PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY. A WELL developed mind and a healthy body may be essential to success, but the aver- age mind finds good clothes a mighty im- portant factor in GETTING AHEAD. The man who wears our tailoring makes a good impression everywhere. The superior quality and style of his garments gives him an air of distinction and good bearing-his person- ality is properly expressed. We'd like to take a measure for a new Fall suit. DRESS SUITS SHIRTS TO FOR HIRE ORDER Id GO MICHIGAN GO' TO LYNDON'S KODAK AND SUPPLY STORE 719 N. UNIVERSITY AVENUE FOR Fresh Films Guaranteed Developing Velox Prints Latest Model Kodaks Good Pictures Bargains in "Trade In" Kodaks WHITNEY THEATRE Saturday, Matinee and Night, Nov. 13 JOE WEBER presents (first time in this city) th6 Newest and Most Successful Musical Comedy of the year. .1 604 E. Liberty Malcolm Block |E ||||| SWAIN 113 E3. Univ. Ave. Develops Films, Makes Prints and Eoi- largements,Takes Groups and Views Any- where Anytime, Home Portraiture a Specialty. Is an All-around Photographer. I ~ lv -f ,- ,, j f D N "Aa Joy just hangs on every puff How a pipe of "Tux" does bubble over with good cheer and sunny comfort I There's something about the mellow taste of "Tux" that stirs a smoker's soul. It gets into his inside works, sweetens his disposition, and gives him that perky,, chesty feeling, like a high- stepper trotting down the avenue. The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe and Cigarette Men who never smoked a pipe before are now smoking Tuxedo, because they have found that Tuxedo is the mildest tobacco made, and that it is the one tobacco that never irri- tates mouth, throat or nerves. You simply cannot get another tobacco made by the "Tux- edo Process"'-and that's the orig- inal of all processes for removing every trace of harshness and bite w from the tobacco. It has beenwide- ly imitated, but never duplicated. Try Tuxedo for a week, andy you'll get acquainted with the sweet-- est, mildest, mellowest smoke in the world. YOU CAN DUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE . 7 Convenient, glassine wrappedc moisture-proof pouch . c Famous green tin with gold 1t lettering, curved to fit pocket 10C In Tin Humidors, 40c and 80c In Glass Humidors, 5Oc and 90c THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY SENATE FAVORS MILITAR TRAINING IN UNIVERSITY (Continued from Page One) lent to one hour weekly, with or with- out credit, as may be determined, and those chosen for assistant instructors shall each receive a salary of $100.00 per year,, 8. Assignment to University Band. A suitable number of students may be assigned by the professor of military science, upon the recommendation of, the director of the university band, to be musicians in the~ band, and satis- factory performance of theiraduties as musicians shall be accepted in lieu of the compulsory military training re- quired of other students. 9. Uniforms. Upon entering the university every male freshman stu- dent of the colleges and every student of the colleges who enters the univer- sity for the first time with standing less than that of the junior year shall deposit with the treasurer of the uni- versity a sum sufficient to defray the cost of a uniform (about $14.00). If later he is exempted from military training, this sum shall be reimbursed to him. All uniforms shall be supplied through the university. D>r. .I. H.uammell Gets Medical Job Dr. Harry H. Hammell, '151, who is at present junior asaistant in gynecology and obigtetrics at the Homeopathic hospital has recently been appointed a member of the med- ical reserve corps of the U. S. Army. Dr. Hammell received his appointment ed as a result of his having passed a successful examination held in Detroit before a military board. The pos- ition will not require that Dr. Ham- mell leave the city until the outbreak of any hostilities. GENERAL ADMISSION TICKETS FOR TAFT LECTURE GO FAST Owing to the great demand for gen- eral admission tickets to the Taft lec- ture, these tickets have been placed on sale at the following places, in addi- tion to those being handled by stu- dent sellers: De Fries' Art store, on South Main street; South University Pharmacy; The Delta, at Packard and State streets, and at Wahr's Book store on State street. Representatives of the Women's League will also have them on sale in the library corridors all day tomorrow. ARCADE Shows at 3:00-6:30-8:00-9:30 TUESDAY, NOV. 9-Robert Warwick in "The Man of the Hour." Wm. A. Brady Feature in five pa wEDNESDAY, NOfV. .ao - Holbrook Blinn in "The Family Cut#aird," by Owen Davis. S Parts. TffURSDAY, NOV. i-MM-. OLGA PETROVA in her unparalleled suc- ce e,'THE VAMPIRE." gParts. Take a "Trip Around the World." Finest series of travel pictures ever produced. Watch for date. lnees GARRICK Week of DETROIT "THE ONLY GIRL" Musical Comedy Music by Victor Herbert, Lyrics by Henry Blossom Direct from One Entire Year at the Lyric Theatre, New York A Group of Stunning Young Women, Selected for their Dis- tinct Types of Ameriean and European Veauties Augumented Orchestra, composed of VICTOR HERBERT SOLOISTS Prices: 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 Matinee: 50, 75e, $1.009, $1.50 SALE THURSDAY, NOV. 11 I I / "WHY BREAKSABBATH DA?" WRITER QUESTIONS HOLDING OF JUNIOR PLAY TRYOUTS ON THAT DAY Editor The Michigan Daily: "Tryouts for Junior Play on Sunday -Sarah Caswell Angell hall." Is it necessity, mercy or worship? Then for conscience sake let us "Re- member the Sabbath Day and keep it holy." (Signed) ONE WHO CARES. Sophomore ockey TeamsSelected The following women have been chosen on the first team for the sopho- more class: Forwards, L. Garaghty J. Hinckenvoeldt, J. Saunders, M. Fleugel, M. Young; half-backs, G. Pockman (captain), M. Galton C. Winchell; full-backs, A. Lloyd, P. Cohen; goal, E. Holland. - This team will meet the upper classwomen on Palmer Field at 4:00 o'clock today in the first game of the year. A second team has also been chosen. Its members are: M. Holden, M. Kerr, I. Hartsuff, A. Miller, C. Vynn, M. Hawxhurst, M. Wilson and H. Grandy. The winner o the match today will meet the freshman team on Friday. C'UNCIL SUPPORTS STUDENT AFFAIRS (Continued from Page Four) this can only be done by the co-opera- tion of the entire student body. The combined assistance of the honorary societies is most essential, as their per- sonnel is chosen from among the lead- ing members of the upper classes, and being leaders, their well-developed ideas will carry much weight. Being composed solely of upper classmen and graduate students, the rtudent council endeavors to crystal- lize and make more effective the opin- ions of the undergraduate body, for they are in a capacity to sort out and censure the many divergent ideas which arise on the campus and to effectively put into operation the more desirable of these. Students May Act as Jurymen The powers of the council are close- ly related to every man on the campus, as is shown in the addition to Article 5, which says in part: "When the case1 arises, the council will * * * re- quest each class president in the vari- ous colleges to appoint one man from his class to serve on the jury. From the group the council will select six? men to act as jurymen on the casel before it."1 The council may make rules and regulations affecting student customs, elections, celebrations, ceremonies, special games and contests not undere the control of the athletic board, and may make rules affecting the general behavior of the student body exceptf as those provided for by the university authorities. In passing these regala- tions, the council acts in its best judg-I ment and expresses, as far as posible, the opinion of the upper classes, whose duty it is to make suggestions in any way they see fit. i I Extra! 5-Musical Cormans-5 MR. CHAS. MOORE WILL SPEAK AT U. OF M. CLUB LUNCHEON University of Michigan Club of De- troit will have as ine speaker at their weekly luncheon Wednesday Mr. Charles Moore, who is at present the director of the Detroit Museum of Art. Mr. Moore was clerk of the senate committee on the District of Columbia in 1901, when plans for the beautifica- Stion of the City of Washington were being considered; and his work on that committee has won for him a nation- wide reputation in art circles, He also edited the Plan of Chicago which was prepared under the direction of the Commercial club in 1906, 1907 and 1908. Because of his wide experience in the field of art, architecture and city planning his talk to the Michigan men on "Some of Detroit's Problems" will be of especial value. Detroit has long had the reputation of rivaling Wash- ington in civic beauty and is constant- ly making new improvements. Although Mr. Moore is a graduate of Harvard, he has always taken a large interest in affairs of the Great Lakes, since Michigan is his native state. SNewspapers Added to Reading Room Three new newspapers have been added to the collection of newspapers and magazines in the reading room of Memorial hall. They are, Marquette Daily Mining Journal, Houghton and Calumet Daily Mining Gazette, and the Grand Rapids Herald. Women to Give Topsy Turvy Dance The women of the university will give their first dance of the year in Barbour gymnasium on Friday even- ing of this week. The athletic depart- ment of the Women's League has the entertainment in charge and they promise a Topsy Turvy party such as has never been seen on the campus at Michigan. The members of the committee have tickets for sale at50 cents per couple, and all are advised to secure them at once, since the number is to be lim- ited. The proceeds of the party will go into the new club house fund. Musk-Ox Increases in Weight Rapidly Chaucer's scribe, Adam, evidently had nothing on the proof-readers who worked on The Daily Saturday night. The exaggerations of the fourteenth century seem to sink into insignifi- cance when compared with the recent one in which the phenomenal growth of a musk-ox weighing originally 1,200 pounds caused that animal to tip the beam at 13,000 pounds on Sunday morning. Had this growth extended over a period of, say, two or three days, it would not have been so re- markable, but to see the creature thrive so that it gained 11,800 pounds overnight is almost beyond belief. Truly, an eighth wonder has entered the world. 1916 LITS, ATTiENTION An impression seems to have been spread that a certain photographer had been selected to take the Senior Lit Students pictures for the Michi- ganensian. This is erroneous. We have a. contract to take pictures for the Michiganensian and the Board will accept ourpictures of Seniors c any department. Randall & Pack, 121 E. Washington street. nov9-10-11-12-13 SOCCER MEN PLAY NORMALITES "On Trial" Proves to be a Strong Play Hold Practices in Preparation for the Final Battle of Year Only one more game with an outside team will be played by the Varsity soccer team this fall. The team goes to Ypsilanti, where they play the Nor- mal squad on November 20. Accord- ing to the dope indicated by the last game with Ypsilanti, the game should be close and interesting. A game between the foreign mem- bers of the team and the American soccerites will probably be arranged if enough Americans can be found to make up a team. As there are only about three or four of the latter out for- soccer, the chances for such a game appear rather slim. Practice was held yesterday and will be held again today on the soccer grounds at Ferry field. 25 cents-any part of the city. StArk Taxicab Co., 2255. oct28tf The mechanical cleverness and structural unusualness of "On Trial," at the Whitney theater last night, riv- eted the attention of the audience from the first to the last scene in what is beyond question the most original play the American stage has fostered in a quarter of a century. The appeal of "On Trial" is found in its visualization of a story from real lice that attaches to the fight for acquittal by an accused murderer, and the battle of wits by the district attorney and the lawyer for the defense, the whole forming an alto, gether powerful and intensely dramatic exposition. Engineering Society Meets Tonight Engineering society members will discuss the nomination of general of- ficers and the organization of the gen- eral society at the business meeting to be held at 7:00 o'clock tonight in room 214 of the new engineering build- ing. All members are asked to turn out. i h Mr Engineer--- We Lead them All Tracing Cloth, Tracing Paper, and Blue Prints, everything you need 11 1 S. University Ave. Opposite Engineering Arch Phone 11 60-R This year, the "We'll be there." 2255. same as last year, Stark Taxicab Co., oct5tf