THE MICHIGAN DAILY tour Ease of Mind Self-possession and personal effici- ncy depends largely upon the clothes you wear.. we are your tailors you will always have that eeing that comes with Clothes of Character G. H. WILD COMPANY IEADIN MERCH4N TAILORS STATE ST. Treni4s Rackezts, We are the Agents for the SRTAA CLOTTED THROETS GAN D Official newspaper at the Univerwity 04 Michigan. Published every morning except Monday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second -class nattecr. Francis F. McKinney ...... Managing Editor John S. Leonard.......... Business Manager Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: bycarrier or mail, $2.50. Want ad. stations.tQuarry's, Students' Supply Store, The Delta, cor. Packard and State, Phones: business, 960; Editorial, 2414. (,owniunvications not to exceed 300 words in length, or itices of events ill be published in Thle lDaily 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 area collected at 7:00 o'clock each evening. E. Rodgers Sylvester News Editor Tom C. Reid ..............Telegraph Editor Verne Burnett..............elegraph Editor E. P. Wright.................Sports Editor J, C. B. Parker ....A.ssignment Editor Conrad N. Church..............City Editor Edwin A. Hyman ...............City Editor Lee Joslyn ..............City Editor (0r~jon D. Cooke......... Statistical Editor Golda Ginsburg ..............Women's Editor Edward E. Mack........Advertising Manager H. Kirk White.......... Publication Manager Y. R. Althseler...... Circulation Manager C. V. Sellers. ,...........Accountant C. T. Fishleigh ..Assistant Business Manager Night Editors Leonard W. Nieter Earl Pardee L. S. Thompson J. L. Stadker Henley MillIH. C. L. Jackson Reporters I. A. Fitzgerald Cecil Andrews Linton B. Dimond E. A. Baumgarth Bruce Swaney E.. L. Ziegler W. R. Atlas Frank Taber Nat Thompson Holland Thompson Phil Pack H. C. Garrison Allen Shoenfield D. S. Rood C. W. Neumann Jas. Schermerhorn, Jr. Business Staff Albert H. Horne Roscoe Rau E. C. Musgrave F. M. Sutter K. S. McCosl L. W. Kennedy J. E. Campbell WV. V. Casgrain C. P. Emery Bernard Wohl Rackets Restrung in Three Days SHEEHAN'S two Americans have died when they sacrificed too 'much for Arabia. The other side will bring up that the amount which is asked for Busrah. is less than is asked for almost any other campus project; that as a university we are fulfilling some of the ideals which we get at Michigan, and are letting no other university surpass us in the way of sending American prog- ress to a people who most need it; and finally that we keep Michigan fromn being provincial, and by a little self-sacrifice accomplish an immeas- urably larger good as a result. AILY INTERVIEWS An observer in many of our class rooms would probably feel that the students have come to believe too lit- erally that "Silence is Golden." We are not here to impugn that ancient wisdom. But silence that might speak if it would is different from silence which cannot speak because it has nothing to say. Our sympathy goes out to the in- structor who must daily face a large class of intellectual inertia which seldom responds and still less sel- dom creates. In some classes the sentiment has gone so far that he who volunteers an idea is looked upon as revolutionary and a traitor to the established sacred and venerable or- der of silence. This attitude is difficult to explain. Wherever the student plans to spend his life, whether it be in business, in teaching or in a profession, it will never profit him to hide his candle heneath a bushel. Indeed, we are told in play and story that "It pays to advertise." If the university is to be a real training for life and not a mere pleasurable vacation, why should we not now learn to present our ideas to the world, so that both the world and we may profit by their value. Silence may be golden; but too much silence is stagnation. W. W. S. LIMIT USE Of COURTS, Racket Restringing a Specialty 100 New Rackets Just Received at WAHRS VNI VEIRSIT7Y BOOKSTORES r YdUR TENNIS RACK Made New I STUDENTS1 BOOKSTORE DETROIT UNITED LINES etween Detreit, Ann Arbor and Jackson. ;ars run on Eastern time, one hour faster n local time. etroit Limited and Express Cars-S :io a. and hourly to 7:10 p. Mn., 9:10 p. Mn. :alamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m. and ry two hours to 6:48 p. In.; to Lansing, 8 p. m. ocal Cars, Eastbound-5:35 a. m., 6:40 a. m., 5 a. m., and every two hours to 7:05 p. m., 5P. mn., 9:05 p. mn., 10:50 p. n. To Ypsi- .i only, 8:48 a. m. (daily except Sunday), > a. m., 12:05 p. in., 6:oy p. ni., 11:45 p. r:1o a. in., 1:2o a. im. ocal Cars, Westbound-6:12 a. m., 7:5o a. and every two hours to 7:5o p. in., 10:20 Ml., 12:2o 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 Huron Sts. Braneb Office, 707 North Univ- ersity Avenue. 'ATE AND GERMAN AMERICAN We Have a FULL LINE OF Cut Flowers and Plants For All Occasions COUSINS & HALL 1002 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. Phone 115 M ANY a mountain o' trouble turns out to be a mole hill after all, when viewed ca'mly through the haze o' pipe smoke. Aw. TYPEWRITERS THE BEAUTY OF MY BUSINESS IS-- F L-0 W E R S Visit my store and see. Everything in Flowers--Daffodils, Orcheds, Tulips, Narcissus, Violets, Sweet Peas, Roses, Carna- tions and Lillies of the Valley. Full Line of Plants . TYPEWRITING AND SHORTHAND MIMEOGRAPHING "Eerything for the Typel riter" O. D. MORRILL (ov'r altim're L'r ch) k 322 S State St.4 TUESDAY APRIL 25, 1916 I Night Editor-Earl Pardee MICHIGAN IN ARABIA MRS. FLANDERS Phone 294 Flower Shop 213 EAST LIBERTY STREET Busrah, spelled Basra on someJ Main S BANK hiNton Sts. 1,50000.O00 Ge., FRATERNITIES me figure with you on your next r's supply of coal. Now# is the e to look after next year's coal ply. Jno. J. SAUER one 2484 310 W. Liberty SH O RT HA N D, T YP EW R IT IN G BOOKKEEPING Best instruction and Equipment Hlamilton Business College State and Williams Sts. I HAVE IT! Ne-ol-in Wears better than Leather VAN'S QUALITY SHOE SHOP The New Shop. 1114 S. University ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price. maps, is a port of some 70,000 per- sons just below the junction of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, and near the head of the Persian gulf. It has recently been conquered from the Turks by the British, and is a stra- tegic base in the fighting to reach Kut-El-Amara, south of Baghdad. There is no sewerage system in Bus- rah, and the blindness caused by the climate and the Arabian sand is only one of the features in the appalling number of cases needing medical treatment. Several Michigan doctors and a i\'ichigan nurse have gone to improve conditions, through a Christ- ian medical mission, at Busrah. The University Y. M. C. A. conducts a campus-wide canvass every spring in order to secure funds to keep the project afloat. Other American uni- versities are doing similar work throughout the Orient. There are always two sides brought up when' the student canvasser dis- cusses the question in making his rounds. The doubtful prospective contributor may state that the money should be used in some local project, that he is not deeply .interested, and perhaps he may bring up that one or GIRLS ASKED TO TENNIS GROUNDS. FORE PLAYING WAIT UN1fL ARE DRY BE- Complaints have come from those in charge of women's athletics to the effect that the tennis courts on Palmer Field and at Newberry Residence are being used while still wet, with the result that they have become deeply rutted and marked. Girls are urged to restrain their tennis enthusiasm sufficiently to wait until the ground is perfectly dry. Those enthusiasts also who play during the early morning hours on the Newberry courts, are asked to keep their game as quiet as possible. These courts must not be used before 6:00 o'clock in the morn- ing, although the courts on Palmer Feld may be used as early as desired. The nets for the Newberry courts will be found on the north porch of Newberry Residence. Drawings for the tennis tournament are now posted in Barbour gymnasi- um. The first round will be played off this week, as fast as the weather permits. Anyone wishing to enter the tournament should send her name to Louise Irish, '18, telephone 390. Collegiate Sorosis will be at home A Completo L 2S*of Drug Sundries, odeks Candies, Perfumes ALBERT MANN, Drulggist 215 Souxth Ma~uhi St. Arntt Arbor. Mich. i Do you drive winter You should. an automobile in the It's convenient. You can heat your garage safely and economically with a SAFETY GAS GARAGE HEATER. Approved by insurance companies. ig Out all Michigan Jewelry at Cost-_- ALSO INGERSOLL WATCHES and ALARM CLOCKS )CK SCHLEEDE 340 SO. STATE STREET Washtenaw Gas Co. To Please a customer we must first produce an article that pleases us and meets our every expectation. We are proud of our clothes and each garment must come up to a high standard before it is given to the owner. This policy makes for good clothes and pleased customers. Capper & Capper Furnishings D. E. GRENNAN REAL CUSTOM TAILOR 606 E. LIBERTY STREET Clothes that stand up under the hardest wear, that have that acceptable quality of being exclusive without being conspic- 'I I uous, are t ho s e well known made by the Hirsh-Wickwire Co. Chicago SAM BURCHFIELD & CO. i, j' II - srAA4 r y f i i W-w-Ca. to all college girls, this afternoon; from 4:00 to 6:00 o'clock. 31ortar-board will meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight at Kappa Kappa Gam- ma house. Pageant rebearsals will be held at the following hours today: Color fair- ies and elves, 5:00 o'clock; court dance at 7:00 o'clock; folk dance at 8:00 o'clock. Costumes for the Detroit trip of the Junior Girls' Play are in charge of Henrietta Row, '17. Anyone wish- ing to purchase the Japanese cos- tumes from the play should see Mar- garet Reynolds, '17. They are to be sold at $1.50. Glee Club will rehearse at i:00 o'clock this afternoon. Tryouts for Senior Girls' Play will be held today from 4:00 to 6:00 o'clock and Wednesday from 3:00 to 5:00 o'clock in Sarah Caswell Angeli hall. Offers Students Good Summer Jobs An exceptional opportunity for mak- ing money during the summer is of- fered students in selling the People's Home Library, according to Mr. Fred Ritzenheim, who has charge of the work here. The book sells at $4.50 and carries with it a 50 per cent commis- sion on sales. All books are return- able to the company, no capital being invested bythe salesman. According to Mr. Ritzenheim the company has never employed a man who worked for 60 days without clearing at least $200.00 Fine Tailoring Quality is the first consideration in our clothing department, for without quality there can be no satisfaction. "We Clothe Young Men Complete" M Don't throw away that old trunk. Whether You we will repair it. Koch & Henne. 300 Give Me Them S. Main. tf Or I have to buy them-it doesn't matter-if you'll only let me have Call Lyndon for a good flashlight. them. Your old shoes, please "Michigan" Tom Lovell Taxi 2255, open under new manage- ment. WAGNER & COMPANY STATE STREET Established 1848 For