I it d1e on V elox. Eastman made and meth- a approved, plus the ex- rrts are guaranties of fin- your films !IA51HAD .1905 T EY- RMANCE ONLY ening Feb. 25 ': IN "IS $IGGSr SUC~S Great Love, OVMAITIC COAMrnw '*.Aire, UOLEY SPEAKING TRIP I SOUTH ENS M.11 ADDRESSES ENGINEERING SOC- ETIES AND SCHOOLS OF SECTION Dean Mortimer E. Cooley, of the colleges of engineering and architec- ture, who left the city two weeks ago on a speaking tour of the South, is ex- pected to return to the city on March 11. During his tour, the Dean is ad- dressing many engineering organiza- tions on behalf of the Federated Amer- lcan Engineering societies, of which' he is 'resident, in addition t visiting a number of colleges and meeting Michigan alumni groups as a repre- sentative of the University. Visits any Cities St. Louis, Mo.; Kansas City, Mo.; Lawrence, Kan.; Topeka, Kan.; Wichi- ta, Kan.; Oklahoma City, Okla.; Dallas, Tex.; Austin, Tex., and Houston, Tex., are a'mong the cities in which Dean Cooley has spoken during his trip. Dean Cooley will spend the week in Louisiata and Alabama. After ad- dressing the Louisiana Technical so- ciety, Baton Rouge, and students of Tulane University, New Orleans, he will go to Montgomery, Ala. He will spend the weekend at the camp of former governor Chase S. Osborn, at Poulan, Ga. From this point he will visit the federal nitrate plant at Muscle Shoals, Ala. Dean Cooley will meet the executive committee of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers at Atlanta,.Ga., Feb. 28. The next day he will ad- dress the Atlanta Affiliated Technical societies. He will also address the Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, on Mar. 2. Spreaks Often On Mar. 4 the Dean will speak be- fore the Alabama Technical school, at Birmingham, Ala. He will talk to the engineering students of Vanderbilt university, Nashville, Tenn., the En- gineers' association of Nashville, and the Nashville chapter of the American Association of Engineers, on Mar. 6. University of Kentucky students will hear Dean Cooey on Mar. 7 and 8. He will spend the next day at Indian- apolis as the guest of the Michigan alumni organization there. The Michigan Engineers club of Chi- cago will hold its annual meeting Mar. 10. The Dean will stop in Chicago to attend this gathering, returning the next day to Ann Arbor. CQNIILERCE CLUB MAY TAKE OVER EMPLOY1ENT BUREAU Organization is Actively Seeking Jobs and Summer Places for Students' The Commerce club is now in charge of an employment bureau. Al- though the economics department is still conducting such a bureau, the chances are that the Commerce club will eventually take over this work, according to Harry N. Rath,''22, presi- dent of the organization. At the present time this organiza- tion is sending out letters to different industrial conce'rns in different cities of the United States, and also to vari- ous communities. The purpose of this correspondence is to obtain informa- tion concerning the worth-while and responsible positions that may 1'e open. In this way many students may ob- tain -summer employment and also, graduates may step into paying posi- tions. No positions ar open at the present time, however. The economics department is h nding over letters that they receve to the Commerce club. THE UNIVERSITY'S COMMON HEALTH RESPIRATORY DISEASES III Great progress has been made in the control of diseases which depend for their spread on some specific inter- mediate agent, such as insects. For example: bubonic plague-the "black death" of history, at one time the greatest "scourge" of mankind, is no longer greatly feared in our country because precautionary measures are, taken to prevent it entering our ports. Bubonic plague is not "contagious," but is spread by rodents and fleas. Yellow fever, "not long ago the death trap of the tropics, now gives promise of becoming 'an historical disease, for man has detected, and is successfully combating its specific carrier, the Ste- gomyia. Malaria, also, is being con-1 quered by effective campaigns against the Anopheles, the agents which carry the malarial parasites. Little has been accomplished so far, however, in the eradication or even control of respiratory infections and other diseases spread either directly' or indirectly in discharges from the mouth and nose. These are responsi- ble for at least one-fourth of the na- tion's annual death toll. Each year at least three hundred thousand people die in the United States from diseases spread by discharges from the mouth and nose. The number more or less incapacitated each year as a conse- quence of respiratory disorders would probably be more than ten million. The control of diseases spread by dis- charges from the mouth and nose (hu- man contact infection) is now of first importance to the community health. The U. S. geovernment maintains 135' schools in Alaska with an expendi- ture of about a half million dollars and an enrollment of 6,899. IINEE U1IUL For Benefit WOME 'S LEAGUE BUILDING Fisher's 7 Piece Tickets $1.00 at Grahamn's and Wahr's I STUDENTS' SUPPLY STORE 111 South University Ave. Engineers' and Arclfitects' Materials Stationery Fountain Pens Loose Leaf Books Cameras and Supplies Candies. Laundry Agency T~obaccos r M ,. q LANDER FOR LOW E RK Phone 294-F2 Branch Store,' Phone 294-Fl 320 E. Liberty St 715 N. University Ave. ' A . It I o1 Get Em From oe& H. S h oe S hop , Al Chop Suey CHINESE AND AMERICAN RESTAURANT Quang Tung Lo. 513 E. Libprty I 1,50, $2,0$,.50 Mail Orders Now ot" . THIN .4 LEAD - and other Metal Pencils THE name VENUS is your guarantee of fcction. Absolutely crum le-proof, smooth and perfectly graded. 7 DEGREES 2B soft & blackH med. hard B soft '2H hard F firm 4H extra hard HB medium-forgeneral use ISc per tube of12 leads; $1.50 per dozen tubes Ifyourdealercannotsupply youwriteus. AmericAn Lead Pencil Co. 215 Fifth Ave., Dept.D11New York Ask us about the new VENUS EV1ERPOINW'ED PEN IL5 3- . A Snappy Brogue Oxford For Early Spring - REASONABLY PRICED AT $8.00 ~~rAir 'Kane T Hertler Downi'VTown O. & H. standard of quality, the highest known _1 /. r / 1 , , and old. .ts in your ' and the gum in the -emains to aid digestion, . teeth and soothe mouth >at. THE TURKISA RCAR TTE are to the other W RIG LEY 41E AOE £S~t FO F~ u~ca ti+Tx4 #I'C x~ choose from, too:. 10 HWIG, H : uiii' iiill , e ' ; P 9)IN}y1 lls)aa u ' , , , .. it11 ., R s y '" G+ VERY day MURADS Bare held higher in the estimation of the men who smoke them. They are the standard of Taste. They are 100' pure Turk- ish tobacco-of the ':nest never fail --nh rcnge- You ac 'm t ' :rmoke them in zu mnniy-on any occasion. They 5re the largest sells ing high-grade cigarette in the world. The cigarette smokers of America DO prefer Quality to Quantity. ! -F Aw t .-. _... . _ .... f ea.ir iS1 A. C2 __ 20A varieties grown. They never disappoint - Mahers oJthe !lighbst Grade Turkish ,,, and Eoqpfian Lyran'fes in the Word ejudgefor Yousel2,! 3 Vat k .: Qom. '1ASffi7 E 195P BL A 1 Tickets'at r.. ~