THE MICHIGAN D C _ slogan. Now it reads, "In1 is weakness." there :rsity of g except Arbor as 414. c, j r. lilson tjr. 'aney From what Ian Hay tells us of the "impregnable Hindenburg line," we hope the kaiser will keep his army im- pregnable and Invincible. Most of us have officially entered the University now, and are hard at work getting out the semester's study- ing. Soon we will have women conduc- tors. Then the men wil be told where t0 get off. The basketball team might well adopt the opera name, "Let's Go!" PROVIDE COMFORTS FOR MEN IN CAMPS Red Cross Distributes Thousands of Knitted Garments To Boys - In Cantonments - Men in Michigan camps have been well provided for by the Red Cross in this state. The report just issued of the accomplishments of the Bureau for mil- itary relief since its organization shows that much has been done to promote the comfort of the boys in the three camps under its jurisdiction. In Fort Wayne, where there are 600 men, and in Seltridge Field, where there are 900, all have been complete- lv outfitted with knitted garments. ertisinif Mangtw FDITORS C. M. C.pell$ Mark K. Ehlbert )RTERS Paul A. Shinkman Horace E. Hunter. Rilla A. Nelson Philip Slomovitz Frances Broene Ida E. Mines Samuel Lamport. Edgar L. Rico David B. Landis es Handibo ?'SSTF aIe In Camp Custer, thousands of knit- id ted garments have been distributed. Case VARY 23, 1918. iesota comes Friday night to Michigan, three times defeated. o4ference basetba l in three t games. Minnesota has a team h rank we have been given to tand. Further, if we recall of the past, Minnesota will put her level best against Michigan. y Wolverine, who has the pro- ichigan fighting spirit will be He will not be of the type is down in the dumps because tate, Chicago, and even Indiana s. He will be keen for revenge, will be there with every bit of e possesses to, help raise the ut of its rut into a new realiza- its powers- in the great endeav- eat, Minnesota. will be a true sportsman. He >t attempt to lower himself or llege by doing any unsports- e thing. But he will be fighting fought that rainy day last fall he helped eleven muddy and- in clad Michigan football men. ebraska off their feet and beat before the Crnhuskers were to the situation. he realized than that he was tg the football tear on by his so he will realize that he can service Friday night. D IN LAST MINUTE PREPAR- ATION ou few who have, been bend- ir backs over text books in the few days in preparation for there is a remedy. Waterman sium. is meant for physical g up, as surely as Univ4rsity are for mental upbuilding. our of workout in the gym fol- some of the real studying is done about this time of the ill work wonders for your mind, l as body. That hour, followed short shower and a fast rub- vilf make you feel that you can r almost any problem in mathe- or that thesis you should have a month ago. gymnasium should be an all- s institution, and not a place freshmen recognize as a neces- Vil. time you lose from the texts, movies, or any other endeavor well spent. Detroit News has gone in for h. They have found two poets 'ere acquainted with the coal ;e. Says Tennyson, "The frost and fuel is dear." And quoth peare, "The fuel is gone that Intain that fire.' The numbers range from 15,618 muf- flers to nearly 44,000 socks. In addi- tion to this, numberless sundries have been furnished; such as, sewing bags, tooth brushes, towels, mosquito net- ting, medical supplies, oil stoves, safe- ty razors and pillows. The bureau has quarters in build- ing No. 995 near the center of this camp, and warehouses with a capacity of several carloads. In all of the camps, the Red Cross has been aided in its relief work by Y. M. C. A. ield secretaries and by the local branch pt the National league for women's service. Besides what has been done in the state, more than 75,000 knitted arti- cles have been shipped outside. A comparatively new undertaking is the establishment of canteens. De- troit has already taken care of many .moving troops in a new, fully equip- ped building. EFFORTS MADE TO INSURE ALL OF OUR FIGHTING MEN Tr"sury Department Urges Soldiers T ake Advantage of Insur- .ance Plan ' WashIngton, Jan. 22.