'AGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during the Univer- sity year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republicationof all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Suscription by carrier or mail, $35o. y Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street. Phones: Business, 960; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig- nature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of faith, and notices of events will be published in The Daily at the discretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration.aNo man- uscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage. The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- pressed in the communications.' "What'sGoing On" notices will not be received after 6 o'clock on the evening preceding insertion. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 MANAGING EDITOR .......... BREWSTER P. CAMPBELL Assistant Managing Editor..................Hugh W. Hitchcock City Editor ............................... E. P. Lovejoy, Jr. Night Editors- M. B. Stahl G. P. Overton R E. Adams Hughston McBain Paul Watzel Edward Lambrecht F. H. McPike Editorials. .T. J. Whinery, L. A. Kern, S. T. Beach, E. R. Meiss Supplement Editors...............T. S. Sargent, T. H. Adams Sporting Editor.............................George Reindel Women's Editor............................. Elizabeth Vickery Humor Editor .................................... E R. Meiss Assistants Harry 'B. Grundy John Dawson Ben H. Lee, Jr. Wallace F. Elliott Sidney B. Coates ulian Mack M. A. Klaver Lowell S. Kerr Howard Donahue Dorothy Whipple H. E. Howlett Arold Fleig Marion Koch Katherine Montgomery BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER ............. VERNON F. HILLERY Advertising..... .................... F. M. Heath, A. J. Parker Publication'Nathan W. Robertson Accounts..............................John J. Hamels, Jr. Circulation~...............................Herold C. Hunt Assistants Burr L. Robbins Richard Cutting H. Willis Heidbreder W. Cooley James Prentiss W. Kenneth Galbraith L. Beaumont Parks Maurice Moule J. A. Dryer Walter Scherer Martin Godring Richard Heidemann Edw. Murane Tyler Stevens T. H. Wolfe Persons wishing to secure information concerning news for any issue of The Daily should see the night editor, who has full charge of all news to be printed that night. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1921 Night Editor-EDW. F. LAMBRECHT VOTE RIGHT Casting a ballot is the work of an instant. A few scratches of a pen or pencil and it has been com- pleted. But this is by no means all there is to giv- ing a proper vote. Snap judgments, especially as to candidates in an election, are seldom sufficient. The officers to be elected today must be more than the most popular men of the moment. The proper discharge of the duties of these class repre- sentatives requires, as is well known, ability and hard work. To elect men able and willing to put these requisite into the jobs is the problem of the voter. This necessarily demands looking up, to some extent, the past performance of the candi- dates in public positions, and deliberation on their relative merits. Indifference taking the form of failure to vote at all, is an evil that will probably be avoided this year, but it should nevertheless be guarded against. By failing to cast a ballot a voter makes the officers elected just so much less representative, and if enough voters commit the same neglect, peanut pol- itics finds a fertile field. Make it a point to vote today, and vote right. HOW ABOUT IT, MICHIGAN? One thousand five hundred Ohio State rooters are planning to come to Ann Arbor by special train to support their team at the Michigan-Ohio game a week from Saturday. A total of five thousand seven hundred and twenty seats have been reserved by students, alumni, and supporters of the Ohio in- stitution. Of course, the Oberlin disaster of last week may dampen the enthusiasm of some of these, but the Buckeyes are backing their team to the last ditch. The number of seats they have reserved verifies this statement. The Michigan Union has announced that a spe- cial train accommodating one hundred and twenty- five persons will carry Michigan rooters to Urbana and return for only $14.60 - almost one-half the regular rate. Michigan students will go to Illinois to support Michigan's team. But, will the Union have difficulty in securing one hundred and twenty- five supporters? Or with true Michigan spirit and characteristic Wolverine loyalty, will our backers so swamp the Union with applications that popular de- mand will force those in charge to find room for more? Cheer-leaders will be at Urbana; the band is planning to go. How about rooters? Ohio will probably have at least fifteen hundred student backers at Ann Arbor. Are only one hun- d-ed and twenty-five Michigan men going to Illi- nois ? A BIG TEN ALUMNI ASSOCIATION If plans to be discussed at a dinner of the alumni of Western Conference colleges, Monday evening, in Cleveland, prove popular to all, it is probable that a permanent Western Conference Alumni associa- tion will be formed in the near future, probably at that self-same dinner. It is to be hoped that the plan will go through as expected. Not for nothing have the universities of the Big Ten banded themselves together in a group both for the promotion of athletic competition ard general co-operation among them. For a good many years these ten institutions have been acting as one great unit in many respects, the activities of each being devoted ultimately to the whole. With a few exceptions, the spirit has been of the best, and the organization has undoubtedly been of benefit to every one of the schools represented. Past happenings, most of them of a minor na- ture, however, have indicated that a similar unifi- cation of the alumni of all the universities in this same group would not be a bad thing for the spirit of each of the several alumni associations. An ex- change of wordy buffets between alumni, notably of Illinois, Wisconsin and Michigan, carried on last spring through the sporting columns of a Chicago paper, and all growing out of a single outburst of an