THE MICHIGAN DAILY pv 1 y ad. published r the Best >rofession is attract- ge men. Several' gnizing this ten- augurated special ee of advertising.. e for you to prove ave talent for the -with a possibility toward your next nal Fatima ad. sub- ,e man before June pay $500 in gold. PLAN THOROUGHLY0uIP -01FCE Y. M. C. A. Officials Claim New Home Best in American Colleges I) e Y.. \ n- a- SECURE PLEDGES FOR $70,000 k ILLUSTRATE your ad. if you can P bat if you can't draw, then use your kodak or describe your idea. Iment of students' ads. blished next month ng next month, some of the ads. ublished in college papers and :h ad. so published, if the writer gill publish his name, year and will be paid for at the rate of $5 derstood however, that the selec- blication does not signify that it e to win the $500 than the ads. us, Fatima Facts Pure Tobacco. No finer tobacco used than st Fatima. Simple, inexpensive package. The biggest selling 15 cent cig. retie in America. Made famous by college men. The Turkish' tobacco used is Fatima is specially selectedi by resident nativ'e buyers at Xa nth!,' Cavalla, Samsoun and Smyrna. Smokers of high priced ciga- rettes who smoke "a few pack- ages of Fatima are-usually sat- isfied to "switch." Fatima Cigarettes are "distinctively individual" They are 20 for 15a no restrictions whatever as to the method employ or the way you shall approach the cept that the ad. must be truthful. our experience that no man can strike the iction in any kind of salesmanship-written -unless he believes in what he is selling. a hint, however. 212 Fifth Ave., New York K- .-H o E.D C-'A ULT T RISH BLEND CIOARETTI' MMITTEE HAS OF APPLICANTS fessor C. O. Davis, of the depart- of education, addressed about 'ospective teachers, who had as- ed to enroll with the appoint- committee, in the auditorium of rsity Hall Monday. This is a r number than were enrolled by rne last year, nearly 350 members class of 1914 having then regis- bese, 199 were placed by the ap- cent committee before September since then about 50 more have d positions. The majority of aers are pursuing other lines of while not a few are taking post- ite work, either here or at some university. hose who enrolled yesterday af- n are urged to make the final nent in the registrar's office this PRESCOTT CLUB SECURE FOOD EXPERT FOR OPENING LECTURE For the first attraction on its pro- gram for the year, the Prescott club of the School of Pharmacy has secur- ed Dr. J. A. Wesener, Phar. '88, of the Columbus Laboratories and the School of Milling and Baking Technology of Chicago, Ill., who will lecture on "Flour as Related to Modern Bread Making," at 2:00 o'clock Friday, No- vember 13, in room 165, chemistry building. Dr. Wesener is one of the leading food experts of the country and was a conspicuous figure in the famous pros- ecution brought by the federal govern- ment against the western millers in the notorious"'Bleached Flour Case." Although the lecture is intended pri- marily for students in Household Chemistry, Food and Drug Analysis,, and Pharmacy, the public is cordially invited to be present. When Michigan's new University Y. M. C. A. building, the .money for which is being rapidly pledged by friends of the association throughout the country. is built, the University of Michigan will have probably the finest building of this kind in the United States. Although the worth and con- struction of buildings of this nature have taken long strides throughout the country, Michigan "Y" officials make the statement that their building will be one of the country's best-equipped 2ollege Y. M. C. A.'s. The structure, which is to be built of red brick and sandstone, will be two stories high, with a basement fitted up for association activities. There will be 52 rooms in the building, all of which have been -planned with special uses in mind. A large lobby on the first floor will have the administration offices open- ing off it. On this floor, there will be a large assembly room on one side,' and a commodious reading room has been planned for the other side. Two office rooms which will be used by the local student pastors, one on each side of the main entrance, have also been arranged for. On the second floor, there are a: large number of class rooms, which will be used for discussion and bible- study groups. There will also be several study rooms on this floor. Two large club rooms will occupy one side of the building, and these rooms will be available for use by any of the university organizations. A large library room, which will be equipped with selected books, will be located on the other side of the floor. The basement will have a large com- mittee dining room and complete cul- inary equipment. There will also be located here a commodious game room, and a whole side of the floor will be given over to billiards. Several rooms used for various other purposes, will also be found on this floor. To date $70,000 has been pledged toward the erection of the building, $60,000 of which is pledged conditional to the raising of a like amount Al- though the actual work on the struc- ture will not be started until the en- tire sum of money has been pledged, it is hoped that conditions will be such that the actual building operations can be begun. next spring, so that the building may be r ar y for use within a year. ANNOUNCE APPOINTMENTS OF 1914 HOMEOPA'THIC