PACE FOUR THE FMTrT4HC AN T)AYL V a a a 1-,r 17114.,.1 t 1 \,: .3-11 t ,1.1t-Vi L-P, I FRIDAY: NOVE~MER .6.i192 I,,ar and upon equality and justice be- tween all nations, great and small, ,shall be formulated and adopted. -, y e Mna (c) When war is outlawed, the durngt},e unrsity yar by the Board in~ Coto tudnt Publications. Permanent Court of International - Justice shall be granted affirmative, of etern Conference Editorial jurisdiction over international contro- versies between sovereign nations, as The ,.!,cejted bress is exclusively en provided for and defined in the code fttlc to the us e for republication *of all news. dispatches credited to it or not otherwise and arising under treaties.} credited in this paper and the local news pub- 3. Should the signatories fail within ' te .two years to make such a declarationt ____ _ .. - , . 1 141 L1i'3,. .L L' 1 L Yi.i i.R ll. 1 'G' va s .. . oR9 " e]cc r : _ "t .._..- ] ST' THE LADIES The article on the sports page (we have one you know, just a little fur- ther on in the paper) in which it gavej the comment of the Ntav men when .t il! 11 I f AD DRAMA TONIGHT: The Play Production classes present "Three Live Ghosts" by Max Marcin and Frederick Isham in University hall at 8 o'clock. * * * "THE CRADLE SONG" Special Bargains We are running bargain tables at both stores. Displays are change twice a week. Prices are so greatly reduced we cannot advertise these bargains individually. It will pay you to watch them each week. Grahtms Bft ooks At. Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, and to join in a conference, the United Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate they returned, to Annapolis was in- of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- States may withdraw its adherence to mnaster Genieral., deed illuminating and edifying. It symail,the Court Protocol; should the nationsddy t n by carver, $3.5;by a fail within five years to make a gen- shiows that while a Navy team may be Offices : Ann Arbor Press Building, May-eral treaty embodying these princi- badly defeated it cannot be beaten. rs Editorial, 425; business, 21214. es, the United States shall withdraw We might make so quite novel com- __________________________ - ~thereupon. EDITORIAL STAFF The Harmony Plan does not satisfyj mnt on the spirit which Sailors have Telephone 4925 Ithose who believe that the United always shown, men like Dewey andI States should join the League of Na- Farragut, all of which would be true, MANAGING EDITOR tions openly, as advocated by Wood- but too trite to be worthwhile. GEORGE W. DAVIS row Wilson; neither does it please the It was not so much the fact that nationalists who would follow thel Chiy Editor...........Robert S. Mansfield principles set down by Washir.gton they did not attempt to establish an News Editor...........Manning Housewort and stay clear of all foreign entangle ibi; but that they voluntarily ad- Womnen's Editor............ Helen S. Ramnsay Sports Editor .... Joseph Kruger ments. It-is a compromise, and like mitted exactly what happened. It Tlgah Editor .William Walthour I Mele ra nd Dr.. lam obert B. Henderson; all compromises, fails to provide a was obvious, we believe, that after the Siga t Editors strong, definite procedure. first few minutes of play the Navy iard . Crsby Tonard C. Koykka Open approval of the League of Na- I Vilar B.Croby Ton~s V Kokkamen were swept off their feet by the Robert T. DeVore W. Calvin Patterson tions and participation in its activities Michigan defense which was more Assistant City Edito hi ' would attain the ends sought by th nearly a forward drive, and an offense [rwin Olian rederick H. S o Harmony Peace plan - and would a as irresistable as lightning. It is not Gertrude E. Bailey Stanford N. Phelps tain them faster, more simply, and as tame slihtning. It is not Charles Behymer Evelyn Pratt more certainly. The plan would easy to admit such a thing. It i estoamttaantetemi Philip C. Brooks Mi Reed pug h ntdSae akit L. Farnum Simon Rosenbaum plunge the United States back into he better, but it is far less difficult Buckingham Ruth Rosenthal Ithe whirlpool of European conflict - the te bt it ar ledfu Edgar Carter Wiltort A. Simpson. Ititan to admit that an opposing eleven Eugene H. Gutekunst Janet Sinclair h the one argument against the League Douglas Doubleday Courtlan C. Smith - and would not provide the interna-verwhelmed you. Mary Dunnigan James n. Sprowian . o*v*ie ames T. Herald Stanley Steinko tional improvement that could be . lizabeth S. Kennedy Clarissa Tapson This department offers a tidy sum Marion Kubik Henry Thurnau wrought by American co-operation to anyone who can determine any- Walter H. Mack David C. JVWhpes ihteIege oayoewocndtrieay Louis R. Markus Chandier J. Wpple with the League thing about Mr. Jesse Lynch Williams Ellis Merry Cassam A . Wson j owever, a compromise is better c1.rvt1ic anmnimto h i ht fronm the Martinez Sierra is matist, and in "The which Masques are to a Spanish dra- Cradle Song," present as their a I e i 1 i annual