[HE MICHIGAN VA b sj.. . MAJESTIC THURS.-FRI.-SAT 0 )RPHEUM THEATRE 2700 3-30 7:00. 9.30 10-On 1 T ,stage THE WHITNEY .1 Anita Stewart In I "IN OLD KENTUCKY" WUERTH THEATRE Wed-Thurs-3-4-A. J:.Blackton produc- tion "Dawn" with a kinogram weekly and comedy, "Trial by Jury." Fri-Sat-S-6-William Farnum in "Heart Strings" also comedy, "Over the Ocean Wave" and news. Sun-Mon-7-8-William Russell in "Six Feet Four" with a "Snub" Pollard com- edy and colored review. Tues-Wed-9-30-Shirley Mason in "The Elephant Man" with aHall Room Boys' comedy, " Chicken Hlunter" anid'kino- gram weekly. Thurs-Fri-11-12-All star cast in a com- edy-drama, "The Gay Old Dog" also a two-reel comedy, "Good Little Brownie." Thurs-Fri-4-5--Montagu Love in "The Steel King" with a news and comedy. Sat-----All star, cast in "Oh 'Boy" (re-- turn date) also a screen magazine and comedy.,1 Sun-Mon-(Watch for this picture?). Tues-Wed-7-8--Frank in "The Brute Breaker" also showing Craig Kennedy stories. COMING Nazimova in "Eye for Eye." Olive Thomas in "Footlights and Shadows." Eugene O'Brien in he Broken Melody." HUBE "BETTY BE GOOD" 0E1'BB1with, V iETROI aheena I Garrick Detroit Louis Mann in "FRIENDLY ENEMIES" "Civilian Clothes," coming next Thursday to the Whitney, is based on the old controversy of whether cloth- es make the man. closing that she is neither the middle aged woman he thinks he has married nor the tempermental Greenwich vil- lage genius that had fascinated him but a young girl who cleverly accom- plished her purpose and then couldn't resist playing a few pranks on her life partner. LIBRARY EXHIBITS RARE ENGRAVEDBIRD BOOKS I The Screen THE MAJESTIC Life Of Alice Freeman Palmer, ' 76, One Of Help and 1Friendsh i - r 1 . . FLOWERS FLOWERING PLANTS Cousins & Hall Members Florists Telegraph Delivery Phone 115 1002 S. Univ WHITNEY THEATRE One Night -Thurs. Mar.'11 The big New York and Chicago success coming to Ann Arbor direct from a 3 months run in Chicago. OL1VER 1'M OROSC - 1VILL AM COURT NAY ID ~r-.oD.TED BY A TYPICAL OIRLO MORO "'C"O CAIS'T S IN HE ,MARTEYT COMEDY OF THE -YEAR.\ .-...'TOM4PJON UC1H ANAN The company de luxe assisting Mr. Courtenav includes: Dorothy Dickinson, Frances Underwood, Isabel Irving, William klolden, JK. Murray, LloydNeal, Ray Waiburn and other arfists who are from the New York theatres. SEAT SALE OPENS. MAIL ORDERS NOW. 75c to $2 Excitement and action are present from beginning to end in Anita Stern- art's "In Old Kentucky," scheduled to appear today and Friday and Sat- urday at the Majestic. Feudal quar- rels, struggles for rich mountain lands, and love jealousies are the pot- ential forces at work in the lives of the principal characters, the chief of whom is a daring young girl of the Kentucky mountains and her suitor from the outside world. Miss Stewart is cast as the moun- tain heroine who is, at the opening of the story, almost engaged to a young mountaineer with whom she has common feudal interests, as the relatives of both have fought on the same sine of a private dispute. Life takes on a new aspect when she meets a young man from New York who is on a trip through Kentucky. The stranger is also attracted to her and the mountain friend of her child- hood preceives that he is in danger of losing his prize. In a fit of jealousy the young moun- taineer sets a trap to kill his rival but repents. After lie has left others hostile, the New York man plots to employ the device for the same end- but this is only the beginning of the series of thrilling episodes that form the story. THE ARCADE In "She Loves and Lies," to be re- peated for the last times today at the Arcade, Norma Talmadge temporar- ily forsakes the serious and emotion- al parts in which she has previously, appeared to such good advantage, to take up comedy in its lighter vein. Her vehicle for this maiden effort' is unique for its originality, the her- oine being at the same time the wife and "the other woman," and even as the wife she is not whet the hus- band thinks she is. Unconsiously her husband"is made the dupe of first one trick and then another until he is completely confused and mystified to the entertainment of all witnesses. Finally she puts him at ease by dis- SET OF AUDUBON'S WORKS IS