T~IE MICHIGAN DAlL*
A1cns ClothingSale
1FEBRUARY COLUMBIA RECORDS
NOW ON SALE
Divided into three lots
Popular Hits
Dance Records
- 65c
- $1.00
Spring Hats and Caps
are now on display
On Two Columbia Records
- -
Enough to keep you in needles and Smoking tobaCCo to
week, boys!
Come in and hear:
A1886 -Casey at the Dentist's"
A1885-- "Cohen Telephones from Brighton"
A1903-"A Girl in Your Arms is Worth Two in
A5760-"Blue Paradise Waltzes"
Your Dreams"
Wadhams & co.'s Corner
Main& Washington Sts.
ano i'ca Ster.
OLL AR
Shows over the coat in back;
low sharp, smart curveaway
front;good knotandslidespace
2for 25c
GLU .'N, PEABODY & CO.. Inc., Makers. TROY. N.Y.
1I
New Suits Enter
the Spring Displays
There is a delightful little
collection of some thirty-five
New York Spring Suits show-
ing this week in the Second
Floor Salon.
All the various models have been
individually chosen, and are quite
as authentic as they are charming.,
The exhibition is the only one of
its kind in Ann Arbor.
Prices $20.00 to $45.00
o
Be
Attractively
Dre sexa
and gain the admiration of all
by having your next suit
Individually
Custom Tailored
by
ARTHUR F, MARQUAROT
Campus Tailor
516 East William St. Phone 1422-J
Y. -. C. A. EMPLOYMENT BUREAU
To RAVE NEW OFFICE HOURSI
Because of increasd interest taken
in the "Y"'employment bureau, ad-
ditional office hours for the second
semester have been planned by Phil-
ip C. Lovejoy, '16. The secretary will
be in his office each week day from,
7:30 'to 8:00 o'clock in the morning;
12:30 to 2:00 o'clock and 4:30 until
5:30 o'clock in the afternoon.
Efforts are now being directed to-
ward placing students in summer
work. Nearly 50 men have been
given positions and there are 40
additional applications open to
students who want work other than
canvassing.
'. wo Senteneed by Judges Yesterday
Deputy Sheriff Lester Canfield ar-
rested George. Herstler Saturday
afternoon on a charge of drunkenness
and disorderly conduct. He appeared
before Justice John D. Thomas yes-
terday morning and was given ten days
in the county jail.
Walter Walker, colored, was arrest-
ed by Patrolman Sodt yesterday on the
charge of allowing his bulldog to
roam unmuzzled. He was haled before
Justice W. G. Doty and fined $5 and
costs, amounting to $8.45.
sV. If. Tinker to Speak at Wisconsin
W. H. Tinker, general secretary of
the "Y," will leave this afternoon
for Champagne, Ill., where he will
take part in the sixth annual Evan
gelistic campaign given by the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin. The meetings
will be under the direction of Sher-
wood Eddy, noted missionary worker,
and will extend through the week.
TO GIVE LECTURE
C. L. Boyce to Address Class in lee-
trical Engineering Thi
Semester
IS INVENTOR OF SWITC HBOARD
Mr. C. 1L. Boyce, formerly chief en-
gineer of the Bell Telephone company
in this district, and later plant super-
intendent of the Michigan State Tele-
phone company, will deliver a series
of lectures this semester, on the eco-
nomic phases of telephone plant de-
sign and construction,
These lectures will be given in con-
nection with course 13 of the electrical
engineering department, during the
last five weeks of this semester, at
10:00 o'clock on Mondays and Fridays.
Important points, such as the deter-
mination of the type of development
and justification of a plant, will be
thoroughly covered.
A large part of the data to be pre-
sented by the lecturer will be made
public for the first time at these lec-
tures. Through his connection with
the Bell company in New York and
Chicago, Mr. Boyce has been able to
collect this information, which will
make the course exceedingly valuable
and comprehensive.
Mr. Boyce has had wide experience
in all branches of telephony, and in
the course of his work he has covered
every state and territory of the Union.
At present he is engaged in the ap-
praisal of the telephone companies in
this state. Hle has also won on inter-
national reputation as the inventor of
a switchboard and fommon battery
transmission now used extensively in
the operation of telephones.
The lecturer takes a great interest in
the engineering college, and shows it
in a substantial way. He has pre-
sented the electrical engineering de-
partment with a valuable collection
of modern high voltage power cables,
which will be mounted and placed in
the museum in the near future. Fur-
thermore, Mr. Boyce will deliver his
valuable lectures without any com-
pensation.
The acquisition of such an authority
as a lecturer, and the nature of the
data to be used by him, have made the
course in telephony, in the engineering
college, superior to that of any other
college in the country.
18-Year-Old Bride Dies of Burns
After suffering for nearly a week
from terrible burns received in her
home last Tuesday, Mrs. Albert Warn-
hoff, 740 Dewey avenue, died Sunday
morning at a local hospital.
