TO MAI a A' nry other name as sweet "-but other tobacco. in t smoke as ti 1'i K. 'i ,, I The reason Murads are de- anded by thousands of smokers that they 'are made of 100% ire Turkish tobacco-the world's ost famous tobacco for garettes-and so conceded. That is why -many manufacturers st of even a dash of Turkish >acco in their brands. I I; Para, Brazil, Dec. 10. - Airplanes may be employed to map the valley of the great Amazon river. If the French are successful in their effort to use. aircraft for surveying the routes of the rivers of French Guiana, it is un- derstood the Brazilian government will apply the same method to the sur- vey of the Amazon and its affiuents. A 1)rench company is said to have been formed in Cayenne, with hangars on the Maroni river, and French aviators with flying experience gained in the war are being employed to run the 25 hydroairplanes said to have been' furnished by the government. In addition to making maps, the' machines will be employed for .carry- ing valuable freight, mails and passen-. gers. There are immense, rivers in French Guiana which, because of the presence of many rapids, are now only navigable in canoes which take weeks to transport freight over distances1 which the, hydroairplanes can cover in as many hours, with always large stretches of smooth water offering a suitable surface for landings and "take-offs." The freight charges are said to be high, and the traffic is expected to consist mainly of gold, balato and es- ,sence of rosewood, which are the prin- cipal exports, of the colony. The pas- senger business is not expected to be heavy . HOLLAND FINDS HARBORED ALIENS BECOME TROUBLESOME Harderwijk, Holland, Dec. 10-Hun- dreds of men and women ,of all na- tionalities, considered undesirable, but accorded refuge and hospitality by The Netherlands, are still confined behind barbed-wire fences in the big war in- ternment camp here. They still are sources of trouble to the Dutch gov- 'ernment. Many of them are war refugees, es- caped from Germany, or Belgium, and to their. number, since the war, have been added several scores of Rus- sians, of Bolshevik tendencies, whom the government has confined here for safe-keeping. The Russians have been particularly troublesome, but the means taken by one of the Dutch military officers in charge of the camp to control their ac- tions are reported in the Dutch press to have been so severe that recently a number of Dutch soldiers are said to have mutinied rather than obey the orders. Brown-At the same time that tui- tion fees at Brown university were in- creased from $175 to $200 the Harvard Law School raised its tuition : from $150 to $200. Patronize the Daily Advertisers. Pay your subscription to the Da lY. Minnesota-It has been estimated at the University of Minnesota that about half' of the students contribute to their own support. Out of 6,073 students attending the university 3,000 are either partially or wholly earning their own way. Among the men there are 1,088 and among the women 265 who are wholly self-supporting. There. are 1,775 men and 310 women wbo are helping make their expenses. The Ameriqan Legion1at the Univer- sity of Minnesota is carrying on a campaign for mem rs. It is the aim of the Legion toelay every former service man in the university ,on the chapter roll. Legion buttons have ar- rived. .Every., organization on the campus will be represented on the committee, which Is- to conduct the drive. cash A 1 .0 Yale--The Student council at Yale has removed the ban o$ Sunday sports at the university. In order that the week-ends for students who re- main in New Haven may be profitable it was decided that squash courts, ten- nis courts and "athletic fields be open- ed on Sunday. TRAINING .COMMENCED FOR RUDSQO{s BAY DOG DERBY The Pas, Manitoba,Dec. .10. - Ap-. proximately 50 dog -teams in several parts of the northland are being train- ed for the 100-nle Hudson's Bay Dog Derby race to be held here March 17. Now that the Nome-All-Alaska Sweep- stakes' race, has been abandoned, the Hudson's Bay contest is, generally re- garded ,as the big dog classic -of the continents A prize of $1,000 has been hung up for the race. The race course ex- tends from here- to the gold.fields and return. Dogs of any breed can en- ter. No stops will be allowed from the start to the finish. The-, Hudsons Bay F ' London, Munitions is 5 *; A lia I,. It is true that "ordinary" cigarettes )St a trife less. -1 Ai "gzz sx' a Put pep into your penci. smooth, long-lasting -r thateasesandquickens yc and makes them more De mBOerdSA ,TtNr SOLD BY GOOD STATIONERS, j --AT SCHOOL, AND ,. +. r Music Society - IN EXTRA CONCERT SERIES AUDITORIUM, DEC. 15, 8 P. M ELEVEN RENOWNED "STARS" IN AN UNIQUE PRO- GRAM OF ENSEMBLE MUSIC. CAROLYN BEEBE, Pianist and Director PIERRE'HENRIOTTE and HERBERT SOMAN, Violinists SAMUEL LIFSCHEY, Viola PAUL KEFER, 'Cello EMIL MIX, Double Bass GUSTAVE LANGENUS, Clarinet WILLIAM KINCAID, Flute coats, cleaned in Energine. Y to wait a few days before them on account of the c Energine Cleaning is against this. Have yours in fact all of a prof E Try us on velours, velvets and plus Our cleaning and pressing has equal. I HENRI DE BOSSCHER,.Oboe "Se )}Come of Sncr.9ine" UGO SAVOLINI, Bassoon JOSEPH FRANZL, French Horn COURSE TICKETS, includiing MISCHA LEVITZKI (Jan. 23); CAROLINA LAZZARI, Metropolitan Opera Primnma Donna (Feb. 28); TRIO DE LUTECE, GEORGE BARRERE, Flute, CARLOS SALZEDO, Harp, PAUL KEFER, 'Cello (Mar. 30)- $2.00, $2.50,$3.00, $3.50;-Single Concerts-$1.00, $1.50, $2.00. On Sale at School of, Phone 2508 } 209 SOUTH FOU ~It-