Tf TiqI~ DALY _ We Will Clean Your Rugs OR WE WILL MAKE NEW RUGS out of the old ones for you. If you have old rugs that are about worn out, call us and we will use them to make new rugs for you. \ SATISFACTION GUARANTEED The Ann Arbor Fuff Rug Compan 1005 BROADWAY PHONE 1946 %AHOUSANDS of smokers give the verdict to you- . Of all the other tobaccos >ne can approach the finest in-a, - have proved it-and NATURE has pro varieties of pure Tu None has the delicious FLAVOR of the finest Turk None gives th'e ENJOYMENT of the finest Turk None will SATISFY you as will the finest Turkis None but the highest grade and personally sel irkish tobaccos is used in MURAD. I RA To enjoy 100% Turkish at its V) BEST-to reac PEAK of Cig Quality-you hav to smoke MURA Try MURAE day and "Judge for Yourself--!' 20c YROS. A LOFML.ARVOM 5 PLANSUBMITTED FOR CO-OP STORE. (Continued from Page One) 3. Membership. There shall be two classes of members, stock-mem- ly bers and deposit-members. The stock membership shall be restricted'to stu-+ dents, student organizations,. faculty and other university employees, and former students residing in Ann Arbor orvicintiy. The minimum individual holding shall be one one share, the maximum ten shares. Any person re- siding in Ann Arbor or vicinity may 1 now become a deposit-member upon mak- ing a deposit of two ollars. 4. Transferabity. Memberbiips, duCed shall be non-transferable and sharest Irkish of stock shall be non-transferable ex-f cept through the board of directors. Whenever any member permanentlyi ish- leaves Ann Arbor or the immediate vicinity the board shall, upon demand, ish-, redeem the stock of such a member at par, or return all deposits made, 1- as the case may be. No dividends shall be paid .on stock held 'by non- ected residents. At its discretion the board of directors may also redeem the stock or return the deposit of any pure other member wishing to retire from ERY the organization. 5. Dividends. An annual dividndi h the of 6%, if and when earned, shall be arette paid to all resident stock-members. Dividends shall be cumulative. e but 6. Rebates. The balance of all D--- earnings after dividends have been deducted shall be distributed annually 3 to- to the members in proportion to their respective purchases. 7. Jlanagement. All authority shall be vested in a board of directors elected annually by the stock-mem- bers, voting share and share alike. The board shall elect a chairman who shall be chief executive officer. The manager shall be hired and his salary fixed by the board. 8. Credit Policy. All business shall be conducted on a strictly cash basis. The use of paid-in-advance purchase cards are recommended. 9. Goods. Student supplies, st- tionery, standard books, athletic goods, confections, tobacco. Other lines' may be added later if the board of directors deems It feasible. 10. Cstomers. No restriction other than payment in cash. ., Advanced Pupils Appear Tonight _ Advanced students of the School of Music will give their next recital at 7:30 o'clock-tis evening at the school. Piano, voice and violin selections will make up the program, which is com- plimentary. The complete program will be as follows: Two Intermezzi,.p,76 (Brahms), Elizabeth SchwIer; 'I Am Thy.Harp" (Woodman), "When Death to Either Shall Come" (Homer), "Hindoo. Chant" (Bemberg), Thelma Stealy; Polonaise, G minor, Polonaise, ,G major (Bach; Le Desir (Cramer), Alma Haab; Senata, A major, for piano and violin (Handel), Andante- Allegro, Adagio-Allegretto moderato, Evelyn Pace and Josephine Connabe; Andante (Haydn-St. Saens), Liebes- freud (Kreisler), Evelyn Pace. Folk Songs: Had a horse, a finer no one ever saw; Shepherd, see thy horses foaming mane (-Hungarian); Would God I were -the Tender Apple Blos- som, A Ballynure Ballad (Irish), Richmond Gardner; Mazurka, Two Preludes, Etude, Op. 25, No. 2 (Chop- in), Normand Lockwood. Apply for Journalism Certificates Applications for certificates in jour- nalism have been placed with Regis- trar Hall. Seniors who are graduat-! ing in June are eligible for these