-'I 1 1 ~ 1 I1 V la . .. !_ ing gh-class work is a natural sequence to having our workrooms on remises. With our workrooms all under one roof-all under con- ated personal supervision, we are able to produce those finished erpieces of tailors' art, so utterly impossible for the great bulk of .es. Your dress suit for the J-Hop should be ordered of us, thus insur- yrou the best materials, workmanship, and a knowledge of thirty s' experience in manufacturing evening clothes. . 11 G. H. Merchant Tailors Wild Company State Street me oome V Now Supply of Laundry Cases ie Slator Book ShopI STOP AT UTTLES 338 S. STATE r sodas and lunches 3ORG I BISCHIOFF 'LORIST ce Cut Flowers and Plants tapin St. Ann Arbor, Mich. PHONE 809 M Rowe City Laundry 406 Detroit St Cash cards save you money PHONE 457-M FIRST NAIL BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH. Capital $xoo,ooo Surplus and Profit $65,ooo DIRECTORS Wirt Cornwell Waldo M. Abbott Geo. W. Patterson Harry M. Hawley S. W. Clarkeon Harrison Soule Fred Schmid D. B. Sutton E. D. Kinnie . .._ -I TRY OUR HOME MADE Vanilla and Chocolate CREAM WALNUT CARAMELS We serve lunches and sodas at all hours The Fountain of Youth State Street Cor. Liberty . . . . .. .. .. We Offer You URITY - - SERVICE - - LOCATION Resources $3,8oo,ooo in Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 in Office--' orthwest Corner Main and Huron Mch Offiee- 707 North University Ave. Farmers &,Mechanics Bank $ers the Best in Modern Banking XCURITY - "- EFFICIENCY lent and Pleasant Quarters. You Will sed With Our Service. Two Offices 5 S. Main St. : : 330 S. State St. IE SUGAR 109 S. Main St. SPECIAL SUNDAES LIGHT LUNCHES Our candies are made in our own sanitary shop. )t a typewriter from ). D. MORRILL 822 South State Street will furnish you an instsquction Ak free ofo harge. You wlI be a ist before you know it. Women ndependent Girls' club will hold a Idren's party at 7:30 o'clock Mon- r evening in Barbour gymnasium. uniors should pay their social tax once at Dean Jordan's office. enior women should fill out Mich- nensian record blanks before the i of the week. 'here will be a meeting of the board representatives of the Women's gue at 9 o'clock this morning. tnbers are asked to report on the ational conference questionares. 'irls wishing honor pcints for swim- ig should see the gymnasium di- tor within the next week. mportan, meeting of the executive ,rd of the Independent Girls' club 1 be held at 9:30 o'clock this morn- in Barbour gymnasium. tehins Did Not Sign Ally Memorial 'he dispatch in yesterday morning's ly mentioned President Harry B. tchins as one of the signers of the norial expressing sympathy for the es. This was an error. President tchins did not sign the memorial. est music in the city Saturday ht at the Armory. 13 L bit of a compliment to the folk at ne, 4ere a giftie of somthing niftie DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson Cars run on Eastern time, one hour faster than local time. Detroit Limited and Express Cars-7:35 a. m., 8:ro a. m. and hourly to 7:10 p. m., 9:10 p. i. ".latnazoo Limited Cars--S:48 a. m and every two hours to 6:48 p. m.; to Lansing, 8:48 p. rm.. Jackson Express Cars-(Local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9:48 a. m. and every two hours to 4cal PCars Eastbound-:35 a. m., 6:40 a' i., 7:o$ a.m. and every two hours to 7:o. p m~ 3:0, P,. i., 9:5 P. iM., 10:0p. in. to Ypsilantf only, 9:2o a. i., 9:50 a. m., 2:05 p. S., 6: p. M., 11:45 p. M., 1:10 a. m., 1-: a. M. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars Westbound-6:oS a. m., 7:so a. m. r":z Pi.. 1:20 a. In. Takes Pictures Dvlps films makes Prints and Enlarge- 731 E. VNIYVERSTY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA GIVES SECOND CONCERT WEDNESDAY University Organization to Render "Euryanthe" Overture By Weber The University Symphony orchestra will make its second appearance of the season in Hill auditorium on Wed- nesday afternoon, Jan. 17, in the reg- ular complimentary faculty series. The orchestra has never'been so ef- ficient as at present, and the widely recognized success of the ast con- cert has justified the inclusion of so difficult a work as the "Euryanthe" overture of Weber, one of the great- est examples of the so-called "ro- mantic" period of musical history. Other features of the program will be the two I ,pNorwegian pieces for strings alo., by Grieg, and Mendels- sohn's deservedly popular violin con- certo, which in its proper orchestral setting, has not been heard in Ann Arbor for a great many years. Mr. Anthony J. Whitmire will be the solo- ist. The program is as follows: War March of the Priests, from "Athalia"............Mendelssohn Two Elegiac Melodies, Op 34 .. .Greig Concerto, Op 64 ........ Mendelssohn "Euryanthe" Overture ........ Weber Freshmen Hold Mixer at Barbour Gym Over 400 people attended the fresh- man mixer held in Barbour gymnasium yesterday afternoon Dean Myra B. Jordan, Dr. Jonathan F. Scott and Mrs. Scott, Miss Alice Evans, and Miss Marion Wood stood in the receiving line and assisted the yearlings to get acquainted. Owing to the great suc- cess of the affair it has been decided to give a free dance at some future date to all those who have paid their class dues. Bank Sues Railroad for $32,000,000 Chicago, Jan. 12.-A suit against the Chicago, Rock Island, andPacific for $32,000,000 brought by the Bankers' Trust company of New York was filed in the United States district court here today. The suit is to collect the prin- cipal and interest on $20,000,000 in gold 20-year debenture bonds. Official newspaper at the University of Mi;,igan. Published every morning except Mamday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. Ofices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: by carrier $2r50; by mail, $.0. Want ad. stations: uarry'; Students' Sup- ply Store; The Delta, cor. State and Packard. Phones: Business, g6o; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed 300 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 in the west corridor of the general library, where the notices are collected at 7 ,:3 o'clockeach 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....aTelegraph Editor Vers .e. Burnett...........Asociate dltor Golda Ginsburg.............Women's Editor Carleton W. Reade.......Statistical diter Marian Wilson..............Literary Editor J. E. Cam bell...Assistant Business Manager C. Philip Emery..Assistant Business Manager Albert E. Horne..Assistant Business Manager Roscoe R. Rau....Assistant Business Manager Fred M. Sutter...Assistant Business Manager Night Editors J. L Stadeker E. L. Zeigler C. M. Jickling H. M. Carey B. A. Swaney L. W. Nieter L. S. Thompson E. A. Baumgarth Reporters W. A. Atlas Allen Shoenfield H. C. Garrison C. L. Roeser C. S. Clark D. S. Rood R. H. Fricken G. O. Broph B. 1. Millar F. A. Taber D. H. Cruttenden Mildred C. Mighell K. L. Wehmeyer J. P. Hart Annetta L. Wood J. C. Martin T. F. McAllister Business Staff Bernard Wohl J. E. Robinson Paul E. Cholette Harry R. Louis Harold Makinson Earl F. Ganscow Walter R. Payne Jackson W. Smart Seymour B. Wilson SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1917. Night Editor-J. L. Stadeker. HONOR IN EXAMINATIONS In providing for a campus vote on the adoption of some scheme for hon- or examinations the student council has taken a step which we believe will be welcomed by a majority of the stu- dents and faculty at Michigan. Since the adoption of an honor sys- tem by the medics and the engineers, students and professors in the other schools and colleges have watched with increasing interest its success. They have watched a greater spirit of honor fostered by the scheme grow up in the engineering college and the Medical school and have felt a lack of it in their own classes. But, as one professor said in his . class yesterday, "you can't have an honor system as you would a text- book." The idea must be realized in the heart of the individual student, and not arbitrarily handed him to fol- low or cary out. That the average student at the present time feels a lack of this honor spirit, and would welcome some way of receiving it, we are firmly convinced. Whether the campus is ready to adopt the honor system immediately and in doing so, depart radically from the present hodge podge of examina- tion systems will be determined by the vote on Tuesday, What the par- ticular "system" to be adopted is does not matter greatly; the need for a more perfect code of honor, and a building up of the honor spirit is the goal which the present movement is seeking. CHEWING THE CUD A class in Spanish was struggling with Valdes' "Jose." "The night was clear but not cloudy," said the stu- dent who was reciting. The class snickered and the tone of voice in which the next few words were given registered discomfort. "I know there is some inconsist- ency there but I haven't had time to find out what it is," said the student when the professor remonstrated. A reference to the point of the above scene is made in a brilliant essay in the January Atlantic. The author is Robert M. Gay, who holds the chair of English in Goucher college, Balti- more. American university methods are re- moving from the college course the very thing it most needs-time for thorough work, for rumination. Of the latter we find this in Professor Gay's essay: "Rumination, my boy, means chewing the cud. Have you chewed the cud of this lesson, or have you simply bolted it?" What has become of the old fash- ioned student who "chewed the cud" of his lessons? Just when the peace dove was learn- ing to fly again the allies came along and clipped its wings. A Detroit man wants to change his name from Cook to Harrison. We hope the exploring - doctor won't take offence.' 1000 JOBS IN THE LAST 100 DAYS This is the report up to date of the"Y", mploy- ment Bureau. Cleaning, window wash- ing, dog washing, snow shovelling, board jobs, room jobs, clerking, trade jobs, evenactingeas Santa Clause are some of the jobs embraced by this re- port. Bureau open. daily from 3 to 6p. in.and Saturday mornings. Telephone 823. Big Bill Edmunds surely didn't make up his mind to quit Washington University and go to Harvard just to learn to be a policeman. EXPLAINS' ABUSED TERM ALUMNUS CITES SKEFFINGTON MARTYRDOM TO PROVE PACI- FIST IS NO COWARD Editor, The Michigan Daily: Considering how often in this en- vironment the word "pacifist" has been linked with the terms "coward" and "traitor," it seems only fair to ask The Daily to publish the following extract. It is from the New York Eve- ning Post, which will not be suspected of heightening any, of the incidents referred to. "There is nothing harder than to overtake an oft-repated lie. But it does seem as if the facts about Sheehy Skeffington's martyrdom ought to end once for all the old slander that paci- fists are people who are afraid of death. Mr. Skeffington was a non-re- sistant. Yet When the bullets were fly- ing thickest in Dublin, he heard that a British captain, was lying bleeding to death in the street because no one dared to go to his rescue and bind up his wounds; Inducing a druggist to go with him, the two men risked their lives under a hail of bullets to carry the captain out of danger, where they bound up his wounds. It was in re- turn for this Christian act of heroic charity that a brother officer, who has now escaped because he was insane, put Mr. Skeffiington to death without warrant or reason. Like the hero that he was, Mr. Skeffington never quailed a moment, not even when he -, Diaries and Office Supplies in general at Handy Desk Calendakr rA .4' A whole years comfort for 75. F LANDERS OR FLOWERS PHONE 2%2 212 E. Liberty St. Member of Florists' Telegraph Delivery Service Flowers by Wire to All the World. r. pleted 40 years of service on the Marquette railroad. Page Mr. negie. x was being marched up and ddwn the street with his arms tied behind his back, while his murderer walked be- side him with a drawn revolver threatening him with instant death. That threat did not deter Skeffington from protesting when Capt. Bowen- Colhurst shot and fatally wounded a boy of seventeen merely because he was on the street. Indeed, throughout the whole sordid tragedy it was the pacifist who was heroically brave, and the officers and soldiers who shot him from behind as he entered the barrack courtyard and left him lying without ascertaining- whether he was dead or not, who were the cowards as .well as brutes. Only one English officer of the dozen or so concerned had the manliness to protest against this mur- der of an innocent man, which must ever remain a horrible stain upon the good name of his country." ALUMNUS AND PACIFIST. Germans Promise Reprisals for French Berlin, Jan. 12.-Germany is about to make reprisals for "inhuman treat- ment" of German soldiers held pris- oners in French concentration camps. he official press bureau announced today that the reprisals would be an- nounced tomorrow. V I Pere Car- We are more than pleased with the success of our first clear- ance sale of _ w w- WA Rw _NVR w OKSOE 11 SwR lc a e l ih u U oragowhns okn ate giemw anta'wo hslann slwyan aurly wI wEVTgt t od Vns atwaytwoyBOKSTRE naualaeig IMSH -WICK WIRE - Co. suits. It is so unusual to be able to buy really desirable merchandise at a reduced price that discriminating people have been quick to take advantage of the opportunity- Our sale continues all next week- until January 20-and includes every suit in the house [except blues] and every winter overcoat. We will have something to say in our advertisement to-mo r r o w about the condition of the woolen market. W(l . Co. N, A locomotive engineer has