ien you're ready ick out a blue serge suit you may as well take your choice a all the serges made. You'll find all of them right in this >. You don't know what blue serge really means until see these we are now displaying. our styles distinctive and individual. And why shouldn't they be n selected by us. You'll be happy with the blues you'll get in here. Large Amateur Finishers agree that Task Development for Films gives more detail and better contrast than the old hand method-and there is not the inclination to slight the work in a rush, while the chances ofscratching the emulsion is practically eliminated. In tank development the developer is easily kept at the proper temperature and strength, which is very essential but almost impossible in any other method. It will pay you to consider our methods in fixing and washing, as well. It is rather expen- sive for you when your films are spoiled in developing. Better bring them to me and make sure. If you want we'll show you how it's done here. LYNDON SHIT FTy Spring line now ready Ky Liberty M A LC OLM Malcolm Block m MORE DAYS ONLY our Feb. Clean=up Sale Bostonian and Florsheim Shoes n leather or rubber soles, black or tan 6$45 Formerly $5.00 $5.50 and $6.00 AMPUS BOOTERY State St. Opposite Hustons' The Sugar Bowl Confectionery We have the best assortment of Choooloptos an d on Bons All klnds of fmnoy Ice Crearns for Parties Try our Fruit Sundaes after the Theatre half. The east part consists of two floors, the upper one constituting the main engine room, and containing the two primary steam engines and the two super-heaters for the boilers. A traveling crane runs along the ceiling, to facilitate the moving of heavy ma- chinery. One corner of the room is devoted to office space. The lower floor on the east half is utilized chiefly for foundations to sup- port the machinery above. The pri- mary radiator for the heating system and the steam turbines for the super- heater are also located on the main floor. The west half of the building contains no upper floor, but is devoted entirely to space for the furnaces, boilers, smokestack, and their accesories. Underneath the main floor, there are two troughs, one for conveying the exhaust from the boilers to the smoke- stack and the other for receiving the ashes from the furnaces and transport- ing them to the ash collector, located on the west side of the building. The entrance to the underground tunnel begins at the south-west corner of the basement. COMEDY CLUB SUCCESSFUL DESPITE MANY HANDICAPS From small beginnings manager Ar- thur Cohen, '14L, and the cast of the 1914 Comedy club have evolved one of the most successful seasons ever experienced by the organization. The heritage left by last year's club was a large debt, and rather a bad taste in the mouths of the students for amateur theatricals. The cast, too, was rather raw and undeveloped. Three definite setbacks were experienced in the matter of a date. Yet in spite of these handicaps the club won through. A great moral support was afforded by the unanimous endorsement of the play by the Drama league of America. The final outcome was one of the best col- legiate productions ever put on be- fore a local audience. On top of this came an invitation from the St. Clair county alumni as- sociation for a reproduction of "The Scarecrow" at Port Huron. This was the final triubute to the worth of the organization, and the first time that the club has ever been able to give an out of town performance. Orders Stay Departure of Nurses Orders staying the deportation of the hospital matron, Miss Edna Schwalm and her assistant, Miss Elizabeth C. Wilson, were received by Secretary Shirley W. Smith yesterday noon from inspector O. G. Frink, Detroit. Miss Wilson left the city at the first inference of trouble, but the universi- ty authorities intend to press the case and retain the two women if possible. FRATERNITIES TO ARRANGE FOR LENTEN BIBLE CLASSES Representatives from all fraternities will meet at the home of President Emeritus James B. Angell tomorrow afternoon to make arrangements for holding Sunday Bible classes in the fraternity houses during Lent. Paul Blanshard, '14, and Ralph Snyder, '14L, will present a tentative list of profes- sors, who are to take charge of the classes. President Angell may talk. Lenten Bible classes, under the same plan last year, proved a great success. Matinees G rPrices Wed. Garick 25c