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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 04, 1912 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1912-10-04

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

IE"

, I'

.1

FE I

Our Political Platform
is
Right Price and Quality
C. H. Wid Co.
Tailors and Importers
31 1 South State Street
University Text Books

Now and Second Hand
All Departments
DRAWING INSTRUMENTS

T IE 1IIHIGAN DAILY
Official newspaper at the University. of Mich-
igan.'
Published every morning except Monday dur-
ing the university year.
Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan, under Act of Congress .of March 3-,'
Offices: Second floor, Ann Arbor Press Build-
ing, Maynard Street.
Office Hours: Editor--z to 3 p. m.; .7 to to
p. m. Business Manager-z to 3 p. m:
Subscription Price: By carrier, $2.50; by mail,
$3.00.
Want Ad Stations: Press Building; Quarry's
Pharmacy ; University Pharmacy :Davis
and Konald's Confectionary Store.
Phones: Bell and Home, 960.
Frank Pennell.............Managing Editor
Joseph Fouchard..........Business Manager
Maurice Toulme...............News Editor
C. Harold Hippler............ Assistant
Karl Matthews....... .Athletic Editor
G. C. Eldredge........ . . . Assistant
John Townley .......Music and Drama
.Leonard M. Rieser...................Files
EDITORIALS
Harold G. McGee Louis R. Haller
Illowell Van Auken Maurice Myers
NIGHT EDITORS
H. Beach Carpenter Fred B. Foulk
Morton R. Hunter.......... Morris Milligan.
Russell H. Neilson ..........Bruce J. Miles
REPORTERS
James D' Eviin............Ernest R. Burton
David D. Hunting..........J. V. Sweeney
BUSINESS STAFF
Adna R. Johnston..........Advertising Mgr.
Emerson Smith.................Accountant
Laurence D. Bartlett... . Circulation Mgr.
John I. Lippincott
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1912.
Night Editor-Fred B. Foulk.

tion that he is not an end in himself.
You men of nineteen sixteen, then,
bear in mind that the reason of these
seeming afflictions is not to puff the
vanity of those who have arrived
but a little ahead of yourselves; rath-
er do they exist for your own eventual
well being.
Remember what a timorous crew
the presentsvaliant, blood-seeking
sophs were last year?
No, 1916, full professor doesn't have
that meaning at all.
Today's Beauty Hint.
Canary-bird egg shampoos are pop-
ular after motoring this season. (No-
tice that "motoring.")
A Prize is Hereby Offered.
Two sticks of first class gum, slight-
ly used but in the best oftcondition,
to the person suggesting the suitable
adjectives for the following. Profani-
ty allowed but not encouraged.
West hall.
Monopolistic 'phone centrals.
Subscription solicitors.

Loose Leaf Note Books, Fountain Pens, etc.
headquarters.

Make our

F-

WAH R'S
Uilversity Bookstores

t '

E
I t Is Easy to Recognize ek.

TEXT XBOO
New and Secondhand BOOKS for all departm
DRAWING INSTRUMENTS
ENGINEERS SUPPLIES

We are Agents for the

Pho~tograph

Richter, Keuffel and Esser and Dietzgen Instruments, Draw-
ing Supplies and Tables, Canvas Cases for Drawing Boards,
Slide Rules, Fountain Pens at all prices.,
hee hn |Co.
Students' Bgok Store

StudIo 319 W. Huron St.

phorme

ATI SFACTION
What a big word it is, and we
w it in every garment.

TYPE WRITERS
New and Rebuilt - All Makes
FOR SALE OR RENT
0. D. MORRILL 322 S. STATE ST.
Local Representative,
UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER CO.'

Dieterle

-

ILOR Liberty Street
(Copyrighted);

-1@

T.

HALL

A CIVIL GREETING
To the four professors in the civil;
engineering department The Daily bids
welcome. Three have come in off the.
field, so to speak, and one has left
another university where he was held
in high esteem, to help put the civil
engineering department of the Univer-
sity of Michigan on a par with the best.
universities of the country. Due to
the influence of the late dean Charles
E. Greene, one of the great bridge en-
gineers of his day, the department has
in the past, confined its energies to
turning out structural engineers. Now
we have a department which will not
pound all the square pegs through
round holes, but will turn out men who
will be as well equipped in hydraulic,
sanitary, muicipal, transportation
and geodetie, (as well as structural)
engineering, as were the structural
men who have made Michigan men
famous for their preparation in one
line. To the dean who has made the
change possible, and to the men who
are to carry the brunt of the work in-
volved in the changes, we say, "Good
luck."
AN EVALUATION.

Noah W. Says:
SCINTILLATE-1. To emit sparks;
to spark. 2. To sparkle or twinkle,
as the fixed stars.
That's us. Let us have no further
discussion on this point.
Spare Him For His Mother's Sake.
He slapped her on the wrist, but
she got her meet. She was a butcher's
dott-er.
_x_
Hearken! Attention Poets!
No colyum of pure reason like this
here is complete without a pome or
two every day, We must have pomes.
To encourage the pome business, we
will print any good practical pome
sent to The Scintillator.
(NOTE: Letters addressed "Skinny,"
or in other bold or endearing lan-
guage will be torn asunder and cre-
mated. So there.)

See Grinnell Bros.or
YELLOW AND BLUE, 16c PER COPY
120-122 EAST LIBERTY S T R E EI

Michigan Banners,
Pennants. and

.

Pillow T

r

M

mom

-

Suits Cleaned and Pressed. .... .........$.75
Suits Pressed.................$.25
Overcoats Cleaned and Pressed........$.5
Overcoats Pressed......................$.20
Trousers Pressed . . .......................$.10
410 S. STATE ST.
ng, Pressing and Repairing. All Work PreFd by Har d

.

--

CARDS PROGRAMS STATIONERY WRITE FOR SAMPLES
GREGORY MAYER & THOM. CO. DETROIT Mica.

Now that the excitement attendant;
upon the return to school is subsiding,
and we are beginning to assume our
respective roles in college activities,
it is not out of place to take stock of
the worth of some of the practices

Now we're certain What's What is
an honest-to-goodness campus publi-
cation. Notice how it comes out 'steen
hours or so late?
Of Interest to Women.
Save your old alarm clocks, knock
out the works with a stove-lid handle,
and use the cases for jelly glasses.
We protest. It all fills up space.
WILL DIVIDE UNION DANCE
HALL BY SLIDING CURTAINS
Tn order to make small socials and
dinners at the Michigan Union more
private, arrangements have been made
whereby the large dance hall will be
divided by sliding curtains. These
curtains will extend from the ceiling
beams to the floor and will be sus-
pended by rings on a wire. The ob-
ject of this is to allow the members
who are attending an affair to assem-
ble in the front end .of the hall and
then pass behind the curtains to the
rear where the tables will be placed.
At the time of dances and large gath-
erings the curtains will be drawn
back against the wall.

443'South Division Stre
MaoCregor Flat

Made and sold by Mrs. L. M. Baldwin at
a rate of 20 percent below regular retail
prices. Wholesale prices to fraternities
and clubs purchasing in amounts of $:o
and over. Wholesale prices average 30
percent below regular retail prices.

It's

GOOD

LIGHT

MEANS

GOOD

EYES

which obtain here.
Particularly the first year men find
themselves in a new environment, with
their conduct more or less wedged in
by apparently arbitrary traditions. To
those freshmen to whom the rules
respecting grey caps, smoking on the
campus and others, seem irksome, a
word of explanation may serve to dis-
pel any misgivings concerning their
usefulness.
The standard of justification by
which to measure such practices, par-
ticularly in a state university, is not
hard to find. Briefly, it is the devel-
opment of the capacity for service in
after life. Between this standard and
the mooted regulations, the connection
is close. The capacity for service in
any individual depends primarily on
his personal attitude; to obtain that
end there must first arise the corres-
ponding desire. This desire can exist
only when the individual gets out of
self and realizes the rights and needs
of others. It is just this fundamental
attitude that Michigan traditions are
created to develop. In a concrete way
they should bring home to the last
year's high school senior the realiza-+

0

IHuston Bro 'a

ndescant Gas Lamps Verticle
Brightest and Steadiest.

and Reflex are the

Special No Shadow Engineer's Drawing Lamp.

Pipe

If you want to buy or rent a type-
writer see Morrill over Baltimore
Lunch. tf
The Western Union uses 10,000 Un-
derwoods. See Morrill over Baltimore
Lunch. tf
PIANOS TO RENT, SCHAEBERLE &
SON MUSIC HOUSE.
Start your school year right by
having your muical wants supplied by
Schaeberle & Son Music House, 110
South Main St. The place where you
will find a complete stock of all musi-
cal instruments, supplies,rstrings, and
where you can have a first -class re-
pair job done on your instrument.
Come in and look around. 3 to 8

The Proper Place to
Take Your Lady
Friend
for dinner, luncheon or refresh-
ments is
Mack's
Tea Room
Combines seclusion with culinary
perfection. Service ala carte. Open
8 a. m. to 5 pn., on Saturdays
till 9 p. m. Orchestra Saturdays,
SECOND FLOOR
MACK & CO.
MAIN STREET

ON STATE STREET
We Serve Hot Luchi
0 H I R OP O D Y
BUNIONS, CORNS CARED FOR A
INCROWN NAILS . CURED
Care of the Feet also taught Everything absolutely
septic. Office Hours 9-12 a.m, 1-5 p.m.
MISS E. U. FOLEY 1921 E. HURON STI
2 blacks E. of High School Phone 9891
The
Farmers and Mechanics Ba:
101-103.105 South Main Street

NN ARBOR GAS COMPANY

apItal $100,000.

Surplus and Profits

_._ A

idard Quality
There is no quicksand mare
$ unstable than poverty in
quality and we avoid this quick-
sand by standard quality.
Tennis, Golf, Base Ball,
Cricket, Foot Ball, Bas-
ket Ball Athletic Equip-
n ent.
Catalogue Faeee

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and
Jackson
Detroit Limited-8:13 and 10:13 a.m., 12:13,
2:13, 4:13, 0:13, and 8:13 pdm.
Kalamazoo Limited-7 :46, 91:46, and 11:46
a.m.; 1:46, 3:46, and 5:46 p.m.; Lansing-
7:46 p.m.
Local Cars East Bound-To Detroit, 5:45 a.m.,
6:45 a.m., and every two hours to 10:45
p.m. To Ypsilanti, 5:45 a.m. and half-hour-'
ly to 11:13 p.m.; also 12:15, 12:30 and
12:5o a. m. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bounid-5:40 and 7.15 a. m.
and every two hours to 11:15 p.m.

ii

Mr. tudnt:Our fall stook of aultings and over.
Mr. Student. * oa*"-***s-Es" no- - --p-
coatings In now complete. You
will find all the new weaves and colorings in our lin
and we will be pleased to show ther. We make gar-
ments that satisfy.

All garments made
In our own shops.

WAGNER .t CO.
State Street

SPALDING & BRos.
rd Ave.. Detroit, Mich.

J T d Ii

:1

J /ry,

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