play in Sarah Caswell Angell hall this Tuesday and Wednesday evening, he has taken the quiet pathos and irony of Spanish convent life to make a subtly moving tragi-comedy. The play on the stage may possibly be undramatic; at least it will require a most expert interpretation. Yet it is, with all its quiet humor,4 a very grateful, sympathetic work, and perfectly adapted to an all-girl cast. In many ways it is the counter- part of "The Cloister," which the Mimes produced several years ago, only a much more human and rounded drama than Verhaeren's unhealthy,. neurotic tragedy. It has the sunlight and grey joy of the Latin tempera- ment; it has the touchstone to the world within its grave cloistered walls. And there is a part in it, the role of Sister Joanna of the Cross, which paints a portrait of feminine beauty and suffering, even heroism as the idiom goes, almost unequalled in literature. This figure of a woman with her boundless mother instinct that must be suppressed, bringing up the child Teresa, who has been thrust upon the mercies of the nuns as a foundling, and finally the closing scene as she gives the.girl to a young man in marriage, and so back to a life of renunciation, a're touched with the deep glow of the world well lost. Marguerite Goodman is playing Teresa. She is the finest actress on the campus. * * * "THE CAT AND THE CANARY" Irving ar olisIJS CHIROPODIST AND ORTHOPEDIST 707 N. University Ave. Phone 21212 A- AWAY With the Old One and get a NEW HAT Re ]aVe the most modern equip1 Ient for wa ing Collegiate Hats and; they are the REST values on thel campus-(ustom), mae and to fit any head. We also malke old hats looki like new. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Street. Phone 744.1 (Where D. U. R. Stops at State St.) I'I -. _._. The irresistible musiC, the pleasant surrounding, and the congenial crowd make Gran- ger's Academy the popular institution that it is. Dancing Wednesday - Friday - Saturday -A -V_.. S Heen Morrow Thomas . Winter than nothing. The deadlock that has Margaret Parker Marguerite Zilszkeg kept the United States inactive in BUSINESS STAFF world affairs ever since President Telephone 21211 Wilson returned from Paris should be broken and perhaps the Harmony BUSINESS MANAGER !"Peace plan will offer a middle ground BYRON W. PARKER'on which the two rival camps may ------ 1meet. It is a step in the right. direc- Advertising."................ J. Finn tion and should the League once Advertising......-......T. D. Olmsted, Jr- Advertising.............Frank R. Dentz, Jr. more meet the disapproval of-the rep- Advertising...... ..........Win. L. Mullin Circulation . .... .... H. L. Newman resentatives of the people in Congress, Publication....'........Rudolph Bostelixani will offer a course of action that is at Accounts ... . ........... ,... Paul W. Arnold+ Assistants least aimed in the right direction. Ingred M. Alving S. 11. Pardee _______________ George H. Aniable, Jr. Loleta G. Parker W. Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow CLEAR THIE DECKS! lohn iH. i5orink Robert Prentiss Elden W. Butzbach Wm. C. Pusch . JzCox Franklin J. Rauner The fighting colonel is once more Marion A. Daniel Joseph Ryan lanes R. DePuy Margaret Smith on the warpath. A full week of sil- Margaret L. Funk Ruth A. Sorge Stan Gilbert Thomas Sunderland ence on the advice of Representative T: Kenneth Hlaven Win. H. Wearne J. E. Little Eugene Weinberg Reid, while the court argued about Frank E. Mosher Wm. J. Weinman the technicalities of whether Colonel F. A. Nordquist Mitchell could be tried or not, was too save nis approxlmaie eg91 1011L interview with him which appeared in yesterday's M. and D. dept. A great salness has come upon us again. This time our life is darkened by our past sins. For all these years we and our predecessors have been joshing the B. and G. boys, and never did we think that some day we should become one of them. * * * Alas, friends, we are now among them. We receive forty cents an hour about once a month for services ren- S4 All Wool Pre-Shrunk in Beautiful Fabrics That Will Not. Fade.i SUITS AND OVERCOATS At Only $ 5t Manufactured by A 7 J 7 much for the colonel himself-and FRIDAY, - VBER 6, 1925 he evidently spent the time preparing a new set of charges that equal in im- Night Editor--WLLARD B. CROSBY portance those of the past few months. -When he takes the stand next week) Mi i e e t S I- -. Tomorrow iic igaln" a.li.U L worthwestern on the gridiron. Praised by critics as the greatest teamI In tie country, every 311ehi- gan mai and woman is eager to see the Wolverines emerge as victors, and with an uncrossed goal line, if possible. But more important than maintaining an impressive string of victories is the maintenance of that spirit that has ever been Michigan's, and which rests in the hanuds of the team and the students who accompany it to Evaiston. a new bombardment of naval authori- ties will be in order. That the war department has been guilty of "almost treasonable admin- istration" in permitting foreign pow- ers to