ogazds Road House, it To Cripples I 'I LARGEST "HA"ESPEARE COLLECTION IN CONR of which are main lobby. on American t 12, Cleveland 8. o 4, St. Louis 3. ics-Boston-No play, rain. ngton 1, New York 2. National -Brooklyn-No play, rain. rati 6, Chicago 5. ork 4, Phillies 2. uis 2, Pittsburg 4. ay to rent a room is with lassified".-Adv. -S r- ALUdKaAILA ill i ']AMPING is certain to be a source of irritation and egret unless the tent is right. We make tents that are easily >ut up and taken down, and hey "stay put" in the worst weather. Lowest prices. Down in Southern Michigan at Cambridge Junction, in the region of the Irish Hills, Walker Inn an histor- ical tavern has been discovered rich in romance. It is a white frame, green .shuttered building )almost a century old, and is now used only as a museum with the original furn-' iture and relics of its. earlier days. Formerly the Walker hostelry was a public inn. Daniel Webster came. there in 1838 and in 1847 James Fen- nimore Cooper brought his family and his Indian guides there so the story, goes. He wrote "The Oak Openings" during his sojourn. One room is call- ed the "murder" room because a traveller with considerable money dis- appeared from it and never returned. His starving horse was found in the nearby forest tied to a tree. Another, "the suicide room' is so-called be - cause a travellar, weary of the trail, took his own life in it one night. In 1853, Sylvester Walker, the orig- inal proprietor, realizing the crowded condition of ,the tavdrn and the press- ing need for a ballroom, built a brick tavern across the road and called it the Brick Walker Tavern. On the. lawn is a great oak, with its top but off. During the "Tippecanoe and Ty- ler Too" campaign, an. enormous Am- erican flag floated from its top and thousands of voters came from the neighboring country and camped in OBSERVAT0OYWILL 0E OPENEDf TO VISITORS The University Observatory wil be open to Summer session students on July 20, 23, and 24 at 8:30 o'clock it was announced yesterday. On these nights the Observatory will be open for three consecutive hours during which time 'three relays of observers will be conducted through the astro- nomical laboratories. Throughout the evening the tele- scope will be focused on the moon and if time permits the starsswill al- so be observed. Visitors' night at the Observatory is a privilege enjoyed only by students of the Summer ses- sion and admission is by ticket only. Admission tickets maytbe secured at the office of -the Secretary in Univer- sity hall on presentation of treasur- er's receipts. The observatory is sit- uated on the corner of East Anne and Observatory streets, directly in back of Palmer field. the inn yard. This building, like the older one, is furnished in antique furniture. The basement and kitchen are still in the old colonial arrange- ment. One of the rooms is called the Henry Ward Beecher room because he' once passed a night in it. Another feature of the Brick Walk- er Tavern is the immense ballroom. It commands a sweeping view of the adjacent country. The ballroom is now in use for holiday dances and the tavern is maintained as an inn where swimming and fishing are add- ed attractions to the old tavern. Oil Magnate Warns Against Government Control Of Fields (By Special Correspondent) New York, July 3.-"Any attempt on the part of the government to reg- ulate the oil industry will unquestion- ably bring about an oil famine and eventually dollar gasoline." In these words, William G. Skelly, president of the Skelly Oil company, one of the leading independent oper- ators in the mid-continent field, ans- wered the La Follette committee rec- ommendations today. Mr. Skelly said that gasoline is the cheapest motive, power on the market and expressed the opinion that if the oil operators, refiners and marketers are permitted to work out' their own complicated problems, unhampered, gasoline, for the next ten or fifteen years at least, will be cheap. "Fifteen years ago," Mr. Skelly said, "the government began to regulate the railroads and since that time service, the chief requirement of the public, has been on the decline. The brief but sad experience with the telephone and telegraph companies shows con- clusively that governmental regulation' cannot and does not meet the claims of its advocates. "Tbe La Follette program; no mat- ter how will intentioned, will toot bring about lower prices for gaso- line. The oil industry today, more than at any other time, needs unbridl- ed initiative. The effect of any sort of regulation will unquestionably bring about a shortage of oil and sub- sequently a panic and famine." . CHUBB HOUSE William Henry Eustis William Henry Eustis, eighty-four, ex-blacksmith, ex-mayor and real es- tate baron of Minneapolis, has don- ated $1,000,000 and forty-four acres of prairie land for a hospital and con- valescent home for crippled children. Eustis, crippled; says he is giving the' money for that purpose because he' "went through life that waywhenpro- per facilities at the right time would have saved him." Dance at Jim Burke's Whitmoire Lake dancing pavilion July 4th, aft- ernoon and evening. Also Friday and Saturday night.-Adv. roh s Farmers & Mechanics Bank -TWO OrriCe- 101.105 S. Main St. 330 S. State St Nickel's Arcade 1 El Today- "Cameron of the Roya[ Mounted" Monty Banks in " East is Worst" Fri. -sat.- Tomt Mix in "00 AND DARE" Stan Lanrel in"Under Two Jags" Sun.-Tues.- Mary Alden and Dorothy MacKail in "A WOMAN'S WOMAN " Charlie Murray in "HELPFUL HOGAN" In view of the world wide celebra- tion of Shakespeare's first folios which is.. planned the University Li- brary is exhibiting Shakespearean fol.- ios, portraits of Shakespeare, and Shakespearean scenes and actors. The University Libiary has the larg- est collection of Shakespeare's works in this country with the exception of Harvard. It is the Macmillan Shake- speare library of about 8,000 'volumes, containing 330 editions of collected Today- Mitchell Lewis in Code of lhs Yi Bert Roach in "The Jazz Bu Screen Snapshots Fri.-Sat.- Owen Moore in "THE P00R SI Century Comedy Sun. -Tues.- Able Gance's sensational prodi "I ACCUSE" Lectures Announced Professor E. D. Dickinson will ture on "International Outlaws- sia and Mexico," at 5 o'clock to row afternoon. At 8 o'clock a two reel film on audion bulb will be shown, ac panted by a lecture given by Pro L. Rich of the physics departme Bolt Kills Jackson Mau Jackson, July 3.-John Baun 50, a farmer residing near here killed this afternoon li lightnin /, 11 LAST = TIMES TO NIGHT Keep Out the Sun"t WM. DeMILLE presents "ONLY 38" OX TEXTILE CO 603 W. Michigan Ave. Ypsilanti, Mich.' Classified Advertising Rates: Two cents per word per day, paid in advance fif- teen cents per reading line per day, charged. ' I WANTED NTED-Roommate- Front suite,; ?verything new, leather upholstered hairs. 1 1-2 blocks from campus. Eate $3.00 per week. SeeAlbert H. 'ollard at 'Chubb House, 209 5. State t. Phone 3083-J. tfn FOR SALE NING Room and Kitchen equip- nent sufficient for eighty people can. e bought for $7,000. Call 3290. 10c-2 R SALE - Small rooming house, me block from the campus. Will ell to good party for $1,000 down. Call 3223-s. 10c-2 R SALE-Six room house directly outh of the campus. Will accept $500 as first payment. Phone 2925-M. 10c-2 TYPEWRITERS 'pewriters of standard makes jought, sold, rented, exchanged. cleaned and repaired. 0. D. MORRILL Nickels Arcade Phone 1718. 1-tfr FOR RENT )R RENT-$60 monthly-furnished appartment. Living room, bedroom, kithenette, bath. Uniti Sept. 1st. Ralph T. Swezey, Phone 3184. 10c-3 LOST )ST - A purse containing $13 on State St. Reward. Call 1662-W. 11 )ST-Gold pencil "Naomi" engraved on it. Call 782-J. 11-2 MISCELLANEOUS NORMANTON BILBIE, Teacher of Violin, Piano, and Harmony (on fac- ulty of the Detroit Conservatory of Music) will take pupils through the summer at 307 N. Main St. Phone 611-M. 4p-21 )ARMING-Sanquist Inn, 615 Church St. A good place to eat. Rates $6.00 for two meals, $7.00 for three meals. Mrs. E. M. Batdarff, man- ager. 9p-3 'UDENTS make five dollars an hour during spare time while at Summer with NAY McAVOY- ELLIOTT DEXTER and LOIS WILSON GEORGE FAWCRT' A CHRISTIE COMEDY TOPICS' ORC 1' ------= a r E WISH to announce to the general public that we are keeping open this summer. We 'solicit your patronage. TUTTLES' LUNCH ROOM May"ard Street A VIRILE HE-MAN DRAMA SATUR "MASTERS OF MEN" LOOK AT TH, CAST WANDA HAWLEY CULLEN LANDIS EARL WILLIAMS ALICE CALHOUN SUNDAY--BOOTH TARKINGTON'S " PENROD AND SAN SUPERFLUOUS FACIAL HAIRS Removed Permanently by ELECTROLYSIS' Electro-Cosmetic Service 224 Nickel's Arcade WILL BE OPEN AS USUAL THRUOUT THE SUMMER SCHOOL Er 'I Ip Ie Ai __- __ - 1 1 IYr M IYYw+ I r DRUGS KODAKS I A new Kodak Model I Your Telephone Manager Is Responsible to You for Good Telephone Service I For pictures 2 Yx44 inches No.IA Pocket Kodak SeriesII FIXED FOCUS New apparatus and new ideas are constantly coming to our photographic department-and going to our patrons. That's the sort of service you want. A case in point is the No.1A Pocket Kodak, Series II, just :announced;, yet you can see it at our counter. It's made for convenience, com- pactnest-and good pictures. That's the kind of a camera you want. $I5.00. Your Telephone Exchange Manager is directly respon- sible to you for your telephone service. We urge you particularly to meet and know him. Sometimes, there may be little, irritating difficulties with the service that the ordinary trouble report does not seem to quite clear up. In such cases the Telephone Manager will make it a matter of personal attention to see that service is restored to your satisfqction. But don't wait until then to make his 4acquaintance. Drop into your telephone. office, some day, and meet him. If he is not in, capable representatives will gladly attend your telephone needs. Or leave your card, and the Manager himself will call on you. The telephone people will give you any information about your own telephone service or about telephone matters in general. }- They are animated with just one purpose-their primary and most important business is to serve yQu. MICHIGAN STATE i 4 TELEPHONE- CO. / I II FI Kodak Film Painstaking Finishing Calkins-Fletcher Drug Co. THREE DEPENDABLE STORES 324 S. State St. Cor. E. and S. University Aves. Cor. S. State and Packard Sts. ra :"I Y SODA WATER Ir w r ~ ~ ~ r r i~ riw