THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Volume 2 SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1922 Number 86 . Lost Articles: All persons who have lost articles on the Campus are requested to call at tjie office of Sec. Smith in University Hall to inquire for them. There are silk and wool sarfs, fountain pens, silver pencils, books, money, satin slippers, glasses, umbrellas, coats, gloves, caps and small trinkets, such as pins, rings, keys, etc. S. W. SMITH. University Lectures: Professor Alfred E. Zimmern, of Oxford University, England, will speak Wednesday, Jan. 25, upon the subject "Greek Political Thought in Relation to Modern Problems", and Thursday, Jan. 26, upon "The Political Frame- work of Economic Policy". Both lectures will be given in the Natural Sci- ence Building Auditorium at 4:15 p. m. The public is invited. F. E. ROBBINS. Faculty of the School of Education: There will be a meeting of the Faculty of the School of Education, Mon- day, Jan. 23, 4:15 p. m., Room 105, Tappan Hall. The Committee on Physi- cal Education will present its report. A. S. WHITNEY. News of the Day IN BRIEF Berlin, Jan. 20.-The German gov- ernment has accepted the invitation to send representatives to the coming in- ternational economic conference at Genoa. Paris, Jan. 20.-Germany's readmis- sion to international sport organiza-1 tions after participation in the Olym-' pic games in 1924 is -forseen today by a sporting periodical. This will be a direct consequence of the invita- tion to Germany to participate .in the coming Genoa conference. It is pre- dicted. Washington, Jan. 20.-Rates on hard wood lumber were ord red reduced by the interstate commerce commis- sion today to a basis of not more than 7 to 11 cents per 100 pounds above the schedule attaining in 1920 before general rate increases were put into effect. Railroads were instructed to make the new schedule effective not later than April 5. H. W. Hammond,,'11, Dies in Denver Word has been received here that Harry W. Hammond, '11, died recently of pneumonia in Denver, Colo., where he went five years ago for his health. Hammond was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and of Sphinx. He was a son of W. L. Hammond, vice- president of the First National bank of Ludington. His body was taken there for burial. HOBART COLLEGE PRESIDENT ; TO SPEAK AT ST. ANDREW'S Dr. Murray Bartlett, president of Hobart college of Geneva, N. Y., will occupy the pulpit of St. Andrew's Episcopal church at 10:30 o'clock to- morrow morning and will also spear . after the young people's supper at 5:30 o'clock. Doctor Bartlett has occasioned much comment on his policy of keep- ing his college small. In order to ac, comp'ish this, Hobart college, which is this year commemorating its hun- dredth anniversary, has set a. small number as the maximum for any en- tering class and has placed the re-C quirements for admission extremly high. Doctor Bartlett has been engaged in educational lines for some time, being organizer and first president of the University of the Philippines. He was connected with some of the large cantonments during the war. Previ- ously he had ben pastor of several churches in New York state. Patronize Daily Advertisers.-Adv. SUiTER SESSION TO OFFER BROADER COURSE SELECTION Oppotunity for a much broader se- lection of courses will be given dur- ing the next session of the Summer school, according to Dean E. H. Kraus. A number of new courses in the literary college, the School of Ed- ucation, the, curricula in library methods, the courses at the biological station, and the graduate school will be described in the preliminary an- nouncement, which will be available next Thursday. Full information con- cerning all courses may be had at the administrative offices of the various C schools. Students contemplating summer study should consult the an- nouncement of courses offered before making their second semester elec- tions. PLAYERS CLUB PRODUCTIONS SLATED FOR NEXT WEDNESDAY "Neighbors" and "The Wonder Hat," the two plays which were to be pro- duced by the members of the Players club last Thursday, will be produced accoi ding to present plans on Wednes- day night, Jan. 25, in Sarah Caswell Angel ! hall. Theseplays will be directed by mem- bers of the club and the parts taken by them as well. R. S. Tubbs, '24L, will have charge of "Neighbors," writ- ten by Zona Gale, while Miss L. Os- borne, of the Ann Arbor high school faculty, will have the supervision of 'The Wonder Hat." GUEST LISTS FOR HOP EXTRA x - All organizations whose lists of guests for the Junior Hop are to appear in the Hop extra must mail or bring to the editorial of- fices of The Daily a typewritten list of guests not later than Mon- day evening, Feb. 6. No lists will be received after that time, but any necessary corrections in the original lists will be made. DANCE- Packard Academy tonight. Kennedy FIVE Orchestra. $1.0.