THE MICHIGAN DAILY STIRS OPIMBlms U MLET For Failure of 01pium SMU GLING MENTIONED Rmest For 1flashington Whirl 'S M M SCFOR HOAAM L SiDE NS RWLARGER CROWDS Collection of plants for the botan-! Accor ling to ical garden and the herbarium of the !the treasurer Natural Science building was the ob- sociation the 1 Ject of a trip taken into Colorado;! tickets to the New Mexico, Arizona, and Nevada last fered by the pi summer by William Archer of the moent exceeds 1, botany dlepartmrent. Nearly 1,500 Season tickets shrubs which Mr. Archer brought j $2.50 for the re back to the University are now in the Season ticket botanical garden, and 500 more are applying at the in the herbarium. Besides the plaiits, torium oan the he collectedl 75 lizards which are ex-' after 7I o'clock. figures compiled by of the Oratorical as- total sale of season series of lectures of- )ublic speaking depart- last year's sale by 200. are still obtainable at enmaining lectures. ts can be obtained by box office at Hill audi- night of the lectures Applications are. also Stud ents on the steps of Lad Cathedraxl at Meaux Sketched from life Geneva, Nov. 18. (Bay A. P.)-Dele- gates to the international opium con- ference, in session her, exhibited con- . silerable interest today in what was regarq ded as a sensationally worded: art icle in the conservative Geneva newspaper, The Journal (IC Geneve, entitled "Opium and the United' States." At o g th Untd S ae idntarticipate in the first conference on Far Eastern problems, the editorial alleges that the slow death of that conference represents a new episode in t he struggle lbetween Japan and the United States, which has almost a: caused the ruin of the League of Na-! { tions protocol for the Pacific settle- mrnt of international disputes. The newspaper continues by al- leg ing that, although the Japanese have succeeded in preserving them-I selves from the opium vice, they nevertheless import huge quantities:. of the narcotic to manufacture mior- hAine, which they later smuggle into China andl the United States. The. article insists that the United Eltates actually in the present confer- once, as she was by implication in the preceding Far Eastern opiumI Charl confeorence, will find herself in op-I Republica position to the interests of Japan preparato ntI In7dia. It concludes with the fer- elect is ti (nt hope that the second conference mnay succe~ed, otherwise American i i i fhIibited in the zoology museum. The majority of his collecting was dlone in the mountain regions of these states. In New Mexico he traveled nearly 100 miles froin the railroad, going as far as possible by automo- bile, then using burros. BAER APPOINTED ro ACHMISTRY OMITE retcihed at th o Oratorical office in 1. ;.0 1,:21 1. Literary building. Police To Hold Auction Of Cars' At a public auction to be held at 2 o'clock Next Tuesday at the City hall, rive cars, some themii belonging to l" ae tswill be sold. These cars ha-vo ben soizodl by the police and hii f Ior fns TLciicdco, Nov. i8.--Fr~ank B. K~el- lf denied rumor:: he would' resign «s American ambassador. Students Tours to Euro;pe SummIer of 1925 (7S~\IND out how economically and comfortably you can go to Europe next summer. Thousands of students went last summer in the exclusive third class cabins on U.S. Government ships. For the United States Lines are setting new standards of comfort in low-cost travel. Clean, airy, comfortable staterooms, inviting public rooms, the best of food, exclusive deck and dancing space, daily concerts:, all con- tribute to a delighiful voyage. Thecost of passage is only $$5 and up. Investigate now! See our representative on your campus. H-e will give you full information" and furnish interesting literature, including a 32-page booklet written by a Princeton Professor telling of his actual experience on one of these trips to Europe. This is your opportunity to enjoy all the cultural and educa- tional advantages of a European trip at minimum cost. Talk it over at home during the Christmas holidays. But get all the facts now. 11 N , Appintentof Prof. E. M. Baker; ofthe chemical engineering depart-! Iment to the new committee on the teaching of electrochemistry, has beenr confirmed by Colin G. Fink, sec- retary of the American Electrochemi- cal society. The board of directors also appointed Prof. F. C. Mather of ! Indiana university, Prof. Louis Ital- lenberg of the University of Wiscon- sin, and Prof. Alfred Stansfield of' lMcGill university in Montreal. the! The committee is to co-operate; Ill., with the Society for the P'romnotio n Of en-Eng~ineering Education, in ain effort to detar~mine a curriculum suitable for studlents specializing in chemistry or ,les G. Dawes, uipon whom th e brunt of the campaigning for1 !n national ticket fell, is res ting up at lhis home in Evanston ,7 ory to moving to Washington for 'four years. The vice-preside seen in a post election pos e with Mrs. Dawes. public op nion will y certainly (draw the inference that the League of Na- tions, already judged dangerous from a political point of view, is not even useful. BUS5SES MAY SUPPLANT STREET CARS IN CITYi Reports by the committee delega- ted to investigate the proposed change from the street car to the bus system j rhrr~n ers. Avent pleaded guilty, was sen-; I~D~f~fl tenced to a fine, and later raised the d ues ion ocf the coast tutionality of 11 ithe or , r, contending that it deprived n~iinnan of dlue process of law, a power _______reserved to the states, and grantedI Nothng tarlin nee besee inan illegal p~refer'ence to phaces in one Notingstatlig ned e sen n jst,-te over those in another. the action of the Supreme court Mon-___ _____ t d:y v hen it ruled that Congress «ha'F r sF e z the, constitutional right to authorize ;o d r e e U the issuance by the Inter-state Con- As M ercury Drops moerce commission of preference or -_ diers for the use of railroad cars in AnAbrsfeto eodhn times of emergency, accordling to i Priof. Ralph W. Aigler of spellbound. A 00K0 (( It adder - 10 Gu~ - -, .K~ FU'N! S I D) IE See .lohnny H-lines, all 1)0p and fun, as the Yankee jocke victory in one of the mrost sp~ectacuiar horse races ever thme screen. This licture, packedl with intrigue, will hold yo' A FOX COMEDY with CLYDE, C in "THECYCLIST" - t ® - S !T kt fI STN I)AY -IFAT11.3NEE Adlls - t2iw ('hilren - 0~c PATHE F 7: Adi A Melodramatic Smash! MISSING DAUGHTERS ADVENTURE -THRILLS - ROM ,ANCE. 'Anothcr. a' ALL OF NEXT WEEK Iohn Darrymoro !I ALISO5 With a Galaxy of Pre-!Emiinent Star, MA(t'lK i SEN NE TT COMEDY£l.~z 11 RALPH I IUBAW'S :7 lG I IT1it(~fALE j "1 WALLACE BEERY, LILA LEE, MATT MOORE and JAMES KIRKXXWOOD III I I SI i