THE WOLVERINE lto verine OFFICIAI STUDENT NEWSPAPER. OF TIE SUMMER SESSION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday afternoons Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Mighigan, as second-class matter Subscription by carrier or mail, $x.oo Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Stleet Phones: Business-96o; Editorial-2414 Ece Hours: Managing editor-i :oo to 2z:oo o'clock daily except Saturday; Business Manager-i :oo to 2:00 o'clock daily except Saturday ommunications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the signature not necessarily to ap- in print, but as an evidence of faith, and notices of events will be published in The erine at the discretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to the office. nsigned communications will receive no consideration. No manuscript wl be returned sthe writer incloses postage. 'he Wolverine does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in the communications. Mark K. Ehlbert......................Managing Editor Phone 2414 or 2227-M J.Ellsworth Robinson...............Business Manager Phone 241 or 1505 er M. Campbell.............City Editor Howard Weeks.:............Column Editor n Marx....... ...Associate Editor Chas. R. Osius Jr........:Directory Editor Martha Guernsey............Women's Editor Mark B. Covell...............Assistant Business Manager Thornton W. Sargent Jr...,................Issue Editor REPORTERS F. G. Merz . l;. Beretta Robert W. Taylor Samuel Lamport BUSINESS STAFF Schneider George H. Heideman Richard Lambrecht William Wachs TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1919 SCHOOL MA'AMS Any person who attempts to speak of any woman or class of women at time does so at his peril. The presumptions, arising by virtue of com- experience, are against the existence of a judicial state of mind in the ker. Add to such remarks as may be addressed to this subject the fact the dissertation is composed in the spring or summer, and the sit- n is admirably suited to an application of the doctrine legally desig- I as res ipsa loquitur. Nevertheless, we purpose to invoke such im- ty as editorial plurality may afford and to venture a few words of im- anal comment upon a highly personal topic. Language has been said to be a system of symbols., To us the term )ol ma'am" was formerly most representative of a high celluloid , spectacles, and a brass-edged ruler. Geometrically speaking, the of ma'am consisted of 180 degrees or "the sum. of such angles as, taken her, equaled a straight line." But whatever may have been the accu- of our concept as concerns particular cases, and of this we express opinion, experience has again demonstrated the danger of generalities. have met several school ma'ms and were not afraid. In fact, we have less hesitancy in "thinking aloud" before .them than in the company ,e average co-ed. A wider cross-section of life has lent a kindlier in- and a more tolerant philosophy. Stability of character and maturity .dgment are things not to be gleaned from he facts between preface finis, and are refreshing stimulants when encountered in a scholastic sphere., Most of us know what it means to receive an education; few of us v what it means to impart one. The latter, whatever the compensa- therefor, is essentially altruistic. It is fundamentally service, - and ce, whether it be the forceful task of regicide (we prefer the expres- to that suggested by Mr. Ford), or the peaceful occupation of teach- is the practical pursuit of vision. The school ma'am's wagon is ed to a star whose effulgence is more than hinted by its mellowing On the Other Hand- Hey! Look! Added Attraction It is with great pleasure that we an- nounce to our gentle readers that Miss Beatrice Barefacts has consented to grace this here colyum with her ad- vice to the needy. Miss Barefacts will answer all or any questions that you desire to put to her and if you desire secrecy she will write you a personal letter if you do not forget to enclose 50 cents in stamps or coin. Miss Barefacts just came in and says she prefers the coin if it is just the same to you. Here are Miss Barefacts' answers for today: Dear Miss Barefacts: Something just occurred to me as I was writing this that I thought might be interesting to you. Do you think it would? 22E. 22E: No, I'm sure it wouldn't. Beatrice. Dear Miss Barefacts:' How far is it from Nova Scotia to calm Beach, how can flies walk on the ceiling, and what time is it now in Tibet? Scientist. Scientist: Yes. Beatrice. Dear Miss Barefacts: I am a girl of 36 and a young man asked me to go out with him the other night. This is the first time this has ever happened. I have talked it over with mother and she doesn't know what to say. What shall I do? Co-ed. Co-ed: Don't worry, it won't hap- pen again. He is probably sober by now. Beatrice. "Summer Fiction, 39c." Yes, sum- mer fiction and some are by Harold Bell Wright. Make Your Stenographer Your Barber For sale, two Dictaphone machines; also Dictaphone shaviAg machine. De- troit Shipbuilding Co. -Detroit Free Press. From old George Brand Take me far, He leaves the band On his cigar. You Will Go Swimming, Will You! LOST-Near the river, silver neck- lace, large links with. opal set in pendant. Finder notify Wolverine office. -From the classified. why is It .when you're feeling good and the sun is shining and the birds are singing and everything is rosy why do you have to go out and play golf and spoil your day? Walt Masonry Walt Mason is a great old boy and he must have made a pile; each day he fills 'his little niche and makes his readers smile. No subject is too deep for. him, his wit is sharp as flint; he takes things as they come around and slaps them into print. Things large and small, he takes 'em all and makes 'em all seem new; and if you read him every night you'll see things in a different .light and know what he says is true. Out of 'em all he takes a fall, financier or miser; one night he'll kid the president and then he'll rap the kaiser. When a man has made a hit like Walt his imitators are not few, and so don't think that I'm in fault if I'm one of them too. Who Raised Him? Ypsilanti's chief of police is named Cain. Yes, So It Is Snared in a movie ad: Choosing a Wife-a first National attraction. What Does It Say? LOST-White poodle dog answering to the name of "Toodles." -Ann Arbor Times. Ching Li put his iron down on its stand. Mechanically he wiped the dew from his forehead and mechan- ically he turned off the switch. -From a Current Magazine. Who ever heard of a Chinese laun- dryman having dew on his forehead? Miss Douglas Proves She Did Not Drown -Headline. That's the trouble nowadays, so many of the girls have such a hard time proving that they're alive. -H. W. I(EEP GYM OPEN LONGER' LAW STUDENT SAYS SHOWERS SHOULD BE AVAILABLE AT LATER 110URS1 Editor, The Wolverine:- An editorial recently appearing in The Wolverine criticized the regula- tions of the tennis courts and sug- gested that more liberal hours be es- tablished for the use of same. The criticism seemed well founded, but no action has resulted in correction of conditions. I can, therefore, hardly hope that my remarks will accomplish any practical result, but I cannot al- low that fact to deter me from voic- ing a matter which is little different in circumstance. Why does the gymnasium close every 'day at 5 o'clock and remain closed all of Saturday afternoon? No doubt the janitor of the building is as much entitled to recreation as we, but the fact cannot be gainsaid that the building is run primarily for the use of the students. We pay for lock- ers and it would seem that their use once a day is not unreasonable in summer. Yet those of us who are en- rolled in the professional schools and whose work often runs through until Saturday noon or afternoon, are de- nied the possibility of exercise in the gym on that day. The showers are one of the most attractive features of the building dur- ing summer. Yet it is almost impos- sible for anyone who has an afternoon class on any week day to play tennis on Ferry field and get back to the gym by 5 o'clock in theafternoon. It is impossible if that class is from 3 to 4 in the afternoon. We respectfully submit that more convenient arrangements may and should be put in force. A LAW STUDENT. DEATH OF BURGLAR REVEALS DUAL LIFE OF PENN STUDENT Philadelphia, Pa. July 21.--Identifi cation of the burglar shot by Pro- fessor Shappelle in a bold attempt to rob a fraternity house here has re- vealed the double role played by a student in the University of Pennsyl-- vania. The masked robber has been iden- tified by one of his classmates as An- thony W. Holfelner of Buffalo. No one had suspected Holfelner of lead- ing a dual life as he was always a conscientious student Examination of his rooms, however, has revealed a large amount of plunder taken from other buildings and fraternities which have been robbed recently. The young student burglar was probably a kleptomaniac as investiga- tion has shown that he did not at- tempt to dispose of any of his booty. One noted psychologist has said that Holfelner was probably a victim of de- mentia praecox. 