PAGE FOUR THE. MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 2G; 192' - - - a w i6das" Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Studest Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The A7-sociated Press is exclusively en- title!d to the use for republicatioaz of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entcred 2t the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $4.00. Officese:Ans Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; busi- ness, 960. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176-.1 MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP M. WAGNER Editor.............John G. Garlinghouse News Editor..........Robert G. Ramsay City Editor..........Manning Houseworth Night Editors George W. DavisgHt arold A. Moore Thomas P. 1lenry Fredk. K. Sparrow, Jr. Kenneth C. Keller Norman R. Tha rEdwin C. Mack Sports Editor........William H. Stoneman Sunday Editor.........Robert S. Mansfield Women's Editor .............Verena Moran Telegraph Editor......William J. Walthour Assistants Gertrude Bailey Marion Meyer Louise Barley Helen Morrow Marion Barlow Carl E. Ohlmacher Leslie S. Bennett$ Irwin A. Olian Smith H. Cady, Jr. W. Calvin Patterson Stanley C. Crighton Margaret Parker Willard B. Crosby Stanford N. Phelps Valentine L. Davies Helen S. Ramsay Robert T. DeVore Marie Reed Marguerite Dutton L. Noble Robinson Paul A. Elliott Simon F. Rosenbaum Geneva Ewing Ruth Rosenthal ames W. Fernamberg Frederick H Shillito Katherine Fitch" Wilton A. Simpson Joseph O. Gartner anet Sinclair Leonard Hall David C. Vokes Elizabeth S. Kennedy Lilias K. Wagner Thomas V. Koykka Marion Walker Mariod Kubik Chandler Whipple Elizabeth Liebermann BpSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROESSER Advertising.................... -I,. Dunne Advertising .................... R., C. Winter Advertising....................Ff. A. Marks Advertising....... ........... B. W. Parker Accounts.................H. M. Rockwell Circulation.....................John Conlin Publication.......... ... .... R. D. Martin Assistants P. W. Arnold K. F. Mast W. F. Ardussi F. E. Mosher 1. M. Alving H. L. Newmann W. C. Bauer T. D. Olmstead Irving Berman R. AT. Prentiss Pndoiph Bn teaue W. C. Pusch George P. Bugbee F. J. Rauner B. Gaplan E1).eyan H. F. Clark M~. . Sandberg C. Consroe F. K. Schoenfeld R. Dentz R. A. Sorge Ceorge C, Johnson A. S. Simons 0. A. Nose, Jr. M. M. Smith K, K. Klein I. J. Wineman W. L. Mullins SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 1925 Night Editor--NORMAN R. THAI. one-fifth of the total membership of the body. Charges are being made by the op- position that intimidation was used to secure favorable action on the propo- sition. While it is true to a certain extent that there were threats on the' part of a number of the reapportion- ists, the case was one which war- ranted drastic action of some sort. There is a very real danger, how- ever, in allowing any one county or district too great a percentage of the members of the legislature. Several w states have recognized this by limit-] ing the possible representation of any' locality to one-fifth of the total mem-, bership. With the present warranted I ASTR LL So's YOUR OLD MAN si 0._____________________________ =.1 -11 ,7 1 , Music AND DRAMA Mother's Day Cards NOW ON DISPLAY AT BOTH STORES There are one or two things in yes- terday's Drama department that we would like to point out and makeI mock of. So without more ado: (a) Mr. Henderson said: "After all is said and done, after the criticisms are sentimentally laid aside, there isj not a man at Michigan interested in dramatics who would not give his eye- teeth for a nart in Mr. Shuter's cir- readjustment accomplished, the leg- cus." islature might well consider a similar We took this up with Donald Coney, plan for Michigan. Without such ac- '8L, who has devoted years and years tion the same argument might arise to a love of dramatics here, and he again within a few years when a max- said, "I wouldn't give anything of the imum figure would avoid a lot of con- j kind." troversy. Valentine Davies, another ardent play-goer, said he would rather spend FOR MORE TEACHERS I his vacation in New York than on the Gogebic is to have a Normal college, road with the opera. at last, and the years of faithful effort Cowles, '23M, notorious actor andj oplaywright (having appeared in Oak- on the part of Representative John ley Johnson's 'Pessimist's Paradise' and Holland have been rewarded. The con-i having written half of a rejected cir-1 ditions on which the school was grant- cus libretto for Mr. Shuter in his ed may hold up its development, of I (Cowles' sophomore year) declined to course, for only one dollar was ap- comment on Mr. Henderson's state- propriated for the institution. If ment, as did the officials in Washing-' northern Michigan miners are in-1 ton. genious enough to build a new Normal1 college on that amount of money, they i (b) Mr. Davies, in his review of deserve it. the Ziegfeld Follies, said that 'The The Senate, however, is a bit more dancing is chiefly in the hands of serious about the proposition of a fifth I Martha Lorber and the Tiller Girls.' Normal school in the state and has The singing, we conclude, is on the passed the Bryant bill providing for knees of the gods. the establishment of one in the north- Later in Mr. Davies' review appears ern part of the lower peninusla. The this: "Then there is a Ben-Ali Hagen purpose of the new school must be tableaux, which as tasteful and color- to locate one within a hundred miles I ful stage picture that Mr. Hagen has or so of those who cannot go to either ever done. Enough said." Marquette Normal in the upper pen- More than enough. insula or Central State Normal at Mt. 0 Pleasant. b THROUGH THE MAIL, THE MAIlT As has been pointed out by Dean ;Dear Jase: Whitney, both of these institutions' Last week I think it was, I was could stand further development. Such walking along State street when I a course ought to be much more happened to glance in Mr. Graham's beneficial, not only to the, schools in window, where he was showing differ- question but also to those who wish ent books. You can imagine my sur- to obtain a teacher's training educa- prise upon seeing a green hat, one of tion.f those cloche affairs, ,I think they cell them, stuck in there with all those Marks may not be an indication of books and things. scholarship but they are still the only Thinking it was some kind of ajoke insurance of a degree. they, were pulling, I stepped in close to look, and you can imagine my __ _astonishment upon discovering they were advertising a new story calledj EDITORIAL COMMENT I The Green Hat. Pretty good eh? Well, it struck me kind of funny at the time and I have been anxiously CRIME IN OUR NEWSPAPERS I waiting for Mr. Graham to follow up -The Dail- -leenia ' a THIS AFTERNOON: The Organ Recital in Hill auditorium tat 4:15 o'clock. * * * "THE THEATRE IN FERMENT" J Prof. O. J. Campbell of the English department has written the first of aj series of six articles by representative members of the faculty for the Music and Drama page of the Sunday Second Section. The general subject of the series deals with the progressive ten- dencies of the theatre throughout the world, and Professor Campbell in to- day's issue treats of the American stage. The second article, to be published next Sunday, has been written by Prof. Frederick Wahr on the German theatre, covering all the significant movements from 1890 to the present expressionism and dealing especially with the influence of Hauptmann on the modern dramatists. It is written in a popular style, and is particularly unique in that it describes at length many German plays not yet available in an English translation. Following on successive Sundays, Professor Clavel will write on the French theatre Professor Kenyon on the Spanish thealtre, Professor de Filippis on the Italian theatre, and Professor Campbell on the English and Irish theatres. The entire series will form an unusually valuable, in- teresting symposium, and The Daily wishes to express its appreciation of the courtesy and very considerable labor which has gone into the preparation of these articles. * * * 1l U R A H A M'S BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK SLEEP ANY WHERE BUT, EAT AT REX'S THE CLUB LUNCH 712 Arbor Street Near State and Packard Ste. s U ." " a ." ............. ........ ..................................... .... xR I 1 MANN'S c2o L s We Also do 1 High Class Work in CLEANING AND REBLOCKING HATS of all Kinds FACTORY HAT STORE 17 Packard St. Phone 1792 (Where D. U. R. Stops at State) . ........ . s .............i ............................... u...... 6.......... .. .: ...i $. StartingA PICEto$250 MATINEES (Sunday, April 26) .GA.R$ SECOND AND LAST WEEK Richard Herndon Presents THE SMASHING COMEDY SUCCESS AP PLESACE. By BARRY CONNERS ALLAN DIN EHART and CLAIBORNE FOSTER "A gay comedy whose wise cracks are the best of the season. As good entertainment as any theater is likely to house. Superbly, performed."-Detroit News. y S.......,................................. 6 f; 1 "".} with The White Monkey and The Tat- REACTION OR PROGRESS The recovery of Floyd Collins' par- tooed Countess, as I have never seen Germany will go to the polls today tially decomposed body from the either of these virtually to decide the fate of its in- -death tomb'would have made a good Yours fant republic. Despite repeated state- "banner" story for the Chicago Tri- Y Pertinax ments to the contrary, there can be bune yesterday. But they had a better s one. The police had found the un- From the Cal the Cal little doubt that Field Marshal Paul identified body of a decapitated woman Von Hindenburg, candidate of the Na- in a sewer. We will not give the I Cowles, Sir: for president, is sym- During the vacation interim while tionalist party gruesome details that the Tribune I pathetic with the monarchy and will minutely related, calculated to you were canvassing tlge musical do all in his power to achieve a