-The treasury' department is making every effort to ,vae eyery member of America's fight- ing forces take advantage of the gov- ernment.insurance plan, which Secre- tary McAdoo asserts to be the "most just and humane provision ever made by. any nation for its soldiers and sailors." Thyrpurpose is rapidly being achiev- ed,, the insurance having passed the third billion mark in the total of policies written, and there are many military units in which every member has taken insurance. The ,automatic insurance provided by the law is only partial and limited protection, payable only to wife, child, or widowed mother and ceases after February 12, 1918. It is important, therefore, not only to the soldiers and sailors of the country but to their families and dependants, that before that date they'avail themselves of the full government protection, which can go1 as high as $10,000, and is payable to a wife, husband, child, grandchild, parent, brother, or sister. -The law also provides for the re- education and rehabilitation of the tot- ally disabled, and monthly compensa- tion to those disabled. WORK OF PROF. A. S. WARTHIN PRAISED BY WAR DEPARTMENT Raymond Fosdick, chairman of the war department training course, has sent a communication to President Harry B. Hutchins praising the work being done by Prof. A. S. Warthin, of the Medical school, in the war train- ing camps In the country. Dr. Warth- in has lectured before approximately 22,500 men in the country's camps. ge completes a series of lectures at Camp Custer Thursday. UONION UNFIR TO MIMES WRITER SAYS UNION IS UNJUST TO ORGANIZATION THAT HELPS - IT FINANCIALLY. Editor, The Michigan Daily: As a member of the Mimes and of the Michigan Union permit me to pub- licly protest against the allowing of women to participate in this year's production of the Union opera., Allow me to call attention to the fact that it is generally announced by the Union that it is the Mimes who an- nually present the opera, and regard- less of the fact that the Union receives the financial benefits of the work of the Mimes, it evidently considers their being so unimportant that they did not notify its members or call a vote to discuss this most radical step. This appears to be unfair if not actually ,dishonest. The Union in.its yearly advertising campaign and in this very year's ad- vertising campaign, boasts as one of its many attractions the fact that only members of that organization can par- ticipate in the opera. And yet, with one foolish stroke they disregard this, perhaps, their most valuable reason for claiming student membership. Of course, were such a step neces- sary, the members of the Union if called upon to vote, would hardly cease the annual production by vot- ing against the entrance of women in- to the production. But regardless of the fact that many of us join the Union because of the opera, yet that organization does not consider it necessary to allow the Mimes, who, it seems, are the pro- ducers of the opera, or even the mem- bers of the Union itself, to assert themselves upon this most radical measure. Let me add that I do not consider it necessary to allow women in the opera this year. There are plenty of talented young men on the campus, some, perhaps, in the freshman classes who are able to keep up the standard of the Michigan operas. It strikes me that the Michigan opera is doomed to meet with great unpopularity this year because of this ridiculous measure and the fact that evidently our old friend, Mr. Moore, would rather try.out a lit- tle of his own side work than allow the Michigan student body a chance to participate in its own opera. And the pity of it all is that the directors in control are foolish enough to allow it. THOMAS LEO DONOHUE, '19. 50,000 COMMON LABORERS r BROUGHT FROM PORTO RICO Washington, Jan. 22.