STIC L News From The Other Colleges Arcade, comes in -time with a manc is"' (DAY-TOMORROW ANITA STEWART . In "Mind The Paint Girl" ARCADE Shows at 3:00; 7 00; 8:30 Phones: Theatre, ag-M Mgr's Rea., a1-II Columbia-In co-operation with the National League of Women Workers, the department of extension teaching will offer an intensive training course In girls' recreational work during Christmas vacation. It is planned tc cover briefly all phases of the work. There are no entrance requirements, The course, which will be given from Dec. 22 to 'Jan. 3, inclusive, con- sists of 10 lectures, two hours each, including discussions; six round table discussion, one and one-half hours each; one evening in the gymnasiun for game work; supervised field work, not less than eight- hours a week; as well as personal interviews, crit- icisms, and An examination. Cornell-After some discussion at Cornell university it was decided Fritz Kreisler should be allowed to appear according to agreement, in a 3 +. 3 . e 3 1 ', r,. t i' ~ series of concerts to be given in Bail- ey hall. Northwestern=The men at North- western university are doing their part toward the Christmas holidays. Twenty-five of them -have signed up to help in settlement work. Their1 -work will consist chiefly' in finding, worthy families to whom to make ;Christmas donations.j MUSICAL CLUBAKES PT, HURON 1C6ISASEMENT FORTY MEN FROM PERSONNEL OF ORGANIZATION TO~ BE TAKEN, THE MAJESTIC Out of . a score of suitors, Anita Stewart as Lily Upjohn, an English Cockney girl who suddenly wins fame as a theatrical star, eliminates all but two in "Mind the Paint Girl" today and tomorrow at-the Majestic. One of them is a subaltern in the British army who rescues her from the objectionable advances of a man of the slums, while the other is an English, lord with position and vast estates. Their. rivalry for her favor is heightened by her delay in giving one or the other a definite answer. The dramatic .moment of the pictures arises when she announces her final decision. his own whom he likes and he begins to change the hu lad made him known oni name of his favorite song. Will Rogers is well suite role of the wanderer in this Ben Ames Wilson, aptly int "Jublio" and frequently in his droll smile and comedy PROF. SHARFMAN TO SPE AT OPEN MEETING OF Athena literary society wil open meeting at 7:15 o'clocki evening on the fourth floor c sity hall. Prof. I. Leo Sha the economics department w PLACE YOUR ORDERS N( want Mac Diamids Candies gifts at Cushing's Pharmacy i Sun-Mon-14-15--Will Rogers in "Ju- bio"; Christie Comedy, "His Master's Voice" and' Jazz Monologue. Tue-Wed-16-17-Owen Moore in "Pic- cadilly Jim"; Star Comedy, "Tick Tick Man" and Ford Weekly. THE ARCADE -. When light-hearted and improvident "Jubilo," played by Will Rogers in the picture of' the same name to be Read the Michigan news.-Adv. I I 11 1 . I . 1 I I j estic IF YOf Peep At The Scenes Behind The Wings In An 3e Sure T o SEE a 'I ( 4 The Varsity Glee and Mandolin club is to give a concert at. Port Huron Monday, Dec. 22, according to a state- ment issued by the..manager yester- day. Permission was secured from tae committee on student affairs Friday, and the arrangements were completed yesterday. ' ' 40 to Make Trip Forty men are to make the trip. Twenty of these will be from the Glee club, 16 from the Mandolin club, and the management and faculty rep- resentative, including the director, make up the other four. Mr. Frank aber, director -of the Mandolin club, will direct the concert, and 'Treas. Robert A. Campbell will be the fac-- ulty representative. W. L. Kemp, '22M, will act as' leader of the Glee club on this trip. - Selectilons N~ot Complete- The Mandolin club men who will take the trip have not been selected as yet, but their appointment will be announced in Tuesday's Daily. The following Glee club men- have been selected from the 115 members to igo to Port Huron: First' tenors- P. R. Wilson, '21, B. Ferneau, J. H Failing, C. C. McCormick, Turner; 'second tenors-H. E. Ramsey, S. S. HIawkes, '21, N. D. Ireland; Kel~p .IKeena, F. W. Goundry, '21, M. Wien eke, '22; first bases--S. L. Hudd, H. J. Schlee, R. S. Buol, R. R. Dieterle, Simpson; second bases-W. L. Keimp, '22M, C. R. esius, Jr., '20; R. D. Smith; W. C. Martin, '22, Tubbs. Other names will be depided upon Monday. ' The men selected will rehearse at 7 o'clock Monday at Lane hal. The Stage SHUBERT-GARRICK DETROIT y Direct from Six Months at the Playhouse and Vanc Theater, New York WILLIAM. A BRADY, LTD., Presents - GARB ICK "AT 9:45" t Matinees and Saturd Week Star December 5i0CI The Melodrima of Mystery, Marr and Murder By OWEN DAVIS WITH THE ORIGINAL CASs Including Marie Goff, Kenneth MacKenna, John Crc Edith Shayne, Edwin Caldwell,,Louis Darclay, Hilton, William Sams, and Robert Thorne. 3 id ,) TODAY and TOMORROW WILL ROGEKS "At 8:15," to be produced this week, beginning tonight by William A. Brady at the Shubert-Garrick, gets well . un- der way with. the first rise of the curtain. Although- it is presented by \the original New York company in- cluding .Marie Goff, - Edith Shayne, John Cromwell, Kenneth McKenna, Richard Collins, and Robert Harrigan, Its producers consider its chief draw- ing featute the- fact that theater- goers have been offered few genuine melodramatic thrillers recently. Tense scenes and cross characters, such as a hero, a heroine, a villian, and the like, aid in giving the play its exciting punch. The mystery intro- duced in the first scene is followed by a series of plausible solutions which only serve to complicate things still further but the ultimate solution is brought about by supplementing in- formation from a person mho was thought to be dead but revives, to what had already been discovered. DETROIT-ON-THE-CAMPUS IN - From the Saturday Evening Post Story will su - ' :~picture the same name ou read the si grely want to . It is full i Y.1 f At td humor spontaneoUs wholesome fun ti beneficial and yet hard-to get. 0 11 . See This Pictu and Cultivate f Rogers *. 4 I' Guests appear in succession at most inopportune times in "Tumble Inn" to be produced by Arthur Hammerstein and Selwyn and company this week, beginning tonight, at the Detroit-on-, the-Campus. The comedy is furnish- ed by the efforts of a young couple' who are about to be secretly mar- ried and find difficulty in extricating themselves from a mix-up caused by the arrival of an unetpected house party. Of the songs, which were compos- er by Rudolph Friml, "Limbo Land,, "Won't You Help 'Me Out," "You'll Do It All Over Again," - and "The Trouseau Ball," are the best. The book and lyrics were' written by Otto Harbach. , The Broadway cast, made up of Ada Meade, Edna Hibbard, Olga Mishka, John Philbrick, Carl McCullough,' Mable Ferry, Charles Knowlden, Jos- eph Dolan, and Eleanor Williams is assisted. by a spirited chorus, which is gowned in an astounding array of gorgeous garments. S amu odtjt :.%N JAM'$ WILIAMS, tdu~ rif, dd& 6 +p Also Christie Comedy "HIS MASTER'S VOICE" and Jazz Monologu 1 i ion I TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY O W E N MOOR E Supported by ZEENA KEEFE - IN - "PICCADILLY JI at 1:30, 3, 4:30, 7. W Get a box of MacDiamid's choco- lates at Cushing's.-Adv.