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February 26, 1913 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1913-02-26

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

IGA

ring Woolens

Largest Assortment in the City.
Ready for Your Inspection,

H. WILD, CO.

311 S. State Street

kP Note Books
he Ideal Loose Leaf Note Book-The Original Loose Leaf
ook-Get Our Prices Before You Purchase-Your Name in
old on Cover. FRE E OF CHARGE
MHEEHAN ( CO. ook.t.re

T HE MICHIGAN DAILY
Official newspaper at the University of Mich-
igan.
Published every morning except Monday dur-
ing the university year.
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan, under Act of Congress of March 3,
1 879.
Offices: Second floor, Ann Arbor Press Build-
ing, Maynard Street.
Office Hours: Editor-i to 3 p. m.; 7 to 'o1
p. mn. Business Manager-i to 3 p. m.
Subscription Price : By carrier, $2.50; by mail,
$3.00.-
Want Ad Stations: Press Building; Quarry's
Pharmacy; University Pharmacy; Davis
and Konald's Confectionery Store.
Phone: -Bell, 96o.
Frank Pennell. ........... Managing Editor
Joseph Fouchard.........BusinessManager
Maurice Toulme.............News Editor
C. Harold Hippler................ Assistant
Karl Matthews............Athletic Editor
G. C. Eldredge ....................Assistant
dohn Townley...........Music and Drama
Viaude Edwards........ ....... .Women
Harold B. Abbott...............Cartoonist
EDITORIALS
Harold G. McGee Louis P. Hlaler
HowellVan Auken Maurice Myers
R. Emmett Taylor Edwin R. Thurston
Robert Lane
NIGHT EDITORS
H. Beach Carpenter Fred B. Foulk
Bruce J. Miles Lester F. Rosenbaum
Morton R. Hunter Morris Milligan
David D. Hunting
REPORTERS
Leonard M. Rieser J. Selig Yellen
Leo Burnett Fenn H. Hossick
F. M. Church Carlton Jenks
Charles S. Johnson C. H. Lang
Bernus I. Kline Will Shafroth
Y. F. Jabin Hsu H. C. Rummel
F. F. McKinney W~. R. Melton
R. E. Cunningham
BUSINESS STAFF
A. R. Johnson, Jr. Advertising Manager
Emerson R. Smith ....... ..Accountant
Harry E. Johnson.......Circulation Manager
Sherwood Field John Leonard'
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY '26, 1913.
Night Editor-David D. Hunting

..

! {
- -- I

DEFEAT
can't beat if the competition
meet is largely a matter of
les-you must look as good as

TYPEWRITERS
New, Rebuilt and Second Hand
For Sale, $15 Upwards.
For Rent, $2 Upwards.
TYPEWRITING AND SHORT-
HAND WORK PROMPTLY
AND NEATLY DONE.
0. D. Morrill
322 SOUTH STATE STREET
Bell Phone 582 J

leterle
Liberty Street
(Copyrighted)

fI l

1 t 'I
lranger 's Acsdegmy ofIDtnci I
ARN TO DANCE. New term beginning now. Assemblies every WEDNESDAY
ID SATURDAY evening. Rent the Academy for your next party. Rates very reason-
le. For information call at academy or phone 246. Offie Hours: 10 to 12 A.M., 2 to 4 P.M.
The The Ann Arbor Savings Bank
hers and Mechanics Bank Capital stock $300,00 Surplus $100;000
101-103-105 South Main Street A General Banking Business Transaeted
Officers: Chas. E. Hiscocx, Pres., W. D. Har-
100,000. Surplus and Profits $67,000 man, Vice-Pres. M. I. Fritz, Cashier.

Our Optical System
is equipped to give the best service.
We test eyes No "Drops" Used. We make your
glasses.
Shur-On Agency

Arnold & Co.
320 S. MAIN

I

( The

Important meeting of business staff
and tryouts at 4:30 today.
SELLING AND BEGGING.
This is the time of year when the
man who depends upon his summer's
work for a return to the university in
the fall, starts to look around for the
means of the return. Among other
things, he will be, almost certain to
consider canvassing propositions,
some of which are good if not abused.
All credit to the man who makes a
success of his summers on the road
through the force of his selling ability;
all discredit to the man who accom-
plishes an equal success in the same
line of work, not through salesman-
ship, but through his power to empha-
size the charitable arguihent that he is
a student working his way through
college,
There are firms who make "work-
ing through eollege" talks, hlead-lin-
ers in the course of instruction given
the men who have enlisted under their
banner. The prospective agent has
this idea drilled into him from the
outset and in actual practice, is sel-
dom able to brea awyfrom it, H"
appeals to the sympAthies and emo-
tions of the house-wife or the trade,
and, in so doing, becomes a convert
to a species of begging that is harm-
ful to himself and to his university
whose name he uses.
Few vocations are as lucrative or as
adaptive to the student as summer-
canvassing. {At the same time, sales
should not be made on any basis other
than that of the merit of the goods
themselves. Audience should be re-
fused to any firm that instructs its
prospective salesmen in the art of ap-
pealing to the kind-heartedness of a
public which has suffered too long al-
ready from the demands made upon it
by this highly objectionable type of
salesmanship.

MUSIC AND DRAMA.
Piano Recital Friday Evening.
When Tina Lerner gives her piano
recital on Friday evening, February
27, the Ann Arbor musical public will
assemble for the last time in Universi-
ty Hall. Miss Lerner's concert is the
last one of the winter series of the
Choral Union; and the May festival
will inaugurate the new Hill Memorial
auditorium as the regular concert-
hall.
Tina Lerner is no stranger to Ann
Arbor. Her performance of the Chop-
in F minor concerto at the Festival
some years ago has been remembered
by everyone who heard her play. Since
then, she has won fresh triumphs in
Europe, England, and America. Miss
Lerner is a young artist to have attain-
ed fame, as she is now only in her
twenty-third- year. Her playing is,
however, surprisingly mature, thought-
ful, and pure.
Her program will be as follows:
Alceste..........Gluck-Saint Saens
Adagio, B minor...........Mozart
Rondo Brilliante ...... ......Weber
Fantasie, F minor. .........Chopin
Etude, F major.............Chopin
Etude, G flat major ........... Chopin
Nocturne, B major, Op. 9,No. 3. .Chopin
Waltz,A flat, Op. 34 .......... Chopin
Barcarolle,~A minor ......Rubinstein
Etude Arabesque ........... Hinton
Valse Caprice "Man lebt nur einmal"
.......Strauss-Tausig
Sonetto del Patrarca--Spanish Rhap-
sodie .............. . Liszt
The selections made for Miss Lern-
er's appearance here Friday are most-
ly familiar and promise to exhibit her
art at its best.
Pupils Reeltal Today.
On Wednesday afternoon at 4:15 the
following pupils of the piano, vle
and violin departments of the school
of music will give a public recital at
school of music hall. A general in-
vitation is extended to all to listen to
the following program
Intermezzo, Op. 119, No. 3 ., Brahms
Sposalizio........ .........Liszt
Elma Snyder
(a) Der Wanderer........Schubert
(b) Ich grolle nicht .....Schumann
Bruce Bromley
Quartet in B flat-Koechel No. 458
(third and fourth movements)
.,.. ..Mozart
Marian Struble, Thelma Newell, W. E.
Votruba, H. Hus
(a) Die Mainacht ..... .....Brahms
(b) Fruhlingsnacht......Schumann
Helen Kessell
Sonata in G minor (first movement)
. ... .... . Tartini
Cyril Davis.
Mattinata ... . ............... Tosti
George Moritz
Polonaise, Op. 53 . ..........Chopin
Bessie Bond Kennedy
Bedouin Love Song.......Chadwick
Frederick Munson
Loure, from sixth solo-sonata .. Bach
Canzonetta, from Concerto, Op. 35..
... , ,.....,...... Tschaikowsky
Thelma Newell
There's a land... .......Allitsen
George Becker
Scherzo, Op. 39...Chopin
Ethel McGregory
Trio-Prison Scene from Faust...
,....... Gpunod
Eleanor Hornby, George Becker, Fred-
erick Munson.
Catholic Club Postpones Meeting.,
Owing to repairs being made in the
K. of C. home the regular meeting of
the Catholic Study club has been post-
poned until Wednesday, March 5.

