JHIC 4 H1C .i tie cnage AT THE WHITNEY Pep is the keynote of Fanchon and Marco's super-revue, "The Satires of 1920,," which comes Sunday night to the Whitney theatre. This season's offering is the most pretentious ever' produced on the Pacific coast, and is brand new in idea,' in staging, and .n costuming. There is a real plot, the struj~ggles of a Texas oil kind who labor s under the error that he can produce a fea- ture film being depicted. Th:ere is a worl'd of humor in its development and brilliant revue numbers follow each other with great rapidity. In several of these, Fanchon and Marco show new and intricate steps, Marco's playing during one of the dances be- ing a feature. Prominent in the supporfting cast are golden-voiced Miss Eva Clark, the prima donna, Murial Styrker, Daisy De Witte, and Lucille Harmon. The girls, a bevy of California beauties of extreme youth, wear costumes in keeping with their sunny state. The book of the piece was written by Jean Havez, whose work for Zieg- feld's Follies made him nationally known, while the music and lyrics are by Fanchon and Marco. Aeturial Socletj Will Aeet Tonight Convening for -thn first time this year, the Actuarial society w ill meet at 7:30 o'clock this evening in room 403, Mason hall. - CONSERVATION PHASE ISAYS HARNESSING OF ST. LAW- RENCE MILL SAVE MUCH COAL: Chicago, Ill., Nov. 30-H. C. Gard- ner, president of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Tidewater association, to- day characterized the conservation phase of the St. Lawrence improve- ment as "fundamentally the most im- portant of all." He said that the electricity gener- ated by harnessing the flow of the Great Lakes to the sea would furnish power to every city, town, and farm- stead in northern New York and New England. Hie quoted estimates that within 10 or 20 years the annual coal saving would amount to 100,000,000 tons. Reviewing the proposal of a. water- way from the Great Lakes to the ocean Mr. Gardner in his statement said: "Above Montreal the width of the St. Lawrence averages close to two miles. it is in this part of the river thatn there occur the great rapids with their total fall of 220 feet- and aggre- gate length of some 45 miles, that must be overcome by the works of man before the St. Lawrence will be- come the untiring and ceaseless slave it is destined soon to be. "The chief benefits of the improve- ments+*assuming that the InternationalI Joint commission's report will be fa- vorable and that the United States and Canadian governments approve, will be these: "The farmers and industries of the 1whole region that is nearer to the Great Lakes than to our salt water ports will reap the advantage of lower transportation costs. ''The people of northern New York and New England will be bonefitted even more than their western breth- ren, for they will not only have the improved transportation by water, but will have electric power for distribu- tion to every city, town and farmstead. "But fundamentally the conserva- tion phase of the St._ Lawrence im- provement is most important of all. Where on our own contirrent is there a region that is not vitally interested in a development that will revery year for all future time savj us from the need to burn millions of tons of our "black diamonds" 'and use instead the "white coal" that a beneficient Provi- dence has laid at our doorstep? Some good judges estimate that within a decade or two, after the power demand shall have grown to meet the supply, this annual coal saving will amount to a hundred million tons." itl ,To the'rStudent WHO CONSIDERS HIS TIME VALUABLE CAN you aford to take a long drawn out class-course in dancing, because it is inex- pensive? WOUJLDIVT you rather prefer a course, taken at your con- venience, as many lessons as you need, and at any time you desire? TIME IS. MONEY I 1 -9 SUGARBOWL HO1 AE MADE CANDY ABSOLUTELY CLEAN BEST LINE [N THE CITY EVERYTHING MADE IN ANN ARBOR LIGHT LUNCHES ANN ARBOR; SUGAR BOWL 40 I Courteous and satisfactory TREATMENT to every custom - er, whether the account be large~ or small.I I The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $62,000.00 Resources........$5,000,000.00 ; Northwest Cor. Main & Huron T UTTLE'S LUNCH ROOMt # Crowded every meal BUT Room for All Our Last years customers One half block South of "MAJ" I 70 othUiesiyAe 4 'V. I q wwwo Vacation Starts 'the 2 1st DEL G RENNAN CUSTOM TAILOR Satisfaction Tuixedoes .._e _ I Evening Clothes Golf Suits, White Flannel Vests' Riding Breeches Knickers -I Olot or :, Place Your Orders Now for Christmas Delivery The entire personnel of our Ann Arbor branch is eager to render service. WHY NOT COME TO Leene N. HALSEY'S Dance Studios 11 WUERTH i- - mw - ARC )JE Ie 14 Nickels Arcade- Telephone 152-R 1 . . -_ rm It'sNevi If you I can pi Camp' Any Other S( About to Att+ Dont Dl ^r too Late! will come at once prepare you for the Davis Dance --or- ocial Function You Are = end in the Near Future w [y Come at Once! s Dance Studio Wuerth Arcade i ,t~o~ ±L4 ~ 14 J ^ r Halsey' orntai/ v~f a i 'Y~ tD ; w,. i )ayc ~ '~cfu t5cA(^ ,fi',~ed1~t' - , ~i &' p An~, cb Zn": E.Ar.. .Cnk4 &{ , 'fJJ3 art~ ~, .u cu NIX b ar ,r , m3 nd r w- ' xmF& t &E, pact -&c! fO"Ag IUV - J Favor, C qV&* A a CLelrt-m4uely rx do U - WpA ; 6?~V 9; e'hw( d, dhcA, ~JecA~t~ ! « , .., TRAO( MARK( R&. US PAT.OFF. A Storsshoes °, ,: Q , y, , 1; : . Q,_ , . - ". ;: ,,_,_, -o ;. z:° a. :n G .a For WINTER s - c 7 JW Y' IW Gt S ' tJy1,C',4 Ofc 1g(.htV, I CU JLO CL- iAT v Cta'i . 4k 1 -{t r 1't JAdt. ~ Ofi' 11w~daX2 S- A ~#cm-, Mv- & jpt ol& u m& 4t b % Mm-c4) AJ CAV teLQl P F~&J TOSILOX"i pfu in TRAMPING XtA4iW" 6AM/ UaA'EwQ t nr4IU''1I1 w ! 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