THE WOLVERINE THE WOLVERINE' The official student newspaper for the University of Michigan summeri session. Published by the students on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday af- ternoons. Twenty-five issues. Subscription rates-By carrier, sev- enty-hive cents for the summer'; mailed to any address for one dollar. Advertising rates-Furnished upon ap- plication to the business manager. Subscriptions and ads taken at Quar- ry's and University Avenue Phar- macy. Office Hours: "Managing editor, 2:00 to 3:00 daily; business manager, 1:00 to 2:00 daily. Phone 960 or 2414., Address, The Wolverine, Press Build- ing, Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Verne E. Burnet-Managing Editor Phone-,2414 or 1283-H, C. Verne Sellers-B ilness iltaunager Phone-960 or 1460 ri.20-2a-George Behan iu "Pas- Bray Cartoons. wm. Collier in "The No-Good Triangle Comedy, "A Dashof ge"Svening 15C .3-2.--'MaeMurray in sweet aellairs.' Burton Holmes Tra- DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ass Arbor and Jackson. Cars ras as Fasters tims, ass hear laster an local time. Detroit Limited and Express Cars--:sa a. iaedhourly tao :, . In., 9:.10 . Kalsmass a Limtd Cars- 8:48 a. m. and 'ry tse hours to 6:48 p. M.; to Lansing, Local Cars, Eastbound-5 :35 a. m., 64o a. m., 05 a s.,asd every two hOurs to 7:05 p. m., 0.:-,oasp ,,la ]oGO P s,. Ta Yps' nti only, 1R45 a. a. (daily cel ct Sunday), as a. a, : p. in. 6:0 p. 31 ., 11:45 P. Local Care, Westbound-6:o5 a. I., 7:50 a. ,and eery two hours to 7:50 . M., 10:20 a., r2:20 a. M. University School ot Music ALBERT A. STANLEY, Director "A Gathering Place for Advanced Students'" Annual Summer Session EIGHT WEEKS JULY 3-AUG. 25 Regular Fall Term begins Mon., Oct. 2, 1916 for Catalogue and Information address CHARLES A. SINK, Secretary Ann Arbor, Mih. The Ann Arbor Savings Bank INCORPORATED 1869 OFFERS Seurity- Service - Location Capital.......................$ 300,00:00 Surplussand Profit...........$ 175,000.00t Resources.................:...$3,700,000,00 Main Office, N. W. Corner Main and Huron Stas. Branch Office, 707 North Univ- ersity Avenue. NN ARBOR- WHITMORE LAKE Motor Bus SCHEDULE JUNE 7, 1916 Monday to Friday LEAvao LEAVE ANN ARBOR WHITMORE LAKE 8:oo A. H. 9:15 A. I.- 1:00 P. M. 2:15 P. .m- 6:oo " 9:00 Saturday and Sunday S:oo A. B. 9:15 A.- . I:oo P. M. 2:5 1. .M- 4:00 5:=5 '7:00 9:00 eave from Edsill's Drug Store, 2oSo. Main Street, Ann Arbor. eave from Lake House, Whitmore Lake. =are - - - - - 500 Special Round Trip, 75o lE V HILL, ,. ER 'It DAILY EDITOR, GETS LIEUTENANTSHIP Harry Hill, -'71, asIatnt to Judge 'inkney of the juvenile court or Chi- ago, is now a lieutenanit in the 1st Ilinois Cavalry stationed at Browns- ille, Texas. In a letter to one of the muembers f The Wolverine staff he says that t is just a little distanca from a le ican army of two thousand and bey can see their tents by day and Tom C. Reid-Associate Editor H. C. Garrison-Sports Editor Marian Wilson-Women's Editor Walter Atlas-News Editor Bruce Swaney-News Editor teporters H. 1. Cooley R. T. Mann George W. Corwin Frank Martin M. N. Elsenau Phil Pack 11 F. Fitzpatrick Ward Peterson H. o. Gellert Grace Rose It. 1. sHaag Jerome Zeigler Mary Gratiot Bsine s Statf Wm. H. Sogan Robert M. Schiller Richard Goldsmith Allan Livingston THURSDAY, JULY 201916 Issue Editor-Jerome Zeigler FRl&EZE OR FRY? Are you the proud possessor of a first-class grouch? Are you goin about with an acrid bitter look on your usually pleasant face? Has your sense of humor so far deserted ye that you fail to appreciate a joke? Do yout shun your friends? Have you lost your appetite? The hot weather, of course! Do you feel hot and sticky when you get up in the morning? After your shower are you hotter and stickier than you were before? Do you go to breakfast and emerge from a hot din- ing room dripping with persiratin? Do you swelter in the class-room? Do you sit on the benches about the cam- pus and reast? Do you go swiolming or canoeing in the hopes of a reprieve from the boiling sun, and come back baked? Do you attempt to study, mis- erably worn out, cursing the heavens glittering beams? Do you go out on the veranda thinking the night breezes will bring you relief, and then pile in- to a hot bed and toss restlessly all thorugh the night? Do you repeat this day after day? Can anything be worse? When you jump out of bed in the morning do you feel cold land chilled? Does the goosefesh make you quiver' even after you have rubbed the skin down to the blood after an icy shower? Do you shiver through a breakfast of hot cereal, hot cakes, hot eggs, hot coffee? Do you shrink when the fresh- air-camp professor opens the windo' at least a inch? Do you go to gym and wear yourseif out, coming forth shaking and trembling under your heavy clothing? Do you sit around a big fire and toast your shins, while your back feels like an icicle? Do you huddle under a mountain of covers in a frigid room and pray for morning: and the warmth of companionship? Do'you repeat this day after day? Can anything be worse? Look around at the beautiful things about you. The trees, the lawns, the birds, the cooling waters, the lovely evenings, the sky, the moon and the stars. Look at the flood of snow, the frozen rivers, the long hill-slides, the' cozy log-fires, the enervating winds, the rosy cheeks, the dewy hair, the cherry lips. Quit crabbing about the weather. It islt so had after all, and you can't chane1 i. Iichigrins 1. Eceol "Man wants but little here below" In all this "merry whirl." lut a guy's regrets Are worst when he gets No letter from his girl. Of jewels rare we choose the fair And evanescent pearl. But its joy is bum Compared, by gum To a letter from our girl. The postman's feet with stolid beat Rewards our eager ear. We wish his step Would show more pep As we wait with aching fear. 'What's this wve see, the signs of glee O'er spreads his mug (or better)?" "It falls our lot To judge him not- --sigh- He reads his s--'s letter." The weather-man promises a rain before long, ut the probability is tsat he also has been affected by the heat. * *K* We didn't know that black garters were so popular until the recent white trousers epidemic. Campus Characters, No. 1 Pat Skully, who has been an em- ploye at the University hospital for forty years. Famous Songs, N. 99234526 TIhe lrize-fighter's -"WhenI 1get You Alone Tonight." This Isn't Our Poiey, But Ie Needed Solething It has been rumored that Camels will reduce in price fifty per cent. In colserquence of which, Uiversity oi- dials are plreparing fey a greatly in- creasedserolleent for lext fal. As yet no big league scouts have been seen hovering around Ferry field watching the preliminary practices of the midsummer stewdent league. "French Retake Somme Towns" -Chicago Tribune. And we judge that there were Somme others which were not re- taken. Got the Job Thru' Pull No Doubt "Archie Squier who got graduated from the dentist department of the U. of M. this spring, has got a fine position in Calumet where he will go soon."-Ovid Register Union. New Form of Locomotion "Appendicitis Takes Sexton to bes- pita."-Head from Tle Michigan Daily. And who, may we ask, will bring the sexton back to the cometery? Heart Aches (fy lyother Grundy) Dear Masam Grundy-The other day I went to visit one of the girls who lives at Newberry and forgot my hat. How can I get it back? Hatless. Dear Ilerman-Ift seems to me that this would afford a good excuse, to your roomie, to call again. While the hand played at West park last night, three students carolled "Drinl, Drink, Everyone Drik," ads all they could get was pop. MSE T'A'I S TOM LOVELL FOR ANI)'a'lbiat tOBBLIl.ED LIHRE VERSE Tom Lovell appeared in the Press buildine 1of1ice this morning without a hat, with his negligee costume of an inly shirt sewed up with a string, and fired with the spirit of '76 and "Amer- ica," and read off to the awed staff the following roaring, galloping can- ,:slenede of verse. Next week he promi- ses to se what good he can say about the Ann Arbor boys and girls, what SUMMER SCHOOL TD E X T BO O(DKS New and Second-Hand Drawing Instruments, Loose-Leaf Note Books Student Supplies in General UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE i CANDIES CANDIES Canoe Fountain Lunchesa°Lunches for and Two at Ice Cream OPuLA i Repett9 Johusons' Thorpe's Michigan and Fraternity Jewelry Leather, Gold and Silver WATCH BRACELETS Extra Fine Repairs of Watches and Jewelry HALLER FVLL ER STATE STREET JEWELERS !- they haven't done; and what they will do, ought to do and should do, as "they," he says, "have left undone those things which they ought not have done, etc." INN ARBOR-A CITY OF FAME Written by Dr. Tom Lovell July 20, 1916 Copyright Reserved Ann Arbor City that's standing With its name of fame High up where light Flows down into the mind. Where some knotty work is done In undoing the knot to find The solution to the problem That's found undone of the hardest kind. American country 'tis of thee, In which this city stands With its buildings and its campus In a land of sweet liberty found. Where minds are young and tender Coming to it starting to train Within the rooms of the U. of M. Making powerful men. Land of the fathers' pride Where these men will be Found when thru with Ann Arbor To keep this country free. So that the pilgrims pride may stand Found in every mountain side With shame and sin banished from Its ocean foamthat rolls. Let Freedom ever ring to swell Our fathers' God and you, Ann Arbor City to dwell With minds that are found to do, Within the fair garden of learning. Where lies that word spelled doubt, And when one is found to get in it It's found hard then to get out. Let mortal tongues ne'er say To freedom's holy light Causing the mind to be Found in the dark thru sight That only wants to seek it Shorthand Typewriting Bookkeeping Penmanship Hamilton Business College state and William Where no light is found in at all For intelligent light that's flowing Will never on that mind'fall. Come and take a walk around it This famous city some day, Beautiful with its boulevard And its river that flows on its way. Making the city up what it stands for And that is for Intellectual Light, The center where education Is found scattered from in light. WANTED-From the person who took the panama hat from the hatrack in University Library, Wednesday night, the return of it to the rack at once and thus the avoidance of further trouble. The Coolest Dining Place in Town is the te Room -easily reached by north or south elevators; open from eight in the morning till five in the afternoon. The service is high grade, and all menus are prepared by a chef who was for a number of years employed by one of the leading New York clubs. Noon Luncheon, 50c Regular Servicc a la carte