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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 12, 1916 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1916-05-12

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

T.HE WCHIGAN fDAILY

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.
TenisRacklets
We are the Agents for the
SLOTTED THROAT RACKETS

LOfficial newspaper at the Ujniversity of
Michigan. Published eve. y. morning except
Monday during the unive'rsity year.
l,,ntered at the jpost-office at Ann Arbor as
seconzd-class 'natter.
Francis F. McKinnev.. Managing Editor
John S. Leonard.......... Business Manager
Offices: Arin Arbor Press Building. Sub-
scriptions: b carrier or mail, $2.50. Want
ad. stations:; Quarry 's, Students' Suply
Store, 'lthe Ielta; cor. Packard and State.
''hones: Business, q6o E ditorial, 2414.
( Mum ii tuca tions rnot to excfeed 300 words in
engili. or novices oft ccts wiil uliishe~d
in Thew Dali £ iiclft at thle otliee in 11w Ann
A-rbior Press BIltg., 01. in the notice boy in the
,vest corridor oftbtz general l ibrary, wvhere
the notices are co011cciet at 7:00 o'cock each
evening.
E. Rodgers Sylvester News lEditot
Tomi C. Reid ..............Telegraph Editor
Verne Burnett........... ..elegraph E~ditor
E~. P. Wright..................Sports Editor
J. C..13. Parker .......ssignment Editor
Conrad N. Church............... City Editor
Edwin A. lymnan....... ........City Editor
L.ee Joslyn.............. .City Editor
G'or.iop D). Cooke... .....tatistical Ejito-
Golda Ginsbutrg .............. Women's Editor
Edward E. Mack........ Advertising Manager
H. Kirk White........ ublication Manager
Y: R. Alfliseler. (' irculation Manager
C. V.. Sellers................. ..Accountat
C. 'T. Fishleigh . .Assistant Business Manager
Nigh Editors
Leonard WV. Nieter Ea4rl Pardee
L. S.IThomnpson f . L. Stadcker
11 cnicy Hill 11. C. L,. Jackson
Reporte~rs
11. A. Fitzgerald Cecil Andrews
Linton B. Dimnond E. A. lanmgarth
Bruce Swaney I. 1. Ziegler
W., R. Atlas frank Taber
Nat Thomson II oiL ind Thompson
Phil Pack i C. Garrison
Allen Shoenfield D. S. Rood
C. W. Neumann Jas. Schermerhtorn, J7r.
Business Staff
Albert E. HorneRoscoe Ran
L. C. Musgrave F. M. Sutter
K. S. MColl L. W. Kennedy
C. P. Emery Bernard Wol
j. I,. Campbell

Rackets Restrung in Three Days

E AES
STU DENTS BOOKSTOREg

Opportunity Given"
IInlaner Tryouts
M'. 3 11(101 ( ontril)tes. kr.tiele ol
l'lattshurg tamnp for
Mray Number
Persons who desire to try out for
staff. positions. on The inlander, but
who -were unable to be present at the
i ^eCt _,% 'held yesterday, will be given
another oppoMunitiy this afternoon at
'1:00 'clAock.
All material for the Mlay number,
of the magazine' has been selected,
an~d it is e}xpectetd that the issue will i
b ie placeti upon sale (luring the first
eat of next week.
Dri. RItufs S. TPucker, of the econ-
omics department, has contributed
an article on tine military training
camp held last year at Plattsburg.
The writer was in a position to see
the experiment in cperation and to
decide upon the effect such camps of
instruction might have in time of war.
Another article, by -1verner W.
Schroeder, '161., takes into consider-
ation the question as to whether or
not the MichigatiUniuon is performing
the duties and i'unction for which it
weas originally intended. The paper
is the result of much inquiry on the
p~art of the writer, among both those
who favor and those who oppose the
institutioii.
CONTRIBUTE TO FUND]
011"I)EN TVS OF tl1QR lY -RAISE
144)1? I NFIWRARY;. ELECT
SPREtlAl)COMITTEE
The following 20 girls have been
elected to act on the freshman spread
conmmittee next year: Emma Riggs,
illa rga ret Atkinson, Emily Loman,
Mlarcia Pinkerton, Kathryn Johnson,
Groeso Gaines. Florence Melcher,
Gertrude Gunn, Fay Hall. Betty Rams-
dell', Emily Powell. Htasel Hoffman,
Virginia Look, Lm'-ile Duff, Ada Ar-
nold1, Frances MacDonald, Josephine
Holmes, Helen Bow,.er, Ardyth Paul
and Hannah Chanmp1lin.
The girls of the :Ihartha Cook dor-
mitory have contributedl $50 to the
girl' infirmary fntd.

Tr

N

N

8

I . I

150 Brand New (This Year's)
TENNIS RACKETS

to Select from- and Everyone Guaanteed

Price: $1.50 to $10

UNIVRSIT BOO STOi E

- .
swr-

dI

To Victor Owners

RECORD S
of McCormack, Amata, lieniplt, Matzesaiur and Werren-
rath are to be had for the Victor Victrola

r - -sn a

We Have A Complete Stock

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson.
Cars run on Lastern time, one hour faster
than local time.
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-S :io a.
m. and hourly to 7:10 P. nM., 9:1o P.. j
Kalamazoo Limnted Cars-8;48 a. in. and
every tw o hours to 6:48 p. n.; to Lansing,I
8:48 P. in.i
Local Cars,; Eastbound-5 :35 a. in., 6:40 a. m:.,
7:o5 a. in., and every two hours to 7:05 p. in.,
8:0; p. ;., 9:05 P. i., 1o:5o P. in. To Ypsi-
.anti only, 8:48 a. in. (daily except Sunday),
9:20 a. tn., 12:05 1. in., 6:0$ p. i., 11:43 P.
tn., z : To a. in.,,l1:2o a. in.
Local Cars, Westbound-6 :i2 a. ni, 7:5o a.
m7., and every two hours to 7 :50 p. n=., 10:20
p. Ini., 12120, a. M.
The Ann Arbor Savings Bank
Organized 1869
Captml..... . $ 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. Offiice, 707 North Univ-
j Hersity Avenue.
COME IN AND TRY OUR
Chinese Comi bn ton Lunch 1.M

TRY ' JEWELRY STORE
For AIarm Clocks and IMichigan Pins
I 113 SO. MAIN STREET
IOur "Tailor-Made" Clothes Cost No More
Than the Average "Ready-Made"
CAN SLE, The Tailor
108 E. Washington St Second Floor
COP off a few
mninutes and eat some of
j WAX KING L00
314 S. State St. 1#hone 1244-M
FIRST NATL, BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH.
Capital $10o,00o Surplus and Profit $$65,ooo
DIRECTORS:
WIR'I CORN WELL WALDO M. ABBOTT
GirO. W. PAiTERSON HARRY M. HAWLEY
S. W. CLARKSON HARRISON SOULE
F'Ra[I) SC'HM~ID D. B. SUTTrON~
k. ID KuNNiE

m -

Corner Maynard and William Streets

A Necessary Consider-
ation in Modern
Efficiency
See Practical Kits

' TUGOLC '

For the BEST

AMP,>

STRAWBERRY
SHORTCAKE.

On MSate

FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1916.

Night Editor......... .1. L. Stadeker
All freshmn vs.who expect to vvork
onl the b1 sine sistaff of The lhiily

-I1N-__

PATCLRLAUNb'RY

Leather Packets

For
Particular
Pcople

11:3OA. M5 :34 P M
Michigan Inn
Chop Se
611 E . Liberty St. Opp. the Arcadia
The Farmers& Mechanics Bank

FOR,
j CHOIdCL CUT FLOWERSj
TO BISCHOFF'S GHOUS_
WAux ster Bros.
Pasturized Milk
11 and Cream

te~xt year' are r'equIested( to e.all at The I --
Iasl o'ieebetween 1:01) and s#6)I WOLF LECTURES TO ENGINEERS

o'clock tiis afferilooll.

Phone 423

S&outh Main Street
Corner Huron

State Street Office
330 S. State St.

- AT-

'a

Cor. Detroit and Catherine

A 6000 STRONG SANK WITH EVERY BANKING NEED

PA,

.. s,. i

a

Teachers of Commercial
Sabji'cts prepart d at
Hlamilton toustuess College
State andWilliamns Sta.

'

£

Enoch Dietorle
Funeral Director
210 South 4th Ave.,
Phone 404

- I~mO

WHITEMORE LAKE SEASON
IS OPENLL

The Lakeview Hotel
AGAIN OFFERS YOU IT'S FAMOUS
SFROG, FISH and CHICKEN
DININERS
BANQUETS A SPECIALTY
CALL 4 JIM OUR
Whiternore Exchange Prop.

jJ

THE STIMULATING OF YOUTHFUL
AMBITION
Tw~\o facts are ematters of g eneral
comment in America at the present
day: Tlhe crowdling of the professions
and the scarcity o% intelligent and ex-.
perienced labor. The causes lie both
in an undue stimulus given to medi-
ocre students to extend their studies
to higher branches of learning, as well
as in the persistent scarcity of teach-
ers and equipment for training youths
jinto thinking workmen.
Much of the money generously sub-
scribed to found free scholarships
at institutions intended to provide in-
telligent artisans, results chiefly in
convincing the recipient that his men-
tal equipment has lifted him above
the workbench and past the tool chest.
Another powerful influence to limit the
needed supply of capable workmen is
exerted by the mediaeval spirit of
"guild exclusiveness," which dictates
the policy of a few of our labor unions.
Membership in such organizations can-
not fairly be made the only channel
of entrance to a trade, wherein the
least competent workman is .led to
believe that he has the right to de-
mand as much pay as the most skill-
ful.
Since the (lay of the shop apprentice
is past, his place can be acceptably
taken only by young men from trade
schools, and every American ideal
urges that there be no entrance limit-
ations -other than merit. Trade union
co-operation in such schools is found
in Germany and the movement in any
country is the forerunner of a better
understanding with and higher wages
from employers. Only thus, by stinm-
ulating 'youthful ambition to 'excel,
can the rising generation be carriedE
past the alluring opportunities of at-I
tract ive wages for routine work with
its deadening consequences.
If there is to be healthful industrial
growth, it is the clear duty of such a
government as ours to provide the
opportunity and explain the means by
which each man and woman may be
able to learn to work skillfully. if
with instruction in the trades is -ju-
(iciously mingled broad teaching in
the humanistic studIies and instruction
in goodl citizenship, more of our youths
who cannot be sent to secondary
schools will find their way to self-
made independence through early ap-
titude in manual work.-American 'In-
(dustries.

