FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVmi3EIE 18, 1925 Published every morning except Monday during the University yeargby the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise cred in this paper and the local news pub- lishted therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, vicligan, assecond class matter. Special rate ni postage granted by Third Assistant Post- mastcr General. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $4.0o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- aard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; business, 21214. EWITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GEORGE W. DAVIS Chairman, ditorial Board.. .Norman R. Thal City Editor............Robert S. Mansfield ?News Editor-.........Manning Housewortb W1omien's Editor............ Helen S. Ramnsay Sports Editor...............Joseph Kruger Telegraph Editor.........William Walthour Music and Drama......Robert B Henderson Night Editors Smith H. Cady Leonard C. Hall Willard B. Crosby Thomas V. Koykka Robert T. DeVorey . Calvin Patterson Assistant City Editors Irwin Oao Frederick H. Shillito Assistants n Certrude t. Bailey Willimn T. Barbour Charles Behymer William Breyer Philip C. Brooks L. Buckmugam Edgar Carter Carleton Champe. Eugene T.hGtttkt nt Douglas Doubleday Mary Dunnigan James T. Herald lizabeth S. Kennedy M iarion Kubik Walter II. Mack Louis R. Markus Ellis Merry Helen Morrow Margaret Parker Stanford N. Phelps Evelyn Pratt Marie Reed Simon Rosenbaum Ruth Rosenthal Wilton A. Simpson Janet Sinclair Courtlavd C. Smith Stanley Steinko Clarissa Tapson Henry Thurnau David C. Vokes Chandler 3. Whipple Cassamn A. Wilson Thomas C. Winter Marguerite Zilszke Headed by Count Volpi, the rmn- mission from Romut combined several of the more or less marked char- acteristics of their predecessors. Their country is poor, this they admitted, but they wanted to pay. y aying the cards face up, they made settle- ment of the debt based on ability to pay; they wished to drive no bargain. nor to hide the true conditions of affairs. Working from facts, the negotiators were able to decide upon something like this: the debt, with accrued l- terest, of $2,133,000,000, in round numbers, is to be funded on a 62 v'ear basis, the annual payments of which. according to the "standard" terms of the British agreement, would amount to about $70,000,000. With vivid recollections of previous Senate action on treaties and the like, we wait to see what they can do to what appears to be the only possible debt settlement. The question of ac- ceptance on the other side causes lit- tle worry. It is vitally important that this business of debts be settled, the sooner the atmosphere is cleared the better. Unsettled debts offer no little cause for irritation, besides assisting the blockade to complete reconsitruc- tion. Looked at from this angle, the at- titude displayed on both sides in pre- paring this tentative settlnement of the Italian debt was nothing short of beautiful-a fine precedent for further negotiations. CHICAGO.ON-TI-S' Bringing the ocean to Chicago, six tramp steamers have doked at the Lake Michigan port with cargoes frozei Europe and South Anerica. Their success should be an advertisement of the possibilities of the St. Lawrence waterway system. Others will follow these pioneers, but no vessel of more than 3,000 tons can navigate the Wel- land canal. The locks on the upper1 St. Lawrence are another barrier toI large ocean ships. Chicago will never be a big ocean port until these condi- tions are remedied. Ex-Governor Lowden, of Illinnia, said recently that the Great Lakes have tributary to them the "greatest agricultural area on the continent." He pointed out that almost two-thirds of the agricultural wealth of the na- tion is within this area. It produces 75 per cent of all the wheat and 85 per cent of all the iron ore in the United States. This territory would be opened to world commerce by mak- - ng Chicago a world port. CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications wi llbe disregarded.The a alIcs of commno i- eants Ivill, boxv cve, be regar.!ded as confidenitmaupon Bet TWA F I~i~g songs are very spirited and certainly serve as a vent for pent up emotions of the cheering hordes; but thy don't mean very much in themselves, we fear Have you ever stepped to analyze the verses andI chorus to most. of them. Let us take, for exalmple AND DRAMA 'lilS AFTERVNOON : The It inee rusicae ithe Michigan Union ball } room it 3:30 o'clock. TONIG11T: "Desire under the Elmns" by Eugene O'Neill in the Shea- bert-detroit Opera House at 8:15 Ok' olck. * * * FIRST ANNUAL in HILL AUDITORIUM, SATURDAY NIGHT AFTER DINNER ;. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGED BYRON W. PARKER Advertising....................J. J. Finn Advertising..............T. D. Olmsted, Jr. Advertising..............Frank R. Dentz, Jr. Advertising..................Wm. L. Mullin Circulation...................1. L. Newman Publication..............Rudolph Bostelina Accounts..................Paul W. Arnold Assistants Ingred M. Alving F. A. Nordquist George H1. Annable, Jr. Loleta G. Parker WV. Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow 3 oi n 11. Bobrink Robert Prentiss W. J. Cox Wmn. C. Pusch M arion A. Daniel Franklin J. Rauner James R. DePuy Joseph Ryan Margaret L. Funk Margaret Smith Stan Gilbert Mance Solomon T. Kenneth Haven Thomas Sunderland . E. Little Wm. J. Weinmnan rank E. Mosher WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1925 Night Editor-ROBERT T. DE VORE tARSTYI in which the first verse opens with a request that the male students pro- gress toward victory. It then statesi one of the oldest dictums of football, following which it expresses the Uni- versitys optimaitie forecast us to the result of the contest. Then come sev- eral ejaculations, followed by a plea for victory for the institution. The chorus opens with a request that the first string players advance toward the goal-posts It then stiates that they should under no circum- stances give way in the slightest. The next line begs them to elevate some sort of unknown devise, at least in Iootbal. Following this it requests thm to parade toward victory for the Sniversity of Michigan antl two op- posing colors of the septrum. It then continues with the statement that the singers are on the players' account, in fact, that they are there to(1 (chr themu.! It closes with the encouraging statement that the singers have no fear for the players; another ejacula- tion, and the repetition of the slang for first eleven. Now on the whole, you must admit that that is not exactly pregnant witl deeply emotional or logical meaning. Still it's a good fighting song. EFV ATTE - M (111IRST CLASS AI CHEERS (F STUI EN'TS8 ()cneupieS &As A ssigned To ter in Each Class !tudents in Ftaar Ann Arbor, Michigan, Nov. IS, 1925.- Miss Effie Snorp who is positively no relation to the laten Dean Zilch, at- tended her first class (a Polish quiz section) amid the howls and cheers of tle caumpus in general. Occupying three seats in the middle of the front row, Miss Snorp acconplisihe a total eclipse of the instruct or. Other co- eds at the rear of the room were much agitated, and plan to report this to the dean. Miss Snorp announced that she would not try out for te football team, despite the many let- fcrs ]'T"!Ivd by her from ost. "I rmbt Eli1e to marry Harold :ralnve, but I wont play football my- sel," she said. Miss Snorp had her first blind date m townt1 lst night. The lucky man called for her in a Ford, ut on meet- ing her, abandoned the vchicle promptly. On walking down toward the iMlaj, Miss Snorp was forced to inake a detour because of the En- gineering arch. "Why do they make th1e streets so narrow here?" she de- ma adcd. To which her complan ion -iv a.foced to admit "that the ini- ,ersity was not designed to accommno- dat e persons of her caliber."' Further discourses upon Ann Arbor's tiniest co-ed will follow as soon as the three hundred and fifty nine found Venus acclima- tizes herself. * * * Lull ElitiS Two teams had a had football hug Uach year they fought for a jug "iiESIJIE UNDIER TUE ELMS" A review by Kenneth Wickware. "When ye kin make corn sprout out o' stones, God's livin' in yew. They wa'n't strong enuf fur that! They reckoned God was easy. - They laugh- ed. They don't laugh no more. Some died hereabouts. Some went West an' died. They're all under ground-fur follerin' arter an easy God. God hain't easy." In the small, meanly furnished bed- room of a New England farmhouse. Ephraim Cabot thus recounts na part of the story of his early struggles-to his newest wife, Abbie Putman, whom he has married because "a hum's got t' hev a woman. .. It was lonesome too long. I was growin' old in the spring-growin' ripe on the bough." He pictures for her the bitterness and the unceasing toil of his first years of combat with the stubborn forces of nature, the stones without number which he has "hefted" from the al- most sterile fields to make fences, how the three sons, Simeon, Peter, and Elben have slaved their very souls out, "plowin', hayin', weedin', milkin',' learning to hate their father for his relentlessness; how two wives have already died-"though they were good workers, and meant well enough." But they were without understanding, and Ephraim has never found solace for his lonesomeness. "She died," he says. "After that it wa'n't so lonesome fur a spell. I lost count o' t e years. I had no time to fool away countin' 'em. Sim an Peter helped. The farm growed. It was all mine! When I thought o' that I didn't feel lonesome." And so he runs on-monotonously- in his harsh, grim voice, putting sim- ple words together laboriously, as if he were building one of his stone fences. But Abbie does not listen to what he says; she is thinking of Eben, on the other side of the partition, the "dead spitin' image" of old Ephraim, but "soft, just like his Maw." Eben is thinking of Abbie; the faint sound of her voice coming through the wall makes him half rise from bed, his arms outstretched, nu ti, at the mem- ory of his hatred for her, lie shrinks back with a curse. At their meeting in front of the house one day, Abbie has said, "Ye can't. lt s agin nature, Eben. Ye been fightin' yer nature ever since the day I come-tryin' t' tell yerself I hain't purty to ye." At the last, Eben