W HATS
STRAW HATS
Bring in your old hat and we will allo wyou SOc toward a
new one. From $2.00 up.
I
We have the Stiff or Soft Sailors,
also a large selection of Panamas
Ask to see our sport coats from $&50 to $10.00.
Flannel Pants from $5.00 to $6.00.
White
and Leghorns
J. F. WUERTH CO.
Next to Orpheum
:
:
0
0
I
ANN ARBOR, MICH.
Wadhams & Co.
I
State Street
Main Street
RECOMMEND MUSICIANS
FOR GRAUATION DAY
m
Your Floral Needs=
Are BEST SATISFIED By Us
PFONE 115
Cut Flowers Flowering Plants
FLOWERS FOR DECORATION
-=COUSINS & HALL
1002 S. UNIVERSITY AVE.
Members of Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association
'11
ANN UNAL
CISES '
COMMENCEMENT EXER-
TO BE HELD THURS-
DAY, JUNE 21
have been beef and bacon. This will
be changed before many months, be-
ccuse beef and bacon in ufficient
quantity is not in sight, and uore at-
tention is being paid to the raising
of beans and potatoes throughout the
country than to an augmented beef
supply."
SUNDAY SERVICES IN
ANN ARBOR CHURCHES
FOR ELECTRIC REPAIRS
OF ALL KINDS CALL
Washtenaw Electric Shop
The Shop of Quality
It its not Right we make it Right
Phone 273 200 East Washington St.
.
A Delicious Lunc
can be quickly prepared, and without thes
trouble, on an
Electric Chafing Dis
This handsome and very convenient table ute
source of both comfort and pride to the ho
Just the thing for -a hasty lunch or Sunday
Cooks practically any dish you have a des
-makes toothsome fudge. No trouble; no alc
messing. Just attach to a lamp-socket.
V w
U. -
slightest"
nsil is a
usewife.
supper.
sire for
ohol; no
Co.
. 2300
lillllililili-i
The following School of Music stu-
dents have been tentatively recom-
mended for graduation from the sev-
eral departments at the annual com-
mencement exercises which will be
held Thursday evening, June 21:
Artist diplomas: A. C. Haigh, De-
troit (piano); Flora A. Miehils, To-
ledo (piano); Carol W. Wadham, Ann
arbor (piano); C. C. Peters, Hills-
dale (violin); I. B. Miller,. Montpelier
(voice); Blanche Williams, Rochelle
(organ).
Normal Diplomas
Normal diplomas: Clara W. Besch,
Lansing (piano); Virginia L. Davis,
Jackson (piano); Margaret A. Ewing,
Brooklyn (piano); Margaret K. Rogers,
Ann Arbor (piano); Marie L. Dole,
Cleveland (voice); Elizabeth Thorpe,
Pontiac (piano).
Public School Certificates
Public school certificate: Miss
Helen M. Blain, Sault Ste. Marie (pub-
lic school music); Marie Dole, Cleve-
land (public school music); Elizabeth
. Filer, Sharon, Pa. (public school
music) ; Hilda A. Greenfield, Clare
City, Minn. (public school music and
drawing); Clara Hagerman, Luding-
ton( public school music) ; Mildred P.
Hill, Aurora, Ill. (public school mu-
sic); Blanche Hunt, Sault Ste. Marie
(public school music); Blanche F.
Keeney, St. Johns (public school mu-
sic); Zaida B. McFarren, Sheperd
(public school music); Ethel V. Slay-e
ton, Ann Arbor (public school music);
Louise R. Scott, Marine City (pub-
lice school music); Edna M. Toland,'
Springfield, O. (public school music);
Martha M. Roggy, Princeton, Ill. (pub-
lic school music); Cecile A. Worrell,
Pentwater (public school music and
drawing); W. S. Westerman, Ann Ar-
bor (public school music); Frances
McCune, Scheffield, Ill. (public school
drawing); Vivian E. Markham, Ann
Arbor (public school music).
FORETELLS SHORTGE
IN FOOD NEXT WINTER
Come in and inspect them.
First Congregational Church
Morning service at 10:30 o'clock,
subject of sermon, "The Exorcist."
Mr. S. Katsuizumi will speak before
the Plymouth Round Table on the sub-
ject, "A Bridge Across the Pacific"
at 6:30 o'clock.
St. Anmrew's Episcopal Church
Holy communion at 7:30 o'clock.
Morning prayer and sermon at 10:30
o'clock. Evening prayer and sermon
at 4:30 o'clock.
Unitarian Church
Morning service at 10:30 o'clock.
The Rev. R. S. Loring will give an
address on Mark Twain's final novel,
The Mysterious Stranger."
Community Chapel
Community meeting at 7:30 o'clock
in the evening. Mr. J. M. Wells will
lecture on "The Marks. of a Man."
First Baptist Church
Morning worship at 10:45 o'clock.
The Rev. Mr. John Mason Wells will
preach only two more sermons before
leaving on a lecture tour through Vir-
ginia, West Virginia, and North Caro-
lina.
Trinty English Lutheran Church
Morning worship at 10:30 o'clock,
subject of sermon, "A Bruised Reed
and Smoking Flax."
Bethelem Evangelical Church
English service at 8:30 o'clock. Ger-
man service at 10:30 o'clock.
Persbyterian Church
Morning service at 10:f0 o'clock,
subject, "Formal Religion and the
World Crisis." Young people's even-
ing service at 7:30 o'clock.
Bethel A. 1. E. Church
Preaching at 10:30 o'clock, subject,
"Misunderstanding." Evening service
at 7:30 o'clock, subject of sermon,
"The Last Promise of Jesus."
First ietliodist Episcopal Church
Morning worship at 10:30 o'clock,
subject of the sermon, "The Two
Worlds." There will be a Mother's
day program in the evening.
Church of Christ (Disciples)
Morning worship at 10:30 o'clock,
subject, "The Day That Is to Be."
CULTIVATING THE CLOTHES SENSE-
No way to do it but to see as many clothes as pos-
sible that are excellently made-of well-combined
colors-and of graceful lines.
Coming to the Hutzel Shop often will show you
what to wear and how to wear it.
Hutzel 's
MAIN AND LIBERTY
JEWELRY HELPED COLUMBUS TO
DISCOVER AMERICA
Jewelry, therefore is not such a great luxury in the sense that it
is useless and incapable of producing an economic.
Queen Isabella pawned her Jewels to get sufficient funds for our
friend Christopher to fit up a fleet of vessels to find this great land of
ours which is now playing such an important part in the evolution of
the whole world.
Wealth spent for good jewelry is conserved and not wasted.
HSALLER & FULLER
',hll E JTREET JEWEFLERS
I
The
Cyc-Corpus Juris
System
-1
The Detroit Edison
Cor. Main and William Sts.
Tel
PUBLISHED BY
The American Law Bok Cc,
27 Cedar Street
NEW YORK.
GoRDON-cY4in.
'ARROW
form-fi
COLLAR
ToPS AND BANDS ARE CURVE CUT
TO FIT THE SHOULDERS. 2 fo? 30c
CLUJE AS ODYCO1CA
PROMPT SERVICE. FULL SATISFACTION
TO OUR CUSTOMERS-
I
I
SPRING
It is on this basis that we do business.
ARCADE JEWELER
CARL F. BAY
Hats & Caps
I
I
Nickels Arcade
Phone 152-W
i
Lnve Copy
at
Parry's and
Tte- DRA
~ILI
Tl;SU.Nf
Leave Copy
at
Students'
Supply Store
FOR RENT
FOR RENT- Fine little bungalow;
five rooms with sleeping, porch and
bathroom; all modern appointments.
July 1 to October 1. $30 a month.
1059 Lincoln Ave. Tel. 837-R. 19-20
FOR RENT-Studio formally occupied
by C. W. Daines. Good opportunity
to continue in an established busi-
ness. Inquire S. B. Nickels, 337
Maynard St. 20-2-3
FOR RENT-Choice room with bath-
room adjoining, for summer months,
$1.00 a week, occupant to care for
lawn. 837-R. 19-20
FOR RENT- Large furnished single
room for next year. Desirable lo-
cation. Instructor preferred. Phone
1981-J. 20-2-3
FOR RENT-Furnished house during
July and August. Call 1947-J. 20-2-4
LOST
LOST-First baseman's glove on So.
Ferry field during the game between
Soph engineers and Fresh lits. Find-
er please return to 725 So. 12th St.,
or call Miller, 691. Reward. 20
LOST- Round-up Pin. B. Glen on
back. Return Calkins Drug Store,'
So. University, for reward. 20
LOST
LOST- Waterman's Ideal Fountain
pen. On N. Ingalls. Call 1755-M.
Reward. 18-19-20
LOST- At tug-of-war, key-ring con-
taining four keys. Rsturn to Daily
office. 20
WANTED
WANTED--Help for summer resort
work. Meat cook, dishwasher, laun-
dress, chore-boy. Call at 602 E.
Washington St., between 11 and 3
Monday, May 21. 20
WANTED-To hire a canoe for the
summer. Call Stebbins, 144, about
meal time. 19-20
WANTED- Canoe blanket-must be
first class. Call 69-M. 20-2-3-4
WANTED-Student to do odd jobs by
the hour. 837-R. 19
MISCELLANEOUS
AN INTELLIGENT person may earn
$100 monthly corresponding for
newspapers; $40 to $50 monthly in
spare time; experience unnecessary;
no canvassing; subjects suggested.
Send for particulars. National Press
Bureau, Room 2558, Buffalo, N. Y.-
USE Daily Want-Ads.
SECRETARY OF PREPAREDNESS
BOARD SAYS MEAT WILL
BE SCARCE
'Lansing, May 19.-"With the pres-
ent army in the field, and an additional
500,000 men who will probably be-
called out on the first of August, the
United States is bound to have a food
shortage this winter," declared R. C.
Vandercook, secretary of the war pre-
paredness board. "Some articles of
food will disappear from our menu
and we may as well face the fact and
adjust ourselves to it.
"There will undoubtedly be a big'
shortage in meats. We will be com-
pelled to turn to various substitutes
and will be better for it. Meatless
days, which are observed in England
and Germany, are not outside the
bounds of possibility. There are sev-
eral varieties of fish which are as yet
little known, though they have been
described and recommended from
government sources repeatedly and the
supply is' limitless. They will go on
the menu of the country.
"In the army, the staple meat issues
SOLID BY
Business ColIge
In new Shades and
Vesper service at 6:15 o'clock.
Church of Christ (Scientist)
Morning service at 10:30 o'clock.
subject, "Mortals and Immortals."
Testimony meeting Wednesday even-
ing at 7:30 o'clock.
German1 1. E. Church
Preaching service at 10:30 o'clock.
Evening service at 7:30 o'clock in
English.
St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran
Morning service at 10 o'clock. Eng-
lish service at 7:30 o'clock.
Zion Lutheran Church
The Rev. R. V. Schmid, a professor
in Capitol university, Columbus, O.,
will conduct the regular services at
8:30 o'clock and 10:30 o'clock. Ger-
man services at '10:30 o'clock.
Dancing classes and private lessons
at the Paekard Academy. tt
NOTICE -For prompt service, call
Downings Parcel Delivery. Phone 830.
-Adv. 16-23 inc
Goodhew Floral Co.
225 E. Liberty. Phone 1321
THE
Varsity Toggery.
Hamilton
Shapes
I
SHOP
Everything in
fresh cut flowers.
Good variety
plants.
the line of
of flowering
1107 So. Univ.
1107 So.
Univ
I
.--
Greenhouses--Observatory and
Volland St. Phone, 170-M.
4
THE
Coming
Events
SPRUNK
Patronize Daily Advertisers.
t.
.d.
N
LET US SEND YOU
AN ASSORTMENT OF VICTOR RECORDS
on our twenty-four hour approval plan! Select a dozen numbers, you
would like to hear in your own home. Phone us, 1707, and we will
send same.
VICTOR VICTROLAS FROM $15.00 TO $300.00
CONVENIENT PAYMENTS I
GRINNEL L BROTHERS
116 SOUTH MAIN. STREET
May 25-Glee club concert in Hill
auditorium.
May 26-Straw hat day.
May 29-Junior lit Jamboree.
May 30-Memorial day (holiday).
June 1-Band concert at bandstand.
June 1-Fresh lit frolic at Ariffory.
June 8-Cap night.
June 8-Band concert at bandstand.
June 11-Final examinations com-
mence.
June 24-Baccalaureate sermon in
Hill auditorium.
June 25-26-Class day exercises.
June 26-27-Alumni days.
June 28-Commencement exercises.
July 2-Summer session commences.
There is opportunity in The Michi-
gan Daily Ads Read tem.
Co.
Has Moved to
ENG RAVING
700 Marquette Bldg.
SERMON ON "THE TWO WORLDS"
A T IST 1A. E. CHURCH TODAY
Morning service at the First M. E.
church will commence at 10:30
o'clock. "The Two Worlds" will be
the subject of the sermon A "Moth-
er's day" program will be given this
evening at 7:30 o'clock.
i