to and Sat. $1.50 DETROIT Oliver Morosco Presents THE BIRD OF PARADISE A Hawaiian Romance MAT TOURNAMENT BEGINSTODAY Changes Are Made in Way of Listing Two of the Classes The annual tournament for the cham- pionship of the university will be started this afternoon when a large field of grapplers get together in their first matches. The contests are to be staged under the direction of heavy- weight champion Lichtner, and are to be judged by three officials who will decide the winners in those bouts where the decision is not reached by the "down" route. The classification of the welters and the light-weight men has been some- what changed since the original an- nouncement of the contestants was made. This year the light- weight class includes all those wrest- lers under 135 pounds, while those who weigh in between 135 and 145 have been put in the welter-weight class. The following is the re-arranged classification: Welterweight: Caswell, Kelly, Saier, McLaughlin, Crane, and Zewadski. Lightweight: - Doyle, Kendricks, Traub, Blumberg, Stebbins, Perkins, Stape and Champe. FOUR GAMES OF BASKETBALL END FIRST WEEK OF SERIES The inter-class basketball tossers finished their first week of play when four games were contested at Water- man gymnasium last night. The soph lits beat the fresh medics in a 13 to 10 battle. Due to a blow on the head, Ross, of the soph lits, was out of the game for about five minutes. In the second game the soph engineers lost to the fresh homeops by a 16 to 10 score. A close game between the junior lits and the juhior laws resulted in an 18 to 15 victory for the lit team. The junior engineers won from the soph medics in a one sided 33 to 11 game. J-LIT "TEA DANSANT" TODAY WILL BE RECORD BREAKER Reports from the committee indi- cate that the J-lit "Tea Dansant," scheduled at the Union this afternoon from 2:30 to 5:30 o'clock, will break the attendance record for afternoon functions. It will be open to any stu- dent who desires to attend. The dance hall at the Union will be surrounded by tables, at which the women of the class will serve tea and wafers to the dancers. The commit- tee has announced that the dance will be essentially a stag affair, but that those who desire can attend in couples. ~ George B isol Liberty and Main Streets F lal A most convenient place for your 220 Chapin Street banking. Choice cut flowers and TUESDAY MARCH One Night Only Under the auspices and guaranteed by the Drama League of America The Iden Payne English Players Will Present "Dolly Reforming Herself" A COMEDY IN 8 ACTS By Henry Arthur Jones PRECEDED BY "LONESOME LIKE" A Bit of Realism by Howard Brighouse Direct from a three weeks run at Fine Arts Theatre, Chicago Prices: $1.50, 1.00, .75, .50, .25 THURSDAY Feb. 26, 21, FRIDAY _ _ _ SATURDAY MATINEES FRI,-SA Take Pleasure in ntroducin the Funniest Comedian Ever in Musical Comedy Jack Traino I the Record-Breaking Comedy Success of the D)ecadie Hcnpccke( Henry 60 LAUGHS A MINUTE---6 INCOMPARABLECAS $0 People 30 OF CLEVER FARCEURS a 10O---Dancing Daisies---1 Picked from the Garden of Musica Comedy's Daintiest Girls .y EAT AT "POP'S" The Place Where Things Taste Like Home ""Pop" Bancroft Cor. Monroe and Thai 11 HANDBALL PLAYERS MEET TODAY TO PLAN TOURNEY Under the direction of Floyd Rowe,! director of intramural activities, a meeting of handball enthusiasts is to be held this afternoon at 4:00 o'clock in Waterman gymnasium for the pur- pose of discussing and laying plans for the coming campus championship tournament. At this sesion Director Rowe will announce the conditions' under which the three prize cups are to be awarded. WHIT Mia rvStreet Feb. 26! 27, fIATINEE DAIL' Goo. Kleine's $100,000 Photo Drama F 00 for Spring We are now show- g advance styles in otwear for ladies d gents. _..,. .,.' . b " ro b ,+' " O "a v , ..,. r F./,'.' ' us show you. IAHR'S SHOE STORES DAILY REHEARSALS HELD BY CAST FOR ORATORICAL PLAY Prof. Richard D. T. Hollister, of the oratory department, and director of the 1914 oratorical play, "She Stoops to Conquer," is whipping the produc- tion into shape in daily rehearsals held in University hall. Fifty dollars. has been set aside by the Oratorical association to provide a curtain and seven -stage screens for University hall. Spicy Comment Will Feature Gargoyle Containing spicy comment in pic- ture and story on various aspects of campus life, the Fast number of the Gargoyle will make its appearance today. In many respects this num- ber is one of the best which has yet been gotten out. The cover, by L. M. Kish- lar is an alluring symphony in orange and black and should attract consider- able comment. Francis A. Bade has QI vi S. State 218 S. Main. "" IILLIAM E. DIETERLE FORMERLY TRE VARSITY TAILOR OF ANN ARBOR s to announce that hehasopened atailoring establishment in Detroit at 94 WEST FORT STREET With a Complete Line of BRITISH AND DOMESTIC WOOLENS ial attention given to my College trade. The same prices Better Satisfaction and Better Workmanship. DIETERLE-VARSITY TAILOR p a t the Crest Th e New P1 a.ee m :: Candy :: Light Lunches The price has been reduced from 50 to 35 cents. COURSE FOR COMMERCIAL SECRETARIES IS PROPOSED A new course, similar to that install ed at Harvard last fall, for the train- ing of commercial secretaries and city managers, may be established here if the plans submitted to Pres. Harry B. Hutchins by William W. Welsh, '12, secretary of the Ann Arbor Civic asso- ciation,. meet with the favor of the faculty. The course, as outlined, would have the city managers of different cities in the state, lecture to the students en- rolled in this course, who will at the same time attend lectures of the vari- ous members of the economics faculty. furnished something entirely new to the campus in the form of grease paint drawings, while Clark Smith, Roy Par- sons and others have contributed oth- er clever drawings. W. A. P. John has written a parody ' on one of the leading modern writers of detective stories. Many wheezes of a more or less modern origin are in the issue, while a goodly place is giv- en to short humorous verse. Student Is Appointed to West Point Hiram Ely, '17E, has received notice of his appointment to West Point. Ely will take the medical examination at Fort Wayne in June, and if he passes it will enter the military academy at once. He was appointed from the dis- trict in New Jersey from which he comes. Cast of 10,000 actors. In 3 acts Each performance 2 1-2 hrs. DIRECT FROM ASTOR THEATRE N. Y. NIGHITS Entire Lower floor . . 5 c 8 rows balcony .. 35c Balance. . . . . . . 25c All Seats Rseerved MATINEES Adults . A . . . . 25c+ Children, under 10 . . . 15c Senior Laws Elect Class Day Officers Senior laws elected the following class day officers yesterday: toast- master, D. F. Melhorn; historian, J. R. Ober; prophet, C. E. Zachman; rep- resentative to present class memorial, J. L. Wilson; class orator, V. W. Main; valedictorian, H. V. Spike. Another batch of canes will be ordered within the next two or three days. Those de- siring a stick, may place their orders with J. P. O'Hara or Harry Muller. Huebel, Varsity Quarterback, to Marry Herbert Huebel, of Menominee, Michigan, former student and quarter- back of the 1912 Varsity football team, has announced his engagement to Miss Marice Elenor Novak of Chicago. Hue- bel is a member of the. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, and coached the football team at Rose Polytechnical school at Terre Haute, Ind. The wed- ding will take place in the early sum- mer. a We make our own candy Main St. N lear Liberty US IN BRIEF nember of the board of direc- he American Society of Civil 's, Dean Mortimer E. Cooley r York City today to attend the seting. Dean Cooleywill not o Ann Arbor until next Wed- erent method of study will th be pursued by the aero- class, which holds its regular at 1:00 o'clock today in room e engineering building. Text rk will temporarily be dis- 1 favor of laboratory tests. -The Technic .board will hold a din- I ner at the Union next Thursday when plans of organization and and publica- tion will be discussed. -Ninety students are enrolled in the new course, Physics 1, being given for the first time during the present sem- ester by Prof. N. H. Williams. EXTERIOR CONSTRUCTION OF POWER BUILDING FINISHED Construction work on the building proper of the new university power plant has been completed. The build- ing is divided into an east and a west JUST IN Spring Suitings--see them in our window-- many more inside--we will lay aside your se- lection. All garments made in our own shops and by jour tailors. I Let Vs Fill Your Waits We have the "Stuff" and our prices are right The Students' Supply Store WAGNER (A Importing Tailors CO. State Street 1 1 11 So. University Ave. L. C. SCHLEEDE Opposite Eng. a' t ;f r R; e't" Are Sure to Please