peril the Panama canal; that $200,000 was paid to a Germn crew to sail the Los Angeles to this coun- try; that sending aeroplanes overland without parachutes is "criminal neg- ligence;" that an unnecessary number of lives have been lost in the army, navy and postoffice aviation services; that the arnty hinders the issuance of propaganda by the air service - these are a few of the bombshells that Col- onel Mitchell is expected to explode during the two or three lays that he is on the stand next week. Such action is of the type that isr expected of Mitchell. The charges that he faces are not such as to allow quibbling over the constitutional points; they are drastic charges and must be met with incontrovertible dered, nevertheless that is enough to All plays are divided into three make us professional, and so we are a B an G.boyThik wat hisde-parts: comedy, t'ragedy, and unparal- a B. and -. boy. Think what this de- leled hokum. Of these, "The Cat and partment has come to when it gets the Canary" since Maestro Cohan's in- into the hands of the B. and G. dept! comparable "Seven Keys to Baldpate" *ac*en nh. e --and what a hash the picture ver- An article appearing in this perfect sion was! -is the example par ex- paper stated that the cast of "TheIcelence of the American thriller at its Cradle Song" Masques' annual play npeak. Horror, thumbing-of-the-nose, which will be presented to the local cedk. pre slapick ae ) comedy, and pure slapstick are all theater lovers next Tuesday and mixed in as mad a jumble as the Wednesday, have become so engrossed theater has ever known. And what an in their parts as nuns that it has be- olla podrida! come a common sight to see one of I have seen the play four times, and these part-time nuns at the Union of a when it appears at the Whitney thea- week-end sitting out a dance with her ter tomorrow and Sunday evening I hands folded, etc, etc. shall see it again. The audience yells We doubt that statement, first of and shrieks until they have to stop the all, it is not among the habits of nuns play: such thrilling bombast has al- to attenddances in monasteries;and ways been, since the days of Moliere secondly anyone who sits out a dance and the commedia dell' arte, the I at the Union should risk a chance of theater's most legitimate excuse. A catching a bad cold. And nuns are truly great play . never supposed to have colds. At least they never carry handkerchiefs in pictures or anything. If all the COMEDY CLU'B girls in the cast are nuns, they will Arrangements have just been com- certainly nake the best looking con-pleted to present the first production vomit ever assenibled. Per~haps tis is on any stage of Colin Canipbell Cle- just as well. If all nuns were of that ments' "The Beginner" as the second caliber, there wouldn't be much dif- production of the year by Comedy ference between a convent and League Club on January 12 and 13. house. You just couldn't keep the , The play is a melodrama of post-1 Smen away. war Paris in six scenes and a pro- ; * * logue, and moves in its cycle from a If "The Cradle Song" were movieiz- insane asylum through a continental ed the title would, no doubt read, circus to Heaven . . . Marguerite "Conventional Love" or "The Sisters' Goodman and Robert Henderson will assion.,,play the leading 'roles. Pasii. P LE AS E PATHS ON THE A. NASH The Famous Golden lule Phone 9736 And ask that a representative of the NASH CO. call upon you to show samples and styles and to take your measu refor suit or overcoat of which you will be proud. STYLE, FIT, WORKMANSHIP AND WEARIN QUALI iES GUARANTEED. Sone of the best dressed people you meet cre wearing Nash clothes. ook for this advertisement on Tuesday and Friday of each week. .I &CO. Tailors of Cinuionat. "SEE BLL AND BUY FOR LESS" If You ave Date With An Egg Break it and come to Donovan's. We have the stock and by golly we have the price. We tell you who we are, where we are, what's our price. We are in the same spot day in and day out to back up our guarantee: "Your money back with a smile if you're not satisfied." So don't .r9y save ! Buy it at Donovan's. THlE IIARMON~Y PEACE PLAN When Congress opens its regular session next month, it will be faced by the most important decision since the Treaty of Versailles and the League of Nations went down to de- feat in the halls of the Senate after the World war. The policy of the United States in regard to participa- tion in the affairs of Europe must be settled. The question of adherence of the United States to the Protocol of the World court constitutes the chief immediate issue before the country. It is of paramount importance to2 bring about the co-operation of the United States with the rest of the world in effective measures to end war. To this end, a movement is under way to rouse popular support of a compromise called by the authorsj the Harmony Peace plan. This plan alis at the abolition of war and the strengthening of the Permanent Courtj of International Justice as a judicial substitute for armed conflict, through the adoption by the United States of three proposals:I 1. The imngdiate adherence of the United States to the Court Protocol, with the Harding-Hughes-Coolidge reservations.t 2. \Vithin two years after the ad-! herence of the United State to the Court Protocol, the signatories there-; to, inhiuding the United States, shall1 formally declare their endorsement of the following basic principles of the outlawry of war and shall call an in- ternational conference of all civilizedI nations for the purpose of making ai general treaty embodying these sug- gestions: I E s ?- proof. The colonel is once more on Our wish is that we had an assistant AND AT LAST: the right track --he is giving the con- who could write this for us each day Following the second week's en- duct of the United States defense units so that we could go in to Detroit and gagement of the San Carlo Opea the public airing that they need. Per- enjoy ourselves for a few weeks. It's company at the Shubert-Detroit thea- haps he is overdoing it-the resulte of the court martial will answer that, being done these days. ter Eugene O'Neill's "Desire Under the ofthe aaratialwisanmserhat,* * * Elms" will open at this playhouse but at any rate he is accomplishing a With all due respects to The Inlan- I Sunday evening, November 15. The great good. der, it seems a bit out of place for a cast - for once - will include Walter But however biting the colonel's magazine striving for a better type of Huston, Mary Morris, and the origi- words may be, without proof they will writing to run poems which rhyme nal New York company. not carry much weight with the level- Indian and Lexington, without batting Even in spite of Mr. Williams' headed commanders who make up the an eye. opinion, "Desire Under the Elms," court martial. His charges are son- * * * personally, is the greatest American sational in the extreme; if he can After all, you know, the Inlander is play ever written. Its conception is prove then entirely correct, he should the Inlander and Rolls is Rolls. breath-taking, and the whole power be granted the public recognition that * * * of its theme and execution over- lie deserves. To defy one's superior WITHOUT APOLOGIES whelms one. It is the high-mark of l officers and force them to defend There was a young man from the American theater. themselves,. while the whole world Lexington--R. B. H. watches requires courage, even from Leigon -sa.B.*H. an aviation colonel. I Whose brother was an-Indian*** The cargesofstion wThough his friends lived in Day- PLAY PRODUCTION COMEDY The charges of the prosecution will ton "Three Live Ghosts," a comedy by not crumble, lIke the walls of Jericho, He knew nary a Persian Max Marcin and Frederick Isham, will at the blast of trumpets. Force must And his sister worked on the be presented at 8 o'clock tonight, and back up the trumpeting that is now 'Ensian at the same hour tomorrow night, in being done. Colonel Mitchell's time , * * * University Hall, as the first numberl on the stand should be replete withi Now that means lots more than the in Professor Hollistes play prodtuc- facts, not mere verbal bombardments. gdon course. The p _ average Inlander poem, and its rhyme of a detective-mystery farce, and has scheme is better for every single line been produced at one of the Broadway We wonder if the underclassmen rhymes with every other. Of course to theaters in New York city. will be able to stir up more spirit for run that in this column is all right The principal parts will be taken the fall games than has been present but, well it isn't creative Art, by Eleta Seeley, '26, in the chaaracter during the past few years. * * * of Mrs. Gubbins; Kathryn Clarke, '26, F: P. A. in his column in the N. Y. as Peggy Woofers; Edward T. Reece. Democrats see victory ahead for World states that not even Luther '27, as Bolton; Frederick Jarrett, 1926 and 1928. Now is the safest time Burbank could c-ross the Michigan spec, as Jimmie Gubbins; and Monroe for the political forecasters to jrdc iewt nopsn em Lippman, 26, as William Foster. The fo hepltia orcser opredict line with att opposing team. eta.0ng is under' the direction of such things. Perhaps he could, but Mr. Yost de- Edith Alvin, '26Ed. flies him to cross the Michigan goal Course tickets for all productions in i $6 Arvin Heaters $4.95 Heaters for Fords 69c Side Curtains for Fords. Open with doors. Roadzter, $3.95 Touring, $5.95 Radiators for Fords, $11.95 188 Proof ALCHL 75c cap, WHY PAY MORE? Batteries for all Light Cars $11.95 13-Plate for Buick $12.95 12-Volt Dodge or Maxwell $15.95 18 Months Guarantee on each and every Battery All Rubber Case. -RADI O! Columbia Dry Cells 35c Columbia Hot Shots $1.95 Crystal Sets, $1.50 Hear Detroit-Lansming Genuine Radiotron Tubes $2.29 Guaranteed Tubes $1.49 45-Volt B-Batteries $2.95 SHOT GUNS AND SHELLS Best Price in City. 30 3L, Z r ... .. ..8.95 We Meet or Beat Any Offer 30 x 312 Tube,'extra on WEED Tire Chains ' heavy ...s...."...er"$2.25- TIRES A Wool Auto Robes TIRES ON A Few Left at ON CREDIT $3095 CREDIT W 1 m W d U W @ 4 a I