i . . THE, MICHIGAN DAIL'Y' WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMI :* , THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEM rST ADDRESSES C, OF C, LUN'CHEON Is of Thfieulty in Distribution of 41,000 Seas to 100,000 Foot- ball Fanus AR'S SCHEDULE HEAVY ielding II. Yost, director of in- olegiate athletics, and Coach rge E. Little spoke concerning higan football at a luncheon giv- by the Ann Arbor Chamber of nerce at the Camber of Commerce yesterday noon. Prof. Ralph W. ler, of the Law school and chair- n of the Board of Control of Athlet- presided and introduced to the iness men the two new members the football coaching staff, Frank yes of Marietta college, assistant ' coach, and Harvey C. Emery of nceton, back lfield coach. oach Yost confined his reiarks efly to the deplorable ticket short- to our big games, and dealt with difficulty which the board of con- . experienced in determining a distribution of seats. According' roach Yost, Michigan has today one he finest athletic plants and equip- it of any institution in the United tes. It is the only plant developed iJely Ithrougb. its ow'nf teceipts. ety-nine percent of Michigan equip- it was purchased from gate earn- s. "It's all bosh about our com- rcializing athletics,".said Yost. "We all building for a greater Michigan no one is getting rich. As to :et distribution the board has done best to be fair and divide the 41,000 ts equally between the 100,000 per- demanding tickets." Everyone would like the 50 yard " he says. "Some have even sent requests to have place reserved them on the 55 yard line, and we e done our best to satisfy all." oach LitUte1spoke on the extraor ary heavy schedule, the strongest 15 years, which Michigan has to e this year. Ile reviewed the' ngth of the opposing teams, but said t it was impossible to forecast the ilts. "We hope to rededicate Ohio's lium for them, but only good hard -k will do it," he says. "We want backing of every business man student whether we win or lose. chances this year depend not only! n our veterans but also upon our vmen." ,uenos Aires, Sept. 23-A dis- ch from Santiago saysthe Span- charge d'affaires has informed Chilean foreign office that the nish government recognizes the sent Chilean government. ['RONIZE DAILY ADVERTISERS A f t Cooley Terms. Admiral Moffett. sreponsibiliy. _oy rs d il feCooleywill also speak Thurs- As "Man Well Worth Hearing" day night when be introduces the admiral to the engineering society. Rear Admiral Williaii A. Moffett, who will head the program for the engineering society's banquet tomor- row night at the Union, is, in the es- timation of Dean Mortimer E. Cooley of the engineering school, "A man well worth hearing." Dean Cooley's friendsh'sip with, the admiral began in 1917 when he went as official repre- sentative of the University to review the Great Lakes training station, which was commanded by Rear Ad- iniral Moffett during the World War. "I don't know what he will speak about," said the Dean in an inter- view yesterday afternoon, "but I know he will raise the students to a higher plane of thinking and convince them of the real service which can be rendered in the field of engineer-. ing." Dean Cooley then went on to relate anecdotes of his experiences with the navy commander while at the Great Lakes station and to praise him as a high type of man. Rear Admiral Moffett, now chief of bureau of the United States Navy aeronautics, has had an adventurous career. In the Sapnish-American war he served under Admiral Dewey at the capture of Manila; in 1914 he commanded the battleship Chester at Vera Cruz when demand was made for salute of the American flag by Admiral Mayo. At the capture of this Mexican city he was awarded the con- gressional medal of honor for brave conduct in battle and in the World UNION ROOMS RESERVED BY ALUMNIFOR-' GAMES All guest rooms in the Michigan Union have been reserved for the week ends of the Iowa, Wisconsin and Northwestern games this fall, accord- ing to Union officials. Most of the reservations were made several mlonths ago, some as early- as, thei Idcay of the game last fall. There arei still a number of rooms left for the week end of the Miami game and these may be reserved in the office of the Union. War was awarded the distinguished service medal for "exceptionally mer-j itorious service in a position of great Read the Want Ads i ) t i .) f pF ona v1 I ; fl .