. ._ , THE MICHIGAN DAILY l i. """"'° _a k.TS k-TS STS STS Go To Calkins' HATS HATS HATS HATS careful and courteous attention latest on sheet or record value for your money For I Soda Water For Thirty Years the Vest CALL AT DRUGS KODAKS Calkins' Pharmacy. 324 South State Street CANDY SODA ALLM ENDINGER'S Music Shop Phone 1692-F 1 122 E. Liberty We are showing the latest styles in Suits, Top Coats Sport Coats, Hats, Caps and Furnishings Vadhams & Co.'s Corner Main & Washington Sts. ... ... ...s.. .,.,. .._.__ ~ . I I Special Sale One-fourth off on All Colored Hats Saturday and Monday May 27 and 29 -at- Hayley's Millinery Y.MC.A. STARTS 1LAKE 6ENEVA CLUB i1embership to Ie Limited to Ie And WomenIi Who Nave Attended One of Cnfereces BEWdN ACTIVITIES NEXT FALL Plans were formulated yesterday at the "Y" cabinet meeting, to start in the near future what is tobe known as the Lake Geneva club. Membership to the club is to be limited to those men and women who have been to the Lake Geneva Stu- dent conference or to one of the great Student Volunteer; Conventions whih are held in various partsof the United States every summer. According to the men back of this new movement, the purpose of the club is to promote good fellowship among the members of the club, to as- sist the Student'a Christian Associa- tion in permeating all of it's activities with the spirit of Geneva, and also to promote this same spirit in the town or city to which each member goes after graduation. The idea was also advanced that the club should pro- vide at least a part of the funds for each delegation which the' Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. send to 1 fake Geneva each year. There is tobe no membership fee, each member will be expected to con- tribute something each yeeii' toward the conference fund until he or she has given at least as much a s they received from the association for their expenses to Geneva or to the Staudent Volunteer Convention. They cafl of course donate as much more as they may desire. Next November will probaably ee the first meeting, of the new club .at which time officers will be electe, for the year. The first meeting is to be called by the presient of the S. C. A., and is to be followed by two more meetings in the college year. Chemical Engineers Visit Two Plantsa Two manufacturing plants, the De-c troit Chemical Works, of Detroit, man-t ufacturers of sulphuric and nitric acids, and the Diamond Cry-stal Saltf company, of St. Clair, Mich., will be visited on a trip of inspection today by students in course 4 of chemical engineering. Prof. A. H. White, of the chomicale engineering department, is in charge of the party.G society rooms.c . R. Lounsbury, "16, and 22 fellowe members of the Commerce club, havec returned from Cleveland, where theyt have been studying various phases of economic welfare. Several interest-a ing and novel .schemes, dealing with capital and labor, were brought tof their notice. Cleveland manufactur- ers are busy trying to solve the ques- t tion more satisfactorily. ' THE HARDEST TEST IN THE WORLD FOP, a Cigarette-To smoke it be- fore breakfast when your taste is fresh and keen. And that is why we ask you to try 0 4ese this morning before you forget. Perhaps they're not your cigarette, there may be others you'd like better; but our motto is a good one to follow. "From Morning Till Night Fewer Cigarettes, butthe Best" LUNCHES, CANDIES, HOT SUNDA AT THE SUGAR BOWL 109 ' SOUTH MAIN STREET _-. ---- 1. :, . i ~l.t - --, . . . I E AIDE OUR OWN CANDIES OUT OF THE PUREST AND BEST, MATERIALS I a I 206 E. Liberty THE PEACOCK May not be a noble bird but his feathers are ad- mired by all. Clothes of this kind are individually custom tailored by See Our Stewart ?.achines at $5.oo for your Canoe An election for the purpose of selecting three student members of the Board in Control of Student Publi- cations will be held on June 1, Gen- eral Campus Election Day. At its meeting on May 25, 1916, the board approved as candidates the following nominees whose names will appear on the official ballot at this election: Yancy Altsheler, '17. Don Smith, '17E. George Caron, '17L. Stanley Smith, '17. Tom Reid, '17. Lamar Kishler, '17E. James Barrett, '17L. Harry Gault, '17L. The attention of the students in the University is called to the fact that the constitution of the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications permits the nomination of. any eligible student as candidate for any of these posi- tions, by filing with Professor F. N. Scott, Chairman of the Board, on or before Wednesday, May 31, 4:00 P. M., a petition signed by at least 25 stu- dents in the University asking that the name of the said student be placed o n the official ballot as a candidate for st udent member of the board. Those wh ose names are thus proposed and app. roved by this board shall be candi- da&t. at said election in addition to those above named. The constitution of the board de- fines ofgibility to student membership as foloivs: "All students in the Uni- versity ssiall be eligible to membership in this board