THI MICHIGAN DAIL. .. -_-___ . . T . - _ - ur New Spring Woolens are sm go NOW on Display WE can save you $8.00 to $10.00 on your siring suit. With our fifteen years' experience making college clothes, none can excel us in this line. Let us explain our CO-OP PLAN. A ARBOR C0-OP OCESSORS TO M. W. MlLWARD) TAI.ORS U 330 South State Street CUST PRACHT ROY P. HENRY , ... ., ' day evening. From there she will go to Cincinnati, where she will appear as soloist at the convention of the Sigma Alpha Iota Sorority, at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. l ;v- i i Uil discoverer, Capt. Dumont d'Urville oi treasury secrets it is good for man toI Iommuniicti onl d!1 I 't Lindquist, of the school of left Ann Arbor Monday after- >r a week's concert tour in the est. He will appear tonight the auspices of the Schubert St. Paul, and he will sing to- - with the Mendelssohn club at On Saturday evening he will, soloist with the Arpi male at Minneapolis. Frances Hamilton, pianist, and annah Cochrane, an advanced .udent under Mr. Harrison, will in concert in connection with cle Francais of the university, r entertainment in the Hotel rtrain, Friday night, under the s of the Alliance Francais of Nora Crane Hunt, a member of cal faculty of the school of will sing in Hillsdale on Tues- Newspaper critics have proclaimedf the master pianist and composer, Per- ruccio Busoni, who arrived in New York January 20, a greater composer than ever. This is Busoni's first ap- pearance in this country after an ab- sence of five years. After filling his engagements in New York and Boston, Signor Busoni starts' on a whirlwind tour of the continent, which will take him to the Pacific coast. Busoni will stop here for a single performance later in the season. Day rate for single passenger now 25c. Phone taxi 2280. Think of it, only 25c a passenger. Phone taxi 2280. TEN DOLLARS Special this week. $15 balmacaan coats for $10. Gross on Liberty. 89-90 Showing of early spring millinery at the Granger Hat Shop, 606 East Lib- erty. 89-90 Editor, The Michigan Daily:-. May I ask the privilege of presenting to the public through your columns a foreword to a rare opportunity shortly to be offered our community through the good offies of the university's de- partment of geology: the approaching lecture by Sir Douglas Mawson. Sir Douglas brings us the latest word from the Antarctic regions, long neglected, which of recent years have been forced on our attention by the endeavors of men who have endured and dared all thtngs in the search for more light. Mawson began his Antarctic exper- iences as physicist of the Shackleton expedition, during which, with Profes- sor David and Dr. Mackay, he partici- pated in the discovery of the south magnetic pole. The region selected by Mawson as a field for investigation was Adelie Land, or Terre Adelie, as it was named after Madame d'Urville by her husband, its the French navy. Less than a fort- night later it was again seen, -this time from the quarterdeck of the Vin- cennes, flagship of the Anerican squadron under Wilkes, who, while sailing 1600 miles along the circle In this part of the polar world, was the first to recognize the existence of an Antarctic continent. Since that time this region has remained unknown as when first it emerged from chaos, until the Australian expedition of 1911-1914 established there its base. As part of the work accomplished by this expedition, may be cited the dis- covery of two additional fragments in the elusive coastline of Antarctica,- Queen Mary Land and King George V Land-while it effaced from the map as non-existant d'Urville's Cote Clarie and the Sabrina Land of Balleny. From a sledge journey across King George V Land with but two compan- ions, Mawson returned alone. The man who, pursued by the spectre forms of hunger and Antarctic cold, tarried to read the last sad offices for the dead over the bodies of his comrades,-- Mertz, overcome by privation; poor young Ninnis at rest in -a fathomless crevasse,--was one who might be ex- pected to wrest from Nature's locked know. This Sir Douglas Mawson has done. His "The Home of the Bliz- dard," which comes fresh from the hand of the publisher, will make many of these known to all who love to readc the latest new s from the pages or scientific research as well as of brave deeds modestly performed. But us a peculiar opportunity awaits,-that of hearing one who has endured and ac- complished much.-Samuel M. Stanton. A ppoiiit Town to Succeed Dr. Burrell Floyd f, ,.'own, '15H, has been ap- pointed assistant in the department or internal medicine under Dean W. B. H-isdale of the Homeopathic Medical School. Town has been selected to fill the vacancy left by Dr. Henry J. Bur- rell, who has resigned to practice in Benton Harbor. AG ENTS WANT l T)--In the University of Michigan. Chas F. Lowling, 459 Franklin St., Buffalo, N. Y. 89-92 WANTED- Exams are over and now you should phmn for returning Oct. , c' getting n pal lug s ummner po- sition. See Mr. Smithson, 503 E. offerson,. Phone 2466. 89-90 GIVE FOUR EXTENSION TALKS FOR LINCOLN DAY AUDIENCES Lectures will be given to four Lin- coln Day audiences by Michigan pro- fessors. Prof. C. O. Davis of the edu- cation department will talk on "The School as a Social Center" at Dundee; Prof E. C. Eggert will speak in Ger- man on "What America Owes to Ger- man Pioneers" in Saginaw; Prof. A. G. Hall will speak in Richmond on "The Right of the Task"; and Mr. R. K. Im- mel will give a recital in Three Rivers on "The Merchant of Venice." Prof. David Friday will talk in Hud- son today on the subject of "Tax Re- form in Michigan," and a Bay City audience will hear Dr. Elsie S. Pratt lecture tomorrow on "The Rights of the Girl." Dr. Gilkey to Speak at "Y" Meeting Dr. Charles W. Gilkey, pastor of Hyde Park Baptist church, Chicago, is scheduled to give next Sunday's "Y" Majestic address. He will speak or principles involved in choosing a life work. Dr. Gilkey is . known as the "boy preacher.'" He has spoken in Ann Ar- bor three times previously. , . ON, I1 = =.... ...A .' " 1, S Ice Cleaned between Afternoon and Evehing Session Special Attention given Ladies 11 USIC EVERY EV.ENI a ROLLER RINK IN CONNECTION i4 i PRICES I I Coupon Books, 40 admissions Single Admissions, Afternoons Single Admissions, Evenings Roller Skating, including Skates a $3.00 .10 HO U R S Ice Rink Open Daily, except Sunday, 9 A. M. to 10 P. M. Roller Rink Open Daily, except Sunday, 9 A M. to 11:30 A. M. Afternoons, 2:00 to 5:30. Evenings, 7:00 to 10:00 Special attention given to beginners at the Morning Session, both in ice and roller skating. No extra charge. Private Lessons by appointment. '1 0 - .15 .25 1. Wve Sharpen Skates Entrance: 725 S. Fifth Avenue, Cor. Hil St. We Sharpen Skates F. C. WEINBERG, Prop.