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January 21, 1923 - Image 9

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1923-01-21

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AV Ar

VOL. XXX tI No 87 ANN ARBOR, MICHIOAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 192

PRICE FIVE CP.Nrs
r

Research work in regard to methods t 1 1 r:
of ransportation in efficiency of rail-
roads, trucks, and boats is occupying
the attention of the research depart- ±
ment- of the University Chamber or
Commerce. The attitude of the man-
ufacturer is being investigated, and
prominent ment in each of these fields y
will be brought to Ann Arbor in the
near future to explain their views on
the problem to the members of the
club.
The Chamber of Commerce is carry-
ing out investigation in this manner
through an organization that divides {
the members into four groups of re-'
search, employment, publicity and ad-I: :
vertising. Those in the club have the
choice of the group in. which they are
to work and in this nmanner are given ; 4 x
an opportunity to devote their ener- Left to right: Miss Slinnlc, lady in wiaiting to Mrs. Outrtemoni"; Vlhairma
gies to a task in. which they are in- 11is' Gautier (1'ti Montreal), Mb', M cDowell lady in- via tin- to 4
terested. A vice' president of thede
club is in charge of each group.
The Chamber of Commerce was or- Wearing his chain of office with all: which was one of the opening features
ganized on. the campus four months the dignity of the lord mayor of Lon- of Montreal'p winter carnival. With
aowith its purpose to bring about a the mayor at the head of the parade
ago 1ih5spu we b Ino don, Mayor Mederick lMartn headed s n ra he, op yr
.closer union between students anddn RayrMceik anhaed was Miss Gauthier, who played the
business men and to help in educa- the parade of winter sport enthusiasts role of "Miss Montreal's" and was
tional and campus improvement. It
has grown to a membership of 46 -Just Vis-o--T
members of whom Floyd Reinke, 2, 1
is president. Classes" Modest Bottle Bobs 1200
It is planned by the organizers 1
Scholar Exl 1n Miles Over Ocean
of the club to establish'a sere o Scholar Explains
similar organizations in other colleges ---
in this section. If this project is car- Is it possible that in all this broad -St. LouisMo., Jan 20 (By A.I'.)-
ried out i is probable that the Michigan land with its many newspapers there S.o,
chapter will be the headquarters o is a man who has never had his name John E. 1-ali, of this city, while on a
the cluib, in the national organiza- in print? Yet that is what.Mr. What's- worldor ein 1921 enclosed a note
tion. his-name told a Daily reporter. inaor e bottlandtr iover-
Another feature of the organization The interview had been going nice bardbewnoulI nNe ea-
work that is being carried out by the ly. Mr. What's-his-name is a white- land, and Honolulu. rte then offered
club is the establishment of similar haired, white-mustached, bi-spectacled a rewd fots rltra lett rwas
clubs in high schools throughout the little man of more than 60 years, a re-eeiVed frmamissionary in Siola,
state to act as sulsidaries to the Uni- tired . Indiana farmer who. has been
versity chapter. in this manner a attending lectures and classes at the-one og the itishi Solon on Islesen-
student would go from the high school University for three years as a visitor. closing the note and announing that
chapter through the University chap- Obviously, this situation has the ear- nthe bottlelad been found by a native
ter and finally into the club in his marks of a good feature story and on the Islandof Ulawa. The bottle is
city. In this respect offiliation with that was what the Daily reporter estimated to have travelled approxi-
mately 1,200 miles.
the An Arbor Chamber of Commerce sought.
is now being considered and Is pron- "I have a nice big farm in Indiana
able that such a union will take place and can live comfortably on the in-
as soon as satisfactory arrangemen: come from it," the old scholar ex-ODEGNER TD
can be made. Affiliation with the De- 'plained. "My wife is dead and a
troit Board of Commerce has already !grown son runs the farm. I alwaysfl
been effected. wanted a college education, I sent my
eece.three sons to Michigan here, and
at last when I had both the time and CONSTRUCTION 0 F FOOTPATHS
li moneyI came to school. I,am not a PROPOSED BY NEW JERSEY
candidate for a, degree because there ENTHUSIASTS
would be little point an my trying to
N ext summer's paving program callssoqaiynw
forxth smten'sonong pamnts o attend the lectures in English State road engineers and highway
for the extension of pavements on History by Professor Turner, Profes- officials of Michigan, in their efforts
three ,streets; on Fourth avenue t sor Wenley's lectures, and also follow to establish a comprehensive highway
Packard, on South State to Grainger several courses on the Bible which system, and studying contemporary
and on Geddes to Oxford. are taught here. !road work in almost every state of
A petition has been presented before "Oh, you can put it in the paper if the union and in several foreign coun-
the city council to extend the pave- you wish, but not with my name. I've tries.
ment on Washtenaw avnue to the city never had my name in the paper, and Paving enginers are paying especial
limits' The petition was presented I don't want to start now." attention to asphalt pavements con-
when it was learned that the state; structe with a "Black base" founda-
Hig thway commissinwas considering ROPOSED FOREIGN ition of asphalt, sand and stone or
paving the W~ashtenaw road from Ann -gravel. Considerable success with
Arbor to Ypsilanti, and r.ks the cty MARKET FOR STATE this type of pavement has been ob-
to pave on each side of the twenty foot tained in California, Oregon, Washing-
strip that the state provides so as to Products of Michigan Factories :May ton, Arizona and Nevada, and in the
make the road the usual width. The Be Largely Exported. cities of Chicago, Calgary, Washington,
city will do this providing the state Owensboro, Hamilton, Omaha, Pitts-
consents to pave. burgh, Buffalo, Denver and Saginaw.
Detroit, Jan. 20 (By A. P.)-A plan buhnBuffas sene and Sa -w
to create foreign markets for the pro Washington has some of these pave-
A T THE THEA TERS ducts of Michigan factories through ments which havebeen in use over
vln n- t hfforty years, Pavement of this kind

