THEMIHIANDAIX The United&ae and the War ten Slossen) cept his arguments to the following the signal treachery to Belgium and to refuse friendship to a liberal and n in last Sunday's points: (1) the German attitude to dis- Luxemburg; (15) the Kaiser's own democratic German, Republic. Ger- anday Magazine of a armament and arbitration in the two belligerent comments on official des- man-American friendship i possible enneth'Turner's book Hagne Conferences; (2) the German patches during the 1914 crisis, ire- in 1922, but it should not cause us to in," in which the re- refusal to accept any of the many Brit- cently revealed by the German Repub- misrepresent the situation as it was g the lead of the ish proposals for a "naval holiday"; (3) tic; (16) Bernstoff's evidence in his either in 1914 or 1917. a demonstration that the German rejection, at the time of recent book, written from the German -s bears the glilt of the Haldane mission, of -the British point of view, of Wilson's reluctance TE UNI4N POiL calls for a hearing pledge not to join France or Russia in to go to war and his efforts to bring e of the case, an attack on Germany, and the Ger- peace by negotiation; (17) the pa- your reviewer goes man counter-deman that England tience of the American Government (Continued from Page Three) n about the war not to pledge an unconditional neutrality, during the submarine war of 1915-16, To the classes of '23,-'24, '25, and '26 >cuments themselves, even in the event of a German aggres- in the course of which many Amer- would attach the chief honor of mak- lard discussions and sion; (4) the Kaiser's plot with the ican citizens were treacherously mur- ing possible the one thing most neces- if them by men of Tsar after the Russo-Japanese war dered; (18) Germany's refusal to pub- sary at Michigan at the present time. ace, but to the specu- for a league against England and the lish her peace terms in answer to Wil- j To them, also, would attach the honor pagandist tract such ocupation of neutral Denmark; (5) son's peace note, or even to indicate of turning the informal swimming . That the late war, the British offer, proved by the Lich- in the most gneal way what those team into a recogtized University 'an accompanied by nowski memorandum, to gratify Ger- terms were; (19) German renewal of team. But there would be much more sering is a fact and many's colonial ambitions in Africa unlimited submarine warfare after than the honor. For five dollars the but it does not in and Mesopotamia before the war; (6) Wilson's election (thus destroying buyer of an admission card receives that the motives ac- Foreign Minister Jagow's admission, Turner's argument that Wilson tw'enty-five swims. This charge of nerican Government in his reply to Lichnowski, that Eng- should have kept the peace since he twenty cents a swim is little more In reckoning up the land consistently sought to keep the was elected on a peace ticket); (20) than twice the amount that would .iness" out of the war, peace before as well as during 1914; the unbelievable (but admitted) Zim- have to be charged at any time in Turner or the re- (7) Austria's plot, communicated to merman note, offering to Mexico order to operate the pool, and is less mind the following Italy in 1913, for an attack on Ser- three American states as spoils of than it would cost to swim anywhere 1) that the currency bia (showing that the Serajevo assas- war, else in the vicinity. always accumpanies sination was a mere preteit); (8) the Five dollars does not permit just Sof every dollar in geographical fact that Serbia was the s a thankless taskto rake over one man to swim, it lets the rest of me oevery dollar hin oographkicathfachatn Serbia s tm old coals but it is necessary so long the University swim too. Everything nao oubles thisne Blinko the haind nations fr as writers on the war Ignore admitted depends on the interest of the whole no more in 1919 than!"Berlin to ;agda" not yet under and essential fats. The deep'guilt ofstdnboyfrwihutespot t for every trader in German control; (9) recent Austrianth ermn oachy The adher- ofa student body, for without the support as enriched, a dozen revelations showing Berchtold's cyn- th ve en achraterst ally wl t ea in a pool the oped shwn ectl',cn fa es.636,mn h no oleaoe-time goods, es-I ical. maneuvers to make war inevit- eats have been characteristically will still remain a .polto be hoped sate-time g oe- al mnouve4ri sptof ake wreit- spending their time out of office by for in the distant future instead of foed th Euro able G11 n and Austrian states- murdering the Republican leaders) a pool ready for use by the end of nadequate, are many men; (10) the numerous offers of need not, I may add, caue America the first semester. an -normal taxes; (4) Foreign Minister Grey, backed -by s followed, and was France and Russia, for a-peaCe sette- illowed, by a period ment on any terms in 1914 -by media- deflation which de- Lion, arbitration, direct diplomatic in- 'U T H PLA CE" FORj THAT fortunes built up by terchange, the Hague Court (Serbia's J T L i L'111 5)l t rat wages in war ( n proposal) or any other method LUNCH AND CUP OF HOT CHOC- doubled, refed and ("y'od have only to push he button"P , so that the s ae which Austria or Germany might ac- LATE OR COFFEE THESE rves that capitalists cept; (11) the rejection of these of- eir profits during the fers until the crisis had reached theCDAYS war would prove that fatal stage; (12) immediate declara- ought about by the tion of war on Russia and France ed labor (or perhaps while negotiations were still in pro- ______ ho reaped top prices gress (using Russian mobilization as S(6) that no man a pretext, although a mobilization is TUTTLE' L U N C H R 0 M esounpospula with rnt in i-self an act of war) ; (1) the 1 Street financier as plan to force war on France, willing 3 MA ARD ST. JUST SOTTH O IF MAJJSTIC n or denounced so or not, by demanding the occupation fist, a poltroo and of French frontier fortresses; (14) r unions? e argumet a priori. ct evidence as to the sufficient to offset any rential argument. I tention of the review- nay be inclined to at- , HE man who has a savings account never Gfears the future., Financialmisfortune or bus- to pleaseany iness disaster can't conquer him. And when op- woman is a portunity knocks, he is ready. Lack of cash 'wrtingu paperx - never deters him. The man who has a savings account HERE has all these advantages. But he has the further benefits of courteous attention and sound finan- cial advice. He possesses a right to all those in tangible things which go to make up what we call "service." And the-beauty of it is that this service entails no greater effort on his part. Two convenient locations and an able organization boxes clesignied of skilled tellers see to that.