wrw mwwrrnmr G. H. Wild CO'. Leading Merchant Tailors State St. MIC116ANDAILY Official newspaper at the University of Michigan. Published every morning except Monday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: by carrier $2.So- by mail, $3.00. Want ad. stations : 6uarry's ; Students' Sup- ply Store; The Delta, car. State and Packard. Phones: Business, 960; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed 3od words in length, or notices of events will be pub- lished in The Daily if left at the office in the Ann Arbor Press Bldg., or in the notice box in the west corridor of the general library, where the notices are collected at 7:30 o'clock each evening. John C. B. Parker..........Managing Editor Clarence T. Fishleigh......Business Manager Conrad N. Church.............News Editor Lee E. Joslyn.................City Editor Harold A. Fitzgerald.........Sports Editor Harold C. L. Jackson....Telegraph Editor Verne E. Burnett...........Associate Editor Golda Ginsburg............Women's Editor Carleton W. Reade......... Statistical Editor1 "Y"Employ- ment Bureau HOURS:- 3 to 6 p. in. Daily 9 to 12 a. m. Sat. Telephone 823 Miiliill [if f111111 i 1l 1 EI I t111111111#111111#il III #11[i .1i i 111111#111111#11#slllit GRAFANOLAS FOR STUDENT'S ROOMS 12-50 WHY PAY MORE? ALLMENDINGER MUSIC SHOP Lone 1692 122 E. Liberty St. ilillli i iiliiiI I IIIII11111111I111il##1 i#iliiillh i IIIIi#l ll;iliilI : I. P. Note Books. Yoxar Nam'e in Gold on Cover Free of Charge ' Slater Book Shop DETROIT UNITED LINES en Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson run on Eastern time, one hour faster al timie. it Limited and Express Cars-8:io. a. hourly to 7:u p. in., 9:10 p. in. nazoo Limited Cars-8 :48 a. n. and wo hours to 6 :48 p. m.; to Lansing, in. on Express Cars--(Local stops west of rhor)--9':48 a. m. and every two hours tCars Eastboupd---5 :35 a. m, 6:40 a. 5 a. rn. and every two hours to 7:05 P. 5 p. n., 9:05 p. in,, 10o50 p. i. to ti only. 9:2o a. m., 9:50 a. m., 2:05 p. 5 p. in., 1 :45 p. m., i:io a. m., 1:20 r'o Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Cars Westbound- 6:o5 a. In., 7:50 a. 20 p).in.. 1z2:2o a. in. We Offer You SECURITY - - SERVICE - - LOCATION Resources $3,800,000 Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Main Office-- Northwest Corner Main and Huron Branch Office- - 707 North University Ave. farmors & Mechanics Bank rers the Best in ModernBanking SECURITY . . EFFICIENCY lent and Pleasant quarters. You Will' sed With Our Service. Two Offices 5 S. Main St. 330 S. State St. X7RIT RS of all makes e or Rent. Cleaning & airing. TYPEWRITING & 00GRAPHING. ?SUPPLIES Ps D X o yr r 1 :3. State 582-J EORGE BISC" OFF SL O RIS T ce Cut Flowevs and Plants h spin St. Ann Arbor, Mich. PHONE 809 M STOP AT ' U T T LBES 338 S. STATE it sodas and lunches GIRLS! buy tickets at Beauty Shop and save $1.50 on $5.00., Souvenir with every 50c purchase of cosmetics t Miss Mable Rowe 503 Fi'rst National Bank Bldg. Phone 2402 FIRST NATL. BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH. Capital $ioo,ooo Surplus and Profit $65,ooo DIRECTORS Wirt Cornwell Waldo M. Abbott Geo. W. Patterson Harry M. Hawley S. W. Clarkson Harrison Soule Fred Schmid D. B. Sutton E. D. Kinnie After the Show stop at SUGAR BOWL 109 S. Main St. We makenour own Candies and Ice Cream in our Sanitary Shop J. E. Campbell....Assistant Business Manager C. Philip Emery..Assistant Business Manager Albert r. Hone..- Assistant Business Manager Roscoe R. Rau....Assistant Business Manager Tred M. Sutter.. Assistant Business Manager Night Editors L. S. Thompson . A. Baungarth L. W. Nieter J. L. Stadeker Reporters B. A. Swaney C. W. Neumann W. R. Atlas C. C. Andrews E. L. Zeigler 11. C. Garrison Allen Schoenfield C. M. Jickling Marian Wilson D. S. Rood Business Staff Bernard WohT J. E. Robinson Paul E. Cholette Harry R. Louis E. Reed Hunt Harold 3. Lance Earl F. Ganschow Walter R. Payne Harold Makinson SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1916. Night Editor-J. L. Stadeker THE REAL UNIVERSITY Once there was a college man who tried to write a story typical only of his own institution. In studying the matter of stories typical to certain schools, he could find only one or two which seemed .real, and one was the famous "Tom Browne's School Days." Finally in the annals of his own in- stitution this college man found an un- substantiated legend to the effect