C (1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY. .. _.: _ t YOU'LL FEEL RIf;IT ALL OVER when you try on the finished suit or overcoat we have made to your meas- ure. There will be no places where the garment is too. tight or too loose. In short, you will have absolutely per- fect fitting apparel, right in cut, right in style, right in every way. C. H. WILD COMPANY Leading Merchant Tailors. State St. .. ' r ! s Y ,I~ ; , , ', ijf 1 r , 3 r ' . 4 1aj 1 I I "' qty f ~ ; ' i s I NEW AND SECOND-UAND T EL T B 0 0 K's Alt Departments Drawing Instruments Supplies of all kinds [. P. Note Books M Scrccap Books Log Log Slide Rules, Michigan Stationery "M" Book Racks, Supplies of all kinds at SH EE HAN'S I STUDENTS' BOOKSTORE j DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson. Cars run on Eastern time, one hour faster than local time. Detroit Limited and Express Cars-8:lo a.1 M. and hourly to 7:Yo p. n4., 9:10 p. m. Kalamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m. and every two hours to 6:48 p. m.; to Lansing, 9:48 p. m. Local Cars, Eastbound-5 :35 a. m., 6 :40 a in., 7:o5 a. m., andevery two hours to 7:o5 p. i., 8:05 p. nm., 9:05; p. mn., 10 :45 P. in. TO Ypsi- lanti Only, 8:48 a. m. (daily except Sunday), 9:20 a. m., 12:05 p. In., 6:05 p. mn., is :15 p. m., r :15 a. m., I :30 a. ra. Local Cars, Westbound-6:i2 a. Mi., 7so a. mn., and every two hours to 7 :50 p. in., 10:20 p. M., 12:20 a. M. The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Organized 1869 Capital..........$ 300,000.00 Surplus..........$ 150,000.00 Resources over ....$3,000,000.00 Banking in all branches Main Office, N. W. Corner Main and iHuron Sts. Branch Office, 707 North Univ. ersity Avenue. Corner Liberty and Main Coal Coke Lumber Planing Mill Specialties Interior Finishing JNO . J. SAUER Phone 2484 310 W. Liberty HUSTON BROS. BILL.ARDS AND BOW LING Candies Cigars pip pes J _ _ _ _ . ___ ___ ____ _ 1 F° COUSINS & HALL FLORISTS Headquarters for all kinds of cut flowers and plants Phone 115 U TYPEWRITERS THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ofeiial newspaper at the University of Michigan. Published eve:y 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- scriptions: by carrier or mail, $2.5. Want ad. stations : Quarry's, Students' Supply Store, The Delta, cor. Packard and State. Phones: Business. 960; Editorial, 2414. Francis F. McKinney......Managing Editor John S. Leonard..........Business Manager E. Rodgers Sylvester.....Assignment Editor7 James M. Barrett ..........Telggraph Editor E. P. Wright..................Sports EditorJ Edward Mack.........Advertising Manager Kirk White ............Publication Manager Y. R. Althseer...... Circulation Manager C. V. Sellers....................Accountant C. T. Fishleigh. . Assistant Business Manager Night Editors Tom C. Reid C. N. Church Verne Burnett Edwin A. Hyman Joseph J. Brotherton ~Reporters J. C. B. Parker Ienley uill Irwin Johnson Lee Joslyn Leonard W. Nieter Martha ray Waldo R. Hunt Business Staff Albert E. Iorne SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1915. Night Editors Verne E. Burnett J. C. B. Parker A HOST FOR THE WHOLE DAY M. A. C. rooters are to be given a reception today. The germ of the idea originated with CARPENTER last year, and it promises to have fruitful results. Syracuse rarely sends many supporters, but we can continue the experiment on Cornell next month. But it is not the actual welcome that counts so much as the spirit which gives it power. The spirit lasts while its outward signs lapse and are re- vived as the occasion demands. Hav- ing welcomed our guests the respon- sibilities of host rest on us until they leave, and this includes the football game at Ferry Field. WANTED: ANOTHER TEAM In the last year Michigan's humor publication has showed a decided im- provement, and it is all due to the work of one man. This same man three years ago, had prophesied for him a college career ending in oblivion,. WAP JOHN fooled his prophets and at the same time made the Gargoyle. We are looking for an even better magazine this -year. Heretofore finances have been hu- mor's stumbling block, and the pro- hibitive price of cuts has thrown much good art work into the waste- basket. This year, with MAGUIIRE at the helm, the business department has been reorganized on an efficiency basis. These men have struggled against big odds and won. The Paint- ed Windaw struggled and lost. Aren't there some more JOHNS and MAGUIRES on the campus to take hold of this idea? FORESTRY DEPARTMENT GETS IMPROVEMENTS FOR FARM New Cabin Being Completed Near Miniature Lake; Steel Watch Tower Planned Fronting a 50-foot lake, a roomy cabin is rapidly nearing completion on the forestry farm situated three miles west of Ann Arbor. This cabin will be used for storing equipment and apparatus used on the farm, and will also serve as a shelter station in inclement weather. The 80-acre farm is being used par- tially as an open air laboratory. Ac- cording to Prof. L. J. Young, of the forestry department, who has charge of the farm, more ,than 50 plantations of various sorts of trees have been laid out since 1903, when it came into the possession of the university, the largest amount being 20 acres of vari- ous kinds of pine. Even the swamp land on either end of the lake has been utilized, in which tamarack, cot- tonwood and spruce have been planted. Another improvement to be made on the farm is a steel watch tower, which will be erected in the near fu- ture. This will be used for demon- stration purposes and will give the students an idea of actual forestry work. Some road work is yet to be done on the farm, which when completed will make it more accessible to auto- mobile parties., MIr. Cleasby Lectures on "Bird Law" Mr. E. A. Cleasby, of the Biological Survey, of the United States depart- ment of agriculture, lectured on Wed- nesday to Prof. R. W. Hegner's class in Zoology 20, on "The Migratory Bird Law." Mr. Cleasby is district -in- spector for the states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, and has had 30 years' experience in wild life conservation. CELEMANBUILD OFFERS PROMINENTPEKERS History of Organization Related; Board of Trustees Includes Many Leading Citizens Wesleyan Guild will have one of the most brilliant programs of its his- tory this year. The speakers include Dr. David Starr Jordan, Bishop Stuntz, Dr. Henry E. Fosdick and other men equally as renowned. One of the officers in charge of the organization recently set forth the make-up of the guild, of which few probably have a clear understanding. The Wesleyan guild was founded at Ann Arbor in 1886, primarily to con- duct lectures, and it was soon after- ward incorporated under the laws of the state of Michigan. In 1897 the board of trustees received an endow- ment gift from the Honorable Henry Martyn Loud of $15,000, the income of which is always to be used to con- duct lectures in the local Methodist church. These lectures are to be based on the general subject, the evidences, the history, the development and the rea- sonableness of the Christian religion. The aim of those in charge is "to be undenominational in character," and particularly "to encourage a Chris- tian spirit at the University of Mich- igan." The board of trustees are among the leading citizens of the, city, as follows: Professors Edward H. Kraus and Thomas C. Trueblood, Eleazer E. Calkins, William J. Booth, Regent Junius Beal, Dr. Cyreneus G. Darling, Herbert M. Slauson, Durand W. Sprin- ger and Levi D. Wines. HENRY FLETCHER TO BE NEW AMIlASSADOR AT MEXICO CITY Washington Oct. 22.-It is expect- ed that President Wilson will appoint Henry Fletcher ambassador to Mex- ico. Secretary Lansing is said to have recommended Fletcher for the posi- tion. Mr. Fletcher is now ambassador to Chile. Ile has been in the diplo- matic service of the United States for 12 years and is well acquainted with the temperament of the Latin-Amer- ican peoples and the problems con- fronting Mexico. Mr. Fletcher was born in Greenfield, Conn., in 1873. He studied law at the University of Pennsylvania, later en- listing with the Rough Riders under Theodore Roosevelt. His service in the army continued throughout the Spanish-American war. Women's Organizations The board of representatives of the Woman's League will hold an im- portant meeting at 9:00 o'clock this morning in Barbour gymnasium. Plans for the year will be decided upon at this meeting, and it is hoped that every sorority, house club and league house in which five or more girls re- side, will be represented. Wyvern will meet at 4:00 o'clock on Monday afternoon at the Sorosis house. The first informal dance to be given this season by the women of New- berry Residence hall took place last evening from 9:00 to 12:00 o'clock. It was given in honor of a few of the out-of-town guests, who are here for the M. A. C-Michigan game. Martha Cook dormitory elected the following as representatives to the Women's League: Senior, Ruth Tombley; junior, Helen Richie; sophomore, Christine Kersey; fresh- man, Emily Loman. The Y. W. C. A. will hold a chry- santhemum sale today. The athletic department of the Wo- man's League is the old athletic com- mittee reorganized. To meet actual needs will be the aim of the Young Women's Christian association this year. At a "To Hear, to See, to Eat" meeting Thursday evening plans were made for a number of Newberry hall classes this winter. Courses in "Hebrew Prophets" and., "The Social Aspects of Foreign Mis- sions," under Prof. Leroy Waterman and Mr. N., C. Fetter, will be begun on Monday, October 25. These courses will run for seven weeks. Beginning October 26, Mr. Roy Hamilton and Mr. G. W. Knepper will conduct classes in the "Character of Jesus," and "What Can I Believe." LANDER' OR MRS. FLANDERS £L w-r Shop Phone 1845-M 213 EAST LIBERTY STREET 4i University Bookstore is at your service with a never-failing supply of Courtesy and a "Square Deal." Also Cords of New and Second-hand TEXT 10O'O K S Drawing Instruments and Rngineers' Supplies Make OUR Store YOUR Store State L.E Main Street Street WA N ounce of proof is worth aofargyment. A C3 pipe of VELVET proves more 0 than a page of print. ii C - ---== am r yobur Yellow tums ' now for TYPEWRITING AND SHORTHAND MIMEOGRAPHING "Eberything for the Typelvriter" 0 ." D'.GMO R R I Litl (ov'r altim're L'ncli) L 3225. State St. A Co mPlete Ltnr* of .Drug undries, Kodexks Candies, Perfumes ALBE RT MANN, Drugist 213 Soth Main St. Ait Arbor. icK. When Gas Service gets into your home it brings Good Cheer, Good Food, and Contentment Gas Service is as nearly perfect as human ingenuity and willingness can make it. All that Gas Service asks is the chance to serve. It brings you light, fuel and warmth at any hour of the day or night in "ungrudging measure" and sees to it that you receive them when you want them. Gas Service doesn't sleep, but it lets you sleep with an easy mind. Washteaw Gas Co. I 4 Wear Clothes for which you need never apologize. You'll find ny styles truly Metropolitan. $28 0 °UP D. E. GRENNAN 606 LIBERTY STREET, EAST m ,' ,C H OO L SV PP L IE S Loose Leaf Note Books, paper to fit, 50c per lb. Fountain Pens sold and repaired. I. I. SC LE EE340 S. State St. SAM BURCHFIELD & CO. The FIRST and BEST Tailoring Establishment in Ann Arbor ANNOUNCE We have an exceptionally fine and varied line of Woolen- to show you this Fall. Outsiders Get Arizona Summer Jobs The University of Arizona College of Mines has announced that it has more positions for summer work in mines and mills than can be filled by its own undergraduates, and has de- cided to throw them open to under- graduates of other schools. The posi- tions now open pay from $2.50 to $3.75 a day. The university has also established, in connection with the state bureau of mines, a limited num- ber of positions for graduate assist- ants. These positions pay about $400 for the academic year. The Arizona state bureau of mines is de- voted entirely to research, and con- siders problems of interest to the en- gineering, mining and metallurgis in- dustries. Those who accept these po- sitions must agree to hold them dur- ing the academic year. They will de- vote half their time to research work in connection with the bureau of mines, this work to be applicable for thesis credit not to exceed 10 units. The rest of their time will be devoted, to graduate study in candidacy for a degree. Those interested should write to Prof. Charles F. Willis, care of the University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona. Miss Martha Gurd Appointed to Iowa Miss Martha Gurd, '08, who has been studying in Zurich University, Switzerland, where she received a Ph.D. degree, has been appointed an. 'MEXICAN SOPH TELLS TROUBLES L. E. Zapata, 'ISE, Set Adrift by Revolutions Limio Eduardo Zapata, '18E, of Mex- ico City, Mexico, is one of the many Mexican students in this country who finds rebellions a menace to financial situations. Zapata, by no means the son of the revolutionary general Za- pata, has not received any money from home in two years, although his father, George Zapata, a retired min- ing engineer, is one of the wealthiest men in the war-stricken country. In an interview with the Mexican student yesterday, he humbly recited as best he knew the conditions in Mexico. "I have tried to locate my father and brother since last Decem- ber, but cannot find them. The last we heard of them, they were on a ranch outside of Mexico City. My mother and sister, who are at our home in Mexico City, have not heard from them since that time either." In a letter received from his sister last August, he was told that a pair of shoes in the city cost approximate- ly $195 in Mexican money. Zapata's brother, who is now in Mexico, attended the University of Wisconsin for several years. Martin guitars, mandolins, ukeleles } SAM BURCHFIELD & CO. ) --- Call 2255 for "We'll be there." Have your room cally by C. H. Ma 237, 2038 Washing Did your pajama a Stark Taxicab. Typewriter for Rent or Sale oct5tf Students, investigate this unsual proposition. Try a fully guaranteed s decorated artisti- ajor & Co. Phone Royal rebuilt, famous Model 1 visible ,ton street. for a week. Then if you like its beau- oct20-21-22-23-24 tiful work and easy action, rent it as - -long as you wish at $3.00 a month. s ever crawl up After 12 months' rental you own the around your neck when in bed? Then you are the fellow I want to see. I have a line of night garments that will please you at $1.50. Davis, 1191 S. Main street. oct3j typewriter. Save money by promptly calling. A. . Cohen, resident sales- man, 711 W. Washington street. Phone 1099, _..oct16eod instructor in the romance languages and all musical instruments at in the University of Iowa, at Iowa berle & Son's Music House, 110 City. Main street.