0o THE3 MICHIGAN DAILY. I ! OI S UriOP.,1l OVERO~jI~ THE LURE OF GOOD CLOThES attracts both man and woman alike. That's why our window display of fine fabrics for suits or overcoats commands the attention of all. Don't be satisfied with just looking. Come in and order a suit or overcoat and enjoy wearing perfectly tailored gar- ments of perfectly milled fabrics. G. H. WILD G., Leading Merehant Tailors State St.I THE MIChIGAN DAILY Official newspaper at the University of Michigan. Published eve:y morning except Monday during the university year. Entered at the post-offce at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Sub- scriptions: by carrier or mail, $2.5o. Want ad.. stations: Quarry's, Students' supply Store, The Delta, cor. Packard and State Phones: Business, g6o; Editorial, 2414. Francis F. McKinney..Managing. Editorf John S. Leonard..........Busincss Manager E. Rodgers Sylvester News Editor Tom C. Reid..............Telegraph Editor Verne Burnett.............elegraph l'ditor E. P. Wright.................Sports l~ditor J. C. B. Parker..........Assignment Editor Conrad N. Church...............City Editor Edwin A. Hyman................City Editor rLee Joslyn.................... City Editor Irwin Johnson ........Chr. .Eiliciency Boar Gordon D. Cooke..........Statistical Editor Edward E. Mack........Advertising Manager IH. KirkWhite.........Publication Manager Y. R. Aithseler....... .Circulationi Manager C. V. Sellers............Accountant. C. T. Fishleigh ..Assistant Business Manager Night Editors Leonard W. Nieter William F. NewtonI Earl Pardee William1 1I. Fort ^~A Selected Editorial jSTUDENT I3IfALS AND HV_)A _ NATURE 'rlie Minnesota Daily Time spent at college is largely1 applied to the formation of ideals. In the classroom and lecture hall, in sports and in social intercourse standards are being continually set up which in a short time become in- variable rules of conduct. Ideal con- ceptions are formed upon every sub- ject under the sun. Politics, religion, every form of human undertaking is conceived in some utopian form. Apart from the world in some respects these ideals are not put to the test of prac- ticability and for that reason they are formed oftentimes without regard or consideration for the basic facts of life. The student conceives institu- tions as they should be or rather as he would wish them to be-he dreams of an ultimate perfection in all things and is impatient for its realization. Unrestrained by the cold test of liv- ing facts, he permits himself to cre- ate high ideals apart from the chances for realization. III I or s Office Supplies in general. The greatest stock in the County WOULD YOU BE H PPY? Then buy a HANDY DESK CALENDAR You may also need a National" or Excelsior Diary Main rst. State St. Comtplete Line of I UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES DIARIES I SHEEHAN'S STUDE3NTS' BOOKSTORE Reporters H. A. Fitzgerald t 1. L. Stadeker Waldo R. hunt Golda Ginsberg Martha Gray Nat Thompson Al. I2. Atlas 1'V. cI:onrald E. A. Baumgarth 1,. S. Thompson, Bruce Swatey T;. 11. Ziegler'. R. J. Blum C S. Huntley Business Staff Albert E. Homet Roscoc Ranu :. C. Musgrave '. M. Stter K. S. McColl G a Maxwell Cutti g C. E. Campbell 0. N. "Shai'd George N obisl DETROIT UNITED LINES tween Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson. rs run on Eastern time, one hour faster local tilne. troit Limited and Express Cars--8:ro a. nd hourly to 7 :1 P. in., :10o p. in. tlamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m. and- two h->urs to 6:48 p. in.; to Lansing, 1).m. cal Cars, Eastbound-5:35 a. in., 6:40 a. m., a. in., and every two hours to 7:05 p. in., p. n., 9:05 P. In., 10:4S "P. m. To Ypsi- only, 8:48 a. m. (daily except Sunday), a. mn., r :o5p. m., 6:oS p. m., r:1s p. :15 a. mn., 1 :30 a. Mn. cal Cars, Westbound-6: x a. m., 7:50 a. nd every two hours to 7:50 p. u., 10:20 ., 12:2o a. m., w F....,, t r Y l We Have a FULL LINE OF Cut 4lowors and Plants ' For All Ocoaslonsl COUSINS &HALL 1002 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. Phone 115 SATURDAY, JANUARY 15, 1916. Night Editor......William F. Newton The Ann Arbor Savings Bank 1 IYPEWRITERS Organized 1869 Organi0e0 TYPEWRITING ANds Caphal ...........$ 300,00 SHORTHAkD Caia ......Surplus ..........$-. 150,000.00 Resources over .. ..