ie use for :otherwise sein d as second s x. ..... Managing Editor o16 .Business Manager '38 .............News Editor .City Editor .Sports Editor ......Women's Editor Charles R. Osius, Jr. tardy Heth ............. Advertising Manager .Issue Manager .~Office Manager ... ..........PublicationMaager ...............Circulation Manager ..............Subscription Manager ..........Guillotine Editor Music )editor ......Literary Editor ....Exchange Editor .Campaign Editor .... ......Efficiency Editor "ster Campbell a I. Dakin , 1919. )N DANCES :an Union have ac- ight with it a new' an active person. And you might find you were not cut out for such a pretentious career after all. Os perhaps you would find an easier solution than you had anticipated, a sort of moulding of events that will make success in the future quite natural and simple. At any rate, it would seem well to take most "ca- reers" with a grain of 'salt, since planning a career has enticed mny worthles people into thinking. they were great, made many valuable rpen worth nothing much at all. It is the doing that matters- doing the stern thing which has been placed at hand to do. In Vienna men and women held up a coal truck and carried off the coal in.their pockets. And after that they probably made life unendurable for their neighbors by making a vulgar display of this wealth, After the humorous Washtenaw-State street ar- ticle, the management of the Chimes should have no trouble in disposing of copies when it comes out next month. Russian Reds will prohibit Christian names for their children; but will number them instead. An- other example of Bolshevik efficiency. In other words, that article about State Street hich appeared in the Chimes seems to "have rung the bell heard 'round the world." We doubt whether General Pershing will care 'to be addressed as "Sir" in spite of his new title. At least, Chicago has been shown what Michigan means by "Spirit."- The Guillotine The Goose That Lays the Golden Egg We are NOT going to have a block M at the 'Min- nesota game. The Athletic association says it's too much work, that they're short handed, that it can't be done. "Too much work." So let it be with Caesar. We ARE going to have a game with Minnesota. The -Varsity is working every' night At Ferry, field to gain more glory for Michigan-and profit for the Athletic association. The men are under equipped;, crippled, and fight- ing against odds but do you hear them com- plain? .Not a bit. They udo their work cheerfully and do not spare themselves. (Thirik of Harold Rye). And what will be their reward? °Some fame, perhaps a greater amount of senseless criticiam; injuries, probable D's from their instructors and maybe an M sweater- te in the Spring. Now if conditions were reversed: How would the Athletic association feel if 'Cap- tain Goetz, Weston, Sparks, Peach and the others should say, "It's too much work" Friendship is like a loaded revolver. It's a nice 'thing to have around but poor to trifle with. You'll Agree- It's an awful place on Surday when the sun is shining bright And everything worth going to is shut and locked up tight, g But when the sky's o'erladen and the rain is drip- ping down' What in the world is deader than our 'dearAnn Ar- bor town? How about the Student Council? Our Daily Novelette Irate golfer-"Don't you know it's exceedingly dangerous to allow that little child to run at large around the links?" Nurse-"Never mind, mister. The poor little feller's stone deaf." G Goodness! Wanted--A room by young man with southern exposure and sober habits, electric lights, ,etc.- The Post.1 Wheezes of Yester-Year (This one used to be popular in the olden days) Father paying unexpected visit-"Does James O'Brien live here?"' Landlady with resigned air-"Yes, bring him in." Would the Shock Absorber? Willie playing in the mire Chewed a cast-off rubber tire, Mother said in gleeful joy, "Now we have a bouncing boy." DETROIT UNITED LINES (Oct. 26, 1919) Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars--6:io a. m., and hourly to 9:10 p. m. Jackson Limited and Express Cara-- :48 a. ms, and every 'hour to '9:48 p. m. (Ex- presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor.) Local Cars East Bound-6:o5 a. m., 9:05 a. m. and revery two hours to 9:o5 p. m., 10:5o p. m.. To Ypsilanti only, it:4S p. m., :o a. nx.. and to Saline, change at'Ypsilanti. Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7:48 a. m. and x2:2o a. m. Plymouth Guild Hay Rack Party Meet at Congregational Church, 7:30 p. m. Sat., Nov. 15 SIGN UP AT ONCE IN LANE HALL Wesleyan Guild Banquet FRIDAY, NOV. 14 6 p. m. Church Parlors SNAPPY TALKS GOOD EATS Tickets 50c Gymnasium Shirt-Pants-Shoes and St $40 WAHRSo -IIIttII I~~IiiiIII11 I i ltI upporter all for 0 UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES E. SCHOOL OF DANCING 516 E. William St. JIANETTE KItUSZKA RESIDENCE PHONE 1 780-W STUDIO PHONE 1422-J FIRST KAT / TIRST ANN ARBOR (OF THE FEDERAL SYSTEM OLDEST NATIONAL IN MICHIGAN 3 Per Cent Paid on S Deposits 1 Suits III W I :. I CORDOVAN Genuine Shell , ) a derive RECITAIr POSTPONED DUE TO ARMISTICE DAY CEI(EBRATION On account of the Armistice Day celebration Mr. Albert Lockwood postponed his pianoforte -recital of an entire Beethoven program from Tues- day afternoon to 4 o'clock Wednesday afternoon in the School of Music. The general .public is nvited. Prof. Stanley to Speak Friday "How to Listen to Music" is the sub- ject of a lecture which Prof. A. A. Stanley will give at 4:30 o'clock Fri- 'day afternoon in Frieze hall of, the University School of Music. Copper Country Club tickets will be .on sale in the main corridor of U-Hall from 1 to 3, Wednesday.-Adv. - - $14.50 A fine rich 'dark brown leather with aristocratic lines a guarantee of faithful seriice written in the high-c workmanship. An exclusive model and a superior valuE above price. (Others .at $13.00) /' ni. at an AT TRY TWADn f.RK C, "01 BOOT SHOP 115 So.,2Mai St. rs ago he could take 50, university and strike stu- )W.' he loss of 10 picked men y of Oklahoma athletics. in part; perhaps it was true now, students should not a "50 student" school. re than 2,100, the univer- £, for., and by more than b Fall and Winter Fashions for Men if you quit N d get into the swim.-Okla- Upholdingant Established. Reputation 0 me-as well as too little--may be :ulating about what lies ahead; vs of events that are not even be- Vagaries, ethereal and nosensical, many a University man's thought ; o something big sometime but he r the moment just ripe while he is y. So he continues the prophetic g for a more propitious hour. seem to be made of a firmer stuff. through plain, hard, uninteresting ider-tone of patience beneath it all. hings disliked or virtually despised Business Suit s Overcoats Evening Clothes Riding Breeches ,. r D.isE. Grennan~ Wanted-Comfortable suitey-ye Daily. see lots of 'em walking aroundalone, too. You 14 Nickels Arcade to be, of Famoits Closing Lines "Here's where 'I shine," said the pugilist as he rubbed his battered eye. Louis XVI. ;i Mme'