that in the dim past students had the right to vote; that the students at one time ran the city council, and ordered the main street paved with gold bricks. He seemed on the right track, but a graduate of another university told him the legend in the east of a student con- trolled town wherein the students once ordered the erection of a town hall one mile long and two inches thick. Thus there was similar legends in nearly every institution, and none seemed to have a basis of fact. But rumors were not what he wanted. In investigating the systems of vot- ing, of societies, of freshmen caps, and of athletic meets, he found that there were no fundamental differences whereby any one institution was un- ique. Whenever one college strikes upon a tradition, a dozen other schools will seize upon it. Individuality of college traditions, then, may simply mean the trying out of all new, feasible ideas, and the founder of the idea gets whatever credit is deserved. About the only things typical pure- ly of his own college, were the peculiar conditions of the campus buildings, and the town and country surrounding it. But many schools have their boule- vard systems, their Sleepy Hollows, their canoe course, their winning spirit, and so on. Most writers of col- lege life have presented flippant, un- true atmospheres to the reading public. Thus the particular college man in this story could not conclude more than that all American universities and col- leges are, altogether, kinds of depart- ments or divisions of the great Amer- ican University. Surely the world is in need of a writer who can conjure up the main cross-lines which form the complex of his own particular school, and at the, same time show these deep, vital, and earnest facts which are truly a part of college life. but which the non-college man and woman, blinded by the superfluous ex- ternals of rah-rah-dom, fail completely to realize. Find Stolen Money in St. Louis St. Louis, Oct. 27.-Eighteen pack- ages of money, including paper and silver, a total of $13,007, identified as part of the $34,500 stolen from the paymaster of the Burroughs Adding Machine company in a sensational daylight robbery Aug. 4, were found in two safe deposit boxes in a vault of the Mercantile Trust company here yesterday. ES IRES FEWER LETTERS GRADUATE WANTS COMMUNICA- TIONS TO DAILY SUBJECTED TO RIGOROUS CENSORSHIP Editor, The Michigan Daily: The disease of writing communica- tions to The Daily has reached the acute stage. Every issue inflicts on the reader the latest literary efforts of our em- bryonic statesmen and budding phil- osophers. The writers of these works are consistently narrow-minded, dog- matic, and immature. Their writings reflect an overwhelming desire to break into print, an ambition which is realized as soon as The Daily pub- lishes some of their stuff. The publi- cation of their offerings becomes an end in itself rather than as a means to an end. Witness the masterpiece appearing in the issue of Oct. 25, signed "Freshman," in which the writer laments the absence of "snub- bers" on some of the Library chairs, and pedantically closes with an al- lusion to Benjamin Franklin. Could anyone suppose he really contemplated a remedy for the defect complained of? If so, it would seem that he would ad- dress his complaint to someone hav- ing authority in the matter (it would be very easy to find out who has charge of such repairs) instead of in- flicting his gems of thought on all the readers of The Daily. Parallel cases might be cited without number. The writer is not attacking "com- munications" as such, for undoubtedly they may be made to perform a very valuable function. What the writer does advocate is a rigorous censor- ship of such contributions, the keep- ing out of those that are not upon matters of general interest to the stu- dent body. There is no reason why a small number of cranks could be al- lowed to monopolize so much space in a publication whose proper function is the supplying of news which is of some general interest to its readers, the student body. Perhaps it will be asked, "Why do you read these communications which you say are not worth reading?" For the same reason that one cannot re- strain himself from biting on a sore tooth. There is a resistless fascina- tion about the pain from the tooth, about the pain from the reading of the communication. The only difference is that in one case the pain is