THE MICHIGAN DAILY It is by no means presumpt- uous on our part to say that; 12*_ Smart Uthesa are the best clothes made, 1 (r. t "because we are sincere in our belief that human minds and hands cannot design and 1tailor better clothes to meet your needs. Lindenschmidt, Apfel & Go. 209 S. Main St Ma-- Tebatei lh& SCon Co. The Eberbach & Son Co. t .1 Calkins Drug Co. Two Stores 324 So. State and 1123 So. University Ave. Whitman's Candles suit more people than any other make. In boxes 35o to $5.00 HERE'S HOW THEY COMPARE) MICHIGAN. CORNELL. IADLER. BROS. & Ca. Do This Dunne .....171 Wieman .. .185 Gracey ....205 Niemann ...161 Rehor .....251 Weske .....185 Peach .....182 Sparks .....157 Maulbetsch 155 Raymond .171 Smith .....185 bIJ 21 19 25 22 22 22 21 19 23 22 21 bO a, 6- 6-2 6- 5-11 6- 6- 5-10 5-10 5-6 5-11 6- '17 '19 '17 '17 '17 '18 '18 '19 '17 '18 '18 3 1 1 2 2 2 1 1 3 1 2 0 LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB o 0 9- 1 2 2 1 3 1 1 2 1 1 2 '17 '18 '18 '18 '17 '17 '18 '18 '18 '18 '17 5-1U 6-3 6-1 6- 6- 6-5 5-8 5-11 6- 5-11 6- a, 21 20 20 20 22 22 20 20 2a 19 21 Provide yourself With a smile and at air of prosper. ity. 'Wear your best bus- iness suit and a cheerful necktie. If you have no best suit--buy one. We have to appear pro- sperous, if we are to be pro- sperous." Come In REULE, CONLN, FIEGEL COMPANY 200-202 MAIN ST 161..Zander 190.. Gillies 210..Miller 175..Carry 210..Anderson 210..Jewett 167..Ryerson 165.. Shiverick 164..Benedict 176..Hoffman 189.. Mueller Michigan. Total weight................................... h2,008 Average weight................................. 182.6 Line average...............................191.4 Backfield average............................... 167 Cornell. 2,007 182.5 187.6 173.5 Good Drugs-Toilet Articles Chemicals and Laboratory Supplies. You know the Quality is Right. The Eberbach & Son Co. 200-204 E. Liberty St. ALL-FRESH READY FOR HEIDELBERG Strong German Outfit Promises Hard Battle in Yearlings' Finale FULLBACK WEST MADE LEADER Kane and Kerr Show Variety o Which Helps Conquer Older Men f Attack YEARLING LITS BEAT SOPHS Seasons determine styles, but character in tailored products is the additional distinguishing feature that determines their genuine quality. II The fresh again yesterday asserted their superiority over the sophs, this time in a well played and hotly con- tested football game, when the first year lits walloped their older brothers = lI111E1IlllllllilllIIlllillllill Il IIElI#11IIIIEII #lEf l EIIgI Fitform Eh es We are showing the Nobbiest Suits a n d Overcoats in Ann - Arbor at Popular Prices. Everything we sell guaranteed. Tonm Corbett 116 E. Liberty IFYoungMns Shop 0R Ytu I IIPB Troubled visions of Zeppelins, U-6 to 0. boats, and the deadly German pancakeI MARQUAI TR cAMPUS TAILOR 516 U. Williams St. SENIOR-FRESHMAN WOMEN'S HOCKEY GAME SET FOR TODAY The senior and freshman hockey teams will meet at 2 o'clock this after- noon on Palmer field for the second game of the season. The triumph of the sophomores over the juniors last Wednesday afternoon has put the up- perclassmen on their mettle, and as the freshmen have been showing up unusually well in practice, the contest will not be a tame one. Harriet Walk- er, '17, is captain of the senior team and Dorothy Williams, '20, leads the freshman aggregation. Returns from the Cornell game will be received and announced on the field. A large crowd is expected, arid enthusiastic. cheering will not be lack- ing to put fight into the players. Hot wieners will be sold to the spectators, so a supply of nickels will be con- venient. In case of rain, the game will be postponed until 3 o'clock Mon- day afternoon. TWENTY-FOUR FAITHFUL SCRUBS SEE CORNELL-MICHIGAN GAME Twenty-four members of the scrub football squad left last night on the Michigan Central for Ithaca, where they will witness the struggle between; the Wolverines and the Bid Red Cor- nellians. This makes 49 Maize and Blue gridders who will trot onto Schoelkopf field at game time this afternoon, 25 men having made the trip with the Varsity squad. The following scrubs were taken: Cruse, MacLachlan, Wolfe, Leffon, St. Clair, Emory, Dablitch, Watts, Wil- liams, Sauer, Fish, Clark, Gariepy, Murphy, Finkbeiner, Abbott, Walls, Brown, Weston, Cartwright, Dieters, Biber, Eaton, and Beath. FIGHTING SQUAD CONFIDENT ON EVE OF CORNELL FRAY (Continued from Page One.) find itself somewhat handicapped. However, it is a poor rule that will not work both ways and the Ithacans should be as much the losers as the Wolverines. Bob Bennett led cheers for the Varsity at Geneva. The advance guard of Michigan rooters aroused much en- thusiasm. There seems to be little confidence in the Cornell stronghold. The Itha- can supporters are from all appear- ances not as willing to risk their money in backing the Bid Red team against the visiting machine, and are asking odds of two to one. This rather upsets the dope that the game would be regarded' as an even bet. The Michigan fans seek five to four odds, but unless there is a change it would appear that they are likely to go dis- appointed or be forced to give the margin required by the Cornellians. flit across the minds of the All-Fresh gridiron warriors as they await the onslaught of the Heidelberg Uhlan regiment, reported advancing on Ann Arbor from its concentration camp at Tiffin, Ohio. The invaders are said to be equipped with a quartet of fast- traveling tanks that swept all ob- stacles before them in the former en- gagements this season. The yearlings have been hard at work all this week tightening up their defense to meet the attack of the fleet Buckeye backs and it is upon the showing made by the line that the first year men's chances of victory depend for the greater part. The verdant for- ward wall has slews of power con- cealed in its bulky front, and if its performance is up to the standard that it is capable of maintaining, the tide of battle must necessarily turn Wol- verineward. The final game today will be in the nature of a test for the freshmen, the Ohio outfit being by far the strongest aggregation on the youngsters' sched- ule. Weight, speed, and experience are among the elements entering into the best team Heidelberg has turned out in years. At a meeting of the freshman squad yesterday , afternoon, Jack West, plunging fullback, was elected cap- tain of the team. West is the star of the backfield and is very popular with his associates. He will undoubtedly be a success as a field leader. The game today begins at 2 o'clock sharp. Returns from the Cornell-Mich- igan game will be read at the field: The lineup: ALL-FRESH HEIDELBERG Hammels .......R.E....... Butcher.. Elmer Cress ...... R.T...... Bittikofer Davidson Fortune ......... R.G...........Lotz Culver ........... C............ Kelly Blackmore......L.G...... Kauffman- Heppert Chapman ........ L.T....... Reinbolt Earl Cress........ L.E......... Smith Hitchcock .......Q.B......... Sayger Perrin ..........R.H...... ..... Stuck Lambright Froemke ........ L.H..... Clark, Capt. West, Capt.....F.B........... Jean The fresh by a series of line bucks carried the goal for the only score of the game in the first four minutes of play. After this the second year men settled down and put up a stone wall defense. For the fresh, Kane at half and Kerr at quarter, are as fast a pair as any class team can boast. Kerr repeatedly tore holes in the soph line while Kane ran the ends at will. Giv- en at left half showed best for the second year lits. The line up: Fresh-I.e., Hand; i.t., Gillespie; I.g., Hansen; c., Borenstein; r.g., Schmok; r.t., Fralick; r.e.; Ed- wards; q., Kerr; I.h., Kane; r.h., Mer- rifield; f.b., Campbell. Sophs-I.e.; Rychener; I.t., Nye; I.g., Steves; c., Hamilton; r.g., Burson; r.t., Jones; r.e., Fonner; q., Storz; I.h., Given; r.h., Anderson; f.b., Davis. VARSITY SOCCER TEAM PLAYS FIRST GAME THIS 'MORNING CTRO *the motion "kr The soccerites will try to pry the ]id off their season today. At 10 o'clock they will engage the University Internationals on Ferry field. The au- thorities have decided to indefinitely postpone the Ypsi clash and have add- ed the Interlocken (Indiana) and a strong Canadian team to the schedule. Coach Peirsol has left for Ithaca, and has put the team in charge of Cohen who will probably be this year's general. The line up: Fleischer, r.f.; Tripo- litis, l.f.; O'Brien, goal; Domboora- jian, l.h.; Brush, r.h.; Cohen, c.h.; Plummer, 0.1.; Snyder, o.r.; Liu, i.r.; Kiefer, center, and Hecksher, i.l. Williams Has Long Term Coach Williamstown, Mass., Nov. 10.-Chas. F. Seeley, at Williams, and Richard Nelligan, at Amherst, have held their places as coaches at the two colleges longer than any other two coaches in the eastern states. When Seeley re- cently entered on his twenty-third year of service, the students and fac- ulty at Williams presented to him a gold stop watch suitably inscribed. During his regime Williams thrice won the New England intercollegiate cham- pionships. Our alarm clocks are good clocks. Chapman, Jeweler, 113 South Main street. tues-eod Ml : A I so MAKE O ~THE ONES. Besi laeatres. WANTED' WANTED-Students wanted as book- keepers in Ann Arbor Savings Bank, forenoons or afternoons, either of- fice. Apply in writing. 10-11 LOST. LOST-Fountain pen in Farmers & MISCELLANEOUS 1 - TYPEWRITERS of all makes bought, sold, rented or ex- changed. Expert repairing, factory service. Sole agent Under- wood &. Corona. TYPEWRITING, MIMEOGRAPHING & SUPPLIES. 0. D.. NORRILL, 322 S. State St. (Over Baltimore Lunch). 582-J. Have those rooms decorated now. C. H. Major & Co. Phone 237. 5-16 be iffem al Ai '/71 Mechanics State Street Bank. Find- er please call Dunnette, 2172-M. 11 FOUND FOUND-Tuesday on the boulevard, bill purse. Call Parson's 2413-W. 10-11 SUMMER WORK-You will find many good propositions on the campus for summer; before you decide, see the Barnum Company's, 721 N. Univer- sity, Dr. Ritter's office, F. E. Ritzen- heim. 7.8,9,10,11,12 All Metro Features Have First Run at The Arcade Theatrel Spot light ball, Packard Academy, "THE KEMPF MUSIC STUDIOS" Saturday, Nov. 11, 8:30 to 12:00.. 20 Piano, voice, pipe organ. 312 South spot light dances, Fischers orchestra. Division street. 'Phone 212-J. Leave Tickets at door, $1.00 per couple. orders for fine piano tuning. 9-10-11 ---If your window shades need renew- Read The Daily advertisements. ing call 237, C. H. Major & Co. 5-16 Michigan men have longr appreciated the artistic 121 East Washington Street