THE MICHIGAN DAIL Y .. tA I w- ;:T , MANE kv There is a QUALITY ATMOSPHERE Students like to come to us because we make suits of true quality at moderate prices. They appreciate the fact that we Jo not dictate style but rather fol- low the wishes of our patrons. W e makte every sui we sell 31 5Tate Sty Tailors Haberdashers Hatters I, .' I,, - ,. r, r \ . 4 4 J «' .....+ " f l! r \ r rr r netted Kittens! With claws! Lolling in "There are many reasons justifying the existence of the second eleven. It offers players any opportunity to con- tinue in active daily practice who for various reasons, are not able to con- tinue on the Varsity. The Varsity coaches- can give intensive training to only a limited number of men and that group of men must be selected at an early date in the fall campaign. With- out the second eleven, the men not thus retained would have to give up footballs or play it spasmodically and thus curtail any natural ability which they possessed. If the originally se- lected university group met with un- usual accidents or the original selec- tions failed, as they sometimes do, to live up to erly season promises, there would be no reserve force in active trainingto call up for replacements. These two factors alone give ample reason for the existence of the second eleven, and make it in reality an m- tegral part of the/university team al- though, largely for practical reasons, it is given a separate entity and title. "The work of the second eleven auto- matically falls into two classes-what the men do for themselves, and what they do for some one else. The very help which they give some one else, namely the Varsity, retards their own personal exploitation. It comes about in this way. Each week, a part of the work of the second team is to demon- strate for the Varsity the play of the Varsity's opponents for that week. If only 20 plays are used from each team on the schedule, this means some 190 plays per-season for the second team to learn and execute as well as pos- sible. As 40 plays are enough for any team, it follows that the second team men can concentrate to only one fourth the extent which they should to per- feet their own attack. With the ab- sence of that high state df perfection, it is by no means surprising that the team attack is not 1000 per cent perfect and the individual is not able to show his true worth. "The work of the second eleven un- fortunately must be done with little chance for public recognition. Most of the work is done behind the closed gates of the Varsity field with no blast of trumpets or applause. It is a de- serving bunch of men who toil day after day on the Reserves. As such they ask no favors from any one, but if a victory goes on the records when you most desire it don't forget that the men behind the guns have done their share in silence." Coach Knox, Harvard. pleasure and purring thru an idle life. A story of those who would rather be "ladies" than wo- L STARTING TODA Y tL Is men. The life-they things they do. they pay. lead. The The price SThe Story of the p I --- - = -- . I "Lilies" of Society .. ,; ALL THE Sides of mod- ern woman's life! Her glory, hers foibles, her ways witl the world and men! In a gorgeous, in- timate picture of things not everybody knows. s r6 GEORG LOAN PRODUCTION d1/ -I wLQ:&3IfY Co NiPSOt4 BG COMEDY ATTRACTION I'' A picture that only George Loane Tucker could make. Brilliant, beautiful, real. The last in his life and his only one since "The Miracle Man." T OR C HY 'S PROMOTI ON" With SCHOOL OF DANCING All the latest steps in mod- ern ballroom dancing taught in private lessons. Private and class lessons in ballet, national, interpreta- tive, aesthetic and toe dapc- ing (Ruissjan and Italian method.) JEANETTE KRUSZKA jOmNSO Studio: 721 N. University Ave. (Above Lyndon'Kodak Shop) PHONE 788-J :;,, : A - TOPICS JOHNNY HINES From the famous Sewell Ford Stories i ORCHESTRA COMING __ I... 'k, \:, -L. - i iiS j7L "The Child Thou Gavest Me" SOON ' z e,' w . -5 i