THE MICHIGAN DAILY - --.-M ,..: :, FFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE" UNITERSITY OF MICHIGAN Piabli~hed every morning except ?Monday wring the University year by the Board in u'ntrol of Student PublicationsB Members of Western Conference Editorial szciatiozl, The ssoiatd Pessis ecluhsi'e lyen- toeaedforrepublication (o I1a news spatc es credited to- it or not otherwise edited in this paper and the local news vub- hed therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbo- ;ihigan, as second class matter. Special rate postage granted by Third Assistant Post- Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, .00. Offics: Ann Arbor Press Building, May rd Stieet. Phone: Editorial, 2414 and 176-1h, Busi- ^ss, 960. Signed coijimunications, not exceeding 300 ords, will be published in. Tl-e Daily at e discretion of the Editor. Upon requcst, Le identity of communicants will be - rded as confidential. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 176-M AANAGING EDITOR HARRY D. HOEY ews Editor............Robt. B. Arr nitoria l boa d Chairman.. e.l. C. Moria. ty ty Editor.... .......,i. G Garlinghouse Night Editors H., Ailes A I.Cn~.t A. Uillington 1 E. Fiske arry C. Clark P. M. Wague oiS EsFditor.. . .Raloh N. It ici omn's Editr... . Winona Ilibbard inday Magazine Editor~. H. L. Ti en fusic Editor. .......... .Ruth A" Hoawell sistant City Editoi...... Kenneth C. K llsr rector Michigan New Bureau..R. A. Ram' ay Editorial Boardj of a college professor or president whom they were able to know and admire during their student days. What the colleges of today need is not primarily publicity, enlargement, facilities, athletic renown. It is that! good old "inside quality" that is made l up 99 per cent of the "human ele-1 ment." 1.t the emphasis be more on the spiritual and less on the material.I One of the best ways is to foster in! every way the contact between fac- ulty and student. Tx E I IMIGRANT HORDE Grave thoughts are now uppermost in the minds of many of our leading thinkers as to what will result should the Johnson bill now before Congress fail to be passed. The House Immi- gration committee warns in a report transmitted to the House that unless Congress adopts some sort of immi- gration legislation before June 30,' "the greatest migration of peoples in the history of the world"'will start for the United States about July 1st. Eco- nomic conditions in Europe and in Asia Minor are given as the reason or this great influx should it not be1 chncked. And according to testimony, tiese peoples whom the proposed law would restrict are not farmers and skilled laborers, but instead are small OASTED RLL "PLEASE GIVE THE 'ENSIAN SOMWE PUBLICITY' "Good ole Cowlesy Wowlesy!" Thus did the salesmanager of the 'Ensian address us yesterday. And to save! trouble, we agreed to say this: PAY FOR YOUR 'ENSIAN But what's funny about that? . . .. * , * * SPECIAL DELIVERY MARCELL:I Have you no conscience, no heart, no unselfishness? You may love Jason just as truly as you seem to, but you must remember that selfish love makes great men into either groveling slaves or cynical egoists. If your own love and ambitions for our Jason do not prompt you to control your affections1 until he has proved himself secure in this world, then consider the other thousands of readers that love Jason just as truly if not as selfishly as you. Can't you see that he is losing his grip on life? He has only two short articles in Wednesday's Rolls with twice as much space given to you as i I. CAMPUS OPINION I ALWAYS Editor, Michigan Daily: With reference to~ your edi~orial entitled "Arousing Public Thought" in the Saturday, February 23rd, issue of the Michigan Daily, your statement that "to those who adhere to the Rooseveltian idea of 'America, first last and all the time' Professor Hobbs certainly was conclusive," may be mis- leading to some-as was Professor Hobbs' concluding statement in the recent debate between himself and Professor Slosson. It may give the' impression to those who would be in- clined to follow Roosevelt that he was against the League of Nations, where- as the facts are decidedly to the con- trary.{ In several addresses between 19141 and January 6, 1919-three days be- fore his death-he advocated a league to enforce peace in his characteristic forceful manner. The following is a typical editorial of his from The ln- dependent, January 4, 1915: "My proposal is that the efficient -Vilized nations shall join in a World League for the peace of righteousness. "This is to be accomplished by all the powers covenenting to put their whole strength back of the fulfillment of treaty obligations, including the de-' crees of court established under and in accordance with the treaty. "Then, and most important, the na- tions should severally guarantee to use their entire military force, if nec- essary, against any nation which de- fied the decrees of the Tribunal or which violated any of the rights which in the rules it was expressly stipulated should be reserved to the several na- tions, the rights to their territorial integrity, and the like." Yours very truly, F. N. Menefee. I- - THE BETTER GRADE GRAHAM'S BOTH E N DS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK Ji ---...