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October 28, 1915 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1915-10-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAt S THE MICHIGAN DAILY.

Walk-Over Foot-Wear

I,
I
Ill ll

Mir. R. U. A. Kodaker.
lDe~r Sir:-
1 am sorry to hear that you have had some bad luck with your
snap shots. It is indeed exasperating to pay 50 or 60 cents for a film,
and then after going to the trouble to get the exposures, to have them
ruined in finishing.
When I was in Ann Arbor this summer I had the same trouble
until a friend told me to go to Lyndon, the Photographer on North
University, and ever since then I have been going there and getting
fine results. Lyndon absolutely guarantees perfect work or no charge
for developing, but the best part of it is he gives perfect work. I have
never had a film poorly developed or scratched up and he has develop-
ed about 20 films for me already.
His prints on Velox paper are the best I ever had made, and they
come so clean and neat.
By the way, be sure and have him make you some enlargements.
He uses Velox for enlargements also, and even though your negative
is thin he gets the contrast. His price is so reasonable that I am sure
you will have a lot of them made the same as I have done.
Now, old man, be sure-and try Lyndon for your finishing and you'll
rind that your pictures will be much better and clearer.

HIllSA
iIII
1'.ll
H!
3 '~l
IIif
II IIti

m.AJ EST I TODAY at
C TQNi HT ?:SO & 9

The Hit of the Season

IMAX

BLOOM

- IN -
"THE SUNrNY SIDE
OF BROADWAY"

I'

With best wishes,
A. Mateur.

713 East Univ. Home Portraiture a Specialty

MA D E BY DANIES . NICKELS
in the only Studio. on the Campus are in a class
by themselves. Amateur finirdhIng
of superior qua.mity.
334-336 So. STATE ST., ANN ARBOK

ALUMNI SHOW GREATa
INTEREST IN CAMPAIGNV
(Continued from Page One)
al letters to classmates and acquain-
tances.
Deans Aid in Campaign
Dean J. R. Effinger leaves today for
C maha, Neb., where he is to be the
principal speaker at the final meet-
ing of the Omaha committee tomorrow
niight. Dean Henry M. Bates will
leave next Wednesday for a four-day
trip to Milwaukee, Duluth and Minne-
apolis, where he will address gather-
ings of Michigan alumni as well as
solicit a number of the more promi-
nent graduates of the university in
those cities.
Lawrence Maxwell, the chairman of
the advisory committee, in company
with President Harry B. Hutchins, will
go to Cleveland, Ohio, next week,
where they plan to interview a large
number of prominent Cleveland
alumni.
President Hutchins stopped over in
Ann Arbor yesterday on his way to
the state teachers' meeting in Sagi-
naw. He has spent the past few days
in St. Louis and Kansas City, where
he has had unusual success in secur-
ing subscriptions to the Union fund.
President Helps in Work
President Hutchins addressed a
large audience of Michigan graduates
at a meeting in the McKiley high
school in St. Louis, attending an alum-
ni luncheon on the same day and leav-
ing immediately after speaking at a
reception in the evening. At Kansas
City the program was similar to that
in St. Louis, and great enthusiasm was
reported in both cities.
The Chicago committee has organ-
ized the work in that city by classes,
and promise to raise their share of the
million-dollar fund.
.The attitude- of the alumni of the
university toward the raising of the
Union fund has been shown by the
action of the advisory committee.
Lawrence Maxwell, the chairman of
that body, has proposed the forma-
tion of a club made up of all alumni
subscribing $5,000 to the Union build-
ing fund, and already 15 members have
joined the organization.
The advisory committee is made up
of such prominent alumni as Law-
rence Maxwell, who is an ex-solicitor-
general of the United States; Eard D.
Babst, president of the American Su-
gar Refining company; Roy D. Chapin,
president of the Hudson Motor Car
company; Charles B. Warren, presi-
dent of the Detroit Board of Commerce,
and Eugene Carpenter, a wealthy lum-
ber merchant of Minneapolis.
This committee is planning a per-
sonal campaign among the wealthier
graduates of the university in an effort
to get more large subscriptions than
have been forthcoming from the 30-
day campaign. These men have ex-
pressed themselves as heart and soul
in the work, and their personal aid
cannot fail to have a great effect on
the great body of Michigan alumni all
over the country.