n Raymond of the sports committee;
iss lontreal; Mayor Mederlck Marthi,
dressed in appropriate regal robes.
Miss Higgins represented the city of
Outremont. The mayor and his party
are shown above.

Gles Example . by engineers throughout the country
Prince Gelosio Caetani, Italian am- in recognition of the need of a coi-
bansad r to U. S., was a living ex- certed effort on their part in the ac-
anple of tlfe proninence of engineers comPlshing of such an ideal They
I n' the spheres of influence in his now einbrace a membership of more
native land; being the graduate :n than 55,000 men.
1 YeAlrs Negotiations Expected To, s ruc
t uhlinate In Privy CounIel Ski Slide For
' - ~ IIea11i
1NEWFONDLAND PLACESNatioalMeet N -ESIDENT ALY
PRICE ON TERITOY unpolis, c.20. (By A.P.)- 12 EDUCATORS WILL CONDUCT
' ('W A Work.has begun' a nthe one hundred OUTRSES I NCHO OL F

" UW "^lLL''' V '"^"''" ' - i the New York zoologscal par. give a course in the business adminis-
the Labrador boundary difficulty. Dr. Iornaday was a student at Ames tration of the public school system.
Newfoundland, maintaining jurisdic- iu the'ea'rly'seventies, but did not fin. Prof. Marvin S. Pittman, of the Mich-
lion over the Labrador coast, has con- lsh his work here. Today he is prob- igan State Normal college at Ypsi-
tended that its zone of influence runs ably one of the best known natural- lanti, will lecture on rural and social
well into the interior, taking up a ists in the world and has devoted his education.
U i-n Stay th. t thid int to tilec- -Mca om4m_ psychology.wll be the

ARCADE
"Minnie," Marshal Neilan's new
production, which is hl:re the first half
of the week, is a real screen enter-
tainment, with an excellent, human
story and thrills aplenty, but its big
quality is in its humorous situations.
Marshal Neilan has taken life in a
small tcwn country hotel and put the
incident:, on the screen in life-like
fashion- nowhere does he exager-
ate.
The story centers around Leatrice
Joy as Minnie, the slavey, drudge in
her fathr's hotel. Minnie, homely
and clumsy, just loves to have a beau,
but thl heaux laugh and go elsewhere.
That makes Minnie angry. She in-
vents a beau. She writes passionate
love letters to herself and drops themj
where the gossips can find them. She
sends herself flowers and big boxes
of candy. But she overdoes the
schemc1. Her step-sister demands
that Minnic produce the wealthy, ar-j
dert lover. The things that Minnie
does to square herself only make mat-]
ters worse and they are so odd that
an inquiring newspaper renorter, in
IIe person of Matt Moore, comes onto