and Abbie are taken away by the sheriff, to answer to the law for the murder of their baby, a son, who, in Abbie's first greed, was to win the farm for her- fearlessly, protesting their love for each other. Simeon and Peter, the older sons, have long run off to the gold fields in Californi-a. Old Ephraim is alone. "Purty good fur yew," lhe says, when Ebl)en declares his intention of sharing Abbie's guilt, "Waal, I got t' round up the stock. Good-by." * * * The Shubert-Detroit opera house held a frankly puzzled audience Mon- day evening-an audience which hardly knew whether to frown or 3 OCD ' . : (Space donated by Graham's) coc~ocooc Ord. MAKE TSELL N[A s c? HATS CLEANED AN)D BLOCKED-1UHT NEW hATS--TUE BEST Save a Dollar or More at the FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Street. Phone 715. (Where D. U1. R. Stops at State St.) Irving -,arinohsD S OIITIIOPEDIST 707 N. University Ave. Phone 21212 TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT You get the date and we'll furnish the rest. The dance only lasts from 8-10, so there will be plenty of time to study either before or after. Tickets at SLATER'S BOOK SHOP, or at - GOODYEAR DRUG CO., Main St. e. ; 7 M.- (-;- lip, -> - THEODORE HARRISON directs "THE FINEST" Michigan Glee Club in the j 1~ "Homecoming" Concert P LE ASE MAKE PATH S ON THE CAPU r BEFORE THE DANCE t.. 1 , 1i .wAft TILE LAST CHANCE The Interfraternity council ha; agaLin "acted" on the question of fra- ternity dances, this time with credit able effect. The plan adopted, whil( perhaps not as satisfactory as ii nmight be, is at lerast something defi nite and tangible, and can be made into a real, workable pact,-if it re- ceives the proper support from the members of the body that passed it- tlie respective fraternities and the mermbers thereof. Conditions are nothing short of dis- gusting when such a resolution be- comes necessary, when men who arc supposed to be in training for the future leadership of the world must be forced to act like rational, re- spectable beings. There is no word that will adequately describe the sit- nation if this plan, adopted by the representative body of the fraternity group on the campus, is not supported by the various houses. The council has not provided any intricate system of policing to enforce this latest rule, and good, common sense should repel any such sugges- tion. Yet if the motion passed and accepted by the council in regard to fraterity parties is not given the nctual support -that it deserves, some method of patrolling the parties will have to be found and adopted. The Uiversity and the individuals who mtk-o t up cannot afford to allow week-cid booze parties at any recog- nized house on or in any way con- rccted Yitli the campus. The fratern- ities have been given an opportunity to eradicate them themselves, and have outwardly accepted. If the plan mldopted does not meet with immediate success, the fraternities will have no grounds for objection if all semblance of self-gbvernment is taken away from terim. AWI PLOIIFATSr-ANi) GENTLEMEN Another step has been taken toward the disVtanglemnent of the muddle churned by ihe late World war, that awful catastrophe that turned all- the hearts and souls of men even- topsy tuivy in its smashing, fiery grasp. A week or so- ago the Italian -)ebt commission went to work over the problem of Italy's indebtedness to this counb'y, in a surprising manner -in a manner, at least, different from the other major debtors who havel come to Washington. The poor, diminutive Frenchman came with nothing, to offer other than Ii ~~i'; I1"Dnli11 nuR" 21n o f wi~l - 1 s it i- e' WHERE WEALTH ACCU7fLATES (Boston Evening Transcript) Bishop Thirkield, of the ]\ethodist Episcopal Church, expressed, at a. meeting of the board of bishops otr that church in Buffalo, the other day, the opinion that America is "traveling the path along which Route staggered to her doom." Our country, he said, is "beastly rich," andl our weal,!t everywhere engenders such "softness, luxury, lawlessness and coirulption" as will surely ruin us, unless we arouse a keener degree of religious impulse and forget our craze to make money. Is the right reverend bishop quite warranted in his gloomy fore- bodings? Is wealth the sole cause of our crime wave?" Bishop Thirkield's position entitles him to a respectful consideration of his main charge. Bu1 is our country's great wealth driving1 it to the devil? Somehowv the present course of American life does not ap- pear to prove that. Ia a general way, to be sure, abounding wealt conduces to evil doing. Where riches abound, tenmptation allounds. (:a wealth leads to ostentation, to glittei-' The Style and Quality of our Service is what Attracts the Crowds to 1-ARMONYT CAFETER IA 548 East Wilamt "Where the Best Food Is Served" 'The Sound 'Basis for S uccess in the Bond Business ANYcollege men are influenced to choose the bond business for a career because they count on a ready-made clientele among wealthy friends. That is a weak basis upon which to make so important a decision. Experience will disillusion them. A man must know his business to succeed in the bond business, as in any other. Men of wealth are good enough business men to demand competent service in return for their invest- ment patronage. The man who is, first, qualified for the bond business-then well trained and well-informed, will find that his progress is little dependent upon friendship. College men who obtain employment with Halsey, Stuart& Co. are immediatelygiven prac- tical training in the fundamentals of the busi- ness before they are assigned to actual work. Thus they begin with a good foundationwhich, together with accumulation of experience, de- velops ability-the only sound basis for success. IN We have prepared a paper which gives much informa- tion about the bond business, of pertinent interest to those who might be considering it as a career. We shall be glad to send you a copy upon request. Write for pamphlet MD-Y The Wolverines espoused it laugh or snicker at O'Neill's frank ut- .T'hey promptly Field-housed it terances. Indeed, "Desire Under the Now it's snug as a bug in a rug. iElms" is quite astonishing to the * * . Iordinary play-goer, used to the usual The TI and G wiar and the Minnie smirking manner of many playwrights H A LSEY, STU A RT & Co. INCORPOR ATED CHICAGO NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA DETROIT CLEVELAND aoi South LaSalle St. 14 WaIl St. tI South 15th St. 6oi Griswold St. 925 Euclid Ave. ST. LOUIS BOSTON MILWAUKEE MINNEAPOLIS 3r9 North 4th St. 82 Devonshire St. 415 East Water St. 61o Second Ave.,S. ing pretense; these Ic en vy and -Zilch divorce case are so hopelessly ( in cloaking unpleasant things. There I cupidity; and out of envy and cupidity i n omisnmled at present that it seens im- is no beating about the bush here, many crimes are born. p 'ssible to make any statement. no provocation for the exercise of Nevertheless the reckoning is by no * * * morbid imagination. Speeches are means all on that side of the account. We expect to see the Gargoyle full made frankly, with the directness Never, in any previous state of society of hospital jokes next issue. common to similar situation in actual in the world, has wealth wrought so * * * life. much good as in this country and iln The old problem of good vs. evil Strikingly simple in theme, the play, our time. A vast proportion of the arose to worry us last night. What under O'Neill's genius, becomes a earnings of American wealth i r-- wiith the Masques and Clarence Dar- vehicle of terrific power. There is no turned to the people whose labor pro- row, we had a. terrific moral battle. fine language; every word spoken duced it in universally beneficial in- I....So we compromised and went to moves the action forward. Such stitutions and influences- in schools, the Arc. bursts of passion as are appargnt are libraries, museums, sanitation, whole - * * * merely glimpses of the intensest emo- some recreation, imnstrunientalitios of We exect that the entire Ann Ar- tions, seen for a moment through the culture, and foundations for research borpolice force went to hill audi- I mask of stern repression. The action upon which great social reforms, may torium last niglit. moves evenly, with a hardness that is be based. These powerful saving * * * almost brittle, slowly storing up an tendencies, operating as a check upon God, how we love them! emotional stress of apalling magni- evil in every form, are set in motion Sir Toby Tiffin. tude, which at last finds a temporary by the direct gift of wealth. More- outlet for both actors and audience { over, not all people Of wealth, notI mle:[us. If we are the richest Nation, in the final crisis-but only for a even a considerablle minority of them,- we are so on the whole the happiest. brief respite. The ruthless suppres- are engaged in - so flaunting thei' Present conditions", especially with re- sion of feeling is recaptured immedi- riches as to'excite envy or stimilate gard to the enforcement of law and ately, and even )after the final curtain crime. What labout the well-to-do the restraint of crime, are not satis- we are conscious of the continuancei who are daily examples to their fellow ifactory, and we cannot blame the men of a bitter struggle. citizen? What about men of wealth of religion for demnanding their One senses in witnessing the per- who expend their income or discovery, amndmne1t. ulat we think that formance of thL play that here, if in the achievement of sc-ince withm isop 'lirkield exaggerates a little. ever, we have true American genius--- learning? Emerson said1 wisely that t is to le" loibted whether it is right an art that is as universal as it is the rich man who animates his pos- Ior proper to lay the whole blame for typical, that has a restraint which de- sessions by his quality land energy thm "criie wave" on the shoulders of pends upon no one state or city for. . ~~fP nnt -rfnr h .tC ,)n. 9 iensupn o nesat oct pwooova %.f./ '.I. . .0"1.0"./ «P~. °,r" I,.v". . I"rP.I". .sra yd "; FARMERS AND MECHANICS 101-105 S. MAIN ST.--ANN ARBOR, MICH.-33C YOU'LL, FIND OUR OFFICERS READY WITH FRIENDLY ADVICE ON FINANCIAL MATTERS, FOR ALL WHO SEEK THEIR COUNSEL. THEIR YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN SUCH MATTERS MAY MAKE THEIR OPINIONS OF VALUE. THEY'LL BE GLAD TO TALK TO YOU. 74 BANK 11