THE MIC:H] .Li 1i11 .IL - L.. -- I ANNOUNCING OUR EXHIBIT Spring and Summer Suntings American and Foreign Sources In Artistic and Striking Designs YOUR INSPECTION INVITED G. H. ag Merchant Tailors Wild Company STATE STREET gh Grade TOOLS for WOOD and FORGE SHOPS H. L. SWITZ E R CO. ARE 301 State St. SPORTING GOODS 0 " hoce Selection of Place Cards and Dance Programs ne no 430 SlaterBook Shop 336 5. State St. ANNOUNCEMENT SAM BURCHFIELD & co. Gives you the best Tailoring service to be obtained anywhere in the coun- try', coupled with a wonderful line of Woolens." 106 E. Huron Street Opposite Court House SAM BURCHFIELD & CO. 1 We Offer You :URITY - -SERVICE - -LOCATION Resources $3,800,000 n Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 in Office- orthwest Corner Main and Huron nch Offiee-- 707 North University Ave. Farmers & Meclnics Bank ifers the Best in Modern Banking ECURITY - . - EFFICIENCY lent and Pleasant Quarters. You Will ised WVith Our Service. Two Offices 5 S. Main St. :: 330 S. State St. PLAI N P SEY - 25 C AFTER 2-30c 12-2 Special steaks & chops kinds American Style short orders Vill open 11 a. n. to 1 a. m. -igan Inn 611 E. Liberty Telephone 948-R i typewriter from D. MORRILL 322 South StateStreet II furnish you an instruction ree of charge. You will be a before you know it. 0P off a few minutes andea some of WAISlINa LOO tate St. Phone 1244-M onmy Shoe Shine Parlor shined. Any kind and any time 5e Liberty and Maynard I soon start to clean all kinds of hats at very low prices. DETROIT UNITED LINES etween Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson S run on Eastern time, one hour faster than local time. Detroit Limited and Express Cars-7:3s a. m., 8:1o a. m. and hourly to 7:10 p. m., 9:10 P. mn. Kalamazoo Limited Cars--8:4S a. m and every two hours to 6:48 p. m.: to Lansing, 8:48 p. in. Jackson Express Cars'-(Local stops west of Ann Arbor)--9:48 a. mn. and every two hours to 7:.48 P.-*. Local Cara Eastbound--5 :s a. m., 6:40 a m., 7:05 a. m. and every two hours to 7:05 p. M., :05 p. n., 9:05 p. in., 10:50 p. in. tc Ypsilanti only ,:2o a. .09:5o a. M., 2:05 p t., 6:05 p. mn., It :45 p. in~, 1 1o a. in., 1:2L. a. ,m. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars Westbound-6:o5 a. m., 7:5o a M., 1T:20 p. M.. 12:20 a. M. Takes Pictures Develops Films makes Prints and Enlarge- meets, 713 E. VNIVERSITY oW Alarm Clocks tSCHiAND SEYFRa $1.00 up Fountain Pens- SUERSMOH NNAR Waterman and Conklin U. of M. Jewelry Schlanderer & Seyfried MODERN.BAHRBER SHOP 332 State St. A Par4icular Place for Particular People. FRANK C BOICOH, Prop, KOLLAUF, The Tailor Official newspaper at the University of Mir.gan. Published every morning except Mnday during the university year. Entered at thepost-office at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. +4rices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub. scritions: by carrier t$.0; by mail, $g00 Want ad. stations: Puarry's;tudents' up- ply Store; The Delta, cr State and Packrd Phones: Busiess, 960; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed goo 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 73 o'clock each- evening. John C. B. Parker..........Managing Editor Clarence T. Fisheigh......Bsiness Manager Conrad N. Churn...:..........News Editor Lee E. Joslyn.................City Editor Harold A. Fitzgerald..........ports Editor Harold C. L. Jackson......Telegraph Editor Marian Wilson... ........... Women's Editor Carleton W. Read......Statitial dir J. E. Cam pbell...Assistant Business Manager . Philip Emery..Assistant Business Manager Albert E. ornoe..Assistant Business Manager Roscoe R. Ran... Assistant Business Manager Fred M. Sutter. . ssistant Business Manager Night Editors J. L. Stadeker E. L. Zeigler C. M. tickling IL M. Carey B. A. waney L. W. Nieter L. S. Thompson iarsn Reporters I. C. arrisoJames Schererhorn C. S. Clark D. S. Rood R. H. Fricken G. O. Brophy B. J. Millar F. A. Taber D. H. Cruttenden Mildred C. Mighell K. L. Whmeyer J. P. Hart Annetta L. Wood J. C. Martin T. F. McAllister Allan Shoenfield (C. C. Andrews R. V. -McDonald C. L. Goldstein Business Staff Paul E. CholettesHarry R. Louis Harold Makinson Earl F. Ganschow Walter R. Payne Jackson W. Smart Harold R. Smith Seymour B. Wilson Bernard Woh SUNDAY, MARCH 4, 1917. Night Editor-Denman Cruttenden TAU BETA PI ELECTIONS Elections to Tau Beta Pi are re- freshing. Although an honor society with a high standard of scholarship as a requisite, its qualifications do not stop with marks. Students above a certain grade of scolarship are se- lected upon a basis of what they have done, and what they may be expected to do for their University and their profession. Such a basis of selection has its limitations in that at times personalities and prejudices may in- fluence unfairly. While subject to the frailties of human likes and dislikes, we believe this method of selection re- sults in a membership of greater value and importance than a method based arbitrarily on mathematical averages. We think that University life would be benefited by more organizations like Tau Beta Pi. POST SEASON MASS MEETINGS With the ending of the football sea- son, comes the death-knell of mass meetings. From the heights of en- thusiasm, we drop to the comparative- ly commonplace level of other activ- ities. Yet, is football the only common center of University interest? Cannot we gather to cheer and sing except during the gridiron season? Is the mass meeting the exclusive property of autumn? A mass meeting is held to arouse the enthusiasm of the student body. Why let our collective spirit lie dor- mant until football time comes again? After a student has gotten a few lessons in the Library while a group of co-eds whisper the latest gossip near him, he doesn't think Morrie Dunne was so radical after all. d Some people were born wealthy, some had wealth thrust upon them, while some planted potatoes. Did you ever notice how the big man in the quartet sang tenor an( how the little five-footer resembles a steamboat whistle?J A rhetoric professor says "got" is a BUM word. Oh! We wonder, too, why that fel- low who never cracks a book never goes to bed until the rest of the house has been sleeping for a long time. ENGLISH EDITOR WILL TALK ON IJRITISH EXPIRE )ION)DAY Mr. S. K. Ratcliffe, editor of the Manchester (England), Guardian, and one of the foremost journalists in Europe, will deliver a lecture about the British empire, on the subject "Commonwealth or Dominion?" at 4:15 o'clock Monday afternoon in room 101, economics building. The address is given as one of the series of University lectures and no admis- sion will be charged. CLUB RECEIVES NEW MEMBERS Latin-Americans Discuss Constitution for Organization Twelve new members were received into the Latin-American club Friday night at the second meeting of the year. A discussion on the adoption of a constitution took up the greater part of the meeting. The club was organ- ized in 1912 to bring the students of the various South American countries in the University together and to cre- ate friendship among them. Discus- sions were brought up on important problems of the day relating to the South American countries. The club's view was to keep its members inter- ested in their home affairs and at the same time to prepare them to under- stand and meet the problems with which their countries might be con- tending. Regular monthly meetings have been kept up since the club was or- ganized. At the first meeting in De- cember last year the following of- ficers were elected: President, Jose M. Hermandez; vice-president, Ernesto Guzman; treas- urer, Julio del Toro; secretary, G. A. Covarrubias; councilman, J. Picon. If You Seek For unvarying quality in Men's Wear you will find satisfaction at THE Varsity ToggeryI SHOP 1107 S. University St. Get your shoes fixed at Paul's Place, 611 E. William St. -tf Shirts made to measure. G. H. Wild Co., Leading Merchant Tailors. State St. tf Make reservations for Sunday night luncheons, Delta Cafe. Phone 817-M. 10:30 A. M. Mr. Douglas will preach on "The Architects" Take your Am-ateur Finishing U ES 1 TO UNITARIAN CHURCH State and Huron Streets 10:30-The Jesus of the First Three Gospels, being first address by Mr. Loring on What About Jesus? Violin 'Cello solo by Mr. Lee Parker. 11:45-Social Service Class. Mr. H. G. urnham speaks on The Cold- Storage Warehouse and the Cost of Living. 6 : 0--The First Unitarian. Address by Prof. Leroy Waterman before the Studerts' Society. N Banjorine orchestra, Delta Cafe, Sunday evening luncheon, 50c. Bt e _ _ _ _ _ _ Will find the proper equipment- DNIVE., SITY BOOKSTORES That Cough will cease its Nagging Way when you allow PINE BALSOM MENTHOL -- and - EUCALYPTUS a closer intimacy JUARRY DRUG CD'S, Prescription Store Cor. S*ate & N. University An Entertainment made up t ti . of seven acts of excellent vaudeville. The Rag Time Orchestrat is a new record~ ' breaker. If this does not amuse you, we have no C'lothes designied and made oil prendises-fit guiaraniteed idea what will. Cor. Main and Ann Sts. Ann Arbor City News ncement has been made that rague-Blackmer Engineering y, a $350,000 corporation, will 'ate in Ann Arbor in the near L. F. Sprague of Detroit, is in conducting a demonstration lackmer positive rotary pump. ecount of Pittsfield township d at the instance of attorneys ressman Samuel W. Beakes of , showed no new development PEACE LECTURER ADDRESSES WESLEYAN GUILD TONIGHT Mrs. Lucia True Mead of Boston, who will address the Wesleyan Guild at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the First Methodist Episcopal church, has at- tended a number of peace congresses in Europe, and is fitted to talk on "The World Crisis and American's Duty." She will analyze the most pro- bable universal peace program and America's share in it, especially at the close of the present world conflict. Special -music will be rendered un- der the supervision of Miss Ada Grace Johnson of the University School of Music. Friday, varch 9 Make reservations for Sunday night luncheons, Delta Cafe. Phone 817-M.