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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 03, 1913 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1913-04-03

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

ap lete Line of Spring Woolens
Largest Assortment in the City

Ready for Your Inspection,

:. H. WILD; CO.

311 S. State Street

TIENNIS
The season will soon be here. Have your Racket ready for
use. Bring it in now and let us re-string it. We guaran-
tee all our work. Do not delay but do it now.
S tudc e nt.'
SHEHCANHH , CO

THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Official newspaper at the University of Mich-
igan.-
Published every morning except Monday dur-
ing the university year.
Entered at therpostoffice at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan, under Act of Congress of March 3,
1879-
Offices: Second floor, Ann Arbor Press Build-
ing, Maynard Street.
Office Hours: Editor-r to 3 p. m.; 7 to to4
p. m. Business Manager- to 3 p. m.
Subscription Price: By carrier, $2.50; by mail,1
$3.00.
Want Ad Stations: Press Building; Quarry's1
Pharmacy; University Pharmacy; Davis
and Konald's Confectionery 'Store.
Phone: Bell, 96o.
Frank Pennell...........Managing Editor
Joseph Fouchard.......... Business Manager'
Maurice Toulme................News Editor
C. Harold Hippler........ .......Assistant
Karl Matthews............Athletic Editor
G. C. Eldredge........... ... ..Assistant
John Townl-y.........Music and Drama
Harold B. Abbott ...............Cartoonist
EDITORIALS
Harold G. McGeeILouis P. Haller
Howell Van Auken Maurice Myers
R. Emmett Taylor Edwin R. Thurston
Robert Lane
NIGHT EDITORS
H. Beach Carpenter Fred B. Foulk
Morton R. Hunter Morris Milligan
Bruce J. Miles Lester F. Rosenbaum
David D. Hunting
REPORTERS
Leonard M. Rieser T J. Selig Yellen
Leo Burnett Fenn H. Hossick
F. M. Church Carlton Jenks
Charles S. Johnson C. H. Lang
Bernus E. Kline Will Shafroth
Y. F. Jabin Hsu H. C. Rummel
F. F. McKinney' W. R. Melton
Russell Neilson R. E. Cunningham
BUSINESS STAFF
A. R. Johnson, Jr....Advertising Manager
Emerson R. Smith.... ... .tAccountant
Harry E. Johnson....Circulation Manager
Sherwood Field John Leonard
Myron W. Watkins F. G. Millard
THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1913.
Night Editor-Lester F. Rosenbaum.
Meeting of entire editorial staff in
offices at 4:00 o'clock, sharp, Thurs-
day afternoon. Important.
Meeting of upper staff, night editors,
editorial staff and reporters in offices
this afternoon at 4:00 o'clock, SHARP.
AN INTENTION OR A RULE?
Undoubtedly, Trainer Farrell's idea

men were given their chance. If notf
why any class relays at all?
MUSIC AND DRAMA.
Last Faculty Concert.
The last faculty concert of the year
will be given tonight at 8:00 o'clock in
High School auditorium. On account
of the fact that the Michigan School-
masters' club will be in session at this
time, a more elaborate program than
usual has been prepared. Holders of
regular faculty concert tickets will
be admitted as usual, while compli-
mentary. tickets will be given to such
members of the Schoolmasters' club
as choose to attend.
Aus de Heimat, No. 2 ...... Smetana
Caprice Viennois .......... Kreisler
Bagatellen, Op. 28 .........Busoni
No. 1, Aus der Zopfzeit; No. 2, Klein-
er Mohrentans.
No. 4, Kosakenkritt.
"Ma Follia."................. Corelli
Samuel Pierson Lockwood
(a) Solvejg's Lied ............ Grieg
(b) Die Maimacht ........ ..Brahms
(c) Ecstasy................Rummel
Ada Grace Johnson
Sonata, Op. 90........... Beethoven
Albert Lockwood
(a) Hungarian Folk Song .. Korbay
(b) Der Asra .......... Rubinstein
(c) Bedouin Love Song .... Chadwick
William Howland
Trio, G Minor, Op. 15.;..... Smetana
Moderato assai; Allegro, ma non agi-
tato; Presto.
Mrs. George Rhead, S. P. Lockwood,
R. P. Hall.
Duets:-
(a) "Schon ist das Fest des Len-
zes...................... Sindig.
(b) Standchen...........Herman
(c) Abschied der Vogel ... Hildach
Miss Johnson and Mr. Howland.
Frances Louise Hamilton and Maud
Zencie Hagberg, Accompanists.

Book Exhibit

The MacMillan Co. Publications
Here for a Few Days Only

Hundreds of Volumes on History, Science, Biography,
Art, Travel' Etc., Etc.

I

I

w

AHR'S

University Bookstores

U _________ I

liCtinunitz

CAPITAL
>u have money in the BANK
CLOTHES 'on your BACK-
's CAPITAL. Sometimes just
THES on your BACK makes
le think you lave money in
3ANK.
Dieterle
.OR Liberty Street
(Copyrighted)

Preferred by discriminatirg people for exquisite
and enduring beauty of tone, for absolute integrity
of workmanship, for undoubted reliability.

.

I

1

OF ALL MAKES
For Sale - $15.00 up,
For Rent,- $2.00 up
(3 mos. $s.oo)
TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES
Typewriting and Shorthand
for Everybo ft
O. D. MORRILL (over Baiti-
more Luneh.)
L Bell 682-J A

StudIo 319 E. Hisron St.

U

:a

Pli~ozi. 61-L

..

Call Taxi-~ 15 50

On Call Day or Night.
Auto and Baggage Livery.

Masiling Tubes FKEE with
**CONT RARIE MA RY " MVUIC
GRINNELL BROS., 120-122 E. Libert y Street OP1'° EN UNTIL
CARDS,- PROGRAMS -STATIONERY
WRITE
ING FOR
ENN SAMPLES
GREGORY MAYER & THOM Co. DETROIT, MICR
We have just received an order of that bath soap which lathers sc
well in hard water. 5c cakes unsEcented; roc cakes scented A ith al
mond. . Also Jergen Violet Glycerine; ioc a cake, 3 for 25c.
VAN DOREN'S Pharmacy
THE HOUSE OF STANDARD QUALITY

i Arbor Taxicab Co.
300 NORTH MAIN STREET

c

:{

"w

& HALL

CUT FLOWERS IN SEASON

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Ann Arbor Time Table
LimitedCars for Detrofl-7:12 a. m. and
hourly to 6:12 p.mi., also 8:12 p. mn.
Local Cars for Detroit-5;40 a. m., 6:40 a.
m., and every two hours to 6;40 p. m., 7:40
p in., 8:40 p. mn., 9:45 p. mn., and 10:45 p, im
To Ypsilanti only. 11:15 p.an., 12:15 p. M.
12:30 p.in., 1:00 a. m,
Limited Cars for.Jackson-7:44 a. m. nd'
'every two hours to 7:46.p. mn.
Local Cars for Jackson-5:20 a.m., and
every two hours to 9:20 p.m.,11:15 p.m.

:rslty

BELL PHONE 115

_~__

lq

ANNOUNCEMENT
GO TO

in considering the barring of Varsity
track men from participation in the
class relay races, was to stave off pos-
sible injuries to these men. It is to be
hoped that this intention will mate-
rialize into a fixed rule, but for a rea-
son different from the above named.
The reason is the class athlete.
To raise the question, on different
facts, suppose Varsity football men
were permitted to run over from Fer-
ry field to the class gridirons in the
fall and there enter into the class
games. How much interest would
there be in class football, especially
if some certain class happened to be
the possessor of a wealth of Varsity
men? Or if Varsity baseball men were
permitted to participate in class gam-
es?
Why then should Varsity track men
be permitted to enter into the class
relays? It is not to be expected that
any great amount of interest will ever
attend this branch of class athletics,
when the class athlete, with a sincere
ambition for numerals, is compelled
to give way to men who are under the
constant care of the trainers and who
have the experience which comes
from continual practice.
Class numerals can't mean much to
the man who wears the Varsity letter.
They mean much to the man who has
insignia of no sort whatever. Class
relays as presently conducted are not
class relays in the strict sense of the
word. They are simply a side issue
for the Varsity men.
Isn't it about time that the, class

THEATRICAL CIRCLES.
"Freckles" Tomorrow.
"Freckles," which will be the at-
traction at the Whitney theater tomor-
row night, is a play for all classes.
Freckles, with his ready wit, his sweet
songs and his battles with "Black
Jack," gives to the play a variety of
incidents strong dramatically and
strangely interesting.
At the Majestic.
Value received would be but a mild
recognition of the merits of "A Stub-
born Cinderella," a tabloid version of
the well-known Singer musical com-
edy success, which opens at the Ma-
jestic matinee today.
The story is of the daughter of a
royal family who comes to America
on a visit. She is engaged to a man
whom she never saw, but in a college
town falls in love with another, diso-
beying her orders. The plot then fol-
lows the usual course.
ALUMNI AND STUDENTS OF
GRAND RAPIDS TO BANQUET
Director P. G. Bartelme, of the ath-
letic association, Registrar A. G. Hall,
of the literary department, and Judge
J. O. Murfin, of Detroit, will be the
speakers at a Michigan banquet to be
given by the Michigan Alumni Asso-
ciation of Grand Rapids and the Grand
Rapids club of the university at Hotel
Pantlind at Grand Rapids on Satur-
day, April 12. Grand Rapids students
may purchase tickets from Harry
Brown at the Union desk before leav-
ing college for the vacation.

Designers of Men's Clothes

HENRY & CO.

711 N. University

StarTh te GARR I CK TH EATR E
StarT a+ #+rD E T R 0 1 T.
FOR SALE E. H. Southern."and Julia Marlowe
IN
Shakespearean Repertoire
Geo. Spathelf, - Receiver Tonight: Twelfth Night

,ml"

Br fl & Cos

For the best Tailoring Service to be had Anywhere.
In making Dress Clothes we aknowledge no equal,
and prove our superiority in every instance.

Sam

Burchfield & Company
106 Bast Huron Street

...

PACKARD ACADEMY
Leading Place For Private Parties
Beginners' Dancing Glass every Friday evening, 7 to 8 o'clock.
Advanced lass every Monday evening, 7 to 8 o'clock.
Privrate Lessons by appointment.

~~~ ~

one 1 850-J

Residence 57LL

r

:decorated 1912
se and American Restaurant
rooms reserved for partIes and ladles and
s. Stat.St. Chop Sey

IU OF M.

THE* SERE

BOAT LIVERY

For a Quiet Afternoon
or Evening

GO UP THE HURON
Canoe Trips
YPSILANTI -Twelve miles. Time,
four hours. Total cost, including
ret of canoe, dray and $j73
freight...............
IAKELAND. and down the Huron,
Thirty-five miles. Time, one day.
Total cost. including rent$209
of canoe, dray and freight "
U. of M. Boat House
North Main St. By the Bridge
P. G. TESSMER, Prop.

of dressing well lies in the little details
that impart a note of distinction and smart-
ness.
The man who wears our clothes stands
apart from the crowd.
Our stock of Spring Suitings is now
complete.
All garments made in our own shops.

One~octO
b~ags--conf
venient for,
cigarette)
_IL
-. Al u
$-aanc4 ta
e~

l1

contradict and con-
fute nor to believe and
take for granted."
No - you'd better
smoke
TOBACCO
It is its own most
convincing argument.
We cannot tell you the
full richness-the de-
lightful smoothness,
of Velvet. Nor can
anyone else. You
must learn that from
your pipe.

Troy's
Best
2 for 25c
collars

11

WAGNER & CO.

Ala in
one
pound'
*gaus
jars with
humid.,'
tvps..

It

Tailors-State Street

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