six THE .Mb f3 GAk: 1 AIL r - -- - - i5 r! 11 0 Y h We Can Make a Dress Suit Why Not Have LYNDON? His pictures are always the best and xlO's are only 25c QUALITY MAKES QUANTITY QUANTITY MAKES PRICES That's why I can do it for a quarter I lead, while others follow Get the best of everything photographic of LYN D ON, 719 No. University Avenue 11 I I V TODAY AT =GJESTIC- HT 3:00 p.m. -TW* 4E* A~#-73-pm DR. ROYAL RACEFORD - - TE MN EWHO TAMED ELECTRICITY LAI MON KIM-- - - - NOTED CHINESE TENOR.. KREMKA BROS. ED. & JACK SMITH PREMIER ACROBATS ENTERTAINERS which will look as if molded on you. It will be the perfection of fit and fashion, embody- ing elegance and good taste. Whether you respond to a toast, or lead in a German, other=men will admire your suit and some may ask,"Who is your Tailor?" But allow us time enough to put into your suit those refinements which are the Hall- marks of our work. DRESS SUITS SHIRTS TO FOR HIRE ORDER 604 E. Liberty Malcolm Block I I I AND THEN THE GIRLS "ON THE 5:15" III r ~ I.. Swair 713. E. Univ. Ave. Makes Photographs with Correct Color Values of Paintings, of Drawings in Monochrome or Poly- chrome, and of Colored Objects. I [as .Photo- graphed more Original Manuscripts on Parch- ment than any one else in the State. Home Portraiture a Specialty. -A" Van's Quality Shoe Shop For O'SULLIVAN Rubber Heels and Classy Work 1114 3 University Ave, - THE NEW SHOP E are equipped to do Gold Leaf Stamping, Embossing, Engraving, Fine Printing and Beautiful and Durable Printing. All of these are necessary to produce the various kinds of dance and banquet programs, in which we',lead HOLD MEMORIAL SERVICEFOR HALL MHchigan-Dartmouth Graduate Hon- ored After Death by French Badge of Honor lOC:AL BOY BURIED IN VOSGES Tribute was paid to the memory of the late Richard Neville Hall, ex-'1, who was killed while engaged in am- bulance work i the Vosges region re- cently, at the S Andrew's Epis- copal church last Sunday. Rev. Henry Tatlock,the rector, de- livered the address. On one side of the chancel were hung the national colors of France, and on the other was hung a portion of the shell-torn canvas of Hall's ambulance, the red cross still intact. Rev. Tatlock first reviewed the work of the American ambulance corps in France, and read the following ex- cerpt from a resolution accorded to Hall by his fellow workers. "The funeral service was held in a little Protestant chapel, five miles down the valley, usually attended by many officers and soldiers and natives of the valley, but today reserved for Hall and his comrades, as the soldiers were engaged upon the mountain crest, where a fierce fight for the Hart- mannsweilerkopf still was raging. "At the conclusion of the service, Hall's citation was read and the cross of war pinned upon the French flag which covered his bier. The body was then carried to the cemetery by the commander of his section, a French officer and an English officer, and three of his comrades. His brother, Louis Hall, walked directly behind the bier, and 16 soldiers, belonging to the battalion on leave from the trenches, marched on the sides with arms re- versed. SKA'TE CARNIVAL BEGINS TONIGHT (Continued from Page One); by . A. Knowlson, '18E, and Staley Robertson, '17M. Tickets for the event are going rapidly, 500 being sold by yesterday noon. At the Athletic Supply Store of George Moe on North University and at the University Library, the sale of tickets for students is being held. Since it is only by buying their tick- ets here before going to the rink to- night, that the student money will be available for the new athletic club house for the women, the student Imanagers of the affair urgently re- quest that tickets be procured some time this afternoon. The lineups for the teams as they will appear on the rink tonight will be as follows: Men's Teams Stovel, '16E.. . . Rover.... .Weston, '18E Rehor, '17P. ... Goal ........Rye, 18E Brodie, '16E.... .Point . . .Hughes, '18E Shannon, '17D. . Cover ......Sharp, '17 Peters. '17D Christiansen, '16E Center.....Katz, '17 Cameron, '17L..Left..Knowlson, '18E Pear, '17D Gibson, 18D.....Right .. Barton, '18E , Women's Teams rovah, '16.....Rover R. MacLachlan, '18 Stanley, '16...Cover .........Saer Fletcher, '16 .Center. Riggs, '19 Garvin, '16......Right Mead', '16 Biel, '19........Pointr.....Lloyd, '19 Davis, '17...... Goal Schumacher, '16 Maines GARRICKe an saJ GAWednesaan.17th DETROIT "A PAIR OF SIXES" The Funniest FARCE In the World ARCADE Shows at 3.oo, 6 30, 8:00, 9:30 Tuesday, January 18 - Lillian Lorraine in "Should a Wife Forgive?" Equit- able Feature. Wednesday, Jan. 19. - "Over Night," 'wip vivian Martin a n d Samuel Hardy. Five-part World feature. Wednesday, January 2o-"Sunday," five- part World feature with Reine Davies and Montagu Love in the leading roles Is A Parisian Ivory Leather Coods Silverware Gold Pocket Knives Chains Pencils Rings Michigan pins Fobs Factory Hat Store 118 E. Huron St. THE MAYER-SCHAIRER CO. AN N ARBOR. MICHIGAN Spoons Pendants Novelties Lockets FINE WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING "T he HALLER JEWELRY CO. State Street Jewelers TAVER N" I SALINE, MICHIGAN A'Fine $2.00 a Day House located on. Electric Line and nine wiles from Ann Arbor. We serve special dinners to small Banquets, Clubs and Parties. Phone 63 Regular 50c-Meals-Special $1.00 CARL SCHLEH, Prop. "WHY HAVE {Y rWARl?" QUERIES DEBS OF LARGE AI)IENCE (Continued front Page One) has at last overstepped itself and a new movement is rapidly coming to a head. Both capitalist and laborer, he said, are victims to our present order. Over-production is based on under-consumption, and until we de- vise some method of doing away with the greed of competitive-trained capi- tal, all our efforts at amelioration through a process of law-making are futile. Socialists Favor Woman Suffrage Mr. Debs touched upon woman suf- frage, assuring his audience that the Socialist party stood for the com- plete emancipation of woman and her enthronement at the side of man. where she in truth belongs. "Th4 Socialist party," he said, "was the first party in the world to recog- ize woman as a human being." With- out the inspiriting influence of woman, man is never at his best, and it is a matter of history that the best work ever produced has been performed with the soul of a woman as its guid- ing star. This portion of the speech found the speaker in his best humor, and his witty presentation of the en- tire suffrage problem brought him round after round of applause from an appreciative audience. Business Topics BRADSTREET'S SAYS BUSINESS OF NATION UNUSUALLY GOOD. Bank 'learances Rise; Steel Output Soars; a General Rise in Prices Follows According to Bradstreet's weekly re- view of the trade situation, good busi- ness, activity in industry, high proces.- and cold weather feature the week's commercial activity. The cold wave which has swept the country has tem- porarily hampered trade, but has to a great extent made up for this by creat- ing a demand for seasonable goods. Good business is everywhere evi- dent. Trade in dry goods, especial-. ly orders for future delivery, has been large and shipments in general merch- andise have been larger than at any time in recent years. Industry in general is employed to full capacity. Steel mills' outputs are sold for several months in advance; prices and wages are at a high-point. Demand for lumber products is, stead- ily increasing and the cold weather 1JOII& ROTHERS Like the car itself these win- ter bodies are strong but light; and the motor therefore retains all its liveliness and flexibility The demountable tops are uphol- stered in cloth. The lighting is by electricity. The lines are graceful and the finish is in keeping with that of the car. The motor is 30-35 horsepower The price of the Winter Touring Car or Roadster, complete, including regular mohair top, is $95o (f, o. b. Detroit) I Staebler & Sons 119 W. Washington Phones 8 and 85 BOOKS WORTH READN (Continued from Page Four) policy of dealing with the problem, the author proves conclusively the need of either prohibition or of the policy of regulation. Consequently, the author must consider the merits of the other two policies. This he does in the remaining chapters of the book. Dr. Durand recognizes very. frank- ly that the policy of the federal gov- ernment in the past has not restored competition. In speaking of this pol- icy the author says (37): "This meth- od of dissolving trusts,-by leaving the ownership of all the e snstituent parts to the same persons that owned former controlling corporation,-can hardlybecharacterized by any other word than farcial." But in spite of this fact, the writer contends that this policy has at least' prevented the for- mation of trusts since the Sherman Anti-Trust Act has been used. Why then would the author advocate, the policy of prevention? First of all he contends that the methods used by the courts in the past are not the ones that ought. to have been .used. The method that Dr. Durand is inclined to favor is the policy pursued in the Union Pacific case. In this case, the court held that the stock of Southern Pacific Company which was held by the Union Pacifio,, should be disposed of only with the approval of the court. And in addition, the writer would advocate a vigorous enforcement of +1- nt;+r~c ln c P neei al i - posing - prison sentences upon the of- fenders. The policy of regulation is rejected by the author because of the vast prac- tical difficulties in regulating the trusts. According to the author the machinery needed to regulate the trusts would be very complicated and detailed. In the appendix to the book we find printed all the federal laws dealing with combinations in restraint of trade. This is a very good feature of the book. It is the opinion of the reviewer that this is the. best book ever written that deals with the legal aspects off thi brnhlpm It is bh d to f kLU A d has had its effect in creating an ex- cessive demand for coal. On January 1, 1916, price levels were! the highest ever known; 51 commodi- ties rising, while only 19 decreased. The total expenditure for building in 156 cities in the United States for the month of December was $67,892- 361, an increase of 62.4% over the cor- responding period in 1914, at which] time, however, building was much de- pressed. For the last quarter of 19151 the increase over the last quarter of 1914 was 50 per cent. Bank clearings for the week ending Thursday, January 13, aggregated $4,776,164,000, a gain of 54.4 per cent' over the same week last year and a gain of 37.8 per cent over the cor- responding week in 1914. The in- crease at New York over last year was 77.4 per cent, while 106 cities re- ported gains and only nine reported Window Cards A SPECIALTY ALSO Programs and Stationery ves prooem.n las oun eo Le a te Van Zandt, '19 very important place in the literature Coburn, '19. Left ... Shinkman, '17 of the trust problem. Gaz, '19 R. D. Kilborn. _au_, Claim Russian Defeat Constantinople, Jan. 17.-(By wire- WOULD DEPOSE GREEK KING? less to Berlin and London, Jan. 17).- ___ . An official statement given out tonight Berlin Papers Interpret Landing of declares that the Turks have repulsed : English at Pealeron as Move Russian offensive on the Caucasus Hostile to Ruler front. The statement says: "The enemy on the Caucasus front Berlin (bywireless to Sayville, L. I.) repeated his fierce attacks in the sec- Jan. 17.-Berlin newspapers, accord- tor to the south of the A asa river ing to the Overseas News Agency, ex- as far as the Karadach mountains." DAVIS & OHLINCER PROMPT PRINTERS I 109-111 E. Washington Phone 432-J more active, and activities are meet- ing with success, despite the high pric- es. Cold weather in the northwest is creating a demand for winter neces- sities, but the cold weather is hamper- ing shipments. Bank clearings for the week ending last Thursday show a gain of 40 per cent over the corres- ponding time last year. losses.t Business in Canada is becoming 'The Ann Arbor Press.--Phone No. press the belief that the landing of al-} -lied troops at Pealeron, five miles southwest of Athens, is considered' evidence that the entente powers in- tend to use extreme means to force! the hand of the Greek government in order to substitute a republic which Venizelos will' head.j WATCH This Space DzrIn.g the .Con- Ing Week Peace Party Stranded in The Hague The Hague, Jan. 17.-The Ford peace party is stranded here unable to get to. Stockholm, which it has chosen for its prominent meeting place. The Berlin foreign office has given a fiat refusal to the peace party BLUE BOOKS "Con Proof Kind" Will Occupy Your Attention at That Time I The S Ald ets'.Supply Store Opp. IEng. Arch 1111 8. UNIVERSITY appeal to be allowed to cross German E Cod Printing. The Ann Arhaor Press. territory again in a sealed train.