A wonderful timesaver
$7.50 in Leather Case
Engineers' Supplies in General-

DO YOU. STUDY HYDRi

Preferred by discriminating people for exquisite
and enduring beauty of tone, for absolute i;:tegrity
of workmanship, for undoubted reliability.

II

If so, have you a
Log"Log Slide Rule?

I

Studio 319 E. HIurean St.

Pho ris.961-16I

W

GRINNELL BROS. 120-122 E. Liberty St.
Everything in the Realm of Music.

AHR'S

University Bookstores

m .

I

Ii

I

''

I
. ul Oi
Y

L .
. /li'

llzattn

[i

pOtAftz

II

II

III

Liberty and Main Sts."
t Convenient Place for

Your

State Savings Bank
Wn J. Booth, President Wn. Arnold, [Vice-President
C. John Walz, Jr., Cashier

fI

SWEET
TTER SERVICE'

AS IT SOUNDS
BETTER CANDY

for
D ~ Dstincey
In divi dual

THE SUGAR BOWL

The Laut S ir
Disappointed ? Console yourself
with a Fatima .le always satisfying.
60 Fatima coupons will secure a while satin
pilloi; top, 24 in..quarc decrated withi Aander
sae:' grtec flot;s-4Z d $ eect fro*,

in Arbor's Beet Confectionery. Ice cream soda de luxe. Candy of all
descriptions.
WE PAY ESPECIAL ATTENTION TO STUDENTS, PARTIES, ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION
ON MAIN STREET .
CARDS -PROGRAMS -STATIONERY
WRITE
EIG FOR
GREGORY MAYER & THOM Co. DETRoT rrMa
The Best--Johnston's Chocolates
THE APPRECIATED CANDIES
y a Box of Johnston's Sugalasses Cookies, 10c
They Melt in Your Mouth

o_ ,

.. --..

.U

MAJESTIC
TODAY 3
COMING TOMORROW
CI AIETY CO.
"FRISKY FRANCE"
20 PCOP g 20

U

S

17

B

E

1$

Banquets

and Club

Dinners

DEVON
A style fa o ed by men
who seek e different in
dress. it'
C OL ICar
- ie -~ -~ut.?sad eMkr

are served in best of style at

313 SOUTH STATE
ICE CREAM SODA, LUNCHES, FINE CANDIES
l a r m Clocks! Guaranteed

MACK'S

TEA

ROOMI

...

Also dinners,lunches and refreshments
Open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.--Saturdays till
9 p.m.
Orchestra Saturdays---Noon and Evening
SECOND FLOOR
Mack &
IMAIN STREET

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Ann Arbor Tine Table
Llmited Cars for Detrolt-7:12 a. m. and
hourly to 6:12 p. m., also 8:12 p. M.
Local Cars for Detrolt-5;40 a. m., 6:40 a.
m., and every two hours to 6;40 p. m., 7:40
pm., 8:40 p. n., 9:45 p. i., and 10:45 p m
' oYpsilanti only. 11:15 p.,in., 12:15 p. mn.
12:30 p. M., 1:00 a. M.
Limited Cars for Jackson-7:46 a. s. and
every two hours to 7:46 p. m.
Local Cars for Jackson- 5:20 a. m.,and
every two hours to 8:20 p. m. 11:15 p. m.

Her Jewelry Co.
308 South State Street
Phone 534

i

le

1T

PACK.

Portrai

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