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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.

May 05, 1916 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1916-05-05

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

THE UrICHIGAN DAILY

1 7 7

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
eling that comes with
Clothes of Character

G.
N

H. WILD COMPANY
Vi + TAILORS STATE ST.

TennisRackets
We are the Agents for the
SLOTTED THROAT RACKETS

I

Rackets Restrung in Three Days

HEEHAN'
STUDENTS BOOKSTORE

Official newspaper at the University of
Michigan. Published everymorning except
' 'nday during the university year.
1 ntered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as,
second-class imfatter.
Franci' F. McKinney ......Managing Editor
John Leonard.........Business Manager
Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub-
scriptions:by er or mail, $2.50. Want
ad. statio ns: Quarr's, Students' Supply
Store, The J )elta, cor. Packard and State.
Phones: Business. 960 ; Editorial, 2414.
(Commiunications not to ecceed 300 words in
lengthi, or notices of events willi be p)ublished
in "Thc Dail)-if left at the office in the Ann
Arbor Prss ik g., or in the notice box in the
west corridor of the general library, where
the unotices are collected at 7:oo o'clock each
evening.,
E. Rodgers Sylvester News E dito
Tom C. Reid..............Telegraph 4ditor
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 Joslyn. ............ ....City Editor
Gordon D. Cooke.t.....Statistical Editor
Golda Ginsburg...............Women's Editor
£;dward 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. Stadeker
Henley ill H. C. L. Jackson
Reporters
11. A.I Fitzerald Cecil Andrews
Linton 13. Dimond E. A. Baungarth
Bruce Swaney E. L. Ziegler
W. R. Atlas Frank Taber
Nat Thompson Holland Thonipson
Phil Pack H. C. Garrison
Allen Shoenfield D. S. Rood
C. W. Neumann Jas. Schermerhorn, Jr.
Business Staff
Albert E.LHorne Roscoe Rau
E. C. Musgrave F. M. Sutter
K. S. McColl L. W. Kennedy
C. P. Emery . Betnard Wohl
j. E. Campbell
FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1916.
Night Editor-J. L. Stadeker
THE NEGATIVE VERSUS THE POSI-
TIVE INDIVIDUAL

ever ready to encourage the new, and
is slow to criticize the projects "of
others. His whole life is one of ag-
gression. He is ever actively toiling to
improve existing conditions, to devel-
op institutions to their fullest extent.
There are two types of men in the
world,-failures and successes. There
are two types of individuals., negative
and positive. The classifications are
parallel.
PLOT OF SENIOR GIRLS' PRODUC-
TION GONE OVER AT MEETING
OF CAST

150 Brand New (This Year's)
TENNIS RACKETS

___

T

to Select trom- - and Everyone Guaranteed

Price: $1.50 to $10
-WAH KRES
VNIVI RSITY BOOKSTORES

E

DETROIT NITED LINES
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson.
Cars tun on Eastern time, one hour faster,
than local time.
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-8:o a.
tn. and hourly to 7:10 p. in., 9:0 P. i.
Kalamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m. and
every two hours to 6:48 p. m.; to Lansing,
L 48 p. rn.
Local Cars, Eastbound-5:35 a. in., 6:40 a. tn.,
7:o5 a. m., and every two hours to 7:05 p. n.,
8:o5 p. m., 9:o5 p. m., 10150 p. m. To Ypsi-
anti only, 8:48 a. in. (daily except Sunday),
9:2o a. i., 12:05 p. in., 6:o53p. n., 11:45 p.
tn., 1:i o a. m.,, 1:20 a. in.
Local Cars, Westbound-6:z a. m., 7:50 a.
m., and every two hours to 7:50 p. in., 10:20
P. m., 12:20 a. M.
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, '07 North Univ-
ersity Avenue.
L
COME IN AND TRY OUR
Chinese Comibination Luneh
11:30 A. M :30 P. .
to1P . ~25c to 7P M.
Michigan Inn
Chop Suey

TRY
CHAP'MAN'S JEWELRY STORE
For Albrm Clocks and Michigan Pins
113 50. MAIN STREET
I ur "Tailor-Made" Clothes Cost No More
Than the Average "Readj-Made"
CANSLE, The Tailor
108 E. Washington St'Second Floor
CHO1 P off a few
minutes and eat some of
omanSVEY
WAX KING LOO
314 S. State St. Phone 1244-M
FIRST NATL. BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH.
Capital $:oo,ooo. Surplus and Profit $$65,ooo
DIRECTORS:
WIRT CORNWELL WALDO M. ABBOTT
GEO. W, PATTERSON HARRY M. HAWLEY
S. W. CLARKSON HARRISON SOUJLE
FRED SCHMID D. B. SUTTON
E. D KINNIE
FOR
CHoI CE CVT FLOWERS
TO BISCHOFF'SHOUNw
220 Chapin St. Phone 8o9-M

