1AI L. AVl.-....A V LHtIL I Apri 8th Prepare Now your selection from our vast assortment of distinctive weaves and colorful blends. G. H. Merchant Tailors Wild Company STATE STREET Rackets Restrmng THR.EE from $1.75 to $3.75 DAYS TIME. ALL WORK GUARANTEED lie Slator Book Shop e 430 336 S. State St. m Grade TOOLS for WOOD and FORGE SHOPS H L. SWITZ E R C O. ARE 301 State St. SPORTING GOODS 0 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 Hotse SAM BURCHFIELD & CO. I We Offer You RITY - SERVICE' - LOCATION Resources $3,800,000 I Arbor Savings Bank. Incorporated 1869j Office- thwest Corner Main and Huron :h Offiee-- 707 North University Ave.' irmiers & Mechanics Bank mans the Best in Modern Banking CJRITY - - EFFICIENCY tt and Pleasant Quarters. You Will d With Our Service. Two Offices S. Main St. : 330 S. State St. P LAI N P SUEY 25c AFTER 2-34c Rice (plain) At all times 25c >lony tea, good for home use10c pks Will open 11 a. m. to 1 a. m. ichigan Inn 611 E. Iiberty Telephone 948-R et a typewriter from 0. D. MORRILL 322 South State Street o will furnish you an instruction ok free oflcharge. You will be a gist before you know it. iHOP off a few minutes and eat some of 3EORGE'S SJE Y WAN KING LOO I S. State St. Phone 1244-M 'Wlomen f. W. C. A. cabinet meets at 4:15 lock this afternoon in Newberry 11. Executive board of the Independent ils' club meets at 7 o'clock this ming in the league room in Uni- sity hall. Prof. William A. Frayer will be the aker at vespers at 5 o'clock tomor- v afternoon in Newberry hall. Mu- will b efurnished by Edna Toland I Mildred^ Sutton of the School of sic. Girls are requested to be in ir seats on time so that services y begin promptly. 1xtra practice periods in apparatus rk will be given at 4 o'clock today 1 5 o'clock tomorrow. 1egular Glee club rehearsal will be DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Dotroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson Cars run on .Eastern time, one hour faster than local time. Detroit Limited and Express Cars-7:35 a. in., 8:ro a. in. and hourly to 7:10 p. M., 9:10 p. Mn. Kalamazoo Limited Cars--8:48 a. a. and every-two hours to 6:48 p. m.: to Lansing, 8:48 p. in. Jackson Express Cars-(Local stops west of Ann Ar~ior)-9:48 a. m. and every two hours to 7:48 p. m. Local Cars Eastbound-5:35 a. m, 6:4o a m., 7:o a. m. and every two hours to 7:o5 p. tn., 8:05 p. m., 9:05 p. m., 10:50 p. m. to Ypsilanti only, 9:20 a. n., 9:50 a. i., 2:op Wq. 16:05 p. in., 11 :45.p. im., Iue a. in., 1:2l a. m. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars Westbound-6.o5 a. m., 1:5a a. M., 10:2o p. M.. 12:20 a. M. Takes Pictures Develops Films makes Prints and Enlarge- 713 E. UN IERSITY o"M* s - LES TC S Alarm Clocks. SCLADER 0 113SEYFRI4 $1.00 Up NRRR SLVR ..nn - Fountain Pens- Waterman and Conklin U. of M. Jewelry Schlanderer & Seyfried MODERN BARBER SHOP 332 State St. A Particular Place for Particular People. FRANK G. BOUICH, Prop, -~ h. held next week at 5 o'clock on Thurs- day afternoon instead of Tuesday aft- ernoon. Extension Lectures Jrof. J. J. Cox will lecture on "The Economics of Road Construction" in Seneca, Mich., tomorrow night. Prof. Fred N. Scott will leave for St. Louis, Mo., tomorrow night to at- tend a meeting of the North Central association. Test Motor For Fuel Consumption One of the mechanical squads made a test yesterday afternoon in the au- tomobile laboratory on a four cylind- er 1916 Maxwell motor for fuel con- sumpti-n and thermal efficiency. In order to obtain accurate results, read- ings of the weight of gasoline used and the amount of heat given off at various parts of the machine were taken every six minutes. "Poor Butterfly" and "You and I",1 the exceptional fox-trots are among1 the April records at the Allmendinger Music Shop, 122 E. Liberty St.-Adv. (Atry g t tly Official newspaper at the University of MK igan. Published every morning except Monday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. .)Mces: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: by carrier $25.; by mail, $.00.. Want ad. stations: Ouarry's; tudents' Sup- ply Store; The Delta, cor. Stat, and Packard. Phones: Business, 96; Editoria, 2414. Communications not to exceed 30 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. Jo slyn ..................City Editor Harold A. Fitzgerald.........Sports Editor Harold C. L. Jackson......Telegraph Editor Marian Wilson... ..........Women's Editor Leonard W. Nieter....Ass't Telegraph Editor D)eForrest S. Rood..........Exchange Editor J. E. Campbell...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 C. M. Jickling g. M. Carey B. A. Swaney J. L. Stadeker L. S. Thompson E. L. Zeigler H. C. Garrison C. S.Clark Reporters C. S Carke James Schermerhorn, Jr. R. H. Fricken G. . Brophy~ D. H. Cruttenden Mildred C. Mighell K. L. Wehmeyer J. P. Hart Aninetta L. Wood F. A. Taber T. F.tMcAllister Allan Shoenfield C. C. Andrews R. T. McDonald C. L. Goldstein Business Staff Paul E. Cholette nHarry R. Louis Harold Makinson Earl F. Ganschow Walter R. Payne Jackson W. Snart Harold R. Smith dSeymour B. Wilson Bernard Woh WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1917. Night Editor-G. O. Brophy AN OPPORTUNITY TO HELP BELGIUM To Ann Arbor belongs the credit of originating the Dollar-a-Month Bel- gium relief fund. Upon the University and the city rests the basis of support for this fund. Fifteen hundred dollars has already been contributed by the townspeople. The University has yet an opportunity to pledge its support of this movement. The appeal which the workers and organizers of this movement are mak- ing is that it is not an obligation, but an opportunity. In the first place it is an opportunity to help countless destjtute children grow into useful members of society, instead of endang- erinj the life and strength of the next generation through their present un- der-feed, emaciated condition. In the second place, it affords a chance to show that our country through the action of our community, is capable of generosity to those less fortunate than itself. The United States has not yet contributed her full share of assistance to Belgium. The Dollar-a-Month fund is one way in which we may do so. THE NEWSPAPER AND COLLEGE MEN After watching several scores of college men of almost every student type known at Illinois "go through" metropolitan dailies, we are convinced that the average college man does not really read a newspaper. Here is the usual line of attack: a cursory-very cursory-glance at the front page headlines as the sheets are eagerly fingered in search of the sports page; a rather critical reading of the news in the world of sport; followed by a few chuckles found in the paper's humerous column, whatever it hap- pens to be. This done, our average college man gives a second hasty glance to the screamer and the scare headlines on the front page, and, hav- ing satisfied himself that Ty Cobb is stillsplaying baseball, that B. L. T. is still funny, and that the United States is not yet at war with Germany, casts it aside for the day. The edit- orials seldom receive any attention. But, the paper has been read. Our college man has gotten from his hasty glances at headlines, but a faint rumble of the Internationl storm which threatens even our land. And the first duty of a citizen is to know and be concerned in his country and, that which goes on about it. Amer- ica is no longer an isolated land. We have reached a period of world inter- dependence: the affairs of France, Germany, England, South America and Budapest are our affairs, and our af- fairs theirs. To truly understand other men, to understand commerce, in short, in order to understand any of the present day movements, the ac- tivities of man, we must see, we must appreciate to a limited 'extent at least, the influences, the events that are making the history of the world today. Our vision must be a world vision, and it is only through a thorough reading from day to day of the newspaper that we can get this world vision. It has been said that-the test of an kt lli ii lialilllllllliiili@tlltiil &81 1 l lllill i lli i 11111111l1 illii111!llIIIS i Knights of the Racquet-AttentionL 53 - .We have just received a shipment of more than - 0. ...- o o 100 Tnis Rockes 0 0 . of the leading makes, including the SSLOTTED THKOAT KACKET Come in and look them over Three interesting and instructive) a Bible study groups 7 to N EVERY_ WT E D N E S D ' = i itg'6111 i 411111 n11Dlllll llie a :r;Li "4i dbfiisi d11P1 1'i s education is the appreciation of an alien interest. It is the obligation of the college men to society to lead in just this appreciation. Yet, can the average student pass the test? If it has been your habit to give five minutes daily to newspaper read- ing, adopt a new schedule and allow an hour-and, if you don't know it, already, you'll find the most import- ant news on the front page. That's why its there. Don't overlook the editorials. Try reading your newspa, per instead of just "going through it."-The Daily Illini. Teddy R. sarcastically advises, "Don't buyRyour guns until you see the whites of their eyes." What if the regiment is green and they close them? "There is no royal road to learn- ing." -Thus remarked a certain stu- dent when told that the book he want- ed was on the third floor of the Li- brary. Adonis is the name of one of the stu- dents in the coming basketball inter- scholastic. Now we know why some of the fair students of Fine Arts are planning to attend the games. Try a Michigan Daily Want-Ad. D ~I 1t, Si' Our Repairing Is Neatly Done Sanitary Cleaning and Pressing Co. Phone 2225 Successors to F. L. Hall 514 E. WILLIAM ST. Freshman girl of good appearance for educational work, $80 per month guaranteed for summer. Address Free Employment Bureau, 600 E. Liberty in own hand writing. tf Rubber Bathing Caps 40c & 59 at IJUARRY DRUG CO'S. Preseription Store Cor. s6ate & N. University 1m Get your shoes fixed at Paul's Place, There is opportunity in The Michi- 11 E. William St. 5tf gan Daily Ads. Read them. Easter Apr. 8 I k TO Take your Amateur Finishing i I REGISTERE 0U S.U $PAL OFF. 19 i0 @ ED. V_ RICE & CO. Jf you'll call 309 So. Main St. and leave your measure today with F. W. GROSS 814 So. State St. I our local dealer, you'll enjoy being "seen as others see you.' MERCHJANT TAILORS PRICE BLDG. CHICAGO, s t E t C .. U.S. A II I _ ...._... ,., n_... , .__ , .. _,.a x_ , -. ,. _ . _ ----- Iad