THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1918. MEMBER ASSOCI'ATE) 1I: The Associated Press is exclusiv to the use for republication ofsal patches credited to it or not other ed in this paper and also the1 published herein.., Official newspaper at the Un Michigan. Published every morn Monday during the university year 1Entered at the postofficeat An second-class matter. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Buildi Phones: Business, 96o; Editoria Communications not to exceed if signed, the signature not necess pear in print but as an evidence o notices of events will be publish Daily at the discretion of the E at the office or in The Daily not the main corridor of the generallit the notices are collected at 7:300 e~veninlg. All unsigned communications wil consideration. No manuscript will" unless the writer sends postage f pose. Robert T. McDonald .... Manag Harold Makinson ........Businac C. S. Clark, Jr............N..N Herbert G. Wilson........... James Schermerhorn, Jr......Sp Bruce A. Swaney .......... Assoc Clarence L. Roeser......... Telegr Mildred C. Mighell........Womn Margaret H. Cooley........Liter Paul E. Cholette......Publicati Bernard Wohl.........Circulatio NIGHT EDITORS Russell C. Ba.rnes Walt Charles R. Osius, J. Mark William W. Fox __________ J~ h of a an's lif iG 5P* fl i the WSS formation of certain habits. He ries ely entitledat a certain time, retires at the same I news dis- hour every evening, and if well equip- wise credit- local news ped with the world's goods, eats three nieals a day. By the time he reaches tiversity of ing except the age of maturity he is a bundle Ar. of habits. It is almost impossible for rn Arbor as a man to change from his former ng. mode of living. He is the same blind al, 2414. slave to his habits as the knife throw- a o rdps, er in De Maupassant's story who f faith, and outlined his wife with glittering wea- hed in The ditor, if left pons as she stood against a wooden ytice box in wall. He hated her and often tried [brary where o'clock each to make the knives diverge one inch. 1 receive no But he could not throw them thus. be returned Habit was too strong. or that pur- Down the golden pathway of life ging Editor man walks. He passes many beautiful ss Manager things on the road. Friendship, love, faith and hope, are all his for the ask- ~ews Editor -. e City Editor ing. But he passes them by with his orts Editor eyes strained on some object in the ciate Editor raph Editor distance. And when he reaches his en's Editor goal, for which he has sacrificed al- rary Editor most everything -- experience and on Manager sometimes even joy in life, he may n Manager find that it is as gray as the dust which he passed on the road. er R. Atlas To the college man is given a chance K. Ehlbert to diverge from the rut of the world. In college he comes in contact with CARAYA TIP The learned laws who were so savagely attacked yesterday by the energetic engineers have charged the latter with "contempt of court." The cadet who didn't salute the naval officer until he was nearly out of sight is undoubtedly the one. who will get left when the transport sails, who will be asleep when the gunner sinks the attacking submarine, and who will be left behind to take care of the regimental mascot when his comrades go "over the top." The Flavor Lasts He chewed his Spearmint proudly As down the walks he swung ;He smacked his lips quite loudly; We thought he should be hung. After May 1, any number of bibulous ones may be expected to get jobs as tank drivers "over there." It wasn't pride or shame, or any of' the other deeper-emotions, that caused so many of the senior girls' faces to look so red yesterday. Melba, my boy, Melba. And how some of them were kalsomined!, As the Reared on the Campuses marched down the streets of Ypsi, the. Normalites sang "Keep the Home Fires Burning'.' They must have taken . the rookines for the old home guard., There w ill be a rehearsal of the "Amazons," act two this morning from 1) to 12 o'clock in Sarah Caswell Angell hall. The whole cast of this act is requested to be present prompt- ly at 9 o'clock. Seniors and sophomores will have regular baseball practice at 4 o'clock Monday afternoon at the field across from Barbour gymnasium. Freshmen will have regular practice at 4 o'clock 'Tuesday. Bond workers who have canvassed all their lists should return lists and receipt books at once to headquarters, room 102, Economics building. Bond applications should. be turned in as soon as possible. The hike to Dixboro will start from the gymnasium at 1 o'clock this after- noon. Martha Cook will give a benefit card party from 2 to 5 o'clock this after- noon for the War Friendship fund. There will be important meetings of the women of the freshman, sopho- more and junior classes at 4 o'clock Monday afternoon at Barbour gym- nasium to nominate juriciary coun- cil members and the social committee for the coming year. The freshmen will nominate the freshman spread committee, the sophomores will nomi- nate the junior play committee and the seniors the senior play committee. FRENCH SOLDIER TO LECTURE MONDAY BOOKS - GARDENING Garden Steps-Cobb...........................60c Garden Making-Bailey ......................... ..........60c Practical Garden Book---Hunn and .Bailey.. ...................60c Vegetable Garden-Watts ......................................80c The Well Considered Garden-King...........................$2.00 Garden Work-Good ....................................$2.00 The Garden Month by Month-Sedgwick...................$5.00 The Garden Blue Book--Holland ...............................$3.50 The Joyous Art of Gardening-Duncan..........................$1.75 Everymans Garden in Wartime-Selden ........................ $1.35 English Flower Gardens-Robinson ...........................$6.75 The Practical Flower Garden-Ely............................$2.00 Around the Year in the Garden-Rockwell..................$1.75 Our Garden Flowers-Keeler ..........................'. .. ..$2.00 A Woman's Hardy Garden-Ely .............. . . ...... . . . . .. $1.75 MAIN STATE STREE'l. STREET I'THE EBERBACH & SON COMPANY 200-204 E. Liberty Street . The place to go when you want Chemicals Laboratory Supplies Drugs and T6ilet Articles I REPORTERS. JR. MAlpine Paul A. Shinkman Louise Irish Philip Slomovitz Florence M. Price Frances Broene Vera Brown Milton Marx Horace E. Hunter K. Frances Handibo David B. Landis dgar L. Rice Gertrude Sergeant Vincent H. Riorden Rilla A. Nelson BUSINESS STAFF W. A. Leitzinger Harry D. Hause Earl H. Cress Katherine Kilpatrick Francis H. Case Frances H. Macdonald Henry Whiting I Agnes Abele George A. Cadwell, Jr. L. A. Storrer Lambert Hirsheimer Frank N. Gaethke SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1918. Night Editor-Russell Barnes HASTY ACCUSATION Professor McElroy, of Princeton, a speaker for the National Security league, has directed at the University of Wisconsin an attack of disloyalty, which appears to be nothing more than the result of a hastily miscal- culated allusion. The state of Wis- consin has La Follette and Berger and a large number of persons of Germanic origin. For this reason the Chicago Tribune comments that ta charge such as Professor McElroy has made is given more weight than if it were directed at another college body.'' The university in question prob- ably contains a few students whose attitude upon the war is not commend- able. Yet it is altogether too -much to assume that a college which has sent as many of her men into the ser- vice as has the Cardinallinstitution, has taken Liberty bonds in such creditable amounts, and has a considerable num- ber of her present student body en- gaged in military training should be accused of being "damned Prussians," as Professor McElroy says he called his audience. The Tribune further says: "The cadets had been march- ing for several miles through the rain. They were then seated in a large hall which was chilly and drafty. They listened interested- ly to the first speaker. Then rose Professor McElroy and began to read from a manuscript. He read on and on, an hour and a quarter. The cadets being young and hu- man got restless and intimated, as other audiences have in similar circumstances, that they had had enough. Instead of taking the hint, Professor McElroy flew into a rage and made his ridiculous charge of disloyalty." - Wisconsin's students of much the same tibre-W-i- those of Chicago, Mifl'hesota, Illinois, Michigan, Cornell, Yale, or Harvard. The efforts of these other institutions in war work are more than passing efforts. A list of army reserve officers will reveal a striking number of college men. Few have waited until they were compelled to go into the draft army. In his statement at Wisconsin, the Princeton professor is casting derogatory re- marks upon every university in the country with a record similar to the Cardinals' showing. More than that, he is putting himself and the univer- sity he represents in an unfavorable position. people who may surprise and even shock him. Their truths may hurt. But the road to a clear understanding is rough. If he accepts only the pleasant old things, around which have grown a glamour, which is only stupidity of people, his life will be rather, easy. One likes his sort of people in public and yawn at them in private. The world will pat him on the back and he will go on his way, with a vague sensation in the back of his thick head of riding on the waves of prosperity. But the man who learns must suf- fer., lie must try new things and they are painful. His life will be bounded by failure and misery in many cases. But he will have the sensation of controlling his own destiny. He has taken the steps which led him into success or failure, alone. No mental tags gained from another man have made him what he is. All he has tak- en from others he has tested by the fire of experience. And, when the end of the long road comes at last, he will realize that he has been a free agent, a pioneer in life and the living of it. The police department reports an unusually large number of arrests this week. Nearly all of those taken in tow by the law have been accused of doing their utmost to make the state dry ahead of time. It has been predicted that there will be a shortage of soda water this summer. The stuff always was a fiz- zle. A Michigan farmer claims he has a device which will make chickens lay colored eggs. No need of worrying much about this, for the state goes dry Tuesday at midnight. -It's about time the crown pince was announcing to his army that it has won another "victory." Ludendorff says France has been bled white. Pretty live corpse just the same. PROF. SADLER TO LEAVE BEFORE MARINE ENGINEER GRADUATES Contrary to a general rumor, grad- uates in marine engineering will not accompany Prof. H. C. Sadler to Washington next week he take up his duties there with the Emergency Fleet corporation. Prof. E. M. Bragg, who will succeed Professor Sadler as head or Utc ma- rine engineer'i department, said yester ay morning that ,although the marine men would finish their work about the time of Professor Sadler's departure, they would not be called to service at that time. 1. M. C. A. Secretary Lectures Sunday N. C. Fetter, general secretary of the University Y. M. C. A., will ad- dress a regilious meeting of the draft: contingent at 4 o'clock Sunday after- noon in Lane hall. A musical pro- gram will be held in connection with this meeting. At 7 o'clock on Monday night the same body will hold a smoker in Lane hall. A want ad in the Daily will nUl; your property.-Adv. CAMERAS and SUPPLIES We do developing and printing 24 hours time All Work Guaranteed Gibe us a trial TEA IS CHEAPER THERE There was a little man, And he had a little can, And he went down town one day; ;And he knocked on the door Of a liquor store. (He forgot it was the first of May.) A sad little man Took his empty can, And wandered up State street way; The Slater Book Shop He drank his fill At Foster's grill, And went to Toledo to Education foiled J. night. Caps and gowns brellas and raincoats. stay.-FIFI. Pluvius last served as um- Freshman, on viewing the becapped and begowned senior: "Gee look at all the new professors!" RESERVE MEN ARE OBLIGATED TO SPEND SUMMER IN SERVICE "It is the duty of all men en-{ rolled in the enlisted Engineering reserve and the Naval enlisted reserve to spend the summer in some work of value to the nation," says a bulletin issued by the committee on the en- listed Engineering reserve. At the beginning of the fall semes- ter a report will be required from each man- in either of these reserves, sign- ed by his employer, stating the dura- tion and nature of the work done by him during the summer, and his atti- 'tude toward the work." Jean Picard, a veteran who served 14 months in the trenches before be- ing sent to the hospital, will speak at 8 o'clock Monday evening, in Hill au- ditorium. Picard has delivered war lectures throughout the United States under the auspices of the International Y. M. C. A., and under the particular di- rection of Dr. John R. Mott, who is head of the army Y. 41. C. A. His Ivisit here is a result of an intimate acquaintance with Dick H all, son of Doctor Hall, who recently lost his life in the service of the ambulance corps. The lecture is open to the public. Postponed S p Lit Meeting, Today Due to the closing of all University buildings yesterday afternoon in honor of Liberty day, the sophomore liter- ary class meeting scheduled for 2 o'clock yesterday in room 205, Mason hall, has been changed to 2 o'clock to- day. You will find what you want warough the Daily want ads.-Adv. There are opportunities for you in Daily advertisements. Read them. There is always an opportunity to increase your builness throug Daily s~dvertluing. Try it.-A-dv. Dancing Friday and Saturday nights at the Armory.-Ady. SPRING STYLES Ililtlitlliillllllllillillllillllliillli111l11l1#l#Ei1#IE#IE#E#lE#IEilil11#1111#EI#1111lli#111111;; - - - - r It s time for =think -fg ti g y u e ti _ a to low shoes. This mdli one of the new spring styles that ms in the popular in Black Calf. An excep- _ .-:--,----.tionally comfortable last that has the correct style 10 f sor te new seasons. _ w - - .= Main floor - EST. 185 ch183-185 Woodward Ave.a uullululullnn ln ti##111l11EE~ill11E#1#tlE11IsEl ae o T n e"###oi DEThoIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (April 1, 1913) Detroit Limited and Express Cars-7:2s a. in. 8:1o a. in., and hourly to 7:10 p. M., 9:1. Jackson Express Cars ;,ocal sto" west of Am Arbor)-9:48 a. in. and evey two hours to 7 :48 V. im. Local Cars East Bound--5:35 a. in., 6:4o a. M., 7:os a. m. and every two hours to 7:;o p. m., 8:05 p. M., 9:05 p. in., 1,o p m To Ypsilanti only, 11:45 p. m., 12:00 a. m., 1:1 a. m., 1:2o a. m. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-6:oi' a. m., 1:48 a. m., 10:20 n-in.. 12:20 a. 11). , '2 A <1 Cc y: . ' TI .. a .. ier 411, Hart Sxchafner& spring suits and top coats are more snappy than ever this spring; the kind of clothes red- blooded young men will be wearing. They have incorporat- ed in them all the style tenden- cies that will be popular. We have bought freely and as a consequence offer you choice of a stock unequalled for rich- ness of choice and variety of style, anywhere but in their shops. You will find here clothes as good as you can buy in any city, and the price is more reasonable. New neckwear, Steson and Knox Hats. I IF IT'S ANYTHING PHOTOGRAPHIC, ASK SWAIN 113 East University T UTT L ES The popular resort for LUNCHES and SODAS Courteous' and satisfactory TREATMENT to every custom- er, whether the account be large or small. The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $550,000.00 Resources .........$4,000,000.00 Northwest Cor. Main & Huron. 707 North University Ave. I -~~ TYPEWRITERS For Sale.and Rent TYPEWRITING 1imeographing Fraternity and Social Stationery 0. D. MOM E LL ;: couth State Street i W~AMW I Try our HOME-MADE Candies They are both delicious and Wholesome MADE AND SOLD AT The SUGAR BOWL Phone 967 1068S.Main St Your every Bank- ing -need fulfilled at I I Reule, Coin, Fiegel &, CO& The Big Home of Hart Schaff- ner and Marx Clothes, at South- west Corner Main and Washing- ton Streets. THE Farmers & Mechanics Bank r 101-105 So. Main 330 So. State St: (Nickels Arcade) I , - ________________ I I 1918 FRESH STRAWBERR TENNIS BALLS SUNDAES