PAGE SIX
THE MICHIGAN DAILY.
PAGIfl SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY.
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SWAIN
713
EAST UN IV.
Develops Films, Makes Pri'nts and Enlargemetits
Takes Groups and Views Anywhere, Anytime
Home "Portraiture a Specialty
is an All-around photographer
Is the'most popular string musical instru-
mernt of the times.
Playsd by College Men Eveaywlhcre
Glee Clubs never fail to win tremendous encores
with the Genuine " Nunies & Sons" sweet tone
"Ukulele," made in Hawaii.
We Have Just ReceivedA Largc Shipment,
Kenneth Wisem an
Member of the Los Angeles Ad Club Quartette
and what he thinks of the M. Nunes 49 Son's
Ukuleles
Gentlem~en:
I have tried a dlozen different mnales of Ukuleles but for the
past seve~ratl years I have u ed exclusively the instrumecnt
made by M Nunes & Sons. The tome of this Ukulele is
BIG, D),EP and very RICH- in duality and from my per-
sonal experience I find that these nece.ssary dualities aie
usutally lackii in the other makes of Uk l~les.
Respectfully yours,
KRNNEiTh-IW1SMAN
LECTURES ERR CULTURE
I1E'VITAL4 OF OLD SYSTVEMI MAY BE
E VI WINCEfirTHAT VOCATIONAL
)WORRIS S ARE FAILURE
Years ago, you know, when Michi-I
gan was v ery, very young, and you
could look over the whole campus
with a glass eye, they inaugurated a
rculture system. Every now and then
somninoted( elevated character would
give a famous address in one of the
little wooden buildings, and in that
way our noble alumni were educated.
In short, the whole system of our
grand old institution was built around
that lecture course.
They didn't have any stiffs to workI
with, or any engines to take to pieces,
or any drawings to blotch, but they
worked everything out on themselves.
Took their ideas apart, looked' em
over and oiled thr~m and gathered them
together again. If one of their loyal
number had a miserable toothache,
three or four would harness a blan-
ket to the disturbing ivory and pull.
They didn't necessarily, have an up-
perclassman fuddie around all day in
the clinic room trying to determine
just at what angle the prongs shouid
be inserted to make an imperfect pull,
so as to bring the patient back for
a.dditional jobs.
Now with all our vocational uneasi-
ness comes the survival of that old
system of a lecture course.. Guess
we ain't getting the proper culture,
after all! Who said them hickory
stick advocators and simple livers
dlidni't know anything about CUTL.-
T1UllE?
HEALTH SERVICE WARlS
E ~ON TUBERCULOSIS GER-3I
Matinee
Wednesday
and Sat.
The
Musical
GARRICK Weei of
8coe
DETROIT
Lila~c Dotlo
Comedy Beautiful Chorus
RAE THEATRE
W. IHron St., Opposite 1). Ui. R.
Waiting Room.
ALAN STANCHFJ'ELD, MGR.
Wednesday, Oct. 2o-"Shore Acres,'
Fatuous Players production.
"Their Bewjt~lied %lopement,"-z-
reel comnedy.
GOODI ORCHESTRA
SattrdB~y, Sunl'ay. and Holidays cn-
tinuo us.
andi l iall )et.c22 L i i rizl u~
Ii ~ei n it zcler c i (lo. IiOS,
C lyd ivai thr'll"ggeat r , "an reo '
tEerO So Il y.' .' M l cie.r
-Fake a "Trip Around the World."
Finest series of travel pictures ever
produced.Watch for date,
ACT ON SPIIIT SHOWN
of(Continued from Page One)
ofthe student body as possible, and
this will be carried out by appointing
several prominent upperclassmen to
talk at the many class meetings which
are being held this week.
Sophomores and upperclassmen, re-
flecting upon the matter, have recalled
the exaggerated reports that followed
the Vanderbilt gamze last year under
conditions similar to those at Ferry
field Saturday, and they are 'anxious
that no black eye be dealt Michigan
now, at a time when the support of
her thousands of alumni means so
much to her in the present Michigan
Union campaign.
11CIC)' IVN NIO "ES
11E1111UP".1111-1OVER UN ITED1.
(Continued from Page One)
ever been a student in this university.
This includes, a large, number of men
who for one reason or another have
left school before acquiring a degree.
The cities in which alumni dinners
will be held today are: Boston, Buf-
falo, Chicago, Detroit., Duluth, Hous-
ton, Texas, Minneapolis, Rochester, N.I
Y., San Francisco, ,Toledo, 0., and Ma-
nila, P. I.
Have your rooms decorated artisti-
cally by C. H=1. Major &V Co. Phone '
237. 2038SNWashington street.
oct20-2 i-22-23-24
Perhaps you may need one of
our Easy Rockers to make It so.
See what we can offer you io the way
of comfortable rom necessities.
Is Your Roomi Comforlable
and Cozy?
I
MARTIN HALLER
FURNITUCRE
112-122 F. Liberty St.
RUGS
I
P
DEANN IVAt G ii ANEXPLAINS Wily
EDIT~ORS ISFSUE 1E11'JOUR3 N AL
N 4w I'aikblie. E lo Ainis to Bring D)is-
eoi ery and Its Application
Closer' Together
in an editorial entitled "The New
Journal," DMean 'Victor C. Vaughan of
the medical school, and editor-in-chief
of the "Journal of Laboratory and
Clinical Methods," makes an apology
in behalf of the editors to the medical
prol'ession and to the public in gen-
eral for the publication of a new mag-
azine in the medical world.
"Why start a new journal?" reads
the editorial. "This question will
arise in the minds of all those who
see this publication. It is a perfectly
proper question and one which we
have asked ourselves many times in
the past few months. Tfhere are gen-
eral and 'special organs, weekly,
#monthly and quarterly, in all the lan-
guages of the civilized world. Then
why start another? Why ask the med-
ical man to add another to the great
IAMORDiS JEW M.RS vWATCHy
sCHLNDEO jRN0 SEYFRIED
RIME.UERWS18 TygER+
NNAR80~ SILVERSMITHS ANN AR~o
DOWN TOWN
HE1ADQUARTERS FOR
U. OF M. JEWELRY
G,, L. COOTI, 91'i7L, APPOINTED
PRO HIBITION REPRE SENiT A'IVE
T'o Attend. Meeting of icilgan State
ExcCIIIIye Committee at
Jacksonf
Grant 1L. Cooke, '17L, has; been ap-
pointed by President Lewis Reimann,
'Hi, of the university branch of the
Intercollegiate -Prohibition; associa-
tion, to act as representative of thel
local organization. He will attend the
meeting of the Michigan state execu-
tive committee which Chairman Fred-
erick H3. Goodrich, Of Albion, has
called for October 23 at Jackson. At
this time tile representatives from the
ai$ If,t3Q (¢(Campaign
WilliamIDe Keine;
Ph y sictt:tlls
Headed by Dr.
and Uiiixet"ity
Starts
are State Agents.
116 So. Maain St.
Phone 1707
1,{51. _Y1.5:.. °.P.?, a
' f9-- -"'i&Cif'iGS ' 8Y31 L+Ti S E7gS _'aM
frES CBa P:14Y;2.?: '3"_' !9.ar P} eiiEY S : '1e 1
S.sr :_',tY.;Cfit' "$ LS 1 . *:7d1r2 ^'.. s-i :"..ir:,[ ::: 4 .: t .. .:
k =' CiR 7i(!t. '°' lir1« 3 '3X:"r" :'!C:S,:^.-.64i'Sfd:
:334-336 S. °' TA T fi, AN A7IOR
Leeave Copy
att
Quarry's ars,
Le~i&DVERTISI NO
Directors of the $100,000 state anti-.
tuberculosis campaign wiii have the
co-operation of tile health service of
the university. The principal purpose
of this campaign ins to be educational
ith hte view of teaching the people
of Michigan the most approved and
scientific methods of fighting the
white plague, which is claiming thou-
sands of lives in this state annually.
Dr. William DeKleine, formerly of
Ottawa, Mich., now located in -Lan-
sing, has complete charge of the cam-
paign, which will spend the huge sum
of $100,000 in spreading educational
literature and instructing the public
in the fight aginst tuberculosis by the
county visiting nurse system.
Dr. H. H. Cummings ana Dr.
Charles P. Drury, of the health ser-
vice, will push the campaign among
the students of the university. Dr.
Drury, '14M, has had special training
along this linel in his work with Dr.
Hewlett in the University hospital,
and he will devote considerable of
his~ thime to the work.
Tubercuilosis examinations will be
made upon students at the' health ser-
vice rooms and Dr. Cummings is ad-
vising every student in the university
to be examined at some time during
the year. It is estimated that there
are thousands of people suffering un-
knowingly from tuberculosis in the
first stages. Although only a few ex-
aminations have been given Yso far,
two students have been found who are
tubercular.
VALE L(0SES STAR FULLBACK
aLegortie Disquilied on Account of
Playing Sommer Ball
New Haven, Conn., Oct. 19.-Harry
Legore, star fullback on the Varsity
football team; Arthur Milburn, cap-
ain of the baseball squad; William
Easton, Spencer Pumpelly 'and Roger
G. Rhett, also members of the Var-
sity ninle, were today disqualified from
further participation in athletics at
h eap of
opened -
periodicals that-often un-
-burden his table? To these
various colleges of~
makze arrangements
quiestions we have given serious con-
sideration, and have finally decided
that a medical journal, of the kind
whlich we hope to make this, will be
of value to the profession.
$ "At present there is a wide chasm
between the research man and the
plractitioner. The former mines .the
ore, the latter refines it and shapes
it into useful instruments. Tlhe work
of the one sulpplements that of the
other. The world is not benefited nor
rnedicine advanced until the work of
both has been done. Scientific discov-
cry must precede practical applica-
Lion. The basic aim of this journal
will lbe to bring discovery and its ap-
plication closer together, to supply
the research mnan with a strictly sci-
entific organ through which he can
report the results of his labors, and
to suggest to the practitioner how he
m 'ay use the latest discoveries."
state oratorical contest which is to
be, held at MV. A. C. in the early spring.
These contests are held for the pur-
pose of selecting a student to repre-
sent Michigan at the interstate con-
test at which students from Maine,
New York, Connecticut, Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, Ohio, Indiana and Mich-
igan will compete.
'From the four such interstate con-
tests men will be selected to partici-
pate in the national contests which 4
will take place a year from December.
'Hang Students to Witness Iowa Game
Iowa City, Iowa, Oct. 19.-One
thousand students will make the trip
to Minneapolis Saturday for the pur-i
pose of witnessing the Iowa-Minne-
,sota football game. One of the rail-
roads will bill them over their rail-
road as cattle, so that the cost oft
trasportation. will be but $2 per head.
Michigan will
for the annual
i'.®'
0-1=22
mm
WANTED I
1101t RENT
--<.
WVANTED -- Immediately; help for j WCR RPNET- --arge, light, attractive
huskin~ corn; k cents: per bushel.
J. I. Stere PacardRoad. 2093-..
oct20-2 i-22-2 3
W'4ANTEI',3) Student Burger at offce;
good gunrantee. U. tof i. arber
Shop, 1110- S. Vni~ ersify. oct20-21
FOR SL
roo-in i tabls, als o GxS ice box, cheap.
'h1ole10. oe'L20-21-2L
suite. 11caso 'able rates. Also room-
muate wvant ed. 'one G"13-11. 41:
T hompson. Oct 16-17-11)
t i I2 ptrawurLr tI2at l ainnruuucc hito to
Or M'u st bui ftj a a wni~rnnftIur acrutl
ab r toInour bu anwn, tIru our aannnriatiu wit't
l biar R. L ri tdm &Tol., Iga trig manufacturrm~
of fvratruitrlj ruind, a rcntniktc LNratrruitu #gwr
Chlli a aabbition tohiour adlrau rprrrot o tabai liguart pitirpli noin
as uniuepoitinlto raa nrr for gnur tiditni rftrilntltE.
15'aatnles 0will be ronuitaatlll fhrpt ton I nd---jrwrlI inot, trres*s tizn?
rnotraaiua3ralon, oiiurltiri ziub jrawrlrg for favors0 auui gifts.,
rattnn prrr t htoprrdalixr in toe rr airinvj, alterttqgdaub
vruzuiiatliof Iraatritj g mi.
Chnbbs,, Suniday. Il honec 1S'+ -W.
1( EM M11-11111.1 I A1) ~aa and Phyi sGraduiates Meet
. ) Asa y LIs CLASS * _, Ibers of the faculty and grad-
uuate students of the departnment of'
(Continued from I"n>,,.One
Senir parn~icswillmak ther ;physics will hold the first of a series
nominations at.*1:00 o'clock Friday in of (:llfrm'uiats in the east lecture
lectuii-ere'oom 13, chemical building, ra 4 :15) o'clock next Monday aft-
an(l juinior lw will hold their elcc- _rmo.A pazper will be read and an
i 1r,.E :? fto 7:0 oclck heopen i.,ctis-on of the subject will
sani dayin room C, law building.-
mi owr~t. ; ' spea er an-.. .-.,, s-. su.Y.L.ec.t
IYale.
This action canme* as the result of
the' men playig summer baseball at
Quogue, L. I., during the past season,
for wich playing they received their
board..
schools in the east to investigate such
boil squad will be a har(, one indeed.
Yale has none too strong a team this
year, and to lose a man of the full-
back's c'aliber in the middle of the
season will weaken the team greatly,
as, Legore was considered one of the
be:st players in his position in the
couhtrV.
W fr rut 4kwIr
Frshli swill nominjate candidates
for la;bs offices at 4:05 o'clock this
ater oiiin rooms 101, economics
buidig.No arrangements have been,
made y;et f'or nominatfions by either
the jrnior, s:ophiomore or the freshman
t1anss f thu~hlo~'1n fnDharmacnv.
wil be annouced later. Attendance
at the:se am-clings will be voluntary.
b~tt ooe. See Davis ,A 119) So. Main.
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