1ID-SEMESTERS TO BE HELD IN LAW SCHOOL THIS WEEK Mid-semester examinations will be held this week for students of the Law school. This will be the end of the fifth week in the Law school when many of the courses are completed. A number of the students will be graduated at the end of the fifth week, Watch for the Student Directory. Advertise in The Wolverine. Wahr's University Bookstores For Traveling Anywhere Anytime You will enjoy using the A. B. A. Travelers' Checks as issued by this bank. They come in denominations of $10, $20, $50 and $100, are cashed by Banks, Hotels, Railroads, etc., without identification. ASKA US Farmers & Mechanics Bank 101-105 S. Main 330 S. State St. (Nickels Arcade) Go to LYNDON'S 719 N. UNIVERSITY AVE. Eastman Kodaks Eastman Films GUARANTEED AMATEUR FINISHING ENLARGEMENTS FROM YOUR NEGATIVES A SPECIALTY We have led in amateur finishing for twelve years and are still lead- ing:-Why? Because we give you QUALITY. We guarantee our devel- oping or no Charge. We have the latest and best equipped store in the State and our help is experienced in every line of Photography. IF YOU WANT SATISFACTION BRING YOUR FILMS TO Two Doors fromHilm LYNDON & COMPANY Uni9 North Hill Auditorium Aj.J1 X University Avenue For Your Recreation We have to offer for your recreation 100 'Tennis Rackets Wright and Ditson's strong line also the Lee Slotted Throat Racket All Grades $2.00 to $11.00 Racket Restringing a Specialty ------ , LEAVE YOUR FILMS AT QUARRY'S DRUG STORE FOR THE SWAINS TO DEVELOP AND PRINT MOODS story in a current issue of a magazine has for its subject the dif- aspects in which various things appear, according to the mood of eholder. When he out of sympathy with the world, when things seem Ming wrong with him, everything looks to be out of joint. There is a mansion which seems to him to be.cold and forbidding. The rich old t.e is a heartless money-grabber, and his wife a glittering fashion- of society. ut later, when his heart is happy, when his spirit is in tune with the the same things appear to him in a vastly different light. The mansion finest on the street, where before it had been the ugliest. Now it es warmth and cheerfulness and beckons the passer-by. The mag- a the kindliest olld man imaginable, who gives him the key to his cigars and does his best to make him feel at home. And his wife the cold-blooded society person he had imagined, but a motherly, e woman, whose clothes now appear to be simple and beautiful, previously they had seemed over-conspicuous and too ornamental. was all in "the eye of the beholder," as the author (states. It did Utter what he said when his mood was melancholy and down-hearted. thing appeared in that light. And when his mood was one of joyous- t was reflected on everything. There are these two ways of looking things, and it depends on the mood we are in as to how we shall see a~ E he important thing is not that we should try to avoid seeing things melancholy mood, but that we should avoid the melancholy mood. are a matter of will, and it is just as easy to will being in the happy as it is to will. the opposite. There are those who are crushed by mis- , and whose whole after-life is changed and embittered by it. But ig man. is *ever crushed. He is an optimist "despite everything - is the optimists that accomplish things in the world. The man with the r outlook, who sees all things in a sad and dreary light, is never the f action and of results. te examination of Henry Ford as a witness for himself seems not un- mental vaudeville performance. At such an exhibition of intellectual er and incompetence the cynic must sneer, the satirist smile and the opher sigh. If there never has been a valid argument for classical ion before there is one now in the revelation of the confusions, the ions and the contradictions of this remarkable man's untutored -The Cincinnati Enquirer. hat with the summer tan of the male and the conspicuous fair bloom female, -it is hardly a figure of speech to remark that the complexion versity life has changed. cabinet position devoted to the administration of aviation is 'pro- Other flighty suggestions are in order. res sell for $250 in Hungary. That's surely stretching rubber. SCHAEBERLE & SON, Music House 110 SO. MAIN ST. Complete line of High Grade Pianos, Player Pianos, Victrolas, Victor Records All String and Wind Instruments SEE US FOR YOUR MUSICAL WANTS Subscribe for The Wolverine. $.75 for the rest of the summer. Bathing S uits WE HAVE THE TWO PIECE KIND WITH THE WHITE BELT GEO J. MOE, "Sport Shop" DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (March 30, 1919) (Central Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars-8 :xo a in., and hourly to 8: io p. m. Jackson Limited and Express Cars-p :48 a. m., and every hour to 9:48 p. m. (Xx- presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor.) Local Cars East Bound-6:oo a. m., :05 a. m. and every two hours to 9:o5 p. In., 10:50 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, I1:45 P. i., 12:20 a. M., z :xo a. mr, and to Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-6:a8 a. m. and r1:20 p. M. Absolutely.. The Coolest Place in Town Air Changed Once a Minute ICE CREAM and HOME MADE CANDIES The Sugar Bowl Phone 967 109 SO. STATE Courteous and satisfactory TREATMENT to every custom- er, whether the account be large or small. The Ann'Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $WiO,000.00 Resources........$4,000,000.00 Northwest Cor. Main & Huron. 707 Nnrth TnivArsity Ave Mid=Summer Sale All Light Three piece Suits 1=4_Off N. F. ALLEN CO. The House oj Kuppenheimer in Ann Arbor