[ICHIGAN DA 1 r ., , .. .,_ t G. H. Wild Co. Leading Merchant Tailors State St. i 1 in SH]EET MUSIC We always have the latest Popular and Classical #r - MENDINGER MUSIC SHOP 122 B. Liberty St. 111IDIIIIIIIIDII IIDiIIIDlll I I IItI IlI IIIIIDD111 IIDIIII Ii 11DD1111 1;lilill9 ALLIV Phone 1692 I SGAN DAL Official newspaper at the University of Michigan. Publied every morning except Monday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: by carrier, $2.5s; b mail, $3.0o. Want ad. stations: Quarry's; Students' Sup. ply Store ; The Delta, cor. State and Packard. Phones: Business, 960; Editorial, 24r4. Communications not to exceed 30o words in length, or notices of events will be pub- lished in The Daily, at the discretion of the Editor, if left at the office in the Ann Arbor Press Bldg., or in the notice box is tho west corridor of the general library, where the notices are collected at 7:30 o'clock each evening. John C. B. Parker.........,Managing Editor Clarence T. Fishleigh......Business Manager Conrad N. Church..............News Editor Lee E. Joslyn...... ......... .City Editor Harold A. Fitzgerald......*.;Sports Editor Harold C. L. Jackson......Telegraph Editor Verne E. Burnett...........Associate Editor Golda Ginsburg.............Women's Editor Carleton W. Reade.........Statistical Editor J. E. Campbell... Assistant Business Manager C. Philip Enery..Assistant Business Manager Albert E. Horne..Assistant Business Manager Roscoe R. Rau... Assistant Business Manager Fred M. Sutter... Assistant Business Manager Night Editors L. S. Thompson E. A. Baumgarth L. W. Nieter J. L. Stadeker Reporters' B. A. Swaney C. W. Neumann W. R. Atlas C. C. Andrews E. L. Zeigler H. C. Garrison Allen Schoenfield C. M. Jickling Marian Wilson D. S. Rood Business Staff Bernard Wohl J. E. Robinson Paul E. Cholette Harry R. Louis E. Reed Hunt Harold J. Lance Earl F. Ganschow Walter R. Payne Harold Makinson TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1916. Night Editor-B. A. Swaney. Night editors only meet at 12:40 to- day. That is the telephone number. Call any time between the hours of3and 6 P. M. daily or between 9 and 12 A. M. Saturday when you desire student help-"Y" Employment Dept. i 823, B V Y YOVR I DESPITE WAR PRICES Our slightly-soiled novels, even the latest, must . sell at 50c. E.YT- WAHRV',Sa UNIVERSBITY 1BOOKSTORES L A V N D Y C A SE A T SlaterBook hp at. . DETROIT UNITED LINES etween Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson ars run on Eastern time, one hour faster 1local time. etroit Limited and Express Cars- 8:io a nd hourly to 7:10 p. m., 9:10 p. m. alanazoo Limited Cars-8 :48 a. in. and .y two hours to 6 :48 p. in.; to Lansing, aoson Express Cars-(Local stops west of Arbor)--9:48 a. in. and every two hours x:48 p. M. ecal Cars Eastbound-5:s5 a. m, 6:40 a. 7:o a. m. and every two hours to 7:05 p. 8:05 p. in., 9:05 P. mi., 10:50 p. m. to Oaati only, 9:2o a. in., 9:50 a. m., 2:o5 p. 6 :o5, p. mn., 11 :45 P. nm., r :io a. m., i:2 n. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. ecal Cars Westbund-6:o5 a. mn., 7:5o a. ro0:2o p. in.. '12:20 a. im. e Farmers & Mechanics Bank Offers the Best in Modern Banking SECURITY - - - EFFICIENCY venient and Pleasant Quarters. You Will Pleased With Our Service. Two Offices -105 S. Main St. : : 330 S. State St. rYPEWHITERS of all makes Sale or Rent. Cleaning & Repairing~ TYPEWVRITING & MEOEGRAPHING. SUPPLIES 4. DMorr111 We Offer You SECURITY - - SERVICE - - LOCATION Varied Subjects A ttract Kreisler Austrian Viollaist it Student of Law, Medicine, Painting, Music, and Military Tactics Few musicians have the varied in- terests of Fritz Kreisler, the famous Austrian violinist, who will appear in Hill auditorium tomorrow evening at S o'clock. He has studied medicine and law, and is a painter of no mean ability, having given a year of his life to the study of painting in Paris. He is a graduate of a military school in Austria, and as an officer in the Third Jaeger Regiment of Granz he served with gallantry and distinction in the campaign near Lemberg in 1914 until Resources $3,800,000 Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Main Office-- Northwest Corner Main and Huron Branch Office-- 707 North University Ave. GIRLSI buy tickets at Beauty Shop and save $1.50 on $5.oo. Souvenir with every Soc purchase of cosmetics. W~HEN a dog bites me once, I m through with it. Same way with a tobacco. . VELVET is aged in the wood for two years to make it the .smoothest smoking tobacco. Home Made Candies Strictly fresh and of the best quality. Pure cream walnut caramels, as- sorted nut chocolates in fib. boxes, 35c. Bitter sweet and chocolate creams all fresh. Special ice cream sundaes. -- State St. Cor. Libety iillIl111 i11111111 111111 11l1 llllli1llll tlIlllllllll i illIllllllli lI III ll11 ll lllltl mein Qom isiinssisiiissississsississssissinsleis LAN DERS 11JIl ;~uO R ' Ilf213 F.LOWERS 1 218 E. Liberty St. Phone 284 Another reminder not to forget us when in need of Flowers for any 1 Ocoasion. Roses, Violets, Sweet Peas, Orchids, Carnations, Chrysan- ' themums and Potted Plants. Corsage Work a Specialty. Member Florist Telegraph Delivery Service. he was severely wounded. His ser-I S. State 582-J GEORGE BISCHOFF FLOR IST Choice Cut Flowevs and Plants 120 Chapin St. Ann Arbor, Mich. PHONE 809 M STOP AT TUCTTLE'S 338 S. STATE for sodas and lunches Miss Mable Rowe 1 503 First National Bank Bldg. Phone 2402 FIRST NATL. BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH. Capital $ioo,ooo Surplus and Profit $65,000 DIRECTORS Wirt Cornwell Waldo M. Abbott Geo. W. Patterson Harry M. Hawley S. W. Clarkson Harrison Soule Fred Schmid D. B. Sutton E. D. Kinnie r", THE SUGAR BOWL 109 S. Main St. SPECIAL SUNDAES LIGHT LUNCHES Our candies are made in our own sanitary shop. ' Jlll ! I fj s l i f I i 3 4 jFl [Fh,, f b 2 "R 1 , . "Y....R:A !' ' e smn ' 0. 'NONi' O GET the best results in tele- phoning, speak directly into the transmitter with the lips in front of but not touching it. Speak distinctly in a moderate tone. WHO W1ILL FOLLOW OMEGA PHI? Campus organizations at Michigan have sprung up like weeds in fertile soil. Some of these organizations have more than justified their right to ex- ist by their contributions to the pro- gress of the University. They are the strong plants in our garden. Then there are the weeds. These are the superfluous societies, which lead a parasite existence, sapping the vitality of their stronger and more valuable contemporaries. Until the members of these weaker organizations become imbued with a self-sacrificing spirit, and decide to terminate the societies for the betterment of the University, this condition will inevitably exist. Omega Phi, women's literary and sociological society, passed quietly out of existence last week. In bringing the society to an end its members pub- licly acknowledged their discovery that the society was superfluous. In so doing they indicated a remedial program which might well be followed by a number of other societies on the campus. The action of Omega Phi is laudable at this time because a termination of its activities leaves its members free to give their individual attention to other worthy causes, instead of claim- ing their waning interest and sup- port while the society was dying a lingering and perhaps inevitable death. After ten years on the campus, Omega Phi retires in favor of Stylus, and frankly confesses its reasons for doing so. Other campus societies should turn the searching light of inquiry upon their own aims and achievements to determine whether they are not in a position similar to that of Omega Phi. CARRANZA MAY PROHIBIT IMPORTATION OF ARTICLES Juarez, Nov. 6.--A new scale of duties upon exports into Mexico was in effect today under a decree issued by the first chief, Carranza. Duties on many staples, including food and clothing, have been raised to almost prohibitive figures, and it was pre- dicted that importation of some articles would be stopped altogether. The duty on oats, of which large quan- tities are being shipped to the Ameri- can expedition, has been raised to $7.50 per ton. Wheat, corn, and hay, however, are free. Reports Co-operate Stores Lower Price Washington, Nov. 6.-Endorsement of the co-operative stores system as "tending to bring about lower prices and better returns to the farmer" was made today by the United States bu- reau of markets. A survey by the bu- reau of 60 co-operative stores in vari- ous sections of the country shows that the system "has very great possibil- ities in this country." The finest Floral Shop in the city will open soon in the Nickels Aroade, State Street. 3-tf vice won him promotion and a medal. Mr. Kreisler is also an accomplished linguist speaking French, Italian, English and Russian in addition to his native German. Musically he is, of course, one of the greatest violinists of our time but he is only less great as a pianist and Har- old Bauer has said that if Kreisler would devote a year to the piano, he would rank among the foremost pian- ists of the world. In composition Kreisler has not done much but he has arranged a vast amount of music for his instrument and may be regarded as the discoverer of that wonderful literature for the violin that the seven- teenth and eighteenth century Italian composers wrote in such quantities. In his researches aflong the buried music of the past he brought to light and arranged many short pieces of ex- quisite beauty which have appealed strongly to his hearers. His programs are said to cover a broader field than those of any artist now before the pub- lie. Smallpox flakes Mruse frelodize Bring from its dusty hiding place the battered old guitar, and let us sing a song or two the Sabbath gloom to mar. We cannot go to Ypsi for con- tagion is rampant, so let us get togeth- er and some quaint old scandals chant. The pretty little school marms (it's a tale that vastly grieves) have had to seek the doctor and to hoist their several sleeves. All over now is Eros' rule and scenes of osculation. Hip- pocrates holds center stage with scenes of vaccination.' And it is said the knock-down ' cons" upon the D. U. R. are stony broke' from running on a semi-empty car. And loud and most disconsolate is Ypsilanti's wail. We send our deepest sympathy-but by the U. S. mail. Perhaps the darlings rave and weep. Perhaps they rend their locks. Per- haps they're sighing for us, but-per- haps they have smallpox. We like their ways, we like their smiles, we like their coyest glances, but in a case of quarantine there's no use tak- ing chances. So put the newest record on the long-used Victrola, and let us drown our sorrows in a drink of something- cola. Or let us try a game of cards, or rough-house o'er the room. But let us try with all our might to quell this Sabbath gloom. Toledo Man Fined $13.45 for Speeding A. N. Bacon, of Toledo, was ar- rested Sunday afternoon for speeding on South Main street. He was fined $10 and $3.45 costs by Justice William G. Doty. Officer, Emil Sodt made the arrest. Our ala,rm clocks are good clocks. Chapman, Jeweler, 118 South Main street. tues-sod For results advertise in The Michi- gan Daily. BRITISH SHIP UNDER U. S. FLAG SINKS U-BOAT, BERLIN SAYS Berlin, Nov. 6.-Flying the Ameri- can flag, a 'British steamer sank the German submarine U-41 near the Scilly islands, and imposed inhuian treatment on two German officers who miraculously escaped death, the semi- official news agency reported today. The attack occurred on Sept. 24, 1915, but the news reached Berlin only when one of the German officers who was badly wounded was sent by the British to Switzerland, where he is now interned. The U-41 ordered the steamer to halt. The order was obeyed, but as the submarine approached to within 300 yards the steamer's rail suddenly fell away at two places and guns opened fire on the U-boat, while the American flag was still flying. Milners to Adopt Military Designs New York, Nov. 6.-To please Ameri- can women who demand hats in har- mony with the patriotic spirit of the time, leading milliners of this city are following the military mode in creat- ing a design suitable for winter wear. The chic steel helmet effect, turbans and pompons, reminiscent of the trenches and worn by many fashion- able women, are to be superseded by the more utilitarian Texan sombrero in a smaller design, close resembling the campaign hat of the United States marine. In the effort of New York designers to establish a distinctively American style devoid of foreign suggestion, the head gear of the composite soldier and sailor has proved a desirable model. Prof. W. R. Humphreys Gives Lecture At a meeting of the Michigan ass9- ciation of English Teachers held in Grand Rapids last Friday afternoon, Prof. W. R. Humphreys, of the English department, delivered an address on "The Use of the English Bible in High Schools." Prof. J. R. Brumm accepted a re- election to the presidency of the organ- ization. Dancing classes and private lessons at the Packard Academy. 18-tf Wt~omen__ Stylus will meet at 7:30 this evening with Elizabeth Toof, grad., at 202 South Thayer street. Judiciary council will meet at 12 o'clock Wednesday at the Little Shop. Dean Myra B. Jordan will be at home to college women from 3:30 to 6 o'clock Tuesday afternoons, at 1215 Hill street. Hygiene lecture for all freshmen and sophomores who have not taken the course, will begin'at 5 o'clock in the west amphitheater of the medical building. There will be a sophomore-junior hockey game at 3 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Freshmen and seniors will play at 2 o'clock, Saturday, Nov. 11. Junior and senior hockey teams will hold an important practice at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Girls wishing to play basketball. should sign up at once. Girls intending to be athletic squad leaders should see Miss Evans at once. Glee club will rehearse at 5 o'clock this afternoon in Sarah Caswell Angell hall. PROF. J. R. BRUM STARTS SERIES OF TALKS TO MEN Prof. J. R. Brumm, of the rhetoric department, gave the first of a series of six talks before the young men's class of the Methodist church Sunday morning. Seventy young men heard Professor Brumm's talk upon the sub- ject of "Becoming College-Bred." Professor Brumm's talks, aiming to answer current problems with regard to religious work, will be continued each Sunday, at noon, until Dec. 3. Next Sunday he will speak on "Defic- iencies in Culture." Sl Takes Pictures Develops Films inakes Prints and Ealarge- 713 E. Unvweiraty Michigan State Telephone J. J. Kely, Manager Telephone 500 Comp~ny hiss Walton Gives T. B. C. Lecture Miss Carol Walton, state secretary f the Michigan anti-tuberculosis asso- lation, spoke yesterday afternoon in ansing before the Ingham county urses convention on "Correct Meth- ds in Tuberculosis Campaigns." From lansing she will go to Howell, Mich.; a the interest of the Red Cross seal rork in that vicinity. oa. W e Eger(Spats heon City Health Dr. J. A. Wessinger, city health of- ficer, spoke to the social service class, at noon, last Sunday in the Congrega- tional church. lie talked on the work of his department, laying stress on the sewage, drainage and garbage pro- blems. Fox-trot ball at Armory Friday night. 7,8 If its artistic wall paper you go to C. H. Major & Co. Phone 23 n-