THE MICHIGAN DAILY. 0I I I ! K a__I The Stein-BloeIb Co.. 1915. The acknowledged lead- ers in men's fashions for more than sixty years have correctly interpreted the style needs of the real American, as shown in . L est Apte & C I _:- II \ 4 1 J i trt"'tos , CLOTHES FOR U. of M. MEN You will find Clothes here in The Big Store that you know are right -Adler's for example. You will like to look over the new weaves, shades, and styles this fashion making firm has put out. Lindnseh mitpfel &Co. Clothiers and Furnishers MAIN STREET I BOSTONIAN SH OES See the New Devon Last It bears Distincetion CAMPVS BOOTERY 508 S. STATE ST. I' THE EBERBACH (a. SON COMPANY Scientific Apparatus, Chemicals and Student Laboratory Supplies for Biology, Histology, Bacteriology, Pathology, and Anatomy THE EBERSACH CA SON CO. 200-208 E. Liberty St. BOY OF 13 MATRICULATES AS CHICAGO'S YOUNGEST STUDENT Chicago, Oct. 12.-Benjamin Perk, of Indianapolis, a wide-eyed boy just past 13 years old, attracted a good deal of attention at the University of Chicago today, where he is registered as a freshman. Perk is the youngest student who has ever matriculated at Chicago. Last spring Perk was graduated fr om the Indianapolis Manual Train- ing High school with class honors, re- ceiving a scholarship at the Univer- sity of Chicago. 20 PER CENT MORE CHEXICAL ENGINEERS ENROLL THIS YEAR Not to be behind the other depart- ments of the university, the depart- ment of chemical engineering reports an approximate 20 per cent increase over last - year's enrollment. The senior, junior, and sophomore classes taken in the aggregate, have 24 more students enrolled than were on the lists last fall, the sophomores leading with a gain of 12. According to reports, the 30 chem- ical engineers who were graduated last fall have all secured positions. Aged Resident Suffers Severe Fall Tobias Stipe, about 60 years old, residing at 541 Packard street, fell to the pavement from the rear platform of the Detroit-Jackson local at 6:15 o'clock last evening, just as the car was nearing State street. He suffered bruises about the head. "THE LITTLE SCHOOLMASTER SAYS": Snappy Tailored-to-Order Clothes for College Men. It isn't what you pay, but what you get, that COunts most in Clothes- buying, and the more con- servative you are in buy- ing tailored-to-order ap- parel the better you'll like togs from our famous Chi- Cago tailors, Ed. V.Price & Co. We'd appreciate the opportunity to show you the prevailing styles for Autumn and Winter and help you select a becoming pattern from our display of 500 handsome new woolens Prices within your reachi u .. a . .. a ... r . r . . .. r .' ., r . d . ,w o a . w . ,. a ao ," . aw a n ,. e. . r . .' ' f r 1 . .. .. . u .' + r ... 4 % yN . .,,.-.,,,..,......,....R 9..,. ,. -il, z =.Q!A; COME IN ----" '1 Reule, Conlin & Fiege4 Corner Main and Washington Streets $18 to $28 IA A M S - _- -' r ,' { tia i {! r - ../ / .Y.. --a I Faculty Members Please Note:- That Caps, Gowns, and Hoods for Con- vocation Day may be rented or purchased at this store. You should be myas- ured immediately. (Third Floor) GET YOUR Window Cards and Posters OF DAVIS & OHLINGER Phone 432-J 109-111 E. Washington Pik liv 9 ; ,Il, }I C y. ARNOLD & CO. JEWELERS 220 S.MAIN STREET Let's Get Acquainted It will be mutually beneficial. We have the best and:largest stock of Jewelry, Michigan Pins, Clocks, Etc. The only exclusive Optical shop in the city where glasses are fitted and made to your order. Special attention to Repair Work. ~-~-~CL2 k Roll Your Favorite Tobacco in Riz La Croix Paper :0 and you will get a better flavor, relish and enjoy- ment from your cigarette than ever before. Because you will get only the pure, fresh fragrance of the tobacco-which explains the universal preference for Riz La Croix Papers among smokers of experience. 4 I ARNOLD&CO.1 JEWELERS 220 S. MAIN SYREET UNION MEMBERSHIP CAMPAIGN. DELAYED BY MASS MEETINGS The Michigan Union house-to- house campaign booked for tonight and tomorrow night, has been post- poned until next Tuesday and Wed- nesday nights, because of the mass meetings planned by the student council. The same committeemen who were announced yesterday will assemble at 6:45 o'clock Tuesday night for a smoker in the clubhouse. The names will be distributed to solicitors on the geographical plan. Laboratory coats. Wagner & Co., State St. Oct13-14 Engineering Society to GiveLecture "Electro Magnets will be the sub- ject of an illustrated lecture by C. R. Underhill, given under the auspices of the Ann Arbor branch of the Ameri-t can Institute of Electrical Engineers, at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow evening in room 348 of the new engineering' building. The lecture is the first of a series to be given this year by the Engineering society. 4 Doors South German-Ameri- can Savings Bank Main St. I FOR RENT FOR RENT-Home-like, well heated, front suite in private house; $11.00 per month. 520 Packard. oct12-13 FOR RENT-Well furnished roons; either singly or in suites; near campus. 433 Maynard street. octl2-13-14 LOST LOST-Nineteen Choral Union tickets between Newberry hall and School of Music. Phone 1134-M. Reward. oct12-13 LOST-Monday, three keys on a ring. Finder please return same to H. Keidanz, 412 Church St. Phonet718. Octla WANTED WANTED-Position as cook. Frater- nity preferred; best of references.' 944 Greenwood Ave. oct12-13 POSITION WANTED --Experienced mechanical draftsman wants work Monday, Wednesday and Saturday afternoons. Box A, Michigan Daily. Oct13 WANTED-Position as cook in frater- nity, sorority or boarding house. Can give good references. Call after 5 p. m. at 524 N. Fifth Ave. Phone 2064. Octl3-14 FOR SALE FOR SALE-REAL ESTATE Cambridge Road-198 feet. Beautiful residence sites on hill with splen- did view. O'kw ner will sell very cheap. Address H. P. Breitenbach, 1611 Kresge Bldg., Detroit. Octl3&16 MISCELLANEOUS HOT OFF THE COLLEGE WIRES Syracuse May Drop Crew torpedoes is more exciting than haz- Syracuse, N. Y., Oct. 12.