.Classifieds-Cont. Il ql vSIFIE D THIS . .: "ow ADVERTISING P. . aUa COLUMN CLOSES AT 3 P.M. Classified Rates. Two Cents per word a day, paid in advance. Min- imum charge for first day, 25c. Minimum thereafter, 20c. Three cents per word per day if charged. White space charged for at rate of 5c per agate line. Classified, charged only to those having phones. Phone 960 FURNITURE DO YOU KNOW we have the most completely equipped plant in the country for Repairing, Refinishing, and Upholsteriing, i furniture? Phone 381-W. P. B. Harding _8-21 FLOWERS . . 'For choice cut-flowers and plants goI to George BISCHOFF, -220 Chapin St. Call 809F-1. 106-21 YALE FITHRNO CACH, HOPES FO -OO Ofl LOST "OlR SALE- The following Box^Replies are at The Daily Office;.John Ross, 18, BAC. THE WOMEN'S LEAGUE BUILDING FUND receives a p'ercentage'of ALL cash purchases at O. D. MORRILL'S 17 Nickel's Arcade. The Stationery any Typewriter Store. 125-50 "LOVE .AND SAND", "DOWN IN * MARYLANjD" played by Bennie Kruger. STOFFLET PHONO' SHOPS,' Nickel's Arcade and 110 E. Washington. 126-50' Try a Classified Ad--it pays.-Adv. 45 CENT COFFEE 35c. Pierces Cash Stores. 118-20 PROFITABLE VACATION WORK MEN and WOMEN wanted to sell NEW indexed Bible, just revised and up to the minute. Free Salesmanship Course and personal assistance. Pas- tors and S. S. Supts. supply leads. Re- cent weekly earnings by beginners: Myrtle Kirby, $49.75; Mrs. Adelblue $48.50; Mis Krause, $42.10; Mr. Gee, (rst week) 6 ;Mr. Vanier, $62.25; Mr. Wolfe, $48.25; Mr. Kahler, $34.50.' Everyone succeeds by our plan. See C. A. Cook, Sales Mvanager, at Lane Hall, any day 3:30 to 6, or write for appointment. 123-50 ATTENTION! Seniors and Juniors School of Commerce We are seeking to strengthen our ,orrganization with college mien and women who have a knowledge of Bookkeeping or Accounting. W&e are a National organization and offer ei- ther perranent or vacation period work in your home locality to those who are interested. Good money right from the start with opportuni- ties -for splendid advancement for. 010S6 whoi qualify. For information i LOST-OnSunday on Ferndon Road, FOR SALE-Beautiful building spot, a pair of shell rimmed glasses. Re- near campus, on car line. Large ward, if returned to Edgar N. Dur- enough for two houses. Call 1048. fee, 1018 Ferndon Road. 1261 J. W. Dwyer . 508 First National Ban, Building LOST-Tuesday afternoon, probably 126-501 ED LEADER TO' TUTOR OARSEN IN OLD STYLE BLUE somewhere east of campus, small black silk bag with orange lining. Finder please call 136-J. 120 LOST-Black leather travelling bag between Ypsi. and Ann Arbor last Saturday. Reward. Return to Daily Office. 126 LOST-Near library, small, black lea- ther loose-leaf note book contain- ing addresses. -inder please call1 783. 124-21 LOST-Pair of light colored ahell rim glasses in Union Reading, Room. Reward. Call 1984-J. g126-2 LOST-Grey kid glove Friday on Campus. Finder- please call 1722- R. 126 LOST-The press in my trousers. Found at Greene's. Call 1449-M. 121-50 LOST-LEATHER NOTE BOOK. RE-- WARD. Call REICHERT, 2368-W. 124-4 LOST-On Washtenaw Ave., crank for International truck. Call 3179-M. 126-3 LOST-10x7 NOTEBOOK. RETURN TO DAILY. REWARD. 124-2 LOST-Chi Omega pin. E. OrudufW on back. Reward. Call 1325. 125-2 FOUND FOUNJD-A seven room house, nearly new, between State and Main. It's a bargain.. You can get it by call- ing Whaley Real Estate Office and making a small down payment Phone 1821-F-1. 126-50 MARRIED COUPLE WANTED'to c- cupy and care for furnished home . Fine opportuity for responsi'Mle party. Applyby letter, giving le- phone number to JOHN ROSS, care; of Michigan Daily. 125-3 HAMMOND TYPEWRITER-Folding, portable. Purchased new three months ago. Accessories, and two sets of type. Bargain. Box WA. A. 126-3 GOOD FARM of 181 acres between Lima Center and Chelsea, near Jer- usalem, $18,000, on terms. Everette Sawyer, 1676. 126-2 FOR SALE-A new, - modern, seven room bungalow and corner lot, $550 down. Call 1286-W. 124-3 FOR SALE--A Radio Receiving Set. Cost $85. Sell for $49.50. Phone 2981-W. 126-2 FOR SALE-Tuxedo, size 37. Good condition Price $25. Call 1162-M. 126-2 FOR SALE-Two May Festival Cou- pons. $1.50 each. Call Jones, 609. 126 BARGAIN-Tuxedo. and vest. Size 37. {$15. Call 2902-MW after 6 p. m. 125-2 FOR SALE-Two \May Festival Cou- pons. Telephone 781-R. 124-3 FOR SALE--Corona typewriter- cheap. Call 1128-J. 125-2 FOR SALE-Soph. Prom, ticket. Call 1057. Ask for Cashman. 126 FOR SALE--Two May Festival Cou- pons. 2629-R. 126 .,REAL ESTA'TEi BEFORE BUYING a sorority or frater- nity house, be sure and look over our new listing. We know we have what you want. Michigan Real Estate Co. 217 S. Main Phone, office 646. Residence, 71W orW 2813-J. New Haven, March 21.-The Yale crews that take the water this spring under the direction of Coach Ed Lea- der will be more like the famous Bob Cook .crews of a quarter of a cen-1 tury ago than any at Yale since th c Cook stroke was abandoned in 1903. This is the belief of the men who have been following rowing at Yale for more than 30 years, who have seen Cook crews row to many a brilliant victory, who have watched coaches at Yale come and go: with an Infinite Va- riety of strokes and theories, who have seen Yale vainly trying to "settle down" with a definite rowing policy, and who now believe that they have in Coach Leader a man who more closely approaches the methods of Cook than any one who has taught at Yale in recent years. Whether a return to the Cook stroke means a return to the era of Yale su- FIRE! FIRE! FIRE! The greatest sufferers when an An Arbor rooming house burns are usu- ally students, BECAUSE THEY CAR- RY N6 INSURANCE on their clothing and books. The price of admission to one movie will pay for $100 insurance and even if you suffer no loss there is that feeling of security which is worth much. Transfers of coverage to an- other location cost'nothing.' prom"acyon the water is a question that is arousing keen interest and many hopes in the Blue boathouse this year. Just what signhiicance a return to the methods of Cook can have at Yale would be hard to realize were it not for an understanding of what his name' represents in the rowing history of the Blue. To all Yale njen Bob Cook is a tra-1 dition. ils age was the "Golden Age"' of .rowing at Yale, when the Blue crews took the water year after year with a confidence that was unbeatable. That age has long since passed, but the Bulldog ever looks forward with grim hope to a renaissance. Whether this year wil bring even the beginning of stability to Yale rowing is some- thing that is being eagerly watched The stroke that is being taught at Yale today is essentially the same stroke that Cook brought back from England after his now historic trip there in 1873. It may differ in. some slight details, as in the finish, but fundamentally it has the same charac- te:'stlcs. It is the same adaptation of the English stroke that Cook devel- oped, and which was later dropped WVhen Yale's ' succession of English coaches introduced the genuine Eng-I lish stroke that in some way never quite seemed to fit American oars- ren. One of the first steps that Leader has taken at Yale is to restore the:old indoor rowing tank that for several years has been floored over for the use1 of the wrestling team. Then he sat the oarsmen in a straight line over the keel as Cook had done, instead of! seating them in the zig-zag English fashion. He requested swivel oar- locks instead of the English thole-pin mnodel, though the thole-pin is highly rated by the English because its click at the end of each stroke is a mechn- ical aid to precision.,I iHe has brought his own boat build- er with him, discarding the type of i shell imported by the En:glish cohes. IHis model seats the oarsmien hiighr above the water. All these features of his ' mechanical equipmesnt were characteristic of Cook's era. But the parallel does not end here. In his demands on the oarsmen them- solves, Leader has followed Cook. Hef urges the necessity of a greater per- fectiop of .inboard work, and precision of the bodies throughout the stroke. a distinct difference from the English coaches who paid more attention to watermanship. fI F - - with Iowa victor. Each team, fdl ing the shooting on its own ra forwarded the redort to the o schools and in the records which received here yesterday, the follo were the scores made; Universit Michigan, 3410 out of a possible Nebraska, 3247; Pittsburgh, 3208; Iowa, 3606. High scores for M2 gan were A. H. Robins, '23E, 363 A. Smith, '23E, 360, and K. S. An son, '23E, 339; each out of the p( ble score of 400. .1er pa rooms Experience Cou nts in every line Your Fountain Pen Is a deIicate instrumet A skilled workman can straighten a bent point, smooth a scratchy one, set a nib to give just the right amiount of flow, regrind your point to make it finer, We can do all of this and more at our pen shop in Ann Arbor and save you long delays. Better yet A AIDER !ASTERPEN will your future as well as your present troubles. RIDER S P EN SHOP solve PEN 'SPECIALISTS IN COLLEGE INN 35 Years Experience RAW ONOW ANOW 11 1111111 o do ILS!H,{I'R i ite now, to U. S. A. Corporation, 504 Benoist Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. 110-21 STUDENTS, act now before 'itis too late. I have room for 0 five Imore .stu- nts in my sal s organization for ring vacation. Those who make od will be given a permanent posi-. ii duringthe summer. Mr. Leader 22 E. Liberty; phone 3221-J. 124-3 STUDENTS' VACATION VORK [he' New Indexed Bible sells itself, you will show it. Some earnings t week: Miss. Frederickson, $52.50; 'ohmeyer, $7675; Nolte, $61.50; Val- r, $56.25. Call on C. A. Cook, Sales ,nager, Lane Hall, 3:30 to 6 any y and talk over summer plans.: 126-50 rSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Profes- sional Salesman ,organizing 'sales crew of ten assistant needs four nore men during Spring vacation. 25 Church St. between 1 and 2. St. between 1 and 2. 125-10 rge manufacturing company will be able to'place several men for sum- ner employment. Box J.B. 125-2 FOR EINT R RENT-Two suites. Closek to ampus. Pleasant environment. $3 ach per week. Two in a suite. H. L Welcher, 710 E. Ann, Phone 71-W. 126-50 PATON DUNCANSON 126-50 11 L . COLLEGIAE CMPETITiON RO.B1NS hIGH MICHIGAN MAN FOR IL 0. T. C. TEAM In the intercollegiate rifle meet re- cently held between the R. 0. T. C' University rifle team with the Univer- pities of lowa, Nebraska, apd Pitts- burgh , Michigan emerged second ADE of a better oxford, in a fine, tailor-like way.. The Coolar is the work of the expert Arrow Col r nakers.' The cu~ffs have buttons WANTED-An energetic salesman. 'Steady employment on commission] basis. Apply 708 First National' Bank Bldg. 126' WANTED-To rent a single garage near Mack Road. Phone 2308-R. 126-2' SAVE MONEY on your groceries at Pierces Cash Stores. 118-20 STOCK REDUCING SALE at O. D1 Morrill's 17 Nickel's Arcade. 125-50 WANTED-A ticket to Sophomore Prom. Call Mitts, 2999. 126; SHOE FACTORY ANN ARBOR CUSTOM SHOE FAC- TORX. Bring your repairs where shoes are made. Crepe soles at- tached to your shoes. $2.75. Bring them in' today. Made-to-measure orders-one week service. Satin-' faction guaranteed or money re- turned. 534 Forest Avenue. Call 3043. 108-21t MEN'S TAILORING OUR TAILORING DEPARTMENT is now open for your inspection. Drop in and see our samples of styles. Quality is our aim. .Davis Toggery, Shop, 119 So. Main. 123-50 TYPEWRITING We do Typewriting and Mimeograph- ing; repair, buy, rent, sell, ex-' change, all makes of Typewriters. O. D. Morrill, 17 Nickel's Arcade. 125-50 CLEANERS AWD PRESSERS CLEANING, $1.25-Pressing, 35 cents. Laundry Agency. L. O. Clapp, 1119 S. University. 121-50 A GOOD ROOMING HOUSE Located near the campus, ever thing in good condition. A steady income is assured. Call us'at once., MRS. GUSTINE, REALTOR 717 Nat'l Bank. Phone-office 835-F-1 'Evenings, 835-F-2, 2738, 4S6-J.: 125-50 FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES If -you are a prospective purchaser,' get in touch with us. We have a com- plete list of homes on easy terms. Do not let the -cash worry you. Come in and talk with us. A. I. Paton Co., Phone 40 Rooms 412-13 First Nat. Bank Bldg, PATION DUNCANSON 126-50 MISCELLAlEOUS or are the rrench link nodel CLUETT, PEABODY & CO. Inc. I m., .o....+.. BUTLER INSURANCE .,i iRVING ARMLTS, p. S. C. 'CHIROPODIST '707 N. University Phone 2052 1H w IF'', M- I--- - , , W"". lq-*OPW - -, I 209 First National Bank Bldg. Phone 401-M HI II' xi 1I S" ) S 7 "The days that make us happy make us wise." -Masefield. 7 room furnished house, $75 per month. From ovember. F. Roy Holmes, 126-501 Single or suite of rooms, s from campus or Main 545-M. 1261 ntleman at 628 Third St. 126-2 for tlfast or ' CLUB >I1S orig- 122-50 HAVE YOU A SWEETHEART OR MOTHER? If you have either, or both, they would welcome your picture in the form of a 6x8 Oval Perry Medallion. These medallions are hand painted in natural water colors, giving all the beauty of the living flesh and flowers There is no glass to break. Water will not injure them. If you send us your order before April 1, we will make you a genuine 6x8 Photo Medallion in natural colors with a border of Forget-me-nots or Oriental flower's for $2.98, and as a pre- mium for your order, during March we will make you, free of charge three Perry Photo Mirrors with your picture on the back in natural col- ors. These mirrors can be carried in a lady's handbag in 'your pocket, any- where. Will not rub off or tarnish. For absolute safety send photo to be copied from by registered mail, of special delivery. ,We will return it with the completed medallion and mirrors in the same manner. Remit by moneyorder, draft, or reg- istered letter. .We guarantee you will be satisfied with our work. George W. Hoyt, Photo Medallions, 922 Oak St., Kalamazoo, Mich. 125-6. YOU GET PROMPT'AND ACCURATF service when your MANUSCRIPTS are TYPED by EXPERTS at BID- DLES BOOK STORE. 11 Nickels' Arcade. 111-50 DRE S1A IG SPRING DRESSES made-suits re lined-work guaranteed-reason- able. 711 Have' Ave. 402-W. 112-50 HEMSTITCHING ARTISTIC HEMSTITCHING White Sewing Machine Co., 205 E. Washington St., Phone 919. 126-12 TPW1TLR Perpetuate those happy moments with the aid of photography. Make your good times everlasting by being able to re-create them thru the medium of pictures. And in having these pictures made remember that for 18 years Michigan students have found 'service and satisfaction at 21w - -$JADLL!4 190r 11 I III I 11 IX Y I 719 N. UNIVERSITY p .~- +- T I I k There'sa Great Difference IN, PHE QUALITY OF MEAT ".f .,. om .I1 I,1 Smartest styles U'If) 4 Ij-z I { 1~~ ii I Swagger Spring Topcoats, In New Belted and Box Back Models at $25 to $30-. in spring suit, RCM fine clothes-makers, our new Spring Suits have all those qualities that make for good -grning--clever designing; all-wo- fabrics; pedp. fit; fine tailoring Every favored new style brought out for spring is .here-the new Norfolks; new sports models; new 3 and 4-button models-in the popular stripes and other rich weaves and colors-" If you alwaps want the Best with courteous and efficient service. New Hats, Shirts, Ties, Hosiery, and Other Furnishings Are Ready Here in the Correct New Spring Styles ind Colors. -Two Phones- II An Exceptional Selection is Presented at- - MMIUMMENMI ---- - - I R 1 U 1 _ ..A.L J..L LJ .J .U.