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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.

November 24, 1915 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1915-11-24

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILI

NOTHING TO CRITICISE

i the suit we make for you. Neither
i the material, the style or the tail-
ring will be found the least excuse
or fault finding. We solicit an order
>r one of our new model suits, know-
ag as we do that it will give such all
'ound satisfaction that we will be
our regular tailors thereafter.
G. H. WILD COMPANY
4cading Merchant .Tailors State St.

'
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l ' t + S
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5 5

THE MICHIGAN DAILY1
Official 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.o. Want
ad. stations: Quarry's, Students' Supply
Store, The Delta, cor. Packard and State.
Phones: Business, 960; Editorial, 2414.
Erancis F. McKinney......Managing Editor
John S. Leonard..........Business Manager
E. Rodgers Sylvester..Assignment Editor
Tom C. ReidT..............elegraph Editor
Verne Burnett............Telegraph Editor
E. P. Wright............ .... Sports Editor
ydward Mack..........Advertising Manager
Kirk White ............Publication Manager
Y. R. Althseler Circulation Manager
C. V. Sellers....Ass.ta.... .Accountan
C. TI. Fishleigh . .Assistant Business Manager

DECRIES RECENT HYSTERIAl

JUST RECEIVED!

ALUMN S US DESCRIBES UTTER-
ANCES MADE AT JUNIOR SMOK-
ER AS ILL-CONSIDERED.
To the Editor of The Daily.
Cannot something be done to fore-
stall such ill-considered utterances as
those delivered before the juniors at
the Union Monday evening? Such re-
marks do the cause of campus mili-
tarism no good, and on the other hand
are highly objectionable, first because
they violate the neutrality urged upon
us by President Wilson and President
Hutchins, and second because their
obvious hysteria tends to make the un-
iversity ridiculous.

The Principles of
DYNAMO ELECTRIC MACHINERY
By PROF. B. F. BAILEY
WAK' a
Vniversity -Bookstore

LOOK

LOOK

,'

Complete

Night Editors
Edwin A. Hyman Joseph J. Brotherton

I Gym

Suit

$i'

$2.00

SHEEHAN'S
STUDENTS' BOOKSTORE

F. C. B. Parker Reotes1. A. Fitzgerald
Leonard WV. Nieter :Martha tray
Irwin Johnson Lee Joslyn
William F, Newton Waldo R. Hunt
Business Staff
Albert E. Horne Roscoe Rau
George Nobil
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1915.
Ernest A. Baumgarth
Night Editor
MORE HOLIDAYS
College is popularly supposed to be
in session for nine months of the year,
but still educators decry the lack of
tune in which to prepare students for.

ALUMNUS.

HELEN R. ELY TO TAKE PART
IN COMEDY CLUB PRODUCTION
Succeeds Henryetta Brandebury-to
Hold Dress Rehearsal
Toniighit

Hear

RECORDS

The New Victor

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Between Detroit,Ann Arbor andJackson.
Cars run on Eastern timne, one hour faster
than local time.
Detroit Limited and Express Cars--8:io a.
m. and hourly to 7:10 p. in., 9:10 p. m.
Kalamazoo Limited Cars- :48 a. in. and
every two h-aurs to 6:48 p. mn.; to Lansing,
B:48 p. m.
Local Cars, Eastbound-5:35 a. m., 6:40 a. m.,
7:05 a. m., and every two hours to 7:05 p. m.,
8:05 p. m., 9:05 p. m., 10:45 p. in. To Ypsi-
lanti only, 8:48 a. n. (daily except Sunday),
9:20 a. n., 12:05 p. in., 6:05 p. In., "t:1s p.
in., 1:15 a. m., 1:3o a. m.
Local Cars, Westbound-6:2 a. in., 7:50 a.
in., and every two hours to 7:50 p. n., 10:20
p. m., 12:20 a. M.
The Ann Arbor Savings Bank
Organized 1869
Caphal.....$ 300,000.00
Surplus .. ..$ 150,000.00
Resources over .... $3,000,000.00
Banking in all branches
Main Office, N. W. Corner Main
and Huron Sts.
Branch Office, 707 North Univ-
ersity Avenue.
TRY
CHAPMAN'S JEWELRY STORE
For Alarm Clocks and Michigan Pins
113 SO. MAIN STREET
COME IK AND TRY OUR
Chinese Combination Lunch

HUSTON BROS,
BILLIARDS
AND
BOWLING

C
l
c
l
E
7

Helen R. Ely, '16, will play the part
of Lady Gilding in this year's Comedy
club production, "The Professor's
Love Story." The part was given at
the first selection of the cast tq Hen-
ryettatBrandebury, '18, who was un-
able to take it because of the new
faculty ruling which prohibits a stu-
dent, entering on advanced credit
from another university, from engag-
ing in activities during the first sem-
ester of residence. Miss Ely did not
participate in the first tryouts.
Pictures will be taken of several
scenes in the play at a full dress re-
hearsal tonight in Sarah Caswell
Angell hall.