-Fifty thous- and common laborers from Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands will be brought to th country, if the plans made by the employment service of the depart- ment of labor are carried out. As soon as more tonnage is available, 60,000 others will be imported. Director Genral McAdoo has asked the department of labor for this ex- tra help, to assist the railroads with labor for maintenance and shop work. The first men imported will be sent to the South and Southwest, with the understanding that they will be re- leased for farm service during the press of the agricultural season. Louis F. Post, assistant secretary of labor, said today tht all requirements for common labor could be met by proper distribution of the domestic supply and of the American citizens in Porto Rico and the other islands. He condemned the agitation for the importation of Chinese- and Mexicans as unnecessary and prejudicial." Report Decrease in Business Failures Business failures for the week end- ing January 10, were 324, as com- pared with 200 last week, 381 in the like week of 1917, 427 in 1916, 600 in 1915, and 413 in 1914. Probably Billy Sunday could not have done a more- unfortunate thing than he did when he decided to write a book. Although "Love Stories of the Bible" is Billy Sunday through and through, he has failed to realize that his personality is his greatest asset, and that for its sake people en- dure crudities that they will not ac- cept when laid bare on paper. Words that stir us deeply in the theater sound very fiat when repeated at home. It is not what Billy Sunday has to say that draws the crowds to hear him; it is his forceful and convinc- Ing sincerity. And because he has been unable to infuse into his book his own magnetism, it stands as an almost unbearably crude piece of writing. Th'ere may be some who will rejoice to hear that "Samson thought he was making a big hit because he was mak- ing a big noise, and had Buffalo Bill hair," or, that "the world is about ready to admit that when Adam made goo-goo eyes at Eve in the Garden of Eden, and told her she was the only woman he ever loved, he started something," but those of us who retain, to some degree at least, an old-fash- ioned respect for the Bible as it stands, will either disregard Mr. Sun- day's book entirely, or remove what- ever support we have given him in the past. Ifsthe Bible needed elucidation, per- haps Mr. Sunday's attempt at inter- pretation might be more acceptable. But the construction that he has plac- ed on some of the most exquisite pass- ages from the scriptures proves not only that he has neglected to make a careful study of the stories of which he has made use, but that he has even misrepresented the facts as originally written. Although it may be his priv- ilege to rewrite the Bible in the lang- uage which he deems essential to an understanding of it, yet it is the privilege of no one to make fundament- al changes in its structure and pre- sent the revised form to the public. TEN ORATORS SURVIVE FIRST TRYOUT FOR MID-WEST DEBATE One woman and nine men survived -the first squad tryouts for the Mid- west debate held yesterday afternoon in room 302, Mason hall. The chosen ten are asked to report in above room at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The fol- lowing are the survivors: I. Victoria Adams, '19; A. J. Adams, '18; Webb R. Clark, '20; S. M. Epstein, '19; Kelsey Guilfoil, '20L; J. A. Krout, '18; R. F.' Mathews, '20L; Wilfred Nevue, '18; M. Paris, '19, and Paul Rostov, '20. Report of Cotton Production Compiled The world's production of commer- cial cotton, exclusive of linters, grown in 1916, as compiled from published reports, was approximately 18,365,000 bales of 500 pounds net; while the con- sumption of cotton exclusive of lint- ers in the United States for the year ending July 31, 1917, was approximate- ly 20,180,000 bales of 500 pounds net. The total number of producing cotton spindles, both active and idle, is about 150,000. NOTICE-SNOW Property owners and tenants are urged and required to clean the snow from sidewalks in front of their re- spective places i compliance with the city ordinances.A Owners of vacant property are no- .tified that walks in front of such prop- erties must be cleaned from snow or the penalties provided by the city or- dinances will be enforced. A. J. PAUL, 3t Street Commissioner. Ann Arbor, Jan. 19, 1918. The Literary Critic Says LOVE STORIES OF THE BIBLE, by Billy Sunday.-G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York. MILITARY FRENCH First Lessons in Spoken French for Men in Military Service......50c Le Soldat Americain en France.................. ...