>. .: ', I ', i,. ' ,,. , - , ItIII' . := ~ {i f < ; .''1I r' (_;:. . ;f! ' ~I , . I i;,1 _: _.:, I ,' ;°, ,i; , , f :: 1 , : ; I , (, ! ; L, _, da . i f ^ -b '.. 113a! ni6ati ° . .: p., - ': r ! i: ; {".: 1 .' r ,:.. .. i i' ; i : ;: :" t' . l k Y.(?~ ' 'hCLif iii r: id" ti i.' j i '.:'i I I'.:' I. 4:. ' t ,, 1 r. f ; j ' 1 ! 1 ' :. 1: 1 j a r .'} i. l; . k ii: " 5t 6... kF . it ,. .i r a I j 0 0 The modernized Q 0. E. GU. The Heksher 3il*n, New York GO Warren & Wetmore, Architctrs servants Architectr- Todya dnd Tomorrow "E great buildings of today, d4igned in masses which rear rug- ged, mounting profiles into the sky, foretell even greater and more massive structures for the next half century. Always a close co- ordination of architecture and eng ccering, of design and construc- tion, the architecture of the future ti.1 find architect and engineer working ever more closely together. Certainly modern invcntion-moder, engineering skill and organi- zation, will rove more than equal icrdemands of the architecture of the future.I of thou Eversharp and Wahl Pen are modern, per- fected instruments for recording thought. Six new features-we mention specially the non-clogging rifled tip, quick reload- ing and interchangeability of parts--make Eversharp more convenient and dependable than ever before. Wahl Pen through the improved all- metal construction has increased ink Ca- pacity, strength to resist wear and abuse, and the beauty good taste demands in personal articles. Eversharp is priced $1 to $45 -Wahl Pen $5 to $55. gade in duplicate designs for meched sets II ,; '; O T I'S. E LE VATOR C O M PAN Y Offices in all Principal ,ities of the World Made in the U. S. A. by THE WAHL COMPANY, Chicago Canadian Factory THE WAHL COMPANY, Ltd., Toronto Manufacurers of the WahiEversharp and the Wahl All-Metal Fountain Pen .l1, . . O.rO'° I",r .I", I".I:/". 1 " /. ./rI" ". 1 ,I^,/" d"4 ". "'°/1.d.P":'/./".0';/, "./".I"'.i"", . o . " . .I. .I". +r0'",r " ;' FARMERS AND MECHAN 101-105 S.MAIN ST.--ANN ARBOR, MIC ATHLLETIC LPROG9RAM TRYOUTS -7 All sophomores and (second semester freshmen who wish to try out for the Athletic Pro- gram staff can see the manager or assistant manager at the Press building between 4 and 5 o'clock any day this week. As- signment of work will be made at this time. 1 fI I f _____________________ - -__..__________.__.1 I HOOSE YOUR BANK WITH THE SAME DISCRIMINA- TION YOU USE IN THE SELECTION OF YOUR FRIENDS. MAKE SURE OF ITS ABILITY TO SERVE YOU ADEQUAELY. IT'S IMPORTANT. THIS BANK ABLY DIRECTED, STRONG, SAFE, RELIABLE QUALIFIES WELL. ICS BANK H.--330 S. STATE iI h HAVE YOU SUBSCRIBED YET READ THE;1 MTIGAN. DAILY W . . . _ . _ .. . . < WThe P eWpRE ECTESD WA/I VFRHANJ &MM1rfI P1W Ii .0 i 7 ... .. . -. . . .. Subscribe for The Michigan Iailly IORTHAND YPEWRI TJNG :)OKKEEPIN EX.RETARTAL Classes Now Forming HAMILTON BUSPNESS COLLEGE State and Williams Superior equipment--pro- cess plus the effort and desire to excell make SC HOO L OF MUSIC .r . ./..o/. P".I'"1,,a ": ".%,.f 0" 1" I"°.1, /.i",onn, ". ,d« ,P1".rE d '. '"« . .r . ?' White Swan the superior I cleaners. Dry cleaning U, Moo" CHORAL UNION SERIES 1. October 23, MARIA JERITZA, Soprano 2. November 3, GUY MAIER and LEE PATTISON, Pianists 3. November 19, "THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO," Hin- shaw Opera Co. 4. December 5, JASOHA HEIPETZ, Violinist 5. January 28, ALFRED CORTOT, Pianist 6. February 13, SOPHIE BRASLAU, Contralto Course tickets may be ordered by mail as follows: $7.00-PATRON'S TICKETS. (Holder has privi- lege of retaining same location for the May Festival. Three center sections on both Main Floor and in First Balcony, front EXTRA CON'CERT SERI E's 1. November 13, SOUSA'S BAND, Lieut.-Commander John Philip Sousa, Conduictor1 2. December 15, DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Ossip Gabrilowitsch, Conductor 3. January 19, KIBALOHICH RUSSIAN CHOIR Basile Kibalchich, Conductor 4. February 23, DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Guy Maier Le Pattison Arthur Shattuck Ossip Gabrilowitsch, Conductor 5. March 16, DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA\ Ilya Schkolnik, Violinist Ossip Gabrilowitsch, Conductor Course tickets may be ordered by mail as follows: $5.00-Three center sections on both Main Floor and in First Balconv. front in rear. $1 per suit, laundry 15% discount, at station in Press bldg. Cash and carry.' TeIephone 165-3238 I to rear. 11 III