shows of Gotham there appeared in appeal to the lowest instincts of our the columns of the Detroit Freie restoration. He has tried to win added animal natures. support by making extravagant dec- It is sufficient to note that the Zeitung a story on the Carmagnole. larations supporting the republican woman was unknown-probably be- Saidstory contained the following not rogram of his chief opponent Dr. regarding the proprietresses who (the Pgyond all chance of identification. It story said) moved "a tinier stove into Wilhelm Marx, but his assertions are was the public's business to know who . si,, very apparently mere political hokum. the woman was, if it had been possi- a tinier kitchen." The outcome is uncertain. The large ble. It might even had been a matter . vote given Dr. Karl Jarres, National- of public record that such a corpse ist candidate in the first election, in- had been found. But it was none of . Th I agonal Talkers idicates that Von Hindenburg will at the public's business to know the un-Frencot least give the republican faction con- savory details of the crime. Freedom r.Sheller. Mr. Sheller's one of the siderable worry. Added to this there of the press you ask? Yes, with a! boys our Christian endeavor class. is a sort of hero worship on the part vengeance, but with no sincere aim to Mr. Sheller, shake hands with Dr. of the people who for decades have improve the civic virtue. been saturated with the spirit of mi- Much has been said by our morning I wanta go back to Michigan to dear itarism. The Field Marshal personi- contemporary about the epidemic of Ann Arbor town back t fles the military glory that was and as crime in Chicago, manner of punish- Orient and back to some of the money such is a menace to the future of the ment and judicial procedure. Little I spent. 0 mother and father pay all republic. has been said about the causes of this the bills and ve have all the fun in It took nearly a century for France crime by the Chicago paper beyond the friendly rivalry of college life. to throw off her imperial tendencies. the fact that the law allows the sale HooryrI wa oback togMi The French revolution was only the of firearms, and the law forbids the igan, to dear Ann Arbor town, I beginning of a series of alternate sale of good beer and whiskey. Thekk trials of the republic and monarchis- wanta go back I gotta go back to tic fors ofghe rmecndmerhasGer- paper has made little attempt to study i Michigan. tic form of government. Perhaps Ger- the more fundamental causes of . Jason Cowlesl many's will be a parallel case-per- crime. We have seen no articles on i * * haps that nation is condemned to a the social, economic, and political +We thought the column was all fin- century of strife before her peope onditions under which Chicago's ished, but it seems that we didn't come to a full realization of the bless- criminals are born and live. Every write the third page of it at all. Just ings of free government. Today's elec- suggestion of the psychopathic condi- ! skipped it entirely. That would bring tion may be the deciding factor. If tion that underlies crime has been Jus out, we figure, about three inches Von Hindenburg is defeated, the re- hooted by the editors.t short. public is likely to survive the storms The Chicago Tribune cries for law Use this Free Outfit CoupOn of the future. If he wins, at least enforcement, fewer laws and their en- J Cowles, Chief Engineer, an attempt at restoration is probable. J.ColE, hefEnider forcement. A century ago England Denizens Fingerprint Corp.! was enforcing capital punishment for Dear Sir: Please send me at once WAYNE WINS a score or more of crimes, and long free of charge your book "The Vital Reapportionment of the representa- imprisonment for minor offences. En- Facts About Foot Prints and Finger- tion in the State legislature has been forcement in the Empire was' thor- prints" and mail me also without a major issue at the capitol for over ough, but crime was rampant. Today charge your Free Outfit and Home! two years. With the passage by the with only capital punishment for one Study course, all fully prepaid with-I House of the Howarth bill, providing crime and speedy judicial procedure, out obligation on my part. 'I enclose for an increase in Wayne county's crime gives England little trouble. three fifty to cover cost of packing delegation to that body from 14 to 21, And we venture to say that if capital mailing etc. and the expectation of favorable ac- punishment for this remaining crime tion on the Wood bill, which would in England were abolished, she would Name............. increase Wayne's quota in the Senate I have still less trouble. from 5 to 7 members, the fight is However, we will not debate meth- Address........................ about over. ods of punishment with the Tribune. The Detroit members of the legisla- But we do argue that newspapers can City, township, village and ward.. ture, as well as Governor Groesbeck and do foster crime. It has been ad- and Lieutenant Governor Welsh, are mitted by reputable newspapermen vpr much nleased by the victorv. I that a metronolitan daily can start R _ n _'_ "THE DEATH OF TINTAGILES" As the third number in the Play Production course, Professor Hollis- ter is offering Maurice Maeterhinck's tragedy in five scenes, "The Death of Tintagiles," Friday evening, May 1, in University hall. The program will also include "Judge Lynch' and "Fishing On the Bridge," but they are puny plays of no importance; the only hope is that they are not allowed to break the exquisite mood of "Tinta- giles" with their very comic relief. Maeterlinck calls his play a drama for marionettes, and the piece has often been produced in Germany with puppets. Yet its heavy atmosphere cannot be successfully interpreted by the mawkish impertinence of wooden dolls. The word is used, rather, in the sense that we are all puppets, con- fused and contorted by the guiding strings of a greater God. The scene is laid in the dim coun- try of Maeterlinck's mystic imagina- tion, a country of blind forests and crumbling castles, of weird grottos and deep, unending crypts. The char- acters are two sisters, the child Tin- tagiles, and Aglovale, the power that wrests the boy from them; Tintagiles represents, perhaps, the symbol of an i ideal, the life illusion: the sisters lattle hopelessly, vainly against the fate that they know must take him from them. The final act, especially, is filled with a neurotic horror and despair that Maeterlinck has never equalled. It is in a vast corridor of towering pillars, at one end there are a long flight of steps leading to the room in which Tintagiles is held prisoner. One of the sisters has crept pathetically to this place in a final, despairing at-- tempt to regain the child: she stum- bles weakly up the steps to the door, and sobbing hysterically, beats fran- tically against the bars. Again and again, she begs for some answer, but her only 'reply is the wailing of the child, which grows fainter and fain- ter until it completely dies away. Ex- hausted, she finally sinks to the floor, a, lifeless mass . . there is no fur-- ther hope. Obviously, the entire effect of the play depends upon a perfect fusion of beautiful, exact settings, atmos- pheric lighting, and powerful acting. Of course, in amateur dramatics and in Professor Hollister's produc-- tions .. . The casts have been selected as fol- lows: "Judge Lynch" Ma ..................Mildred Boyce Ella................Lillian Bronson The Stranger......... Arthur Farrell Ed ....................Phillip Rowe "The Death of Tintagiles" Tintagiles .............Frieda Banks Ygraine............ Emily McElwain Belangere ........Lora Belle Corson Aglovale.............Monroe Lipman Servants of the queen.......... ................Virginia McLaren ......--.. -....Charlotte Eckert ................Lillian Bronson "Fishing On the Bridge" Mrs. Hughes ........Florence Nelson Andy Hughes ..........Milton Green Susie Hicks.........Charlotte Hicks Mr. Hicks ............Jay Rosenthal You can pay more, yes; but you won't find any- where a better dinner ,than the one we'll be serving her e on Sunday Arcade Upstairs, Cafeteria . . t. w. N ickeIs Arcade t; , . - b; Your Own Lamp of Alladin 'I _- _ If you would have it, you may have your own "Lamp of Aladdin, which, when you rub it will produce for you many of the things in life you most desire. We do not mean such a lamp as his. We have reference to something far less mysterious and awe-inspiring. But in its capacity, to produce material things for you it is far more wonderful than Aladdin's, for it will give'you many things which he, in his time, could not have thought of. We have reference to savings, in whatever manner' accumulated. If from day to day and week to week you lay aside a part of whatever you make, bye and bye the time will come when for the asking you can have the things you desire. It will not biing you everything. It will not uy health and happiness and friendship, those most worthwhile things in life. But it will aid you in gaining all of them, if used rightly. Little need to tell you of the advantages of laying by something for the future. If you but think a moment you will recall living _.examples which prove the truth of what we say. Count these men you know whom you consider most successful. How many of them are not thrifty? There is no necessary relationship between men who are thrifty and saving and the fact that they are loved, admired and respected in their community, but the two usually go together. In a material sense it is different. They have the things they want because they have the means to buy them. They have the means because they have not squandered all. And what price all this? Very little indeed. The habit of saving, once determined upon, is easily acquired. Shortly it becomes a genuine habit. as natural as any other habit you acquire. It demands only the effort' required to live on a little less than you make. The cost is small. the reward is great. A good time to begin saving is today. 1 1 fl fl it I!