11VHlV Ll-11L 1 G. H. Wild Co. Leading Merchant Tailors State St. r ', 111I1111111111111.t1t l i~ltll llllll1111!!1!ll ll l t111tlI ll llltillilliltill lil TTENTION STUDENTS- We are now in a better position to.serve your wants than before. We can save you money. SEEING IS BELIEVING Allmendinger Music Shop ie 1692 122 B. Liberty St. SPECIAL ON UKULELES - tIll ll11l llillllillllltllililtlllllllll ll llll11tIlll il 1111 |1111lllillllllllll Official newspaper at the University of Michigan. Published 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, $2.50; by mail, $3.00. Want ad. stations: Quarry's; Students' Sup- ply Store; The Delta, cor. State and Packard. Phones: Business, 960; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed Soo words in length, or notices of events will be pub- lished in The Daily 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 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 Emery..Assistant Business Manager Roscoe R. Rau....Assistant Business Manager Fred M. Sutter... Assistant Business Manager Night Editors L. S. Thompson Henley Hill Reporters, B. A. Swaney C. W. Neumann W. R. Atlas C. C. Andrews E. L. Zeigler I. C. Garrison C. M. Jickling E. A. Baumgarth Business Staff Bernard Wohl J. E. Robiison Paul E. Cholette Harry R. Louis E. Reed Hunt. Harold J. Lance Earl F. Ganschow Walter R. Payne TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1916. Night Editor-B. A. Swaney There will be a meeting of all the members of the news staff, sport staff, and try-outs at 12:40 o'clock today in the reportorial rooms. DR. RICE Is HERE Did you hear him last evening? Go tonight 7:15, M. E. Church Auditor- ium. STUDENT NEEDS ARE MANY slat they can e,.11 h r_ r - ~* -WA-HR~S- VNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES mominunumuinunnnunnnunnuniin auunuh r UNIVERSITY New ad TEXT BOOKS __--__-_ DRAWING INSTRMENTS SVPPLIES OF ALL KINDS * Slater Book Shop ....-: DETROIT UNITED LINES' ween Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson s run on Eastern time, one hour faster ocal time. owit Limited and Express Cars-8 :o a. ,d hourly to 7:10 p. in., 9:10 p. mn. amazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m. and two hours to 6:48 p. in.; to Lansing, . m. kson Express Cars-( Local stops west of Arbor)- :48 a. in. and every two hours 8 p. mn. al Cars Eastbound-5:35 a. m, 6:40 a. o5-a. m. and every two hours to 7:05 p. :05 p. m., 9:05 p. m., 10:50 p. m. to anti only, 9:20 a. m., 9:5o a. M., 2:05 p. :o5 p. n., ii1:45 P. im., 1 :1o a. mn., 1:20 To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. al Cars Westbound-6:o5 a. m., 7:50 a. :2o p. m.. 12:20 a. m. Farmers & Mechanics Bank offers the Best in Modern Banking SECURITY. . . EFFICIENICY nent and Pleasant Quarters. You Will eased With Our Service. Two offices 05 S. Main St. : : 330 S. State St. [PRI TERS of all makes ie or Rent, Cleaning & pairingTYPEWRITING & D OGRAPHING. SUPPLIES 0. ID, Mo rr 11 We Offer You SECURITY - - SERVICE - -LOCATION Resources $3,8oo, ooo Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Main Office-- Northwest Corner Main and Huron Branch Office- - 707 North University Ave. Phone 2402 Open evenings by appointment BEAUTY SHOP MISS MABLE ROWE Shampooing, Manicuring, Massage, & Chiropody Switches, Curls. Cosmetics, Ornaments First National bank Bldg. Room 503 Ann Arbor, Mich. FIRST NATL. BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH. Capital $rooooo Surplus and Profit $65,ooo 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 After the Show stop at SUGAR BOWL 109 S. Main St. We make our own Candies and Ice Cream in our Sanitary Shop .. s State 582-J iEORGE BISCHOFF FL OR 1ST ice Cut Flowevs and Plants Chapin St. Ann Arbor,'Mich. PHONE 809 M STOP AT U TTLE'S 338 S. STATE or sodas and lunches to make appointments for heart and lung examinations. o' en All houses of five or more women must send the names of their repre- sentatives to the board of representa- ere will be an important rehears- tives of the Womens' League, to Dean the old members of the Girls' Jordan by Wednesday, October 11. club this afternoon, at 5:00 Women desiring to try out for the k in Sarah Caswell Angell hall! Gargoyle may see the editor any aft- ernoon from 