cer- tificates. The school records ,will be investigated, the - requirement being that the applicant has a B average in scholarship. Prof. Carl J. Coe Ill at Home Prof. Carl J. Coe, of the mathemat- ics department, has been confined to his home since Friday with a slight attack of tonsilitis. On that day he returned from a tour through -north- ern Michigan for inspection of highI schools. To day is "W' Day. VALUABLE CARTOON FOR MAY CHIMES TAKEN FROM OFFICE A cartoon by Fontaine Fox, na- tionally known cartoonist, which was to be published in the May issue of the Chimes, has been stolen from the Chimes office., F. M. Smith, '22, edi- tor, believes that the cartoon was thoughtlessly taken by some person who did not realize its value. He requests that it be returned to the Chimes office immediately or it will be too late to be inserted in the issue. LIBRARY GETS 700 VOLUMES ON HISTORY OF SCOTLAND. With the arrival and placing on the shelves of papers and publications dealing with Scottish history and liter- ature, the Library now possesses one of the finest working collections for the study of these subjects to be found in university libraries in the country. The collection, complete,- to- tals approximately 700 volumes. The recent additions to this col- FIRST NATIONAL BANK _ Organized in 1863 . IQ 3 % paid on Savings Deposits Oldest National Bank in Michigan -V Pure wool fabrics combined with fine hand tailoring 1* lecton were purchased by Librarian value, as they p; W. W. Bishop while on his trip to some of the more England last year and are of great the Library here. $ .00 and up Wadhams & Co. Society Brand Clothe r t' tlti., t//f1lY///}Yif////Yttttt Slt// t.. . fldti*U&. loods found as a rule only FOR SPRING ARE HERFE in the finer hotels. Serv.ice 3 that is immediate. These are Arcade Cafeteria features!1 .A Upstairs, Nickels' Arcade ,. ._. i * r . ' ,, _ - s , ,. _ ,n .. r F / f I Iltr I I l UN DERWOOD "STANDARJJ PORTABLE the Worlcb Smares'T COLLAI / #* r when you do your writing on the Underwood Portable T HEMES, letters, writing of all kinds can be finished up sooner and done with less effort. Besides, the job is sure to be a neater one, more easily read and understood. This Portable has behind it the ex-. perience and resources of the world's largest typewriter manufacturer. Weighs 6% lbs., uncased. Price $50 Obtainable at Underwood offices in all principal cities, or direct from UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER CO., INC. Underwood Building, New York AI / THE difference between the VAN HEUSEN Collar and ordi- nary collars is not merely that one is soft and the others stiff. The VAN HEUSEN Collar is as stylish as it is soft; and as com- fortable as it is correct. Ordinary collars depend upon stiff-, ness for their style, anduponcrisp- baess for their comfort. The VAN HEUSEN Collar tempers its style to the shorn neck. Ordinary collars have as little con-. sideration for a neck's curves as a round hole has ,for a square peg. If your dealer cannot supply you with the VAN HEUSEN Collar and the VAN CRAFT Shirt (a soft white shirt with the VAN HEUSEN Collar at- tached) write u, for addre of one that can. r "Well dressed men take off their hats to the VAN HEUSEN.,Collar," wrote a leading. haberdasher. But it's even more significant that they bare their necks to'it. Nine styles, quarter sizes 131 to 20. Price fifty cents. Will outwear halfa dozen ordinary collars. No Starching N Rough Edges 't 111 Not Wrinkle esy Your hiasq Sav~ (br Tie4 rU ^RADC "ARK REG. U. SPArT. OPp, mEORIGINALwiDE GARTER y Loo for the nMe "B. Z." when You buyr a wlde-web Barter. It identifies the genuine-fhe patented garter that has no slidees, buckles or bothersome adiustment. Real luxury and solid comfort. 35o to $1, everyWhere, in sintgle-grip and the E. Z. a-Grip. and theEF. Z. Swart Garter. Made ely 17 The Thou. P. Taylor Co., Bridgeport, Caen. You wouldn't wear a tourniquet 1 It isn 't a VA N HEUSEN unless it's stampped Phillips-Jones Corporation, Makers PHILLIPS-JONES CORPOI .TION -1225 RA' R 4 DNa