Give Dinner Party to House Manager ReA Cross Sends Doctor to Servia A birthday party was arranged Dr. Nellis B. Foster, professor of last evening in honor of Miss Hortense internal medicine in the University, sailed Sunday from New York for Wind, the business manager of New- Servia where he Will study conditions berry residence. Miss Wind was pre- under the auspices of the Red Cross. sented with a corsage of sun-burnt He will probably return in Decem- roses. ber. 2,000 MISSIONARIES INTERNED IN JAPAN, INDIA AND AFRICA Chicago, Ill., Aug. 20.-"Two thous- and missionaries are interned in Jap- an, India and Africa and 700,000 con- Cars Let With or Withou* Drivers Our 10 ears are kept in first class condition and are ready to go any time .f day or night. We have Overlands, Studebakers and Fords Phone 830 109-111 Catherine Stark ( Friednan i BEFORE YOU LEAVE! You will need a Trunk, Bag, or Suitcase from WAII KiNTSON'S ., 325 S. Main Street Phone 24 0 Trade in yoar old one Between sets drink Coca-Cola. Welcome wherever it goes, for there's nothing that com- pares to it as a thirst-quencher and for delicious refreshment. I Demand the genuine by ful game- nicknames encourage substitution. THE COCA-COLA Co. ATLANTA. GA. l i 0 d .// J "S 1 4 ' ix verts form paganism are shepardlesa because of the. present world war," declared Rev. Edmund F. Cook, D. D., in his address before the graduating class of The Moody Bible Institue on Thursday night of August 9th, 1917. The occasion was one of unusual interest because it marked the close of the summer term and the graduation of the largest class in the history of the Institute, viz., ninety-eight men and women who completed the two years course of training. Dr. Cook who has recently accepted the posi- tion as Director of the Missionary Course of the Moody Bible institute, gave his inaugural address on this occasion on "The Call of a Crisis." PERRY DISCUSSES "ISOLATION" FOLLY (Continued fronmPage One) From that time to this day there has never been a time when England did not support the Monroe doctrine as against any third power, or when the British navy did not guarantee its en- forcement. This is not saying that there have not been spells of un- friendliness between the two coun- tries. But there never ' was a day, even at the height of these quarrels, when the British navy would not have helped us keep France or Germany or any other power from seizing a single island in the West Indies. During all this long period of a full century thestwo nations have guarded each other's interests in the western hemisphere--not from sentiment but from the most practical of motives Thus while most Americans imagined their country was "isolated;" it was not isolated at all, but was merely protected by an arrangement that had all the effects of an alliance. Isolation Grows Less. But after the year 1898 our degree of isolation was even less. We oust- ed Spain from this side of the water, and then we proceeded to dominate the world's great trade route through the isthmus and turn the Caribbean sea into an American lake. We acquired islands in the Pacific and became an Asiatic power. We undertook to in- fluence policies in China. A man who keeps a little hole-in- the-wall on a side street can remain isolated from his competitors. They will ignore him, and he is quite safe from any interference. But when he has moved into a huge block in the choicest business location in town, begins to undersell everybody and capture their trade, and also takes an active hand in the politics of the town, he cannot expect to remain iso- lated any longer. He must look out for himself-and woe betide him if he does not. Such is the kind of "isolation" some Americans thought we were enjoying today-a purely imaginary isolation. The formal entrance of America into the war merely turns a cold, legal theory into a practical policy. A so- called "armed neutrality"-which for us was war with all war's dangers and none of war's benefits-is thus turned into a wholesome co-operation that will give us the benefits that we have earned. And the greatest of these benefits is the vitalizing and up- lifting influence upon ourselves which comes from acknowledging honestly our real position in the world and do- ing our part. CLASSIFIED WANTED-- Furnished fat or small house for five or six boys for next fall. State price, number of rooms, location, etc. Box 3., Wolverine. LOST-A pair of bone rimmed nose glasses in the South Wing of Uni- versity Hall, Friday at 11 o'clock.1 Finder please call 2414 and leave name or leave glasses at Wolverine office. 21-22 The New Catalogue of the HIni n'nnifTT f inidaon Detroit' to Put-in-Bay - Cedar Point Cleveland - Sandusky Daylight Across the Lake ~r.-Sc I {w To Spend Vacation on Coast of Maine Dr. and Mrs. Lombard left today for C H O P S V E Y a vacation of a month on the Maine Open During Summer School coast. Dr. W. C' Edmunds will ac- 11 AM. to 1 P.M. company them while Mrs. Edmunds MICHIAN INN visits her mother. Phone 48-R 601 E. Liberty St. SUMMER SCHOOL TEXT BOOKS NEW AND SECOND-HAND DRAWING INSTRVMENTS Suppites of All Xinda The Slater Book. Shop Phon~e 430 336 So. Stat. St. Every Day Excursions to Put-in-Bay Round Trip Fare Round Trip $t Some dsy on75 Sundays or 333 Week Days. Holidays 1.00 Cedar Point Exdursicns $125 Round Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday Trip Cleveland One Way Fare, Every Day, $1.75 Big Steel Steamer "Put-in-Bay" leaves Detroit every day at 8:00 a. M., Central Standard Time. Steel Side Wheel Steamer "FrankE. Kirby"leavesDetroit week days at 4:00 p. in., Central Time. FREE DANCING--Finzel's Orchestra on Str. "Put-in-Bay" whole afternoon at Put-in-Bay. Two and one-half hours at Cedar Paint. Visit Percy 1t000000 Meorial, the Caves, Casino, Dance PtavilionssBig natals, Bathng Beaes, AquaticSides, Bard Walks, Midaway,' Lagoons, etc.a FiystStreet Wharf,Detroit write for Folders Ashley & Dustin Steamer Line PO Detroit, Michigan p Preliminary Showing Of A utumn Hats FOR WOMEN GOING AWAY The Millinery Salon takes pleasure in presenting this week a most charming display of early Auturnn Hats for vacation wear and for women who are re- turning home from the university. Felts, velours and satins with the newest soft brims, soft crowns or both; il effective Autumn colors and combinations-old rose, .delft, green, pupple taupe and sand. Models gleverly designed by Gage, Phipps, Knox and others--all newly unboxed and distinctive. PRICED $5.oo UP (Second Floor.) 11 IS NOW READY Complete information concerning the eight Colleges and Schools: LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS, EN GINEERING, MEDICINE, LAW, PHARMACY, HOMEOPATHY,:DENTISTRY, GRADUATE, AND THE SUMMER SESSION Special Courses in Forestry, Newspaper Work, Land- scape Design, Higher Commercial Education, including Railway Administration and Insurance, Architecture, Conservation Engineering, Education (affiliated with Ann Arbor Schools for Observation Study), and a' Course for those preparing for the scientific administra- tion of departments of sanitation and public health. 1- For Copy of Catalogue, Special Announcement, or Individual Information, address The Dean of the School or College in which interested, or 11 SHIRLEY W. SMITH Secretary University Ann Arbor, Michigan