100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

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 24, 1915 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1915-04-24

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

THlE MICHIGAN DAILY

... ,.,. :..........._,.__, W._,e,... :.. .. ..._.. ..

i

N'T HOP FROM SHOP TO SHO
)KING FOR THE NEW BILLIARD
TH FLANNEL. WE HAVE IT, IN THREE
LDES. ALSO PLENTY OF OTHER WHITE
CLOTHS FOR TROU ERINGS.
KAC KEtĀ°T S
We are agents for the only real up-to-date
Rackets on the market.
The Slotted Throat gives the Racket a balance
which no other Racket has
Come in and ispect our stock before buying
STUDENTS' BOOKSTORE

i

OIT UNITED LINES
N ARBOR TIME TABLE.
* Express Cars for Detract-7 : i
d hourly to 6:o p. m., also 8:io
for Detroit-5:40 a. m., 6:06 a. in.,
two hours to 6:06 p. m., 7:06 p.
p. mi., 9 :r5 p. m., and 10:45 P. m.
Inti only: 7:4 a. m., 8:20 a. m.,
m., 5:o6 p. m., r:,5 p. m., 12:15
:3o a. M., x:oo a. m.
rs for Jackson-.7:18 a. in., and
> hours to 7:48 p. i.
for Jackson-s:xZ a. m., 6:50 a. m.,
y two hours to 6:5o p. m., also
., rI: I p. M.
rou are Hungry I

The Finest

Place in Town

to Dine

TIHE MICH3IGAN DAILY
Official newspaper at the University of
Michigan. Published every morning except
Monday during the university year.
Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as
second-class matter.
Offices, Ann Arbor Press Building Sub-
by carrier, $2.50; by mail, $2.5. Want a.
stations: Quarry's, Univ. Pharmacy, C. H.
Davis, cor. Packard and State.
Business Office Phone 960
Editorial Office Phone 3414
11. Beach Carpenter.......Managing Editor
W, Sherwood Field........ Business Manage
Fred Foulk...................News Editor
1,. F. Mc Kinney ......... .. Associate Editor
Chester ii. Lang. ..Associate Editor
T. Hawley 'rapping........Sporting Editor
Assistants to Business Manager
John Leonard Ry Leffler
Rudolph Holman Arthur H. Torrey
Night Editors
James M. Barrett, Jr. E. Rodgers Sylvester
Tonm C. Reid Howard R. Marsh
Reporters
Edwin A. Hyman Eugene L. Bulson
C. B. Parker Vera Burridge
Irwin Johnson Gerald Rosenbaum
Verne Burnett C. N. Church
Hr. A. Fitzgerald Edward P. Wright
L. Greenebaum William F. Newton
Lee Joslyn
Business Staff
Terris Fitch Edward Mack
C. V. Sellers Y. R. Altsheler
Birk White C. P. Fishleigh
Delos Smith J J. Herbert
Thatcher Rea
SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1915.
Night Editor-J. C. B. Parker.
COMEDY CLUB TRY-OUTS.
Spring try-outs for the Comedy club
come early next month. There vlil be
a meeting this coming Thursday, duly
announced, where prospective candi-
dates will be told what to do. If there
are not 100 or more persons out for
the preliminary session, the officers
will have good reason for being dis-
appointed. Past experience, however,
isn't reassuring as to future enthusi-
asm. The club has not had its deserv-
ed quota of try-outs in the last few
years.
The injection of a little more "pep"
and modernness would help the Com-
edy club wonderfully. It isn't an
overly attractive proposition for the
talented student light now-a couple
of apathetic home audiences, a short
trip and weeks of hard work. Put on
"The Melting Pot" or "Diplomacy" or
"The Speckled Band" next year, do a
little judicious press agenting of the
Glee club or Band Bounce type, and
drag the Comedy club off of the emi-
1iently respectable but dreadfully un-
interesting pedestal which it adorns.
In the Peantime, give it the avan-
tage of a large try-out list.
Underclass friends wish, that ,some
of these seniors with cars for grad-
uation presents would get plucked.
Many a stude has pulled out of the
slough of scholastic mediocrity be-
tween spring vacation and the end.
One height of popularity is,reached
when the campus policeman calls yo'u
by your first name.
Surprising bow much sympathy for
home missions is uncovered- by the
Busrah canvassers,

For he too is busy perspiring.

Macks
tea 1IOOH
Service a Ia Carte
Open 8:00 in the morning ill:00 in
the aftrnoori- atwrdays til 9:00
Olrd)est:'a Mnslo onl Sturciays
Special Club Dinners and Banquetsl
by appointment

step in atdy
ITT LE 'S

I

e always ready
serve you.

So say us all.
There will be an important meet-
ing of Cercle Francais at 8:00 o'clock
this evening in the Cercle rooms:
The baseball pi'actice schedule for
women has been arranged as follows:
seniors, Tuesdays and Thursdays;
juniors, Tuesdays and Wednesdays;
sophomores, Mondays and Thursdays.
All practices will beaheld at 4:00
o'clock. Interclass games will be
played according to a schedule to be
announced later, and a championship
trophy will be awarded.
* * *
"Constitutional Revision" wvill be the
topic of most importance discussed -at
the next regular meeting of the Wom-
en's League executive board, on Sat-
urday, May 1. The issues with regard
to revision of the League constitution
will be formillated and presented at
that time by Judith Ginsburg, '15,
chairman of the committee.
A cross-country walking squad,
which all university women are invit-
ed to join, leaves Barbour gymnasium
at 8:30 o'clock this morning. One
point in the athletic honor system can
be earned by participating in the
tramp.
Outdoor work for the playground
class begins at 10:45 o'clock this
morning.
BULGARIAN DIPLOMAT GIVES
LECTURE IN MEMORIAL HALL
Hon. Stephen Panaretoff, Bulgarian
ambassador to the United States, lec-
tured in Memorial hall at 4:15 o'clock
yesterday afternoon on "The Develop-
ment of the Bulgarian Language." He
holds the chair of Bulgarian philology
at Roberts college, Constantinople,
and is said to be the highest authority
in the world upon the Bulgarian lan-
guage. Professor Panaretoff is pre-
paring the first complete dictionary
of the Bulgarian language, and is the
first diplomatic emissary from Bulga-
ria to this country. The lecture was
given in response to an invitation ex-
tended Professor Panaretoff by the
university.
Ernest Moore Gives Lecture Tonight
Ernest Moore will deliver a lecture
on "The Truth about Socialismn" at
7:45 o'clock tonight in the Unitarian
church. The lecture will be given un-
der the auspices of the Intercollegiate
Socialist society.

it will cost to janitor in the women's
dorms.
One sign of the times: co-stude un-
consciously hums "I Want a Hero."
Maybe that snap summer job you
hear so much about isn't.
Awful when roomy starts to walk
like Charlie Chaplin.
Baseball will open" the spring sea-
son all over again.
Ready for that pop and peanuts
diet?
Pity the glory-ridden footballer.

11

It will be of interest to you to know that
we have just received a shipment of

150 Tennis Rackets 150
ranging in price from $1.5o to $8.oo--every one
of them guaranteed. We give especial attention to
Re-stringing Rackets. Your racket made
new for $i.5o, $2.50 or $3.5o, as you desire.
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE

CUT FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS

Tennis Lovers, Attention.

FLORAL DESIGNS

CORSAGE BOUQUETS

THE ONLY DOWN-TOWN FLORIST

FLANDER'S FLORAL SHOP

CUT FRESH DAILY

PROrIPTDELIVERY

m, m-

Second Floor-Annex BRn ildil('

209 E. Liberty St.

Phone 1845-M

OPEN SUNDAYS TILL NOON
Our Special
CARNATIONS 50c. PER DOZE

ON STATE I
n Arbor Savings Bank
:k $300,000 Surplus $ioo,ooo
Resources $3,000,000
al Banking Business Transacted
fiscock, Pres., Michael J. Fritz,
D. Harriman, Vice-Pres., Cal F.
. Cash'r, Wm. Waltz, Asst. Cash'r

PARTICULAR .LAUNDRY
FOR
PARTICULAR
PEOPLE
CY LAUNDRY'
THOS. ROW[, Prop.
Detroit 'St. Phone 457-M

ty and Main Sts.
nvenient Place for Your
Banking

i /'
[f

PHONE "13''
FOR

BU S BEE
"THE POPULAR PLACE"
ICE CREAM

r

The finish of the semester seems a
lot closer when you think about that
thesis.
The innovation neans that those to
come will be born with smiling coun-
tenances.
If it keeps on getting warmer, will
the Kaiser insist on his place in the
sun?
le-studes are wondering how much

CTS, not words, is
the best way
to-teach folks.
Even wild ducks f
foller the"fliers.U
smokers follow the real thing, too. sily c ims, may
"catch" for a while but the genuine, proved integrity of
VELVET tobacco, and VELVET'S own aged-n-the-ood
mellowness, finally win. loc tins and 5c metl-ned bags.
Seneca and Scout Cameras
We have them from $2.00 up.
V U LC A'N F ILMS
MANN & WALKER 213 . ma in street
* th
Scorig te inig n
is a matter of physical and mental sapr_,'ority
-a condition of leg-sturdinss olispece,
brain -alertness and instant judgm~le' . Iye -
keenness and accuracy, an ability to take
chances with a degree of certainty of final
achievement.
ShreddedWha
assists athletes in acquiring these qualifica-
tions, for it builds and develops brawn, brain,
The most nourishing form of whole wheat,
it is a food that strengthens the tissues of the
human body and fosters the development of a
good brain and sound body.
"All the Meat of the Golden ,Wheat"

Burchfield & Co.
We can offer you the finest and
best tailoring service to be had in
the state, with no exception.
Evening dress is our specialty.

Hungry: Dean's Peanuts
you. 10 cents a pound.

will fill

Sam
PHONE 599

Burchfield

& Co*
106 E. HURON ST.

SOME NEW THINGS

IN

a_

airts, Soft Collars& Caps

AT

Toggery Shop
107 S. University Ave.'

Made only by
The Shredded Wheat Company,

Niagara Falls, N. Y

11

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan