THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY; JUl Yx xi tit tt Published every morning except Monday during the University Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publica- tions. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished',.herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoffice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $.5; by mail, $2oo. Ofces: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP C. BROOKS Editorial Director......Paul J. Kern City Editor.....Joseph E. Brunswick Feature Editor.....Marian L. Welles Night Editors Carlton G. ChampeH. K. Oakes, Jr. John E. Davis Orville Dowzer T. E. Sunderland Reporters E. M. Hyman Miriam Mitchell Mary Lister Robert E. Carson Betty Pulver Wm. K. Lomason Louis R. Markus BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURANCE JVAN TUYL Advertising............Ray Wachter Accounts.. .......John Ruswinckel Circulation........ . ... . Ralph Miller Assistants C. T. Antonopulos S. S. Berar G. W. Platt Night Editor-JOHN E. DAVIS TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1927 LET'S GIVE HIM A REAL VACATION President Coolidge is a public serv- ant for ten months of each year. Even when he bends over his desk at work, it is behind a glass partition by which persons can watch him. This is the penalty, we demand of our chief ex- ecutive, and no president has a right to object, for it goes with the office. All of us are human, however, and even a president needs a vacation. The ordinary business man, who runs a concern not a fraction the size of the United States government, can escape to the wild. backwoods of South Dakota or northern Michigan and there go unshaven and unkempt for a month, if he pleases, without once having to pose for a picture. Not so the president, however, for when the American people pay a man they must have full value received, and in addition to the political neces- sity of forcing him to rest in a hos- tile section, there is the even more burdensome necessity that requires him to meet and greet the whole state. As might be expected, the so-called national women's party has enacted the most pitiable spectacle of the season. Anyone is to be pitied who has to have a militant suffragist around, and when a number of them get together the result must be as intolerable as the nonsense they pro- pose. It is the prime right of every party to hold a convention, however, and the women do this with great gusto. Unfortunately for the chief execu- tive, this crowd of women who always have time to leave their homes in the glorious battle for equal rights, met this year at Colorado Springs, Colo- rado, and since most of them had noti neglected their more serious business ; enough by the time the convention was over, they decided to call on the President, across the state line in1 South Dakota.' So they did. Typically suffragist was their ill-judgment, and if the wo- men's party can be eliminated entirely< by any one process the steps thatl they took were directly in that direc- tion. "Equal Rights Envoys," they1 called themselves, (and they still have f the temerity to propose equal rights 1 after the hopeless mess they madec of a citizenship law when they secur- s ed its change) land a mass meeting t was held in the bandstand of Rapids City, which gave all the nationalv officers of the enlarged sewing circle ' a chance to display themselves in the shadow of the summer White n Huose, and as though keeping the t president awake nights wasn't enough g :hey took. the pains to call on him o he next day (he didn't attend the t neeting in the park) and press their b lemands, threatening and pleading inn rder to secure his support.f Now President Coolidge, whatever M lse may be said of him, is already r ossessed of one very fine wife, ac- r :ording to reports. If the women's tr arty is sincere in its wishes, it eems that by persuading Mrs. Cool- ac Ige they would have a much better s hance of accomplishing something so han by calling on what must have in een a very disgusted president by M the time he saw 500 suffragists. If they are still more sincere, they could have presented their requests in a dignified and sincere manner to the representatives from their home states, who, after all, make the laws; and this process would have saved them the trouble of polluting the peaceful calm of the Black Hills with their presence. Of course one can not expect much of a women's party, because the worthwhile women are busy raising future presidents rather than accost- ing present ones. But even so, it seems that some one out of almost any group of 500 would have had the good judgment which is character- istic of the sex, and seen that when the president of a great nation takes a vacation he ought to have a rest. The same, of course, could apply to the South Dakota boy scouts who in- sisit upon giving the chief executive merit badges and things, but then, they are boys and they live nearby, while the worst offenders are women who should know better, and who had to make a long journey to reach the place. Perhaps some day the American public will learn to regard its presi- dent as something more than an orn- ament and a showpiece, to whose home all the suffragists of the na- tion can repair with impunity. Why can't we let him have only two months of freedom? Two months, without a battery of potographers and delegations, would be a real va- cation to the president, and a vaca- tion which he well deserves. President Coolidge is to be pitied if the women's organizations continue to besiege the summer White House. Perhaps the thoughtful South Dakota legislature, which has named creeks and mountains after him and his wife ever since they arrived in the west, will be thoughtful enough to put a price on the heads of suffragists seen within shouting distance of the vaca- tion home of our chief executive, and while they are on the subject they might somehow make it unnecessary; for a Massachusetts farmer to wear; South Dakota chaps and ten gallon hats, especially if we are to retainr our respect for that gentleman from Massachusetts. RETRIBUTION Friday there were hung in Joliet prison, Illinois staterpenitentiary, three desperate criminals. All three had been incarcerated in the first place for serious offenses, and then, in a break for freedom, they had killed a guard of the prison, for whii'h they finally hung. Fortunately Ill-i inois as a state has a means f'r deal-p ing with such despicable crimes, and the three men who participated in the murder of this guard have now' been placed in a position where they are scarcely a menace.< It is reminiscent of an incident aI few years ago in our own Marquettef prison, where a guard was stabbed I by convicts in an attempt to escape. The result was that the guilty prison-n er was put in solitary confinements for a few days, andthen allowed his usual freedom and the usual libertya to kill another guard. About twot weeks ago another attempt was made e t in the same place, and the reason at guard was not killed was certainly not because the prisoners failed to attempt, it. They, too, were punished in some minor way, in order not toA offend the prison reformers, and nowA they are free to attempt another mur- der. The worst that can possibly happen to them is a little longer wait t for their inevitable pardon or parole, b and the result of all this is the woe- ful situation in which we now find r ourselves in regard to disciplining v prisoners.o If the last legislature was too soft v hearted to exact a proper penalty h from murderers, they could at least S have protected the men who guard n our jails. There is something whole- N some just about the execution of the murderers in the Joliet jail that o. should be a gratification even to the a widow of the guard, who begged to be ci allowed to spring the trap.U When Illinois executed those three p men it came just three persons nearer I o being a respectable state. Michi- gan still has neglected this means R Of approaching respectability. It is oo late to bemoan the failure of the pi ill in the last legislature, but it is f ot too early to commence agitation S or it in the next. The citizens of li Michigan should certainly begin to r ecognize the operation of a just and easonably expeditious system of re-Iur ribution. __ __ _ _M James Stevens discovered just ex- ni ctly what the old fashioned western ot aloon was really like in a beery epi- bo ode entitled "Saloon Days" published ne the July number of the American as ercury. P -U-rama THE MARBLE STAIRCASE Twelve years ago Elbert Gar3 erected in his Fifth avenue home a $150,000 marble staircase. Today th staircase may be bought from the fir wrecking the building for one dolla and cartage away. It is of utterl3 no value to them, unless re-erected in exactly the same position, and nc doubt the costly ornament will adorn a Long Island swamp or the bottom of the ocean if a purchaser is nol found. Thus human values change,. and twelve years spells the difference be- tween wealth and poverty. Ceaseless change, as inveterate as the winds constantly affects the whole universe alike, and human values, as well as material, are changing with th values of staircases. For every loss there is a gain, and the object or en- terprise, such as a university educa- tion, which is worth such tremend- ous sacrifice today may be as worth- less as the marble staircase in 1939 ORGAN RECITAL Palmer Christian will give an or- gan recital at 8:15 o'clock tomorrow night at Hill auditorium. Mr. Chris- tian's program, including both the old and new composers, will be presented by the University School of Music as their regular Wednesday evening con- cert. Programme: Prelude .........Corelli Corelli was the first of the greal violinists. The Prelude is from his ninth violin ksonata, transcribed fo organ by Guilmant. Prelude-.-..............Clerambaull Clerambault, the most famous mei- ber of a family numbering many dis- tinguished musicians, was conductor of Mme. de Maintenon's orchestra court organist to Louis XIV and Louis XV, and organist at St. Sulpice,Paris Prelude (Fantasia) and Fugue in G minor ..........Bah In all the Bach organ works there is nothing so stunningly dramatic as this Fantasia. There are passages "with an expressive, declamatory character then unheard of, and chord progressions of unequalled daring.' The fascinating theme of the Fugue is developed with marvelous skill; it is a Fugue that attracts layman and mu- sician alike, due to its assertive vital- ity and perfection of development. Nocturne..............DeLamarter An exquisite minature from the pen of one of America's finest musicians. The Fountain-Legend ..DeLamarter From a Suite entitled "A Chinese Garden," dedicated to Mr. Christian. For the Fountain the composer has furnished the following picture: "a patient little fountain in an old gar- den lost in the middle of a block of matter-of-fact houses. . . touched, sometimes, by a gust of wind.y. swayed, but swayed rythmically.- and the bit of melody, the symbol of that midget girl in worn and neglect- ed marble whose cupped hands catch the water . . a wistful melody, ike her snub nose. . . . And for the Legends: "A dream of feuds, and horrid pells, of goblins and knives. . Allegro naestoso Andante expressivo (Sonata in G) .Elgar England,ynoted for a great litera- ,ure, has unfortunately not been nota- ly productive of great composers. After Purcell (1658-1695), the next eally great name is that of Sir Ed- ward Elgar, whose work in the field f oratorio is known throughout the world. It is a matter of regret that is only large work for organ is the onata Op. 28, as it is a strong, orign- al composition. [inuetta antico e Musetta ......Yon "Musetta (from an old instrument f like name) is something applied to n ancient dance from which is ac- ompanied by a drone bass; it is here sed as the middle section of this [quant composition. fmprovisation on a familiar melody ................ Strauss hapsody Catalane...........Bonnet The themes for this work were icked up by the composer from the lk-songs of Catalonia, in northern pain. The work is essentially bril- ant in character, and contains a ather spectacular pedal cadenza. The Philharmonic concert courses, nder whose aupices such stars as arion Talley, Fritz Kreisler, Giovan- Martinelli, the English singers and hers, have been brought to Ann Ar- r, are at present busy making out xt year's scedule. They have taken their slogan, "A new city added to ilharmonic ierritory each season." a Y e i r Y i 1 1 t B y R s e s i i s i t s r t r , s SKILLEDa REPA A While you are here for the summer get a Rider Masterpen You will enjoy it the rest of your life. Made in' Ann Arbor Rider's Pen Shop 31,5 State Street QUICK SERVICE II.I The S.heen of New Hose Blue Crane means service weight chiffon. Mack's offers for your approval a New Hose, that answers the call of beauty combinedrwith practicability. Boxes and boxes of, shades from $ f which you may chose your own. All silk from top to toe........ New Fall Footwear-- Behold the shoes for autumn! The smartest com- binations. Patent leather trimmed with black lizard. Conservative and sophisticated. One strap, high heels and short vamp. You may$fl have the new oxford, laced on the side with high heels and round toes //[w.o df V.a U-. 7-' SUBSCRIBE TO MICHIGAN WEEKLY a .1. Our government knows the value of storing up nature's resources. It has built dam after dam to store up water for periods of drought. This should be an example for you. Store up" your earning ability now for the thoughts of sickness and old age. Provide for your future finan- cial needs. -4 4 Ann Arbor Savings Bank it