)F MICHIGAN ting except Monday during the Univer- Control of Student Puljli'cations. THEASSOCIATED PRESS is exclusively entitled to the use for dispatches credited to it or not otherwise 3 the local news published therein. to e at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second or mail, $3.5o. - ' ss building, Maynard street. Editorial, 2414. exceed So words, if signed, the sig- pear in print,ebut as an evidence of will be published in The Daily at the left at or mailed to The Daily office. I1 receive/no consideration. No man- ess the writer incloses postage. cessarily endorse the sentiments ex- Ms. . Managing Editor one 2414 or ioi6 ...Business Manager one 96o or 2738 t .... ........................... .......News Editor ll................. City Editor .Sports Editor k. ....Women's Editor stein .......................Telegraph $ditor EDITORIAL BOARD ian Charles R. Osius, Jr.. wines, J..........Advertising Manager ...Issue Manager Office Manager . Publication Manager der ., ...'.... ...Circulation Manager .--.----- .-. . .Subscriptioni Manager ..... Music Editor ..Literary Editor to ..........................Exchange Editor k ..........................Campaign Editor understood that chapel would be ended before I o'clock. Noted speakers could easily be secured to de- liver twenty-minute sermons, and the. balance .of the services could be up-fo-date, including good music, benedictions, and other modern forms of worship. If students realized that they would be among those they know, that the services would be brief, and that the hour would be satisfactory, they would in all probability respond to their religious tenden- cies ;by attending the chapel; It would, of course, be non-sectarian and inter-denominational. The de- tails of management, organization, and other ar- rangements should be left entirely in the hands of a student cominittee, advised by church heads. Michigan should go over the top in a religious drive as well as a mehorial or other kind of cam- paign. Michigan students are just as religious as, any, but they desire a convenient arrangement for their worship. A non-compulsory, union chapel might provide the desired accommodation. BAND ETIQUETTE The advice of the communicant to The Daily in yesterday's issue regarding the University band playing the "Star Spangled Banner" with covered heads and thej,"Yellow and Blue" with uncovered' heads might well be enlarged to take into consid- eration just what band etiquette should be., No military organization should require its mem- bers to, remove their hats when paying respects outofdoors. The band is governed by military eti- quette. By special request, the members have re- moved their hats -recently when playing the "Star Spangled Banner," although there hardly seems any substantial foundation for the request, Why do not the band members adhere strictly to military etiquette and keep their hats on, whether playing the "Star Spangled Banner," the "Yellow and Blue," or any similar song? LEARN THE "YELLOW AND BLUE" Ignorance of the "Yellow and Blue" is a dis- grace to any ~Michigan man or woman. In spite of this, two-thirds of the University student body do not know the most important of Michigan's songs. It would not be amiss for some University or- ganization like the Studput council-to devise means whereby every Michigan student would know every word of the verses. For instance, it could be taught to the freshmen at their weekly talks in University Hall. IFor the sake of those who have not a copy of the song, The Daily is printing it on the front page. Learn it. DETROIT UNITRD LINES f: 11li wlll im (Oct. 26, 19>9) between Detroit, AnndArbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time)L Detroit Limited and Express Cars--6:io a. in., and hourly to 9::o p. in. Jackson Limited and Express Cars 8:48 a. m., and every. hour to 9:48 p. n-. Ix- presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor.)- ' Local Cars Eqst Bound-6 :o a. M., 9:05 -4. r, and every;two hours to g:os p. in., 1o:so m.i. To Ypsilanti only, r z:45 p. In., z : 10 V a. n".. and to Saline, change at Ypsilanti..- Ypsilanti. S Local Cara West Bound-7:48 a. m. and 2:2 a. M. 17 mm 1jflhIIiIII s i, _ { MICHIGAN'S Favorite College Songs" - $3.00 - UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE lams Brewster Campbell John . Dakin TAFF ey Ralph DuBois erhorn Robert C. Angell ell 11. Hardy Heth DANCING NOTICE floreatter the Monday and Thursday voning assemblies at the Packard will be strtptly couple dances, well chap- eroned with the best of music. 55c per couple.