100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

February 29, 1916 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1916-02-29

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

DA IL Y

'I_

BUY A

C

1

Mr. Michigan Student:

ur Best

Opening the Homlyke Phonograph Parlors down town doesn't
mean that I am going to give up Ph 'ography to Michigan Students.
It only means that I am going to try harder to please you-hoping to
gain your patronage at one store by fair treatment at the other.

The element of pride
an d Tailored Suit.
cut and nyade to the
cause such a suit will

Special Club Offer
Opportunity to Purchase a
EST MODEL NUMBERS
Nos. 10 - 11t- REMINC
4 - 5 - UNDER
1-2-3 - - MON
1.2 - - L. C. S
10 SMITH PRE

Yours t uly,

A. S. LYNDON.

ii

e.

150 TAKE PART IN 1
ACTS OF ALL NATION REVUE

on Display

COLM
Malcolm Bldg,

xpert
job, see him

to

an

u .,,., " sa

d s--and

becE
adI ax

d.
is

has
of

COLA Co.'.

(Continued from Page One)
country, and the management would
have been unable to secure his serv-.
ices had he not consented to offer his
services to the enterprise without
charge.
The lighting effects will be novel in
the extreme, and here also, profession-
al aid has been called in. No curtain
will be used between acts, one scene
fading into the next through the aid
of concealed screens and mirrors.
Among the many vocal numbers
which will be rendered during the 13
acts, Zanelli's songs in the Spanish
scene are certain to score a decided
hit. Possessed of a remarkably clear
tenor voice, Zanelli has been given
every opportunity to display his ability
to advantage,-and he is considered one
o' the stars of the whole performance
by Director Stauffer, who is staging
the Revue.
Is Unified DIamatic Production
Despite the fact that there are 13
acts in the Revue, in addition to the
Prologue and Epilogue, it is a unified
dramatic production. The whole Re-
vue of the Nations is connected by a
well-defined plot and is in no sense
vaudeville. The theme is built around
the central figure of Humanity, played
by Louis Reimann. In the prologue,
Humanity bids all men come forth
into the world and see things as they
are, surrounding the world with a
complete fabric of perfect understand-
ing.
In this introduction are seen Hu-
manity's 10 hand-maidens, Love,
Friendship, Honor, Truth, Beauty, Cul-
ture, Labor, Progress, Humor and
Hope, played by Grace Fletcher, M.
Domboorajian, Gladys Seelye, Helen
Seelye, M. Crowly, Emilie Sargent,
Phyllis Povah, Dorothy Durfee, Mar-
garet Cooley, and Frieda Wuerfel.
From the introductory scene, the
scene changes to the various coun-
tries represented in the different acts.
in each scene Humanity appears with
the symbol which represents the con-
'ition lauking in that scene, and sends
a hand-maiden to bring the needed
condition about, and draw the nation
into the folds of his robe of many
pockets. All races and creeds are as-
sembled by these various messengers
and appear in the epilogue en masse,
singing:, "Above All Nations Hu-
To Use Interpreters
Each nation presents its act in native
costume and tongue, interpreters being
,sed when necessary to make the con-
versation clear to the audience. Albert
Seelye, who takes the principal part
in the African scene, knows the Zulu
language thoroughly, and uses it in
his exhortation to his followers as they
prepare to encounter a troupe of hos-

Popular Mats. Week of
en rdayK Feb, 28th
DETROIT
A World of Pleasure
Company of126
,ARCADE
Shows at 3:oo, 6:30. 8:00, 9:30
Tlies. 29-William Courtenay iin "Sealed
L1p4." quatable.
Wed.. March i- Alice Brady it, "The
pallet Girl."
Thur. 2-WilliamU Favershain in "One
Miltion Dollars."
Orpheum Theatre
The Home of Paramount and
Triangle Photoplays
Matinees, 2:00, 3:15 Evening, 6:45, 8:00
9:15 Saturdays - H~olidays Cont luuoins
Ties, Feb. 29-Dorothy Gish in "Jordon
i= a Hard Road." Also Triangle Comi-
edy.
Wed., March i-Mary Pickford in "Such
a little Quteen." Rebooked Paramount
Thr s ri Geraldine Farrar in Tempta-
tion. Paraniount Evening i5

Is the thing

A L SO-
No. 5
1

All Machines Fee
See Represen
State St. any day,I1
UNITED

YOU CAN (0

ENJJO

The MajeI

312 S. State Str

Tables rented at 3q

,,

lIly (

MAJESTIC
NOW PLAYING
MM +MM

THE HANDCUFF KING
HAR DEE
IN MOST WONDERFUL FEATS
MUSICAL MACLARFNS
VERSATILE VAUDEVILLIANS

- - - - .

