00- r t ' 82JLU I il11till 11111111117 1 r --- "-- IS TOBE MICHIGAN'S IYEAR? VICTOR Y A T 0.;SU.FETE IS HIN __, ,: r i . .. . . . ... _ ESSAY CONTEST OPE'N TO COLLEGE STITDENTS "Forty cash prizes, ranging from -,$10' to $8300, will be given by. the Interco- legiate.Prohibition association for the best essay dealing with the solution of the prohibition problem. The contest closes Nov. 1. The contest is open to all students attending institutions of higher learn- ing in the United States and in Cana- da. - The essays shall have from 2000 o 3000 words, and four copies of each essay mus be sent to the office of the Intercollegiate Prohibition iassociation at 14 .West Washington St., Chicago. The prizes will be awarded Nov. 24 to Nov. 29 at Toronto, Canada. Further information concerning~ they contest will be furnished by Louis. Rei-E man, '16, Lane hail. Michigan Daily and Chimes for $4.50. Sign up for Whimsies toda.-Adv. v A .REAL. GOOD MEAL CHOP' SUEY * STEADS Everything good at Ann Arbor Chop .SueY 314 S. State-Second *Floor- .. y -___ i o il J 7 '-lq; ry .. ' Y v Y L / ,. " , - " ; -,:' t.'-'t _ -fir j/ ; < , ; - % , i _ V I n A \Yi rl A Sc-ar 'the. Thing; I : $1- -$3.50 A SCA F ofcaaml's'hair A adds unmistakably 2o one's appearance and comfort. In plain colors and combinations. $1 to $3.50. ' I f Newest -Hats for Winter; $3.50.-$5 S HAPES anid -colors for fall k)and winter show variations from those of former years. They wil~l fit you to perfection. $3.50 to $5.' There s tyexc mf r tion of '80,000 p~ersons packed in new stadium and bands playing ot ralsing of American flog. ink into stadiumt from w~its of 0., S. F. a tillery ,corps firing 21-gn salute. Below,, typ- 1CL ~fikgaa captain.' lie an~d VantlerVoort, MIV~icigan'tackle, have eluded 0. S. U. defense t~0. S- IT. runnuer :(KMee) if lhe fakes forward pass. adherents whro 1 teams that made. her famous years ago.' tack *and a strong defensive line. Mich- :ter that 19 to Th~e defensive, la f .!Captain Goe'eI ,igan beat 0. S. -U. 19 to 0. The stad- iversity at: the and:, Kirk_, at .the., en'ds and -'the', allP ium, officially, dedicated with impres-. s *new. stadim arun ,praying ; of . Kpe backfield Isive. ceremonies, was filled to capacity ''' st~,~ i~i hi~ii1 and thousands--were turned away. p.,i .set t sa "' e b ittspots-in the team __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ oeof '.- thp WhiohI show s' a:,powrfutl'. driving at-. __ _______ t. ' S . .J it 77 i : j i, 5 f 4 nH. -S-MIc oatsE conomy, too, forp rices are lowU Ti i _ nl LSTERS, greatcoats; ;chesterfields, box coats, ragi[ans as adc by' Hart r x?;, t ;, 1 k Tilt id Upset 0s of critics' advance gridirons throughout trday remained, for the taid and upright .posi- ~teamns figured for vic- hhrough on 'the top of one game, however, remained upright, an unsung eleven gave ,it ck and spilled most of over the field. epresented the Univer- n the game at .Urbana at conqueror of Yale.j to win by a top heavy n, but that is about 'all for, the Hawkeyes. The e of. Illinois ran ramp- Old Gold ranks out- gaming the cohorts of ,nd losing by the score as narrow as the slen- .whims, after a battle be forgotten. Coach the year with an al- een- aggregation, uni- versally picked as winners .of a posi- tion close to the cellar in the Big Ten,, has built a team that serried the ranks_ of Iowa and drove, fear into the heart' of each of its future opponents. The fighting Purple of Northwest- ern, .doped to lose to Minnesota by a' close score, showed. again :the -spirit that battled but could not quite con- quer Chicago and held the -Gophers to a. 7 to. 7 tie. With the score ;7 -to '0 against his men in the closing main- utes of play Chuck Palmer, Purple half back cooped up a Minnesota fumble on his own 'goal line, dashed through the entire. Gopher eleven' evading Earl Martineau, thle last of the Northmen, in one of the most sensational swerv- ing runs in years and. planted the oval behind the Minnesota goal where the] goal kick tied the count,. Wisconsin toyed with .Indiana, win ning, 20 to 0, and Chicago's :second. team easily downed Purdue;. 12 to 0. Back in 'the East Harvard took a gilt victory, from Center, in, the last meeting of the two ' teams for 'many yearn . ditiutr ornaly2f year. Gass ipe an pierpar- peily N"0LARSCGRSCME PIE LNHESOA O* r o ra ourSt ki 4! Ti mefor "Woo'I Hose; 75c==$1L.50 WARM and- smart are woolen :hose in black and numerousmixtures. '75c, to $1.50 New golf hose, too, at $2 to $3 a panr. Schaffner & Ma- be of the finest v ao.Iens. n. . Their new stY les and. colors give you a well-dressed appeaance. The r'long weir will save You money. - -- '. , , - It ,:: T-. 11-2-123 X35-X40-$45 Dance at4'Ypsi' nug, 8: 30.-Adv.. every Friday even-I t Are you in earnest about having to economize? -Don't do it by eating poor foods. Here you can get the fin est possible at lowest prices Att'ractive New G l vsx$ - $ HERE'S every color in new , gloves that you may desire. lvsta Well made of the finest leathers obtainable. $2 to: $4. 'colar Aittached Shirts; $2.50 WVTHITE shirts with collars VY attached - -especially' when- made by Arrow or Man- hattan - are, what' young men wear now. $2.503to $3. Warm Pajamas of Flanneil; $2 a w T .A TXTTY -w' r P- !. ..,very overcoat m u s t sotisfy completely'- -or yoar.money back -Trausrs S s uif6r onl ' 30' In newest styles, fabrics, colors T HERE'S only one way to practice economy in the suit you buy for winter.. That's to purchase one of these ..models by Hart Schaffner & Marx. Other fine makes, too. MaIde of the best fabrics, in new colo, rs , an4 styles for dress, school, sports, business. An extra pair - a f trousers to give a you double wear i Other 2-trousers suits , r ced to t$45 I T he Re",ule- Conlin Company Arcade Cafeteria ; . .. I II TC"lLNNF 1 na amaifnr n,