Cor. Maynard and William Streets

Special November List at the

on the

um

GO TO
T'mUTTLE'S

Candies

Cigars

Pipes

1

b

Our "Tailor-Made" Clothes Cost No More
Than the Average "Ready-Made"
CANSLE, The Tailor
108 E. Washington St. Second Floor

CHOP off a few
minutes and eat some of
GEORGE'S SUEY
WAI KING Loo
314 S. State St. Phone 1244-M
FIRST NATL. BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH.
Capital $too,ooo Surplus and Profit $$65,ooo
DIRECTORS:
WIRT CORNWELL WALDO M. ABBOTT
GEO. W. PATTERSON HARRY M. HAWLEY
S. W. CLARKSON HARRISON SOULE
FRED SCHMID D. B. SUTTON
E.D KuNNiE
FOR
CII CE CUT FLOWERS I
TO ISCHOFF'S HOUSE
220 Chapin St. Phone 8o9-M
The Farmers & Mechanics Bank

their life work. This insistence has
become so great that the degrees are
being demanded as prerequisites tor
work in the professional schools. The
medics are kept in their class rooms
and laboratories from 8:00 o'clock to
12:00 o'clock and from 1:00 to 5:30 or
6:00. Pressure is becoming so heavy
in the Law school that Monday and
Tuesday of the first week of finali
examinations will be given over to
regular class work.-
And yet there is a demand on the
Campus that another day be taken1
from the work of the curriculum andj
added to Christmas vacation. We
don't blame the faculty for turning it,
down.
Presumably students come here to
study, but it has taken herculean ef-
forts on the part of the faculty to turn
the Campus into more of a work room
and less of a play ground. Stringent
rules regarding cuts immediately be-
fore and after vacations have gone in-
to effect, and they must be enforced
if the new goal of scholarship, which
is coming nearer and nearer to real-
ization, is ever to attained.
Special Dinner to be Held at Uninn
Tickets are on sale for a special
dinner at the Union on Wednesday,
December 1. The committee for sell-
ing the tickets is in charge of Alvin
M. Bentley, '16.
George McMahon, '16, will be the
toastmaster for the evening. Speeches
will be made by Prof. David Friday,
of the economics department and other
members of the faculty. The Michi-
gan Concert quartet composed of H.
L. Davis, '17, F. W. Grover, '18, Chase
B. Sikes, '16, Harry Carlson, '17, will
give several selections and Leroy
Scanlon, '16L, will perform on the
piano.

NEW LENS USED AS AUXILIARY
TELESCOPE IS SATISFACTORY
A seven-inch lens attached as an
auxiliary telescope to the large 37/-
inch reflector at the university observ-
atory has given good results., Its pur-
pose is to fix the position of the images
of faint objects in the center of the
field of the large telescope when
photographs are being made. As a
test of the efficiency of the new tele-
scope an excellent view of Jupiter was
obtained on November 5.
"Y" Offers Miany Yacation Jobs.
Students desiring work during
Christmas vacation have an opportun-
ity to find positions through the Y.
M. C. A. employment bureau. Numer-
ous jobs are reported in bothLAnn
Arbor and Detroit. Philip C. Love-
joy, '16, secretary of the department,
urges all men interested' to make
their application at once.
In future all cars stop at Goodyear's
Drug Store.ti
Women's Organizations
- - --- --
Rev. Tatlock will address the
Thanksgiving Vesper service at 5:00
o'clock today in Newberry hall.
Money will be collected in the lib-
rary today to apply on the Ann Arbor
women's fund for a hospital car.
There will be no hygiene lecture to-
t'clay.

VEST
PAPER VESTS
are Windproof

Better than a
SWEATER
or
CHAMOIS

SODAS
CANDIES
LIUNCtI iS

On State

PARTICULAR LAUNDRY

For the BEST In

50c

For
Particular
People,

QUARRYI
DRUG COMPANY
Prescription Store

I I

CITY LAUNDRY
THOS. ROWE, Prop.

Detroit Street

j

Phone 457-M

11

Successful Men
Wear Tailored Clothes and Good Clothes Are
Half The Battle
There is a great difference between tailored clothes and the
other kind.
Every suit is made to fit the man-we do not force the man to
fit the suit. Just come in when you're ready.
TALR.

