a tDal 'SPAPER OF THE ublished every morning except Monday ng the summer session. ember of the Associated Press. The As ated Press is exclusively entitled to the for republication of all news dispatches ited to it or not otherwise credited in paper and the local news published here- 'tered at the postoflice, Ann Arbor, higan, as second class matter. abscription by carrier or mail, $t.so. iices: Ann Arbor Press Building. ugnmunications, if signed as evidence of d faith, will be published in The Summer ly at the discretion of the Editor. Un- .4 communications will receive no con- ration. The signature may be omitted i ligation if desired by the writer. The imer Daily does not necessarily endorse sentiments expressed in the communica- EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones a414 and :76-M MANAGING EDITOR HOWARD A. DONAHUE Eiitor ..............William Stoneman torials ............. .Paul If. Einstein t Editors................Nathan Davis Robert Ge Ramsay. Assistants lard Heidemann Ada Phelps aret Geddes Andrew ,."Propper C.Heraper Regina Reichman othy Mitts Margaret Stuart ena Moran Luca Tolhurst K. foyer Matilda Rosenfeld ed with the possibility of a prompt re- cuperation to normalcy. r Two successive Presidents have giv- en their strongest efforts during their terms of office to the emulation of a great spirit of intern'ational co-op- eration and good fellowship. Two have passed from the chair of office with their purpose unfulfilled. Al- though opponents in political prin- ciples, they had a common purpose. At the failure of one's method the suc- cess of the other's seemed imminent, but the latter also failed. Still, the motive behind each was in accord with that which incites every human be- ing to .a love of peace. It is then, the ideal which we must preserve and formulate, an ideal which would be the highest possible tribute to the late President and of inestimable benefit to posterity. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 96o BUSINESS MANAGER L. BEAUMONT PARKS Iyertising...............Hiel M. Rockwell ablication ....................D. L. Pierce ccounts...... .....A. S. Morton rculatioz ...............John C. Haskin Assistants lizabeth Bartholomew George Stracke atherine S. Griffiths John A Barrett ,' TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1923 Night Editor-NAtHAN M. DAVIS A NATIONAL ENIGMAt The world must move along. Noth- ing, no calamity however great, can prevent the sun from rising or day from succeeding night. Ma. in the same way must keep going; a na- tional loss, though keenly felt, must be immnediately .illed. So it takes nothing'' from .the sincerity of the inourning for the late President, that there should be an immediate discus- isionas to'4what mnannr of man is this thrust'suddenly into the Presidency of the United States. Mr. ooidge who succeeds Presi- dent Harding as the chief magistrate is somewhat mystifying. He is best recalled to the public mind by his handling as governor of the police- inens' strike in Boston. He has a considerable reputation for shrewd- ness; he is credited with courage and vior; and he is apparently a man of few words. Outside of this little can be forecast' Will Coolidge carry on his prede- cessor's policies unchanged or will he re-direct the course of the nation? There is no way of telling. In his first public announcement as Presi- dent, Mr. Coolidge declares, "It will be my purpose to carry out the pol- icies which he has begun for the serv- ice of the American people and for mieeting their responsibilities wher- ever they may arise." There can be no prophecies based on that state- mnent. Emerging from the mist that clothes our Vice-Presiden, the man nw at the helm is a big question mark.'r IMXORTALIZING AN IDEAL Tributes are not. the business of politicians. Nevertheless the -most suitable memorial which could be erected to the honor of the great Am- erican who has just passed away would be a world brotherhood embody- ing the ideals which President Hard- ing held for a World Court plan. Strorig in his feeling, of moral obliga- tion toward Europe and the rest of the world, the late Executive realized the all-important influence which this country would exercise in internation- al circles without active participation in the petty quarrels and disagree- ments of the Old World. Thl' institution of a permanent world brotherhood would not only im- mortalize the ideals of the present but of many generations of peace-loving American Presidents, who, despite their antipathy for foreign alliances, "would have sacrificed much to set the nations of the world on a basis of in- timate understanding and unimpaired co-operation.* Even the men who inost strongly insisted that we re- frain from any diplomatic agreements outside the western hemisphere would have welcomed gladly, an organization of this kind under the prevailing con- ditions of the day. President Harding did all within his power to bring the nations of the world into closer harmony, and could his ideal of a World Court have been accepted so that at this time it might be working on the many perplexing1 Wouldn't it be just as wise to have term papers mimeographed as to have several copies of one paper typed one at a time? If for no other good, it would help solve the rush in the typ- ist's office. The official report of ligfor sales in the province of Quebec states that the income has been steady. Judging from the steadiness of the flow of Canadian whiskey to this country, it is not sur- prising. It cost the Spanish government a little over $7,000 to have Columbus discover America, according to the Living Age. It costs some people more than that to discover Paris. The French won't be satisfied that they're in the wrong until Germany blows up the whole works. YESTER DAY By SMYTHE Eyes Across the Sea Europe in the midst of wrangling and confusion pauses for a moment to pay tribute to the memory of Presi- dent Harding, and wonders how the change of chief executives in the great power across the ocean will af- fect them in their bickering and jeal- ously contested conferences. London prepares tohold memor- lal serviices for President Harding either in Westminster Abbey or St. Paul's Cathedral. Numbers of Amer- ican 'and British flags are flying at half mast, and newspapers make the President's death the subject of their leading editorials. Above all the coming attitude of the American gov- ernment on the Ruhr situation, the League of Nations, and European debts is anxiously awaited. Paris is especially interested in President Coolidge's probable foreign policy. French statesmen would like to know his attitude toward the World Court, The French speculate a good deal on whether the new President will travel in the direction of Euro- pean intervention or isolation. For the present, the world is watchfully waiting. Preacher's Politics The clergyman who joins the ranks of politicians in buying people into office,. Whether they be the right of the wronk (sort, ceases to retain his license of unrestricted criticism of the "unscrupulous electioneer." Mm- bers of the church are too often prone to consider their ideas as unquestion- able and beyond dispute. And so when the newly appointed superintendent of the Michiganu Anti-Saloon league states that $5,000,000 must be raised in the United States within the next decade to "put the right kind of men in offices of public importance, raise the moral standards of the nation, and to make the whole world dry," he ex- pects that we accept his notion as the final word of fact. says that a man is innocent until he is proved guilty and hence this is a case of an innocent man spending six long months in a prison. It sounds like the Bastille. Is this an exception- al case or does the law forget more often? OASD RLL IF WE WERE- WHERE WE ARE WOULD I'E BE I confes to that I agree with Long- fello which says there is one big mis- take in the human body, as viz.: that our backs are where they are. If they reposed in front we would not catch could even we open our coats; all so, wen we went to scratch our backs we could do a good job of it. * *. *f Scientists have hashed over many moons about the deep question-did monkey or man come first? (A youngc lady named Eva Lution started thist here fuss). Wel, refering back to the above problam, I feel confident thatj my solution to this will set all doubt at rest; first come man, then comes woman, and woman makes monkey out of man. Aint Sience grand? Following the steps of politicians and introducing graft into there trade, the scientists are now grafting monkey glands into old geezers to refresh 'em. Those fel- los, can do every thing but reduce, the TI. C. of L. But now, I ask you, dust to dust, because of which can't they give us chicken glands and then we can lay our own eggs? Much words -hds been passed in re- gards about the Irish and the Mexic- ans are so much a like because they both are all ways fighting. With my rights per citisen of the U. S. I pro- tests most violently. War is only a habit with the Mexicans, but, begorra, an industry to the Irish! In reflecting back over the long list and annals of Dumbells, ( I come to none wich tells of a human so less of intelligence as one wich I met. On the edgness of exasperation I pointed up towards the sky and asked, "Is that the sun or the moon up there?" To which le. answers in reply, "I don't know; I don't live in this neigh- borhood." TARIK. I --------'----- EIDITORIAL COMMENT) pundit. This is one reason why there is more hope from self-gov e~rnment in industry than from State Socialism. But if leisure is a necessity, sat- isfying a strong immemorial instinct, how can there be too much of it? Why should anybody work at all, save as a spontaneous contrast to his leisure? In August, even the mildest specula- tion is a weariness. It is enough for the lazy to know 'that laziness is a virtue, industry a vice to be restricted as much as the present industrial sys- tem admits. As for the ant, she is in- vited to go to the -sluggard, consider his ways and be wise. FINE STATIONERY FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS Instead of paying a big price for blank stationery, send us your name and address and we will send you a free sample of Milo Name and Ad dress Stationery. It sells at $1.00 per box of 75 en- velopes with 75 double sheets to match. The paper is beautiful- Linen Finish-and on each envelope and sheet of writing paper we print your name and address in rich blue. In fact, it's a $3.00 value for $1.00. It's a wonderful quality and costs leess than you have been paying for blank paper. Milo Name and Address Stationery will please you: Write for free sam- ple today. Address Westlake Station- ery Co., 120 North Erie Street, Toledo, Ohio. F O O D always tates much better if the surroundings are right. There is no pleasanter place in Ann Arbor in which to eat than TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM MAYNARD STREET Text Books and Supplies for All Colleges GRAHAM'S-Both Ends of the Diagonal - The Store of Service- S ET your watch by the Clock in our window! This time will always be correct be- cause it is regulated by electricity. Just plug into the light socket and you will have the correct time right on your desk or in your own home. We have the agency for the new clocks. , They are the Telechron. Be sure you get the Telechron.. Others are merely immitations. ; Arthur . Arnold State Street Jewelry 802 SOUTH STATE STREE~T I r ,. ,, ,f f~a4 r Electric Hair Dryer, 25 IMMAM- LAZINESS A VIRTUE (New York Times) Some of us have never got over our resentment at the advice and direc- tions we had to learn at Sunday school; "Go to the ant, thou sluggard; con- sider her ways and be wise." This wis- dom of the ant, pe#petually bustling and fussing and working overtime, seems doubtful to youthful observers. The last instance of that quality was taken by Mr. Julian Huxley from the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: For each rise of ten degrees centigrade the ants go about double as fast. * * * On a warm day an ant will go through a task four of five times as heavy as she will on a cold one. Ants must be particularly silly to do a thing like that. It is a pleas- ure to be told by an illustrious mathe- matician, philosopher and recon- structor of society, Mr. Bertrand Rus- sell, that too much work, indeed much work, is immoral. Writing on "Leis- ure and Mechaxnism," in the Dial, he defines "virtues" as "those mental and physical habits which ,tend to pro- duce a good community"; "vices" as "those that tend to produce a bad one." Most men don't like to work. It is called a curse in Genesis. Heaven is figured as a place where nobody works. The regularity of work under industrialism has made it particularly unpleasant, a contradiction of instinct. The best we can do is to mare the hours as short as possible. "Four hours' boredom a day" must people could stand. The important thing is leisure,, with its opportunities of vol- untary and various activities, quiet, return' to the soil; to substitute "in- stinctive satisfaction" for "instinctive dissatisfaction." The professional and other middle classes haven't partially cured their instinctive dissatisfaction, greater than that of the wage earn- ers, as the latter have. The competi- tive system should have made life more leisure- ly, but it has made it more hustling. Increase of leisure, diminution of hustle, are the ends to be sought, not mere quantitative increase of production. The trade unions have clearly perceived this, and have persisted in spite of lectures from every kind of middle or upper class I 4# ;' For the pleasure it will bring to you, we are, pleased. to ;F, By concentrating a steady cur- rent of cool or well warmed air-whichever you prefer- your hair is completely dried in a remarkably short time. Costs little to use. Detroit Edison Telephone 2300 IMain at William ,.e: say we have re- ceived a shipment of Page & Sh aw' s Candy of Excellence We also remember the wishes for Gilbert's Chocolates I Daily Excursion/ to - PUTowIN- BAY 0 c One RouodlTrip $1.25 Sund Way (Ret..Sam e Day) .oid Leamres Ded it SDaiy 9 a.-a. (E. T.) The finest exclusive excu Fon rateamer, the Pat-in-Bay, noted its large ballroom, mnkes thtip amezmorable one. Orchestraa dancing aboard, without extra chafte. Cafeteria aboard. Four hours camed with u oar pesurat Putla-Bay-bathing-dair tv or mlnchig and ahl c elds. Semetho wontderful Caves, and Psn mnumet. Connections at Put-ia-Ba satmametretftrCleveland, Toledo and Lakiei .Day t. .a.ndusky The Put-in-Ew mnaestw mstb ogh Sandusky everpEday. Fare-I 0"eay. Special Friday Eitons to Cedar Point A seilexcnruiop Is matde~eeerFr~syto Cedaint-the fresh water r toAdntc (gythe hus at11tingbeachz in the vmrld-large summerhot groveis, a outdoor auements. Fourhowrat Cedar Point and se at Pu t-n-Bayl Las d Pint at5 nand Put-inBay t 7 p arivback in Detroit 1t30 pFarp-C sdar oit1.50 round trip;Pat Bay. 80esb 'OM twtser Map Felder laesDetroit 8 m- As hley& Dustin S ad da7Steamer,.ne LFeet O First Stireet "I Detrolt, MI Morality and the clergy are insep- arable, and still this solicitous pastor would stoop to the position of a cam- paigning politician, maybe not in his own name, but certainly in that of the organization he represents, openly electioneeringL and gtill expect the respect whicl is due a member of the church to be forthcoming. The clergy- man has his acknowledged place with- in the sphere of moral influence but in taking a step directly in conflict with the code which he has preached, he ceases to perform his assigned function. The Law Forgot John Keogh, of Detroit, has been waiting since Feb. 7 in the county jail without a preliminary hearing. Keogh was charged with a violation of the Federal prohibition law and for six months has been waiting arraign- ment, but someone made a slip and without due process of law a man has Pnt ' ninM inno n- .Thelnna r G. Claude Drake's DRUG AND PRESCRIPTION STORE PHONE 508 "The Quarry"