At a meeting of all senior girls who
are taking part in the senior play, the
plot was outlined by Professor Brumm,
who is to direct the production. Regu-
lar rehearsals will begin on Wednes-
day, May 10, in Sarah (asweil Angell
hall. The members of the cast are
to be ready with the lines of the first
two acts, but the mob will not need
to rehearse for several weeks. Those
in the mob are expected to be fa-
miliar with the play, however. The
play may be secured at the library.
Copies of the play will be on sale at
Wahr's book store on Saturday.
Committees for the play are as fol-
lows: Properties, Helen Tuthill, Lu-
ella Gallmeyer, Isabell Hicks; pub-
licity, Martha Gray, Katherine Regan,
Ida Lewis; costumes, Grace Fletcher,
Helen tow, Adelaide Cushing; finance,
Aris Van Duesen, Gertrude Fischer,
Marion Stowe; music, Ellen Sargeant,
Esther Cook.
The following changes have been
made in the cast:
Jacobus............... Marion Stowe
Town Crier .........Nellie Rosewarne
Stylus short story contest has been
extended to May 14. A prize of $5.00
is offered for the best short story
written by an undergraduate woman.
Stories should be given to .Gladys
Vedder, in the rhetoric library.
LAW REVIEW OUT THIS WEEK
Malcolm, Sunderland, Lobingier, and
Waite Contribute Articles
"The Status of the Philippines," by
George A. Malcolm, of the College of
Law of the University of the Philip-
pines, an article in which the legal re-
lationship of those islands to the Unit-
ed States is discussed, is one of the
leading articles' in the May issue o.f
the Aichigan Law Review, which will
appear some time this week. Prof.
E. It. Sunderland, of the Law school,
has contributed the-fourth of a series
of articles on the Michigan Judica-
ture Act of 1915. "The Reception of
the Roman Law in Germany," by
Charles Sumner Lobingier, of the
United States . court for / Shanghai,
China, and "A Definition of Considera-
tion," by Prof. John Barker Waite, of
the Law school, are the otber leading
articles.
An 2ppreciation of the late Presi-
dent-Emeritus James B. Angell and
his relationship to the Law school is
included in the Notes and Comments.
Advertizers in The Michigan Daily
are the reliable business men of the
city. It is to your interest to trade
with them. **

New Victor Records
FOR MAY

N

NI

On Sale Today

t

A FINE LIST
HEAR THEM

.

ti Vewt~ M1'Ustc bouze
MRS. M. M.- OOT
Corner Maynard and William Streets

m

1

GO TO
TUTTLE'S

A CANOE TRIP

with

For the BEST

LU NCH

STRAWBERRY
,SHORTCAKE

incomplete Without
an
ICy-HotBottl.

Oni State

PARTICULAR LAUNDRY~

Buy all sizes
at

., .

Wurster Bros.

E. Liberty St.

Opp. the Arcadia

Pasturized Milk
and Cream

he Farmers & Mechanics Bank

No .doubt there must be a negative
and a positive element in every com-
plete unit. This axiom is true of so-
ciety as surely as it is of other units.
It' society, this classification of ele-
ments takes the form of negative and
positive persons.
The negative individual is the man
with the colorless personality. He
does his work in a half-hearted man-
ner. He is by nature a pessimist-a
destroyer. He offers objections to
every departure from the old, and
never advances any suggestions tit
might develop the old into something
better. He picks flaws in every bit of
constructive work, and never offers a
substitute. At best he is inert, pas-
sive, cold..
The positive individual is he who
is what his name implies, a whole-
hearted, constructive builder, full of
dynamic energy. He is the type whd
sees the problem and tries to solve it
by actual labor, instead of folding his
hands and waiting for someone else
to do the work. He is the every ready
optimist who dares to attempt. He is

_ J,

J'' J

..
,, "
.
.,. '
o
....

Quarry Drug Co's
Prescription Store.

OXFORD
TIME
is, iiER

I

DetroitStreet

Phone 457-M

CITY LAUNDRY
THOS. ROWE, Prop.

For
Particular
People

Phone 423

luth Main Street
Corner Huron
A G000 STRONG BANK WITH EY

State Street Office
330 S. State St.
ERY BANKING NEED

Cor. Detroit and Catherine

Our Oxfords and Pumps for ladies and gents are exclusive
models, distinctly above the ordinary.

TI

Teachers of Commercial
Subjects prepared at
Hamilton Business College
State andWiIams Ste.

J

Enoch Dieterie
Funeral Director
210 South 4th Ave.
Phone 404

Prices from $3.50 to $7.00

WAHR'S SHOE STORES

MAIN STREET

STATE STREET

Tle University of Chicago
If 1 in addition to resident
I Ei work, offers also instruc-
TU tion by correspondence.
ISTUD For detailed in-
formation address -
24th Year U.ofC.(Di.h), ucko,IIL

I,
tttcehn s,,..