over-heated Michigander, would seem to point to the need for some sort of co-operation between the alumni as well as between the schools themselves. The Big Ten was organized to create a better spirit of competition between the universities of the Western Conference, .and not for the purpose of promoting antagonism between individual gradu- ates. Unity of the schools, ideal unity, is only.pos- sible when the graduates of those schools endeavor to maintain among themselves just such a spirit of sensible rivalry as exists among the various student bodies. If the proposed new Western Conference association is able to effect and bring about such a unification and such a spirit of mutual help and consideration, it will have done much to multiply the benefits of the Conference organization as a whole. ABOLISH PANTOMIME It should not be necessary in a school with our traditions, our glories of the past and present, to repeat every year the need of greater co-operation on the part of the student body to the cheer leaders. Eleven men fighting alone for eleven thousand others who may sit passively on the sidelines can seem a rather harsh picture to look upon, but the fact is as true today as it ever was - that the team alone cannot win the game: the men and women behind the team must help decide the final score. Get behind your cheer leaders, Wolvetines! The big battles are just ahead of us. Change those puny whisperings to man-size yells. Let the alumni go back to their desks after the game with the voices of husky thousands ringing in their ears. We do not want our cheer leaders to go through pantomime exercises. 'They are doing their level best for the school and for the team. It is up to us to do like- wise, by following these men "until the air is rent as if by thunder". In the Saturdays to come Mich- igan expect~ every man to do his duty! T he Telescope i,.-- A complete line of textbooks and supplies for all colleges at both stores GRAHAM 30th ends of the diagonal Ivalk '1 DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars-6.o5 a. m., 7:05 a. m., 8:io a. m. and hourly to 9:xo P. M. Jackson Express Cars (local stops of Ann Arbor), :48 a. m. and every two hours to 9:48 p. m. Local Cars East Bound- :55 a.m., 7:0 a. m, and every two hours: to 9 :oo p. in., z i :00 p. m. To Ypsilanti only-11:40 p. in., 12.25 a. mn., 1:15 a.m. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7:50 a. M., 2:40 p. m. To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Limited cars: 8:48, 1o:48 a. in., 12:48, 2:48, 4:48. To Jackson and Lansing-Limited: 8:48 PUBLIC SALE 1921 OCTOBER 2 9 16 28 30 3 10 17 24 31 4 11 18 25 b 12 19 26 6 1s 20 27 7 14 21 28 1921 1 S 15 22 29 OF Choral Union Tickets CONCERTS BY HAROLD BAUER.....October 20 JOHN McCORMACK.November 22 IGNAZ FRIEDMAN..December 5 FRITZ KREISLER .....January 9 ERIKA MORINI.....February 3 ROSA RAISA, and GIACOMO RIMINI .......March 14 Saturday 8 to 12 A. M. AT HILL AUDITORIUM THEREAFTER AT SCHOOL OF MUSIC Good Seats Will Be Available at $4.50, $5.00, and $5.50 . NOTICE TO MEN We do all kinds of high-class Hat work at pre-war prices. Hats turned *nslde out, with all new trimmngs,' are as good as new. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 PACKARD STREET Telephone 1792 e k* I~cRLA ~- b 1' I . ! I Borrow It from Her a young man If you were. ADVANCED SECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR STENOGRAPHERS MONDAY AND THURSDAY EVENINGS Class Commences OCTOBER 24 Hot Malted Hot Chocolate Hot Bittersweet Hot Butterscotch WE WASH ALL GLASSES IN HOT WATER 709 N. UNIVERSITY I As I am And met a sweet young thing As I did And were anxious to make a good impression As I was And took her to Freddie Besimer's for dinner As I did And then you reached into your pocket to pay the bill As I did And found you forgot to shift your money from your other pants As I did What would YOU do? -Ges Who. WOW! Headline in Ann Arbor Times News: SHOW GIRL'S JEWELS ARE BASIS OF SUIT. We wonder what else the suit was made of. Quoth Eppie Taff: He died of suffocation Before his will was signed, With every indication Of too small a frame of mind. Our Latest Song Entitled: "Our Relatives Are Born to Us, but Thank God We Can Pick Our Teeth." Page the Nursery Erm, Erma, and Erman, Ermine, Herman, and Sherman, All are getting there; Can you make room in your family For a lonely Teddy Bear? Your one verse was good, Ermine, and Erm en- joyed it. But you mailed it to the wrong address. We are not the editor of Snappy Stories. Here is the other one: Lack of Foresight If the freshmen form this year's Block M, There's one thing that's not foreseen, While the M's supposed to be maize and blue, With the frosh it is sure to be green. -Ermine. Want to see something slick? Sure Mike! Look at a greased pig. A New Version Roses are red, Violets are blue, I like tea, My sister has a horse. - Dr. Kekkle. Famous Closing Lines "These are not breaches of etiquette," said the flippant young thing as she strode across the cam- pus in her 'bockers. ERM. s: " pytE f #R CN' EwI ALD us'you !' hI Note November 10th of the Month Records Now on Sale ,IoIe' A-4468-IN A BOAT-Fox Trot...................................Happy Six EMALINE-Fox Trot..........................Yerkes Jazarimba Orchestra 3453-SALLY WON'T YOU COME BACKI..............From Zlegfeld's Follies, 1921 SECOND-HAND ROSE....................Follies, 1921, Played by Ted Lewis A-8459-I AIN'T NOBODY'S DARLING-(Song)-Fox Trot Paul Blese Trio and Frank Crumit FRANKIE AND JOHNNY-(Song)--Fox Trot' Paul Blese Trio and Frank Crumit A-8468-MOLLY D-Fox Trot...........................;Art Hickman's Orchestra GOODBYE, PRETTY BUTTERFLIES-Fox Trot.... Art Hickman's Orchestra A-8457-rM LOOKING FOR A BLUEBIRD (To Chase My Blues Away) Marion Harris, Comedienne, Paul Blese's Orchestra, Ace. SWEET COOKIE ................... ..........Marion Harris, Comedienne A-3461-IN THE OLD TOWN HALL, from Ziegfeld Follies Van and Schenk, Comedians WHAT'S A GONNA BE NEXT, from Ziegfeld Follies Van and Schenk, Comedians Al2.mendinger Music Shop 122 E. Liberty Street f 4 "When You Buy, Buy Quality" Van Heusen Collars Place your quantity orders in advance WAGNER & COMPANY For Men Since 1848 STATE STREET AT LIBERTY