11,111a ger of S11ll1llit e (onipally Believes
in11)evei opig In 1idividuiality
Robert 13. Wolf, manager of manu-
facturing at the Burgess Sulphite comc-
pany, of Berlin. N. I1., will lecture to
engineering students on "The Devel-
opmient of 'Indhividlua lity in Industry"
at 4:00 o'clock this afternoon in room
348 of the Engineering building.
Mr. Wolf has a unique but rare
philosophy of the management of a
pulp mill,.lie believes in developing
the individuality of the mill as well as
the individ uaility o~t the men. By
application of his principles to the
Burgess plant, hie has saved over
$100,000 in materials alone in one
ye:;r.
Th'le talk is gidven as an addedl num-
ber on the pcogrami of the Taylor so-
ciety conference, Mr. Wolf being one
of the leaders in the paper and pulp
discussion tomorrow morning, which is
open to the general public.
TO TEST WATER FOR TYPHOID
al It .. fi%' ?al- 10 1 -. o'e i
ry Farmi Causes Fever Cases
Samples of the water from the for-
estry farm were brought into Ann Ar-
bor late yesterday afternoon for ex-
amination for possible signs of ty-
phoid fever germs. The well on the
farm, which is only 14 feet deep, .is
suspected of containing germs by Dr.
W\essinger, city health officer.
Two of the six cases of typhoid fever
now in Ann Arbor have been traced to
an adjoining well, a quarter of a mile
distant on the Vogel farm. On Palm
Sunday five local girls went out to
the forestry farm for a picnic, stop-
ping at the Vogel house for a drink
of water, which is held responsible
for the sickness of two of them, Mary
and Alice Perkins, 814 West Liberty
street.

Prices from $3.50 to $7.0

Quarry Drug Co.'s
Prescription Store

Detroit Street

Phone 457-'M

CITY LAU NDRY
THOS. ROWE, Prop.

WAIIR'S 5SHO[: ST ORES

M-1.1 Mol W. ON A

MAIN STREET

FTATE STREET

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

r.

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.
. ..
.'' "/
.i
'_o:,
: ,.
:o.
.y.l .

15 HEREB

En graved Cards

Straw

Hat Day

Window Posters
Calling Cards

Davis & Ohlinger
Prompt Printers
432-J 109-111 E. Washington

oxuw foD

TIME

Y/ .
F
{ p r

KE

Cox Sans and Vining
T AXI PHONE I8I12-M c Ilyow _____on
for all College Degrees
Co's Livery & Baggagei may be ordered now from
114 North State Street ~ ~

No Drops
Needed in Qvr
Eye Examination.
My specialty is making
Drugless Eye Exam ina lions-
determining scientifically and
accurately the glasses your eyes
require.
Shop facilities enable ue to
make your glasses, giving you
quick service.
We grind lenses.
EMIL H. ARNOLD
Optometrist-Optician
with Arnold & Co., Jewelers, 20'S. Mlain St

May 17

a

I

WVILSON ( VOICE OF PRINCETON
EN lIVERSITY UNWE R~ I)UATE S
Princeton, N. J., May l1.--A straw
vote of the -undergraduates of Prince-
tona University revealed Woodrow WVil-
son to be their choice for the next
president. President -Wilson received
396 out of a total of 840 votes. Roose-
velt was the second choice with 261
and Hughes third with 121 votes. The
remaining ballots were' scattered
among Root, Benson, Taft, and Weeks.
Bryan received' one vote.

'Tie University of Chicago
HOME in addition tc re.oid: nt
II works. offers.a o instru~~
Lion by corrceapon'Jern e.
SU Y For dtuiled irmp-i
o 24th Year U. of C. (Div, 11), £tClaao. Ill, ,i!Itw.t .~
Don't throw away that cold trunk.
We will repair it. Koch R Henne, 300
South Main. tf
Bicycles and Repairing at Right
Prices. Switzer's Haardware. tu,fri,sat

JUST RECEIVED
a shipmnt nt of the wonderful
new
Stewart Phonographs
Come and $5o Buy one for
Hear One% your Canoe
For Sale By
JOHN B. MOODY
20q) N. Ingalls Tel. 508-M

I

For best results have your filns de
veloped and printed by Hoppe. MI
Saddle ponies at 50c an hour. Co
330.

12

. : - ®

all J FOi First Class Iliccre Repairiig
tf G to to Switzer'b laranare. tu-fri-sat
tf See -Hofppe for your next portrait.

Patronize Daily.Advertizers.

For quick service, call 2255,

, .---

,.....

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