IN- CLUIDED Valuable books containing engrav- ings of birds have just been placed on exhibit in the main corridor of the Library. The books represent works of John James Audubon, Alexander Wilson, Charles Bonaparte, John Gould and, R. Bowider Sharpe. Four Volumes Comprise Set Audubon's set consists of four vol- umes called "Birds of North Ameri- ca. It was published in London from 1827 to 1838 and was acquired by the University in 1839. There are supposed to be 175 sets of this work in existence, 80 of which are in the United States. A set in good condition was offered in 1913 for over $4,000. Another work exhibited is "The American Ornithology," by Alexander Wilson. It is in four volumes and was printed in Edinburgh in 1823. Wilson was a Scottish weaver, peddler and school teacher who was forced to come to America in 1794 because he had written satires that were too pointed on the master weavers of Paisley. Bonaparte's Nephew a Writer Charles Bonaparte, prince of Car-s nino and Misignano, also the nephew of Bonaparte the first, lived in Phil- adelphia from 1822 to-1828. He is the author of "The Natural History of Birds Inhabiting the United States." The rest of the books in the exhibit are the "Birds of New Guinea and the Adjacent Papuan Islands," by John Gould, and the "Birds of Paradise" and "Bower Birds" by R. B. Sharpe. These two collections were donated to the University by the Hon. A. M. Todd of Kalamazoo in 1916. Mead Is Interne at Homoeop. hospital At the Homoeopathic hospital P. Mead is the only new interne to take up work this semester. Patronize the Daily Advertisers. ANCIENTI (By Winefred Biethan) Alice Freeman Palmer, '76, was probably Michigan's most beloved alumnae. Her husband wrote of her, in "The Life of Alice Freeman Palm- er," "Her friends were numbered by; the ten thousands." Born in 1855 on a farm in Coles- ville, New York, she lived her earliest years an industrious, helpful; life. She was burdened in the University with both scholastic and financial dif- ficulties, for her preparation at Wind-, sor Academy, Windsor, New York, was so inadequate that she entered on condition. To gain even partial financial aid from her parents she promised never to marry until sheF herself had put her brother through college and given her sisters what- ever education they desired. Pays Debt to Parents She paid this debt during five years of underpaid, overworked, teaching, and the years following when she was head of the history department of Wellesley and president there. Her class, the third after women were admitted here, was composed of 11 women and 64 men. President Angell said, "One of her most strik- ing characteristics in college was her warm and demonstrative sympathy with her circle of friends. She could not but be, to a certain degree, a leader." She worked in the debating club and other campus activities, was connected with the Presbyterian church, and taught the roughest class in a mission school Sunday afternoon, making money at tutoring on week days. Human, After All Her letters throw considerable light on her life here. Present students may take courage, for even she said, "I had such an abominable habit of wasting time." A different view arises when she writes of the theater, "It pays to go once, but it wouldn't do for a University girl, with her hands and head more than full, to indulge in such 'exciting pleasures often." "Ann Arbor has been in uncontroll- able excitement this week," she wrote another time. "Thirty boys have been suspended and one expelled. The sen- ior and junior classes are aroused and the whole body of studentsibolted chapel two mornings last week. At a great meeting a petition was sent to the faculty signed by 65 sophomores and 70 freshmen asking to be sent off, too, as they were equally guilty. If there Is general suspension, the two classes will go in a body to Cornell." "Oracle" Explains Excitement The explanation of this excitement is in "The Oracle" of 1874. The morn- ing after a sophomore-freshman fight two boys of the winning class took a banner to chapel. Outside the door more than 50 others joined to make a triumphal entry, when a member of the faculty demanded the flag. The boy who had it was suspended for planning to disturb chapel, but such indignation resulted as Mrs. Palmer described. To her sister, Lucy, she wrote, "Oh L! (meaning Lucy). Don't you wish we could stop this dreadful liquor selling!" She became h ead of the history de- partment at Wellesley college in 1879, and president in 1882, at the age of 27. In that sam( year, though her hesis was neve finished, Michigan conferred upon her the degree of that "God could take a joke," and"it was commonly believed that Miss Freeman's Bible was not the ordin- ary Bible, for out of- it came extraor- dinary chapters, extraordinarily fitt- ed to occasions that arose." She or- ganized a Christian association that later became a non-demoninational church. Marries George Palmer She married George Herbert Palm- er of Cambridge, in 1887. She made friends of everyone she met, and en- tertained all in her home. She work ed with the Collegiate Alumnae asso- iation, was on the executive commit- tee of Wellesley, and attended their mneetings, and was for nine yeas president of the Women's Educational association of Boston. "Europe we took as our play- ground," wrote Mr. Palmer. They spent 1888, 1895, and 1902, not sight seeing, but enjoying Europe and its people. They carried with them every where "tablecloth, clock, hearth rug, and many books to make even hotel rooms look homelike." Into a holiday no schoolgirl of 12 ever carried a lighter heart. 1902 Marks Her Death Mrs. Palmer's death came in 1902. Her prayer was, "God help me to give what he gave-myself, and make that self worth something to somebody; teach me to love all as He has loved for the sake of the infinite possibili- ties locked up in every human soul." Lovell Heralds Advent OfSpring IT IS THE FIRST DAY OF SPRING (By Dr. "Thomas orOIll) It is the first day of spring, To gladden hearts again; For the golden sun is shining Upon the meadows and the plains, The hillsides and the woodlands No longer will remain All covered with the beautiful snow, That swells and warms the grain. We welcome gladly springtime Now the winter is gone; For no sooner the sun its shines The 'woodlands will be filled with song, For these little songster will be there, With the frog found hopping along, That's been sleeping in the pools Made, to get out by the sun. Springtime is for nest building On those twigs of trees, Where little eggs will be laid in With these birds to warm and feed For no -sooner these eggs will be hatched These little featherless will be Until they are strong enough To fly through space to see. Summer with flowers to appear Upon the earth again, For they're will be those refreshing showers -To water themt again. As we go from sringtime to summer To be thus explained, For spring and summer never fails to come For the old earth still remains. HOSPITALS GET 17 INTEbNES FROM SENIOR MEDIC CLASS Seventeen new intern'es have been appointed this semester at the Uni- versity hospital and nine more are ex- pected to be appointed by the end of the week. Those already appointed are all, members of the class of '20M in this university. The appointees in surgery are R. M. Cleary, G. C. Adie, H. M. Nelson, J. Manting, H. L. Miller, C. N. Weller, and F. E. Curtis; in medicine, J. Pal- ma, D. J. Barnes, L. J. Foster, and H. G. Waller; in otology W. G. Stinson; In ophthalmology R. E. Boice and R. L. Jinch; in roentgenology E. F. Mer- rill, and in dermatology A. Kurchner and H. L. Keim. - Ir Tomdaioy, To- morrow, Saturday. Ph.D. in history Her Presidency Brings Fame During Alice Freeman's presidency, Wellesley became famed everywhere, largely through her own public lec- tures at other colleges. The faculty was improved through her choosing estimable members, and the Academic council of faculty members was or- iginated, saholarship was raised, equipment added, and a traditional personality was established, Alice Freeman's own. "Isn't it fun to be president?" she once exclaimed, and she encouraged that enthusiasm to do, and freedom of expression in each individual student. She was' deeply religious, but thought Branch Nickels Arcade IU~ORM F IT TALBOT- 2's in. TYRONE- 2Yin. RROW form COLLARS are curve cut to ft the. shoutders perfecty Ctuet, feabody &Co:Incmkrs " Ladies' Party i Gowns a Specialty t a,,