c os;e co-opiera onl wzi Le bureau o argo area tat ae maps a ot to tae
foeg cmeceo h Uie Sae s also in use near Kalamazoo ande life to !building up tthe largest colle dctoa-o scooy ilb h
foreign commerce of the United States talso inse nega . KalamaProvince of uQebec. The Canadian tion o wild animal, fish and bird life subject of Prof. William Henry Pyle,
Department of Commerce, is being other points in Michigan. authorities concede to Newfoundland o ofoundanyhered iof the education department of the
considered by officials of the Detroit The southern states for many years only 'a narrow strip of the Labrador beon ny of his rat work University of Missouri. Dr. Clarence
Board of Commerce. negligent in improving their roads, littoral, which is necessary to the the. collegeconferred upon him the Yoakum, asociate rofessor of ap
have embarked upon road building fisheries industry of the island colony ipli
The plan would include employment,' programs involving the construction For m th e the right honorary degree of Mater of Philoso- pe sea d of Care st
b} the local boardl of an expert from i , For more than a century the right of . personnel research of Carnegie Insti-
the locaboard of Wasngxpt fro of several thousand miles of new inrd Newfoundland to this shore line has phy, but failed to notify him of the tute of Technology, will offer a course
edepaxment at Washington who surfaced roads. In eight months of been conceded. honor. During the summer Dr. L. H. in experimental ed ati
would act as advisor to manufactur- 1922, southern states sold 343 roa _Pamnmelm head of the Botany depart, _ _a__n.
ers in Detroit and other Michigan bond issues amounting to $86,436.650. .p1 m'et, made a 'visit to the east and
cities and help them to build up a V ederal assistance is -being given sev- Offer Fellowships while in conversation with Dr. Horn-
foreign trade for their products. In eral projects, notable among which , aday, mentioned the conferring of the
this way, it is declared, comparatively is a highway extending through the F r Research Work degree which the eminent zoologist Toy
small concern-s that, now lave no Holston river valley of Tennessee, -promptly denied. The matter was
foreign trade experts of their own with a length of fifty miles. Four $1,000 dollar fellowships are ' taken up with college authorities and I
would be enabled to build ump the:r Concident with the development oc being offered by the Bishop Museum of 1 proper notification was made.Te
comxmerce in this direction by co- - drn|rgh Two outside npeakers of note are in
ci th modern highway system has come a Honalulu for study and research in Ann Arbor today. Edwin Markham
operative action. movement for the construction of foot- 1 Anthropology, Botany, Zoology, Geo- GOV. PA R K ER ACTS auhor of "The Man With The Hoe",
Board of Comemrce officials a r e paths along state highways. A bill to logy, or Geography at Yale university.
authority for the statement that hun- this end is to be introduced by good These fellowships are open to men and TO PUNISH KLAN will be at the Methodist church to-
yatitwenight, and Harold I . B. Speight, of
dreds of Michigan firms are not tak- roads enthusiasts in the next sesson women who have completed a t least IMinister King's Chapel, Boston, will
.ng advantage of their opportunities of the New Jersey legislature. The one year of graduate study at an in- New Orleans, La., Jany 20 (By A.P.) preach
for foreign commerce merey because = paths, it is believed, would keep pedes- stitution of high standing! - -ov. Parker has decided to call a at U ancg.
thydI o nertn herte -yjmorning.
they de not understand the rather In- trians off the roadway and taereny Application for these fellowships special session of the LouisIana leg:s- Speaks On Fashions
volved steps necessary to make such greatly reduce highway accidents. should be made to the dean of the lature to take up the question of the Morning worship will begin at 10:30
a venture successful. To successfully _. -.graduate school of Yale univensity, abolitlor of the Klu Klux Klan in o'clock at the First Methodist church.
engage in selling goods to fore:gners, ISCHOOMASTEPS 1OL1 STATE New Haven, Conn., or to the director Lousiana, to impeach certain officials Dr. Stalker will speak on the, "Fash-
it is pointed out, the :seller must 'he VONFEIREN'E HERE IN )A T of the Bishop Museum, Honolulu, in Morehouse Parish, and to dispose of ions of Folks". Bible classes will
acquaintel with a wide diversity o Hawaii, before April 1, 1913. They some minor legislation, according to meet at noon in Wesley Hall. Miss
subjects,if mlud in the van- Convening at the same time. the should be accompanied by any reprints a story printed here today in the;Frances Gill will tell of her visit to
ge and tariff impositions in the various Mchigan cademy of Science and the I of which item.Oberammergau this last summer be-
countries that he wishes to serve. - , applicant has been the author, letters 1 vI ldAnce ohtaind nt the n'n nhoar- twn A.0 an .o0 olockis r +g r_

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