" ® ' SUNT)AY_ ATTr4TTgrr 9. 1931 _ .. -. AT f1TTr 0 10e galw,tgau Darg U ,nsd&W Pn. Itosdgelv lt" ew r'-summs { t a sw s t ali 1 ,, m 41W bX v els mw e e bs* am is Asof A10e, Moga, p r - swami elsie matt,. ;1 Lnt, w l 1.50 by mag. LUemt eur Bulding, Maynard Street, As Ah, M Ia . Sillarlal, 4ft31 Swiomss EDITORIAL. STAFF . MANAINO EDITOR HAROL .0. WARRENi, JR. swla Uiseste, . . . ... Gmr 'William ASSOCIATE EDITORS LV tSher U. Qureluhi ~ Eleanor Rairdon Marion Thornton P. cutler Showers EUSIN1ES STAFF SUSINESS MANAGER WILLIAM R. WORBOYS buees manager .. Veraon ish ': s, ........ .Carl Marto t tsauIiC Mager ... 4..,...Jck Bialu . Cirlation ........Tomas Muir Night Editor-Sher M. Quraishi SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 1931 What Others Says THE HONKER (Detroit Saturday Night) He is a species of wild goose. He can't fly, but he can ride-like John Gilpin. He drives most of the time with his horn. He will pass you on a road where there may be 30 feet clearance for him, but he will toot his horn. He will be a block away when he sees you coming in- to a stop street, but he will take the right of way and toot his horn. He will catch you behind a street car with a blockade of traffic on your right; you can't move but he will toot his horn. He will get into a line of cars that are moving 30 miles an hour on a city thorough- fare, but he is not satisfied with that; he will cut out and in, and as he goes he will toot his horn. He will not hesitate at dangerous intersections where there is no stop sign, but tears right through and toots his horn. Sometimes he is an impulsive youth with a new high-speed car. Sometimes he is a grocery boy rattl- ing truck. Sometimes, sad to re- late, he is a mature man who is old enough to know better. He may be nervous, or nutty, or both. He may have the gift of courtesy, but he conceals it as successfully as a Missouri mule. He may be good to his mother, but he never gives his neighbors a break on the road. Dr. E. B. Skaggs of the psychologi- cal department of the College of the City of Detroit says of the honker: "The horn is just a distended mouth. The driver who constantly uses his hoirn to wdrk his way along has a superiority complex. He loves to show off his own im- portance. The horn is an index of his character. It certainly shows he is not a rational being. When a man blows his horn in a traffic tie-up he indicates his mental in- feriority." NEW PROJECT AWN ARBOR stepped news again on Friday announcement of plans into the with the for the productions here, by the Interna- tional Radio corporation, of a mid- get long and short wave radio set. This means not only that the fame of Ann Arbor will reach out fur- ther but, what is more important, it means that the manufacture of the new product will necessitate the hiring of many of the local unem- ployed. This city often figures in the national news because it is the home of a great educational in- More and more frequently we' stitution; Ann Arbor, means the hear the suggestion that all horns University of Michigan and vice be abolished as a public nuisance. 'h aThat cannot be safely done. There versa, ho matter where the names are times when a horn is needed. are mentioned. Scarcely less im- But it would be a great help if the portant, however, is the fact that honker could be compelled to put other plants-large manufacturers his horn some place where it would of nationally advertised products- not be so near his hand. are located here. Notably among these are the Hoover Steel Ball and DISARMING Economy Baler companies, whose EUROPEN names may not be closely linked ERP with Ann Arbor in the minds of those who buy the products, but (Chicago Tribune) whose existence help make Ann Mr. Newton Baker, opening the Arbor an ideally progressive com- eleventh annual conference on pol- munity. itics at Williamston, said that thea At any rate the city, though com- hope of the coming conference on paratively small, should prove a disarmament will "lie not in thej splendid example for other com- statesmen of the world but in the munities that have been ponder- peoples of the world, and the] ing President Hoover's r e en t strength of the peoples of the world statement that the unemployment at the conference depends not uponr situation will be relieved only when the knowledge or good will of a fewi individual communities get down elect and thoughtful spirits but on to work without waitng for that the extent to which popular knowl- doubtful cures-all term "Federal edge is thorough and deep, and so aid;" The government obviously fortifies the representatives of the will never be able to straighten out people with the support of an in- individual communities in the mat- formed and resolute public opinion." ter; it can merely coordinate the This may explain why intern;- c efforts of all of them as a whole. tional conferences on armament arer Perhaps Ann Arbor is more for- disappointing to Americans. OurE tunate than other cities in being own representatives, at least in re-a so well situated that manufactur- cent years, have seemed to be moreC ers see in it an advantageous loca- guided by "a few elect and thought-x tion for the establishment of fac- ful spirits" than the representatives tories; perhaps we can attribute a of European nations, and doubtlessc great deal of our civic fortune to a their failure to get results wouldc stroke of geographical luck. be explained by Mr. Baker as the in-t At d time like this, however, a evitable consequence of the lacka great deal of natural luck can be of that thorough and deep populara discounted, for the International knowledge which would fortifyt Radio corporation is showing the European delegations in the effortI sort of spirit that a great many to .disarm. Thorough and deepr other manufacturers - even more knowledge upon the problems of1 advantageously located and with armament and disarmament wer well-known products - are lacking must assume is lacking among Eu-r in the face of the depression. The ropean peoples, or there would nots manufacturers of the new radio are be such unwillingness of their rep-n to be congratulated for contem- resentatives to accept the recom-i plating a new business project at mendatons of the few elect and a time when less farsighted and un- thoughtful spirits which Americana reasonably conservative business diplomacy represents. men are hiding their heads like os- The difficulty, we suspect, lies inp triches in the sand, and losing the the stubborn belief of Europeann benefits of constant plugging, and peoples and their representativesd we see in their optimistic plans a that their knowledge of the prob-p success that will come from catch- lems involved in armament ist ing the public on the rebound, thorough and deep. If our few electt with a product that everyone will and thoughtful spirits could onlyd want. We sincerely trust that the persuade the Europeans that thish new radio will warrant a constant is an error and that it is our few increase in production, not only be- elect and thoughtful spirits whoe cause it is backed by local business have the deep and thorough knowl-a men but because it will help solve'edge of the problems of armamenta the jobless problem and make Ann this would promptly bring about av Arbor even more of a progressive general disarmament. But Euro-c city than it is. pean nations insist upon thinkingr that some thousands of years of i experience with one another in Eu- To sink shamelessly into the rope's crowded household has giv- t stratum of Scotch jokes, we should en them a deep and thorough p like to remark that the Scottish knowledge of their own conditions i airman who cut two days off the and relations; in short, that they a Australia-England flight time was know more about their own affairs N merely living up to the reputation than our few elect and thoughtful P of his feilowmen. spirits. This, no doubt, is a deplor- o able fallacy, but until it can be dis- posed of our efforts to induce Eu- rope to beat the sword into the plowshare are not likely to shine so far as good deeds ought in a naughty world. PERRY OF LAKE ERIE (New York Times) Perry's victory on Lake Erie was one of those exploits that leave no sting. The vanquished fought well, and in the hour of triumph the young American commander was magnanimous. Thereafter along the frontier of the lake peace pre- vailed. To maintain it through the years to come, the war being over, the Rush-Bagot treaty im- posed a limitation of armaments. In his message, read at the dedi- cation of the commemorative shaft last Friday, President Hoover em- phasized the victory of peace that is "no less renowned than war." Of the unveiling of a tablet on which the actual words of the agreement were inscribed, he said: "It comes at a time when the na- tions of the world are seeking so- lution of their common problems through cooperation and disarma- ment." Perry, like Farragut and Dewey, had no passion for war. Duty was his lodestar. He was a religious man. His mother, whose five sons served in the navy, impressed her fine character upon all of them. So well was this known that when the news came of the battle of Lake Erie the Rhode Island farmers de- clared that it was "Mrs. Perry's vic- tory." She trained her children "with extraordinary care to high ideals of duty." Her husband had served in the United States Navy. Two of her three daughters mar- ried naval officers. When the War of 1812 began, Oliver Hazard Perry was regarded as one of the best or- dnance officers. He was an able mathematician and navigator. The commander of the Newport flotil- la of gunboats, he engaged fre- quently in manoeuvers to test his crews. There is no more impres- sive example for naval officers than the work of Perry in building ships from the virgin forests of Lake Erie to do battle with the British and in arming and equipping them. The story of the battle is a classic. Into the winning of it went all his training and his indomitable character. By rules of the game he was beaten when Barclay, who had fought with Nelson, riddled the American flagship Lawrence with gunfire and made her deck a sham- bles. But Petry, transferring Co the Niagara, had only begun to fight. When the British squadron finally surrendered, the officers were al- lowed to retain their side-arms, and humane care was given to their wounded. The American people have delighted to honor Perry with monuments. But it must always be remembered that he took no delight in war for its own sake. ELECTRICAL VOTING (Chicago Tribune) The French chamber of deputies will do its voting hereafter by means of an electric device. On every member's desk will be a yes and a no buton. When the time comes to vote, the member will press the desired button and his doing so will deposit a small coin on the speaker's platform. The tip of the balance will indicate whether the yeas or tjae noes prevailed. No one knows how many weary hours are devoted in all our legislatures to the business of calling the roll. To be sure, time spent in calling the roll is not spent in passing other laws, which is probably so much net gain; but against this must be reckoned the fact that the cumber- some methods of doing business now in vogue at Springfield, Wash- ington and other capitals encourage legislators in the belief that they are in a world of their own. Of course the use of coins to re- present votes could not be per- mitted in a nation of expert kid- ders. The suggestion would be too pointed. Also, this country con- tains too many good amateur elec- tricians to allow any such simple device to be used as the French have devised. What we need is something which will print the roll call automatically and make it available for instant examination and correction by members whose votes may have been improperly re- corded. Obviously, too, some means must be devised for preventing vot- ing by an absent member. No doubt a fairly competent elec- trical engineer could devise a fool- roof and cheatproof electrical vot- ng system in half a day. It is noI accident that such devices have not been adopted by our legislatures.1 Politics does not want to save time or anything else, except face. OASTED ROLL MOTHER, CHILD DOING WELL BULLETIN Hwjrx Whoofie, campus dilletante and lietratus, was reported better, in spite of a slight temperature, yesterday at University hospital, where he underwent a nose opera- tion Friday. * * * IS IT HOT ENOUGH FOR YOU DEPT. Our typewriter keys stick to the paper every time they hit it (one of the two reasons that we can't write a good column), and per- spiration is standing out all over the machine itself. Even the lead slugs which enable you to read this pretty page every morning are beginning to look gooey. Ugh! In no time at all, they will begin to run in a manner a bit akin to this all down the nice empty column that we ought to fll with words drip drip drip and gather in a pool at the bottom, just like this. Then we'll have to wait and wait and wait and wait and wait until it congeals berofe we go on. There.. * * * THE OVUM (By Witheringham Bilgewater) Little does an ovum know Into what it's apt to grow, Whether it will be an oaf Or a mama's sugar loaf. Little does an ovum think That it's tumbling on the brink Of a life of sin and shame Sadly hampered by some name. We were once an ovum too So we know their point of view. . * . UNDER THE SUN A New Rolls Novelette Out of the murk he came, and his coming presaged a new era, a better time on earth for all men ... out of the murk he came, but he himself wondered from whence he had sprung. "Mother," he said (for in truth he had a mother) "mother, from where did I come?" And his mother, like innumer- able mothers since the days of Rob- inson Crusoe, replied, "A stork brought you." And he was satis- fied ... . until later. Then he ap- proached his mother and again queried her, "And do all such as I come from the murk and do all such come by stork." And his mother made answer: "Yea, and verily." And he wondered. This is a fun- ny note he thought. And he made question yet again: "Where do the storks come from, mother?" And his mother was silent, and he knew that he had indeed sprung from the murk and was apart from all other men and that he presaged a new era. And he did not like be- ing apart from all mankind .. . for there were women. Thus he sang a song: "Ah to sping in the spring ere the singing string Shall burst with a boom into bifurcate bits." Thus he was comforted. Forty chuckers of polo. "And I a nine- goal man," he boasted. He was married to the wrong girl. There had been no intimacy. But he loved her, loved her. It was immense. i r Dancing Moonlights to Sugar Island Vifve to Detroit and enjoy an evening of music and dancing on Str. Tashmo and in the pavilion at Sugar Island. Tickets 75c. Park on the deck. Leave at 8:45 every evening. " " POPULAR STR. TASHMOO Fo* oifc TAKLE A RIDE ON STR. TASHMOO To PORT - -HURON. COME TO DETROIT any day this Summer, park your car on the dock, and enjoy this all-day sail over the great International Highway of Lakes and Rivers. Free Dancing on the boat. Splendid Cafeteria and Lunch Service. See Detroit river front, Belle Isle, Lake St. Clair, the Flats and the celebrated "Venice of America." This cruise of 61 miles each way takes you through a con- stantly changing panorama of rare land and water views. Port Huron, Sarnia, St. Clair Flats, Algonac Starting this trip from Port Huron passengers leave at 3:10 p. m., arriving in Detroit at 7:45 p. m. Returning, leave Detroit at 9 the next morning, arriving in Port Huron at 2:10 p. m. Str. Tashmoo leaves Griswold St. Dock at 9 a. in., Daily and Sunday; arrive Port Huron 2:10 p. m. Returning, leave PORT HURON, 3:10 p. i., arrive Detroit 7:45 p. a. FARES: Tashmoo Park or St. Clair Flats, week days 75c; Sundays, $1.00, R. T. Port Huron or Sarnia, Ont., one way, $1.10, R.T. $2. TASHMOO PARK halfway between Detroit and Port Huron is Detroit's favorite pleasure park where you may spend six hours and return on Str. Tashmoo in the .veng. Free dancing in the pavilion; picnic in the grove, baseball, golf and al outdoor sports and amusements. Sk reading G. T. Ry., between Detroit and Port Rat.lroad Ti ckets Huron, are good on Str. Tashmoo either direction I Don't Put It Off Till Next Month riw t , 7 ^ 1 w A, 4% I Z I A Three Minute Phone Call Will Do It For You Now! That attractively furnished that nice, large airy room suite, or that you want to rent next fall . . have you rented it yet? If not, try a classified advertisement in The Daily and make sure that your offer reaches students and faculty who are searching for lodgings right now. Just dial 21214 be. fore four o'clock, and your ad will ap- pear in the next paper. 2w -