of its people. Stevenson in his "Apology for Idlers" hints that it was not the lessons he recited that he remembered so much, as the hours spent mingling with men while a truant. A prominent industrial captain remarks that the great social unrest in the world today is caused not half so much by a demand for higher wages as by a desire on the part of labor for a greater degree of human recognition. How many members of my own class do I know ? What are the character traits of my fraternity mates? Have I tried to understand the purposes and ideals of 'my teachers? These are questions that all may well ask themselves. Am I learning, the things in college that will enable me to under- stand the men and women about me when' r leave the campus ?-is a query that should be answered by every student of DePauw. History dates, biological facts, chemical formu- lae, economic principles, Greek and Latin conjuga- tions, are valuable parts of knowledge. But char- acter analysis, human understanding, social adapt- ability are invaluable keys, to the door of Success. Unfortunate is the college graduate who leaves -academic halls with only the former; unusual the' man who attains the latte- without the former. A'nd in this lies the strongest argument for college train- ing. The right kind of a college will give a man learn- ing in the sense of history dates and biological facts and the rest, but it will also give him a knowledge of men and women; An insight into real character; the ability to merge his desire with the desires of his fellow Workers and thus create society; The Humanities are not the only subjects taught in the right sort of a college; neither is the study of humanity the only course pursued: A combina- tion of the two, with the maior study in the lat- ter, is the ideal. For there's nothing a man can cash in on bet- ter than on his "knowledge of people."-DePauwt Daily. The'Telesc pe Meade - - Contract Specifica Rietz and Cratherne College Alg Adam's - Railway Accoul Boyd - - Strength of Materi liazen.- - Fifty Years of Eu Pierce.- - - Integral Tab S 'DETROIT UNITED LINES (Oct. 26, 'sgs) Between Metroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars--6:to a. and hourly to g:io p. mn. Jackson Limited and Express Cars-8:48 a. in., and every hour to 9:48 p. m. (Ex- presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor.) Local Cars East Bound-6 :o5 a.,in., g :o5 a. m. and every two hours to 9:05 p. in., i0:so u. m. To Ypsilanti only, i:4p i., :to a. m.. and to Saline, change at p santL Ypsilanti.: * Local Cars West Bound-7:48 a. m. and 12:20 a. n.' Just Received! Jones' Administrationo f Industrial Enterprises, Johnson and VanMetre's Railroad Transportation, Mead's Specifications and Engineering Relat4ons, Pierce's Integral Tables. BOOKS ARRIVING DAILY DETROIT BANQUET TO HONOR DEAN KIfBALL OF CORNELL Dean Dexter S. Kimball, of the Col- lege of Mechanical Engineering,'Cor- nell university, is- to be the 'guest of honor at the annual banquet of the Cornell University association to be held in the Detroit University club next Saturday night. Dean Kimball is one of the foremost experts on the gas engine and This books are standard in that industry. He will talk on "The Needs of Cor- nell." John A." Russel, dean of the school of business and finance of the University of Detroit, will be another speaker. ARMY AIBILANCE SERVICE HEN HOLD BANQUET TONIGHT There will be a dinner at 6 o'clock tonight at the Union for all men who were in the army ambulance service. Men who served in this branch are urged to attend. Those wishing to have places reserved are requested to call J. M. Seabright at 184. The Daily contains the latest Asso- clated Press News.-Adv. Wi UN "Any act of memory, whether conscious or unconscious, is a mental picture" THINK THIS OVER.-. The purpose of the 20 Fxercises in the, new booklet 'JA and CONiCENTRATION" is to so stimulate and train t faculty that it may be used at will. These Exercises do n< } ~other' study; they aid it. The few minutes of diversi creative; the mental process is clarifiediand stimulated fo duty of the day. It begins with kindergarten work' in mental picturing. All highly cultured minds know something of the utili mental picturing. It trains the mind to perfect concentr to remembef. It will aid you in your work. At all book stands-60c 'The Education By mail with individual instruction-$1 Bo r, FEBRUARY 26, 1920. VG ORIGINALITY the pioneer' days of the Uni- of, amusing customs and reg- of which were the restrictions sonal freedom of the student. necessity of securing permis- the town would seem today to paternal solicitude on the part The ringing of a bell to sukn- anxious surveillance of stu- kewise savor of a not alto- cern for the welfare of the eed, it is with a sigh of con- vn freedom thit the twentieth ad of these seemingly irksome' d 111111 ILA 'Lunches - Sodas _ Candies. SUGAR BOWL 11l i li ll111111llH lllllil111 H Lunches Nunnally's Candy -Maynard St. J. L. CHA' JEWEL AND OPTObo 113 'aQUTH MA FIRST NATIOI Organked FIRST ANN OF THE FE "You are the first I'ye ever kissed," He swore and bowed his head.. The girl looked up and moved away, "I want no amachoor," she said. MARLEY 21/2 IN. DEVON 24 IN COLLARS CLUTETT PEABODY & CO. YNC.TROY N .Y OLDEST NATIONAL ' IN MICHIGAN 3 Per Cent Paid on Sa Deposits r checks upon their per- at the men who filled our ee-quarters of a century endent than the student resent generation coma- to us that '-there was a expression at, that time ay during the intervening ust look in vain for the ividual, independent stu- oes not stand alone as regards this - student opinion. The same experi- in the history of every university in md probably abroad. The unattrac- hat the student body of today is not saying things which show that it is k out certain problems for itself. It levoid of the mental originality which about' the tidergraduate days ,Scott, eats and our own Lowell. Political well as literary ideals of realsig- not arising from our universities to- id in the past. The modern and so- it" process of education, in short, urning out men who can apply--not create. em of education at fault or is the the rase changing? Probably, both, outgrowth of the other. For, after r discount for theinevitable rosiness' ys," the fact remains that there is no lifference between the student of id the student of today, the disturb- iich is the realization that we are not the comparison. ing system of education can be nore easily than can the character of I the change cannot be made by stat- tions. It must be a laborious process influence keeping the idea constantly ninds. 'imes, satire on Chimes, says Daily in what way is the Chimes responsi- What, we inquire, has become'of the old fash- ioned comedian who used to ask his partn'er if the furnace had gone out. And then the latter-used to convulse the house by replying, "I don't know; I didn't see it come this way.' LESSON II On "How to Be Witty Tho'. in Love" Once seated on the. divan you assume the con- versational tone used so effectively in Lesson I, and remark to the young lady you are favoring with your attentions, "I was out with a girl last night and asked her for a kiss." The fact that you asked for the kiss instead of stealing it stamps "you at once as an honest though ambitious 'young tran. Your hearer having been touched by this szn of your dependability asks, "And what did she say?" In a strained, unnatural manner you reply in a sepulchral tone of voice (a sort of "My God, it's Nell" tone), "She said that her father had from-" ised to kill any man that ever kissed her." The girl, who by this time is sitting on the edge of the divan, asks in an awed whisper, "And what did you say then ?" Reverting to the conversational tone, herein- before mentioned, you reply, "I told her that her father must have been an awfully bloed y mur- derer." The girl then gives vent to her pent up emotions in hysterical laughter. -When she finally quiets down she perceives clearly that you are not only witty but are a '-egular devil with the women, two of the most important requisites for being popular with the ladies. History No Historian Knows Stude-After Columbus returned to Spain his influence waned and he---he began to slip, as it were. Waggish classmate-So that's 'why they put the chains on him. Famous Closing Lines "Parted on my wedding day," sighed the groom as he heard his waistcoat split down the back; NOAH COUNT. loVERC'OA. --- --- T !-. N/ bp a will be needed for several weeks yet this season. You, can purchase at a I. ! f PRICE ! . I II DISCOUNT ,, from one of the finest and largest. stocks of overcoats to be shown at any time this season. Take Corbett's advice and buy now if you want to save money as overcoats cannot be purchased for Fall delivery at as low prices as we are -selling. FINE STYLES. ALL COLORS. PURE WOOL FABRICS. SPRING SUITS AND OVERCOATS A990 1 Y are being received daily. I TOM CORBETT Walk a Few Steps and Save Dollars 116 E. LIBERTY STREET Between Main