-Adv. - I WHAT'S GOING ON SATURDAY 8:00-Elimination tryouts for Mid. West debates, held in room 302 of Mason hall. 11:45-Members of La Socledad His- panica meet at Spedding's studio for 'Epsian picture. 1:30-Varsity band meets in full uni- form in front of Alumni Memorial hall for 'Ensian picture, 2:00-De~olay officers meet at Ma. sonic temple for rehearsal. 2:30-Allcampus mjx6r at Union. 3:00--Varsity track men engage in re- lay carnival at Waterman gym. 7:00-Upper Room Bible class meets at Lane hall. 7 :4--Craftsmen meet at Masonie tem- ple. W. D. MACKENSIE, HARTFORD SEMINARY HEAD, HERE TODAY Dr. William Dougles Mackenzie,. prominent theologian and president oi Hartford Theological seminary ni Hartford, Conn., will be in Ann Arbor' tonight and Sunday for the purpose' of interviewing students and speaking' at several meetings. The Montieth club will hear Pres- ident Mackenzie at 7:30 o'clock to- night in Lane hall. Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock he will occupy the pulpit of the Congregational church, a'nd he will address the young peo- ple's meeting at 7 o'clock at the same place. Arrangements to talk to Pre-, ident Mackenzie on problems relating to the ministry and in regard to choosing a life work can be made by calling Mr. Louis Reiman, 1693, today. Dr. Mackenzie has studied exten-' sively in this country, England, and Germany, and previous to his present position was a professor in the Chica- go Theological seminary. He is the author of a number of books on re- ligious topics FEW ADMISSIONS LEFT FOR BARBOUR GYM DANCE TODAY Less than 20 tickets for the sopho- more literary class mixer, which is to be he'd from 3 to 6 o'clock today in Barbour gymnasium parlors, remain unsold, states C. J. Verkerke, '24, chair- man of the social committee. Only 200 tickets will be sold due to the limited capacity of the parlors. Most of the tickets' have already been distributed to members of the class. Rhodes' five- piece orchestra will play. Sophomores who have been unable to secure tickets may be able to secure them at the door, states Verkerke, but it is likely thdt all the tickets wall be disposed of before the affair starts. Only a Few Left - Nestor Johnson HOCKEY SKATESof IiWAHR'S University ookstore dggg x ..tliiilt|litlitlillllitlitiilliiill' illilltilliltiii I II, -~--- - SUNDAY 10:1-Chimes business and editorial staffs meet at Rentschler's for photo. 3:00-Taumen meets in room 302 of Union. U-NOTICES Tryouts for the annual French play will be held every day . this . week from 4 to 5 and 7 to 8 o'clock in room 202, south wing, of University hall. All French students are elig- ible. The Varsity blotter is now out and can be had by .calling at the- Chimes of- fice in the Press building. Soph engineers who signed up for slide rules at class meeting may secure same between 10 and 12 or 2 and 5 o'clock today from Cooper at 408 E. Washington street. NATIONAL AUTO C. C. OFFICER TALKS TO HIGHWAY STUDENTS "Management and Record Vorms for Highway Transport," was the sub- ject of a lecture by F. W. Fen, secre- tary of the motor truck commission of the National Automphile Chamber of Commerce, New York City, before stu- dents in the graduate short period courses in highwayengineering 'and highway transport, last night. Mr. Fen, according to Prof. Arthur H. Blanch- ard, of the highway engineering and transport department, is one of they foremost international authorities on highway transport in this country. UNITARIAN CHURCH State and Huron Stb. SIDNEY S. ROBINS, Minister JTnuary 22, 1922 "THE ESSENTIALS OF LIFE" This is Young Poople's Sun- day in Unitarian Churches all over the United States. Floyd W. LaRouct e. Dr. Pre-ton W. Slosson, George D. Wilner,.will speak at the morning service, 10:40. MISS MARGARET WYLIE of the Wayne Co. Psychow'thic Clinic, speaks at 6.:30 on "Fail- ures in Life and Why." Supper 5:45. MUSIC Anthem: "Build The'i More Stately Mansions"; Offertory Duet: "Break Diviner Light." "Do You Wonder What A Uni- taran Church Ia?" I SUNDAJ'S CHURCH SERVICES I Wh iat Others S A WORKING RELIGION Say: II for. Catherine and Dlvisieu Sts. 10:30 PRESIDENT - MURRAY BARTLETT 5:30 Supper at Harris Hall. President Bartlett will speak. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Huron. Below State HAMILTON, '78, AND MILLER ADDRESS A. S. M. E. SMOKER Members of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers held a smok- er Thursday night at the Union at which J. W. Hamilton, '78, of Northern Ontario, and A. L. Miller, instructor in electrical engineering, delivered ad- dresses. Mr. Hamilton told of his experiences in the Rockies, Mexico, and Upper Canada, and spoke of great opportun- ities there in mining and lumbering. Mr. Miller,spoke on copper refining. The society has planned similar meetings for each month of the school year. DR. BARRETT INVITED TO SPECIALISTS' CONFERENCE Washington, Jan. 20.-Dr. -Albert M. Barrett, professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan, is one of a number of prominent neuro-psychiat- I ric specialists who have been invited to attend a conference, at Washing- ton, Feb. 2, called by Col. Charles t. Forbes, director of the United States Veterans bureau. The conference will discuss, and make recommendations, regarding the care and treatment of veterans. suffering from mental and nerovous derangements. JESSUP, '23E, WILL JOIN EXPEDITION TO GIUATAMALA Miners Demand Increase Shamokim, Pa., Jan. 20.- The ri- state convention of the anthracite mine workers late today adopted the rec- ommendation of the sales committee demanding a 20 per cent increase in wages for contract miners and a one dollar a day increase for all paid men. The convention had before it tonight a recommendation providing for a con- vention of miners on April, 1 in the event that no satisfactory agreement has been made by that date. Leaders said there was every prospect of its adoption. Johnston to Address Craftsmen Prof. Clarence T. Johnston, of the surveying department, will give an il- lustrated lecture on "Egypt and the Early Guilds" at the meeting of the Craftsmen's club which will- be held at 7:45 o'clock tonight in the Masonic temple. The third degree work will be exemplified, and Professor - John- ston's lecture will be given at the end of the first section. Fire Causes $20,000 Loss Damages amounting to more than $20,000 were suffered by John and Mike Alexander when their candy store, located on North Main street,1 was partly destroyed by fire last Wed- nesday night. Several people who were sleeping on the second and thrd floors of the 'building were forced to escape in their night clothes. Reviews American Troops Rome, Jan. 20.-King Victor Em- manuel yesterday reviewed the Amer- ican battalion which came here to participate in the ceremonies attend- ing the presentation of the congress- ional medal of honor to Italy's un- known soldier. 10. 30-Rev. Mahlon C. Tunison, '08, of Logansport, Ind., will preach. Subject: "Life's Ov- erflow." 12: 00-Sunday School at Church. Guild Class at Guld House. 4:00 - Junior B. Y. P. U. at Church. 5630 - B. Y. P. U. at Guild House. 6:00 - The Students' Guild at the Church. - Miss Sigrid Johnson, U. of M. Nurses' 'raining School. '14, Supt. Clough Memorial Hos- pital, Ongole, India will be the special guest of honor and will speik. Luncheon at G:00; Address at 6.45.*Forinmr Kal- amazoo students especially invited. A real working religion appeals to every real man. Convince him that religion is practical, calls forth the best that is in him, and holds something that satisfies, then he will accept it, use it and let it possess him. Religion after all is a way of living and not merely a belief. Jesus spent all of His time showing men how to live and,.He said little about belkefs. He was continually going about doing good, relieving physical and mental suffer- ing. The diffigulty we have now in understanding Christianity is caused by the fact that so many theoretical and theological explanations have been spun around it. A great- deal of the formalism and symbols in our church worship today, have been borrowed from ancient forms of worship and prob- ably was never in the mind of Jesus. While many men of today may be out of sympathy with- the church, they have the profoundest respect for what Jesus taught and what real Christianity stands for today. Jesus called men to no easy life. He spoke of giving up wealth, positions of influence, even those dearest to oneself, in order to serve one's fellow- men. But in exchange for all these things He promised happiness, a full life developed in all its possibilities, and in the end "the Kingdom of God" here on earth. In other words, He appealed to the heroic, the hard-to-do, from the mediocre goal to the infinite aspiration. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. REV. ARTHUiJR W. STALKER, D.D, Pastor MISS ELLEN W. MOORE, Student Director 10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship. Pastor's Subject: "THE WILL AND RELIGION." 12:00 Noon.-BIBLE SCHOOL. Student Classes in Auditorium of Lane Hall. 6:00 P. M.-Social Half Hour for the young people. 6:30 P. M.-WESLEVAN GUILD devotional meeting. MR. ROSS FOX, LEADER. 7:30 P...M.-Evening Worship. Pastor's Subject: "IMPRESSIONS OF OXFORD." SPECIAL MUSIC for the day: "Andante" (From Concerto) (Mendel- ssohn), Miss Struble- and Mr. Brooks; f'Benedictus" (Gounod), the Chorus; "How, lovely are the Messengers" (From St. Paul) (Mendelssohn), the Chorus; "0 God have Mercy" (From St. Paul) (Mendelssohn), Mr. Williams: "Berceuse" (Godard), Miss Struble' and Mr. Brooks; "Through Peace to Light" (Hastings), the'Cho- rus; "Jerusalem" (From St. Paul) (Mendelssohn), Mrs Whee'er. PRESBYTERIA N CHURCH, I AND "UPPER ROOM" BIBLE CLASSES LANE HALL ANN ARBOR BIBLE CHAIR See , Upper Room" Bulle- tin and Printed Schedule. Sunday Class for Men from 9:30 to 10:15 4z x ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH CHURCH OF CHRIST I I South University AvT, (MO. SYNOD) Cor. Third and West Huron Sts. C. A. BRAUER, Pastor 9:30 A. M.-Public worship (German) 10:30 A. M. - Bible School. 11:30 A. M. - Public worship. Sermon: "Christ, giving liv- ing water." WELCOME ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Fifth Ave. and Washington St. E. C. STELLHORN, Pastor HURON AND DIVISION I MORNING WORSHIP at 10:30 Rev. L. A. Barrett speaks on "SOCIALISM AND CHRISTIANITY" J. Frank Green, State Secre- tary of the State Christian Mis- sionary Society of the Disciples of Christ will speak on the Stewardship of Money. This is one of the series on Stewardship which has been given during the month. Bible School at Nine-Thirty and Students' Classes at Noon. Mrs. Arthur's Class of Universi- ty Girls will study the old Tes- tament this quarter. Christian Endeavor at 6:30. Student Class 12:00 Prof. W. D. Henderson speaks on "WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE BIBLE" YOUNG PEOPLE'S SOCIETY Social Half-Hour at 6:00 Program at 6:30 Thelma Henderson, '23, leads. Topic: "Sins of the Tongue." 4 I F. P. ARTHUR, Pastor GILBERT BISHOP, Organist l Carnegie Institute Professor Here IDr. E. G. Anderson, investigator for the Carnegie Institute of Washing- ton, at its station for experimental evolution, located at Cold Suring Harbor, Long Island, is spending a few days in the city as the guest of the University faculty men. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Sincerity is not a savior, but it renders the acceptance of sal- vatlon as it is in Jesus especial- ly easy and rapid. "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." 10:30 o'clock: ,I Vorris K. Jessup, '2E, left Wednes- r night for New Orleans to join a entific expedition which will sail Jan. 28 for Guatamala. The party 1 make a three months' investiga- a of archaeological material in the 4tral American republic. The expe- on is in charge of Carl Guthe, a son :he late Dr. Karl Guthe, ho was a fessor in the physics department, e some years ago,, Hays to Quit March 4 Washington, Jan. 20.-Postmaster General Hays announced today that his resignation from the cabinet would be dated effective March 4 in order that his term cf service'in the cabinet may include one complete year Buy your class toques from Daily advertisers.-Adv. 9:00 A. M. -- Bible study hour. 10:30 A. M. - Sermon, "When Jesus Finds a Guileless Man." 5:30 P. M. - Student Forum. "Can The Golden Rule be Ap- plied in Business." Earl H. Ludin, leader. 7:30 P. M. - Sermon, "Better Than Disarmament." All services English. Dr. W. Douglas Mackenzie, President of the Hartford Theological Seminary in Connecticut will speak. The subject is: "THE MEASURE OF DEVOTION TO CHRIST."' Class for University students lead by Mr. George A. Kiyper. Congregational Students Association. Dr. Mackenzie will speak. TRINITT LUTHERAN CHURCH Fifth Ave. and William St. Rev. L. F. Gunderman, Pastor 9:30 A. M.-Sunday School. 10:30 A. M.-"The Great Physi- clan." 7:30 P. M. - Vesper Musical Service. Mr. John Matthews, tenor, will sing a group of sacred songs. YOU ARiE WELCOME TO ALL THE SERVICES OF THIS CHURCH. 12:00 o'clock: 7:00 o'clock: I s -1