THE MICHIGAN DAILY
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HATS
HATS
HATS
HATS
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Go To Calkins'
HATS
HATS
HATS
HATS
For
Soda Water
For Thirty Years the hest
We Have It On Record
Have You Heard The Latest ?
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DRUGS
KODAKS
Calkins' Pharmacy
324 South State Street
CANDY
SODA
We are showing the latest styles in Suits, Top Coats
Sport Coats, Hats, Caps and Furnishings
Wadhams & Co.'s Corner
Main & Washington Sts.
MEDIC SCHOOL ALUMNI
PLAN REUNION IN JUNE,
ENGIEERING FACULTY
ADIEEIS OPTS HONOR SYSTEM
Provide for Standing Committee to
Review All Cases of
Dishonesty
ALLMENDINGER'S
Music Shop
Phone 1692-F 1 122 E.
Liber
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Boat House Bulletin
Saturday Evening
8:30 till 11:00
American Medical Association Mem-
bers to Be Received as Guests by
Regents and Faculty
Plans are under way for holding
a reunion of the Medical School alum-
ni here on Friday, June 16. The re-
gents and the faculty of the Medical
School have invited the members of
the American Medical association,
which holds its annual convention in
Detroit at that time, to be present. A
special program for the day has been
arranged.
The various members of the Medi-
cal faculty will appoint hours, at
which time they may be seen by their
friends. From 10:30 to 12:00 o'clock
there will be clinics and demonstra-
tions at the hospitals. At 1:00 o'clock
a luncheon will be given by the re-
gents' in Barbour gymnasium.
The visiting ladies will be entertain-
ed by the wives of the medical facul-
ty. All museums and collections will
also be open to them.
An organ recital is to be given in!
Hill auditorium at 3:00 o'clock. Dr.
V. C. Vaughan and Mrs. Vaughan will
give a reception at their home from1
4:30 o'clock to 6:00 o'clock. In the
evening, class dinners will be held,G
and also a general dinner for mem-
bers of certain classes and the mem-
bers of the association who register
for the same before Wednesday eve-
ning, June 14, at the Detroit office.
The faculty of the College of Engi-
neering at its meeting on May 15,
1916, adopted the honor system pre-
sented through the committee on dis-
cipline by the students of the college.
The system provides for a standing
student honor committee to review
cases of dishonesty reported by the
students and to make a report on the
honor system with recommendations
to the faculty through the committee
on discipline in March of each year.
Under the honor system the follow-
ing provisions are made:
A. Written quizzes during the se-
mester may be given without the su-
pervision of the instructor; but those
who wish to take the quiz under su-
pervision may retire to the office of
the instructor or other place desig-
nated by him.
B. Final examinations are to be
given in duplicate,-
(1) Under the honor system in the
room to which the class is entitled
by virtue of hour of the course;
(2) Under supervision of proctors in
a room to be posted on the bulletin
boards by the Secretary of the college.
(Signed) LOUIS A. HOPKINS.
LUNCHES, CANDIES, HOT SUNDAE
AT THE
109 SOUTH MAIN STREET
WE MAKE OUR OWN CANDIES OUT OF
THE PUREST AND BEST MATERIALS
mmw
"Honorable Mention"
Reserve your Canoes and
Lunches for Sunday
Afternoon
is a poor salve for
the wounds of fail-
ure in the final test
for high marks.
Hitting the line
hard in class room
or on the athletic
field calls for the
courage and endur-
ance that come
from a well nour-
ished body made
fit for the day's
work by proper
food.
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WM. J. SAUNDERS.
REMEMBER
That the sweetness of
low price never
equals the bitterness
of poor quality.
I AHTHUR F. MARQUARDT
Campus Tailor
516 East William St. Phone 1422 J
SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY ONLI
Tennis shoes, 55c. Switzer's, 310
State.
Patronize Daily Advertisers.
Y VICTROLA RECORDS OF
S. MAY FESTIVAL ARTISTS
SCHAEBERLE & SON.
** Walsh Taxi Line, Phone 2255.
THE
AT
Business Topics
According to the review of trade
just issued by Henry Clews and com-
pany the business outlook for the
country is as a whole promising, de-
spite such perplexities as extraordi-
nary foreign munitions trade, a great
extension of credits, our acute re-
lations with Germany and Mexico, and
the constant raising of commodity
prices.
Prosperity is assured the west for
at least another year because of the
high price of food and agricultural
products.
Labor in other parts of the world
has been so diverted by the war from
production to destruction that this
country is practically certain of an-
other booming export season. There
is also an unprecedented demand for
our mineral products, while the iron,
textile, and transportation industries
are in a thoroughly satisfactory con-
dition.
The last few months have witnessed
a feverish state of business activity.
During the first four months of the
currelit year, bank clearings reached
the tremendous total of $78,000,000,000,
or nearly 45 per cent more than the
amount for the same period last year.
Even making an allowance for the;
rise in values, it is evident that there
has been a substantial increase in the
volume of American business.
Exports, new charters for concerns
with not less than $1,000,000, railroad,
earnings, in fact all lines of industry
show great increases this year when,
compared with last. Optimism con-
tinues on the flood tide,'and there are
no signs of weakness, although there
are certain changes in tendencies
which should not escape notice.
tion of the American Institute of Elec-
trical Engineers, Prof. A. H. White, of
the chemical engineering department,
gave a lecture on "Electrical Precipi-
tation of Smoke and Fumes," in the
amphitheater of the chemistry build-
ing last night.
Mr. W. H. Buettner of the geology
department has recently completed
mounting the partial backbone of the
ancestor of the moderncrocodile. The
backbone is probably one of the most
complete sets of vertebrae in existence
and makes a valuable addition to the
University collection.
N. L. Carey, grad., will leave June
1 for the Ochoco national forest in
Oregon, where he has accepted a posi-
tion on volume table work.
H. J. Andrews, grad., and E. L. All-
mendinger, grad., have secured posi-
tions for the summer as timber cruis-
ers in the Arapalio national forest in
Colorado.
Letters of appreciation have been
received by the committee in charge
of war relief in Ann Arbor. Several
hospitals in France were especially
grateful for the fine packages sent
them.
The Round-Up club will hold a smo-
ker Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock,
at which time officers for next year will
be elected.
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Conservation, of Energy
Eu
CAMPUS IN BRIEF
Blefore the Detroit-Alini Arbor see-
ShreddedWha
is the favorite food of college students for
study or play because it supplies the greatest
amount of digestible, tissue-building material
with the least tax upon the digestive organs.
It contains all the rich, body-building material
of the whole wheat grain made digestible by
steam-cooking, shredding and baking. It is on
the training table of nearly every college and
university in the United States and Canada.
Delicious for breakfast with milk or cream, or
for any meal with all kinds of fruits.
Made only by
The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y.
.
tf
What Electricity Means
to You in Your Home
leave Copy
at
Quarry's and
The Delta
LASSII
AflVFRTISI
I Leave Copy
at
Students'
Supply Store
N G
WANTED
WANTED-Two or three refined peo-
ple to take upper floor of small mod-
ern house (three rooms and bath)
for next college year, where home
atmosphere would be appreciated.
For 2 days address "Home," care
Daily. m19-20
WANTED-One or two rooms for
students (women) summer and
next year, not close to campus.
Terms reasonable. Write Box M,
Michigan Daily.
FOR REIST.
FOR RENT-Autos for rent with or
without driver. A. Harnack Ypsi-
lanti. Phone 678. m20,21,23
LOST
LOST-Near ninth green at Golf club,
a pitching iron marked "pitcher,"
made by Jack Herd. Finder please
return to C. Fordney, 233-MN.
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE-Indiana reports, Statutes,
Digests, text boolbs, Cyc, Corpus
Juris, high grade sanitary oak of-
fice furniture and chairs. Excel-
lent location and opportunity for
practice. Willits, 212-218 Willits
Bldg,, Kokomo, Indiana.
FOR SALE-May Festival ticket for
Saturday afternoon, main floor. Call
815-W.
MISCELLANEOUS
Forest Inn, near corner S. Univer-
sity and Forest, open for business
Saturday, May 20. Give us a try.
Advertizers in The Michigan Daily
are the reliable business men of your
city. It is to your interest to patron-
ize them. **
The Michigan Daily for t e rer"
of the year, 50c. **
J-Laws Choose Council Nominees
At a meeting of the Junior law
class yesterday, P. A. Miller, and D.
W. Sessions were nominated for Stu-
dent Councilmen. Polls for the elec-
tion will be open Tuesday, May 23,
from 10:45 o'clock to 12:15 o'clock,
in the halls of the law building.
Electric Flat Irons
They save many steps in the kitchen
Electric Toasters
Make the finest toast for breakfast without any fuss or
trouble, and they are always ready.
Electric Heaters
Take the chill off the room, and do it quickly.
Why use a cold room when it can be easily avoided?
Electric Chafing Dishes
Are the very best things for the long winter evenings.
Think of the Welsh rarebits and other delicacies.
The Detroit Edison Company
Eastern Miehigan Division
I
Patronize Daily Advertizers.
**
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We Have a Splendid Line of
First Class Pianos for Rent!
Take up the matter of renting with us!
IT WILL BE PROFITABLE TO YOU
GRINNELL BROS. Music House 1M South
PRONE 1707 and try our Victor Record approval system for May records
I
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Ten cents rents a good Eastman
kodak, any size you want. Lyndon's,
719 N. University.
Don't throw away that old trunk.
We will repair it. Koch & Henne, 30
South Main. tt
Advertizers in The Michigan Daily
are the reliable business men of your
city. It is to your interest to patron-
ize them. .k
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Lyndon's for kodaki, films,
Itgs Open Sundays, 9:30 to 4:8
p. TI.
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