GRADUATES Eight Engage in Practice, Six Enter Outside Hospitals, Five Stay in Ann Arbor Students of the law school of the University of Kansas threaten to strike, if the student council carries out the request of the faculty, to sus- pend for one semester three law stu- dents, who were ringleaders in a rally held in the corridors of buildings while classes were in session. The student council has refused to suspend the men for more than one week. One man plays on the basketball team and another on the baseball team. -0-- The University of Missouri is plan- ning to have 30 tennis courts ready for use by spring. Iowa State College, at Ames, is the only other school in the Missouri Valley conference which .furnishes courts for student use. -o-- - Syracuse University is observing a week of prayer from November 9 to 14. Prominent men will speak at the chapel exercises in the colleges of lib- eral arts, fine arts and education. --o- Kappa Sigma fraternity of Syracuse University has voluntarily announced the policy of second semester initia- tion. -0-- A. E. Shipley, master of Christ's Col- lege, Cambridge, England, has sent a circular letter to American and Cana- dian universities,. asking for Belgian relief supplies which will be received by Lady McDonnell, 23 Warwick1 Square, Pimlico, London, S. W. -0---- Wellesley girls are rolling bandages; for the use of the Red Cross in Eu- rope.- ---- Prof. M. C. Carr, of the art depart- ment of the University of Missouri, has made his freehand drawing class pop-. ular by organizing it into a Sketch club which meets in the evening. Prof. William A. Scott, of the com- merce department of the University of Wisconsin, will lecture next semester at Leland Stanford University on the new banking system. -0-_ The voting precinct containing all the residences connected with Leland Stanford University, endorsed prohi- bition, defeated the eight hour law, and carried Johnson for governor by a large majority. --o-- Leland Stanford University raised $1,000 by subscription for the Belgian relief ship which will leave San Fran- cisco in the near future and proceed to Rotterdam by way of the Panama Canal. -o- Yale claims to have a 9 4-5 second, 100 yard man in Williams, a freshman, who ran for Exeter last year. -0-- The department of romance lan- guages of Leland Stanford University, will offer a two-hour course in eco- nomics, conducted in French, next semester. Moving pictures of Ohio State's cadet regiment have been made by the Roy- al Film Co., of Columbus. -0--- Albert Benbrook, '11E, former Mich- igan center, umpired the Ohio State- Indiana game, at Columbus, Saturday. "MAROON" EDITOR MUST EXPLAIN Chicago Student Faces Trouble Over "Faculty" Editorial George W. Vottingham, student edi- tor of the University of Chicago Daily Maroon, will be asked ,to explain charges, made by him in an editorial Saturday morning, to the effect that one of the professors "cheated" his classes by giving high marks for work not done. The editorial was one of a se- ries running for several days, com- menting on the ease with which stu- dents taking certain elective courses were able to get high marks. The article read in part as follows:, "The instructor lectured for a month,. and then he announced - that there would be no more meetings until the final examination. He did not appear at the examination. I received a B from the course, and heard it talked about that the instructor had said, when questioned about the examina- tion, 'Take the class lists and give each member a B.'" 5 FORYQUR DEN5 Beautiful College Pennants YALE and HARVARD Each D in. x 24 in. PRINCETON, COR- NELL, MICHIGAN Each 7 in. x 2 in. 4--PENNANTS, Size 2x30-.4 Any Leading Colleges 9f Your Seleotiop. All of our best duality, in their proper colors, with colored em- blems. Either assortment, for limitec time, sent postpaid for 5o cents andfive stamps to cover shipping costs. Write us for prices before placing orders for felt novelties of allkind. The Gem City Novelty Co. 4210 Bittner Street Dayton, Ohio VISITORS AT FLORAL EXHIBIT AVERAGE ONE THOUSAND DAI Nearly 3000 people visited the fl exhibit in Memorial hall on Saturc The unusually large number of v tors was partially due to the crc of people here to attend the Pe sylvania game, and, to accomimod these, the building was left open til 10:00 o'clock that night. It is estimated that on an avera nearly 1000 people have visited display each day since its open over a week ago, and it is expec that this mark will be maintained d ing the remaining time of the displ Mr. Weiner, head gardener of botanical gardens, has announced tr he will keep the exhibit on disp until after Thanksgiving, provid the flowers remain fresh that long. Receives Volume In Humanistic Sei "Athenian Lekythoi," is the title a recent volume of the humanistic s ies which has been sent to the edi of the Michigan Alumnus to be viewed in that publication. It is wr ten by Arthur Fairbanks, of the M eum of Fine Arts in Boston. The b( is published under the authority the executive board of the gradu department of the university. -o- Girls of Christian College, Columbia, Mo., are glad to welcome parades of students from the University of Mis- souri on their campus after football victories, but would be glad if they would return the thermos bottles}1 and parts of toilet sets which were taken from the first floor rooms as souvenirs. In future; Drug Store.. all cars stop at Drug Store. i iho Iaoa ~- ESTABLISHED 1894 ?Niz4igam PRESIDENT HAIR BY B. hUTChINS Harry Burns Hutchins was born at isbon, New Hampshire on April 8, 847, and practically all of his boy- ood was spent in the New England ates; After graduation from the iblic schools, he entered the New ampshire Conference Seminary at ilton, N. H. at the age of 14, at which ace he completed his preparatory ork for college. Being graduated from there in his neteenth year, he matriculated at esleyau University in Middleton, N. but on account of failing health, was forced to leave that institution fore completing his first year. A tle later, his parents having decided move to the west and never having ven up his hope of a college educa- m, he entered the University of ichigan, from which he was gradu- ed in 1871, receiving the degree of, i.B. As an undergraduate at Mich- an, he stood in the front ranks of s class. He was, in his senior year, e editor of the "Chronicle," the most portant of zhe then existing univer-' .y publications. At the time of his aduation, he was chosen for the sition of orator and commencement eaker, the highest honor then con- red by the faculty. The next five years were spent as an structor and assistant professor of story and rhetoric in the University Michigan. During this time Profes- r Hutchins was married. In the yeari 16, he formed a law partnership withr 3 father-in-law which was success- ly pursued in this state until 1884,1 .en he was tendered the chair of ay Professor of Law" in the Uni-1 'sity of Michigan. This chair he :upied until 1887. knowicclge and organization become generally recognized, called by Cornell University to organize a department of having he was in 1887 law at Atnouncement of appointments con- rerred upon members of the 1914 hom- 'opathic class, as well as a list of ,ose who will engage in general prac- tice, we-'e given out by members of the homeopathic hospital staff yester- day. Ive of the class have secured posi- tions in the local homeopathic hospi- tal, six in hospitals elsewhere, and right will engage in the general prac- tice of medicine. Two of the members )f the class were women. JORDAN'S TAILORED YOUNG MEN'S SUITS that institution. This work was done entirjly under the supervision of Pro- fessor Hutchins, and the law depart-j ment at Cornell is today considered one of the leading legal schools of the country. He returned to Michigan in 1894 as dean of the law department, which position he filled in almost contin- uous service until 1910, his incum- bency being interrupted only during the years of 1897-98, when he dis- charged the duties of President Angell who was absent from the university on a diplomatic mission for the United States. In 1910, upon the resignation of President Angell, Dean Hutchins was tendered the presidency by the boa;:d of regents. President Hutchins received the honorary degree of L.L.D. from the University of Wisconsin in 1897. He is a member of the advisory board of the "Michigan Law Review" and is also a member of the American Bar Association, having acted as the pres- ident of the section on "Legal Educa- tion" for one year. Under appoint- ment of the Supreme Court of Mich- igan, he revised and annotated five volumes of Supreme Cburt reports, and he has done much active work in the preparation of several text-books. He contributed a biography of the late Thomas M. Cooley, a former dean of the law department at Michigan, in the series on "Great American Law- yers," and he has written many papers which have appeared in law periodi- cals throughout the country. READY TO WEAR The list of graduates and their posi- ions is as follows: R. S. Ideson, in- "erne, homeopathic hospital, Ann Ar- bor; M. A. Darling, assistant in gyne- cology and obstetrics, homeopathic hospital, Ann Arbor; C. D. Pillsbury, assistant in surgery, homeopathic hos- pital, Ann Arbor; H. J. Burrell, assist- ant in internal medicine, homeopathic hospital, Ann Arbor; Sadie L. Orney, interne, homeopathic hospital, Ann Ar- bor; Geo. G. Shoemaker,'acting super- intendent, homeopathic hospital, Pitts- burg, Pa.; Ed. J. Phillips, interne, Ernest Wendt hospital, Buffalo, N. Y.; R. V. Hadley, interne, Buffalo homeo- pathic hospital, Buffalo, N. Y.; P. M. Champlin, interne, Gowanda Asylum, Gowanda, N. Y.; G. B. Fauldner, in- terne, Metropolitan hospital, New York city; Miss Bessie Coffin, interne Wom- a's hospital, Philadelphia, 'Pa.; N. E. Stewart, in practice, Tedrow, Ohio; Ira D. McCoy, in practice, Cass City, Michigan; Q. B..Huntley, in practice, Lowell, Michigan; D. B. Hagerman, in practice, Grand Rapids, Michigan; F. R. Reed, ixt practice, Detroit, Michi- gan; J. C. Danforth, surgeon, Chal- mers Motor Co., Detroit, Michigan; J. F. Migdalski, in practice, Detroit, Michigan; G. G. Alway, in practice, Whitmore Lake, Michigan. My pictures of the Football men are the best-and only 10c.-Lyndon. tf. OUR MODELS ARE OUR OWN ORIGl.NAL AND EXCLUSIVE NOT TO BE HAD ELSEWHERE 2.. : $250 to$3 500 EVERY JORDAN GARMENT HAS A CLEVER, DISTINCTIVE EXPRESSION - * - IN JORDAN GARMENTS YOU GET CONFINED PATTERNS AND CUSTOM WORKMANSHIP ri ""S " k x a ; .1 SOLE AGENT FOR THE AQUASCUTUM. OVERCOATS (MADE IN LONDON, ENG.) WARMTH WITHOUT WEIGHT (WALKING LENGTH) 4j JORDAN-TANLOR LAFAYETTE BOULEVARD, CORNERi WAYNE STREET Z' w