2:30 to 4:00 o'clock. an Jordan will speak at the ves- ft IAll notices for the 'Womens eolumn r services at Newberry hall this ternoon at 5:00 o'clock. Hereafter sper services will be held on Thurs- ,y afternoons instead of Wednesdays, last year. All schedules for required gymnas-. m work will be posted on the bulletin ard in Barbour Gymnasium, Wed- sday, October 11, All students, eshmen, sophomores, and upper class omen who are taking required gym- ,sium work, will begin work, on ednesday or Thursday, according to ledule. Sophomores will begin on{ hursday, Freshmen on Friday. All, asses will hold their first meetings the gymnasium. Locker tickets should be purchased the treasurer's office, and should be changed for lockers during the orning hours this week, at the gym-] sium. Gymnasium clothes may be purchas- afternoons this week at the gym- sium. All Freshmen must have had their ysical examinations by today. All upper class girls who are tak- g any kind of gymnasium work this ar must see Miss Evans this week, Does your musical instrument need pairs? Take it to Schaeberle & Son, 0 South Main street, for first-class ork. oct3tf You could hang yourself with a avs cravat-but it would be fool- h. Davis at 119 Main. oct5,7,10,14. O. G. Andres for shoe repairing. 222 State. 'Phone 1718-1. tues-eod of The Daily should be put in the boxy in the reading room in the Library, before 1:00 o'clock of the day pre- ceeding their appearance. The wo- men's editor is at The Daily office every day from 1:00 to 2:00 o'clock, and will receive any notices which may have been delayed. Women interested in working on The Daily should see the women's editor Wednesday afternoon, from 1:30 to 2:30 o'clock. DEAN EFFINGER TO GIVE TALK TODAY AT KALAMAZOO COLLEGE Dean John R. Effinger of the Lit- erary college left yesterday for Kala- mazoo where he will give the Angell memorial address in connection with the Angell memorial exercises to be held today at Kalamazoo college. Following his address, Dean Effinger will leave for Menominee where on Thursday he will take part in the program of the meeting of the Upper Peninsula Educational association. The program will be in the form of a symposium in which six speakers will. take part. Each will speak on the subject, "The Function of Schools in Preparedness for Peace." While Dean Effinger is in Kalama- zoo he will visit the schools. He is a member of the examining commit- tee of Kalamazoo college. "THE KEMPF MUSIC STUDIOS" Piano, voice, pipe organ. 312 South Division street. 'Phone 212-J. Leave orders for fine piano tuning. GETTING THE HABIT. Now that the hurry and bustle of college opening is over it is time to stop and take stock of things. Is the daily life we are leading as university students a Jumbled mass of work and pleasure, or is it a well ordered pro- gram of study and recreation? Many of us spend too much time indoors; studying, or reading, or watching mov- ing pictures. Many others go to the other extreme, spending nearly all of their time out-of-doors, and neglecting their studies. This is the time of year to get a system. Plan your day, as to the ap- proximate number of hours you will study, exercise and sleep. The an- nual fall tennis tournament is sched- uled to start this afternoon. If you are interested in the court game, sign up in the match. Then there are the golf links, the class gridirons, and it never is very hard to get up a scrub game of baseball. If for some reason you do not engage in any sport, there are the boulevards. At no time of the year is the Huron valleymore beauti- ful. The autumn foliage with its rich shades of brown, and red, and yellow, transform it into a succession of mag- nificent pictures. Plan to spend a certain part of your day in one or another of these recrea- tions; and you will find it much easier to concentrate in study for tomor- row's quiz. MICHIGAN'S UPPER ROOM What is the Upper Room? A senior asked this question yester- day of four other seniors, and only one could answer correctly. It might be inferred thus that a large portion of the campus is ignorant about the Up- per Room; which will have a new $40,- 000 home on State street to be started next spring. The Michigan Daily likes to expose good things in preference to bad things. Investigation shows that the Upper Room organization has been working along quietly, powerfully, and with worthy results. The highest praise perhaps, which might be offer- ed, consists in showing the facts of the case. The Upper Room bible class consist- ed last year of 312 members, and this year it is sure of a membership of 400. The Upper Room is the main part of the Bible Chair, an organiza- tion which includes four other similar classes making a total of 500 to 600. members. Other universities which have bible chairs, consist of Virginia, Kansas, Missouri, and Texas. Twenty-five years ago in Bulter College, at Indianapolis, Prof. Thomas M. Iden, organized the Upper Room class. He continued the' name for a similar class when he was made pro- fessor of chemistry, and dean, at the Kansas Teachers' College, at Emporia, Kansas. Three years ago, Professor Iden came to Michigan and brought some of his Kansas pupils with him. Around a small nucleus, he has built up an important factor in Michigan life. He conducts his discussion groups on a practical basis, and only questions of live interest to the stu- dents are taken. Co-operation is ef- *=NI fected with the University Y. M. C. A. The aim is to teach the fundamental questions of life, and to help students learn character along with culture. Perhaps the best proof of the Upper Room's strength is the fact that former members of the Upper Room class have just completed a fund of nearly $40,- 000, so that even better opportunities might be provided for men of Mich- igan in the coming years. SNAKE DANCE STUDENTS TO HONOR__OLD LORY C. X. Oldrin Plans Big Celebration When Company I Comes Home "There is going to be some time in this town all right, when the boys of Company I get back!" Among all the citizens of Ann Ar- bor who thus express their resolution to fete the iocal members of the Mich- igan National Guard on their return from Mexico, none is more emphatic and sincere in his statements than Mr. Charles M. Oldrin, of Schaeberle & Son company. And it is due to the boundless interest of Mr. Oldrin in the boys, that Old Glory flies in the breeze right in the center of the city fn honor of Company I. Late last June, something over a hundred men, 21 of whom were Michi- gan students, entrained for Grayling preparatory to leaving for the border. Their departure was a very quiet af- fair, not even a band being there to cheer them up. In Detroit the streets were black with people, all cheering, and fighting to get a last handclasp. The contrast nettled Mr. Oldrin and during the next two months he began a campaign among the local business men and residents to raise enough money for a flag in honor of the boys. And then, late in August, all of the townspeople who could, crowd into Hilliauditorium were thrilled when the big flag, 50 by 30 feet, fluttered out its huge length above their heads like a gigantic but beautiful butterfly. This was the culmination of impressive ceremonies within the auditorium. Afterwards the citizens followed the veterans of the Civil and Spanish- American wars as they escorted the flag down town. And with bugle calls resounding in the summer air, the flag was raised to its present position above Main street, suspended on a seven-strand steel cable from the top of the First National Bank building to the tower of the courthouse. Every day, if the weather permits, the flag is swung out over the street at 11:00 o'clock in the morning. At 5:30 o'clock in the afternoon it is taken down and the "storm flag" put out in its place. And throughout the night a floodlight from the roof of the Ann Arbor Savings Bank building bathes the flag in a luminous glow. Yesterday the weather was somewhat inclement, and therefor the storm flag, which is just half the size of the larger banner, was flown. It is quite a problem to keep the flag straight in windy weather and Mr. Oldrin has found it necessary more than once to ride out on the cable in a sort of life-saver's car and untangle the folds of the flag. Mr. Oldrin regrets that the flag must be taken down without the proper bugle calls each night and hoped to secure the services of the Varsity band on Sundays to honor the flag. This has been found impossible. But Mr. Oldrin has made another sugges- tion which quite admits of accomplish- ment. When the band leads the stu- dents around the town in a good old snake dance after the Varsity beats M. A. C., Syracuse and Pennsylvania, he would have it strike up the "Star Sangled Banner" when passing under the flag and the students doff their hats to Old Glory. CALL AT The Fountain of Youth WHEN YOU WANT Candies -- LightLunches -- Refreshments The New State Street Ice Cream Parlor CORNLR LIVERTY REMEMBBR THAT "Flanders is to flowers what Sterling is to Silver" When ever an occasion arises where you want the freshest blossoms grown, just call 294 and your order will be taken care of in the best possible manner. Corsages are our speciality. Our ideas are always the newest. We are also members of the Florists Telegraph Delivery Service. Flowers sent to all the world by wire. FLANDERS LOWERS 213 E. LIBERTY ST. PHONE 294 0 2:d b 1l.. QMART for a go give me a; slowly an'.j VELVET gets i ness that way-t natural ageing. IJ POF PILLSBURY URGES Psychology Head Discusses Degen- erates Before University of Iowa Students That the increasing number of criminals can only be curtailed by a series of tests, made possible by the use of psychology, was the statement of Prof. W. D. Pillsbury, of the psy- chology department in an recent ad- dress before the students of the Uni- versity of Iowa. "There will be an increasing number of criminals until those who are men- tally efficient are made economically of. value. This can be accomplished only by a series of tests which are something new in the field of psycho- logy. You should understand man as you do a machine; his mental machine as well as his material machine. The problem of the psychologist of today in his tests of the mentally deficient that he may discover who is not cap- able of life in society, is, what in- dividual persons will do under certain. conditions." Professor Pillsbury then went on to discuss the morons, who through their mental defectiveness, are a menace to society. Provisions of a suitable place where these may be sent, to prepare them to go back into society, or a means of isolating them from society, was also discussed by Dr. Pillsbury. MIRIAM GERLACH APPOINTED ASSISTANT TO DEAN OF WOMEN Miss Miriam Gerlach, of the Uni- versity of Illinois, has been appointed by the Board of Regents to act as as- sistant to the dean of women, as well as secretary. Miss Gerlach took her degree in 1911, since which time she has been teaching English in the man- ual training high school in Indian- apolis. She is to be found in her of- fice in Barbour gymnasium every day from 9:00 to 12:00 o'clock in the morn- ing, and from 2:00 to 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon. 3' Takes Pictures Develops Films makes Prints and Enlarge- 713 E. Uments no To learn tyewriting well requires alose applioatiom A t §wrjter andfe instruction boo from O.D.Morrill. 322 S State1 will do the rest. ASKS THATCROWD STAND klecs may be all right but 0 od, honest workin' partner man that's got his learnim' 0 naturally. its good-. woyears _ _ _ wrrrrwwrwur t WRITER SEATS DAY'S SUGGESTS THAT NO BE PROVIDED AT SUN- ANN ARBOR SERMON. Editor The Michigan Daily: Billy Sunday is to speak in Ann Arbor on October 23. 1 think it is rea- sonable to conclude that Weinberg's colliseum will not seat one-third of the people who will want to hear Sun- day's famous talk on "Booze." Why not make the most of this opportunity to allow as many people as possible to hear this famous preacher? If seats are installed the place will not seat more than one-half as many as it will be possible to accommodate if people stand. Usually two can stand in the same space that is required for one. Surely if Mr. Sunday can stand and preach for an hour his hearers can stand and listen for that length of time, and by so doing twice as many will have a chance to hear him. I make this suggestion to the commit- tee on arrangements for the benefit of those who greatly desire to hear Sun- day but who will not be able to do so if seats are installed. Respectfully, GEORGE HORTON. 'Phone 600 for signs and show cards. oct3 to 29 Buy a Davis shirt, $1 to $4, and a tie with the money saved. Davis at 119 Main. oct5,7,10,14