SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1924
THE MICHIGAN
DAILY
PAGE NINE
GERMANS TO ELECT
CHANCELOR SOON
Dawes Plan And Large Foreign Lon
Broughi. tAbouissou ion
of Rekisag
EXTREMES LOSE GROUND
Berlin, Nov. 28-Nine chancellors
in six years is the record the German
republic has established and as the
election of Dec. 7 approaches there
Is ,much uncertainty as to what the
party alignment will be behind the
tenth man to be ,designated to direct
the affairs of republican Germany.
jD; Wilhelm Marx, the present
chancellor, took over the post Dec.
1,.123, and managed to keep the boat
steady during trying times in spite of
the .fact that he did not represent a
majority government. His handling of
German affairs in the London Confer-
ence which evolved plans for putting
Dawes project into effect, and his suc-
cessin getting the'German Reichstag
to - accept the agreement reached in
the London Conference, were great
achievements.
Jut after the adoption of the Dawes
plea and the successful floating of the
loan of $200,000,000 abroad for the
establishment of a German gold bank
to sIabilize German currency per-
Manently, domestic politics got so hot
that Chancellor Marx was unable to
rebuild his -cabinet in such a way as
to'meet with the demands of the var-
ions parties at the extreme right and
the extreme left. On Oct. 20 he ad-
vised: the dissolution of the Reichstag
that a new election be held to select a
Reichstag which may better represent
majority opinion and make it possible
to form a coalition cabinet which shall
have the support of a coalition of
parties in the legislative body.
This election will take place Dec. 7.
It is impossible to forecast the result
with any definiteness because of the
multiplicity of parties and the religi-
ous,! racial and political cross-cur-
rents in Germ'any which segregate
small groups and prevent the develop-
ment of two or three really outstand-
ing parties, such as exist in most par-
liamentary governments.
It is quite generally predicted, how-
ever, that both the extreme right and
the extreme left will lose strength in
the coming election. Communistic
leaders and ultra-nationalistic leaders
of the extreme right both apparently
have lost ground. World revolution
promises held out by Communist lead-
ers have failed to materialize so often
that German workmen are losing faith
in promised world upheavals as pos-
sible cures for Germany's ills.
RIMflPOCKET FLA5K
OFKING TUT INTGE
T .f
LonUdon, Nov. 28--Prohibition may
or. ma not have been in effect 3,299
years ago, but recent gifts to the Brit-
i ; Museum indicate that the ancient
Egyptians were at least affected by
a thirst for something stronger than
2.75 percent beer.
One of the gifts is a pottery pocket
fIask,. similar in shape to those ex-
hibited in the windows of many jewel-
ers today and of sufficiently large
capacity to gratify the most thirsty.
The other consists of fragments of a
geat vessel upon which is boldly
painited the inscription:
"Beer Which Ignores Dreams."
The inscription, in the form of early
hierglyphics, depicts a jar, with three
atrokes to indicate a number of jars;
then the symbol for "ignores,"-an
owl representing knowledge, and a
pair of hands turned down to denote
"nothing doing"-a chicken, denoting
sound, and an eye, denoting wakeful-
ness. Officials of the Museum vouch
for the translation of the devices.
Other archaeological finds have indi-
cated, according to museum officials,
that beer was the great beverage of
the Egyptians 3,000 years ago.
Class Pays Visit
To Detroit Office
Prof C. B. Gordy's classes in shop
management visited the Western
Union Telegraph company in Detroit
Tuesday. The object of the visit was
to study, under actual working con-
ditions, the planning and alloting of
work.
'This was the sixth company visited
this year by these classes, previous
visits being to the Michigan Central
Repair shops, Ford plant at River
Rouge, Kent-Owens Machine company
of Toledo, Detroit Press Steel coim-
pany, and the Paige Motor Car com-
pany in Detroit.
hAVE YOU SUBSCRIBED YET?
Orchestras Help
Support Students
During the football season 200 stu-
dents find employment in orchestras,
according to Phil Diamond, orchestra
manager.
Of these, 35 are in orchestras with
regular schedules and the others at
such times as there is an increased
demand for them as there is during
the football ,games, jaround J-Hap
time and in the early spring. a
Some of those musicians playing
this year who have just entered col-
lege have been previously several
years on the stage, but after gradua-
tion very few ever go into professional
work.
A very small percentage of the play-
ers pay their entire way through
school with the proceeds of their,
work; the greaterpnumber do not,
however, and there are quite a few
who do not need the money at all but
are playing for a pastime.
Student orchestras are in great
demand for out-of-town dances dur-
ing the winter and in the summer
practically all of them play at summer
resorts and on lake steamers.
ELECTRICAL FIRM
PRESENTS FURNACE
Another Moses In The John Bull Rushes!
PNDIANT'IE Y rV:40
juREST CRIS IS
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How To Do It
In Blackboard
He iroglyphics
COURT CONSIDERS
D, RAINAGE cAINAL
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Avast there! And laugh. For the Federal Goernment and 3ay tAes
signs on campus biackboards are not and Mang
unqualifiedly for your consumption. o Liie oN lo
If events of possible international l
importance are calamitously fore- I
shadowing, never beware. Smile and LONG DISPUTED
keep smiling.~~
Every student, as he makes his Washington, Nov. 28-More states
rounds between campus bench and have appeared before the Supreme
drowsy class room, finds a few bits Court in the Chicago Sanitary Canal
of information to wake him up. They case than have been assembled in
are distributed about in University any other litigation in recent years.
buildings in the least decipherable of The states on the treat Lakes,
hieroglyphics, and they serve count- j with the exception of Illinois, support-
less thirsters after knowledge with ed the federal government in its con-
|
Modern Machine For Research
Added To Engineering
Equipment
Work
material for speculation during the tention that the volume of water with-
tirst and last seven minutes of every drawn from Lake Michigan by the
hour. Sanitary District of Chicago must be
There is, of course, the announce- restricted to the extent necessary to
ment of the professor who is moving prevent such a lowering; of lake levels
his course to another room. And that as would interfere with navigation,
is accomplished in various ways. impair harbor improvements and re-
"Two o'clock class in room 307" is tard waterpower development.
no longer considered new, so we note Others in the Mississippi Valley
that it will meet there "by one flight joined the Sanitary District in its as-
up." For further information on air- sertion of the right to take as much
plane transfers, study the engineering water as was n~Qessary to dilute
blackboards. Or to get the same and remove the sewage of Chicago
effect, go to "Earthquakes in room and vicinity. In addition to the sani-
234 this afternooh at 3" tary argument advanced by the Sani-
An index expergatorius is accom- Iary District, these states contended
panied by "I can as well be hanged that the present intake at Chicago was
as tell you the name of it" in one necessary in the interest of naviga-
room, and the names of the presidents tion on the Mississippi.
of China reach an approximately Seldom has litigation of such mag-
climatic ending in an imperial look- nitude been marked with greater de-
ing title that defies translation. lay. Originating in March, 1908, it
Little grains of knowledge can usu- has been before the courts constantly
ally be found in Mason Hall where ever since in the tedious process of
millionths of once whole numbers reaching a final decision. Originally
chase equal signs up and down the the controversy involved withdrawals
walls. Diagrams of what no one through the Calumet river. In 1913
has ever seen multiply rapidly in the government instituted another
science class rooms. The abbreviated Isuit relating to withdrawals through
dictionaries of entire dead languages the Chicago river. These two de-
are still dying for your attention. veloped into cne in which the gov-
Take your choice. And as some ernment won a complete victory in
one famous has doubtless scribbled it, the federal district court in Chicago
don't let the lecture interfere with in June 1923, the sanitary district be-
your college education. ing enjoined from withdrawing from
Lake Michigan water in access of the
k R sui amount authorized by the Secretary
M~istakR es'Cults of War. 'The injunction, however, was
n*"suspended during appeal.
In Scholars/ups
IFinding that its water supply for,
household purposes drawn from Lake
London, Nov. 28.-As a result of an Michigan was being contaminated by
error on the part of Britain's food the deposit of its sewage in the lake,
MELTS IRON AND STEEL
Installation of the large standard
electric furnace presented to the en-
gineering shops department recently
by the Detroit Electric Furnace
company, has been completed, accord-1
ing to Prof. H. L. Campbell of the
metallurgical engineering department.
The furnace which is of 200 pounds
capacity, is installed in the foundry
laboratory on the fourth floor of the
East Engineering building.
Temperature as high as 6300 de-
grees fahrenheit, the temperature of
the electric arc and the highest tem-
perature ever reached, are obtainable
in the new machine. It is to be used
in research work for melting cast
iron, steel and non-ferrous metals
such as bronze and brass. Professor
Campbell emphasized that this fur-
nace was not an experimental ma-
chine of small size, but a standard
capacity machine similar to those
used in the Highland Park plant of
the Ford Motor company.
The acquisition of the furnace by
the shops department makes available
facilities for research posessed by
few universities in the country. The
extremely high cost of the equipment
putting it beyond the reach of the
majority of schools.
Former Student
Represents Ba nk
, Detroit, Nov. 28-S. Harold Eaton,
'17E, has been employed as district
representative of Halsey, Stuart & Co.
Inc., well known investment banking
house of New York and Chicago. He
will have charge of the Southeastern
Michigan territory, making his head-
quarters at Jackson.
Eaton was at one time manager of
the United Motors Service, Inc., and
I in recent years owned and managed
his own electrical business in Kala-
mazoo.
.Firemen, Bakers
Elbows In S
Stockholm, Nov. 28-Nothing short
of an American jury can compare
witY th'e newly elected personnel of
the Second Chamber of the SwedishI
Riksdag for variety of occupation and
social status. The list of members
contains more than 90 different
titles to describe the pursuits and!
positions of the 230 persons consti-
tuting the full membership.
T h e Social-Democrats gained
enaugh. strength to-dictate a new cab-
inet headed by the veteran statesman
Hjalmar Branting, who has twice be-
fore been Social-Democrat premier of
Sweden. Among his cabinet members,
are F. V. Thorsson, minister of fi-
nance, who rose from a shoemaker's
apprentice to his present place at the
king's council table. Per Albin Hans-'
son began his career as a grocer's
boy and is now minister of defence,
But the stories of obscure begin-
nings are no more fascinating than a
perusal of the titles by which the
present members of the second cham-
ber describe themselves. They show
blacksmiths and iron workers side by
side with admirals and university pro-
fessors. Farm hands, shoemakers and
stone masons rub elbows with noble-
men, governors, army officers of high,
rank, prominent lawyers and judges.
No less than 72 describe themselves as
Editors Rub 'BRITISH UNEMPLOYE
Swedish Chamber, INCRESING STEI
DOILY'
I'..i
Your
Shirts
proprietors of farms. The list con- ministry during the war, a gift of Chicago prevailed upon the state leg-
tains 20 editors, 11 teachers and pro- London, Nov. 28-Nearly 11 per- $150,000 to found scholarships in cer- islature in 1889 to create the Sanitary
fessors, nine carpenters and cabinet- cent of workers in Great Britain and taro agricultural colleges is contem- IDistric. The construction of a canal
makers, four locomotive engineers Ireland were unemployed oD Sep- plated by a number of dairy companies across the divide which sepa rated the
and firemen and severol other rail- which benefited by the mistake Mississipiwtehed f
road employcs. - teiber 28, according to figures pub-whcbeeiebytemsa.-Miispiwtrhdf'mmtato
road employes.tmr2, dgIn 1919 someone in the ministry the Great Lakes was decided upon to
Other occupations selected at ran- lished by the Miistry of Labor Ga- erroneously imposed a levy of two connect the Chicago "and Des Plaines
dom from the list are as follows: zette. The number of applicants for pence a gallon on all milk transported rivers, the object being to reverse the
c mechanician, chaplain, baker, miller, employment registered at the employ- from the southwestern counties to j current of the Chicago and Calumet
glass blower, clergyman, physician, ment exchanges had grown from 1,- other parts of England, and following rivers, and cause them to carry the
merchant, dairyman, gardner, mail 150,000 at the end of August to 1,205,- legal action by the dairies the money sewage into the Mississippi through
carrier and accountant. Of the three 000 on September 29. has been refunded. It is now proposed the Illinois river, instead of discharg-
women members, one is a trained The Gazette also records another to form a trust fund and devote the in- ing it into the lake.
nurse, one a photographer and one iadvance of four points in the cost of come to scholarships for the benefit of Application was made to the Sec-
sets herself down as "wife." There isiliving on October 1, the index figures sons of milk producers in the coun- retary of War for permission to divert
one baron, one count and several oth- being 76 against 72 on September 1 ties concerned. (Continued on Page Twelve)
er noblemen of Sweden's bluest blood. and 69 on June 1. These figures in-
dicate apercentagevadvance in prices
I ove the re-wvar level.
STEIM TO PILAE Davis To Attend--
[_ T Memphis Meeting
Prof. C. 0. Davis of the school of
London, Nov. 28-The first lifeboat}.
with radio to b) carried on a cargo Education will attend the convention FO ' YOUNG M E "
vessel was taken on the steamer of the Southern association of college
Geraldine Mary, 7,200 tons, which left and secondary schools being'held the M A D E Y E D E R H E I M E R S T E I N C O M P A N Y
the Clyde for Newfoundland recently. i week of December 2 at Memphis. He
The 26-foot lifeboat, fitted with a will go as fraternal representative --- " t
seven horsepower gasoline engine, has from the North Central association, -
a triangular aerial hoisted on two on the appointment of Mr. Edward
masts, and the transmitter is operated Miller of Detroit, who is president of -
by an alternator. the latter organization.
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Week Beginning G A R R Nights, 50e to $2.50
Tomorrow Matinees -
i- W ed. andi Sat.' -
Sunday Evening to $1.0
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HIMSELF Hopper as "xoko
AND HIS _
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SUN., MON., TUES. AND WED.
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Deserve the best launder-
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We abso-
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