Matinees I n week of
Wednesday GARBOtK 2
and Sat. DEto erT2
DETROIT
TONIGHT'S THE NICHT
BEAUTY CHORUS OF 50

ARCADE
Shows at 3:00-5:30-8:00-9:30
FRIDAY, OCT. 2-EdmundBresse in
"The Song of the Wage Slave." A
strong vital story in five parts. Metro.
SAT UR])AV. OCT. 30-"Anthony and
Cleopatra," the gigantic spectacular,
historical drama produced by Kleine
-Six parts. Return date.
Trake a "Trip Around the World."
Finest series of travel pictures ever
produced. Watch for date.
RAE THEATRE
W. Huron St., Opposite D. U. R.
Waiting Room.
ALAN STANCHFIELD, MGR.
Friday, Oct. 29
"Gangsters," a Griffith produc-
tion, with the same cast as in
"The Birth of a Nation."
ADMISSION ALWAYS TEN CTS.
Matinees 2 P. M.; Even ings, 6:30.
Saturday, Sunday, and Holidays con-
tinflu J'.

I

BOSTON BRANCH:
14 Tremont Street

NEWPORT BRANCH'
220 Bellevue Avenue

i

a
l

. ..;..

ESTABLISHED 1818
C " T 0IN
MADISON AVENUE GOR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET
NEW YORK
Our Representative, MR. J. A. GORMAN,
will be at
THE PONTCHARTRAIN
To-day and Tomorrow
with Fall Styles in Ready-made Clothing,
Furnishings, Hats.
and Shoes

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29.-"The Rosary,' featuring Kathlyn Williams
and All Star Cast.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30.-George Kleine presents Irene Fenwick in
"The Woman Next Door."
SUNDAY and MONDAY, OCTOBER 31 and NOVEMBER 1.-"The Chal-
ice of Courage," by Rev. Cyrus Townsend Brady.
COMING ATTRACTWoNS
Viola Allen in "The White Sister."
"The Melting Pot," featuring E. Walker Whitesides.
Mrs. Fisk in "Vanity Fair."
"The Dust of Egypt," featuring Edith Storey and Antonio Moreno.

EWELERS ATCH
SCILANDE SEYFR
L1BE LIBER I ,
N iE SILVERSMITH ANNAR9
DOWN TOWN
HEADQUARTERS FOR
U. OF M. JEWELRY
"BE ST BAND I EVER
HEARD," SAYS YOST
(Continued from Page One)
a crowd of some 300 students, whose
enthusiasm over the project seemed to
be unbounded. "I can say frankly that
I never saw a band on any football
field that makes such a hit with the
crowd as does that Varsity band of
yours. There is something about its
playing that seems to go right to the
hearts of the alumni, as well as to
raise to its highest pitch the fighting
spirit of the team," were the closing
words of the coach.
Promoters of the Band-Cer-Tain-
ment, who contend that the entertain-
ment is to surpass anything of its
kind ever before presented at Mich-
igan, emphasize the fact that the per-
formance is not to be on the order of
a charity show for the band. Instead,
they said, every man who witnesses
the production is to get his money's
worth, and more, as well as to do his;
part in sendin'g the band to help the
team.
The program workers, who are
somewhat mysterious concerning that
which they have up their sleeves for
Wednesday evening, promise a real
eye-opener in the final announcement
of the program. Among the leading
attractions are the Camp Davis engi-
neers, a company of 17 boilermakers,
who are to depict their camp life in
song and verse.
Following the engineers' skit, W. C.
Achi, '17L, with a group of three other
musicians, is to give a costumed ren-
dition of native Hawaiian songs, ac-
conipanied by the ukelele. Achi is

