PAGE FOUR THE" MTCVJHrAMN ATI.VY i t tL. iY1iL i iil3t 1't LlC11i. 1 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1925 I J P it a t iproves and stands ready to support, at least morally. Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Advocating of state farms for the Control of Student Publications.I - segregation of persons displaying Members of Western Conference Editorial criminal tendencies by the EugenIcs }Association. ciia ednisb h +Ueic society should cause some consterna- 'The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news tion in this vicinity. dispatches credited to it or not otherwise ,credited in this paper atid the local news pub- lished' therein. NTO RLSTO Fntered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, The death of Samuel Moffett Rals- -'Tticthigan-, 'as second class matter. Special rate' r of .poste granted by Third Assistant Post- ,on, United States senator from Indi- 1aster,.,General, sutlcritionaby carrier, $3.5; by mail, ana, brought a brilliant career to an $4.00.a $ untimely end. Having served his n Street.Ann Arbor Press Building, May state as both senator and governor, ^'i 6 4e ori q 2as5; business, 2214. his name will long be remembered as a true sevant of Indiana. EDITORIAL STAFF His services were not limited to Telephone 4925 state undertakings alone,-he was, MANAGING EDITOR without a doubt, the outstanding GEORGE W. DAVIS power at the Democratic National convention in the summer of 1924. Chairman, Editorial Board... Norman R. Thal City Editor...........Robert S. Mansfield Several times he was offered the op- News Editor............Manning Houseworth portunity of securing the Presidential Women's Editor............ Helen S. Ramsay Sports Editor................Joseph Kruger nomination, but always he refused. 'Telegraph Editor.......... William Wathour Satn hn Music and rama..Robert B. Henderson Starting thirty years ago as an un- Night Editors known lawyer and with little financial Smith IT. Cady Leonard C. Hall aid, he worked his way step b Willard B. Crosby Thomas V. Koykka aihwokd is ayte by stepI Robert T. DeVore W. Calvin Patterson to the great success which was his. Irwin OlianssistantCedrc Shillito He was admitted to the Indiana bar in Assistants 1886, and two years later he served s r. arkailey araret Parhkeps as a Presidential, elector. Again in 1:harles Behymer Evelyn Pratt 1892 he served in the same capacity. Philip C. Brooks Marie Reed 1Farnin ...SimonRosenbaum In 1913, he was placed in the gov- Buckingham Ruth Rosenthal ernor's chair in Indiana, holding that Eugene 11. Gutekunst Wilton A. Simpson position for one term. From the time f louglas Doubleday Janet Sinclair Mary Dunnigan Courtland C. Smith of the expiration of his term until he James T. Herald James A. Sprowl was sent to the senate in 1923, he 1Russell T. Hitt Stanley Steinko Elizabeth S. Kennedy Clarissa Tapson practiced law in Indianapolis. Marion Kubik Henry Thurnau Walter H.-Mack David C.. Vokes With three years yet remaining of ouis R:--Markus Cheandler J Whipple his term, there will be difficulty in ItEllis Merry' Kenneth Wickware Stanton Meyer Cassam A. Wilson getting any one as able as Senator Staenorrow Thomas- C. Wine iltnt ersn h e lerbert Moss Marguerite Zilszke Ralston to represent the people of In- diana in congress. He leaves a great BUSINESS STAFF gap in the senate; friend and foe will Telephone 21214 I miss him equally. His death is a loss BUSINESS MANAGER to the people of Indiana and to the BYRON W. PARKER nation at large. Advertising.....................J. J. Finn Advertising..............T1. Omsted, Jr. Advertising ..............Frank R. Dentz, Jr. It looked as though Jack Lovette Advertising.................Wn. L. Mullin would need a corps of bookkeepers Circulation...................1 . L. Newman Publication...............Rudolph Bostelman and a staff of stenographers to figure Accounts.......... Asist....Paul W. Arnold out whether he was a junior or. not. Ingred M. Alving S.. Pardee George II. Annable, Jr. Loleta G. Parker W. Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow GENERAL SHERWOOD John 11. Bobrink Robert Prentiss Elden W. Butzbach eWi. C. Pusch One of Ohio's leading citizens, W. J. Cox Franklin J. Rauner Marion A. ,1aniel Joseph hRyan Gen. Isaac R. Sherwood, of Toledo, James R. DePuy Margaret Smith has served the last of a long series Margaret L. Funk Ruth A. Sorge Stan Gilbert Thomas Sunderland of terms as congressman from that T. Kenneth Haven Wm. If. Wearne . J. E. Little Eugene Weinberg district. For nearly twenty years, Frank . Moser Win. J. Weinman General Sherwood represented the F. A. Nordqust Toledo contingency in the lower house, and during that time became politically prominent both as a mem- SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1925 ber of that body,-having done creditable work on several important Night editor-THOMIAS V. KOYKKAi committees,-and as a member of the democratic party. THAT WAR MAY CEASE Starting in 1872, following worthy Europe is no longer a "house di- service in the Civil war, the longevity vided;" it is a unit governed, as it of General Sherwood's career has rightly should be, by its three great been unique in the annals of the powers-England, France, and Ger- American House of Representatives- many. The most contagious battle- he added experience to natural apti- ground on the continent has been tude. The esteem in which the vet- quarantined, and will no longer breed. eran of many battles in and out of international strife. With its major politics was held by his townspeople, powers placed' on an equal footing, and the irreparable loss they have and with peace assured between suffered, can perhaps best be esti- those powers, the most densely pop- mated by this show of trust and con- ulated section of the world may now fidence over such a long period. settle down to its natural, progres- The. old familiar figure sitting be- sive existence. hind four of the finest carriage horses And these things, which are destin- in the state, which it was his custom ed to have a lasting and constructive to drive four-in-hand through the effect on every ciivilized nation in the crowded city streets, is but a pleasant world, were accomplished Thursday, memory. Oct. 15, 1925, when representatives of the great European powers came to an agreement as to the various terms EDITORIAL COMMENT of the security pact. As the surren- der of Cornwallis at Tarrytown_ marked the birth of a nw nation, so M. CAILLAUX'S FORMER OPINIONS this agreement marks the birth of a ON, THE DEBT new peace for Europe and for the en- (The Christian Science Monitor) tire world, and opens the gates toan While M. Caillaux has been carry- era of prosperity and good feeling. ing on his negotiations concerning As a result of the Locarno Security the funding of the French debt, his conference, France, and Germany critics have apparently not referred have promised that they will never to the opinions that he expressed again oppose each other on the bat- several years ago in his volume en- tlefield, and these former enemies titled "Whither France? Whither Eu- have agreed that between them, ever rope?" For a statesman to outline and to. remain demilitarized, shall be an publish a political creed is a risky inviolate =zone along the Rhine which undertaking. John Adams did it, and neither nation shall cross to attack lived to regret and 'recant some of the other. And similar agreements ! his opinions. So President Wilson's were made by Germany and Belgium. prefessorial views on American gov-' Added to these engagements, England ernment were cited against him and and Italy have promised to throw l frequently quoted in the Congression-, their combined weight against any of al Record. M. Caillaux's book, writ- the three parties which shall violate ten while he was still a political out-} the terms of the pact. law, was tentative in character and ' There were also included other vague in suggestion. It breathed a stipulations: that Germany shall pro- mild Liberalism, and avoided definite ceed tq make arbitration treaties with statements that might prove em- her ezlstern neighbors, Poland and barrassing if he returned to politics. Czecho'slovakia; that certain policies The French statesman, however, shall be followed in regard to Ger- did say some severe things about the many's entrance into and obligations manner in which the French people toward the League of Nations and had been deceived into thinking that other international bodies; that cau- large sums would be immediately re- tion shall be used in the French re- coverable from Germany, and criti- lations with Poland, that, so far as cized the statesmen who, "ignorant possible, Germany shall be protected j of finance and economics," had not from complications with Russia; and settled the debt question in 1918. He others of equal import. pointed out the danger of not dis- But the actual trems are not near- charging these debts immediately, ly as important as the fact that the | and was of the opinion that England powers have met in conference, dur- and the United States could only be I 1 AND TO Or R DRAMA k~eCITY This afternoon Michigan's Varsity faces its first real combat of the sea-?THE PLAY:PRODUCTION COURSE son. The Wisconsin team, under the Professor Hoister has just an tutelage of George Little, former field nounce-d the complete list for this coach here, is one of the strongest of!semesters Play Production course. th p Cont i'ore and if the Yost-men Five programs will be presented, and 1 s a 1{ x, i i Halloween Decorations and Party Favors BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK f come out victorious they will have shown that the hope which the entire student body places in them has not been in vain. Every loyal supporter of the Maize and Blue will hope and1 pray for his school who are fighting for them on the Camp Randall field today...... We just thought we'd men- tion it. * * * ZILCH STAGES TRIUMPHANT RETURN Former citizen of Needles, Ariz., arrives in Ann Arbor sober. CROWDS RIOT Is welcomed by Varsity Band and Blue Key Club at station Ann Arbor, Mich., Oct. 17. (Special to Rolls)- Joseph Zilch, former leading citizen of Needles, Ariz., who has not beenj heard or seen from, since 1893 ar- rived in this city late yesterday on horseback. The horse died shortly thereafter. Mr. Zilch stated that his purpose here was to install a radio station in order to warn all of Dexter and Sa- line of impending storms. "Great waves of air rush from Ann Arbor with hurricane force," said Zilch, "and these cause terrific storms in Saline and Dexter." Mr. Zilch, or Joe, as he prefers to be called, is staying at the Union where he is to deliver a series of lectures on "The Use and Meanings of Constitutions." When met at the station by mem- bers of the faculty, the Band, the Blue Key club, and representatives from all the sororities and league houses, Joe declined to make any fur- therstatement than "I want a Pickle." He did not say what he wanted the Pickle for, however. This morningrhesplans to call on the Mayor en re selling him StateI street and the campus. It is rumored that the Law club and the Union will also be involved in the deal. each production, with the exceptionj of the Interpretive Reading Recital. will be given two performances. In addition, due to the more elaborate scope of the series, subscription tick- ets have been raised from $1 to $1.50, while individual seats will be priced at fifty and seventy-five cents. The sale of season tickets will be an- nounced shortly, each subscription being valid for either performance. All of the productions are given in the auditorium of University hall, and the first play, Marcin and Isham's' "Three Live Ghosts," will be present- ed November 6 and 7. A bill of three one-act plays will follow on Novem-' ber 27 and 28, probably including "Pai In Pimlico," "Miss Mercy," and Lord Dunsany's farcial satire on breakfast food, "Cheezo." The third number will be Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" on December 16 and -17, and, the Interpretations from Literature will be offered January 8. Awards will be granted the best selections, and the entrants will be chosen from the entire campus. The final bill will be George Bernard Shaw's slap- stick allegory, "Androcles and the Lion," on January 20 and 21. * * * "Wo.o.i CHIROPODIST AND 707 N. UIhversity Ave. Phone 21212 ' ' -~tlt111111111IP1 E1; 1 il 11Id C1tI 111$@lli 131 .i l9iil~ llil!, Frog, Chicken and Steak Dinners Served at BOULEVARID INN Two blocks from city bus lie on Tackson Road, from noon till midnight. Special attention given to parties. Phone 0534. = i III 3 III III f ill 111111111 111 1111111111 111111112 l 3111!illill ill 111 l1i i3I11 CHARLESTON NOW Open Daily 10 A. Al. to 10 P. M. Private Lessons Daily Adults' Class every Monday and Friday. Fifteen one-hour les- sons, $5.00. TERRACE GARDEN STUDIO 22 Wuerth Arcade Phone 8328 , 1 . ('OMEI)Y C11B The first production of the year by Comedy Club will be a bill of three one-act plays presented in Sarah Caswell Angell hall Wednesday even- ing, October 28. The program will include Coln Campbell Clements' "Spring," W. S. Gilbert's "Creatures of Impulse," and "The Camberly Trb angle" by A. A. Milne. Mr. Clements' npring," especially, i a very master- piece of atmospheric comedy. Itsj story tells of a shop-girl and a sailor, and with the most delicate touches unfolds the eternal romance - but "in American." "The Camberly Tri- angle," in its turn, is a slightly satir- ical adaptation of the conventional French liaison, while the Gilbert fare is a tabloid operetta with an artificiality worthy of "Engaged." The casts have been selected as follows: "Spring" The Skirt .............Amy Loomis The Gob ............ Thomas Denton "Creatures of Impulse" j Broomlehart ...........Earl Sawyer Peter .................... Otto Koch Sergeant Klooque ........ Barre Hill Pipette ............Phyllis Loughton Mistress Martha.......Marion Leland The Old Woman .... Mary Lou Miller "The Camberly Triangle" Dennis Camberly.......Neal Nyland Cyril Norwood ........ James Martin Kate Camberly . . . .Margaret Geddes Valentine Davies is directing "Spring" and "Creatures of Impulse," while Margaret Effinger is in charge of "The Camberly Triangle." * * * l'1A CRiA)OAY Gitta Gradova, who is to appear under the auspices of the Matinee1 MusicaleA Wednesday afternoon, Oc- tober 21, in the Michigan Union ball room, studied for many years under Mine. Djane Lavoie-Herz, a disciple of Scriabia., and through Mme. Herz has become one of the most authori- tative interpreters of the Russian composer in this country. The program for her Ann Arbor re- cital will include the following num- bers: Now Comes the Gentile Savior . . Bach-Busoni In Thee Is Joy ........ Bach-Busoni Sonata, Op. 31, No. 2......Beethovenj PLEASE DON'T KE PATHS DANCING ATA TONIGHT And every Wednesday, 8-10 Friday, 9-1 Saturday, 9-12 Jack Scott's Club Royal Ten Piece Orchestra Tickets at Slater's Book Shop and at Goodyear Drug Store on Main St. _ ,--. . _._ - -- .7-- ousfuutth g ty u onethi seasn Nayet wek' aco au i ll VYR IQh C UIIIH i . I~ ff~ JOE ZILCh Mr. Zilch will address the student body from the tower of the Union this afternoon at three thirty. The subject of the speech will be "Desire Under the Goal Posts" and will deal chiefly with the proplem of an en- larged stadium. An intervitw iith Joe will appear in an early issue. * * * It has been brought to our atten- tion that there is a letter for Joe Zilch addressed care of the Univer- sity. At least an announcement to that effect appears in this morning's D. 0. B. Read it and see. * *e * Rollo and ourselves had an argu- ment this morning. It was about II. starting. We thought we ought to at- Rhapsody in G minor f........Brahms tend a nine O'clock class but Rollo Why?.....................Schumann was indifferent. We thought he ought Etude in F sharp minor .... Arensky to take us, but he couldn't see it that Desir......................Scriabin way. Etude in F sharp minor ....Scriabin Well to make a long story short, Poem Tragique .............Scriabin Rollo won. We went to class but he II.n didn't take us. Later in the day Impromptu in F sharp major.. Chopin however we send' for his nurse down Etude in F minor, Op 10, at the Ford place, and then maybe No. 9. .,.,. .. .. . . .. . . . . ...Chopin Rollo didn't start! Prelude in B minor ........Chopin * * * Etude in A minor, Op. 25, It has rained three Fridays in sue- No. 11..................Chopin cession now, Saharah papers please Waltz in A fiat major ........Chopin copy. Miss Gradova, on the authority of * * * Gilbert Gabriel, approximates a coin- The Deacon's Counsin observes that bination of Peter Pan and Lord Pyr- E the B. and G. boys have probably on. "There was a mystery about her ' . t ;,. . I t, ly f ' { , 11 .: . ". f 't 4 qi nr;Vrrax J 1, , F t a !fir ' . y . ,, . /4 i , 1'S , 1, . , , , _ i W , q c/ f 3 x.14 f . ; . , ri ; llf ur s wi cnange your mina it I-ring beautiful Furs of excellent quality and authentic styling within the reach of very modest purses. Raccoon-the Ideal Coat for 'Campus You've never looked your best until you've worn a ii-ur Coat, nor have you known what real winter comfort is! You will find a raccoon coat the smart- est and most serviceable coat for college days. More flan any other coat, it flaunts the collegiate air of campus life. Among other furs featured here are Cnni 4- p tl Mnm,t Pnnthlr nnAM.ie-r. l , 'IF t Fir, _ _ e. ., A r, r. .; r [ ",ti !__% I° ... -'''' 1 ,:: . t _ - 1 - _ _ _ _ -- i . " t added several members to tneir gang. interpretation," he says, of her New He says he has seen some of the York debut, "complete concentration. pledges raking the lawns. variety of color, and a profoundly ma-! * * * ture suggestiveness as well. One felt IMERICKS the heas1x i , of th-,Tfr