physical, in the other mental. This letter is written because of a genuine interest in seeing The Daily a better paper. Not that it isn't an excellent paper now, but the writer believes that it would be a much more readable sheet, and much more at- tractive, if most of the communica- tions so unfortunately addressed to it were not published in its columns. And the writer is not the only one who thinks so. Further, the writer does not sign his name because he has no desire to get into a three weeks' squabble with Daniel Webster the Second as to whether his major premise will hold water. He will cheerfully admit, to any crank who, out of righteous in- dignation at the views herein ex- pressed, flies to the attack, that he is not "possessed with the confidence of his convictions." A GRADUATE. -alllllli1111[11illillillllllllilttlll!l11li3iiAllillllla lllilillllliil1111111!tiillll'. FOR EVERYBODY EVERY DAY What the World's Experts know,- - The Home Universty Library, 50c The People's Books, 25c WA VNIVE SiITY BO KSTORS lllllll I I 1l h11Illl ll 111111 l 11 111111111111111'111:hi i11h11 ii HE best things in life are the commonest. Thar's plenty of E3f friendships - plenty of sunshine -- plenty of landscape-an ' y' can get VELVET at any tobacco store. Hone Made Candies Strictly fresh and of the best quality. Pure cream walnut caramels, as- sorted nut chocolates in alb. boxes, 35c. Bitter sweet and chocolate creams all fresh. Special ice cream sundaes. -THE FOUNTAIN ofYUTH State St Cor. Libeaty A I l 11 11 IIII -11 213 E. Liberty St. Phone 294 Another reminder not to forget us when in need of Flowers for any tlOccasion. Roses, Viol ets~ Sweet Peas, Orchids, Carnations, Chrysan- themums and Potted Plants. Corsage Work a Spdciatyy Member Florist Telegraph Delivery Service. WYVERN TAKES IN 13 GIRLS Junior Women's Honorary Society to Initiate Nov. 7 R' i Takes Pictures Develops Films makes Prints and Enlarge- ments, 715 E. VnIversity Women - WEB AND FLANGE INITIATES Senior Civil Engineer Honor Society W~vern, junior girls' honorary so- ciety, elected the following 13 girls to membership at a meeting held Thursday evening: Ruth Bailey, Mar- garet Birdsell, Helen Bourke, Ger- -Takes in Eight Men Freshmen spread of $1.00 should paid at once, either at Dean Jor- Web and Flange, senior civil en- a's office or to Olive Wiggins, '19. gineering honor society, took eight 11l Glee club members report at 10 men into their membership at a ban- lock this morning at Rentscheler's, quet held at Mack's tea rooms Thurs- 'Michiganensiar pictures. day night. Louis Hyde, '17E, acted as, A 10-mile hike .tarts from the gym- toastmaster. Prof. C. T. Johnston of sium at 8:30 o'clock every Saturday the civil engineering department, was rning. One athletic honor point is the principal speaker. r -en for every 10 miles. The following men were initiated: Funior advisors pay 50 cents at once R.jW. Rose, L. R. Crandall, J. R. Pol- hier at Dean Myro B. Jordan's of- lock, H. H. Whittingham, C. A. Zanelli,I e, or to Mildred Harrington, '18 D. A. Smith, L. F. Dieterich, and E. k11 girls wishing to register for ad- R. MacLaughlin. iced gymnasium work or for aesthe- dancing must do so at once. ORSEE SHORTAGE OF ORE Joard of representatives of the Wo- O DELIVERIES DUE TO ICE n's League will meet at 8:30 o'clock s morning, in Barbour gymnasium. he board of representatives of the (By United Press) men's League will not meet today Pittsburgh, Oct. 27.-An iron ore men' L a ann d.shortage before spring is foreseen by 8:30 o'clock as announced. steel men here today due to the fact rd Auto Truck Stolen Last Night that the big lake carriers have been V Ford truck belonging to the so busy freighting for the week-to- Ithson Dairy company ws stolen week trade that they have not been in their barn on Benjamin street able to pile up a reserve. With the ly last evening. The theft was re- closing down of lake freighting by ice, ted to the local police at 9 o'clock expected early rext month, freighting I up to a late hour no trace of the will be practically over, as rail freight chine had been found. Its license rates are prohibitive. They would in- nber is 22689. crease the cost of pig iron more than etroit authorities telegraphed to $4 per ton. local police last night reporting It is estimated that 65,000,000 tons theft of a Paige touring car bear- would be necessary to carry the fur- the license number F382. naces over to the opening of naviga- tion in April. The most optimistic au- nts Fresh Lit Football Men Out thorities now declare that it will be 'res1 lit football candidates are Inpossible for the lake boats to de- uested to meet Manager Hart An- liver enough ore to swell the reserve son at the intramural clubhouse, now on hand to even 60,000,000 tons. ry field, Monday afternoon at 3 ock. All men interested are urged Form Alumni Association in Montana be present as the class series start A new alumni association of the t week, and little time is left for University of Michigan has been ,tice. formed recently at Great Falls, Mont. Twe'nty-seven enthusiastic' alumni ianos for rent; terms right. Schae- were present at the first meeting. The le & Son, 110 South Main St. oct3tf second banquet was held Oct. 14. t . x t [ntercotk ate trude Brook, Golda Ginsburg, Eliza- b'eth Hall, Katharine Harrington, Mar- garet Henderson, Louise Irish, Mil- i dred Mighell, Nona Myers, Louise Williamson, and Alice Woessner. In- itiation will be held Tuesday, Nov. 7. ATTEMPT TO ELECT DEMOCRAT FROM 'MRS. WILSOINS DISTRICT Cornell: In tle present .freshman class- 44 states of the union are re- presented, as well as 16 foreign countries. States having no youth in the University are Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada and South Dakota. .Dartmouth: The Outing club offers two medals to the men covering the greatest number of miles before (By United Press.) next spring. Richmond, Va., Oct. 27.-Democratic Wisconsin: lii preparing for today's party managers have concentrated game, six cheer leaders have prac- their efforts to supplant the present ticed every day for two weeks in Republican congressman from the the gymnasium that they might have home district of Mrs. Wilson with a a uniform series of wierd contor- Democrat. It is the only Republican tions to hold the cheering section. district in the state. Indiana: The Glee club sang at an They are behind the candidacy of Alumni luncheon in Indianapolis State Senator E. Lee Trinkle, from this week. Mrs. Wilson's home town of Wythe- Syracuse: Withe nw dormitories ville, to defeat the Republican, C. and a lack of dining rooms, Syracuse Bascome Slemp, candidate for re-elec- is continuing a campaign for funds tion. Among those who have camp- for a common dining hall. $10500 paigned for Trinkle is Governorfracmo iighl.$0,0 pagnd fhor Trinkseis Gveno by has been collected to date. The Un- Stuart, who was himself beaten by iversity already takes care of four Slemp six years ago. halls by a- centralized catering which Democratic candidates who expect 'livoives a university butcher shop, to return to Washington are: Wil- ice cream parlor, laundry, and great liam A. Jones, Edward E. Holland, soe-room. Walter A. Watson, Andrew J. Monta-Is:U-ryam. gue, Edward W. Saunders, Carter alldOis ithe oiersity has started Glass, C. C. Carlin, and Hal. D. Flood. a new dormitory for women. It is Thomas W. Harrison is due to be nam- to be a three-story flreproof building ed the successor of James Hay, who of colonial design accommodatin was chairman of the House military 102 women. No women's residence committee, and who resigned to ac- has ever been provided for directly cept appointment on the court of by the University. claims bench. Minnesota: Students and faculty have United States Senator Claude A. organized with the purpose of start- Swanson has no opposition. He will ing a fund for the relief of imprison- be the first United States senator chos- ed foreign students. en by direct vote in Virginia, Iowa: Electric lights ha e been il. stalled on the football field to facil- Leave your film at the Delta. itate signal practice before the Min- oct3 to 29 nesota game. t" * * * * * * * * * * * * Feinstein's Poem Receives Praise In one of the recent numbers of the Menorah Journal, the poem with which Mr. Martin Feinstein of the rhetoric department won the-Field poetry prize, was reprinted and given a high criti- cism. Mr. Feinstein is spoken of as one of the most promising of the younger poets of this country. The poem is entitled, "The Night March- ers." * * * * * * * * *.: COW OCCUPIES JAIL, WHEN DOOR: FALLS DOWN Rowena, S. D., Oct. 27.-A peaceful cow today is the only occupant of the Rowena jail. Bossie took possession when the jail, unoccupied for months, de- teriated and the door fell away. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *