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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.

April 20, 1916 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1916-04-20

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

THE WICHTGAN DAI.LY

Z11'3ss

,_.-.

11

T

our Ease of Mind
Self-possession and personal effici-
cy depends largely upon the clothes you wear.
we are your tailors you will always have that
ing that comes with,
Clothes of Character

G.
ADIN

H. WILD COMPANY
MERCHA.N TAILORS STATEST.

'ennisR Sckets
We are the Agents for the
SLOTTED- THROAT RACKETS

Rackets Restrung in Three Days

S EH
STUDENTS BOOKSTORE

NcI AN DAILY
Official newspaper at the University of
Michigan. Published every morning except
Monday during the university year.
Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as
second-class matter.
Francis F. MeKinney......Managing Editor
John S. Leonard.......... Business Manager
Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. ,Sub-
scriptions: by carrier or mail, $2.501 Want
ad. stations: Quarry's, Students' Supply
Store, T1he Delta, cor. Packard and State
Phonesr: Business, 9o; Editorial, 414.
Communications not to exceed soo words in
length, or notices of events will be lublished
in The Daily if left at the office in the Ann
Arbor Press Bldg., or in the notice box in the
west corridor of the general library, where
the notices are collected at 7:00 o'clock each
evening.
E. Rodgers Sylvester News Editor
Tom C. Reid -........Telegraph Editor
Verne Burnett ............Telegraph Editor
E. P. Wright................Sports Editor
J. C. B. Parker .........Assignment Editor
Conrad N. Church..............City Editor
Edwin A. Hyman......City Editor
Lee Josl yn.. .........City Editor'
Gordon . Cooke. ....Statistical Editor:
Edward E. Mack........Advertising Manager
H. Kirk White..........Publication Manager
Y. R. Athseler........Circulation Manager
C. V. Sellers............Accountant
C. T. Fishleigh ..Assistant Business Manager
Night Editors
Leonard W. Nieter Earl Pardee
L. S. Thompson J. L. Stadeker
Henley Hill
Reporters
H. A. Fitzgerald H. C. L. Jackson
Golda Ginsburg Jas Schernerhorn, Jr.
Linton B. Dimond E. A. Baumgarth
Bruce Swaney E. L. 'Ziegler
WV. R. Atlas Frank Taber
Nat Thompson HollandrThompson
Phil Pack, H. C. Garrison
Alien Shoenfield 1). S. Rood
C. W. Neumann
Business Staff
Albert E. Horne Roscoe Rau
E. C. Musgrave F. M. Sutter
IK. S. McColl L. W. Kennedy
J. E. Campbell W. V. Casgrain
C. P. Emery Bernard Wohl
THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1916.
Night Editor-H. C. L. Jackson

DETROIT UNITED LINES I
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson.
Cars run on Easterni ti ne, one htour faster
m local time.
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-8:io a.
and hourly to 7 :1o p. ni., 9 :io p. i.
Kalamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m,. and
cry two hours to 6:48 p. i.; to Lansing,
48 p. in.
,ocal Cars, Eastbound-;:3; a. m., 6:40 a. rn.,
3 a. n., and every two hours to 7:05 p. m:,
q :. o;, 90 p. in., iJo : o p. in. To N psi-
iti only, 8:48 a. n. daily except Sunday),
2o a. n., 12:0 P p. in., 0:05 P. in., :1145 p.
i :10 a. In., j :20 a. inr.,
Local Cars, Westbound-6:12 a. in., 7:50 a.1
and every two hours to 7:50.p. in., o:1020
in., 12:20 a. Mn.
The Ann Arbor Savings Bank
Organized 1869
Capihal.. .. $ 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.
[ATE AND GERMAN AMERICAN.
SAVINGS BANK

EASTER LILIES'
All Kinds of Easter
Flowers and Plants
COUSINS &HALL
1002 S. UNIVERSITY AVE.
Phone 115

TYPEWRITERS

a

TYPEWRITING AND
SHORTHAND
MIMEOGRAPHING
"Ll'erything for the Typelvrier"
0. D. M ORRILL
(ov'r altin're 'nch)
L 322 S.State St. A

I

A CHANCE FOR 1919.

Main &
Resources,

Washington Sts.
$2,500,000.00

FRATERNITIES
t me figure with you on your next
ar's supply of coal. Now is the
ae to look after next year's coal
pply.

I HAVE IT!
Ne-ol-in
Wears better that
Leather
VA N'S QUALITY
SHOE SHOP
The New Shop, 1114S. University
ASK FOR and GET
THEI ORIGINAL
Caeap aubVtitt2 cost YOU same price.

Jno. J.
hone 2484

SAUER
310 W. Liberty

TYPEWRITING
MIMEOGRAPHIINGI
MULTGRAPHIING
Hamilton Business College
State and~iiliams t

I

losing Out .ll Michigan Jewelry at Cost-
ALSO INGERSOLL WATCHES and ALARM CLOCKS

)CK SCHLEEDE

340 S0. STATE STREET

.... .
...... .

To Please a customer we must first produce an article iliat pleases us and
meets our every expectation.
We are proud of our clothes and each garment iust come up to a high
standard before it is given to the owner.

Members of the Student Council
have arranged a program for the
freshmen this afternoon. It will be
in the nature of a get-together for all
the 1919 classes. Seven hundred seats
have been reserved for them at the
Olivet game. It rests with the fresh-
men tomake the program a success,
and they will do so by turning out in
a body this afternoon and wearing
the fresh caps. The eyes or the uni-
versity will be upon the yearlings and
this will be one way in which they can
demonstrate their enthusiasm and col-
lege spirit. Be on hand, freshmen,
and help inaugurate the Cap-day ex-
ercises!
IMPROVE TENNIS 'COURTS
WOMEN ENGAGE CARETAKER FOR
NEWBERRY AND PALMER FIELD
GROUNDS.
Arrangements have been made by
the Women's Athletic association to
keep the tennis courts on Palmer Field
and at Newberry Residence in better
condition this year than ever before,
a man having been engaged for the
sole purpose of sprinkling, rolling and
keeping them well marked.
The Newberry court is open to all
college girls and is not for the exclu-
sive use of the residents, as seems to
have been understood by some. On
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday at 11:00 o'clock, 2:00 o'clock
and 3:00 o'clock the courts are used
by the students taking required gym-
nasium work, but at all other hours
they are free for the use of all girls.
The tennis tournament is already
being planned, and drawings will be
posted on the bulletin board of Bar-
bour gymnasium this week. Any girl
wishing to take part in the tourna-
ment should notify Louise Irish, '18,
telephone 390.
At a meeting held Tuesday after-
noon, the practice hours for elective
baseball were decided upon. Sopho-
mores will meet at 4:00 o'clock, on
Tuesday and Thursday, juniors and
seniors on Monday and Wednesday
at the same hour.'
Classes in requiredgymnasium work
began on Tuesday of this week, and
all girls registered are expected to
be present at their scheduled hours.
Classes for the rest of the year will
meet on Palmer Field.
Walking trips leave Barbour gymna-
sium every Saturday morning at 8:30
o'clock, under the personal direction of
a squad leader. These hikes are for
ten miles, and will include trips to
Whitmore Lake, Saline, Dexter, and
other near-by points. These .cross-
country hikes were one of the most
successful features of the spring work
last year, and are decidedly sociable
in nature. The itinerary is posted on

D AILY INTERVIEWS
AND COMMENTS
CAMPUS' LITTLE IRONIES.
Did you ever see a woman student
gaze fascinated into an art store win-
dow and then learn that she was mere-
ly looking at her own reflection in the
smooth plate-glass window? The same
campus idealist who saw that had a
course where he was at first delight-
ed because a person picked out the
similar experience in a high-brow
most high-brow author ou the lista
to write a thesis on. But later the
idealist found that the person had
taken the unusual selection merely
because nobody else in the course was
likely to pick out the same subject
An instructor must feel a similar
doubt about student psychology when
he is at first tickled because the stu-
dents clap lustily when he announc-
es that there will be .a holiday or that
the semester's work is ended, and
when he suspicions afterward that
the applause might have been partly
an expression of relief for their es-
cape.
Certain haughty literary men sneer
in their very soul at the chatter of
a girl in the mountain-top atmosphere
of a seminaire course, but often they
make fools of themselves soon after
in trying to strike up an acquaintance
with the same girl to hear the same
line of chatter.
Also the person who likes to appear
unconventional and boasts of his non-
conformity is likely to spend more
time in making himself look careless
than does the ordinary person who
looks natural and well-dressed.
These incidents are by no means
typical, but they certainly exist and
clutter up the blue sky of college
idealism. True progressiveness comes
from a nice adjustment between the
praise and blame principles; and as-
pirations worth striving for are de-
fined as being dissatisfied with one's
present condition.-V. E. B.
the bulletin board of the gymnasium
every week.
Junior girls will hold a luncheon on
Saturday, April 22, at 12:00 o'clock in
Barbour gymnasium. Tickets will
be on sale in the library, Thursday and
Friday, from 8:00 o'clock to 5:00
o'clock. They are thirty-five cents.
Miss Katherine Puncheon, '98, treas.
urer of the National Association of
Collegiate Alumnae, and principal of
the Philadelphia high school for girls,
was in Ann Arbor this week on her
way to Chicago, to attend the council
of Collegiate Alumnae. Miss Puncheon
was the first woman in the Philadel-
phia schools to be placed on an equal
footing with men principals.
Omega Phi will meet this afternoon
at the Chi Omega house. Grace Boyn-
ton, grad., will speak to the club on
her experiences in Constantinople du-
ring the first year of the war.
Rehearsals for the dances in the
Shakespearean Pageant will be held
at the following hours: Flower fairies,
5:00 o'clock this afternoon; court
dance, 7:00 o'clock this evening; elves
and color fairies, 4:00 o'clock, Friday
afternoon.
The last sale of scores of the "Yan-
kee Yogi" will be held today in the
library.
HAD TO HOLDFROLIC APRa 21
COMMITTEE ANSWERS OBJECTION
OF FROSH TO GIVING FRESH
DANCE ON GOOD FRIDAY.
Editor, The Michigan Daily:

In The Daily yesterday there was
an article by a Frosh objecting to the
date, April 21, for our Frosh Frolic,
because that date is Good Friday. We
would like to explain that April 21
was the only date we could arrange
with the faculty upon which we could
hold the party.
We were not ignorant of the fact
that the Frolic was to be given on
Good Friday; yet circumstances forced
that date upon us. Which should we
have done-give the party on that
date, or not give it at all?
HARRY PENNIMAN,
Chairman of Committee.
HONORS EVENLY DIVIDED IN
CORRESPONDENCE CHESS MATCH
Honors are now evenly divided in
the correspondence chess match be-
tween Ohio State University and the
Michigan Chess club, and the score
stands 1-1.
Collins of Ohio has resigned his
game at the 32nd move, foreseeing in-
evitable checkmate in three moves.
Ohio's lone tally came as a result of
Stearn's resignation of his game after
losing his queen by a clever play on
the part of Schuer of Ohio.
Patronize Daly Advertizers. *

AA-
A Cemplot. LinIe of
Drug Sundries, Kodaks
Cardies, Perfumes
ALBERT MANN, Druggist
215 So3 MMednS st. Anx Arbor, HelK.
Do you drive an automobile in the
winter?
You should. It's convenient.
You can heat your garage safely and
economically with a SAFETY GAS
GARAGE HEATER.
Approved by insurance companies.
Washtenaw Gas Co.

" NO bite" is about as poor a
recommendation for tobacco
as "no rheumatics" is for a
wooden leg. But' tobacco that
won't bite an' yet is chuck full of
taste-that's a different story-
that's VELVET.

-..

MRS. FLANDERS
Phone 294

Flower Shop
213 EAST LIBERTY STREET

'k

0:

THE BEAUTY OF MY BUSINESS IS-
FLOW ERS
Visit my store and see. iverytbing in Flowers--Daffodils,
Orcheds, Tulips, Narcissus, Violets, Sweet Peas, Roses, Carna-
tions and Lillies of the Valley.
Full Line of Plants

YOUR TE 'NIS RACKET
Made New
Racket Restringing a Specially
100 New Rackets Just Received at
WAHRE
VNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES

I,

-I

BONWIT TELLERs &CO.
FIFTH AVEN UE AT 38T" STREET
NEW YORK

This policy makes for good clothes and pleased customers.

Capper & Capper
Furnishings

D. E. GRENNAN
REAL CUSTOM TAILOR
606 E. LIBERTY STREET

6foB ortIP' RBlnh1eP

I,

SAM BURGH FIELD

&'CO.

There's an interes
"Bontell" blouses
derie of the campu
of treatr
insoucian
"Bontell
from the
"Geneve"-
and front
chine bloc
plaiting.
tint.
Hat of pic
ribbon wit
any color c

sting harmony of
and the camara-
us - a simplicate
nent, a youthful
ice t h a t sets
" blouses apart
usual.
- The collar, cuffs
o f this crepe d e
se are edged with
In white or flesh
5.50
ot-edged gros grain
th straw rose. In
combination. 14.50

Fine, Taligring

_.

"Y" EMPLOYMENT BUREAU HAS Mary men are needed for odd jobs,
GOOD JOBS OPEN TO STUDENTS board jobs, full time jobs and summer
work. About 40 summer jobs are open
and those who expect to want summer
The "Y" employment bureau is at Ik are advised by the management
present in position to supply a great to call at the "Y" office as soon as
many students with all kinds of work. possible.

_____________

Look over the advertizements. They I Shook's first orchestra, Michigan
will interest you. Union, April 2,, 1916, Seven-piece
orchestra, saxaphones and banjorines.
Class balseball teams:-Get your Tickets at Union . apr 20-21
supplies at Cushing's. Ask for
special rates.- tf KFor quick service, call 2255.

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