11:30 A. M
to 1P. M.

5:30 P. M.
25c to 7 P. M.

Michigan Inn
Chop Suey

South Main Street
Corner Huron

State Street Office
330 S. State St.

6 1 E.Liberty St.

Opp. the Arcadial

A G000 STRONG BANK WITH EVERY BANKING NEED

HIENRY C COP
North Va ivmersIty Ave. Dir
McKellar Wins in Kentucky Election
Nashville, Nov. 23. -Collected fig-
ures of the senatorial election show
K. D. McKellar to have led the ticket
with 42,892 votes. M. R. Patterson
came second with 40,402. J. B. Lea
came in a poor third with 32,691.
2255 2255 2255 2255

We are show-
ing the new-
est models in

. i

FALL FOOTWEAR for LADIES and GENTS
Special Agents Nettleton Shoes
WAHR'S SHOE STOR ES

MAIN STREET-

STATE STREET

-

I MIMEOGRAPIIIMG
MULTIGR APHING
Hamilton Business College
State and Williams
MASQUES STAGE FIRST PLAY
OF THE YEAR DECEMBER 17
"The Business Meeting" by Arlo
Bates is the first production to be
staged by the society of Masquesthis
year. It will be given Sarah Caswell
Angell hall, December 17, as a part
of the Women's league program of
that afternoon.
The play is to be under the direct-
ion of Mary Palmer, '18, M. Tryouts
will be held in Sarah Caswell Angell
hall next Monday and Tuesday after-
noons. Although the play is to be
given under the auspices of Masques,
all university women are eligible to
parts in it.
Have your portraits made at Hoppe's
Studio for Xmas presents. nov.24-25
2255 2255 2255 2255

KOLLAUF" THE* TAILOR
DRESS SUITS A SPECIALTY
Main Entrance of old P. o. Building
MAIN AND ANN STS.
Eckersal Picks All-Conference Team.
Chicago, Nov. 23.-Walter Eckersal's
All-Conference eleven is as follows:
Batson, Minnesota, right end; Shull,
Chicago, right tackle; Dunnigan, Min-
nesota, right guard; Watson, Illinois,
center; Blockner, Purdue, left guard;
Buck, Wisconsin, left tackle; Squier,
Illinois, left end; Russel, Chicago,
quarterback; Macomber, Illinois, right
half back; Byers, Wisconsin, left half-
back; Bierman, Minnesota, fullback.
CLOTHING
from the House of Kuppenhelmer on
sale by N. F. Allen & Co., Mah
street. wed-eoa
Make yourself at home in the Big
Store, Reule, Conlin & Fiegel.
nov5-10-14-19-24

vc4
t 3 i~x$/ ;
t l ' r I
1.WCo7

A Young Men's Line at a Young
Men's Store.
If you are a young man, it certainly
will pay you to patronize this com-
bination.

~PANY,
-ectly Nerth lofLaw Biauitdn.i
ATTENDANCE AT TURKEY DAY
DANCE LIMITED TO HUNDRED
Because of the great demand for
tickets at the Senior engineers' turkey
day dance, at the Michigan Union to-
night, the social committee has an-
nounced that the attendance will be
limited to 100 couples. Tickets may
1stillbe obtained from Harley Warner,
R. S. Archer, H. B. Barthoff, L. C.
Rowley and C. E. Stryker.
The chaperones for the occasion will
be Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bringhurst and
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Crissel.
Antartic Collection Is Attractive
Some strikingly clear pictures of
life in the far south are included in
the collection of the Sir Douglas Maw-
son's Antartic expedition exhibition in
Alumni Memorial hall, which is open
to the public today I
Colored photographs of icebergs
and fields attracted especial attention
on Tuesday Those dealing with the
members of . the expedition itself,
their quarters clothing and epuipment
were also admired. The collection of
bird pictures is composed chiefly of
views of penguins and gulls.
Pres. Wilson to See Army-Navy Game.
New York, Nov. 23.-President Wil-
son will see the Army-Navy game at
the Polo grounds next Saturday from
a reserved box on the Navy side of the
field.
Shirts made to order.--G. H. Wild
Company. State St. Tailors.
Thanksgiving Dinner, Whitney
Hotel. 12-2 P. M., 75c. nov.23-24-25

I

Hirsh- Wickwire's
ready-to-wears

y

r

are the best we could find when we
opened o u r ready-to-wear depart-
ment. We know they are the best
you will find when you look for
your winter clothes.

1.. 1

'I

WAGNER & COMPANY
State Street
Establihed 1848

GLOTES
for men, best known makes at
able prices, on sale by N. P.
Co., Main street.

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