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October 18, 1911 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1911-10-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

I Co., 311 So. State Street
[ING DISPLAY
Vinter Woolens of Exclusive Styles
sits, Overcoats and Trousers.
i CO., 311 So. State Street
E LEADING MERCHANT TAILORS

a TYPEWRITING, LAW OUTLINES, TYPE
s, WRITER SUPPLIES, TYPEWRITERS,
, (new and second hand), for sale and rent.
O. D. MORRILL
OVER BALTIMORE LUNOH BELL 582-J

J .J

iwnr

IP

Notc Books

SPECIAL PRICES

On all Sizes

I

Gym Supplies
STHEEHAN
& company
STUDENTS' BOOKSTORzE

THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Official Newspaper at the University
of Michigan.
Published every morning except Mon-
day throughout the school year.
MANIAGING EDITOR.
Walter N. Towers.
BUSINESS MANAGER
Albert R. Dilley
Editors.
News Editor .......Harry Z. Folz
Assistant...........Frank Pennell
Athletic Editor.......F. E. Shaw, Jr.
Assistant ........ ...G. C. Eldredge
Music and Drama .... Earl V. Moore
Intercollegiate News Harold G. McGee
Files .............Emmett Taylor
Editorials.
Arthur B. Moehman Walle W. Merritt
Night Editors.
Maurice Toulme Mack Ryan
Loren Robinson Karl Matthews
Wallace Weber.
Reporters.
John Townley * Oscar Beckman
C. Harold Hippler ....Robert Gillett
Frank Murphy William Daugherty
J. Selig Yellen.
BUSINESS STAFF.
Assistant to Mgr. ..Joseph Fouchard
Advertising Mgr ...Elmer P. Grierson
Circulation Mgr.....E. Ray Johnson
C. H. Kleinstuck A. R. Johnson, Jr.
A. R. Johnson, Jr.
OFFICES:. Ann Arbor Press Building,
Maynard Street.
OFFICE. HOURS: Managing Editor,
1-2 p. m., 10:30-11:30 p. m.; Bus-
iness Manager, 1-5 p. m..
Both Phones 960.
Subscription price: -By carrier, $2.50;
By mail, $3.00.
Want Ad Stations.
Press Building; Qutarrys Pharm-
acy, State and North Uni-
versity.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911.
Night Editor---Karl Matthews.
Those Showers.
If cleanliness be next to Godliness,
and both be of some importance to us
in this little world below, we devout-
ly hope that Ann Arbor affords to
freshmen and others of us better facil-
ities for developing the latter than it
does for attaining unto the former.
We do not now refer to our landlady's
tub, that might be worse but for the
saving grace of competition, but the
gymnasium showers. We pause to re-
flect. When were they not even as
they now are. What a feeling of re-
freshment came over us as prospect-
ive colleagues when we read what the
catalogue said about them. How, after
as upper classmen, have we antici-
pated rumored changes. How have we
year by year returned to stand again
in slippery places while water, steamy
hot or icy cold, trickled down upon
our shrinking forms. Some day a
committee will be appointed. It will
inspect. It will become amazed at "the
condition of things" and it will make

I town Zath
And still calamity camps on the trail
of the Ypsi fusser. Now the dean of
the pedagogical mill decrees that all
males must cease social activities at
10 P. X. and furthermore that the
landlady shall execute said edict.
Our esteemed contemporary, The
Ann Arbor News, falls for a yarn anent
a freshman who applied to our Dean
Reed for permission to ring the chimes.
One of our news sleuths wander-
ed into our shop with the same tale
and we cast him hence with aspertions
as to his veracity.
The finest product that Old Mother
Earth turns out, is, after all, in the
final analysis, men-real men-and
civilization is nothing more or less
than a measure of the output of real
men. True the mills of the gods grind
slowly, but-. John Mitchell, who ap-
pears on the Students' Lecture Associ-
ation course on November 2nd next is
a real man, with no stretch of the im-
agination needed to put him in that
category. Born February 4, 1870 in
the little town of Braidwood, Ill., he
has made good-and honestly. ie
went to school for a period of but four
years, namely between the age of six
and ten years. After that he went to
work, at hard, cruel labor. At night he
studied, and he has been studying ever
since-and working too. He has delv-
ed deeply into economics, with some
law-and much general reading. He
began in the coal mines, and his name
has been connected with the labor of
coal mining, in one way or other, ever
since. From the time when he was
sixteen years of age he has been affili-
ated with organized labor. He used
to be door-keeper in a labor union,
where hisi keen sense of observation
served him in good stead. Early. he
became interested in the problem of
the laboring man, and he rapidly
climbed to the top on the side of la-
bor. In 1899-1908 he was president of
the United Mine Workers of America.
What he did there was public knowl-
edge. Since 1908 he has been Chair-
man of the Trade Agreement Depart-
ment of the National Civic Association,
and second vice-president of the Amer-
ican Federation -of Labor since 1900.
He is a man with a message and is a
forceful and magnetic speaker. His
lecture in Ann Arbor will be on "Acci-
dents to Workingmen." 13
FRESH SCRIMMAGE
WITH SECOND TEA I.
The All-Fresh team scrimmaged
with the second string men yesterday
afternoon after a short period of sig-
nal practice. Kellar was not out and
Bushnell played at quarter.R . G.
Smith took Bell's place at right bal.
The rest of the lineup was about the
same as participated in the game with
Mt. Union. The freshmen are improv-
ing under Cole's direction and by their
next game should be able to give a
good account of themselves.

When You Desire

Portraits of Quality
Go to
THE PHOTOGRAPHER

IPlat tingm PortreAit.

Platinum Portrailts

319 E. Huron

Phone 961-L
Pla tinunir

recommendations. We shall once more
be washed and made clean. Until that
day, with hope eternal in our breasts,
we wait..

Platinum Portrait.

Portrmalts

We Do French Dry and Steam Cleaning
PILESSI G aeend REPAIR I14G-
Suits Cleaned and Pressed 75c Suits Pressed 25c
FULLER & O'CON'NOR Tailors 619 E. William St.
Ii

Class Teams
willfind our stock of
Foot Ball Goods and
Athletic Supplies
In general, complete In every detail
University Bookstore

II

4j

Mrs. J. R. Trojanowski
FASHIONABLE HAIRDE'SSER
Hair Goods, Hardressing, Manicuring and,
Face Massage.
Rain water Shampooing a Specialty.
10 South University Bell 696-W
ZOTH]EIRS
S CLOTHES BY HAND
DRY CLEANED 75c
$SED 25c OVERCOATS PRESSED 25c
SOUTH STATE STREET

Ann Arbor Chicago
Callajhan (0Company
340 S. State St. Opposite Law Bzldin g
Law Books
New anid Seeond-Hauid
Old Books-Taken inExchange-New Books
Callahan ( Com parny
Opposite Door of Law Bldg.- Next to C.rmer

I

I

!I

Shoes

Harry

Lenox''

Tailor

are none better but many are higher
new snappy fall styles at $4.00, $4.50

Wishes to advise the U. of M. students that he has
secured his complete stock of Fall and Winter Rools.

i

.ND & FORSYTHE
215 S. MAIN

56 Lafayette Ave.

Detroit, Mich.

U

CLOTHES PRESSING CO.
ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE
conditions to keep a skirt presentable during rainy weather.
>ecial pressing contract is not an ordinary condition, how-
-ts better than you are accustomed to having them pressed,
Ir, better yet, for $i.oo we contract to press 3 skirts during
*. Q The installation of strictly up-to-the-minute Sanitary
vices, and the mammoth business we are doing, make these
Q An inspection of our finished work will explain our
ephone call will summon one of our representatives.
is 1634-L We Colleet and Deliver

Van Doren 's
Pharmacy
703 PACKARD STREET
Drugs, Candies,
Soda Supplies, Cigars
and Students''Supplies
We make the best chocolate soda In
town. Drop In on your way to Ferry
Field.

GOOD BOARD $3.50 IN ADVANCE
THE PINES, 503 E. Jefferson Street
Catering to Parties a Specialty.
Musie by Fischer's Orchestra.
JOHN FERGUSON, Proprietor

Good Board

New Rate

THE HURON
$3.50 Week in Advance

Mrs. E. B. Lambert

519 E. William St,

f

i

yY

I

ANNOUNCEMENT
It is with pleasure that we announce that Mr. W. L. Berry.
of Chicago, has taken charge of our tailoring department. Mr.
Berry comes to us very highly recommended, both as to his abil-
ity as a cutter and as a man, and we bespeak for him your kind
consideration.
WAGN ER & CO.3.305 S. State St.
Importing Tailors 3335S tt t

Choral Union Concerts
GADSKI
OCTOBER 20
FOR A STARTER
The MayFesival
FOR A WIND-UP
10 Star Concerts $3.00
Reserved Seats now Seling
University School of Maasic

............

Billiards is a fine game, ask
those who play. You need:
some recreation and what is

FOR HIRE
7 Passenger Touring Car-Sight
seeing and joy rides to Whitmore'
Lake, Ypsi, Detroit, etc.

A.GSPALDING & BROS
The Spalding Trole are theIargestmanu-
f acturers in the world
of OFFICIAL EQUIP-
qIN qMENTforaflathletic
TRAos sports and pastimes.
p 'f you are interested
' ALD P nfi Athletic Sport you
MARK *Q should uve a copy of
IN e the Spalding Cata-
l ogue.-It's a complete
encyclopedia of
is ow throughout What's New in Sport
the worda
Otuarawa:t.. of andis sent free on re-
Quaflity quest.
254 Woodward=Ave. Detroit Mich

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and
Jackson

better than this?
HUSTON BROS.

Special Rates to'Students
CALL
H. B. PECK

Detroit Lf ited--8:13 a. m., 10:13 a. w., 12:10
p.m..2:13p. m.4:13 p. m., 6:13 p. m., 8:13 p.m.
Kalamazoo Limited - 7:46 a. mn 9:46 a. mn.,
11:46 a. mn1:46 p. m., 3: 46 p. m., 5:46 p. m.
Lansing 7:46 p. m .
,oeal Cars EastBound-'; Detroit, 5,5 a,
m., 6:45 a. m., and every two hours to 10:45
.To Ypsilanti, 5;4 a. m. and half hour-
to 1:15p. m, aso 1:15a.n., 12:30 a. mn.,
12!50 a. m. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-5:40 a. LL., 7:15 a.
m n.,and every two hours to 11:15 p m.

Phone 6033J

413 Thompson St.

GADSIKI.

12.

DALL & PACK, Photographers

b

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