%WS I to get. But despite -wool fabrics in the stylish clothes are on i can't afford to over- good suit that is truly 1A Our Difference rice Others on 5 Roll loc 15e 25c 04c ea. 05c ea. 90c ............... $1.15i US AND SAVE MONEY ay to day sooner than others. ral Shop RTMENT us for Party and Group Pictures PURE FOOD LWL OF 19DB HAS DECADE OF SUCCESS ACT ACCOMPLISHES GREAT DEAL IN SAFEGUARDING HEALTH OF CITIZENS Washington, D. C., Jan. 3.-Ten years of enforcement of the food and drugs act of June 30, 1906, are reviewed in the current annual report of the bu- reau of chemistry, United States de- partment of agriculture, which says that the act's chief contributions to the safety of the people's health have been its corrective effect upon the drug and patent medicine industry. its control of trade in unclean milk, polluted, decomposed, or filthy foods, and protection of foodstuffs from con- tamination with poisons likely to be met in manufacture. Terminate 6,000 Prosecutions The general effect of the food and drug act may bhat be estimated, says the report, by considering its effect upon food and drug control by the states, upon development of the food and drug induRFries, and by the prin- cipal abuses that have been crrected But to illustrate the scope of the work through figures and facts the report points out that more than 6,000 pros- ecutions have been terminated in the courts in the first decade of the act that manufacturers have been cited at hearings more than 40,000 times that many thousands of factory in- spections have been made, and that more than 750,000 shipments of do- mestic and imported food and drugs have been examined. Improve Food Shipments Special attention has been given to shipments of poluted or spoiled food. Milk shipped in interstate commerce and imported from Canada has been improved in cleanliness, purity, and the condition of sanitation under which produced. The canning of de- composed navy beans has been largely suppressed. Interstate shipment of oysters from polluted waters has prac- tically ceased. Because of co-operation with state and municipal officials in controlling the shipment of bad eggs, it is report- ed that the quality of the eggs reach- iug the large cities is much improved. Other products in whose handling and sale improvement has been -noted in- clude mineral water, tomato products, fruit, vinegar, and gelatin. WILL CONTINUE LAW SCHOOL LECTURES DURING SUMMER Althoug it has been rumored that :ectures at the Law school would be discontinued this summer, Prof. E. G. Goddard said yesterday that classes and lectures for summer school will be held as anbunced in the bulletin. He also stated that "the mos' patriot- ic thing Hach one of us can do is to keep busy. I would not advise 'any- one to lie abut unoccupied while in wait for some military position to pre- sent Itself.' GERMANS HEPUISE IN DRIVE ACRSSPIAK ENEMY LOSES HEAVILY WHILE ITALIAN ARMY SUFFERS FEW CASUALTIES (By Associated Press) Headquarters of the Italian army in northern Italy, Wednesday, Jan. 2. -The enemy today attempted to gain the west bank of the Piave river, to offset the loss of Zenson, but met with a quick repulse, and the entire west bank is now definitely clear and held, by the Italians. A landing party on flat boats attempted to make a crosing at one point but an intense artillery and- machine gun fire led to the aban- donment of the attempt before the west bank was reached. The general commanding the army corps in the Zenson sector is receiv- ing high praise for the tictics which brought about the rout of the enemy from the only position they were able to maintain on the west bank with heavy enemy losses and virtually no: Italian losses. The mountain front is compara- tively inactive, the enemy giving chief attention to air raids which con- tinue against towns and cities near Venice, without notable damage or casualties. Paris Offers Site to U. S. Students Paris, Jan. 3.-The municipal coun- cil of Paris has offered a -t osand yards square of ground on the Champ: de Mars, where the exposition of 1900 was located, to American universities for the construction of the "American Students' House." It is understood that the work of construction will be- gin at an early date. Take a shirt, for instance. The price you pay the retailer for it is usually less than the subsequent amount you pay for laundering it But, the more you pay for upkeep of the article, the greater the value of that article to you. In other words, the more you iay the less it costs you. The Home Laundry has by institution of common-sense methods lowered wear and tear on your laundry to an irreducibly minimum That's your gain, and ours. Your account payable monthly, if you desire. OUR CASH CAII SAV ES Y0U 10%. WE SUPPLY EVERY STUDENTS' NEED Sheehan & Co. Anf Arbor Detrc It isn't Original cost-its- the Text-Books and, For all Courses Upkeep Home Laundry 218 E. HURON STREET- PHONE No. Former Student Dies In Canip - Reginald S Franchot, '1 9E, died from scarlet fever at Camp Bowie, Fort ,Worth, Tex., Dec. 26. Franchot was in training; t the aviation school tnere, and hi death came two hours before his conmm.- sion would have been received. Local Bank Enters Federal Ites The Farmers and Mechanics ban Ann Arbor has ben granted men ship in -the Federal Reserve syi The applicatiin of the local bank approved last week; and tie I tution will beecme an active me: in a short time Sale Coats Students' Supply Store IRTS, Engineer's Supplies, Stationery, Confectionery, Newsdealer L. C. SCHLEEDE, Propr. ything! . ow that you can't pos- 1111.: S. University Ave. . . #L/#/A ,I- / 1; ;. , IA WELER ELS ARCADE Hospital Notes y so- Uni- cial for nds in er State ,ollege ni gym- Howard C. Gitchel, '21, was sent to the contagious hospital yesterday with an attacl: of the mumps. Ella C. Blis, '18, was operated upon for appendicitis at the University hos- pital during the Christmas recess. Martens, '17, Marries Margaret Eddy Albert C. Martens, '17, a member of the 1916 varsity football team, and now in the employ of the federal gov- ernment as a chemist, was married yesterday to Margeret Ray Eddy of Maywood, Ilinois. Health Service Installs Moisteners Stamp moisteners have ben install- ed intthe brarch postoffice by the Uni- versity health service. College Men Welcome Ambassador Tokio, Jan. .-A notable dinner of 120 American college men was held here recently in honor of R. 5. Morris, the new American ambassador. The welcome was organized by the alumni clubs of Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Columbia,; and the University of Penn.. sylvania. Viscount Okabe, Yale, '7t. formerly minister of justice, presided, and Professor Anesaki of the Tokio Imperial university and late exchange professor et Harvard, was the princi- pal Japanese speaker. N. C. Fetter Attends Conference N. C. Fetter, general secretary of the University Y. M. C. A., is in East Northfield Mass.,, attending the stu- dent volunteer conference now in ses- sion. In a week Mr. Fetter will leave East Northfield to go to Chicago for a conference of Y. M. C. A. secretar- ies and student pastors of central western universities.. U. of M. Jewelry. J. L. Chapman's Is tne place. 113 S. Main.-AdY. LClothes £arYound ,:_r his sale is for 10 days only and we are not -CORBETT'S CLOTHING SALE of new fancy suits and overcoats at 1-3 off. unloading old stuff, but are making reductions on THIS season's up-to-the-minute patterns. ,, I. i V 1 ,; STRICTLY CASH "The Young Men's Shop" 116 E LIBERT- - - - - - - - Save $1 to$2 Campus' Bootery I e: - Fraternities, clubhouses, .g houses and others who are ed in being supplied with veg- fruits, etc., at low rates, are d that the Ann Arbor Green- as established a branch at 117 'ashington St., where these sup- Special Shoe DURING JAN UARI Barg ;er and daily. ihiflg- Must reduce our large stock of Bostohian and Florsheim S- /f 113T