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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

May 18, 1917 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1917-05-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

In fine tailoring the cost of good
workmanship exceeds the cost of
the fabric.
Workmanship is the ability behind
the shears, behind the needles.
It plays the most important part in
a successful suit, fixes the cost, the
selling price, as well as the value of
the garment.'

TAKE YOUR
Amatuer Finishing to a Reliable Photographer
who has an established reputation and you will be assured of
Results that will not be a disappointment.
L Y N D 0 N 'S 719 N. University Ave

SPECIAL

SALE

I

ON

'kmanship

11

Established 1906, and
Growing bigger and better every day.

OURL TAILORING HAS
STOOD THE TEST.

J* K. MALCOLM
604 E. Liberty St. Malcolm Block

FRATERNITIES
We havelunsurpassed ,accemodations for group photographs

MAIN STUDIOS
1546-43 Broadway New York, N.Y

Perfect Portraitures

"Amateur Work Handled in a Pro-
fessional Way.

r

6 1 }E. Liberty St.

PHONI& 948-W

e

H IT NEY THEATRE
Tuesday, May 22
ma. co ,(,q A,,9 ..;msPQesMT
Fs E. C SF0PTScT IIS
LCOTT
N IN MIS GREATEST SUCCESSj

HE 01-OCOTT Si r
' KN Fws ?" "Ir<Fs ELES OF LovE"
rices 50c to $2.00
Sale Saturday A. M.
5RAW HAT' DAY.
,eta

Goodhew Floral Co,
225 E. Liberty. Phone 1821
Everything in the line of
fresh cut flowers.
Good variety of flowering
plants.
Greenhouses-Observatory and
Volland St. Phone, 170-M.
9 o'clock-Fresh engineer dance at
Armory.
Tomorrow
2 o'clock-Soph and fresh assemblies
for spring games at Waterman gym-
nasium and the flag pole.
7 o'clock-Upper Room Bible class
meets at 444 South State street.
U-Notices
Tickets for the Junior Jamboree go
on saleat the Union at 2. o'clock this
afternoon.
FELLOWS TO APPEAR
Michigan Comedian to Take Part in
Patriotic Concert
Michigan students will be given an-
other opportunity of hearing Waldo
Fellows, '14, when the Glee and Man-
dolin clubs give their patriotic con-
cert on May 25 in Hill auditorium. Fel-
lows has promised to appear at the
concert but the nature of his skit is
not yet known.
Other numbers of the concert will
be given by trios, quartets and other
combinations as well as chorus nu'm-
bers by the entire club.
COUNCIL CHANGES DATE OF
CAP NIGHT FROM JUNE 1 TO 8

YIWIC.G MAKES LAST
CALL FOR RUMMAGE SALE
CONTRIBUTIONS TO BE USED FOR
BENEFIT OF BUSRAW AND
CITIZENS
A last call for contributions for the
war-time rummage sale managed by
the women of the advisory board of
the University Y. W. C. A. will be
sounded today. Articles of clothing,
particularly shoes, are needed for the
sale, and the committee has announced
that such articles will be called for to-
morrow forenoon, if the donators will
call 208, Newberry hall, some time
today.
Those who contribute to the sale are
performing a double service, first to
the University Busrah fund, and sec-
ond to the people of this city upon
whom hard times fall heaviest. The
plan is to sell the contriluted articles
at a low price to those who have need
of them, and give the money from the
sale to the support of Michigan in
Arabia.
Mrs. W. R. Humphreys and Mrs.
W. A. Frayer are in charge of the
sale, which will take place May 24, 25,
and 26, at 221 East Liberty street,
and they have announced their hours
as 1 to 9 o'clock, afternoon and even-
ing.
S. C. A. ELECTS NEW
BOARD TRUSTEES
Eight Members Selected with Terms
Expiring in 1919 and
1920
Eight , trustees for the Students'
Christian association were chosen at
the annual election held Wednesday.
On account of the imperfection of the
new plans for election which were be-
ing devised last year, the four mem-
bers of the board whose term expires
in 1919 wvre not elected until this
year.
The new members of the board
whose term expires in 1919 are: Prof.
J. R. Allen, Baptist church; Judge V.
H. Lane, Presbyterian church; Horatio
J. Abbott, Methodist church; Dr. G. C.
Huber, at large. «
Those whose term expires in 1920
are: Prof. C. T. Johnston, Congrega-
tional church; Mrs. A. E. Jennings,
Church of Christ, Deciples; Prof. M.
P. Tilley, Episcopal church; Mrs. B.
Jordan, at large.

Pop. Mat. Tes. Wk. ay 15
Thurs. sand Sat. R Rf I.K Nights
25C and 5oc D TRi T 25c, 50c, 75c
DETROIT
BONSTELLE COMPANY
in
"Shirley Kaye"
Orpheum Theatre
Matinees, : 0 -330: Evening, 6:5
8:15, 9-tae
Saturdays-Holidays continuous.
Thurs.-Fri.-17-18-Wallace Reid and
Myrtle Stedman in "The Prison
Without Walls." Triangle Komedy,
Paramount Pictograh and Cartoons,
and Ford Travels.
Sat.-19-Jackie Saunders in "Sunny
Jane." Also Pathe Comedy and
News.

ARCADE
Shows at g:0:. isse; a:; 9:11
15eUseless Otherwie Specified
Fri.-18-Frances Nelson in "Power of
Deceit ;"Herz Comedy ("The Love
Dope").

I

SOILED

SLIGHTLY

SH EEHAN

& CO.

On and after June 1 st, BUSY BEE will serve no lunch.
BUSY BEE is, primarily, a Confectionery Store and not
a restaurant.
It has never aspired to be a restaurant.
Every item of a lunch or dinner has to be prepared after
the order is given, and we find that this hampers the service
that our customers demand.
Ninety per cent of our business depends on Fountain and

ATHLETIC

GOODS

i

Ilb mmmmmm

Sat.-19-FEarle Williams in
pin ;" 'Mrs. Vernon
"Patria."

"Arsene Lu-
Castle in

Rae Theatre
= TODAY -=
Paramount Pictures - Always
distinctly different
"Wild Olive"
Also
"Lonesome Luke Gladiator"
TOMORROW-Lillian Walker In
"GREEN STOCKINGS"

I

I

Candy customers.
We are going to sacrifice part
these people by giving them the

of our business to please

NOTICE!

|| r4|

4E

This is Modern

Triumphant Return to the

-

S

I

Of the Createst of all War Films
THOMAS H. INCE'S
$1000,000.00 SPECTACLE

ADMITS TRYING TO TIE UP WAR
PLANTS IN UNITED STATES

MAY 26

--

L I

AT- GOING ON
Today
o'clock-Musical tea for benefit of
Cross at Newberry hall.
10 o'clock-Soph and fresh as-
lies for spring games at Water-
gymnasium and the flag pole.
o'clock-Captain C. B. McCormick
res in Natural Science auditor-
on "Field Artillery and Its Ap-
'clock--Senior sing at band stand.
)clock-Mr. F. S. Dewey lectures
om 401 Mason hall on "The Claim
rtment of a Casualty Company."
0 o'clock-Dr. W. F. Colby lec-
in room 348 Engineering build-
r "Electrical Conductors and In-
ors."I

Cap night was changed from June
1 to June 8 by the Student council
last night, at the first meeting at-
tended by newly elected members. In
the election of officers the following
men were chosen: S. S. Attwood, '18E,
president; H. S. Hatch, '18, vice-presi-
dent; P. o. Davis, '18E, treasurer; W.'
H. Hogan, '18, recording secretary; C.
A. Hart, '18E, corresponding secre-
tary, and H. B. McWiUlIamsh, '18P,
auditor.
Ask Power to Control Shipments
Washington, May 17.-A provision
empowering the president to use the
nation's armed forces to prevent any
obstruction "of the orderly conduct or
movement of interstate or foreign
commerce" during the war was writ-
ten into the administration's prefer-
ential shipment bill today at a confer-
ence between President Wilson and
Chairmen Newlands and Adamson of
the congressional interstate commerce
committees.
There is opportunity in The Michi-
gan Daily Ads Read tnem.

New York, May 17.-Conceding tUat
he had spent all the money he could
get from David Lamar and others in a
campaign against the "munition trust"
Henry B. Martin, secretary of the
American Anti-Trust league, made a
sweeping denial here today that he had
knowingly used German money in
furthering the work of labor's national
peace council.
He took the witness chair in his own
behalf at his trial with Lamar, Cap-
tain Franz Rintelen of the German
navy, and four others on charges of
conspiracy in 1915 to put an end to
the entente allies' munitions trade in
this country by fomenting strikes
through the council.

I I

Original=-=Huge--Stunning
and Poetic
"Civiizbtion" is an argument against
giving one man the power of

Wilson Asks Committee on Suffrage
Washington, May 17. -President
Wilson has written a letter to Repre-
sentative Pou of the house rules com-
mittee suggesting that the creation of
a special house committee on woman
suffrage might be a wise act of pub-
lic} policy.
The president said he had no desire
to interfere with such matters, but
pointed out that he had been told that
an approval by him of the idea might
result in creation of such a committee.
In his letter he did not deal with the
merits of the woman's suffrage ques-
tion. The senate already has such a
committee.

III

Life and- Death over Men, Women and Children

TODAY AND y TOMORROW ONLY
Three Shows. Daily---3, .7 and 9 P.M.

t x
c

o'(clock-"The Merry Wives
sor" in University Hall.

of

ROMPT SERVICE, FULL SATISFACTION
'0 OUR CUSTOMERS' '

It is on this basis that we do business.
ARCADE JEWELER
CARL F. BAY

Rugs perfectly cleaned, washed, and!
sized without injury. Koch & Henne. ft
For fine Watch Repairing, 3. L.,
Chapman, Jeweler, 118 Main St.-Adv.
Tues. e.od

Look at the Cut Prices:
MaBes ALCcONY - 15c
Matmnees -MAIN FLOOR 25c
Nights - BALCONY -
MAIN FLOOR. 250

IYMI II()
aft-

SPECIAL ORCHESTRA OF 12 PIECES

..-

Arcade

Phone 152-W

1!

p m

w

I Try The Daily for service.

I

,,.,,,,. ---,.. -._,.o

I

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