100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

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.

January 20, 1917 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1917-01-20

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

I %W*1jr, k4444 41

San taiIl

"--I

.class work is a' natural sequence to having our workrooms on
nises. With our workrooms all under one roof-all under con-
d personal supervision, we are able to produce those finished
ieces of tailors' art, so utterly impossible for the great bulk of
pr dress suit for the J-Hop should be ordered of us, thus insur-
the best materials, workmanship, and a knowledge of thirty
xperience i manufacturing evening clothes.

11

G. H. Wild Company
Merchant Tailors

State Street

LI

STOP AT
UTTLES
338 S. STATE
r sodas and luncheg
OR G BISCHOFF
LORIST
e Cut Flowess and Plants
apin St. Ann Arbor, Mich.
PHONE 809 M

Rowe City Laundry
406 Detroit St
Cash cards save you money
PHONE 457-M
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

NEMLUW
v

Now Supply of
Lau.ndry Cs. ses

he Slater Book Shop
Y 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

. ..r.

"""'--1

We Offer You
JRITY - - SERVICE - - LOCATION
Resources $3,800,000 t
n Arbor Savings Bank
Incorporated 1869
n Office--
rthwest Corner Main and Huron
ch Office--
o7 North University Ave.
armers & Mechanics Bank
ers the Best in Modern Banking
ECURITY- - - EFFICIENCY
nt and Pleasant Quarters. You Will
ed With Our Service. Two Offices
S. Main St. : : 330 S. State St.
E SUGAR:BOWL
109 S. Main St.

DETROIT UNITED LINES
B twe Dtroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson
Cars run ott Eastern time, one hour faster
than local time.
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-7:35 a.
i., 8:ro a.Lm.and hourly to :o p. in., 9:10
P. m.
Kalarnazop Limited Cars-8:49 a. m and
every two hours to 6:48 p. m.; to Lansing,
8:48 p. in.
'"ekson Bxpress Cars -(Local stops west o
Ann Arbor)-9:48 a. m. and every two hours
to 9:48 p. Mn.
Local Cars Eastbound-5 :35 a. m , 6:40 a
m,, 7:05 a. m. and every two hours to 7:05 p.
t ev 5:0 p. m., 9:05 p. in., i o:5* p. M. to
'0 Yiat i only, 9:20 a. Mn., 9:50 a. mn., 2:05 p
n., 6:0 p.., M- :45p.in., :i a.in. :.,, :2
a. in. o Saline, change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars Westbound-6 :05 a. m., 7:50 a.
n., zesmo p. m.. 12:ao a. m.
i Takes Pictures
Develops Films
makes Prints
and Enlarge-
713 L. VNrIERSITY
MANYSLAW VTES ILLEGAL
CORRESPONDENT BELIEVES RE-
SULT SHOULD NOT BE. ALLOWED
TO STAND.

Official newspaper at the University of
M..gan. Published every morning except
M.>nday 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 $2.5; by mail, $3.oo.
Want ad. stations: duarry'; Students' Sup-
ly Store; The Delta, cor. State and Packard.
Phones: Business, 960; 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 7:30 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 . Fitzgerald..........Sports Editor
Harold C. L. Jackson......Telegraph Editor
Verne E. Burnett...........Associate Editor
Golda Ginsburg.............Women's Editor
Carleton W. Rade........Statistical Editor
Marian Wilson.............. Literary Editor
J. E. Cam pbell...Assistant Business Manager
C. Philip ruey..Assistant Business Manager
Albert E. Hore..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.Tickling H. M. Carey
B A. waney L. W. Nieter
L. S. Thompson E. A. Baumgarth
Reporters
W. A. Atlas Allen Shoenfield
H. C. Garrison C L. Roseser
C. S. Clark D. S. Rood
R. H. Fricken G. O. Broph
B. I. Millar F. A. Taber
D. H. Cruttenden Mildred C. Mighell
K. L. Wehmeer J. P. Hart
Annetta L. Wood J. C. Martin
T. F. McAllister
Business Staff
Bernard WohIJ.. E. Robinson
Paul E. Cholette Harry R. Louis
Harold Makinson Earl F. Ganschow
Walter R. Payne Jackson W. Smart
Seymour B. Wilson
SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1917.
Night Editor-C. M. Jickling
MICHIGAN\ MEN AS HYPHENATES
What is the future for college men
entering into business in South Ameri-
ca? The current issue of the Outlook
magazine has some information con-
ceining foreigners in Mexico that
bears directly upon this question.
The writer takes for his subject tep
hyphenated Mexicans and discusses
the relative popularity among natives
of that unfortunate country of Span-
iards, Americans, Englishmen, Ger-
mans, Japanese, and Chinese. His
conclusion is that after all the Mex-
icans do hate Spaniards a little more
than they do our own citizens, strange
as that may seem.
Americans are heartily disliked by
Mexicans, and even further south we
are regarded with distrust. This fact
ought to receive the careful consider-
ation of Michigan men who are think-
ing of trying Latin-America as a field
after graduation. It need not scare
them, but they will be doing their
country and their University inestim-
able good, if they study the matter and
do something constructive toward re-
lieving the situation.
Germans are most popular in Latin-
America, and they make the most
money. Their secret is that they
adapt themselves to their environment,
and put themselves out to please their
neighbors. If Michigan students who
are planning a career in the south-
ern countries adopt this attitude
they will do much to advance them-
selves and benefit their country.
As far as we know the men who
stood in line all night to get hop tick-
ets aren't engaged either.g
In Maine they found a woman bath-
ing her children in beer. We thought
the stuff had a higher marginal signi-
ficance than that.

Roald Amundsen, the explorer, is
fretting because high prices of food-
stuffs are delaying his trip to th4 north
pole. Why doesn't he get 'em charged.
They couldn't send him any bills.
GOVERNMENT SURVEY TO TAKE
503 YEARS FOR COMPLETION

1000 JOBS
IN THE LAST
100 DAYS
This is the report up to
date of the Y" Employ-
ment Bureau.
Cleaning, wvindow wash-
ing, dog washing, snow
shovelling, board jobs,
room jobs, clerking, trade
jobs, even acting as Santa
Clause are some of the
jobs embraced by this re-
port.
Bureau open daily from
3 to 6 p. m. and Saturday
mornings. Telephone 823.

N

ITS 'DICTIONARY HAIT'I

STUDENT CRITICISES STUDY OF
DICTIONARY TO GAIN NEW
WORDS
Editor, The Michigan Daily:
Just a few words about the "dic-
tionary habit." We all agree that lack
of vocabulary is a very serious hand-
icap. But what is the best method
of improving and enriching one's vo-
cabulary?
On that point your suggestion to
study the dictionary is, I believe, mis-
leading. There are people who take
such a suggestion rather too literally.
They memorize words directly from
the dictionary, and many curious us-
ages result from it.
I believe that the best method of in-
creasing one's vocabulary is extensive
reading of good literature. Good lit-
erature contains a large and varied
vocabulary in its correct usage; ex-
tensive reading of it brings the words
nearer to us, we make their acquaint-
ance, even friendship.
In the course of time we begin to
use them as if we have known them
from the time of our birth. To look
up those words the meaning of which
we do not know would signify intelli-
gent reading.
A STUDENT.
Our alarm clocks are good clocks.
Chapman, Jeweler, 113 South Main
St. tues-eod
The Michigan Daily for service.

.:
..
.
r
_
r
is
r
r
_
_: t
li )

Ii

CJ .'t t h g h a t le ss t a ig4 G i e a

Handbooks of Practical Information for
Sci ntific Men.t
22 Books in the Set - 50 cents each

i

IWhen-you stop t3t't' s .
litte wonder that is e S
so good. Every bit of it has
been natzrally agzd for two years.
L .~ '140

Little I.C.S. Gian'

LANDERS
OR
FLOWERS

PHONE 294

Ask to see them at

1 l

K- '~"'

213 E.I

Liberty St.

WAHR'S
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES

M3 f

Member of Florists' Telegraph
Delivery Service
Flowers by Wire to All the World.

Corwin Discusses French Diplomacy
Edward S. Corwin, '00, professor of
politics in Princeton university, is the
author of an interesting volume,
"French Policy and the American Al-
liance of 1778," which deals with Eu-
ropean diplomacy of the period and
emphasises once more the United
States debt to France.

Flannel Shirtsi
Wild Company.
tailors. State str

made to order. G. H.
Leading merchant
eet. tf

Children's aancing class at
Packard. Fridays, 3:30 P. M.

the
16tf

O. G. Andres for shoe repairing. 222
S. State. 'Phone 1718-J. tues-eod

7

Watch For

SPECIAL SUNDAES
LIGHT LUNCHES
Our candles are made in
our own sanitary shop.

typewriter from
D. M OORRILL
822 South State Street
I furnish you an instruction
re of charge. You will be a
before you know it.
.W~L~omen

1 girls taking required gymnas-
must sign up for posture examin-
ns on the lists in the locker room
he gymnasium. 'Examinations will
n Wednesday, Jan. 24.
ST STUDENT COUNCIL.
DANCE IN GYM TONIGHT
he first dance of the season to be
n by the student council and the
en's judiciary council will start
:he Barbour gymnasium parlors
B o'clock tonight. Dancing will
inue from 8 to 12 o'clock.
he floor of Barbour gymnasium has
i recently scraped and put into
e, and is now in first class condi-
to furnish the utmost of pleasure
rhatever Ike Fisher's best quintet
capable of attempting.
he committee in charge consists
1. S. Hatch, '18, chairman; C. E.
1, '19, and Russell Dodd, '18.
nan Suffrage Amendment Offered
ashington, Jan. 19.-Senator Poin-
er, Washington, offered a woman
age amendment to the constitu-
today. His amendment provides
no person shall be prevented from
ig because of "race, sex, or color.'

Editor, The Michigan Daily:
At the recent election in the Law
schoold upon the adoption of the hon-
or system, the ballots were piled in
a heap upon the ballot box. The hon-
or system was being tested by placing
voters upon their honor to cast but
one vote. By far the majority did
so. But all did not. The writer per-
sonally knows from over-heard boast-
ing that some men of that school,
over-zealousantagonists to the sys-
tem, voted from three to five ballots
apiece. No wonder the results of those
who honorably voted were beaten by
a small minority with a weak code of
ethics. No wonder those men who
so voted did not desire the honor sys-
tem.
What then from this state of facts
results? It is clear that the result of
the Law school vote upon the honor
system was not a truthful expression
of opinion upon that question. It is
likewise clear that there are a few
students in the' Law school who are
in need of a revised code of ethics.
Shall such a result be allowed to
stand? Shall a fraudulent expression
of opinion of the school be allowed to
stand for a truthful one? In behalf
of those members of the majority of
the Law students who honorably cast
but one vote, this writer thinks that
it should not. A new election should
be had; and at that election care
should be taken to prevent some over-
zealous antagonist to the system
from casting from three to five bal-
lots. The honor of the Law school de-
mands that the expression of a few of
its members who have over-stepped
proper bounds, shall not pass as the
truthful expression of the entire body.
Upon the shoulders of those who did,
the fraudulent voting lies the blot
upon the name of the Law school
which should be immediately wiped
out by a new vote.;
LAW '19.

11

Here are some of the features that will appear in
Sunday's issue of the Daily.

The Auto Section

Tomorrow

"The General Fiend of Designs for the Coming Year"

"The Automobile Laboratory and Research Work
University."

in the

San Francisco, Jan. 19.-It will take
503 years to make a complete survey
of 'the waters of Alaska, California,
Washington and Oregon, according to
estimates made by Supt. E. Lester
Jones of the United States coast and
geodetic survey, The estimates are
based on progress made with the pres-
ent facilities. It will take 333 years
to complete the survey of Alaska wa-
ter and 170 years to chart the waters
of Washington, Oregon and California,
he says.
Bryan Campaign in Indianapolis
Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 19.-William
Jennings Bryan came to Indianapolis
today to help the dry forces in the
campaign to abolish saloons in the
Hoosier state. He will address a
state-wide gathering of dry democrats.
There is opportunity in Michigan
want ads.

"A View of the New York and Detroit Shows."

These are only a few - The rest are just as good.

4

Don't Miss

Reading It

in Daily for service. Try a Michigan Daily Want Ad.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan