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March 29, 1916 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1916-03-29

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

THE MICUIOAN DAILY

S--WALK-OVER--!

Si

i

4.,
~)i~)

Our
Latat
A Trival

It's Here-
The New 3A Special with the
NEW RANGE FINDER
Greatest Thing Out. Prices from $49.00 to $77.00

May Festival Tickets

I

English Oxford, leather
Sole O'Sullivan rubber
heels Black or Tan

LYNDON'S

719 NO. UNIVERSITY AVE.
Where You Bi~y Kodaks and Films

U

Will be Placed
On Sate at

MRSI STOKES QIVES LEOJURE
Wife of New York )liiUonaii'e T:dk~ on

We easily save you one dollar
on this Oxford

WALK- OVI

115 ~

Swain
713 E. University

DELT
"Art iS
Sunday Ev
Fi

Mr:~. Rose Pastoi' Stokes, wife or
J. C. Ph&ps Stokes, New York multi-
p fl (~"~ (-~rl~ -~ 'FT (~ D millionaire, lectured last night in Uni-
-~ ~ ~' ~ ~ersity hail on 'Socialism and Social
;. MAIN ST. Reform,"
Mrs. -Stokes said, during the course
of her lecture, that the work of the
Expert Developing and Print- present-day social reformers in pov-
ng v~as cilicacious in ~ts way, but that f~r SIu~Ients and Others erty, child labor, and slui~ problems
P. S.- He uses the grade and kiiid rc4orm 01 the present social order was
(Ve1ox~ Cyko, Etc.) of' paper he thinks necessar~r to get at the real root of
best suited to any piven negative, the evils. Prof. R. W. Seilars, of the
philosophy department, introduced the
__________________________________________________________-. spt'aker. A public discnssion followed
lectui e.
Mrs, Stokes spoke yesteeday evening
at dinner to the wonien of Martha
('00k dot-mu ory, and will speak to
loriq, Life is 5hmf
wo:nen again ~c 4:15 o'clock this aft-
ernoon in the lecture room of the nat-
'enin~ Luncheon
~rnuon :u the lecture room of the Nat-
ni-al S~iCflCe building. The subject
fty Cents
Or her lectdre Will he "Socialism and
I Woi~'en" Mrs. Stokes wik ([:SCiiSs 50-
M. to 8 P., M. cial problems, and th~ir relation to
I women and the suffragist movement.
L FEIVTFLJRE The meeting will be open to men as
well.
Trio Orchestra
Lle us to give Better Service SENIORS DISCUSS MEMORIALS
~,*flflk AUt LA ** VW *48MV t'A*tt~OtO .lkttC' Lit

q
Pu~ular Mats. GA DDIPII Week of
I1I1IIJR March 27th
DETROIT
The World1s Greatest Entertainer
Harry Lauder
/
Shows at j:oo. 6:jo 8:00, 0:30
Wed. Mar. 29-George Beban in 'Pawn
of Fate."

Apr11 1
Saturday Morning at 8:00a.m.

$2.50 each if Pre-festival cover coupon is ex-
changed-otherwise $5.50.

Thu. Mar. so-Emily Stevens in "The
House of Teats"
Fri., Mar. ~t-MabeI l'aliaferro in "Her
Great Price."

Beginning Monday, April 3, as long as they
last, they will remain on sale at the University
School of Music at $2 and $5 each, respectively.
The Sign of Satisfaction I

Orpheum Theatre
The Home of Paramount and
Triangle Photoplays
Malinees, 2:00, 3:i5 Evening, 6:45, 8:oo
9:15 Saturdays - ~olidays Continuow
TODAY
"The Life of Our Saviour.~' ' Reels,
Hand Colore(t Pathe afternoon toc, and
Evening 'sc.
Thur.-Fri. Mar. 30-31-Pauline Frederick
in "The Spider" Also first in~tah1-
meut of the ilurtou Holmes Travel-
oglie series.
THE FAMOUS
Coi Sons and Viniag
~ GAPS, 6OWNS AND HOODS
for all College Degrees
may be ordered now from

Hill Auditorium

SEVENTEEN

PHONE
1459J

5:30 P.

YEARS

WE CALL and

1~X1'ERIENC E

SPECIA
Mandolin

DELIVER

110 EAST LIBERTY STREET

Reservations Enal

APID S OE R PAIR SHOP

ATTENTION! AMATEURS!

You will always be assured of bright,
clear pictures if you have your develop-
ing and finishing done by

Union; Convene A gain April 3
First steps on the 1916 senior me-
morials question were made at the
Union Monday night, when the chair-
men of the eight graduating classes
met for an informal discussion of the
question of disposing of the annual
donations.
A second meeting of the chairman
will be held at 7:45 o'clock next Mon-
day night at the Union, at which time
definite proposals will be made and
these will be submitted to the van- I
ous for action at their meetings.
1)R. LOEW, PROMINENT SChOLAR,
~1VES TWo LECTURES THIS WEE~

COUNCIL P 1; A N S
F RE S II

CAP DAY

DAINES

& NICKELS

--

Li

Why atimas are a
Sensible Cigarette

I

What makes a ciga-
rette sensible?
It must be delicious to
your taste, of course.
But the fact that Fatimas
please the taste of most
men- the~t outsell any

of every long-smoking
day just what cigarette
comfort means.
And you'll realize that
you've found the one
cigarette you'll want ~
stand by -- a ser,~ibTh

other c~
over Sc-
make F~
Fatima
cigarette
also giv
comfort.
They
means
throat ai
better y
make ye
The milc
of all pi
Fatimas
that.
Stick I
you'll dis

igarette costing Cigarette.
-doesn'tbyitself,
atimas sensible. Why not try FaCrr.~s
-today.
is are a sensible
b0cause they ~oJ %~4cco (&'
e you cigarette
Polirnc, 'was //u' only cga-
rd/c a-wa rd/cl i/u' GA'ANi)
are cool. That J'A'IZl/, ~ ~
:omfort to the ~ -
Tid tongue. And * ~!1u!lj I- .~'P~'.Wfl.
et, they never
u "feel mean."
I Turkish blend
Lire tobaccos in
takes care of
n Fatimas and
cover at the end
-, ~,1 ~~'x -
T~JL~.K1SI

Dr. A. W. Loew, who will give two
public lectures at the university this
week, is among the most eminent of
the younger scholars in the field of
of palaeography. Although now con-
nected with the University of Oxford,
England he was born in the United
States and studied in the American
School of Classical Studies in Rome.
Dr. Loew will deliver an illustrated
lecture on "Mediaeval Repositories of
Learning'' in the upper lecture room
of Memorial hall at 4:15 o'clock to-
d a y . ________________________________________ _______________________
Will I*cture on Electric Furnaces
Mr. E. L. Crosby, sales engineer of
the Detroit Edison company, will give
'a lecture on "Electric Furnaces" at
19:00 o'clock this morning in room 165
of the chemistry building.
Dr. Bartell Reads Essay
At the meeting of the local branch
I of the American Chemical society held
yesterday afternoon. Dr. F. E. Bar-
tell, of the chemistry department, read
a paper on "Negative Osmose."

(Continued from Page One)
A. S. Hart, '17, were appointed a spe-
cial committee for this purpose at
the meeting held last week.
Fire Vro~ect~on Urged
The quc.ition of safeguarding the
~raternity and sr~ ority houses iron:
danger of fire was favorably discussed,
being referred to the Council from the
health service with a request for co-
operation.
Intercollegiate bowling relations
with Yale and several other big East-
ern colleges may soon be a reality, if
an intercollegiate bowling club is or-
ganized here as planned by the Coun-
cii. The idea is to form an intercolle-
giate organization, similar to the pres-
ent national rifle association, in the
:arious colleges, matches being
played at th different institutions and
the reports being sent out by wire. At
the close ol' the season a tournament,
in which select teams would compete
for the champion ship honors at a
tournament to be held in one of the
big eastern cities, is also part of the
plan.
FR A ~l'ERM'rY ME N )IEE T; TALK
OVER TILE l"RESII3IAN PROBLEM

I C__MATINEES, 2:30 p. m.
NICHTS, - 8:15p.m.
AND HE~ SUPERB COMPANY
MATINEE ~
and NECHTA WI

Thurs., Matinee, A Doll's House; Night, Cr0012 Stockings
FRI. MAT, LADIES ONLY ADMITTED, "WIFE OR AFFINITY?"

U

Whitney Theatre
MAIL ORDERS NOW
Thursday, April 6
Taylor
Holmes
In a New Comedy Crimful
of Wholesome Fun
His Majesty
Bunker Bean
by Lee Wilson Dodd
From Harry Leon Wilson's
Widely-Read Story, Published in
the Saturday EvenIng Post
Direct from 6 Months
at Cort Theatre,
Chicago
The Chicag. Daily News Fey~:
The Play Is ~ Corker."

h itney Theatre
Wednesday, April 5
The Evont of the Season
8th Annual Tour of
)ire~tion Win. Morris

I Scotland's Idol
England's Pet
America's Favorite
I Wo~'Id's Greatest Entertainer

wiah a Company of

Representatives from a number of
the general fraternities met at the
Ncacia house yesterday and discussed
problems which will be acted upon at
the next meeting of the inter-fratern-
ity conference. An effort will be
made to induce the faculty to allow
freshmen to live in the houses of fra-
ternities to which they are pledged.
'There is also a movement to discon-
tinue mock initiations.

I

International Artists
PRICES - = ~Octo$2
Seat Sale PJlonday, April ~

Taxi
ment.

2255, open under new manage-

'my Hixson's new stag lunch.
Williams St.

512

If

DAY arch 30 ~~Seat Sale ii
ay,1Oa.m. II

4
2 Oi~iv~di&dt4as

The New YorJ tinter Garden's Largest Spectacular Revue

I

CITY PLANS GARDEN CONTEST
PrIzes to Be Awarded to Stimulate
Interest In Beautifying Yards
The civic association has started a
contest by which it is hoped greater
interest in beautifying the city will
be created.
The contest is divided into three see-
tion~ and prizes will be awarded for
each. T~hey are the home garden con-
test, the children's municipal garden
contest, and the private yard contest.
The whole contest is in the hands
of a committee of which Harry W
Douglas is chairman, with Mrs. James

Foster and Ray F. Bassett as asso-
ciates. Similar contests have been
held in a number of the larger cities
of the country with very marked sue-
cess.
Florer Speaks at Detroit Art Museum
Prof. W. XV. Florer of the German
department, opened the educational -
lecture course given un(ler the aus-
pices of the Recreation commission of
the City of Detroit last night, at the
Detroit Fine Arts museum. The sub-
ject of his lecture was "The American
Revolution,'' illustrated by the Swain
collection of photographs.

30 Famous
8on~

[ 12

ii
AU the Winter Garden Favorites, including Swor and Mack, Minerva Cover-
dale, Blythe Brown, John G. Sparks, George Schilier, Samuel Adams, Louise
Mink, Ruth Mink, and the celebrated

60 u.a.W1N TER GARDEN CH0RVS~--6O

The Famous Winter~Garden Runway

Patronize Daily advertisers. *

PRICES: Gallery, 50c; Balcony, 75~, $1.00, $1.50; Orchestra, $1.50, $2.00. AUGMENTED OR~

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