- . ---c The Soldier's English and French Conversation Book.... . ...25e International Conversation Book-French-English......... .....50c Rapid-Fire English-French-German........................25c Altemus' English-French Conversational Dictionary.......... $1.00 Oxford English and French Conversation Book....... .........25c Wilcox's War French.......... ...... ......5c Cortina-Frenchrand English Military Manual...............$1.50 French for Soldiers-by Whitten & Long....................75c WAHR'S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES We have a complete stock of FLASHLIGHTS and Flashlight Batteries Switzer' s Hardware 310 STATE ' 1918 DESK CALENDARS AT Slater's Book Shop Phone 430 336 S. State St. 1 ., ,. I 'WtomenI Michigan Dames will sew for the Red.Cross this afternoon at the home of Mrs. H. W. Stevenson, 1306 Wash- tenaw terrace. Y. W. C. A. cabinet will not meet today. The temporary headquarters of the association are at the office of the dean of women in Barbour, gym- nasium. Eastern Star initiation will take place at 4 o'clock this afternoon in Masonic hall instead of tonight ass formerly announced. The change is due to the fuel conservation order. SPECIAL! .I .dea Hair Brushes $1.00 value 75c I QUARRY DRUG CO'S PRESCRIPTION STORE Cor. State and N. University Phone 808 I There will be no basketball tice at 4 o'clock Wednesday 4:50 o'clock Thursday. prac-. or at Posture exams for all those taking required gym work will start this morning. No credit will be given un- less the appointment is kept. Girls, who have not made appointments must do so immediately. The Girls Education clui will meet at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon in the Cercle Francais rooms. The meeting is an important one and all members are urged to attend. MORE LYRICS AND MUSIC NEEDED FOR JUNIOR PLAY Rehearsals for the annual Junior Girls' play will commence with the second semester. Great promise is shown by the music and lyrics already handed in although many more can be used. Emily Powell, '18, chairman of the committee, will advise all jun- ior girls interested in writing lyrics or music. The names of the play and the au- thor will not be announced until short- ly before the play is given. The names of those successful in the chorus try- outs will be made public soon. Always-Daily Service- Always. - DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jacks'in (Effective May 22, 1917) Detroit Limitedvand Express Cars-7:35a in., 8:1o a. In., and hourly to 7:10 p. m., 9:14 Kalamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m. and every two hours to 6:48 o. M.; to Lansing, 8:48 p. M. Jackson Express Cars lcal sto- west of Arm~ Arbor)-g :48 a. in. and every tw o hours to V:48 p.m Local Cars East Bound.-s:35 a. mn., 6:40 a. in., 7:os a. m and every two hoars to 7:05 p. m.. 8:o5p-. iM., 9:05 p. M., 10:5o pm.M. To Ypsilanti only, 9:20 a. n., g 5ca in., 2:05 P . ,, :oS P.,in, 9:45 p.-n, 11 :45 ''. m. 12:20 a. Mn. i :ro a. in., I1:20 a. n, r0. oSaline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West. Bound-6 :os a. m., 7:48 a. rn.. 10:20 p. i2.. 12:20 a. m. We have both the inclination and the equipment to furnish the best in banking service The Ann Arbor Savings Bank INCORPORATED 1869 Capital and Surplus $ 500,000.00 Resources . . . $4,000,000.00 Northwest Corner Main and Huron Streets A e 707 North University Avenue "Just a Little BETTER" ICE CREAM for all occasions TRUBEY'S 2I8 S. Main Street ;,1. I Anywhere and Everywhere fj r r/ . / / C1 OI, o I the well dressed man is conspicuous. Good clothes add wonders to general appearances. Then, too, think of the satisfaction he derives from the knowledge he is clothed in good taste. Any man may enjoy the same feeling if he'll let us make his next suit which will fit per- fectly, look and wear well. SHORTHAND TYPEWRITING BOOKKEEPING PENMANSHIP Classes Just Starting. Enroll Today HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE State and William r Dr my is a cloud i than a man'sl )wing," says Ian i cloud breaks Bt kaiser Bill had n the hand, $850,000 Corporation Organized 'Here H1ay. The Forge Products corporation was we're organized in this city Monday with a d best capital of $350,000. The plant will manufacture high steel forgings for tool work and also auto parts. It ounts will be located on Hill street, near the t few Ann Arbor railroad. G. H. Wild Company Radio Miiltary WristWatches $4.25 to $21 U. of Mi. Jewelry Leading Merchant Tailors Stat ? Street h