,'OUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, UUTOkma S U N D A Y ADMISSION MONDAY ADULTS ....35C J TUESDAY I CHILDREN 10C H pt i lll I I iilli1111 lIlt t ll il lllllllltlll llil11 l lllllll ll tf l Ill llll 1t1tllliltt lt11111ll ll lllllllllllllll l '= S -w A hypnotic MysteyDrama:th - t the ollllllllllllllll = M IIIlItlt1111U t111t111ii lila agaistWOE RHO R i A *Whn .t N VC Struggle e of Will Fatal - aganst ct W BEFORE DAWN Hour t Will. =o of Dawn A AA A =e ° ~Came !b Deadly Came Battle Could His = of the Strength i s _ q Mind of Will of Evil"Conquer against the- ao v a m.t°U r g i n g s of this = P was:Evil Mind t Victorious b 7 -d N "When I Hypnotize a Man, I Alone Am His God!"=i d He laughed when told he Yet, strangely, the words of In the morning he could not =e would kill Kirke, the man the hypnotist kept singing b who insulted the woman he and thumping through his remember, but Harrison = loved. brain. Kirke was dead! s Never before has such a Baffling Mystery been Seen on the =B Screen. It's a Surprising Sensation--a Startler!=p The Most Brilliant Minds Have Failed A Play to Challenge Your Powers of to Unravel the Plot Deduction = t CAN YOU? SEE IT! C YU AND SAY! --LOOK WHO'S HERE! t1111111tt it lllilllil n lllli . ;(111it11111 i11I 1 j I (I v~lvs y9v r~ y ir a Llod Riotous 5sa>x ddy Y L . . . . ti" L.. . St1 \ t:.....:y. Mirthquake .... "' :.I.LLJand- toV, He Who C to Rattle Lloyd's Your Ribs, Laughs Shiver Long, _ Your Liver - for and Tickle .fLloyd's - Your Laughs - T .-& lumy ast I -~tff~fffffuf t~fufffn fff NOTE:-To enjoy this show to the fullest extent you should avoid coming in at the middle. SHOWS AT 2:00 -3:40-5:20 --7:00 - 8:40 Iflfffl llflff ll~tlf H H ulff lfftffffNHliilfff i ~ lH llllffft~l lli i lHf1 itf ~lfl1{ ift{f11 ffili ll l lfll illlf = SUNDAY DHEUM MONDAY §411 Star Cast "The Courage Of MargeO'Doone" Story by James Oliver Curwood FOX OUR STANDARD PRICE: Comiclassic . Adults .. . .. .................. 20c_ NEWS Children ................... ...1Oc Comedy Week Day Matinee ..............15c- ReadTheMichigan Daily i i _ u CAPUS OPINION (Continued from Page One) ames K. Pollock, Jr., in support of arding, says: "Opposed to Governor Cox we have enator Harding who, as president, ill put an end to all the international, obnobbing and domestic tomfoolery hat this country has endured for ight years. The difference in the two ten is clear cut. A vote for Cox means vote to continue the almost savage epitude of the Democratic adminis- ration. A vote for Harding means a ote for American first and America flicient." Interesting Argument Harold E. Howlett points out an in- eresting phase of the League of Na ions argument. He cites the growth f union and democracy from the early nglo Saxon days to the present and xplains that the League of Nations is ut another step in the growth towards niversal brotherhood. Many other communications were eceived, but lack of space makes it mpossible to either use the articles or uote from them. 'ADSCHRISTENSEN S FIRMER-LABOR LEADER (Continued from Page One) resident Johnson upon the termina- ion of the Civil War to those who had een in arms against the Union. Judged by such standards, where oes the Democratic party stand? early two years have elapsed since he signing of the armistice and yet nost of the war-time prisoners still anguish in their prison cells. Presi- ent Wilson has wasted a glorious op- ortunity; he has failed in the critical est. A general amnesty to war-time risoners immediately upon ending ot he war would have placed him along ide of Lincoln, Grant and Johnson. nstead, he has given us a reactionary Burleson and a medieval Palmer. The Democratic party has betrayed its rust and is unworthy of the suffrage f a free people. And what of the Republicans? Are hey worthy of the best traditions of heir party? Senator Harding is re- ported as saying that if elected he would not free the war-time prisoners. He has betrayed the idealism of Lin- coln, Grant and Johnson. He has re- ected the splendid liberal traditions of his party. What, then, remains. For whom, then, shall a free people vote? Re- mains Christensen and Debs. Both the Farmer-Labor and tle Socialist parties have come out strongly for the libera- tion of war-time prisoners. A vote for Cox or Harding is a vote for govern- Went by prison rule. A vote for Christensen is a vote for freedom. RussianB allet Dancers Coming To Whitney Soon On Saturday night, Nov. 6, Fokin and Fokina, two noted Russian dan. ers, will appear at the Whitney the atre, in a number of interpretiv dances. Fokine is not only-famous a a dancer but as the creator of the vas spectacles that were presented by th Diaghileff Ballet Russe several year. ago with Nijinsky as the premieui danseur. Everywhere they have been seer these artists have met with admiratiox for the intricate and difficult stepso their brilliant dances, and lovers o. music and dance will be afforded ax opportunity to witness somethin novel in the way of an evening's enter tainment. Ann Arbor's progressive merchant use The Michigan Daily.--Adv. SAYS DESSUPERIOR TO COX AND HARDING (Continued from Page One) I believe with Prof. John Dewey that man thinks only from necessity. I would, however, add that this neces- sity is almost always a material one. Following certain pertinent facts, I incapable of coping with the vital problems of the day. The Socialist movement is the logi- cal successor of Industrialism. Not. that it will prove a cure-all; human society will always find some growing evil to eradicate. Yet the attempt of Socialism to substitute human achieve- ment for that of wealth or private- property, is in itself the most forwardr step since the beginning of civiliza- visualize the history of civilization as -i a succession of cyclic periods. Each period, whether it be slavery, the I am going to vote for Eugene V.. church, or feudalism, began as an Debs, because he is to my mind the idealistic, revolutionary movement to symbol of man's striving. His life has overthrow the preceding social sys- been the struggle of a noble soul. tem, lost its idealism in the struggle When I compare him with Harding and' for success, and was in the end re-.Cox,I cannot but feel that the Social- moved by its more competent suc- ist candidate isamuch their superior, moved.both intellectually and spiritually.. The same is true with our present I Debs is indeed the open-eyed leader ot Thdusialeiot to our b en it a period that is as yet in its idealistic industrial period. It too began with tgwiebt teRpbia n its humanism and its "rights of man.". stage,. while both the Republican anct itshumnis ad is