l Control 0ofStudent rublicatons. OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ress is exclusively entitled to the use for ws dispatches credited to it or not otherwise and the local news published therein. stoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second rrier or mail, S3.So r Press building, Maynard street. 960; Editorial. 2414. ot to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig. to avvearin inthut a an evidence of k ",, E , be pu at or he Dailyat the he Dai office. tion. man- postage. sentimients ex- ey ......Managing Editor Phone 414 or toi6 te, Jr...................... Business Manager Phone 960 or 2738 rt ............................... News Editor 11.......... City Editor ...... Sports Editor rk ......................'.... Women's Editor nstein ...........................Telegraph Editor EDITORIAL BOARD man A Charles R. Osius,, Jr. aines, Jr......... ,... Advertising Manager 1 . . ..u... .ssue Manager . Office Manager ............... ..... .... lication Manager der ........,,....... ..Circulation Manager . ........................Subscription Manager .,. Music Editor ................................., Exichae Editor .k ..... ............... Campaign Editor nothing that tends to broaden a man so much as mixing with fellow students from different parts of our own country and the world and listening to their opinions on present day questions. Each student is a representative of' his own na- tivity and, to the man or woman who is seeking all that college life can give, is a source of enlight- enment which is not to be passed by at a glance. But there is a tendency among students to cling to some small group of the classroom or social circle or his own disposition and let the world move on unheeded. That is the attitude which the aboriginal tribes held. But we live in a different age. It is our duty as broad-minded American citizens to know life in as many forms as possible and here in this University is the place to start. The big men in this school today are the men who have looked at life from its different sides as shown on our campus. So why may we not do the same? Tomorrow when you go upon the campus speak to that man whom you met yesterday, even if so casually. They have ideas., some of them as good as yours. By doing so you broaden your own out, look and the cosmopolitan ideas of your school. Michigan is cosmopolitan. It is up to you to keep it so. --Con'tributed. 20TH CENTURY RIP VAN WINKLES Speaking in parables, have you ever thought of the listless individual-the modern Rlip Van Win- kle-who lets most everything pass by him without even a wink.? Can't you just see him wandering aimlessly under ancestral trees, stroking a long gray beard and crying hedplessly-"Doesn't any- body know Rip?" That is the tragedy of being asleep, or of sleep- ing too long. Self gratification may be a niighty pleasant college dream, but like the Van Winkle dream it never wants to end. So probably the mis- take is in ever lying down at all. In spite of the cosmopolitan aspect of university life, every uni- versity always produces' a certain percentage of narrow, provincial people every year. They are, of course, products of the dream. - The man who is too restless is often severely censored, but how often he is the very man needed to wake other peo- ple up. The American university-a product of a fiercely progressive race-should have plenty of loyv ers of the chase, of the hotness of competition. Rip would never have lain down in the first place if he hadn't gotten a mighty false sense of things. And he surely. would never have retired for twenty years if he had not become mesmerized with the idea that the world was all wrong and that petu-. lant solitude was the only thing for him. Are you going to wake up some quarter of a century from now to look around regretfully, rub your eyes and sigh, because it is too late and you have slept too long? Villa has announced that he will stay away from the U. S. border on his campaign next month. And still there are those who will try to tell you that Pancho isn't overly endowed with gray matter. 11 I JE EDITORS as 11. Adams ' Brewster Campbell John I. Dakin EpITORIAL STAFF rshl1, William H. Riley Ralph DuBois Katrina Schernmerhorn Robert C. Angell 1{. Hardy Heoth BUSINESS STAFF CITY THREATENED BY COAL FAMINE: That the coal situation is getting to be very serious is the opinion of the wholesale and retail coal dealers of Ann Arbor. Due to the threatened general strike they declare the out- look at present is indeed gloomy. The striking miners are demanding a five day week and a six hour day. The new twages demanded by the miners will advance the price of coal. The local dealers are striving to get a supply on hand to satisfy the pre- sent demand. The consumption to date has been unusually heavy for this time of the year and the cold weath- er is not yet upon us. The local deal- ers are fully prepared to handle the supply in case they can get it but now the present question is "Will we get it?" Prices at present fortsoftacoal av- erage about $8.50 per ton., and hard' coal is selling for $12.50 per ton. These prices are much higher than those of last year and the consensus of opinion is that they will go higher. FORMER UNIVERSITY WOMAN WEDS DARTMOUTH GRADUATE Ruth'Warner, ex-'20, member of Al- pha Chi Omega, was married to Ralph Tyler, '14, a Sigma Chi at Dartsmouth, Tuesday, October 14, at Muncie, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Tyler will attend the Centennial at Dartmouth and be at home to friends at 90 Clan street, Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov. 1, 1919. ALARM CLOCKS Guaranteed. Try One J. L. ChapmAn. Jeweler 113 South Main Street fill 11111111111111111111111111111111111111 Just Reelived Five Cords ' PARCEL POST LAUi $2.00 Eaci WAHR'S iI I w. Branch Nickels Arcade su SA'URDAY, / 1919. Nght Editor-John Y. Dakin HIGAN" ON FERRY FIELD. g.oing over to Michigan with the inten- ning." ction from the M A. C. Holcad edi- nted in Friday's Daily represents the (QEANERS' DRESSERS 204 . Wq$NhVUTOM! L11 .l *6Z8. i_ Co they d. With char- ng over practi- the purpose of whieh have not I Suits Pressed while you wait. is an doing? Michi- down to, Ferry field been equalled in the ng a Varsity band for size and spirit. hich is conjured up Bing bodily trans- he stands on Ferry AS With Late 1919 'ATLASWarMaps To the students of The University of Michigan who take advantage of this offer We bster' s New Int order that eleven men may be made is theirs to win but that, victory or Jniversity is behind them, 9,000 last whistle. A victory for M. A. "C. ring to that school while a win for ns nothing regarding her Conference gargling a loss, however, the tables I Michigan's stakes are paramount. of victory lies as much in the stanas i. PUBLICITY Everett W. Smith of Stanford uni- d or enthused the minds of visitors Newspapermen's convention Friday vocating training for publicity in uni- s of journalism, the first heated dis- e assembly ensued. In spite of the fessor Smith was apparently called end his char'acter," as he put it, the )f vital importance to professors of ditors of newspapers, and publicity es. What might the student's stand- ttending school today wants nothing he practical and the professional. ,He >e satisfied with the amateur. If he is ut in a world of real things he wants To him an ugly truth is a precious "The B lmp " "Such is LIFE," argued the Gargoyle editor when the proof-reader complained about poor copy last week. "A rare case of good JUDGE-ment, I'll call it," said the Gargoyle editor as he filed away yester- day's issue. We are not going to be as candid as the Chi Tribune, which stated, in large caps the other day, that the alleged witticisms and reprinted editorials ,on their inside page are "ED PAGE FILLER." Plenty of Room Up Front "For Sale, a seven-passenger Morman."-Ad vertisement. The ticket includes accommodations for self and one wife.n "Man Shot on Corner."-Headline. Must have been a square guy. How to Write Humor. No.:2 To write something extra snappy, take the old banana-cucumber gag, and insert the names of dif- ferent commodities. Thus: Fussy Customer-What have you in the shape of olives? Grocer-We have some nice fresh eggs, mum. "'Tain't like the old brew," murmured the Judge, as he tried another case. The Campus Crank says that judging by appear- ances the freshmen have nearly all gone to pot. Prof. Robert M. Wenley: "It's true that !the Germans wanted a place in the sun but they never realized how 'hot it is there." Prof. David Friday: "The way the Federal Reserve Board attempted to decide whether to raise funds for the purpose of carrying.on the war by 'means of taxation or loans reminds me of a story that Lincoln told about a man he knew. This man was hunting deer one foggy morning and saw an object which he took to be a deer. He raised his rifle to his shoulder and took careful aim. Sud- denly he bethought himself that the object he was about to fire upon might not be a deer, but his neighbor's cow. He therefore took such aim so that if in case it was his neighbor's cow he would miss it but that if it was a deer he would kill it. The Only Grand Prize (Highest given to dictionaries at the Panama-Pacific Interna- tional Exposition was granted to webster's New International and the Merriam Series for superiority of educational merit. Wo my, soviet, tank, war bride. These ar rom the thousands of late words,=-all fined in this Great Work. nhe* ferriarnWet ,plete Reference Library in Dictionary For pages, and type matter equivalent to a" IS- all in a single volume, in Rich, Full Red Les am Binding, can now be secured by readers c on the following remarkably easy terms: The entire work in either binding ti _ . ; :" , ' .-. ; .. x' : 1919 Atlas) Delivered for $1.00 and e h ereafter of only a few ra- (In United Stag ~REDUCED ABOUT ON (IN THICKNESS AND WE 4 India-Paper Edition-- 'Printed. on V.i \ . Since publicity men are more highly paid than are many others in other phases of the newspaper game, why not prepare for it open-eyed, 'rather than theorize about why it is or whether it ought to be? Perhaps this is a trite question. The student who does not' want to learn how to be a successful amateur, but instead how to be an all-around man in a professional occupancy, will appreciate being taught what principles should gov- ern every activity in his particular field. It seems that a step toward progress has been taken when schools of journalism accept the popular demand of the public and attempt to instill an ethical standard into the men who are soon to respond to the de- mand. In so doing the university is meeting the world on the same ground that the graduate him- self will have to do when his days of collegiate training are over. FELLOWSHIP One of the Greatest things that Michigan uni- versity has prided herself' in is the cosmopolitan spirit that pervades her students. And it is a thing thing to be nroud of in the highest sense. There is ular e in. x '1 f+. (f C \: '.1 J'I ' . '.' Printed on the highest c x 94 in. x'5 "It is an ever-present and reliable school-master to the whole family" The only dictionary with the new Divided Page, characterized as "A Stroke of Genius." S. II THE ATLAS Is the 1919 "New Reference Atlas of the World," containing nearly 200 pages, with 128 pages of maps, beautifully printed in colors, with marginal reference indexes, late Census Figures, Parcel-Post Guide, late War Maps, etc., all handsome- ly bound in red cloth, size 101/4x13% TO THOSE E. Van Allen, 805 Empire Bldg., I (Publishers of Genuine Webster Dictionaries Please send me free of all obligation or expense a co containing an amusing "Test in Pronounciation" (with ization of Carver" also "125 Interesting Questions" wit and striking "Fascimile Color Plate" of the new bindin pages of India and Regular paper with terms of your Mic Webster's New International Dictionary. Name