$3,000,000.00 MIMEOGRAPHING Banking in all branches "Zberything for the 'ypevriter" Main Office, N. W. Corner Main Q. D. M O R R I L and Huron Sts.- (ov'r Baltim're Lnh) x,22 S. Stat. St. Branch Office, 707 North Univ- ersity Avenue. T Coal Coke Lumber "ATE AND GERMAN AMERICAN Coa nCokeilue r SAVINGS BANK . Inteioreinis Main & Washington Sts. JN O J. S A U E R esources, $2500,000.00 Phone 2484 310W. Liberty lepartent Paper and Envelopes All Departments LOOSE LEAF PAPER "Any Size," FOUNTAIN PENS SOLD AND REPAIRED MICHIGAN'S DIG MEN Freshmen and incipient sophomores are often caught with their noses in the Michiganensian gazing at that section wherein the membership rolls of the various campus societies are set out. Ambition begins to grow within them to write a small biography after their own names some day. Sometime during their junior year, if they have associated with the right men and been careful not to do anything which might hurt anybody's feelings, they receive a mysterious letter, and within another week find themselves full fledged within the fold. Finally, within the approach- ing shadow of Commencement, these same men are apt to think their lit- tle paragraph of titles unmeaningful and futile. It is then that some of them consider the point system. The point system is a scheme whereby all extra curriculum activi- ties are listed and graded according to the amount of time and energy which they demand. In this way tab can be kept on the men engaging in these affairs with a view toward keeping their activities within rea- sonable bounds. Complaints are fre- quently heard from the leaders of campus .opinion that they are seri- ously hampered from doing their best in some specific line, by reason of the many calls made upon their energies by numerous organizations to which they may belong. Of course it is their own fault if they choose to tie their hands in this way, yet it will be done so long as human nature is tickled by a singling out from among the crowd. Altogethergtoo many men having taken their fling at everything which came along, turn to their studies at examination time only to find that they were too late. Again the women have pointed the way. Their point system is working, and they say the new order is better than the old. PRESC OTT CLUB MEETING The creation of high ideals is a fine thing in itself, but the ad.justing them to the actualities of human nature is another. Human nature is a difficult commodity to handle and stubbornly refuses to be changed or to accept change in anything. Reforms or the attainment of any ideal will not come over night. Many a lifetime has been expended with only the beginnings of the achievemenut of some distant am- bition. Society will refuse to be ini- stantly converted. The problem for the academicians to consider is how to always retain the most noble and elevated of ideals but to modify them to such an extent for working purposes that their very nature will not de- feat their ends. When the student be- gins to realize that, desirable as it might appear to instantly attain ideals, they must be considered in the light of their approximate realization, he is on the high road to success. Women's Organizations Girls' Glee Club meets, Rentschler's studio, 9:00 o'clock a. in., for Michi- ganensian picture. Menmbers are re- quested to wear light dresses. Dr. Bertha Van Hoosen and Mrs. Frances Burns speak at last session of the Vocational Conference. 10:00 o'clock this morning. Seniors are requested to pay the 50 cent social tax to Isabel Hicks, '16, at once. Vocational Conference luncheon, 12:00 o'clock, Barbour Gymnasium. Requisition blanks for the Women's League have arrived, and the league wishes to state that in the future they willnot be financially responsible for purchases made without these requi- sitions, which may be obtained from thertreasurer, Jeanette Armstrong, in Barbour Gymnasium from 1:00 to W HY not make yo person- ality a mixtur e oCO!m- mon sense and pesn e ns You supply the common s and V E LV ET'll brng the "pleasant feeln'ss" The Beauty of My Business is FLOWERS FOR. Corsage Bouquets Baskets of Flowers MRS. FLANDERS Phone 294 Open Sundays, 9 to 12 ALL OCCASIONS Floral Designs From 75c to $15.00 Flower Shop 213 EAST LIBERtY STM EtT FLOWERS DELIVERfD A Comxplete Lifts of Drizg Sundri+es, Hodesks Candies, Peru zwe; ALBERT MANN, Dr Is*I 2l south Mmdii st. Aiz Arbor. !11h d -~ SCHLEEDE 340 S. State - -1 Do. you drive winter? You should. You can heat economically an automobile in the It's convenient. Your Choice of All FALL SUITINGS your garage safely and with a SAFETY GAS GARAGE HEATER. $30.00 D. E. GRENNAN REAL CUSTOM TAILOR 606 E. LIBERTY STREET Approved by insurance companies. 3:00 o'clock on Mondays and 9:00 o'clock to 11:00 o'clock days. froin Fri- Washtenaw Gas Co. .m... ..... . ...+. |E. WOMEN ATHLETES TO HOLD 1A NQUET IN BARBOUR GYM - . .. r .. I. I SAM BURCHFIELD & Co. Fine Tailoring Net Wednesday to Hear Papers Read and to Elect Officers The Prescott club of the college of' pharmacy held its first meeting since its reorganization last Wednesday eve- ning in the Chemistry building. The following papers were read: "Syn- thetic Camphor and Rubber," by R. E. Schoetzon, 'I6P; "Foreign Patented Drugs," "What Women in Pharmacy Are Doing," by Mary E. Dunlap, '18P; and "Detroit as a Drug and Chemical Center," by Earl W. Cummings, '17P. The following officers have been elected for the school year; C. Costa, '16P, president; J. Millner, '17P, vice- president; R. G. Brown, '16P, secre- tary; H. N. Oellrich, '16P, treasurer. The next meeting will be held early in February. The Women's Athletic Department will hold their sixth annual banquet on February 19, at 6:00 o'clock in Barbour Gymnasium. This will be1 followed at 8:00 o'clock by a cotillon, to which all university women will be admitted free. Complimentary tickets, however, must be secured at Dean Jordan's office, between Wed- nesday, February 9 and the following Monday. Tickets to the banquet will be on sale at 35 cents in Dean Jor- dan's office. s - .,.... PLAN TO AVOID ACCIDENTS' Triangles Donate Life Preserver; Oth- er Societies to Take Action Conscious of the latent danger which the Huron river holds for unwary stu- dents, various campus societies are planning measures to safeguard them against the possibility of further acci- dent. The first move came from the' Triangles, which moved to donate a life preserver to be placed in one of the most dangerous spots. Among the societies which will dis- cuss the manner in which they can best attain their goal at meetings to be held either next week or early in the following week are the following: Sphinx, Vulcans, Alchemists, Druids, Griffins and Archons. Michigamua may also deliberate upon the danger. CAPTAIN AND 3 PRIVATES OF -. S. ARMY DROWNED Calveston, Tex., Jan. 14.-Capt. Ed- ward P. Nones, medical corps, United States army, attached to the coast ar- tillery post at Fort Crockett, and three privates of the coast artillery corps were drowned in the Galveston chan- nel today when the boat J. B. 16 was run down and sunk by the tank steam- er Charles E. Harwood, outward bound° for Tampico. C'apt Nones' home was in Louisvillle, Ky. Good Printing. The Ann Arbor Press 1*M DR.PETERSON TALKS TO WOMEI Dean Schlotterbeck, Prof. Glover, Mrs Davis and Mr. Jayne Also to Speak Dr. Reuben Peterson, of the medica school, will speak on "Nursing as Vocation for Women" at the Vocationa Conference luncheon Saturday noor This will conclude the conference. Other speakers at the luncheon wil be Ira Jayne, commissioner of recrea tion in Detroit, who will talk o: "Playground Work;" Mrs. Jesse I1 Davis, who speaks on "Vocationa Training;" Prof. James Glover of th mathematics department, who wil speak on the training offered in th university for actuarial work; Di Otto Schlotterbeck, cdean of the col lege of. pharmacy, will speak a: "Training for Pharmaceutical Chem istry." 'Tickets for the luncheon may b procured from the committee of whic Josephine Randall, '17, is chairmar Mrs. sates Called to home in Bray Cit - Mrs. Eric Layton Gates, social di rector of Newberry residence, has rc turned to her home in Bay City o: account of the illness of her mother Miss Alice Wood, assistant instructo in physical education, will take Mr, Gates' place during her absence. 'V SHORTHAND, TYPEWRITIN8 BOOKKEEPING Best instruotion and Equipment Hamilton Business College St-te and Williams Sts. 11 "'TENTION S FTUDE S!" For quick MESSENGER CALL see hst ad on BACK OF TELEPHONE DI- RECTORY. Phene 706. 4'17E Lyndon's for kodaks, films, finish- ings. Open Sundays, 9:30 to 4:30 only. .i i ICE SKATING NOW A T fEI N BER G'S COLISEU M Alwa )r you see