Gymnasium Shoes
For Men and Women
Rubber or Leather Soles
Prices 70c to $1.90 per pair
Just received
A New Basket Ball Shoe
for Men
Only $3.00 per pair
Heavy suction rubber sole

119 E. LIBERTY STREET

7.w

1

known to the campus as the man who
wrote "Fight, Men of Michigan," re-
cently published, and the Hawaiian
War Cry, Michigan's latest yell.
Those men who took tickets to sell
last night are requested by the man-
agement to call up, or appear in per-
son at, the band office in the engineer-
ing shops building, phone 46 Univer-
sity, at some time between 10:00 and
12:00 o'clock or between 4::00 and
6:00 o'clock tonight. Any other men
who wish to sell tickets are to do like-
wise.
Rabbi Hirschberg Will Speak Sunday
Rabbi Samuel Hischberg, of Milwau-
kee, will conduct the services of the
Jewish student congregation on Sun-
day evening at 6:45 o'clock in New-
berry hall. Rabbi Hirschberg has
chosen as his subject, "Has Religion
Proved a Failure?"

There will be a lecture on Christian
Science by Willis F. Cross, C. S. B.,
of Boston, Mass., at the Armory, Fri-
day evening, October 29th, at 8:00
o'clock. You and your friends are
cordially invited. Admission free.
oct29
Don't fail to hear the genuine Uku-
lele, the beautiful-tone Hawaiian in-
strument. Competent instructors.
Grinnell Bros., 116 South Main St.
Phone 1707. Oct28-29-30-31-Nov2
2TENTION STUDENTS!
For quick MESSENGER CALL see
last adv on BACK of TELEPHONE
DIRECTORY. Note. the MAJ. cur-
tains. Phone 795. Ann Arbor Parcel
& Mevsenger Service. A. F. Brown,
'17E. oct29
The new "M" Book is here, bigger
and better than ever. Price the same,

Tal-

r rVa n1.1i.A~0 eiey, 10, pdj0la th t~ine l
Hoppe does developing, printing and and has a beautiful voice that is well
enlarging. Prices right and work best. suited for her part. M. R. Wood, '16,
Oct28-29 lends comedy to the whole production
by his ready wit. J. W. Grover, '18,
This year, the same as last year, as Jack Smith; C. B. Sikes, '16, as
"We'll be -there." Stark Taxicab Co., Henry Jones; C. W. Wilbur, '16, as
2255. oct5tf Horace Worthington; J. Sumner, as
James Young; Miss Olive Hartsig, '17,
Pianos to rent. Prices and pianos as Jessica Vanderpool, and G. Parsons,
right, at Schaeberle & Son's Music as Togo, all have good voices and play
House, 110 South Main street. oct8tf their parts-admirably

Standard Oil Company Men to Speak
An open meeting of the Commerce
club will be held at 7:30 o'clock on
Friday, October 29, in room 101, eco-
nomics building, at which Mr. Moffet
and Mr. Parker, of the Standard Oil
company, will explain their con;any's
plan for sending men into the Orient.
Alpha Nu Sociey Aects 'fen!' ht
Alpha Nu debating society will hild
its regular meeting in its rooms at
7:30 o'clock tonight. The amendments
proposed at the last meeting will be
disposed of at this time. A general
discussion will be held on the subject
of imposing a literacy test i , i r
Call 2255 for a Stark Taxicab.
"We'll be there." oct5tf

hurry"" Call Stark, 2255.

"In a]

octl3eod $1.

0ct28-29-30

- ke the Evening Pleasant!
Take a Box of Candy Along with You--
GILBERT'S, MORSE'S ORL CKANE'S
TIhe Student S upplyStr
1 1 1 1 S. University Ave. Opposite Engineering Arch Phone 1160-R

9

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