Mrs. Warnhoff was only 18 years old
and a bride of less than a year. At
the time of the accident she was alone
in her home and had attempted to
start a fire in the kitchen range by
pouring kerosene on the smoldering
embers. The explosion which took
place enveloped her in flames and set
fire to the house. She rushed out into
the yard and extinguished the flames
by rolling in the snow, only after the
fire had burned nearly all her clothes,
and inflicted painful burns all over her
body. %
Surviving are her husband, her pa-
rents, Mr. and Mrs. Christian Schlee,
two brothers and* three sisters, all
living in Scio township. The funeral
will be held this afternoon at 1 o'clock
from the residence, Rev. G. A. Neuman
officiating.
Call Lyndon for a good flashlighit
cod-tue
Board of Regents Appoints
Scientist as Assistant9
° Astronomy
CONSIDER SANITATION 0
ACCEPTSIIUOOFOR
SSPECIALRESEARCH
Exting'uisi Two Small Fires Sunday
Two fires kept the fire department
busy Sunday althoug] neither caused
much damage. The first blaze occurred
at 9:30 o'clock in the morning at the
Schuman Hotzel bakery, 219 North
Main street. Beams over the furnace
caught from the pipe and were gain-
ing good headway when the depart-
ment responce.t They were extin-
guished with the aid of chemicals.
The second fire occurred at 2:45
o'clock in the afternoon at 214 West
Huron street. The occupants were
away from home and a red hot stove
had ignited a rug on the floor in one
of the bedrooms. The fire was con-
fined to the room where it had started.
Belgian
in
OF GYM
r s
.Allme nigr JMusic Shop
122 E. Liberty Street
LOOK FOR THE NOTES
Military training was the chief ques-
tion before the board of regents at
its meeting on February 11. Other-
wise, routine business occupied most
of the attention of the board.
The board accepted a gift of $1,000
from the family of J. Ford, of Detroit,
to be used in special research work
ini the department of pathology.
The new change in the literary col-
lege graduation requirements was ac-
cepted by the board, along with the
provisions for special phrases of dis-
tinction to be inscribed on the dip-
plomas when certain 'standards of
scholarship are attained.
The question of serious overcrowd-
ing and poor sanitation of Waterman
gymnasium was presented to the board
of regents by Athletic Director P. G.
Bartelme and Prof. R. W. Aigler, mem-
bers of the athletic board in control,
but action was deferred until the next
meeting of the board March 1.
New Astronomy Assistant
The board appointed Dr. F. Hen-
roteau, a Belgian scientist expelled
from his country because of the for-
eign occupation, as a visiting assist-
ant in astronomy for one year. His
salary will be paid by R. P. Lamont,
of Chicago. Dr. W. L. Schurz was
appointed a special lecturer on South
American affairs in the summer ses-
sion, his salary to be paid by the
American Association for internation-
al conciliation.
The resignation of G. N. Fuller, of
the rhetoric department, was accepted
by the regents, and Clarence B. Gosh-
orn, of Grand Rapids, was appointed
to fill the vacancy. Mr. Fuller goes to
Lansing to assume the secretaryship
of the state historical commission.
Detroiters Aid University
In a report by Professor Francis
W. Kelsey with reference to the list
of Michigan citizens who made the fi-
nancial contribution of the University
of Michigan to the American Academy
of Classical Studies in Rome, there
appear the names of the following per-
sons: Levi Barbour, Herbert E. Boyn-
ton, Icon. William .L. Carpenter, Roy
D. Chapin, Hon. Edwin Denby, D. M.
Ferry, Jr., Charles L. Freer, William
J. Gray, Jere C. Hutchins, Clarence A.
Lightner, Charles Moore, William HI.
Murphy, E. W. Pendleton, John R. Rus-
sell, and Miss Mary Turner, all of De-
troit; R. W. Hemphill, Ypsilanti; Wil-
liam Savidge, Spring Lake, and A. C.
Bloomfield, Jackson.
S',en (Graduates Secure Appointments
The department of education has
recently secured appointments for
seven graduates of the university.
This year an exceptionally large num-
ber of teachers have been placed.
The recent appointments follow:
Isabel Drummond, '14, Battle Creek
high school, English; Alice Wiard, '15,
McMillan high school, Detroit; George
Jillson, '16, Central high school, De-
troit, mathematics; Marshall Wheat-
ley, '16, Central high school, Detroit,
physics; Grover R. Bromley, '15, Eat-
on Rapids high school, science; Phil-
lip Potts, '16, Traverse City high
school, English; Vivian Glanz, '15, St.
Clair Heights high school, English
and German.
Patronize Daily Advertizers. **
LUNCHES, CANDIES, HOT SUNDAES
AT THE
SUG AR BOWL
109 SOUTH MAIN STREET
WE MAKE OUR OWN CANDIES OUT OF
THE PUREST AND BEST MATERIALS
NMI-
When tiv pace groWs hot and the play be.
comes ccsperate you can pick out the men who
are in g JCOnde;:or I iot only a matter
of brawn ard mu C I but also of lungs and
stomach. The bl ay to keep in proper
trim is a .y diet u -od, clean, wholesome
For years it hV- been used by men who have done
big things in the athletic world. All the health and
vigor of ;he sun nd soil are packed and stored in
every shred of this easily digested, palatable, whole
wheat foc The m-:x.mu of nutriment without
overtaxing the digesI ive sp'tem.
AIw 's f:9sh, always d licious, you never tire of its
rfresh Bayr. Try it wh fruit or berries or alone
\vit mb e - creani,
,wit t
"There is health a trengfh in every shred"
Mde r ay by
The Shredded Wheat C'ompany, Niagara Falls, N. Y.
I'
Patronize Daily Advertizers.
**
Lem oyLeave Copy
at at
Quarry's and LA S IFIE f Students'
the DeLta Supply Store
A D VE RTI S IN G
I"{)l RENT.
F OR RENT-One sleeping porch suite
and one large room, at 904 Oakland.
hone 652-M. feb15
FOR RENT esirable rooms at727
B. Uiverity.feb15
FOR RENT- Good front suite, only
two blocks from campus; either with
or without partner. Prices reason-
able. St. feb15
IFOR RENT - A very desirable suite,
2 1-2 blocks from campus, at 332 R
Jefferson.
LOST
WOMEN ATHLETES WILL
BANQUSETNSATUA
Various Classes Will Give Special
Stunts; Miss E1aims' Cotillion
to Follow
The annual banquet of the Wo;-"
an's Athletic department will be made
at Barbour gymnasium next satur-
day evening at 6:00 o'clock.
The banquet is the first large me4e-
ing in this line that the Woman's
Athletic departmenta tas ever had
Instead of the usual toasts, specia
stunts will be given. The senior
stunt is being worked out by Emelie
Sargent, the junior by Margaret Bas-_
sett, the sophomore by Louise Car-
gahty, and the freshman by Jane Du-
eling. Dean Jordan, Miss Evans, Miss
Wod and Dr. Pratt will be the guests
of the department.
Following the banquet is Miss
Evans' Cotillion, one of the greatestI
social affairs of the year, to univer-
sity wonen. This will come at 8:00
and Wednesday, and at the library on
Thursday mnd Friday. They will be
sold at 35> cents each.
Special awards will be. given out
at this banquet to the women who
have g;ained 30 or 60 athletic honors,
and those who have done so should see
Jeanette Armstrong, '17, at once.
COl.C II. D. SMITH, OF LONDON,
ONT., TO ADDRESS CANADIANS
Col. H1. D. Smith, oficer in command
of the First Division of the Infantry
school of London, Ontario, has been
secuiredl to speak at the Canadian
club's banquet, which will be held at
the Uni n Thursday evening at 6:30
It is planned to make this the largest
social event that the club has yet held.
The banquet will be open to all Cana-
dian students whether they are mem-
bers of the club or not. Other speak-
ers will be announced later.
LOST-Between State and. Ingalls,
platinum necklace, pendant set with
pink sapphire and small diamonds.
Reward. feb15-16-17-18
LOST-Lady's leather Hop program.
Calling cards enclosed. Finder call
2367. Feb15-16
LOST-Greek text of Euripides belong-
ing to Library, U. of M. Finder
please call or phone J. A. Kerns, 543
S. Division. Phone 2005. Reward.
feb.15
,
IOR SALE
F1' SL French horn,.good tone,
excellent condition; high and low
pitch tuning slide; brand new case.
$30 complete. Call W. M. McKee,
2074-M.
FOR SALE-Boston bulldog. Phone
268 or call"at 1312 Broadway. feb15-16
LOST-One loose leaf leather covered
note book. Name on outside, H. F.
Shaw. Return to Daily Office or
phone 366. feb15-16
WANTED.
WANTED-A few live self-supporting
men; can land positions that will
bring them back to school next fall.
See Mr. Smithson, 527 E. Liberty,
1568-M.
Have You Heard About It?
The Victor Talkieg Machine Co. have pioduced
THE TUNGSTONE NEEDLE!
Which will play 50 to ioo Recordswithout
changing. Their Records. are made by the
World's Greatest Artists. These features, com-
bined with our liberal service, make the most
desirable combination in exislence.
Our Easy Our 24-Hour
Payment System r I el ro . Approval Plan
Phone 1707 116 south Oan St.
1
MAf ,i 1+1[ VsTUDNTSPATRONIZE 6
BOOK EXC INUE TlSW
THISmu
decti(A of Samue
o'clock, and special avor dances a I sdent"Y" ook
other surprises hae been plann rceing the support
make the evening i enjoyable o udents who desire to trade
for all who participate. There are "hir books for those to be used t
only 300 tickets available for the Co- 'second semester.
tillion, and those who wish to attend The exchange is open in the ass
should procure them at Dean Jordan s ciation building every day this we
office. from 10:00 to 12:00 o'clock in I
Tickets for the banquet will be on morning and from ' :00 until 6 o'cl<
sale at Bar our gymnasium Tuesday in the afternoon.
I
I- 11
ier
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