who (at the time of tak- ing office) either by virtue of credit earned are entitled to the rating of seniors in ,the school or college in which they are enrolled, or who have received a degree in the Arts College of the University of Michigan and are continuing their studies in another college in the University, who have complied with the eligibility rules of their school or college and of the Uni- versity governing participation in non- athletic activities and who have re- sided in the University for at least four semesters, provided that no stu- dent be eligible to membership in this board who either at the time of his election to membership therein or at the beginning of his term shall hold or be a candidate for any salaried posi- tion on any publication under the con- trol of this board." BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS. V f f k .._ n ' , 1 ' ' The Professor Can't Do It He can pass you out of college with honor marks, but he can't pass you through life. Tackling the problems of business is a matter of physical. and mental pre- paredness, and these come from well balanced foods and rational exercise. For the problems of college or the battle of life nothing can equal Shre4&dded Wheat, the food that contains all the muscle-building, brain- making material in the whole wheat grain prepared in a digestible form. Its daily use preserves the proper balance between brain and muscle, supplying the phy- sical strength and mental alertness that are needed in every line of endeavor. Shredded Wheat Biscuit is on the training table of nearly every college and uni- versity in this country and Canada. Two of these Shredded Wheat Biscuits with milk or cream make a complete, perfect meal, supplying all the strength needed for study or play. Made only by The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y. ARTHUR F. MARQUARDT Campus Tailor St. Phone 1422J1 ,.r, THE CAMPUS IN BRIEF The Roy ). Chapin scholarship of $750 yearly, for two years, is to be awarded this summer for .research work in the highway engineering lab- oratories to the graduate student of the College of Engineering or of any other accredited engineering school in the country who is judged to be best qualified for the work. Mr. Chap- in, who offers this scholarship, is the president of the Hudson Motor Car company of Detroit. A movement is on foot to organize a student branch of the Society of Automobile Engineers. This branch will bear about the same relation to the parent body as does the present student branch of the Association of Electrical Engineers. All students in- terested in the formation of such a branch should sign the slip provided for that purpose in the Engineering I in the hot snmmer months with an I Electric Fan The cooling breezes of an electric fan cost you only a few cents a day and give you great comfort in i On Wednesday night, May 31, there-, will be a union meeting at the Bap-- tist church, dealing with the prohibi- tion question from different points of view. New campaign songs will be sung with N. C. Fetter, Jr., leading. Mrs. Maria Peel, Prof. S. F. Gingerich, and Mr. T. A. Lawry will be the prin- cipal speakers. The Home The Office The Store The. Shop LOST LOST-In Intramural Clubhouse. Horseman tennis racket in case. Finder please return to 436 Thomp- son street. Liberal reward. m27 LOST-Small gold knife with engrav- ing F. A. T. Thursday afternoon on Ferry field. Return to Daily office. Reward. m27,28 FORB RENT FOR RENT-One furnished apartment in Cutting Flats during *July and August. Telephone 1358-W between 8 and 10 A. M. m25-26-27 WANAD WANTED-To buy Franklin and Esty "Dynamos and Motors." Must be cheap. 111 S. Ingalls. Phone 1466- M.. -m27 FOR SALE VO R SALE-Racycle bicycle with coaster brake in splendid condition. $15. Inquire 916 Church street.m27 MISCELLANEOUS Patronize Daily Advertizers. ** Announcement was made recently at the Kappa Alpha Theta house, of the engagement of Stella Rosa Roth, '14, daughter of Prof. Filibert Roth and Mrs. Roth, to Orlan W. Boston, '13E. |I|||||||-- - - - -i--- 1104d1 .ssistant Band Manager Tryout Tryouts for assistant student nianager of the Varsity band will be h eld in room 328 in the Natural Scien.ce building between 1:15 and 2:00 o'clock this afternoon. Only freshnien are eligible for this posi- tion. Get It Now-You'll Need It Soon --- The Detroit Edison Com an Eastern Michigan Divislin -,---" r.r..... " . " ." One of the Rea Joys of Life is to hear the World's Famous Artists' Voices and- Music reproduced on the VICTOR VICTROLA, Latest Dance Reeords are beautiful. i Corner MaIn and W1 lliasa Sts. Telephone 2300 Try our Record Approval Service GRINNELL BROS. MusIC House Ali Don't throw away that tld trunk. We will repair it. Kach & Henne, 300 of the year, 50c. . : South Main. The Michigan Daily for the rest tf Saddle ponies at 50c an hour. 830. Send The Daily home. 50c for the rest of the yeare 116 South Main St. PHONE 1707 I 11 11 Downtown Hicatlquart e, for Glee and Mandolin. Club Concert Tickets i Buy your calling cards at Shee- han's. tfj C I idon fr p. - I 4