El FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY, FRIDT)A Y, F7fllT' P 1P,1c7. every Mrlpnigxcp Md !luring thc, .11emnkbers leu'. rsy Ilar by .(Copt r Mon of ~.;~,ej n oni-reicc 'Ir'. Entcred at the plostoffii* at Ann Arbor, t caa, s~c .i o~'natter. Special rate (it )'1~C raitc ,.1 Third Assistanlt Post- Sa ter t rnera1_ Siol c' iptiuri by carrier, $3.75' by sail, O~fices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- Hard Stied NeditEditor... .,.P iin iorn !Muic and ram. a ... c. rA.O News EditorEditors Charles 1iehyrner Ellis Xlerry Carlton Champe Stanford IN, jo Chamberlin Coprtlanrd CSm'i James Herald Cz.,sarm A. W44 ii Assistant City Editors Carl Burger H'enry Thurnats Joseph Brunswkk Reporters Marion Anderson :Miles Kimball Alex Bochnowski 14i ilti,n kirshnaum Jean Cmrpbell Ricl-ard Kurvink. Chester E. Clark G. TIhomas M ceacto C larence Eideisoni Kenneth Patrick Earl W., De La Vergnel Morris Quinn WXilliaml Emery Jaynes Sheelian Alfred Let Foster, Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Robert E. FiucL Sylvia Stone/ h~oliert (>e snrx W'4illiam l) 'huruijuu LE;,ine .rriier M4ilford Vanik 4,ierria -i . (lencer Hferbert lF_\Veldkcr JHarVev J. *~derson Marian Welbas Stewar I ( key Thadileus Wa'ielewski M omr-v; I ve 'Shier w'od Winsl, w with the disarmament requirements' of the Versailles treaty as General Foch announced, she has disarmed : ificently to render France safe from iougi s sionr. 9In WOe lfuture, though Germany will ;ii.1 behouadr e:frictone of 0the All"', f. il s. iFor lus efet upon in i viitional goodwill alone, te tran- :ition stands as one of the most im- portaitt steps in the reconstruction of Europe. 1TI(;ATb\(' INQA[TIS The ltOMFaddcfl brancht banking bi1, t *'5 ::il i ge d l y the oPresidnt, 0B Il ( li o u ail n ,e 01 a :t « ;37 Ol ' S. 1 .. i 't d' ri{I ,ct V0 tlk 0ir ' o '10f ., I a 1 i .:.' l71w ' =)''.' TPho'.' cFadden bill contains a num- b 'o of provisions liberalizing . the rules affecting the operations of na- tional banks and though opposed on the ground that branch banking in- terests would shortly drive inde- pendent banks out of existence such a view is not generally held. Branch banking on a large and small scale iN here to stay. The McFadden mleas- ure regulates operations so that na- tional and state banks have more nearly equal, freedom of operation. In these days of rapid changes in banking methods and transactions it is inevitable that certain irregulari- ties and inequalities should arise un der existing laws. These are what the McFadden bill aims to mitigate. As for the indeterminate extension of the Federal Reserve bank charters, the McFadden bill only provides for the avoidance of any unsettled con- ditions previous to the expiration of the present charters in 1934. CUTTING ILLNESS BY RADIO About four years ago the United States Public Health Service began providing medical advice via radio to vessels at sea. Ships without physi- cians found the service an invaluable one in treating illnesses of seamen without returning to port or stopping at out of the way points for medical service. Since that time, this service of U4~ Public Health department has been increasingly used, one station alone handling 57 such cases during 1926. Telegrams show that many lives have been saved. The departmlent is car- rying out in a capable fashion a very necessary special service for the country's citizens. It is beginning to seem that speech- es demanding law enforcement may come and go, but that crime roes on forver. "Alienist Gives New Test for In- sanity ." Evidently, the position of th prosecutor will be entirely hopeless. Final examinations are now only four months away. "1)'01lIIT"IMu sic and Drma Rlswill cover completely the rt+ 4)NtiI I: The ies re- OIl w ''eeRing Circus next Tuesday cofehsb ''r llI, Aiit mflt ytiorning, in lill audit orium, when l lle1 ii, theHIBl'Ps5" Hilt Hobbs and Reed will keelp the stur- 46Tiw man of I)PSI l1ly" i te lnne 'dents from straying into the danger- titeatem at S :t"(I o'eovk. ois paths of Eddy's oratory. x * * * [ ttr~r 11 e. t'i: : N i i t r'F" For Your Convenience--Two Stores Completely Stocked GRAHAPIS At Both Ends of the Diago nal ~SKILLED REPAIRINu3 ~t th se sterii t ithr These ~~~t-wo professors are ir4 III 'i a!", £amt Eddy ill peace, but MIS1i- I IIrgIoilst ill ret ainsthe !l'ad s inlhe i t (1 1. 4 (OU~ItI'yfllil.t DOWN THlE DIAG7ONAL ' P'rofessor Hobbs," asked " in ' ;ta Seiryse"y to debate this other su)- ri otf dd\ ' , 'Dare We Think(?'j or are the students to be per- 1 ' -Ladled against their will that they do dare to?" * *I Some of the more obvious points might just as well be cleared up be- fore this show begins. For instance,' they might just as well agree to leave Washington right out of the argu- ment. After all, it's only his birth- (lay we are celebrating.f If they don't arbitrate George outj as evidence, Hobbs can say that Wash- ington believed in war, citing the Revolutionary affair. Put then Eddy would come right back and say that Washington' was generous to his enemies and that he made a better president than he did a general. Hobbs and Reed can bring in an 1 oil painting of Washington standing{ in the boat crossing the Delaware.I And . Eddy might show the audience Qtite the inert c'Xc iiiug andtion'ueaat°d jetsgetdb rfso ob rhrM al vi rcould not have been used. So we will Maurice Harp~enden just give an idea of what it would At present Miss (o1-'neil is mkn have been like. The subject was: very lead ing lady-lie threats of I "Resolved: that under the existing withdravving from the c.'Est of t r conditions, the United States main- company to sta