THE MICHIGAN IDAILY "# } Your Ease of Mind Self-possession and personal effici- ency depends largely upon the clothes you wear. If we are your tailors you will always have that feeling that comes with Clothes of Character G. H. WILD COMPANY LEADING MERCHANT TAILORS STATE ST.4 NiC -' WOMEN I~lGA'N DA Ii PLAN PICNIC T E N KI ,l "STTvd'F U A'VPTATo IDA nDmc 1 Official newspaper at the University of Michigan. Published evety morning except Mpnday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as cmnrs~c rnte t LS AVING DANCING PARTS IN PAGEANT TO MAKE MERRY; SENIOR GIRLS REHEARSE ENNI 150 Brand New (This Year's) TENNIS RACKETS I second-cls atter 'u e All girls who took dancing parts in Francis F. MKinney. ManagingEditor the pageant will have a picnic Thurs- John S. L.eonard........ Business Manager. day, MVay 11, in Cascade Glen. Those Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- wishing to go are asked to sign at scriptions: by carrier or mail, $2.50. Want the gymnasium. ad. stations: Quarry's, Students' Supply Store, The Delta, cor. Packard and State There will be a rehearsal of Acts I Phones: -Business. 960; Editorial, 2414. a T f'! 1, to Select from - and Everyone Guaranteed Price: $1.50 to $10 a" Tennis Rackets We are the Agents for the SLOTTED THROAT RACKETS Rackets Restrung in Three Days SH EEHA N'S STUDENTS BOOKSTORE Communications not to exceed 301o words in length, or notices of events s'iil be p)ublished in The D~aily if left at the office in the 'Ann Arbor Press Blag., or in the notice box in the west corridor of the general library, where the notices are collected at 7:00 o'clock each eveniing. and n of the senioru iris play this afternoon at 4:00 o'clock" in Sarah Caswell Angell :all. WOULD PLAY, ON SUNDAY WAHR'S VNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson. Cars run on ,.astern time, one hour faster art local time. Detroit Limited and Express Cars-8:io a .and hourly to 7:10 p. Irh, 9:1o P. iM. Kalamazoo Limited Cars- 8:48 a. m. and Cry two hours to 6:48 p. m.; to Lansing, 48 p. m. Local Cars, Eastbound-5:35 a. in., 6:40 a. i., 05 a. m., and every two hours to 7:05 p. m., o5 p. Il., 9:o p. mn., to:5o p. InI. T1o Ypsi- tti only, 8:48 a. m. idaily except Sunday). 2o a. Ill., 12:0 p. in., 6:o3 p. in., I :-45 1 r : o a. n., r ao a. im. Local Cars, Westbound-6: I a. m., 7: o a. and every two hours to 7:50 P. ni., 1o:2o mt., r2:o a. m. The Ann Arbor Savings Bank. Organized 1869 Caphal ............$ 300,000.00 Surplus..........$ 150,000.00 Resources over .... $3,000,000.00 Banking in all branches Main Office, N. IV. Corner Main and Huron Sts. Branch Office, 707 North Univ. ersity Avenue. COME IN AND TRY OUR THAR P S JEWELRY STORE For Afarm Clockk and Michigan Pins S113SO. MAIN STREET 1 Our "Tailor-Made" Clothes Cost No More Than the Average "Ready-Made" CAN SLE, The Tailor 108 E. Washington St Second Floor CHOP off a few minutes and eat some of GEORGE'S SUEY WAI 1KLING LOO 314 S. StateSt. Phone 1244-M FIRST NATL. BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH. Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profit $$65,ooo DIRECTORS: WIRI CORNWELL WALDO M. ABBOTT GEO. W. PATTERSON HARRY M. HAWLEY S. W. CLARKSON HARRISON SOULE: FRED SCHMID D. B.,tUTTON E. D KINNIE FOR CHOICE CVT FLOWERS I o ,T BISCHOFF'S GE 220 Chapin St. Phone8o9-M E. Rodgers Sylvester Tom C. Raidke.... Verne Burnett....... R. T. Wright......... I.C. B. Parker .. Conrad N. Church... Edwin A. Hyman .. Lee Joslyn ......... Gordon D. Cooke.... Golda Ginsburg....... Edward 1,. Mack.. H. Kirk White. Y. R. Althselei... C. V. Sellers ....... C. T. Fishleigh ..Assis NightF Leonard W. Nieter L. S. Thompson Henley Hill Repo .FL. A. Fitzgerald Linton 1B. Diaond Bruce Swaney W. R. Atlas Nat Thompson Phil Pack Allen Shoenfield C. W. Neumann Busine Albert E. Horne E. C. Musgrave K.,S. McColl C. P. Emery j. E. C: News Edito; -r. .Telegraph Editor .Telegraph Editor- E. If. SKA GGS, '16, SAYS FER R Y .---Sports Editor FIELD SHOULD BE OPEN IN .....Assignment Editor ...".City Editor SPRING AND FALL. ...........City Editor ... City Editor ......Statistical lEdito- Editor, The Michigan Daily: .......Women's EditorI When I first entered this university .AdvertisingManager as a freshman one of the first things Circulation Manager to strike my attention was the fact . Accountant stant Business Manager that Ferry field was closed on Sunday. I asked why this was-why should Editors the university playground. be closed Earl Pardee on that day of all days when it can J. L. Stadeker 11. C. L. Jackson be best enjoyed by the individual stu- rr idents". The answer I invariably re- rtcrs CecilAdw eived was, "Tradition, my boy." As E. A. Baumgartlih a freshman and as a sophomore this E. LZiegler Drank a answer stilled me-though I still felt lola i ahorrnson that it was all wrong. However, in It. C. Garrison D. S. Rood the last two years I have been sur- Jas. Schermerhtorn, Jr'prisod at the number of students who ss Stag entertain the same views as I do Roscoe Rau about the playground being closed on F. M. Sutter Sunday. To Victor Owners I RECORDS of McCormack, Amata, ftempl, Matzenaur and Werren- rath are to be had for the Victor Victrola We Have A Complete -Stock .r m s - 1nerMtynu fndlWic Streets Corder Maynard and William Street I I m '" A CANOE TRIP GOTO TUTTLE'S Bernard Wobl a mpbell WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1916. Night Editor-L. S. Thompson TOWELS Comnbinetion Lunch A.M 25c 5:30 P. u. to 7?P. M. ..... . . Michigan Inn Chop Suey E. Liberty Sc. Opp. the Arcadia e Farmers & Mechanics Bank Wurster Bros. Pasturized Milk and Cream Phone 423 Main Street ner Huron State Street Office 330 S. State St. When the cook piles the dishes into the boiling water in the kitchen, tow- els are necessary and sanitary. And when the drummer happens to have a' room with a private bath, towels are just 'what he wants, no matter how particular he is. But when several hundred students, faculty men, and janitors have to use the same strip of crash cloth within a few hours, in the, lavatories of the Library, Alumni hall, and several other much frequented places on and near the campus, then is the time that the local apostles, ranging from the hygiene to aesthetics, register their objections. A few years ago, a slight agitation for cleanliness on the campus result- ed in a promise always to keep an abundant supply of paper toweling at all places needed on the campus. The need is still present only it is greater with the growth of the university. Use of the present system is the surest way of transmitting diseases. The leaders in the rising voice of protest hope that the usual lack of the tissue toweling is only an oversight, and that there will be an immediate reme- dy of an institution which results in nearly everything unpleasant, from chapped hands to the spreading of the worst disease which afflicts 'mankind. HOLD EXAMS FOR CLERKSHIP In the spring and fall, at least, Ferry field ought to be open to the student body on Sundays. There is much to be said for it and I can see little that can be said against it. Why, after all, is the university playground closed on Sunday? Is it because the caretakers of the gfounds refuse to work on Sunday? Well, are they needed? Is it simply traditioi-they closed the gates in the beginning and have ever since kept it up? I strongly suspect that the real reason for keeping Ferry field closed on Sunday lies in certain narrow, Puritanic, religious views which unfortunately we still cling to. If this is true--then of course, we are on delicate ground and yet-it seems to me that any religious views which would be so narrow as to look un- favorably upon Sunday recreation of a good healthy kind are to be con- demned. Whatever lies behind the fact that the playground is kept closed on Sunday-though I would like to know the real reason-the fact remains, and I cannot help but regard it as 'a deplor- able fact. Perhaps in the future when I visit Ferry field on a Sunday afternoon in springtime I will see the courts lined with players-with the usual week- day multitude of patient "waiters-for- a-court"; perhaps I will see baseball and otherwsports going on down there. I will be delighted with this change--only regretting that it did not come about in my day. But-when will this change take place? s. B. SKAGGS,'16 Lit. COAHNG EVENTS Quarry Drug Co.'s Prescription Store LUNCH CITY LAUNDRY THOS. ROWE, Prop. Incomplete Without an Icy=.ot Bottle ._- . . Detroit Street Phone 457-M PARTICULAR L A UNR Y with Detroit Street Phone 457~M On State . " + . .. , . OXFO RD I For the BEST TIME Buy all sizes at 15 HERE STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE For Particular People 11 Cor. Detroit and Catherine BANK WITH EVERY BANKING NEED' IL I q Our Oxfords and Pumps for ladies and gents are eclusive ,models, distinctly above the ordinary. SHORTHAN|D, TYPEWRITING BOOKKEEPING Best Instruction and Equipment' HaKilton Business College State and Williams Sts. Enoch Dieterle II Funeral Director 210 South 4th Ave. Phone 404 Prices from $3.50 to $7.00 WAIR'S SHOE STORES MAIN STREET STATE STREET WHITEMORE LAKE SEASON IS OPEN The .Lakeview Hotel ACAIN OFFERS YOU IT'S FAMOUS FROG, FISH and CHICKEN DINNERS BANQUETS A SPECIALTY CALL 4 JIM BURKE Whitemore Exchange Prop. Position of (lerk to Attache Open, With Salary of $1500 Ixaminations for clerk to commer- cial attache in foreign countries, a position which provides a salary of $1.500 a year; and a clerk qualified in one foreign language, at a some- what smaller salary, will be held in the various cities of the country; on May 17. The chief qualification for the posi- tions consists in familiarity with re- port writing, the ability to use a typewriter, and a good acquaintance with at least one foreign language. - Candidates are urged to file appli- cations for both positions, and appli- cants should write at once to the United States Civil Service Commis- sion, Washington, D. C., or to one of its district offices for application blanks. Notices containing the full requirements for the examination will be posted outside of the appointment office in Tappan hall. The University of Chicago HOM in addition to resident IJUIVI.work, offers also instruc- tion by correspondence. ST Y For detailedi L 1 4th Year U.efC.(Div. H).Chicaro, .. m ..ui tcr Y1 z. Mail Extra Blanks to High Schools Recommendation blanks for next year's entrances are being mailed from the Registrar's office to the 260 accred- ited high schools in the state. In ad- dition to the secondary schools with- in Michigan, the blanks are being PROF. F.W. IKELSEY REPRESENTS UNIVERSITY AT PEACE MEET Prof. F. W. Kelsey has been select-. ed to represent the university at the first national meeting of the League to Enforce Peace, to be held in Wash- ington, D. C., on Friday and Saturday,., May 26 and 27. At this gathering a number of prominent men will speak, including ex-President William H. Taft, Newton D. Baker, secretary of war, and President A. L. Lowell, of Harvard. May 12.-Soph Prom, Armory. May 13.- University of Detroit All-Fresh, basebal game. May 13.-Varsity track meet. May 13. - Cornell University Michigan, baseball game. May 17.-First concert of May F tival, 8:00 o'clock, Hill auditorium. May 18.--Second concert of May F tival, 8 00 o'clock, Hill auditorium May 19.-Third concert of May F# tival, 2:30 o'clock, Hill auditorium. May 19.--Afternoon, tug of war1 tween sophomores and freshmen. May 20.-Morning,. pushball cont and class relays, Ferry Field. May 19.-Fourth concert of May F tival, 8:00 o'clock, Hill auditorium. May 20.--Polish Seminary vs. A Fresh, baseball game. May 20.-Leland Stanford Univ sity vs. Michigan, track meet. May 20.-Fifth May Festival conce 2:30 o'clock. Hill auditorium. May 20.-Sixth concert of May F tival, 8:03 o'clock, Hill auditorium May 30.---Memorial Day (Holiday May 30.-State Normal Colleges All-Fresh, baseball game. June 2-3.-Interscholastic Meet. June 2.---Notre Dame UniversityN Michigan, baseball game. June 2.-Cap Night. June 3.--Notre Dame Universityv Michigan,, baseball game. June 9.-M. A. C. vs. Michigan, bas ball game. June 10.-M. A. C. vs. Michigan, bas ball game. June 25-Baccalaureate Services. June 26-27.-Class day exercisesj the schools and colleges. June 26-27.-Alumni Days. June 29--Commencement Day. vs. TRACK WALKERS ARE WARNED -l inhi aa fn ls lll< l..f t, ire ai -nicgan uentrai ails Attention of Students to Danger <«. Oes-F. Now that the warm weather is here .- es- long afternoon walks will b.popular. In the past the Michigan Central k es- tracks have been used by a great manyy. be- students as a promenade. A represen- tative of the company wishes to warn the students of the danger connected est with this practice, citing the catas- Cs- trophe of Washington's birthday, when one student was killed and another seriously injured, as accidents very likely to recur if people persist in er- walking the tracks. rt, WEBSTER TEAM DEBATES MEN f'RO A DELPHI FRIDAY TIGHT es'. . The cup debating teams of the Web- ) ster and Adelphi House of Represen- KEEP'iU1FFLER LSE) vs. tatives societies will meet in the final Don't keep your muffler open. cup debate on Friday night, May 12. Don't drive car faster than 15 miles The question is the government manu- per hour within city limits. s facture of arms and munitions of war.! The members of the two teams are: Sideovalks are iin the street. Webster, Dorothy V. McCormick, '18L, Don't ride bicycle on side al VS. S.-F. Cohn, '18L, and A. P. Bogue, '18L; Don't postnotices on itdlerap or Adelphi, J. R. Simpson, '18M, H.' D. telephone poles. se- Hopkins, '16, and W. A. Pearl, '16. Don't keep a dog aroundv without a license. se, Name Hobbs on Security Committee Don't break the city ordinances and Prof. William H. Hobbs was appoint- expect to get off without paying the ed a member of the executive commit-_ penalty. in tee of the National Security league, The above is 'iven to protect you. at the anneal meeting of that organ- Show your appreciation. ization held recently at the Astor hotel, New York city. Patronize Daily Advertizers. ** 4 Straw Hat Day i Advertizers in The Michigan Daily sent to 264 schools in other parts of are the reliable business men of the the country wjtich have repeatedly sup- city. It is to your interest to trade plied the university with freshmen in with them. ** other years. Call Lyndon for good pictures. Try a Michigan Daily Classified Ad Daily Corrects Exhibit Date The Daily wishes to rectify the foi- lowing error which appeared in the Tuesday, May 2, issue of the sheet. The date of the engineering exhibit was given as May 17 and 18. The cor- rect dates are May 18 and 19. .j i quick results. ** Walsh Taxi Line, Phone 2255. tf Patironize Daily Advertizers. TRAITURE 11