-- to Caligula. And besides he is keep- , Iti,. airvnr 1i,. 1n rsn,*.nm ,,c, athine,, Einstein Herman Wise Ar. drew Propper Assistants . { ltatc e R. S. %Masield orim B1icknell 14. C. !n"ck lerrianBoxe r Verena oran eargaret Bonine Tarold Moore 1cilen Brown CarlpOhirnacher ernadette Cote 11yde Perce ;.W. IDalii Regina Rcichm Ans ;?rold Ehrlicb Edmarie Schrouder V. P Henry C. A. Stevens Tanning fouseworth W. I S'oneman ',-othv Ka-mm HF. R. Skone 'ilia Kendall Marie Reed oseph Kruger N. R. ToI Clizabeth Lieberman W. ). Walthour BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURENCE H. FAVROT 4dvertising..................E. L. Dunne Pdvertising.............. Pesry. M. Hayden %1%ertising............. . Roser Advertising...............W. K Sche er Accounts ....,...............A. S. Merton Circulation .. . ....... .... P usllcaton . ..... . 1awreti 'ir Assistan a . W. Campbell N, .?iCla h Champion arold A. Marks Ihn Conlin By ron Parkes . ouis M. Dt e If. E. (ose Joseph J. ]jn-i A. J. Seidm~an, David A. Fox Will Weise Lauren H aight C F W it H. L. Hale R. C. Winter -I1URSI AY_ BR JR 28,'1924 Night Editor-THOMAS E. FISKE - - 2- c Tnhiaeyou ieterr om us, a mi traders and common laborers. unheard of in Jason before. The Johnson bill fixes the annual I don't believe there are any girls quota of any. race that would be ad- on the campus heartless enough to do mitted to 2 per cent of the total pop- such a thing. I wouldn't be at all ulation of the country using the cen- surprised if you aren't a girl. I be- ;us of 1890 as a basis. Selecting this liebe you're just a man trying to play particular census would automatically with his affections without realizing bar countless numbers of southern what harm you are doing. In short, and southeastern Europeans, for I feel that I have a right to demand a large immigration from those parts public apology from you in behalf of did not begin actually until a later all who love his kind, lively, rollicking date. The present law on the other fun. hand allows a 3 per cent quota of the The Princess of Rhan Roe. 1910 population. To any interested * * * individual there is apparent at a mo- The Rover Boys' Vengeance, No. 3. ment's reflection what the great differ- No sooner had the three Rover Boys ence in actual numbers would be. seen the scorching flames pouring Other than this however, the import- from the garage which housed their ant question is, will these new immi- mammoth dirigible than they prompt- grants, should the Johnson bill be ly cast about for some appropriate voted down, be an asset or a liability method of squelching the consuming to our country. That is the matter tongues of flame which threatened the to be considered. frail walls of the structure. If one looks back over the history " The fire bucket," cried Dick, and of immigration and its results in seizing a nearby pail, he dashed its ;America, it is quite safe to say that liquid contents into what was now a one will come to the conclusion that -eething furnace of bi seetingfurac~ .o blsteingheat. n truth the very essence of progress While Dick Estrove heroically to in the United States has been a result check the fiames 'with the pail of of the immigrant who came to this water, Tom rising to the occasion, had country. 'He labored, he worked, and i dashed madly into the house and se- he created far more than-.any other. cured the sane magnetic fire exting- His share in the building up of a uisherthat saved the aged hermit and DETROIT UNITED UNES EAST BOUND Limiteds: 6 a. m., 9:10 a. m. and, every two hours to 9:10 p. m. Express: 7 a. m., 8 a m. and every two hours to 8 p. m. Locals: 7 a. m., 8:55 a. m. and every two hours to 8:56 p. m., 11 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:40, p. mi., 12:25 a. m. and 1:15 a. m. WEST BOVID Limiteds: 8:47 a. m. and every two hours to 8:47 p. m. Express ()aking 1 cal stops): 9:51, a, mn. and every two hours to 9:60 P. M. I ocals: 7:50Oa. m.,1 1t)a. W. 1 2' 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 14 17 1t, 19 20 21 22 «,l FA9TORY IHAT S't(l1E 617 Packard St. Phonet4- (Where D. U. R. Stops at State) GEELTAMIPAGT GARRICK 'ibt 'Ickt r1aw(L rs bi l rtr rs d.