-Adv. I HI{UIUfnl Uhll iiiillHIII1!u{pllllimlC111i lllll![ II U II IIi f11111310III VMuxns" for the Game Cousins & HaHi Members Florists Telegraph I Phone 115 mnum nquist D. P. Joyce Robt. Somcrville Arthur 'L. Glazer: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1919. N ght Editor-Thomas H. Adams SAFETY FIRST.IN MILK, ety-five per cent of the Ani Arb6r milk ' is pasteurized and of guaranteed purity. about the other five per e t ? :onsid rble share/of the latter is sered by ing louse keepers who, deciding for them- and patrons, consider pasteurization umneces- cr impracticable from a finagcial standpoint. lDaily advocated pasteurized or at least cer- milk in editorials appearing Octob er 5, and, spectiel, after securing the opinions of va- cdmpetent authorities. No steps were taken nedy the situation by the cpmmon council, t-ed to be the only body that could effectively fith the matter." > big a problem to- sink into oblivion, the milk oxi has again. raised its head and this time he backing of no less an authority than Dean kan of the Medical school on the side of un- jonal pasteurization. In the 'words of the lat- t shotold be the business of4the health offcer b that all milk is pastetirized, and examined day" and, if the common council fails In ful- its obvius duty, "the moral force of the con- y should at once be brought to bear to make >arding houses serve pasteurized, milk." ectio~hs tb pasteurized milk range from quality ply and expense. According to the authori- roper pasteurization should have no eect on talit of the milk. Variouss local dairies state he falling off in supply due to the increased >f pasteurization could be more than taken f ; hd as for the question of expense, the 'needs no'discussion when one stops to recall phoid epidemic of some years. ago in which teurized mlk played an unenviable part., : matter seems to have evolved into a ques- f milk which is immune from contamination ti added expense, or no added expense and vhich entails more or less of a gamble. The t body wants safe milk and the boarding should supply it. It should not be necessary e city legislators to pass -an rdinance requir . ch aprotective measure, but if it is-it is up =en t'actquickly. i line, five per-centers!, RELIGION FOR ALL his Greater ]Michigan of ours there seems to quate provision for almost every activity im- le. ,The greatest factor of all, however, has luite conspicuously neglected. That is re- re is no University chapel nor any consider- >rce at work to get students to f ttend church. eacl indiyidual church holds get-igethers, cvites its menbers to attend, but these efforts een comparatively unsuccessful in the past. re are about 180 students out of 9,ooo en- in the University who attend church. Most se who do attend are devout church-goers. reat majority of the student body, the huge; >f Michigan men and women do not go to T. This is certainly a deplorable' situation. best possible solution to the problem seems :he establishment of a union chapel for stu- anly. Hill auditorium might be secured and ervices, say of forty-five minutes to an hour's In, could be held each Sunday noon. If the rere set at 12 o'clock, the student services not interfere with the worship of the indi- churches. This would also be a most satis- time to get students to atter d, it being --'4 N-- CLOTHES FOR YOUNG MEN AN1D ME2N WHO STAY YOUNG The$ limp, Does Senator Borah Know of This? "Detroit Declares War on Olives"--Headline. We still stand for self-determination. We saw again today the advertising caption which never fails to sehd us into a shimmy of chuck- ling-'The Event of' the Season, Men's Suits 1-3 Off." Pep meeting style, we suppose, or at least hope. Or 1 f You Belong to the Favored Sex Student in Press Building-Say, I want to change my name in the directory. Bored Attendant-You may change your name by court order. But Were They? Over 2,700 students-the largest number in any American university-are soaking in erudition at Ann Arbor. Som"e will go forth against the public, to become long-haired lecturers; others to con- spire against the peage and dignity of the common- wealth, and to arouse the sleeping devils of litiga- tion as spiders of the law; others are studying the birth and death of worlds in the real ,of cosmos and scheming to catch comets by sprinkling salt on' their tails;- others still, there are, disputing as to whether splints or a plaster cast should be used in the case of a broken neck, and striving with micro- scopes to distinguish blood corpuscles from hom- eopathic pills, and varicose gins from healthy veins in a cork leg. The cause of science was never so prosperous at the University as this year, and it will go hard but that more things will be discov- ered in heaven, earth and Erebus than are dreamed of in Newtonian philosophy, or the evolution. of Darwin that seeks to establish man's relation to the ape by the hirsute covering of "his shins. -U. of M, Daily, Nov. 3, 1891, Elbertus wanted to know today if running 'for campus offices was governed by the Board in Con- trol of Athletics. We'll Say He Was One of the members*of Michigan's Varsity de- bating team in 1908 was named John E. Winner. A recent' advertisement in the- London Times for a cook stipulated that she have a sense of hu- mor. And by way of a paradox she would proba- bly be required to peal onions. The coroner's jury investigating the cause of the sudden demise of our Conference Hopes returned a verdict that the deceased came to his end because of an' overdose of Harley. y I: 4 At college, in society, i business, everywhere--Society Brand Clothes for father and son. They are authoritative in style and propor- tioed to t all types of men without tedious measuitings and fittings. They express alertness and are made to stylish lines until the very fabric Always all-wool. ALFRED DECKEI & COHN, Makers InCanada, SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES, Limited Chicago New York , Montreal retain wears their out'. . 4JFWert& A