I THE UNIVELimITY OF MICHIGAN DAILY Published Daily (Sundays excepted) during the Oollegs year, at THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHI6AN. Orrica: Times building, 329, s Main St. be- tween Liberty and William Sts. tAN tI ING EDITOR J. F. THOMAS,'00 L. BUSINE4s SIANACIEII O. H. HANS, '00 L. EDIITORS H. B. SIsIMA, '08 L., Athletics. E. L. GEsEn, '9 L. G. D. HUDNUTT, '00, BUTLERi LAMB, '00. T. R. Woonnow, '98 L . CAMPBELF, '0H. A. CAMPBELL,'99. F. ENGELHiARtD, '98. Thesubscription price of the Daiiy is $2.50 fsr the college year, with a regular delivery before noon each day. Notices, communica- tions, and other matter intended for publica- tion mast be handed in at the Daiiy officebe- foxe 8 p. in., or mailed to the editor before 3 p. i., of the day preious to that on which S exbscriptio mayt e left at The Daily fer a favor by reporting promptly at this office an failure of carriers to deliver paper. The Daily for the remainder of the college year will be delivered every day for $1.21. The Seniors will undoubtedly discuss the class memorial question at its meet- ing this afternoon. As usual all kinds of plans and projects are in the air and the annual bugbears are much in evi- dence. The fountain nightmare, the monument scare-crow and the scholar- ship delusion are all on deck and live- ly. Fountains and monuments as me- morials are too rediculous to need ser- ious attentions; leave the former for Columbia's New Dormitory. The plans for the first dormitory of Columbia University have been com- pleted, and the work of erection will commence immediately. The building, to be called "Hamilton Court" in honor of Alexander Hamilton, will stand be- tween 120th and 121st sts. It will be nine stories high and will cover a plot of ground 200 feet square. The rooms, arranged either single or divided into suites, will be furnished by the Uni- versity, and will be sufficient in num- ber to accommodate 800 students. In addition to the private rooms, there will be dining rooms, reading rooms, public parlors, ainh a number of private baths. On the ground floor will be the quarters of the university physician and the various managers, besides sev- eral selected stores for the convenience of students, including a drug store, and a barber shop. The basement will con- tain a complete heat and electric light plant. The building will be completed in time for the opening of college next fall. Notice to 'Varsity Candidates. Friday night at 7 o'clock, in Room 9, U. H., there will be a meeting of all 'Varsity candidates to start the season off with enthusicAit and to give the coaches an opportunity to outline the season's training. Pres. Richards will preside, speeches will be made by some of the older players and Manager Keith will speak of the schedule. MANAGER KEITH, CAPTAIN BUTLER. To stick Rubber use MAJOR'S RUB- BER CEMENT. Beware ! ! ! Don't DINTER SHOBS -OF- Every Description. A LARGE LINE OF OCY USHOES SEE OUR WINDOW? BEAULS SIIO'0ES TOREt, 109 X. Mats Street. Oppos e the Court House. A Cleaning-up Price $7.50 We bunched together about one hundred Men's Sack Suits-Suits that have sold for $10.00-and $12 00 and they are worth every penny of it today. But you expect to buy clothes at this season for less than a regular prices, and we are not going to disappoint you. We never do. Our bargains are always genuine- what we tell you you can rely on. Money always re- funded if goods are not as represented. 'V Imperial Hats for Spring on sale Saturday, Feb. ig. The Shoe Store's A busy place and humming with good news all the time. There's a new story for every. day, though it's always to the same effect: better shoes for less money. There are five chapters for this week. Wf. J. APRILL, i19 I. WASHINGTON ST. anti-saloon leaguers and the latter for take a substitute. dead men. The scholarship, idea was proved by last year's class not to be practical. There is a memorial, how- ever, that any class might be proud to leave behind it. Michigan greatly needs a trophy room for the display of the trophies won in athletic contests. We praise the taking of daily exercise, but it is safe to say that if there were no intercollegiate battles there would not be enough interest taken in the "gym." to draw a hundred men to it a day. It is the spirit of rivalry that stimulates the majority of those who develop their bodies and thus shake the cob-webs from their brains. The tro- phies we win are the visible embodi- ment of this spirit of emulation and they ought, therefore, to be kept where stu#ients couid see them. This_ is no matter of vain-glory or "brag," but a matter of plain common sense. Let '98 put the money it raises into furnishing a trophy-room and it will provide a memorial in fact as well as in name. The First University. The University of Fez, ill Morocco, called the Kerinine, was founded in the ninth century by a woman native of- Keronan, in Tunis, called Fatma the Holy. Not only is this the earliest of ali universities in existence, but dur- ing the tenth and eleventh centuries it was almost the only source of learning, to which wandered students from all parts of the world, Mahometan and Christain alike. COURSME X. FRATERNITY STATIONERY, BADGES OR PINS Send to SMITH, STURGEON & CO., 237, 239, 241 Woodard Ave.. Detroit. Designs and estimates furnished on all work of this kind, a RESERVED FOR U. OF M. y.< Representatives of Charles Dudley Warner's Libra ryoth'WrdsBt Literature Are in Ann Arbor for a short time with a limited number of sets of the first edition of this splendid work. IMMEDIATE ACTION is necessary to secure one of these sets at the low introductory price and on easy terms. The last volumes, now in press, will soon be com- pleted and the introductory offer will then be withdrawn. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, U. of P., and other leading universities have secured nearly one-third of the first edition. A limited number of sets of this edition has been reserved for the students of Michigan. 20 volumes now completed and ready for delivery and are on exhibition at the Harper's Weekly Club Office, 318 S. State St. For full information concerning THE INTRODUCTORY offer and SPECIAL student rate call on or address Harper's Weekly Club, Office Hours: 1 to 8 p. m.