THE MICHIGAN DAILY l'he private canoe sheds of Saun ers' Canoe Livery will not be open >r some time, due to repair work eing done. Opening of same will be ublished later. Wm. J. Saunders, rop.-Adv. . A full line of new and second-hand canoes and equipment now on sale at Saunders' Canoe Livery. Terms cash. ,-Adv. Hear Mr. Patton sing at the Upper Room Bible class tonight.-Adv. WUERTH TODAY ORCHESTRA MUSIC R r I, *? *1 * * * * * * * * * * * AT THE THEATERS * a. #4 " Picturing Woman's Nine Big Emotions dt TODAY m AJESTIC IMAJESTIC ORCHESTRA Nightly-All S' ws Sunday I LAST TIMES TODAY CHARLES RAY in "THE GIRL DODGER" S UNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY ANITA STEWART in "A Midnight Romanoe" A RCA DEI I II * * * * * * * Majestic---"The Girl Dodge.'r" Arcade-"Fortune's Child." Wuerth-"Tricks of Fate." Orphleum - "The . Millionaire Pirate." Shubert - arrick - Detroit-- All week - "Old Lady :31." 4 * *k *S ;L *i %{ _y IN .Mob,1i Ce Detroit Campus - Charley." Opera House on the All week - '"Come on, Shows at 3:00; 7:00; 8:30 Phones: Theatre, 2g6-M Mgr's Res., 2316-M Sat-22--Gladys Leslie in "Fortune'sj Child" and Big-V Comedy, "Bums and Boarders." Sun-Mon -23-24--Louis Bennison in "Sandy Burke of the U-Bar-U" and Glacier National Park Scenic. Tues-25-June Elvidge and Frank Mayo in "The Bluffer;" Mutt and Jeff Car- toon, "Here and There," and Current Events. I WUERTH THEATRE 2:00, 3:30, 7:00, 8:30; 10:00 sat-22-BESSI E BIRRISCALE, "Tricks -of Fate." Also Scenic Comedy. Sun-Mon-23-24-WM. FARNUM in "For Freedom." Also Sunshine Comedy, "Roman Cowboy." Scenic and Cartoon Comedy. Tues-Wed --25-26 - GLADYS BROCK- WELL in "The Forbidden Room." Also Lloyd Comedy and Mutt & Jeff cartoon, "Fireman Save My Child." Coming-Hearts of Humanity "The Unpardonable. Sin" ORPHEUM THEATRE 2:00. 3:30, 7:00, 8:30, 10:00 .Sat -22 --MONROE SALISBURY in "The Millionaire Pirate." A News and Comedy, "It's Great to Be Crazy.' Sun-Mon-23-24-MAROLD LOCKWOOD AND MAY ALLISON in "The Fire of Hope." "The Lure of the Circus" and Ford Weekly. Tues -25- MARGUERITE CLARK in ."Rich Man, Poor Man." Also "A Fight for Millions"-"The ride of Disaster." COM I NC Charles Ray 'The Girl Dodger' s atsGARRICK SI an $1.50 UETROIT 54c to $2 LEE Kugel presenty the Sunshtne'Comedy 'OLD LADY 31" by Rachel Crothers Bessie BarrSOiXlC BESSIE BARRISCALE TRICKS OF FATE ALSO Scenic and Comedy Sunday, Monday William Farnum in "For Freedom" Also a Tom Mix Comedy "The Roman Cowboy" Coming Hearts of Humanity ORPH EUM TODAY Nonroe Salisbury in "flE MILLIONAIRE PIRATE" NEWS AND COMEDY Sunday, Monday Harold Lockivood "The Fire of Youth" COMING Charles Ray in The Girl Dodger I I ARCAD E Today AT THE MAJESTC Two diametrically opposite types of students are portrayed in "The Girl Dodger," Charles Ray's new Para- mount picture which will be shown for the last times Saturday at the Majestic. One type, played by Mr. Ray, is a dreamy, bookish, solitary, afraid-of- girls ind ividual. The other, played by Hal Cooley, iK a lively, effesves- cent, athletic, chorus-girl-admiring student.. The humor begins when the two trade places pro-tem. The dub be- comes the host--or is scheduled to do so---of a party in which a chorus girl is the honored guest. The lively stu- dent is temporarily cramming, and then the dub gets it all mixed up by mistaking the other's financee for the cous girl. The complications can be better im- agined than explained, and it is said that the man or woman who fails to find, in this picture, comedy and en- tertainment of the most desirable sort, is lacking in a sense of humor. Anita Stewart in "A Midnight Ro- mance," a story of love and adven- ture, will be the attraction for three days beginning Saturday. AT THE ARCA)E Gladys Leslie in "Fortune's Child," will be Saturday's offering at the Ar- cade. The story centers about an ar- tist temporarily side-tracked to the under-world, who is brought back to his former self by the sympathy and faith of Beth, a child whom he shel- ters. He decides that she will mean much to him in his later and more worthy years. Louis Bennison, star of "Oh, John- ny!" will be seen Sunday and Mon- day in his second screen production, "Sandy Burke of the U-Bar-U." P'ORTRAITS STORED FOR DECADE NOW IN ALUMNI HALL Portraits which for 10 years were stored away, have recently been plac- ed in the lecture room of Alumni Me- morial hall by Prof. S. F. Kimball of the fine arts department. These paint- ings are the work, for the most part, of American artists with famous American men and women as their subjects. Among these are included portraits of Lincoln, Jefferson, Martha Washington, Webster, and many other notables. Some of these paintings hung in the gallery of the old library building and when that was torn down they were placed in storage where they, remained un'til a few weeks ago. EXHIBITION OF DESIGNS HERE TO STIMULATE MANUFACTURE Exhibits of industrial designs made by students of Michigan schools will be held April 1, 2, and 3 in Memorial hall, during the convention of the Schoolmasters' club. The purpose of thetdisplays is to show the relation between industry and art, and also to encourage the designing and making in America of articles formerly manufactured in Germany and other foreign countries. HOEXTER, FORMER FACULTY MAN, TO ADDRESS STUDENTS Mr. Samuel Hoexter, formerly a member of the faculty of the eni- neering college, and at present con- nected with theEmerson Efficiency school, will be the speaker at the meeting of the Jewish Students' con- gregation to be held at 6:45 o'clock Sunday night in Lane hall. He will talk on "Some Fundamentals of Re- ligion from the Standpoint of a Prac- tical Man." Michigan's paper for Michigan men. Four thousand students read it every morning.-Adv. Daily want ads tring results. The nine cardinal emo- tions experienced by every girl or woman in her first real love affair are portrayed by Anita Stewart. As Marie, a mysterious girl who earns a livelihood by day as a hotel maid, and who by night wins the heart of the season's best catch by her beauty, grace and won- derful gowns, Miss Stewart runs the gamut of feminine emotions. 1 Her introduction under the direction of Lois Weber, shows her as a near-stricken girl being rescued with other passengers from a stranded 7 ocean liner. Next she is seen as a room maid at the Sea View Hotel, a popular summer resort patronized by the ultra-aris- tocrats of the social set. Here she encounters rom- anCe in the person of Roger Sloan, son of a wealthy re- tired business man, and to her comes first of the nine temptests of heart and mind. Determined to maintain her identity as a commonplace hotel servant, and to explain to no one the reason for her soft hands, charming conversational ability and her command of four languages, she experiences in her admiration of Sloan and in his recip- rocal interest in the initial emotion-Hap- piness. The second emotion is Anxiety, born of her impatient longing for the midnight hours when she can seek their mutual haunts on the beach, to be with him for a few stolen moments. The third is Anticipation wherein she looks forward to the time when she can re- veal her true self to him and delight in his bewilderment at the real identity of his com- panion of the midnight hours. The fourth emotion is Suspicion-brought on by the persistent attention of a girl guest of the hotel who loses no opportunity to show her interest in Sloan. The fifth stage in her depiction of the pro- gress of a woman's heart toward the ulti- mate goal is jealousy-aroused by her be- lief that Sloan is beginning to return the 'blonde" woman's interest. Marie Alexander-A Hotel Maid Servant and Abused by Day-a Regular Vision Loved and Adored by Night --is a Remarkable Character o Mystery and Amazing Contrasts Portrayed by the Beauti uI Star, Directed by a Genius at Picturing Impulses of Every Woman's Heart. I SLA D Y S LESLIE "Fortune's Child" The sixth emotion Fear-made the more convincing when she sees him deliberately enter the room occupied by Blondie Mazie, the girl guest. Here she registers the thing that every woman dreads-the possibility of losing the man who has won her heart. The seventh in the list of femininity's re- ligion of sentiment is Adoration-prompted by the discovery, through her own act of bravery in saving Sloan from the efforts of Blondie Mazie and her cohort, Blinkie Deal, to compromise him as the foundation for blackmail. It is immediately following this tense sit- uation that Sloan convinces the mysterious maid of his real affection for her, thereby commanding true feminine adoration for his total disregard of caste or social status. The eighth emotion in the category is Grief-the result of unexpected develop- ments which compel her to disappear leav- ing him only the solace that he may hear from her again. And the ninth and greatest of all is Ful- fillment-the culmination of the previous eight, whereby she gives him the clue which leads him to discover and win her finally, under surprising and sensational conditions. Augmented Orchestra "cupid's lay Sen nett Comedy SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY GLAD'- TL3IIE in Vitagraph tre ribbon Feature "THE SO :1I " She was just a "slavey" in a boarding house but she wanted "Jimmie." He was a prize fighter and --- Come and see how they get their real start is life, "Better than a dozen sex plays" -Dramatic Mirror Tomorrow and Monday-Louis Bennison,starqf "Oh Johnny" In "Sandy Burke of The U Bar-U," A thrilling drama of western pluck and luck. P