TIIP3 MICIIUGAN t AILY Spring Suits, Overcoats Hats and Furnishings GET IT AT CALKINS' PHARMACY Inmall the latest and up-to-data styles. h We have a line of SHIRTS and NECKWEAR that com- prises all of the nobby ideas Our prices are reasonable for seasonable goods. t > . . , " :- ,' ' ' } _ % -°' , J Do you know we served a ton of Malted Milk at our Soda Fountains last year ? We me.ke"em Kgfh* Our New Ic. cree.m We make it ourselves, and it is REAL Cream. No Gelatin. No Ice Cream Powder. Societyl Clothes for also a fine- Furnishings, Caps Bags Cases, Come inan oe them over. *I trtgNS.t +YAR~.D. 8 C. Brand Spring line of Hats, & Suit id look 9 GET IT AT CALKIN'S PHARMACY 342 SOUTH STATE STREET WADHAMS & CO. 121-123 So. tlain St. i r.e.w I The Farmers & Mechanies Bank 101-103-105 South Main Street md ividual Custom Tilloring Capital, $100,000 Surplus and Profits . I $75,000 The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Capital Stock $300,000 Surplus $ioo,ooo Resources $,000,008 A General Banking Business Transacted Chas. F,. Hiscock, Pres., MVichael 3. Fritz, Cash'r, WV. D. Harriman, Vice-Pres., Carl F. "raun, Asst. Cash'r, Wm. Waltz, Asst. Cash'r Savings Dept. (dernan-A neican 3 a Liberty and Main Sts. A Most Convenient Place for Your Banking That is correct in style and fit The new fabrics for this season are here in large assortments. CALL EARLY. A. F. Marquardt Campus Tailor 516 E. William Street -Apart from the officers and commit- teemen who have signed up, about 40 new memberships were reported for the Michigan Union Boat club, accord- ing to incomplete returns at- a commit- tee meeting, at the Union yesterday afternoon. The luncheon planned for the committeemen for tomorrow noon has been postponed. -Copy for the March issue of the Michigan Alumnus has been sent to the printers, and the publication will be distributed the latter part of next week. -Senior engineering canes will soon make their appearance on the campus, about 75 having already been ordered. -Fuiersity hospital authorities re- ported yesterday that the condition of Mr. Lymann Bryson, instructor in the rhetoric department, was about the same. An operation for mastoids Temple Theatre ADMISSION Sc. (except Friday and Saturday) Saturday, March 6 The Place, The Time and The Man (with Gerda Holmes) I I I f I Next Week The Lion's Bride. Furniture co _I I - F .o.... . ..._ . Orpheum Theatre The House of Famous Plays by Famous Players. I SAT. MAR. 6 Carlyle Blackwell in "The Key to Yesterday" Arcade Theatre SHOWS:AFTERNOONS 4;00: EVE, 6:15; 1:45; 9:15' DIRECT FROM FACTORY TO YOU The people of Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County are cor- dially invited to call at the Exhibition Rooms of the COME- PACKT FURNITURE COMPANY and examine for themselves the splendid values offered in choice furniture at prices represent- ing, in many instances, A SAVING OF 100 PER CENT as compared with prices usually charged. The Come-Packt Mission and Craftsmen Designs are par- ticularly suitable for fraternity and club houses. We also design and make special furniture to order. Builders of new homes will find it to their advantage to em- ploy the facilities afforded by our factory for the production of "built-in" furniture for libraries, dens, halls, dining-rooms and kitchens. Take Packard Street car to State Street and go one block south and three blocks west to factory of COME-PACKT FURNITURE COMPANY Corner Edwin and Division Streets I I Cloth Shop TAILORS Service and durability, built on the lines of fashionable Tailor- ing, you will find in the Myles productions. Our own Tailors and our own Workshops 618 E. LIBERTY STRFET I, - I - I tE \ Gymnasium Supremacy is earned through greater strength; ability to think quickly and act while thinking; through the possession of muscular power, prowess, and endurance that enable an athlete to defeat his opponent. hredded Whea seems probable. -Prof. W. R. Humphreys, of the Eng- lish department, was one of the judges at the oratorical contest held at Alma college last night. He will return to- day. -New programs for the Union mem- bership dances for the remainder of the year will probably be off the press in time for the weekly affair next Sat- urday. After each dance number, on the new programs, the kind of dance will be designated, and each fifth one will be a fox trot. -Claude Maurier, '17, will address members of the Cosmopolitan club, in the club rooms, at 4:00 o'clock Sunday afternoon. He will speak on the gen- eral subject of South Africa. Maurier is a native of South Africa. -1lembers of the Law faculty gather- ed at the Michigan t'nion yesterday noon for luncheon, after which ques- Lions of importance to the Law School were discussed. The meetings will; probably be held by-weekly, at leastr until the spring vacation, --N. E. Pinney, '16, and Olerhilps, '17,, have been elected president and secretary, respectively, of the Inter-1 national Polity club, succeeding Prof.E J. A. C. Hildner and Fred B. Foulk, '13-'16L, who recently resigned, FIRST NATIONAL BANK ANN ARtDOR Capital - - $100,000 Surplus and Profits $65.000 Directors Wirt Cornwell, Geo. W. Patterson, H. J. Ab- bott, S. W. Clarkson, E. D. Kinne, Harrison Soule, Waldo M. Abbott, Dan B. Sutton, Fred Schmid. SIX CITIES TO HEAR ,LECTURES Five Faculty Men Will Take Part on Extension Service Program Lectures for the coming week on the university extension service will be given in six cities, five faculty men carrying out the program. Mr. R. K. Immel, of the oratory'department, will r Saturday, Mar. 6-The Tragedy of Bear Mogntain, : part Kalem Drama; chiefly Concerninig Males, Vitagraph Comedy Hearst-elig; ews, also Lubin Comedy. Coming - Mrs. Leslie carter in "Dit Barry." watch for the date. I m T ELLS ABOUT WORK AT, BUSRHH,,ARABisi Makes Your Hands like Velvet Mann's Benzoin Cieam has a marvellous effect on the skin. Two or three applications will remove the roughness, and by its occasional use the skin acquires the smoothness and softness of a baby's. Delightful after shaving.Price 15 ceul MANN'S DRUG STORE ,2135PM ain street Nurse e from University of Mie Writes of Conditions Since Start of War higan is more nourishing than meat. It possesses all the elements of whole wheat that con- tribute to tissue-strengthening and the building of brain, bone and brawn, Brains and bodies nourished by SHREDDED WHEAT meet emergencies, tests and crises as they should be met-victoriously. "All the Meat of the Golden Wheat" A. L. WEEKS OF DETROIT NEWS TO SPEAK HERE ON 1j AMA TICS A. L. Weeks, of the Detroit News, has been secured to lecture at 2:00 o'clock Monday, in room 203 Universi- ty hall, before the classes in newspa- per work. Mr. Weeks is lecturing in place of Mr. Lymann Bryson, who is confined to the university hospital. The talk will be along the lines of newspaper dramatic work, as Mr. Weeks is dramatic editor of the News.' The lecture, although primarily for the students in the class, is open to the general public. Student ComplainsH Ie Was Threatened Upon complaint of Gordon R. Mir- ick, '17E, Oscar Iianeman, an employee of a local skating. rink, was brought before Justice W. G. Doty yesterday, charged with threatening to do bodily harm. Miriclt asked that Haneman be put under bond to keep the peace, but the matter was settled without action by the court, the complaint being dis- missed upon, payment of the costs. The trouble started when Mirick offer- ed to take the position held by H-ane- man at a reduced wage. i 1 r 1 1 1 1 '1 1 deliver the first of the out-of-town talks, by giving a reading of "The Mer- chant of Venice," before the high school at Hudson, Michigan, Wednes- day. On Friday, Mr. Immel will ap- pear before the County Grange Teach- ers' and Patrons' association at Hol- ton, Michigan, where he will speak on "The Citiven of Tomorrow," and will read Charles Rand Kennedy's "Servant in the House," Prof. E. R. Turner, of the history de- partment, is booked to spea, in Grand Rapids, Friday, 'under the auspices of the public library of that city. Prof. J. S. Reeves, of the political science department, is to talk in Bay City, Thursday, on "The Commission Form of Government." Prof,. H. R. Cross, of the fine arts department, will speak at Lansing, Friday, on "The Story of American Art," under the auspices of the public library there. The Twentieth Century club, of De- troit, will hear- Prof. Clarence L. Mea- der, Thursdty, on "Russian Universi- ties." Although this talk is not on the regular extension series, it was through officials in charge of the se- ries that the club secured this engage- ment of Professor Meader, I ENGLISh TAKE OVER HOSPITALI As an aftermath to the annual cam- paign which was made by the Students' Christian association, for funds for support of the univergity mission in. Busrah, Arabia, the officials of the Y. M. C. A. have just received a letter from Miss Minnie Hoizhauser, who graduated from the Homeop nurses' school last year, in which she tells of the conditions that have prevailed at the hospital since the beginning of the European war. She says that the hospital has been taken over for the temporary use of the English government, which now has control of Arabia, and that literal- ly hundreds of wounded Arabs and Turks are being treated daily by the hospital staff. She stated further that existing con- ditions {throughout Arabia had, im- proved immensely since the English occupation, but that, unless conditions in the United States this year make it possible for the sending of more rep- resentatives to Busrah for the general staff of the hospital, the effectiveness of the work would be greatly hamper- ed. She said that both Dr. Bennett and Dr. Van Vlack, who are Michigan graduates, have been especially effi- cient in the constructive work which they have been able to do at the9mis- sion, and that their work had been rec- ognized to such an extent that they have been tendered other positions of a medical nature in other parts of Busrah. According to Miss Holzhaus- er, however, both of them have practi- cally, decided to remain with the hos- pital, the local committee here being very loath to part with their services. In a campus wide campaign last year, the local association succeeded in raising about $4,500 for the main- tenance of the mission, and, to date, about $3,700 of this, amount has been paid in. The campaign for fundsthis year, if conducted on the campus, will probably take place the latter part of April. The S. C. A. has not, however, made public any plans on the matter. Cast and chorus of the Michiga: Union opera will have a full rehears al at McMillan hall, at 1:00 o'oioc this afternoon. Team captains in the Harvard ches tournament make reports to the secre tary by 7:30 o'clock tonight. Choral union ushersvreport at Hil auditorium Tuesday evening, for it lecture by James Archibald. Members of the Deutscher Verei will hold a meeting at 8:00 o'clocl Wednesday night, in the Verein rooms General business will be discussed and new members will be voted on. Association Forms Chautauqua Plan, Plans for the Chautauqua which is to be held in the city this summer were formulated at a recent meeting of the Ann Arbor Civic association Students who are contemplating at- tendance at the sumrmer session, and are doing sociological work will be in terested in the plans being made for general city beautification in connec- tion with the playground movement At the same meeting a committee was appointed to prepare a booklet for the purpose of adverising Ann Arbor in the South. BULLETINS SHOW i'NIVERSITY NEEDS TO 191 ..1EGISLATURI Bulletins of information, addressed to the state legislature of 1915, and to the people of the state of Michigan have recently been 'published by the university, discussing the need for a fire-proof library building and a mod- el school. The bulletins show that th( cost of the University of Michigan to the people of this state is less than that of other colleges, and that th university annually serves directlj more than 100,000 citizens of the state besides the regularly enrolled stu- dents. Forestry Students Plan for Field Da Plans are being made by students o the curriculum in forestry for theiz annual field day, which will be held a the forestry farm some time in May no definite date having been set as yet. Races and other field sports wil be engaged in and a barbecue will bi Made only by The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y.t Librarian Koch Takes Librarian Theodore gone on a business trip eastern universities, Business Trip W. Koch has to some of the IS AMATEUR FINISHING CAMPUS VIEWS PORTRAITS You Ought to Come ,In if you are at all interested in the very latest sheet music. Every Friday our Detroit store sends us the big hits of the week. They are yours at ten cents a copy. )AINES &,NICKELS The etly Studio on the Caimpus Phou. 130_J M! HENSIAN PHONE 1707, FOR DELIVERY GRINNELL BROS. "'The Source of the Latest and Best" 120-122 E. LIBERTY ST. Li