THE MICHIGAN DAILY ----------- L- Iu1 c l e ul i ttn Daily Ilie Largest Assortment, ine woolens in the city is here for your inspection. We think you'll ee that never have you seen classier fabrics. Tailored in our in- table style in a suit to your measure, they will make you as smartly ssed as any man in town. G.H. g Merchant Tailors Wild Company STATE STREET ii Lee's Slotted Throat T E1N NiS R ACK ETS 1e Slater Book Shop 430 836 S. State. St. iA lungs '- s. y n STOP AT UTTLE' S 338 S. STATE or sodas and lunches EORGE BISCfiOFF LOR IST ice Cut Flowers and Plants ;hpin St. AnAn rbor, Mich' PHONE 809 1M' Special Sale of Cosmetics and Switches Special Ten Day Weave BEAUTY SHOP Miss Mabel Rowe Shampooing, Manicuring, Massaging and Chiropody Phone 2402 326 North 5th Avenue 'FRST NATL BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH, Capital $ioo,ooo Surplus and Profit $65,000 DIRECTORS Official newspaper at the University of Mie~agan. Published every morning except Monday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. O~ces: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: by carrier $os ursb mail,, $.eo. Want ad. **tai e r ; tudents ' u p Store; The Delta, cr. State and Packard. Pones : Business, 960; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed 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......... .C.ity Editor Harold A. Fitzgerald...... .Sports Editor Harold C. L.Jackson.:TelegraphEdtor Marian Wilson... .........Women's Editor Leonard W. Nieter... .Ass't Telegraph Editor DeForrest S. Rood......... Exchange Editor J6. E. Canapbell... .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. ickling H. M. Carey B. A. Swaney E. L. Zeigler J. L. Stadeker Reporters C. S. Clark James Schermerhorn, Jr. R. H. Fricken G. 0. Braphy D. H. Cruttenden Mildred C. Mi Annetta L. Wood F. A. Taber T. F. McAllister Allan Sho'enfield C. C. Andrews R. T. McDonald K. L. Wehmeyer Eugene Given P. W. Gordon Hielmnuth Maag E. L. Rice Business Staff Paul E. Cholette Harry R. Louis Harold Makinson Earl F. Ganschow Harold R. Smith Seymour B. Wilson Walter R. Yayne Bernard Wohl THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1917. !11lli1111ll1lillfill lil 1111111 1illillillilt1111111 li i lii ili11111111 li111111l ltliI ilitilil1111 IN GOD'S OVT OF DOORS Get Your Recres.tionO01t of 11 TEN NIS wDASEBALLmGOuAhLFIs as aa Our Stock is complete and Prices Right Ilillilllhlilli~lliilillmll mili mlmll Nili I illlillil~lilli IIllll Wirt Cornwell Geo. W. Patterso S. W. Clarkson Fred Schmid Waldo M. Abbott n Harry M. Hawley Harrison Soule D. B. Sutton K. D. +Kinnie After Your Class OR ANY TIME, DROP INTO THE ountain ofYouth And enjoy one of our Horlick's Originals or try one of our Delicious Sundaes CAMP ARBUJTUS FOR GIRLS TO OPEN SEASON IN JULY University Graduates to Start Third Summer of Modern Out- door School Camp Arbutus, conducted for girls by Michigan graduates on Arbutus lake, two miles from Mayfield, Mich., will open its third season July 3. Athletics occupy a greater part of the camp program, instruction being given in swimming, canoeing, rowing, tennis and horseback riding. Personal hygiene, first aid, astronomy, and field biology constitute the non-athletic curriculum. The directors of the camp are: Mar- garet H. Steere, '15, Dr. Clara Sargent, '15M, Emilie G. Sargent, '16, and Jamie Morgan, '19. 1917-18 Y. W. C. A. OFFICERS TO ENTERTAIN OLD CABINET Members of the 1916-17 Y. W. C. A. cabinet have received invitations to a breakfast party to be given by the 1917-18 acbinet on Saturday of this week. They will meet at 7 o'clock Saturday morning, prepared to follow wherever their hostesses may take them. HEN you hear the front-door knocker it means that somebody 93 that's out is tryin' t' get in. An' same 13 way with most other knockers. II No need to "knock" where your pro- I duct's right. Just tell the facts Every II bit of V _LVET is naturally aged two I years to make it the smoothest smok- ing 'tobacco. -I- __.__ ---=r- We Offer You ECURITY - - SERVICE - - LOCATION Resources $3,8 oo ,oo Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 [ain Office-- Northwest Corner Main and Huroun ranch Office-.- 707 North University Ave. Farmers& Mechanics Bank Offers the Best in Modern Banking SECURITY -..EFCEC enent and Pleasant Quar"ers. You Will eased With Our Service. Two Offices 105 S. Main St. : 330 S. State St. Typewriters Typewriting. Mimeographing. 0. D. MORRILL, BaltimoreLunch. D3y ..State t ry a Michigan Daily Want-Ad. DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson Cars run on rastern time, one hourfaster than local time. Detroit Liuntea ano express Cars-7:35 a. rn., 8:xO a. m. and hourly to 7:10 p. m., 9:10 c>. Tn.i Kalamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m and every two hours to 6:48 p. m.; to Lansing, 8:43 p. m. Jackson Express Cars -(Local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9:487. m . and every two hours to 7-:48 p. m. Local Cars Eastbound- :35 a. m., 6:4o a n., 7 :05 a. im. and every two hours to 7 :05 p. n., S:. p. In., 9:o5 p. M., io:so p. m. to Ypsilanti only, 9:20 a. in., 9:50 a. M., 2:05 p rn., 6:o5 p. m., 11:45 p. M., 1:1e a. M., 1:24. a. mn. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars Westbound-6tog5a. m., y :so a. n., 0:I20 1. M. 2:2e a. n. Swaina Twenty-two remarkable photo- graphs of the Greek Play. Come in and see them. 713 E. UNIVERSITY +HOP off a few minutes and eat some of GEORGE'S SVEY WAX KING LOO 314 S. State St. Phone 1244-M Notary Public. 0. D. Morrill, 322 South State.-Adv. tf Night Editor-C. M. Jickling HOW ABOUT A SEND OFF Within a few days Michigan's quota of men for the officers' training camps will leave for the forts to which they have been assigned. They are going intg a fight. First will come three months of gruelling toil, then the chance of a commission, then the army. When Michigan athletes leave Ann Arbor for a fight they are ac- corded a send off. We realize that whatever of pro- wess and achievement may be theirs reflects credit upol the University. So it is with the men leaving for ac- tive service in the war. This month Michigan is sending more than one hundred men to the training camps, and a comnplete ambulance unit to France. Why not arrange a send off for these men? They will not leave together, so that the usual send off at the station would be impossible, but a farewell smoker could be arranged for them at the Union. Let's show these men who are going out to fight our battles that we're behind to the last trench. ATTENTION! Attention! This is the first word of command that the soldier learns. With that word his body becomes erect, his mind active, and his ears ready for orders. At this time of year one of the big- gest problems in the students' life is to keep attentive in his class work and lectures. With the great black problem of the war hanging over our heads the problem becomes doubly difficult. The man who is truly ef- ficient is the man who can work while his roommate whistles. It is the greatest thing in life to keep our minds on our work and not go weav- ing webs of golden dreams while the professor is explaining the intricacies of the native habitats of snails. The men who have been successful in the eyes of the world have been men who could keep one thing before them at a time. And while spring weather and the war try to lead our minds from our work, let us remem- ber that first command of the sold- ier. PRONE 294 213 E.1 F LANDERS OR FLOWERS Liberty St. Member of Florists' Telegraph Delivery Service Flowers by Wire to All the World. ._._ For live, progressive, up-to-date ad For results advertise in The Micbi- vertising use The Michigan Daily. gan Daily. """ I-c i 4 I I I vpp7vOF 4a ? y b r9' The Lad's "Batting" Record was bad, says the note from Prexy to Papa -whichreferred of course to the "bats" that de- stroy the body and break down the thinking machinery. The only cureisback to the simple life and s -u , % . a ~ =- ., f' II _. , Shredded Wheat the food that puts you on your feet when everything else fails. A daily diet of Shredded Wheat means clear thinking and quick acting. It leaves the body strong and buoyant and the brain in condition to tackle the problems of study or play. It is on the training table of nearly every college and university in this country and Canada. Two Shredded Wheat Biscuits with milk or cream supply more real body- building nutriment than meat or eggs at one-fourth the cost. We have heard the message from Belgium. But only a few have re- sponded. An order to report at camp is like an invitation to join an honorary so- ciety, it never comes. The Daily Illini says, "We wonder, whether those fellows who wear flags on their collars aren't the ones whose mothers used to sing: I didn't raise my boy to be a soldier'." W 1Ulomen Mortarboard will meet at 7:30 o'clock this evening at the home of Della Laubergayer, '17, 712 West Hur- on street. Class meetings for the purpose of nominating.committees for next year will be held at 4 o'clock tomorrow aft- ernoon in the parlors of Barbour gym nasium. Two Exclusive Our Fashion 296 "The Albamont"-Young Men's Two-Button Soft Roll Sack Vacation Fashions Our Fashion 297 "The Kaskule" '-Young Men's . One-Button Novelty Sack Made as you want them - when you want them by Merchant Tailors r Chicago, U. S. A. Call and see our superb display of Summer Fabrics and be measured today! F7red W.Gross, )VainS tree Made only by The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y. r--- _ _