('ltl oin' - f1[ JIsurance, et . PasGuort. v-isa>, 'it'at rc papr. readmsion .lflnavimrs etc. in ormatlon. ^11 Europe, Orient, CaIses, Tourst etc. Our PPVIi., lo r iT t relatives and Ilel(ls to U.f 5 . o reln-wn lt r~s. IS1URANC.F All II If V E. G. KUEBLER, 601 E. Huron . YSi. e Phone E s' rAN4 ARB~oR c". - I You'll never forget the Selwyn Produc. lion of THE COOL 1GII See II r Forgive Yourself You Don'tI Read th e Want Ads I l P C t EDITORIAL COMMENT The Co ple ePj,,ct for the Standard Oil Buiding New York City and HASTINGS 4the New'Ar;Architects A ANTI -e~tnet sape ua becmeof argyter p 'a 1~~ 4vv A stinthet new adec is tenntoarrtt u tesrteL farha guriptcr ofdtail. acoN tnis egt h ew architecture i edn oadgetsrc tu.r aterf far greteipo dtanci hnit eal Certainly modern invention--modern engineering skill and organization, will prove more than equal to the demands of the architecture of the future. SOTIS ELEVATOR COMPANY Offices in all Principal Cities o tle World STARVING CHILDREN (From Toronto U.) The Canadian Committee for the Re- lief of Starving Children in Germany received a cable yesterday announcing , that its first soup kitchen had, onf Tuesday, been opened in' Cologne. This movement for the relief of helpless children, thpugh well-sup-" ported and known in England, was be- ? gun only a short time ago in Canada. The start was made in Toronto where the Canadian Committee now has its headquarters and where it has receiv- ed a great deal of its strength. This' news of its first result is a tribute to Mr. G. C. L. Pemberton, of the Canad- ian Bank of Commerce, the present SANFORDS~ FOUNTAIN PEN INK rThe Ink That Made he Fountain Pen Possibl u: UE SLmlK J A CHV IN I1PORTANT MEETING TONIGHT IN .HILL AUDITORIUM For the purpose of insurin, success with an effective beginning to the Eu- opean Student Relief Campaign at lichigan, a monster mass meeting has een called for tonight at seven o'clock a Hill auditorium. Little will be left .ndone with respect to obtaining the .earty support of every man an-i wo aan, student or faculty membEr, for his worth c. use. It behooves ever, hinkiu, iud',: ual on the c'p . tol end at lei- t Ls moral suppof ly eing present at this meeting tonight. 1o one, who las the least interest in aving. thelives of tens of thousands f fellow-beings and fellow-students, an e use his failure to attend. A com ttee composed of students nd fac t nen has been appointed, nd th :have already accomplished auch tpG rd perfecting plans for thw ri -e. Specil speakers have been se- ured forthe occasion, and a full turn.- ut shoul be there to receive them. you are a loyal Michigan man or oman, you will be present at tl: e eeting. FACULTY AND STUDENT It has always been one of the un- >rtunate penalties of organizing a ast educational institution that the ntact between its leaders and its :udents' must be diminished in the rocess. In fact it can almost be :ated as a principle that the larger te school, the less the contact. This lack of mutual acquaintance id exchange of ideas is, in the nature things, especially characteristic be- veen the President and students.] he executive duties are so great that. tle time,is left for such an exchange. s a man of importance in the com- unity the President must appear in xtra-university affairs to a greater :tent than before. President Burton, we believe, is orthy of commendation as one col- ge president who is making every fort to get into contact with his I udents. At frequent intervals, the resident speaks before some group Ann Arbor and members of the udent body have an fnntunitnn o nl great nation gas indispensable. And with this as 'a recdrd what need be teared from these new immigrants? True it is that some are of other coun- tries than were our earlier immi- grants, yet there is hardly anything proved by such a fact. What they, may lacy. in one way, they undoubted- ly make up for by excelling in an- other. Things always work that way. If we are all going to be brothers, let us be true brothers and help as much as we can, or else let us forever keep still when we. think of that better re- lationship between nations and peoples that the American is so noted for to think of. More sincerity and less hy- pocrisy should be the goal.- his beautiful daughter from certaint death in the volcano in the "Rover! Boys Triumphant" (series three). With this infallible instrument, the spreading flames were, as Sam aptly put it, "immediatlely and completely quenched." The fire temporarily disposed of, the three were agreeably surprised by the timely appearance of the three Dare- well girls, three charming sisters who lived on the next' farm, and of course great admirers of the daring Rover boys, whose exploits in South Africa. related in "The Rover Boys Abush." had startled the world. "Dora," cried Dick, kissing the eld- est of the three tenderly and thor- oughly. ".Eunice," exclaimed Tom, embrac- ing the next eldest sister. "Hello, Dahlia," muttered Sam to the youngest and homeliest. "Oh Dick," sobbed Dora, "that hor- rible Silas Marner told mama again today that unless she will marry him by Sunday, he will foreclose the mort- gage and put us off the farm." "Have cheer," said the dauntless. Rover boys, sternly, "Your mother will never marry Silas Marner!" Read about the hop-off for Nica- ragua tomorrow. . . i } I 1 i I ; w i j ,1 'Twenty-Five Years A96 At Michigan From the Files of the U. of 3Y. Daily, February 28, 1899. Dr. Bourlaud gave an interesting talk in the Alpha Nu hall Saturday. Dr. Bourland spent several months in, Spain Just preceeding the outbreak of hostilities with this country, going there to study the language. He told the following story which illustrates the ideas of some Spaniards. A Span- ish gentleman of some standing ask- ed Lieut. Dyer, our naval attache at Madrid if he knew what would be the first Spanish move in the event of war. Being answered in the negative, the grandee replied that the Spaniards would take all the convicts from their penitentiaries, transport them to America and turn them loose in South Carolina, firmly believing tllat the United States would be unable to en- dure such a blow. The Pennsylvania debating team last night went down beforethe debaters of Michigan, in University hall. The first Eastern debaters who invaded the West left victory behind. l treasurer of the organization and one of its most active workers. The similarity of this movement to that of the E. S. R. will probably bring upon its head the same sort of abus- ive criticism from portions of the pub- lic as the latter received from sections of opinion in the University. If, how- ever, it were remembered that in this movement, just as in the European Student Relief, there enters a consid- eration which for want of a better phase might be termed "relativity," most of this misunderstanding would be eradicated. In short, a weighing of the merits of the various pleas for assistance from both at home and abroad should be carefully made by every giver before advocating either the support or non-support of any of them. Recognition of the deserving ap- petals for funds at home should not cause us to forget the crying needs of the student and the orphan of Europe, or vice versa. Senator LaFollette of Wisconsin de- sires that his naie be withdrawn from the North Dakota presidential primary, because "the campaign in North Dakota is not being conducted in a manner that will insure a vigor- ous presentation of the issues for which he stands." Apparently the senator believes in a noisy funeral. The question seems to be, is it Daugherty's move or Coolidge's. But if one or the other doesn't move soon,; the senate is going to play the whole game alone. State street haberdashers are com- plaining that there is no sale for soft collars. And if the poisoning con- tinues, there will not even be a sale for dog collars. .' I. Washington 0 D OtR S A smell.. . Turgid and quivering It fell all about me Like a bucket of paint { It covered me With its nauseous insidiousness And made me sick To my stomach. . . lnurch * * * There is a tradition that -is older than cherries on Geo. Washington's birthday, older than fire crackers on the - fourth of July, older than Cap Night. . And that is the tradition that bims are always late. And the depressing thing is that! they always are. Ah-and we used to think that it was accidental! Now we know (having been told )that if a him is ready on time, she sits idle for ten minutes or so, just to keep the rule-while the geezer below sucks! his thumbs, or if he is more ingenious, counts the spots in the rug. Mr. Jason Cowles FF r 1 f -/ of ,. CLOTHES and HABERDA S H ERY 1, -, A T 304 S. STATE ST. QAdAJ\ Today and Icmorro GEO -MEREDITH, REP- SPECA Y A TTENTION IS INVITED TO OUR FOUl- P l EGE SUITS AT $55. 8//0 WA BY OUR REPRE- SEN TA TIVE. i i FINCHLE T7YHAS ESTABLISHED A FRESH AND TASTEFUL STAND- A RD OF A TTIRE, WHICH IS REC- OGNIZED AND ACCEPTED BY COLLEGE MEN. JACKETS OF NEW SUITS A RE FULL - BODIED AND THE TR 0O USERPS OF CORRECT COLLEGIA TE WIDTH. FABRICS ARE IMPRESSIVE IN THEIR DISTINCTION AND QUALITY., 1REIDY- TO-PUT-ON TAILORED TO MEASURE A fair sized audlience composed chiefly of engineers listened to a very; interesting lecture delivered by Prof. M. E. Cooley of the Engineering de- partment, yesterday. The subject of' the lecture was "The Engineer In and Out of College," and it contained some very good advice both to the student while in college fitting himself for his life's profession and also some I The sentiment, "No more war" and "Down with militarism" is heartily applauded in France. Strange to say the Ruhr is still pollu-infested. { Now that ninety per cent of the stu- dent body is working on the Union Fair the difficulty arises of finding] people to attend. t i 1 Saginaw Students 'Plan 1924 'Sprout' Finchey IHaberdashery, selectcd abroad, has uncom- f i i