iD Sale I|| LL N Kodaks and Photo 1w IY wa DON Supplies AMATUER FINISHING % off on mackinaws and raincoats % off on all odd trousering % off on all overcoatings in stock % off on all suitings These prices are strictly cash J. KARL MALCOLM. New Dress Suits for Rent. V Cut on Made-to-meas- 0 ure Suits and O'coats WHAT $15, $18 AND $20 WILL BUY Men and Women at a [g Reduction. CORNELL DESIRES GAME AT ITHACA Michigan's 1914 football schedule is expected to be formally ratified to- night at a meeting of the board in control of athletics called by Prof.; A. S. Whitney, chairman of the board. The schedule, as prepared by Direct- or P. G. Bartelme, will be presented to the board members, and probably will be adopted as drawn up. Final settlement of -every game, with the possible exception of the Michigan Agricultural College battle, is expected at the session tonight. Ad- vices have been received from Cornell relative to Michigan's request that the game be switched to the Ithaca field, and these are to be made public at the session of the board. The special committee appointed for the purpose of inspecting sketches and discussing plans for the new con-] crete grand stand to be erected on the south side of Ferry field, will make its report to the board tonight, and. definite action relative to the building of the stand is probable. The complete schedule for Mich- igan's indoor track team will prob- ably be considered. DRAMA LEAGUE TO HOLD FIRST MEETING OF SERIES TUESDAY A meeting of the Drama league study classes open to all members will be held at 8:00 o'clock Tuesday even- ing at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. This meeting will be the first of a series of seven or eight which will be devoted to the study of the modern drama, th'e first three dealing with the American, and the remaining four with the English dramas. At the meeting Tuesday night Wil- fred Shaw will speak on three plays that the league is sponsoring in Ann. Arbor this wjnter. PUS BOOTERY t. Opposite Hustons' w Sugar Bowl, Confectionery We have the best assortment of Chocolates Mand Bown Dons .dnad of fanoy Ie Creams for Parties our Fruit Sundaes after the Theatre Main Street R'S SHOE STORES ave just received a shipment of the al Tango Pump, rubber sole and for Ladies and Cents. :: :: :: :: FORMER STUDENT HELD AS FORGER Harry J. Mercer, '98L, was arraign- ed before the county court in New York city, Thursday, on a charge of forgery in the first degree. Mercer formerly lived in Los Angeles, occu- pying a position of wealth and respect, but owing to a fire which destroyed his entire business, he became desper- ate, left the city under cover, and has since been running through the coun-I try, forging deeds and selling suppos- edly good titles to property, never in his hands. Mercer studied law at Michigan. Af- ter graduating he made his home in Los Angeles, where later he estab- lished a good business, married and became very prosperous. When in school he was vice-president, from the law department, of the Students chris-' tian association. CAMPUS IN BRIEF. --Announcement of the marriage of 'Dr. Henry M. Ballard, '13D, to Miss Gladys E. Cobb, at the home of the bride's parents in Northville, Mich., was received yesterday in Ann Arbor. Dr. Ballard is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Will L. Ballard of Ann Arbor, and a member of the. Psi Omega fraternity. While in college he was well known as a musician. Miss Cobb graduated from the Ypsilanti State Normal Col- lege with the class of 1913. -If efforts now being mpade are suc- cessful, the Aero club will begin to build a new glider in a few days. Officers of the organization have written to a Detroit man who promis- ed financial aid last year, in an at- tempt to secure sufficient funds to construct an experimental glider for test purposes. The air machine now owned by the club is badly damaged and useless for practical purposes. -The regular monthly meeting of the University of Michigan Clinical Soci- ety, which was to have been held last Wednesday, will be held on Wednes- day, January 14. -Dr. Reuben Peterson, of the Univer- sity hospital staff, will return this morning, from Lansing, where he lec- tured, Thursday and Friday. -Rapid steps are being made under the direction of Mr. Harry Rotschaef- er, of the economics department, in reestablishing the Michigan branch of the Intercollegiate Civic League which disbanded in 1908 because of lack of interest. The society will hold a reorganization meeting next Tues- day evening at 7:00 o'clock in room 1010 of the economics building. -Assistant Professor J. G. Winter, of the Latin and Greek department, con- tributed the leading article, "A Walk' Through Ostia," to a recent number of "Records of the Past," an archaeo- logical publication. Stephen Langdon, '98, now of Oxford University, Eng- land, also contributed an article. -The first arrangements for the spring trip of the electrical engineers will probably be made within the next week. While it has not as yet been definitely decided what cities will be visited, it is probable that the same NIGNT . MATINEE Wed. January 14 A Notable Dramatic Event, The New York and London Sucess A Butterfly The' Wheel . $1.50, $1.00, 75c, 50c, 25c - - - -$1.00, 75c, 50c, 25c PRICES IIDown-Stairs, - - - 3: Up-Stairs, - - - 2 Matinees-Adults 2Wc; Ciild trip through Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Schenectady, New York, and other large eastern cities, as was made lav year, will be taken again. -Prof. William Howland, head of the vocal department of the school-of mu- sic, is rehearsing a number of De- troit factory workers and department store employees, for a big recital to be held in Detroit, next May. He has interested 562 persons in voice culture and expects to find many rare voices from this number. -Dean Mortimer E. Cooley will ad- dress the Twentieth Century club of Detroit, Monday, on "The Relation of Public Utilities to the Public." CHICAGO WILL PLAY SAME SEVEN CONFERENCE TEAMS Following the refusal of the athletic board of Chicago to accept the invi- tation of Harvard for a football game next fall, rumors had connected the conference champions with a Yale al- liance. These stories have been effectively stopped by the announcement of the Stagg program for next fall, which contains seven games. All are with conference schools, and are the iden- tical institutions met by Chicago last fall. MICHIGAN HAD FIRST SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM (Continued from page 1.) Hutchinson, '84M, magazine writer on hygienics; Donald Stuart, '03, metro- politan playwright and instructor of French at Princeton; Lee White, '10, former editor of The Michigan Daily, and now special writer for the Detroit News; Lowell Carr, '12, state editor of the Detroit Free Press. MAJI i THURSDAY, THIS FRIDAY, Till SATURDAY,' Matinee TWO SHOWS NIGHTL' Best of Musical con Knute Eriel In His Great Succ The Semii Girl ORIGINAL PRODI 30- PEOPLI Chorus of "Fair Co. Regular Majestic Coming next Mon., Tues "ALL GIRL" VAUI Nothing but Gir REMEMBER All Sea vedupstairs and d both shows Every Ni The Play with the Big Trial Scene Six Months in New York One Year in London MONDAY TUESDAY ea Matinee Nigi ZIG-ZA TALKS COLORED MOTION PICT( Described by MR. ARTHUR P1 The Noted Traveler MONDAY - "AFRICA," fro Town to Cairo. TUEGDAY-"SPAIN," from to the Pyrenees. REMEMBER ITwiceU Hundreds of Moving Pic DR. ANGELL READS PAPER {IRLS' EDUATIONAL TO CLUB. We also have Rubber Sole High Shoes In Black and Tan for Men. R"S SHOE STORES kin St. 304 S. State St. Nettleton Shoes for Men At the first regular meeting of the Girls' Educational club yesterday af- ternoon, Dr. Angell read an interesting paper on St. Cyr, the famous school where the daughters of the French nobility of the. seventeenth centutry were educated, and for whose pupils Racine wrote his famous play, "Es- ther." The next meeting of the club will be held on Friday, January 23. Ideas Wanted for New Band Selections Between 60 and 70 complete sets of music have been obtained and propr erly bound by the librarian of the ,arsity band. New numbers will be constantly added, and all persons in- terested are requested to send in lists of popular band numbers that they may be used in selecting the new mu- sic. These lists may be mailed, or left at The Michigan Daily office.. GEO.SCARBOR- OUGH'S SENSA TIONAL DRAMA I G A R R IC K Detroit, George 220 Chapin Sireet Choice cut flowers PICKS FOUR COLLEGES ORE OFTYN THAN MICHIGAN Harvard, Princeton and Penn- a are the only universities who ad more men placed on Walter first All-American teams than a.n. e 1889, when the eastern critic is first selections, the various levens have been made up of from the following schools: 9, Harvard 58, Princeton 49, lvania 34, M ichigan 6, West , Chicago 5, Dartmouth 5, Car- Brown 4, Cornell 3, Columbia apolis 2, Minnesota 2, and Am- Penn State, Syracuse and Wis- one each. E DAME-CARLISLE TILT S BILLED FOR NEXT FALL ough the Harvard-Michigan 1 game next fall will be the ectional classic, another east- stern battle of major import- ance has been practically arranged. Carlisle and Notre Dame are billed to meet in Chicago on November 14. The game does not conflict with the schedule of the University of Chica- go, which plays Illinois, at Cham- paign,. on the same Saturday. "CASES OF AGENCY," BY PROF. GODDARD IS OFF THE PRESS Prof. E. C. Goddard, of the law fac- ulty, has received notice from the West Publishing Co., of St. Paul, Minn., of the publication of "Cases of Agency," a case book composed by himself. The publication, upon which Prof. Goddard has been working for some time, is one of the American Case Book series. Prof. Goddard is the first member of the law faculty to contribute to this series. This .bopk. will be used by fresh laws next semester in their course in Agency, of which Prof. Goddard is instructor. i EAT AT ttpopS,, The Place Where Things Taste Like Hon ""Pop" Bancroft Cor. Monroe and 1 Have you noticed the distinguished appearance a perfect fitting I E STATE SAVINGS BANK Surplus and Profits, $100,000.00 Capital Stock $50,000,000V ANN ARBOR, MICH. W m. Arnold W/m.J. Rooth c John WelzJr A Vice-Pres. President Cashier Liberty and Main Streets most convenient place for banking. Dress Suit 0 gives one ? This is the only kind we make. Our fabrics are the newest. WAGN ER & CO. Tailors State Street START THE NEW YEAR WITH We sell everything a student needs. Students' S111 S@. University Ave. Supply All garments made shop. in our own Phone Slaughter Sale of Men's Suits, Overcoats and F 25.( 22.( 171 00 suits . $19.75 ;25.OO overcoats . . . . 19.5O One lot of suits-Complete assortment i $s..22.00Overcoats . . .17.25 large range of patterns go at this, 00 and $22.50 suits . $17.25 $20.00 Overcoats . . . $15.25 slaughter sale . 9*75 00 suits . $15.25 $18.00 Overcoats . 13.75 Soft and Stiff Hats-$i, $i.5o, $2, and $3 $16.00 Overcoats $12.50 values Slaughter and $18 suits . $13.75 $15.00 Overcoats . . $10.75 sale prices"c 79c, 87c, $1.59, $2.19 YOU ARE IOOKING FOR BARGAINS, INVESTIGATE LUTZ CLOTHING STORE HOME OF HART, 217 South Main Street 'urnishings One lot O'coats-Values up to $18.oo. Slaughter sale price . 9.25 All men's shirts, trousers and boys clothing included in this Slaughter Sale.