Factory Hat Store
118 E. Huron St.

we

N
cr 5

OK CASES
FLAT TOP
ER DESKS

. BINDING;
a Sp ciaity
aent
ATION
our Watchword
ecessful Business

H AIRER CO.
Street
ADDING MACHINES
CHECK PROTECTORS
NEOSTYLES
SAFES

HENRY JAMES IES IN LONDON
hr_ Famous R adi t 1A ieen iln POO
Mer- iHealth Since First of Year
Ka--
ed a- London. Feb. 28.-Henry James, the
ne >f lovelist, died here today. The au-
coun- thor had been in poor health since the
Abeginning of the year. Two weeks ago,
dphsicins felt that his recovery wasp
Cold niprobablh, ecause, although his con-
inoc" ditini at that time xas not critical, it
y u : was b lieved that he could not recover.

tile tribesmen.

The weird sound of1

feated him
route, hit
alpe ahe '
t the half
tgh a ray ,
d's recor _
here that

BIWl DVF 4 A YL E R MA E IP
The committee in charge of the
Union bridge tournament has decided
to hold a special session at the Michi-
gan Union Wednesday afternoon fronm
:00 to 6:00 o'clock to give contest-
ants an opportunty to make up games
they have missed.

the Zulu war chant is but one of the
many strange songs which will linger
, in the memories of all who hear it.
A chorus of Chinese girls will sing
in their native tongue, while a group
of Chinese men will give an exhibition
of shuttle-cock playing.
Albertina Rasch will personify the
Daughter of the Nile in the Egyptian
scene, in which she will present sev-
eral of her famous eastern dances.
In the Japanese scene, Vena Marsh
gives a parasol dance in which the
color scheme plays an important part.
Helen Ely will dance the Hula, Hula
dance of the Hawaiians, assisted by a
nimber of young women, including
Helen McAndrews, Adele Crandall
Blanche Gordon, Gertrude Gunn, Leila
Pike, Pearl Lockhart and Ruth Ely.

For Spring Hats -
before Zanelli, who plays the part of
the Sultan.
Dorothy Conger and a group of littlef
girls from Detroit will present a series
of classic Greek dances in the portion
of the performance devoted to the
Athenian kingdom. Following this
scene, Humanity tells his audience that
it has seen the world through his eyes,j
and in the final picture the central fig-
ure leads his handmaidens about, bind-
ing up the ragged edges of the world,
admitting all men in the common bond
of love.
A general rehearsal will be held in
Hill auditorium this evening.
COAL MINERS AND OPERATORS
FAIL TO REACh SETTLEME1YFF
New York, Feb. 28.--The bituminous
goal -miners and operators who have
been conferring since last Thursday
failed again today to reach a settle-
ment. After an adjournment an il to-
morrow, however, it was said by bot
operators and miners that an agree-
nent probably would be concluded
then. The miners expect to get most
of their demands, most important of
which is a wage increase of about 10
per cent. All likelihood of a strike
seems to have vanished. Thursday aft-j
ernoon the anthracite coal miners and
operators will meet again. The an-
thracite miners are asking for a 20
per cent increase.
KEYSTONE STATE CLUB PLANS
TO GIVE DANCE ON MARCh! 9
At a meeting of the social committee'
of the Keystone State club yesterday,
plans were made for a dance to be
given at Packard academy, Thursday,
March 9. Tickets for the occasion will
sell for one dollar. This will be the
first time a social event of the club
has taken the form of a dance.
Another meeting of the social com-
mittee will be held at the Union
Thursday at 5:00 o'clock, when at this
meeting dance tickets will be given
out.
Alcohol Is Companion of Pneumonia
Washington, Feb. 28.-"Alcohol is
the handmaiden of pneumonia which
)roduces ten per cent of the deaths
in the ,United States," a public health
service bulletin said today. "This is
io exaggeration. The liberal and con-
.inuous user of alcoholic drinks is
eculiarly susceptible to the disease."