-Unless a ing Frosh. very radical move is made in the nearP future, the famous Syracuse crew Pigeons Race for Cup which always figures materially in the Ames, Iowa, Oct. 12.-Eight hun- Poughkeepsie meet will not start. The dred pigeons will be released today athletic association is financially em- from the Iowa State campus in the barrassed and it will take phenomenal $500 cup race to Chicago. The birds soliciting to put it on a firm footing are timed by ankle stop watches and again. An attempt will be made, how. it is expected the flight will be made ever, to extract $2.50 from each stu- in less than six hours. dent. Harvard Acquires Old German Prints $2,800 in Jobs Secured by Oregon "Y" Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 12.-Master- Eugene, Oregon, Oct. 12.-Jobs pieces by Altdorfer, the sixteenth cen- which together will bring over $2,800 tury German artist, have recently to University of Oregon students have come into the possession of the Fogg been secured by the University Y. M. Art Museum of Harvard. These and C. A. More students than ever be- an etching by Hirschvogel are by far fore have availed themselves of the the most valuable acquisitions of the opportunity offered by the employ- Fogg Museum in some time. They ment committee, and a second can- represent some of the best German vass of the city is necessary to fill the art and none like them have been on demands of the applicants. sale in over fifty years. Iowa Student Drives War Ambulance Elect President of Deutscher Verein Ames, Iowa, Oct. 12.-Robert Thom- Members of the combined organiza- as, Iowa State '11, has written some tion of the Deutscher Verein will meet Ames friends that he has been spend- tomorrow evening in the Verein room ing the summer in the thrilling voca- in University hall for the purpose of tion of driving a war ambulance. He electing a president. Hugo Wa-genseil, was on a leave of absence in London 'lectin a eset. to ageil, at the time of the Zeppelin air raids, '16, who was elected to that office, has and confesses that dodging bombs and handed in his resignation. Grinnell Bros.' Music House HAVE MOVED To 116 South Main Street Between Huron Man.L and Washington PIANOS FOR SALE AND RENT* Sole Agenits in Michigan for M. Nunes & Sons' Genuine Hawaiian "Ukulele"-the sweetest toned string instrument made. Ask to hear it. PHONE"1707 PETITION To Revive All Feminine Enthusiasm Kinds of Athleties (Pronounced: REE-LAH-KROY) FAMOUS CIGARETtE PAPERS tC They are so pure, light and thin--their combustion is so perfect-that there is abso- lutely no taste of paper in the smoke.. I4 strong, do not burst in rolling, and are naturally I adhesive, because FE made from the bestTwinest flax linen. Entirely ing,illustrated Book- lets-one about RIZ L pure and healthfulCROIX CigarettePapersthe ~ preandhelthul - other showing how to ollYou because exclusively a Own" cigarettes-sent anywhere in vegeta ble product, on request. Address The American L in At a mass meeting of women held yesterday afternoon in Barbour gym- nasium, resolutions were drawn upI and signed by more than a hundred, petitioning the Women's league for the formation of a women's athletic asso- ciation to be organized as a branch of that organization. Madge Mead, 16, chairman of the present athletic committee, presided, and outlined the plans of the new or- ganization. With an active member-. ship of .300 the association would be able to revive enthusiasm in all lines of athletics, organize class cheering sections, give a general athletic ban- quet, and encourage all the women of the university to take an active part in the athletic program. Is Off Duty First Time in 27 Years Miss Mary Sullivan, of the local postoffice, is absent from her desk for the first time within 27 years of her service in that capacity, and is con- fined at her home with a'-mild case of pneumonia. Her record of service is unique among local postal circles. Miss Sul- livan will probably be able to resume her work again within the next few days. FOR WOMEN'S A. A.I a k. INSTRUMENTS AT OBSERVATORY RECORi) QUAKE 1,800 MILES OFF Note Tremors Lasting More Than WO Minutes; Shocks Reported in Porto Rico Paul W. Merrill, assistant to Prof. W. J. Hussey, of the university obser- vatory, yesterday examined the seis- nographic records of an earthquake which occurred Monday afternoon and estimated that the shock occurred at a distance of about 1,800 miles. The records whichowere obtained by four separate recording pens in both horizontal positions, north and south, east and west, show the first tremors at 1:39 p. m., central stand- ard time. The main waves were no- ticed at -1:49 and the duration of the record is at least 50 minutes. Al- though the variations are well marked, the quake does not seem to have been a severe one. Telegrams from Stuttgart, Germany, via London, and from New York City report that an earthquake is esti- mated to have occurred somewhere in the West Indies at about the same time, while a message from Porto Rico reports that a slight earthquake was felt there. Fraternity China is a specialty of the firm we represent. Dean & Co., Ltd., 214 South Main street. oct8-10-13 Girls, attention! For rain-water shampoos, face massage and manicure go to Mrs. J. R. Trojanowski. Phone 696-W. 1110 South University. Side entrance. ,I i . va = .. ... .. . _.. _ , voorlwi.. - ok dftPHONE Ch Wt