morning except Monday ity year by the Board in Publications. 4fember of Western Conference Editorial .ociation. 'he Associated Press is exclusively en- ed to the use for republication of all! s dispatches credited to it or not other. e credited in this paper and the local s published-' therein. :nered at the postoffice ,at Ann Arbor, higan, as second class matter. f ubscriptionbycarrier or mail, $3.50. )ffices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. d Street, 'hones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- s. 060. ommunications not to exceed Soo words signed, the signature not necessarily to ear in print, but as an evidence of faith, l notices of events will be published in Daily at the discretion of the Editor, if, at or mailed to The Daily office." Un- led coinniunications will receive no con- ration. No manuscript will be returned, ss the writer encloses postage. The Daily snot' necessarily endorse the sentiments ressed in the communications. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176X MANAGING EDITOR MARION B. STAHL lug to praise their wives after the latter had seized the reins as they had been before. AFTER THE SCALPER'S SCALP That Ferry field will be filled to ca- pacity at both the Illinois and Wiscon- sin games is now a certainty. From all indications, thousands of football enthusiasts will be unable to procure tickets for these games. In conse- quence of this, those persons who wish to realize a profit from this ex- traordinary demand, may sell their tickets for abnormally high prices. To this policy of "scalping," the University authorities and the Ath- letic association are actively opposed. Any outsider resorting to this proce- dure, if discovered, will be fined $100 and costs. Any student so discovered will be referred to the faculty, and will suffer whatever fate they may de- termine. A Northwestern student was re- cently given a large fine for scalping Throughout the entire Western con- ference there is a decided hostility to this unfair method of profit making. At Michigan scalping will be closely watched; and with a heavy fine, and possible dismissal from the University as the penalty for those discovered selling tickets at abonrmal prices, the practice will hardly be worth while. 1ASTEROLL /EDITORIAL COMMENT WHAT KINDA A PRECARIOUS PROFESSION SEATS DIIJA (New York Times) GETw MICHIGAN SONG LAS What Left Writes About Is Evidently Right Did you ever read The Michigan Daily The morning after- And suspect a man By the poem he wrote Because the same thing Happened to you The day before-- And you're a girl! ? ? RIGHT. But, my dear, HOW do you know it's a man? Buft Tlen, Berkeley Is a Big, Big Towni "Late dances were taboo Tuesday for University of California co-eds. . . On Friday and Saturday nights 'Goodnight' is at midnight. All women students must reach home by 2 a. m." - Det. Free Press. Day and Night "Night Editor-T. A. DAY." - Purdue Exponent. * * * PUTTIN' 'EM OVER IN JOISEY t / .~ . 1 Who is dis guy De Joisey Boid I hears a wise frosh shout Well all I gotta say me lad When I'm around look out. 1 A dispatch from Chicago states that V by the will of his father, -enry Kitch- ell Webster, the novelist, is to ' re- ceive double the amount bequeathed to each of his five brothers and sis- ters. So far as Mr. Webster person- ally is concerned, such tender con- sideration may have been unnecessary. He is a fairly popular writer, but his father was apparently not ignorant of the woes of cultivators of literature. "Look at the biography of authors," wrote Carlyle; "except the Newgate Calendar it is the most sickening chapter in the history of man." The story of starving authors is ancient. Cervantes languished in jail because he could not pay his debts, and Dr. Johnson walked the streets of London at night because he lacked the price of a bed. The recent revival of interest in Herman Melville served to bring to light the fact that the author of "Moby Dick" died in New York, only a generaton ago, in poverty and virtually forgotten. A recent volume vouchsafes the information that Walt Whitman, but ten years before his death, was forced to beg a meal at thej door of a stranger. Bernard Shaw has confessed that during the first nine I. years of his'literary career he earned only, a five-pound note and lived at the expense of 'his mother. The successful author of our time is doubtless to be envied. But it is aj question whether the unsuccessful au- thor's. lot is not frequetnly harsher than formerly. Once 'he might seek a patron. It was not considered partic-' ularly disgraceful if he resorted to begging. Today a privilege of that. sort is not readily granted. The un- successful author is told that the proper course for him to pursue is to :two A T : .1 0RH~ BOTH STORES .. .. You will be surprised at the large results obtained at low cost from "Daily" classified ad--Adv. a ON-OR 140 qW.AA s Editor..................Paul Watzel Editor ,..............James B. Young stadit City Editor........Marion' Kerr oral Board Chairman......aR. Meiss t Editors- Ralph Byers . Iai.ry Hocy fP. Dawson,' Jr J. E. Mack T. l-ershdor!.-r R. C. Moriarty EI A. Donahue 'ts Editor...............F. H. McPike say Magazine Editor......a Delbert Clark ie-'s Editor ........Marion Koch or Editor. ..........Donald Coney *ernce Editor.. ..... Bb... B. Grundy rial Editor ................Robert Tar- it E~ditor ..................I. H.Ailes I.- Pryor' othy Benn urice Berni A. Billing B. Butler C. Clark B. Connab lyn J. Cou Assistants Tohii Gsrlinzhouse ctts Isabel Fisher an Winona A. Hibbard ton Samuel Moore T'. G. McShane W. B. Rafferty 4e W. H. Stoneman ughlin Virginia Tryon hael P. M. Wagner te A. P. aWebbink UOtt Franklin Dickman Joseph 'EIpstein 3, .' W. ,Ruavieh BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER TT_____t T__ rtisipg ............John J. Ijamel, Jr. rt ing............... dward F. Conlin rtising ........Walter K. Scherer' unts ....,.........Laurence IT. Farrot ulation...............David J. M. Park ication ,.......L. Beaumont Parks Assistants nsend H. Wolfe Alfred M. White neth Seick Wn. D, Roesser ge Rockwood Allan S. Morton y M. Hayden James A. Dryer ene L. Dunne Wm. I. Good Graulich, Jr. Clyde L. Hagerman C. Haskin A. Hartwell, Jr. 'ey E. Reed J. Blumenthal . Putnam Tow a;rd Hayden Armantrout \.K. Kidder . Coot5er THenry Freud ace Flowera - l{frbert P Bostwick i. Ri dle IZ Pierce od T,. Tha1 'HUR1SDAY, 'OCTOBER 26, 1922 ght Editor-HARRY D.. HOEY PRESERVING THE TIMES The management of a Swedish mo- tion picture company located at Stockholm recently decided to film the life and adventures of the famousj Swedish monarch, Charles XII, who died in 1718. The preserving of his- torical data, and the furnishing of na-1 tional inspiration are given as the reasons for this project. Whatever motive the producers may assign to this enterprise, they may! be certain of one thing, that they are using the moving picture to the great- est advantage.dThough many may be reluctant to admit, the educational field is one of the provinces in which the cinema may do its most valuable service. Yet in viewing this undertaking, it becomes increasingly evident how lit- tle we know of our ancestors, compar-, ed with what later generations will know of us, our ways and our cus- toms. This Swedish production, no matter how exactly its scenes are set, regardless of how much the at- mosphere of that day is studied, will yet lack the air of genuineness which will. pervade the pictures of today, when posterity has the opportunity toi see them. Those who attend . moving pictures will readily admit that pictures of the Civil war; or even of more recent times are often sadly lacking when it comes to convincingly creating the atmosphere of that time. It is practi- cally impossible to duplicate the build- ings of the past, and most of the old furniture is not at the disposal of the producers. As far as the actual act-1 ing is concerned an actor, no matter how able, finds it difficult to correct- ly interpret an age with which he has only a secondary acquaintance. The moving picture of today is aI record that will defy the ravaging effect of time on history. Our children will have a far clearer conception of our youth than we haveof that of our parents. THE ROYAL ROAD TO SUCCESS To the making of books on the sub- ject of "success" there is positivelyI no end. Neither is there any end to the doing of articles on this subject, and the latest of these is one from his honor-,--John F. Hyland, railroad' engineer, writer of an autobiography, whom most people have heard is pres- ent mayor of "lil '01 New York." John F. ayers that the road to sue- cess is a hard one; nothing new in this of course. But John F. also i . . DETROIT UNITED LINE$ Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars- a:oo a.m., 7:oo am., 8:oo a.m., 9:05 a.mn. and hourly to 9 :o5 p.m. Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of Anil Arbor)-9.:47 am., and every two hours to 9:47 p.m. Local Cars East Bound-7:oo a m. and every two hours to 9:oo p. m. 11:oo p.m. To Ypsilanti only-i i :40 P.m., 1 :15 a.m. To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7:5o a.m., ia:io p.m. To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Lim- ited cars 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, 4:47 p.m. To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:47 p.m. 1922 OCTOBER 1922 S X T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 #13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23. 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Start Right With a Good Hat! We do all kinds of HIGH CLASS Cleaning and Reblocking of hats at low prices for GOOD WORK. We also make and sell POP- ULAR PRICE and HIGH GRADE hats, FIT THEM TO YOUR HEAD and save you a dollar or more on a hlat. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Street Phone 1792 (Where D..R. Stops at State Street) Mallo Nut Orange Ice French Raspberry Bring Your G uests This Week-End M~'aid- 'o The)%! Only 60c a quart at your dealers I packsa mean left and totes a mean seek ancccupatinwhich will pay him right for his labor.' That is sound advice, I trained Jack Dempsey for the Wil- of course. Yet it leads one to wonder lard fight ' whether there is not inherent in it an This Bull Montana was as meek as tindication that respect for authorship a child is diminishing rather than growing. Till I gives him lessons in "How to Perhaps the greatest authorship has be Wild" always found a more congenial at-t You can talk about your tough choipin mosphere in aristocratic societies than eggs it is ever-likely to dscover in indus- But I'm the leader of the Hoboken trial democracies. yeggs . . Try, thl . .Deticzotus is, Phone 142T7- 2830 Week-End ..Special THE EDITORS ichigan is prepared to welcome the1 ting editors who come to Ann Ar- today to attend the annual con- ion sponsored kby the State Press . A rooming committee has been king 6Tertime' to furnish quarters these distinguished guests, and r entertainment has been unus- y well taken care of. le big football game Saturday to ch they are invited as the guests he coach, the banquet tonight at ch a colleague of international re, n' will speak, and the meeting with ident Marion L. Burton on Fri- evening are some of the atrac- s which have been provided for r enjoyment. it along wth this Michigan hopes students of journalism will co- ate with the heads of the depart- t in enabling these men to take y with theim accurate impres- s of what we are doing here in journalistic endeavors. This will ably engage their' deepest inter- TEMPORARY GALLANTRY ter much heralding the time has tst arrived when women are ris- in politics. Men of charitable, If you wanta know some more about Dis guy De Joisey Boid' { ust write to Mike de traffic cop On Broadway and Toidy-toid. DE JOISEY BOID. WE REGRET we must say to Baron Cognac regarding his communication about those who where not so much shot up on the road to Columbus but were, rather, partially shot, (breathe). Well, we regret to have to say that we shall run it in next Monday's colyum. * * * lHe Probably Got Quite a Rise Out of Chi "We take our hat off to Fleisch- mann, the star guard of the Purdue team, who had to be taken by force out of the Chicago game after he had a ri'b caved in."-Purdue Exponent. Yes, and he foamed at the mouth, I betcha. * * * TO A YOUNG LADY WHO CROSSED - ~HER LEGS IN CLASS How shall I know you in that realm which keeps The disembodied spirits of the dead (As Bryant chirped) when all cor- poreal sleeps, And only plasms slither overhead? When thou shalt wake from much-re- quired repose To dwell forever with the cheru- bim, Spirit alone, sans figure, face, or limb, How shall I know thee then?-God only knows! TOMAS A. CELANO. * * * ; Is This Poetic Justice, or What? Two signs in close juxtaposition in a restaurant: "A. B. C." (first sign). - "This Restaurant is under Amerl- rnh 7t~n~n~r m~r /r..n ..7 ,...,, I ..Www. ---------- MANNERS (Daily Cardinal) Oscar Wilde once murmured some- thing about "manners being more im- portant than morals;" decadent spell-! ing books carried the adage, "Polite- ness is to do and say the kindest thing' in the kindest way;" and we'd ven- ture to conjecture that the result of! the Commerce Mag questionnaire will1 reveal one of the chief complaints against the university man as im- politeness ,or unmannerliness, or thoughtlessness. Thoughtlessness of others covers the whole subject adequately. It in- cludes the entire range of thought, lessnesses from commonplace courte- sy to more complex forms. There un- doubtedly is a current absence of those finer qualities which distinguish the lady or gentleman. It may of course be argued that such qualities are assiduously observed, even on a university campus. Courtesy doesn't take time and it requires very little exertion. The lift of an arm to raise a hat, the stretch of a mouth for a comradely grin and greeting-these are efforts payable on delivery. And the .heightened spirit of good will that would result would be ample compensation. Thought- fulness does, of necessity, possess more complex forms, and the practice of these, too, is surprisingly gratify- ing in its result. You can try it and see! And remember that it isn't particu- larly amusing to anyone to observe the crude and purposely impolite in- dividual. COURTESY (Ohio State Lantern) There is a tendency on the part of some students, as they become more and more adapted to the environment of school life, to overlook or to ap- parently neglect the rules and tradi- MORENCI-ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schedule in Effect October 18, 1922 Central Time (Slow Time) D X X D P.Af. A.M. P. P.M. 2:55 6:55 Lv Morenci .Ar. 1:35- 9:35 (Hotel) 3 :45 7 :4$ .Adrian .... 12:45 8:45 4:15 8:15... Tecumseh . .. 12:15 8:15 41:30 8 :3o... Clinton .... 12 :oo 8 :oo 5:15 9:15 .. Saline .... 11:15 7:i5 5:45 9:45 Ar Ann ArborLv. 10:45 6:45 (Court House Square) A. M. D-Daily. X-Daily except Sundays and Holidays. Friday and Saturday 'special bus for studentt leaves Adrian 1:45, leaves Ann Arbor 4:45. JAMES H. ELLIOTT, Proprietor Phone 926-M Adrian, Mich. Y. W. C. A. CAFETERIA " ONE BLOCK OFF STATE 508 WILLIAM .... t i , A few cold* suggestions for If you have visitors for the Illinois game, you will naturally be looking for a place to take them for meals which will retain yourreputatfion as a host and yet be sparing of your purse. EXCELLENT FOOD AT SENISBLE PRICES weather and your, comfort 4'. OVERCOATS Large, roomy Goats, CAPS of soft woolens in the correct patterns for fall wear comes out fiat on the platform that j the road to secess is a wearisome one; nothing new in this. But John F. says something else and having hark- ed back to the Greek proverb that "it is the part of the wise to take good out of that which is evil" we herebyf offer it: "Fight laziness as your worst enemy. There is an old maxim that laziness begins in cobwebs and ends Raglan or plain some with belts sleeves, 4 i can Management (second .sign).- . . everywhere smile indulgently, in iron chains. Laziness kills ambi- ; , e sntions of their institution. In doing heir hats to these newly elect- tion and butters no parsnips. The lazy so they are showing lack of consid-1 ice holders, and go home deter., man is headed for the poor house. OUR WASHING lady shuffles the eration for fellow-students. 1 to lot an air of chivalry per- Finally, write on your hat-brim that clothing of the several collegians she One of the most common failings of all their relations with their fe- there is no royal road to success. If bathes laundry for, but this week we this group is their habit of making colleagues. there were such a road the world have a idea. We are sending a ragged ; the reading-rooms of the Library a characteristic of the human would be full of successful people. pair of socks in hope that we may place for their personal conversa- good or 'bad, is to be generous to Hard work is as good as any to tray- draw an ace in the exchange. tions. They do not seem to consider lately arisen to power. For the el on."** the annoyance they cause others, whoi ly great to patronize those'who If this isn't a piece of pure, un- MINISTER says life is like a foot- are there to study. recently attained an estimable adulterated literature of the first wa- ball match. Now ain't it the truth- Considerable has been written, most-I is an enjoyable undertaking. ter, par excelence and bar none, we'll fifty to do the work and fifth thous- ly in jest, concerning Library "dates" >leasure derived from it is dou, leave it to the editors of Whizz Bang and to do the shouting! Perhaps this has caused the mis- hose who receive it are flattered or the Smart Set. CAL CULUS. guided element to consider it quite nk that the folks higher up ap- -* **the thing to spend a social evening te true worth, and the flatterers An earthquake occurred this week The Scotch Will Leak Out in the Library ,interfering with the iment themselves on their un- 5,200 miles south of Washington, and! "Tonight-Isaac MACROSSAN." actual studying that is going on 1 natures. All is well as long as yet Georgetown unversity in that lo- - -Our Own Daily. around them. Dates with study are arvenues remain in an inactive cality was the first to discover it. * * * not objectionable, but ordinary dates but let them once assert them- Shows the value of a higher educa- Everybody knows how we always are, and amity is lost forever. tion. If there were any inhabitants in; harp on the great good this colyum ieautiful sentiment is displayed the vicinity of the earthquake, they is capable of in its moral moments, The convention also brought forth 3 men whe resolve to be chival- probably didn't even know about it. ! * * the startling revelation that womenE o the women who have just en- - - Well, isn't the staggard prose at the were on earth first, and the only rea- the field o n 1ftie. h 1-.M-3v-et-v The want ads have it- that certfanI ,head o f todial'a ,'an. a~ aet" nnint c-1- .-,,., 10t ,- ,-, i! { i f WOOL HOSE Th famous Wilson hose with or without clocks GLOVES A complete lne of buck- skin and mocha, lined or unlined, gauntlet or button wrist, as you prefer - .,. Van. Boven & C ress I