Thursday, "PRINCE

Fresh Lits will hold a party Satur-
day afternoon, March 4, from 2:30 to
5:30 o'clock. Music for the dancing
will be furnished by one of Ike Fisch-
er's orchestras. The following will
chaperone the party: Mrs. Jordan, Miss
Evans, Dean Effinger and wife, Regis-
trar Hall and wife, Mr. Scott of the
rhetoric department, a'nd Mr. Scott of
the history department. Adtnission
will be twenty-five cents and all the
tickets which are not sold to the mem-
bers of the class will be disposed of
to the other members of the university.
VARSITY BAND MANAGEF
WILL LEAVE UNIVERSITY
(Continued from Page One)
secretary of the Michigan Engineering
society since Januarv, 1914. His resig-
nation will not taklr effect for about
two weeks. As hi last work upon
the campus, he has general administra-
tion over the production of the All-1
Nation Revue.1

s

that the c
terest of I

mning in sensational
ie, and this younL-
mne pretty seriou }
.th's records befor
.h track work.
ale at New Ilaveu
. 2.--For the first
ball history a big
aeet the Yale Var-
this year. The an-
a the Elis and the
1 2, has been trans-
>lo Grounds to time
ide from the break
)me will be rmarked
ancial aspect; for,
1o Grounds only a
to see the game, it
lat New Haven will

Sei'mogrilpi Mhowvs Q.uake
Washington, Feb. 28.-'The
town niersity seismograph

FRESH LITS DANCE SAT
Ike Fischer's Orchestra to
Music for Occasion

Mrs. I
of her
which
Thai
is pur

Shocks
George-
record-.

i

German Act Interesting

LOCEE1 STEEL (AGE PROVES
EASY FOR N. Y. MAIL LOOT3ERS
Ne? York, Feb. 28.-Four caas
'xaches filled with registered mail
-rom Washington and Baltimore were
stolen from the locked steel cage 'f
a motor express truck that was
bringing them from a New Jersey
Central railroad train at Communipaw
to the New York postoffice early Sat-
urday morning. How much the let-
ters and packages were worth the
postal authorities will have no means
of knowing for several days. Their
guess is that the thieves probably got
about $1,000 and "certainly nothing
like $500,00.0"
THREE KILLEDI, MANY INJURED,
WHEN DYNAMITE EXPLODES
St. Louis, Feb. 28.-At least three
persons are known to have been killed
and many injured, seven of them seri-
)isly, 'when five cases of dynamite
stored at Maplewood for store con-
struction work exploded this after-
noon. Maplewood is a suburb of about
5.000 people. Approximately 30 houses
most of them frame, were demolishes

Mr. Dodge contra
Tauscher to supply
on Febriary 15, but
is authority for the
munitions have not
though he says he p
3'75, or 25 per cen1
price. Captain Tau
attorney and effor
made to ascertain 1
Mr. Dodge.
House Author of B
Washington, Feb:
today is convinced
House, President
tial advisor, has bee
through the disclosi
he is the author of
1912, entitled "Ihi
'strator;" which wor
onstruction of the
'>f government.

ed severe earthquake shocks begin-
ning at 3:27 P. M. yesterday and con-
tinuing for several hours. It is esti-
mated that the origin of the disturb-
arce was about 2,100 miles from
Washington.
la fuUre aiH care stp at Cood-

One of the most interesting scene:
i the whole performance will be the
toy makers of Nurenburg, where the
famous German toy shops are por-
trayed with a care that is said, to be
unusual for a stage presentation. Ir
this scene, the toy bugler blows a blasf
on his bugle, and the wooden soldiers
awaken, stretch their stiffened arm

year's drug store. tf and legs and go through their drill
_----- --'-the orders being given entirely ir
Call Lyndon for a good ehli t G
German.
ce~d-twe
__Vena Marsh takes a leading role iti
Our Service the Turk scene as the Soltan's favor.
Is always Gentlemanly, Courteous ite dancer. In this scene, Miss Mars!
and Promnt. Stark 2255. tf will execute several Turkish dances

Ten
eag

Shirts made to

er.--. 11. Wi

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan