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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.

May 01, 1917 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1917-05-01

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


The Largest Assortment
ne woolens in the city is here for your inspection. We think you'll
e that never have you seen classier fabrics. Tailored in our in=
able style in a suit to your measure, they will make you as smartly
sed as any man in town.
G. H. Wild Company
ding Merchant Tailosr STATE STREET
Lee's Slotted Throat
TENNIS RACKETS

Official newspaper at the University of
Mir:gan. Pubished every morning except
Mjnday during the university year.
Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as
second-class matter.
Offies: An Arbor Press Building. Sub-
scriptions: by carrier $.5o; by mail, $3.o.
Want ad. stations: : uarry's; Students' Sup-
ily Store; The Delta, cor. State and Packard.
bones: Business, o6o; Editorial, 2414.

DON'T

I

BORROW
MONEY
to finish
the term

IN GOD'S OUT OF DOOR.
ca t Yoar Reareatoon O ft o
TEONIVEISBASEBALL1G OLF
=~Oxar stock is complete anid
- a
- a,
UNIVEDRSITY BOOKSTORES

lie Slater Book /Shop
e430 336 S. State St.

STOP AT
U TTLES
338 S. STATE
>r sodas and lunches
EORGE BISCHOFF/
q LORIST
ce Cut Flowers and Plants
hapin St. Ann Arbor, Mich-
PHIONE~ 809 M

Special Sale of Cosmetics and Switches
Special Ten Day Weave
BEAUTY SHOP
Miss Mabel Rowe
Shampooing, Manicuring, Massaging and Chiropody
Phone 2402 503 First National Bank Bldg
FIRST NATL. BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH.
Capital $soo,ooo Surplus and Profit $65,000
DIRECTORS

Wirt..Cornwell
Geo. W. Patterso
S.. W. Clarkon
Fred Schmid

Waldo M.Abbott
on Harry M. Hawley
Harrison Soule
D. B. Sutton
&, D. Kinnie

After Your Class

)R ANY TIME. DROP INTO THE
ountainof Youth
And enjoy one of our Horlick's Originals
ortry one of our Delicious Sundaes

We Offer You
IRITY - - SERVICE- -LOCATION
Resources $3,8oo,ooo

arbor Savings Bank
Incorporated 1869,

rthwest Corner Main and Huron
ch Office-
707 North University Ave.
ariers & Mechanics Bank
'ers the Best in Modern Banking
CURITY - -EFFICIENCY
ent and Pleasant Quarters. You Will
ad With Our Service.. Two Offices
S. Main St. : 330 S. State St.
typewriter from
D. MORRILL
822 South $tat. Street
I furnish you "an instruction
-s of charge. You will be.a
3efore you know it.
live, progressive, up-to-date ad-
g use The Michigan Daily.

DE'TROIT UNITED LINES
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor. and Jackson
Cars run on lEastern time, one hour faster
than local time.
Detroit Limnea ana lixpress scars-7:35 a.
n., 8:io a. m. and hourly to 7:10 p. m., 9:10
Kalamazoo Limited Cars-S:48 a. m and
every two hours to 6:48 p. m.; to Lansing,
8:4 a1:
Jackson Express Cars-(Local stops west of
Ana Arbor)-9:48 a. m. and every two hours
to 7148 V. m.
Local Cars Eastbound-5:35 a. m., 6:40 a
i., 7*5 a. m. and every two hours to 7: o5p
Mn., I ms P. iM., 9:05 p. in., 10:50 P. in. tc
Ypsilanti only, 9:20 a. m.,.9:5o a. m., 2:05 p
rm., 6:oj P.'Im., 11:45 P. in., 1:10 a.in., 1:2t
a. m. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars Westbound-6:o a. m., 750 a
in., 1o:va p. m.. 12:2# a. m.
Swi
Twenty-two remarkable photo-
graphs of the Greek Play. Come
in and see them.
713 E. VNIVERS1TY
C]op off a few
minutes and eat some of
0ISO RIIC~SS
WAN KING LOO
314 S. state St. Phone 1244-M
There is opportunity in The Michi-
gan Daily Ads Read them.

Communications not to exceed 3o wards
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 A. Fitzgerald..........Sports Editor
Harold C. L, Jackson..... Telegraph Editor
Marian Wils'on... ..........Women's Editor
[.eonard W. Nieter.... Ass't Telegraph Editor
I)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
Night Editors
C. M. Tickling Et . M. Carey
B. A. Swaney J. L. Stadeker
L. S. Thompson E._L. Zeigler
Reporters
C. S. Clark James Scherm 'rh n, Jr.
t.H. Fricken G. . Broph
. H. Cruttenden Mildred C. Mighell
Annetta 1,. Wood F. A. Taber
T. F. McAllister Allan Soenfied
C. C. Andrews R. T. MlcDonald
K. L Wchinyer Eugene Given
p. W. Gordon Ielmuth Maag
1. L. Rice
C. L. Goldstein
Business Staff
Paul E. Cholette Harry R. Louis
Harold Makinson Earl F. Ganschow
THrold R. Smth Seymour 1. Wilson
Water R. Payne Bernard WohI
TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1917.
Night Editor-J. L. Stadeker
HOLDING TO NORMAL ORDER
It has been suggested that the senior
Swing Out exercises be dispensed with
this spring on account of the war. This
raises the question as to whether we
ought to allow the regular program
of University events to be ripped to
pieces on the general plea of war
preparations.
Wherever a regularly scheduled
event interferes with military work
we believe that it should be cancelled.
An indescriminate slashing off the cal-
endar of traditional ceremonies or
events, however, would surely' harm
rather than help the University's pre-
paredness program. The war has
caused disorganization in the univer-
sities on a large scale. Hundreds of
men have resigned from college, and
from those who remain there is the
constant cry, "I simply can't get down
to study." This set of conditions is
demoralizing to all university affairs,
and affects the military work just as
much as other courses.
Needless cancellation of regular
events, such as the abolishing of Swing
Out this year, will only add to the
disorganization by emphasizing the
abnormal state of affairs. By such
action the purpose at which it aims,
that of increasing the military ef-
ficiency of the University, will be de-
feated.
WELCOME TO THE MAIZE AND
The Illini congratulates the Regents
of the University of Michigan on their
action taken yesterday in voting to have
the Wolverines return to the Western
Intercollegiate conference. The I lini
congratulates those alumni and under-
graduates of the University of Michi-
gan who have worked so faithfully
and with such success to bring about
this result.
We have great respect for the ath-
letic teams which have been developed
at Ann Arbor, and we feel that with
their competition added to the al-
ready keen competition wthin the
"ig Nine, western athletics will come
nearer to assuming the place they
deserve in the intercollegiate w orld
Michigan will add prestige to th con-
ference, and the proverbial suprem-

acy of the East will tend to become a
thing of the past.
We welcome the return of Michigan,
and regard the action taken yesterday
as one of the most significant events
in the history of athletics in the Mid-
dle West. We look forward to the day
when wars shall be no more, when
athletic schedules will go on unin-
terrupted, when the Orange and the
Blue will clash with the Maize and
Blue, and when the Big Nine. shall
become the Big Ten. We believe that
Michigan will never regret her return
to the fold, and we hope that every
school in the conference will give her
the hearty welcome she deserves. The
future looks bright for athletics in
the West.-The Daily Illini.
Conscription has solved many a
problem of what to do next year.
Have you received your final invita-

tion to attend the training camp? No,
we haven't either.
The mayor of Chicago, in catering
as he believes to German-American
sympathies seems to have demonstrat-
ed perfectly how a person may get "in
Dutch."
otlomen
Girls' Glee club will rehearse at 5
o'clock today. Members are request-
ed to turn in tickets and money for
Saturday's Arcade performance.
Classes in home nursing begin today
at the city Y. W. C. A.
Wyvern meets at 8 o'clock tonight
at the Alpha Phi house.
First round matches in tennis
tournaemnt must be played off by to-
morrow night.
War relief work will be carried on
from 3 to 6 o'clock this afternoon in
Barbour gymnasium.
A large shipment of yarn has been
received and the girls who are plan-
ning to knit for the naval reserves
can get it at the director's office at
the Barbour gymnasium this morning
or at 4 o'clock this afternoon.
War Strikes Minnesota Fraternities
Minneapolis, April 28.-Fraternities
at the University of Minnesota are
hard hit by the war. Many have al-
ready discontinued table, and all have
at least a few men in the service. The
Sigma Chi fraternity has 10 men out
of 30 left, and the Betas have only
seven out of 30.

Jobs are plenti-
ful at the "Y"
Employment
Office.
Tel. 823
3-6 P. M. Daily

noise but ne7CT Lits th ..r
When you stop to think, jt's
I tie wonder that V~in /7ET,
sy g .Evr teii a
U ~ been naturally czg.d wor two yetrs.
t- -

Flowers by Wire to All the World.

EARN IT

100 Enrolled in Rome Nursing Courses
More than 100 women have enrolled
in the courses in home nursing and
hygiene being given at the city Y. M.
C. A. in charge of a Red Cross nurse.
Only a few classes are still open, and
these meet in the morning on Mon-
day, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday.
Registration may be made at Miss
Evans' office in Barbour gymnasium.

F LANDERS
FOR
FLOWERS
PHONE 224 213 E. Liberty St.
Member of Florists' Telegraph
Delivery Service

E

* s0
-- k

White oxfords are going to be worn more
than ever this summer. There is nothing
like them for use with white flannels and
sport jackets. The young man who thinks
of economy as well as style and comfort
can well afford to look at our display of
white canvass oxford--three fifty and up.
Leather or rubber soles
Wagner & Co.
State Street-At Liberty
Established 1848

-1
- - - -_
- t
ttract ve Figure
A corset is so personal-so
much a part of one's very self
fully selected and fitted by a
skll fi tter,
Redfern Models enhance
figure beauty and correct. figure
defects.
You will appreciate the
value of a Redfeirn Corset,
and you will like the beauty
of form and exquisite dain,
tiness of the latest models,

"On Your Toes"

The winning team is on its toes every inning
of the game. Strong bodies and keen brains
battling for an opening. Nerve and endurance
are required here as well as muscle, speed and
skill. The most important food in developing
these is
Shred d heaNt
This body-building whole wheat food has played no
small part in winning victories on field and diamond
and cinder track. It is the stuff that muscle is made
of-it fits a man to play the game and derive the ut-
most benefit and enjoyment from it. Easy to digest,
delicious to eat, it furnishes the maximum of nutrition.
Its flavor is always fresh and new. Try a bowl for
lunch or supper; eat it regularly at breakfast. Served
with milk or cream, or combined with fruit or berries.
"There is health and strength in every Shred"
Made only by
The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y.

$3 up

H For Sale by

.

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