rth mountains, corn India? What woul and+ II HI lL iILtd dUUUULIJ' OFINDIA SELF-RuLE (Continued from Page One) God, in a Ford car. When I- s introduced to hm," the speaker .tinued, "I clasped the hand of the st bashful man that I have ever t. He was as shy as a girl, and sied gently with his eyes cast d wn. was small, he couldn't have wei h- more than 100 pounds, he had noth- on save a loin cloth, not even the andi cap that all his followers ar; thin and emaciated, he had n fasting for some time because followers had been guilty of vio- ce. His face was anything but >ressive, but I had been wth him s than ten minutes when I was npletely mesmerized by the man. Vas carried away by the beautiful rit that he showed, and amazed at kindness, gentleness and charity t this man who is leading the ian people in the greatest revolt their history." Visit to G1~nd rhandi took his guests into his in- chamber. There he lives in a e tent, without a floor; a straw a pallet ,two pillows, and three cks his entire earthly possessions. (fessor Van Tyne described him as strange idealist, a remarkable man , a fund of !sound philosophy ich if accepted every where would tainly make the world an ideal e" Hs main tenet is that of the ce of the soul, love. "Ghandi's ghter lied to her father bye day," speaker related, "and he punished severely by fasting himself. He k to me one day that he would do a.y with machinery in India. That the forms of the Western civiliza- . He would destroy all weapons, . India would lead a quiet pastoral .'But,' I said, 'wouldn't the Af Glassitied Advrising Rates: Two cents per word per day, paid in advance; fif- teen cents per reading line perr day, charged. WANTED kNTED-A 22 target pistol. Call 'erce, 1391. 40-p FOR SALE R SALE-Wheelock piano in ex- lent condition, with or without n'ner attachment and high class ecords. Fine for fraternities or ororities. Telephone Mrs. Mitch- 11, 2600. 38p-2 TYPE WRITERS ewriters of standard makes ought, sold, rented,' exchanged, leaned and repaired. 0. D. MORRILL Nickels Arcade / Phone 1718 1-tfr TYPEWRFTING PEWRITING AND MIMEOGRAPH- NG promptly and neatly done. 'ypewriters cleaned and repaired. . D. Morrill, 17 Nickels Arcade. tfr STATIONERY FARANCE SALE-Correspondence tationery All clean ,stock at less han cost." 0. D. Morrill, 17 Nickels' .rcade. Open evenings. tfr LOST AND FOUND ST-Bleack leather bill told con- airing two bills and dentcation. all E. E. Vadakian, 2025 Hill St. 'hone 1327-J. 40-c-2 OLEN-Child's bicycle from porch f Staebler Oil Station on Main St.' Monday evening. Reward. Call tone, 2695-W.. 40-p you do then?' And he said gently and quietly, 'I would meet them with my bare breast. They want money and jewels and this is all I have,' and he swept the barren tent. 'If India, would get along with as little as this, destroy all the luxuries of the west- ern world, who would want to raid the and rob them?' His is a doctrine of soul force." "Ghandi," Professor Van Tyne con- tinued, "does not lay the troubles of India to England, he lays it to West- ern civilization." Rajahs Support British The Mahrajahs of India, the native princes almost overwhelmingly sup- port the British in their efforts, ac- cording to the Professor. At a con- ference at Delhi, at a great banquet given by the princes to the visiting Prince of Wales, Professor Van Tyne met many of them, and they express- ed to him their views. In a visit that he made to the Marajah of Alwer, one of the most brilliant, but at the same time most wicked of the native princes, the Mahrajah spoke in threse terms, "The British are crazy to try to introduce democratc self govern- ment into India," he declared, "tote fundamental basis of the Hindu re- ligion is the caste system. If the British succeed in their attempts, the caste system must obviously go, a government without religion cannot endure in India." "When the few Englishmen in In- dia, who have ived there and under stand the sensitive nature of the In- dian, and know their minds in all the intricacies of the Indian mind, are allowed to work without interference, they will achieve what they hop~e to, probably not for a few generations, but certainly in time, a government for the Indian people which will be democratic, and representative," General Christman Near Death New Orleans, Aug. 7. - Gen. Lee Qhristman, noted Latin-American rev- olutionary leader, is in a critical con- Tennessee Floods Rece6 the basements of several dition at his hdme here and his phys- Knoxville, Tenn., Aug. 7.- Flood houses were flooded. icians expect to resort to blood trans- waters at Bristol, Tenn., caused by a fusion in an effort to save his life. cloudburst, are reccding. For a time A very direct and cheap General Christman is 60 years old, srious dama-e wa threatened and advertising--classifieds. . ,. Students SL pIy Store Y AVENUE -1111 SOUTH UNIVE r .. 11" 1 THE ANN ARBOR PRESS 0 OFFICIAL PRINTERS TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN and ITS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS PRESS BLDG, MAYNARD STREET PHONE NO. 1 RU NNING DAY AND NIGHT TH-ANN ARBOR PRESS { AT THE THEATERS I I I I II l I I .,.... . ..... Screen-Today Majestic-Marquerite de la Motte and Marjorie Daw in "Wand- ering Daughters"; also Regin- ald Denny in "The Leather Pushers." Wuerth - Johnnie Walker and Eileen Percy in "The Fourth Musketeer." Orpheum - Conway, Tearle in Marooned Hearts." Stage-This Week Garrick (Detroit) - The Bon- stelle company in "Six Cylin- der Love." GA R R ICK MATS.SaTu 25-50C 14th Annual Season Nights 25-50-75c-$1 THE BONSTELLE CO. ig the "High Power 14it" "SIX-CYLINDER LOVE" Next Week-"The Fox and the Gander" TEA CHER S NEEDED Many vacancies , in' file now! ' Westmere Teachers' Agency 716 OId National Bank Bldg., SPOKANE, WASIONGTON i.-4 The- Engineering in a Curling Iron What sort of engineering is it. that makes a study of the needs and the interests' of women and creates prod- ucts to satisfy them? Does it seem that, in practice at least, this sort of thing is a little different from your understanding of what an engineer really is and does? After all, when you come to think of it, engineering is concerned with all the facts of life. It takes the old facts and interprets them in new and broader ways; but its big job is the very big job of making more living, fuller living,-readily available. It is, in every aspect, a thing worth do- mg, whether it concerns itself with curling irons or converters, or any of the thousands of products in between. This is truly the day of the engi- ment are sought in almost every phase of living. Engineering is remaking the business of housekeeping. Its methods are being applied to merchandis- ing, to distribution, to the wrapping of bundles and the packing of boxes, to the lighting of streets and the hun- dreds of things that, a few years back, were strictly "rule-of-thumb". By the time you are at work out in the world, there will be more-though there are only a few of them left. Whatever is worth doing is worth engineering; engineering effort digni- fies itself. Whether it puts more use- fulness into= transformers or curling irons or turbines does not matter. The thing that counts is the work, the creative, constructive service that is going on for the lasting benefit of mankind. - -A pair of in' Health rager, 1104. tortoise shell Service case. glass- Call 39-p-2 F 0 o D always tastes 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 -Rider, fountain pen, Thursday 'noon. Name on barrell. Call :s, 960 or 558. 31-p-16 rm U' , WHITE SWAN LAUNDRY C . Launderers, Cleaners. neer. His judgments and his equip- 0 Dyers, Pressers . : '"s :: . Cents' Suits.............$1.25 Ladies' Suits......$1.50 up VE DAY SERVICE ON REQUEST PHONE 165 ACHIEVEMENT OPPORTUNITY In