VALUABLE CHARTS OF ANCIENT
WORLD ON EXHIBITION TODAY

1

rw

I

ALBERT M. KALES TO DELIVER
LAST OF LAW LECTURES TODAY
Albert M. Kales, of the Chicago bar,
will talk on "Cases on Appeal" in room
C of the Law building, this afternoon
at 4:00 o'clock. This is the last' of
the series of four lectures on trial
law being given by members of the
Chicago Society of Advocates.
To Raise Funds for Prohibition
At a meeting of members of the pro-
hibition party of Washtenaw county:
at the Presbyterian church in this city
yesterday plans were laid for back-
ing more strenuously the dry cam-
paign in Michigan. It had been de-
cided to launch a campaign to raise
from $3,000 to $5,000, to be used to
further prohibition work in Washte-
naw county and the state. Soliciting
will begin Monday, May 15.
Don't throw away that old trunk.
We will repair it. Koch & Henne, 300
S. Main. tf
Saddle ponies at 50c an hour. Call
830. tf
Taxi 2255, open under new manage-
ment. tf

Valuable charts of Europe and
America, dealing particularly with
the exploration of the New World up
to the time of the Cabots, are on dis-
play today in the small exhibit room
on the second floor of Alumni Memor-
ial hall. The collection belongs to
Dr. Edward L. Stevenson, who lec-
tures in the auditorium of the Natural
Science building this afternoon. Today
is the only day the charts will be on
exhibition.
Tickets on Sale for University )Dance
Mr. Wilfred B. Shaw, secretary of
the Alumni association and Mrs. Shaw
will be the chaperones at this
week's university dance at Pack-
ard academy Saturday evening. Tick-
ets for the dance will be on sale in
the corridor of University hall from
11:00 to 12:00 o'clock and from 2:00
to 3:00 o'clock on Friday and from
11:00 to 12:00 o'clock on Saturday.
Dancing will last from 9:00 to 12:00
o'clock. The committee in charge this
week is composed of Dick Gardner,
'17E, chairman and R. B. Frantz, '17E.
Over 104) Tickets Sold for Dance
Over 100 tickets have been sold for
the Union dance to be held in Barbour
gymnasium Saturday night. The chap-
erons are Dean John R Effinger and
Mrs. Effinger, and Mr. F. R. Waldron
and Mrs. Waldron. The committee
is as follows: John W. Langs, '17,
chairman; W. 0'. Johnson, '17. P. R.
Steketee, '18; and H. W. Collins, '8.

ONCE WORN, NO COMFORT WITHOUT THEM

Look"
what

at worn shoes and see
shows the most wear :

The heels.

ANN ARBOR WOMEN TO START'
CAMPAIGN TO HELP VETERANS
With a view of re-educating disabled
soldiers, and preparing them to be-
come self-supporting citizens, a move-
ment originating among the large uni-
versities of the east has been taken
up by a number of local women. It
is estimated that $100 will serve to
prepare one soldier to earn a liveli-
hood.
The funds in this city will be in
charge of Mrs. S. W. Clarkson, 816
Tappan road, Mrs. R. M. Wenley, 509
East Madison street, Mrs. M. P. Tilley,
1015 Ferdon road, and Mrs. Carl Wor-
den, 16 Cutting apartments. "All con-
tributions may be made directly to
them.
COMBINED DEGREE MEN
MUST FILE APPLICATIONS
Students who expect to enter either
the Law school, the Medical school or
the Dental coliegt! as candidates for
the combined lit-law, lit-medic, or lit-
dent degrees must file applications
with Registrar A. G. Hall before May
15. The applications probably will
be passed upon before the end of the,
month.
LAW LIBRARY FOR SALE - 600
volumes, all leather, at your own price.
Wilbert H. Fuller, 320 Genesee St.,
Lansing, Mich.
ATTENTION, LAWS:

BIG CHIEF INDIAN DENIES THAT
H lE WANTS WhITE MAN'S SCALP
Several Michigamua neophytes and a
number of frightened freshmen might
have been seen sneaking behind trees
and seeking other places for hiding,
when two "real,, live, dressed up In-
juns" made their appearance on the
campus yesterday. But Chief Black
Eagle, who, in- spite of his claims to
97 years, is still hearty and erect, de-
nies that he is on the warpath and
says that he has no connection with
the rites of Michigamua. He is ac-
companying his granddaughter, Princ-
ess Neawanna, who is touring the
country lecturing on the customs and
lore of her ancestors. Princess Nea-
wanna is a graduate of Carlisle and
lectured at the Ann Arbor high school
yesterday afternoon.
Oratorical Meeting Set for May 11

Look at O'Sullivanized shoes
and see what shows the most
wear:

The soles.

I

O'Sullivanized shoes give you
the most fdr the money.

A general
association,
stitution of
voted upon,
May 11, at4
north wing.

meeting of the
at which the
the association
will be held on
4:00 o'clock in

I I

Oratorical
new con-
will be
Thursday,
room 302,

SECONOMY

AS WELL

AS COMFORT

N° 1 505 BLK
oN1605 TAN
Wagner Co.

Rabbi Wolsey to Speak Sunday N
Sunday evening at 6:45 o'clock
bi Louis Wolsey, of Cleveland, I
will address the Jewish Student
gregation in Newberry hall on
theme, "God is my Refuge." Dr.
sey is Cleveland's most promi
rabbi.

xi Line, Phone 2255.

Call Lyndon for good pici

,mb

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