cttne Editorial Comment LIVERY DO YOU NE UDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE SUMMER; OFr. THLE UNIVERSITY OY MICHIGAN. 'uesday, Thursday, and Saturday Afternoons. \nn Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street. nes: Business, 969; Editorial, 2414. OFFICE HOURS: .o Daily; x :3o to 5:oo Daily, except Saturday. ? is not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the signatures to be published in print, but as an evidence of s of events will be published in The Wolverine of the Editor, if left or mailed to the offic~e. niunications will receive no consideration. N9. be returr.ed unless the writer. encloses postage. does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- >mmunications. r. SARGENT, Jr................Managing Editor Phone 2414 or iso. .ILLERY......................IBusiness Manager Phone 960 or 2738. BUSINESS ASSISTANTS Xnan John J. Hamel, Jr. Robert S. Kersey ISSUE EDITORS Hamilton Cochran' ;' f. IN EDITOR~ THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1920. SCHOLARSHIPS UNPOPULAR? e eligible to compet'e for scholarships a :ent offer their names. Notwithstanding kat the chances of winning are.excellent, ity of those who enter being successful, as to be no such for the prizes. The reas- e is hard to ascertain, as the scholarships cally limited to graduate students, and is, that any p rson who returns to school luating must be more than usually inter- :curing a broad education. We may ,infer ig the graduate student there are lofty rho scorn money, apathetic ones who don't perhaps, still others who are afraid to re the fittest win out. Or it may be that gnorant of what isoffered. Know then, are ten University schalarships for three ollars each, and five for five hundred dol- With more students competing for the >se who win the scholarships will have a stinetion for having'achieved something. ike everything else, is comparative.- NEWSPAPER "MORALITY :arly stages of newspaper deyelopment, it ie been questioned whethw newspapers ity, lut with the in.creasing conception of s and purposes of journalism, it is appar- iere is no longer much ground for such a When newspapers first began bitter com-r ie keen fights for news scoops often caus- o resort to underhand methods of secur- nformation, and'ir especially dull periods en the cutsom to fake stories, Later, an- se of this type of journalism appeared advedt of yellow journalism, particularly stic o, th e Hearst papers. Too often did fail to get all the points of a story and con- published untruths or partial truths. nd sex stories were unduly played up for :s, arid glaring head lines told of rather >penings. In many cases the newspapers demands on their reporters as to how a secured, except that they get it. All of gs tended to make newspapers which did good- reputations, and the newspapers ng the first to discover this sand to cor- ways.- >oner did the leading newspapers find that mrges must be made if they were, t, con-. ublic favor, than they set about to mend s. With this realization, which came into about twenty years ago, but which. such reeley -and Dana felt in the early stages ism, theedeveloedta generallyrrecogniz- aper morality. The very things,- which :terized the newspapers before 1900 were > be put on the blacklist, and soon there ip a code of ethics,,which is yet being The underhand methods of the previous e frowned upon; the lurid stories began less conspicuous places, and records f bievements were accorded the places of ae news columns, and most papers began work for the public good. It is now a -ery journal's ethics to get -all the facts an honorable way. Very seldom is there nal coloring- of the news, and the public acknowledges 'that it is getting the news course there are yet a few papers, which to the archaic methods of journalism. ity of the newspapers of today realize that lies in them. They know that the .n be helped through their editorial and nns, and they are endeavoring to live up sponsibilities. :h things as these that make newspaper They now have a recognized code of ith includes fair play for all, and this>' loped morality, which, however, has been rking its way to the surface for years, is ecognized. The alarity with which peo- the stat ments of the' newspapers, both orial and news columns, is substantial newspaper morality of .the highest type t d TEACHERS' SALARIES Through nearly'all-time members of the uni- versity faculty have been shockingly underpaid, and the only reasonable criticism respecting the ad- vances recently granted is that they were so long delayed!t That is the plain,_ blunt truth. -Other universities have been offering higher compensation and breaking in disastrously upon our teaching force; but even in the absence of that circumstance, salaries here, as a rule, have been un- fairly low. It wi require many years of advanced pay to equalize the losses and the sacrifices of the long years past. We in Wisconsin should be willing to pay justly for brains,-and that we have not begi doing to teachers of any kind anywhere. Artesans whose trades can be learned in a fortnight, as painters, in a few months as carpenters, plumbers, electricans, and steamfitters, often have been better paid than men and women with college educations requiring at least four yers of study after the high school period ! No words can be too strong for condemna- tion of this outrageous situation, and no praise can be too high for regents and school boards that now. even though tardily, are placing this profession of teaching through decent compensation, on a high and deserved basis. We all should be ashamed beyond measure for our contemptible procrastination in a matter so im- portant.1 The sound action regarding the university in- strmctional force should be extended at once univer- sally throughout every branch of education in all the, .states. Starvation wages to the instructors of our girls and boys are no longer to be sanctioned in Wiscon- sin, thanks to a deeply awakened 'public conscience In no manner may our taxes be so advatageously expended as inthemaking of the best quality of c izenship, and that is precisely what our teachers are doing.-MIadison, Wis., Democrat. FACTORYLABOR ON THE FARM Searching a few months ago for a glint df silver in the cloud of labor troubles which overshadowed the farms ofhe nation, we thought we had found it in the factories which wer turning out tractors and other improved farm machinery at an unpre- cedented rate. Seeing at the time no better way to lighten the gloom of the farmers, we pointed eut 'that the laborer drawn from the farm to the factory eventually would send back to the farm a machine which would do twice the work which he hadbeen able to do. That assertion provoked a broadside,, of protest from the farms. Rural correspondents threw down their pit~hforks and picked up lead pencils to in- form us that we knew nothing about the farmer or his problems. They advised us with rustic simplic- ity of speech that if we had nothing wiser or more comforting than that to say we had better keep still. We were silenced, if not convinced. It is comforting to ;us, therefore,if not to the farmer, to note that one of the high lights of Arthur Evans' careful observation in six agricultural states has been upon the overcoyning of labor shortage by improved farming machinery. Writing from Aber- deen, S. D., he says: "The farmer here seems to be reaching the point, through te -use of more and bet- ter machinery, where he is less and less dependent upon. migratory labor during the harvest rush." This observation is typical of that in the other states visited. It is a sign of the times. Bright lights, high wages and short hours may- be the attraction which takes the laborer from the farm to the city. Demand for his services is what' holds him there, This demand is in part due to the need of factory products on the farms. It may mean a slow adjustment, but it does mean adjust- ment.--The Chicago Tribune. The captain of Shamrock IV sailed for homeon the' Baltic. He ,culdn't, get a stateroom on the good ship Alibi. Bob Martin's no longer the champion. He's mar- ried. Abaft the News Our laboring classes are starving, starving for, something to buy. The profiteer is dodging all the time. Dodging the dollhrs that our hardworked laborers throw at him. Clothing is all to "the azure. Women's dresses are gettiig higher and thinner below and lower and fewer above every year. It's going to be a hard winter., Hard for the males. A half pint of bathing suit is worth as much as' two pieces of coal or an egg nowadays. Eve would be green with envy at a modern bathing outfit. She'd have to turn over a new leaf to ge#along to- day., Adam's last name would be Upp from figur- ing out the bills that drifted' int6 the garden every day. The bankers had a convention the other day. They are going to do away with the hole in. the doughnut to conserve material. Malt, hops, and yeast have taken the elevator. Nothing outside of Ypsilanti is Normal. Men's vests are going to be sleeveless next year. 714 Monroe St. NICE HOME COOKED MEALS 3 Meals pr. day $6.50 pr.wk. -1 lude Front Under Student Management On the Huron River "Ma" Failings SAUNDERS' CAOE aUSED TEXT BOOK.. IF NOT, BRING THEM IN W EPAY CAS H FOR ANY SECOND-HAND TEXT (Next to Cutting) UNIVERS. WH BOOKSTC Everything in University SuppI FOR TRAVELING ANYWHERE, ANY TIN Yl ;Wi1l* Enjoy Using the A.B.A. Travelers' Checks as issued by this bank. come in denominations of $10, $20, $50, and $100, cashed by Banks, Hotels, Railroads, etc., without id tion. FARMERS AND MECHANICS B 101-.0, South Ma i Street 330 South stai I i 1" Corner State and Packard t THEANNARBOR PR 218 S. MAIN ST. Confectioney Lunches i t X Our Printing Is 'Like Our IWhen downtwn stopi is avd cool off." Phone w I s v r Courteous and satisfactory TREATMENT to every custom-, er, whether the accoont be large or small. The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $600,000.00 Resources, $4,750,000.00 / 0.E 1 7 Press Building Maynard St. {-. Q! Northwest Corner Main & Huron 707 North Universiy Avenue I I ;6000 IIN6 TO A [TT AT Del icatssen IN SUNDAYS 4 TO 6 P. N. 119 [astL.iberty Street Phone 2G20M Official Printers to Tie University of Michigan and its Student Pubhic cations Ii iw nimr ., ..r'., THE ANN ARBOR P SWAIN'. 713 E. University Avenue develops films- and MAKES PRINTS - A'ow. .K I~ 11~ -$ r with care ST ENTS LUNCH 409 E. JEFFERSON OPEN 6 A.M. to 10:30 P.M. Home aked Pies ALWAYS LADIES READY INVITED Before you Leave' Remember/ your fri- ends with flowers. Especially your Foster Parents., Special Good By boxes $1.50 and up. BluMaize Blossom Shop Nickels Arcade f, Daily Service Big Steamer ,Put-In-fBaY Capacity 3270 Passengerso Finest exclusive Excursion Steamer, Largest 0 Ball Room, Finzel's Orchestra. No extra charge for dancing.\ Every day from Detroit at 9.00 a. m. for' Put4n.-Ba-Connecting with Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Co, and Steamer Arrow for Middle Bass. Kelley's Island &I Lakeside. Sandusky-Connecting with Railroads and Suburban Lines, Fare, $1.50 CedarPoint-l5min.byferryfrom Sandusky, Faroincludingferry,1.75 Excursion fares.(returning same day Put4n-Bay, week day 90c; Sundays Holidays, $1.25 Round trip. Sandusky, evey day ,.©0 Round trip. Four hoursat Put- -Bay; Bathing, visit the Caves, Perry's Monument, Pavilion, Groves, Dancing and many other attractions, several Hotels. Cedar Point Fresh water rival to Atlantic City; Large Hotels, BoardWalk, Thousands bathe here daly Returning Leave Sandusy2.30 p. m.,Put-in-Bay 4.30 p. n., Leaveg"edar Point ferry; connect at Sandusky. every ay arrive Detroit 8.00 p. m. Dancing Moonlights,. Leave Ashley & Dust~in Steamer Line Detroit 45 p.m. Fare Wed. Thur. c Sat, $un 7-cFootof Fiast St. Detroit,Mich-. -Writs for naop folds;- '~u~j1j3~~j Liui~wnr * I I. I a zy in a Detroit restaurant aspberries and got more FOR RENT SAUNDERs' CANOE LIVERY, On the Auron River I,