- I Nearly three hundred and sixty-five days out of every year, envelopes of printed matter, relative to stocks, markets, and the like, are received at the combined office of The Daily and The Wolverine. Apparently, every time a new quotation is ;eceived by the government it is printed and sent out to num- berless newspapers throughout the country. The students piblications here seldom or never use this printed matter, yet it continues to come through the. mails, notwithstanding past suggestions that the serve 'ice be discontinued. It is really more a nuisance than a convenience. No doubt this same matter is sent regularly to thousands of newspapers, big and little, important and unknown; no doubt'many of them use the mate- rial they receive, but just as certainly countless oth- ers do not. Yet the stuff continues to arrive. The amount of printed matter the United States government printing office turns out annually must be almost inconceivable and we are ,sometimes in- clined to wonder just how much of it is really need- ed and how much is waste. Past times, not so very long past either, have been marked by a shortage of print paper. What is more, paper, ink, machinery, and labor cost money, especially when the produc- tion is as great as that at the capitol. Probably it will be argued that, under the sys- tems used by all modern big business, such a de- crease as might, with care, be effected by the gov- ernment printing office, would bring about a saving comparatively so tiny that the ultimate result would be hardly worth the effort. Possibly this is true. Yet still our minds, unaccustomed to the vast scale on which government business is conducted, contin- ue to revolve upon the possible uses to which money, saved through the exercise of a little more care, might be put, and its possible advantage to the coun- try. Fight .fans in Chicago will be unable to view the pictures of the Dempsey-Carpentier fight, accord- ing to a ruling of ;Chief of Police Fitzmorris. The chief has the right idea. Why should one be allowed to witness for 35 cents what another paid $50 to see? Love balms and heart repairs use up an aston- ishing amount of space in the modern newspaper, and, incidentally, demand the payment of incon- ceivable sums of good hard cash. Nevertheless, we wonder what the courts would do, were it not for the unrequited-love fad. R A H A I TW WO 0O L L 0 KR E GE S T A MI ______________________________________ .illlttlllllllhiill tlllllllllllllllllll~iiuiiIuiu iuuE llllituiiiuui HIGH CLASS FOOD Served at CHIUBB'S on State St. opposite Lane Hall W E BELIEVE you will find here yoi bank. And a bank that every like better : Have You Tried Our Farmers & Mec 101.105 S0. MAIN STREET Member pf tlie Federal HOME COOKING WHITE SWAN LA TEET'S 805 East Huron Street FOR Q UALITY. AND SE 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, $625,000.00 Resources .........$5,000,000.00 707 North University Ave. Northwest Cor. Main & Huron Our methods and machinery are up-to-date in every with less wear to the fabric. We cater especially to on request. TRY US. H. G. Prettyman PHO: For Home-Cooked Meals Take a I" KODi TRY TUTTLES On Maynard Street 1-2 Block South of Majeslo Theatre I Photography the Ko than you think-anc work-we can readil, Autographic A brolv '.2,, any K show . ,' s reported that Des Moines street car service is to be restored. Incidentally, has anyone ever ht of inaugurating such a service in Ann Ar- S$ 5o buys a brand J new Corona portable type- writer. Other makes at attractive prices. See us before you buy.' bor? i I p vn, Pa., kissing is blamed for an epi- .isters. We would be interested in as- er the success of efforts now under atting the blister scorge. hat a perambulating, grass-trodding TYPEWRITERS of leading makes bought, sold, rented, exchanged, cleaned and repaired. O. D. MORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade f The Ideal Wonder Others' Opinions ly THEY WIO SIT ON THE EDGE OF A us . CLOUD (By George Ade) ve Published by permission of the International Magazine company (Cosmopolitan ' Magazine). Copyrighted, 1921. he The undergraduate-a confusing combination of >f slick-haired Apollo and spoon-fed infant. c- We glance at his pin-feathers and grin. Then n- we look him in the eye and quail. at The old grad' may be rated as a success in his u- home town, but when he gets back among the ri, cloisters he discovers that he has been traveling t- down-hill ever since he took the sheepskin. is The unripe generation has it on us in everything r- except experience, and the only sure fruit of experi- n- ence is caution, and caution is always the symbol of weakness.. :s, Bobby is an awkward high-school cub, and then, le in a matter of weeks, the transfiguration, and the es demi-god is sitting up there on the edge of a cloud, h- giving orders to' his relatives on the dull earth be-, at low. d, We are acquainted with his weaknesses and re- t- spect them because they are sanctified by tradition. ly The sophomore has vast reservoirs filled with special information which would mean nothing to 1- a person more than twenty-four years of age. Alter- n- nating with these crowded compartment are roomy, u- open spaces which are approximately vacuums. re It is a marvel that he who dawdles should know n- so much. Also it is a never-ending miracle that one ly who spends so many hours in class-room could have u- at his,command such abysmal reaches of ignorance. ar Those who profess contempt for the rah-rah is rowdies and the sisterhood of fudge-makers know as mightly well that we cannot have a contempt for 1-' those of.whom we are deathly afraid. We may envy the ukelele-player seated beneath' :e the pennant and we would prefer the electric chair I- to the cold appraisements of a sorority house party, ie but those who sniff at the coming rulers of the uni- ie verse are merely showing off a cheap bravado. as 'Why not recognize the fact that we play second .11 to the kids? The Governor and the Mater never ?y sell so low in the pools as wheen the children are i- home from school. -Which reminds us that college students should be FAILINGS' DINING ROOMS $7.00 per Week-3 Meals $6.00 per Week-2 Meals HOME COOKING Electric Fans . Cool, Ventilated Rooms 714 MONROE STREET East of Cutting's Flats Ic Pref e .S- I1 0- r. "U ~ - " .. I Summer Sch o ol Students for Fountain Refreshments and Fine Candies visit Thelletsy Ross Shop The FountainR 1oom Beautiful 13-15 Nickle'sArcade -.- I" Daily Smn Big Steame Put.In-Ba Capacity 3270 Passengers Finest exclusive Excursion Steamer, Largest Room, Finzel's Orchestra. No extra charge for ing. Steamers leave on Eastern Time. Every day from Detroit at 9:Oa. m.for Sandusky-( Cedar Point- C. C Qc BUSINESS knowledge is of invaluble aid to everyone in every walk of life. Whether you intend working for somebody else or intend paddling your own business canoe our course of com- merical training is needed to make you competent. I .U ~V ~ tI E i' F T Pavil Co Thou: Reti froml erry for Sand lay 4:30 p.m.I Ashley & Foot of First r may' I