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October 16, 1921 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1921-10-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

AUTO LIVERY-
416 S. lIAIN ST.
PHONE 5834-J
With or Ithout Driver '
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GUN AND BLADE
WILL AID IN DRIVE
FOR READING ROOM
Plans for the Gun and Blade ban-
quet and participation in the drive
to complete the Union reading room
as a memorial to Michigan service
men, were laid recently at a meeting
of the organization.
Mr. H. J. Betty, of the department
of Veterans bureau of this section,
and Captain Myron Adams, of the
Fort Sheridan Association of Chicago,
and Joseph A. Bursley, Dean of Stu-
dents, will address the club at their
banquet in the Unioi on October 27.,
at which officers for the year will be
installed.
Officers elected recently were as
follows: Wilfred Hocking, '24L; pres-
ident John Lawton, '24, vice-pres-
ident; Harry Archer, '23, secretary;
Earl Allmand, '24, treasurer; and
Charles Miller, '23, sergeant at arms.
Case,19, WinsYae-cholarsip/
In the competive examinations of
organic chemistry just completed at
Yale university Francis Case '19 was
the winner of the $650. Scholarship.
Case is a resident of Ann Arbor.

Theaters=
i 1 1tI11 11tlllillllltltl11111 e
GARRICI
Girls and music blended into an en-;
tirely new type of revue is promised
theater-goers by the producers of the
Greenwich Village Follies of 1920,
which comes to the Shubert-Garrick
ai, Detroit today, for a week's stay.
These Follies are not a revamped or
revised edition of the 1919 Follies.
which visited Detroit last year, but
are rather an entirely new spectacu-
iar revue.
As to scenery, music, costumes, and
fun-makers the new Greenwich "Vil-
lage show is said to be far in advance
of its predecessor. Sone of the more
effective numbers are the "Samovar,"
the "Valentine," and the episode of
the Bena masks. This last i said
to be a re l addition to stage craft.
ARCADE
Charles Ray, as Martin Tripp, a
young salesman who loses his job
and finds himself in a "hick" town,
holds the center of the screen in "A
Midnight Bell" the feature picture at
the Arcade theater for the first three
days of the week, starting today.
In this new release the star of so
many "small town" pictures starts
in search of ghosts in a haunted
church-and he finds them! Into the
picture enters a gang of crooks, op-
erating from the haunted church
Martin Tripp decides that he has dis-
covered the headquarters of the crooks
and goes to spend a night at the
church. He finds that he has entered
a veritable hornjet's nest, and the
events which ensue hold the interest
at a high pitch.
"The Love Egg" will be the comedy
shown in conjunction with "A Mid-
night Bell."
ARCADE
(Second Half of Week)
Maternal devotion is the theme of
"Mother O' Mine," which will be
shown at the Arcade theater for four
days beginning Wednesday. At the,
same time the story has a cleverly
involved melodramatic plot which is
said to hold the interest at all times.
The story is of a boy who prefers
the city, with its opportunities, as well
as its dangers, to life in a small town.
His mother, in order to help him, gives

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Henderson Motorcycle .:....... $65.00
Studebaker Speedster ......... 50.00
1920 Ford touring with starter... 260.00
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him a letter to an influential man in
the city. The boy is installed in this
man's offices, and in an altercation
with his employer the latter is ac-
cidentally shot with his own revolver.
The boy goes on trial with everything;
against him, but his mother, who
knows more of the actual circum-
stances than the boy realizes, finally
manages to wring a truthful state-
ment from the chief witness for the
prosecution.
The picture is one filled with plots
and counter-plots which, combined
with excellent acting by a star cast,
insures its popularity.
MAJESTIC
Doris May, of the erstwhile McLean-
May combination, .has been cast with
such co-stars as Hobart Boswarth, Mil-
dred Manning, and Frankie Lee in
Maurice Tourneur's latest photoplay
"The Foolish Matrons" which comes to
the Majestic theater today for a three
day run.
"The Foolish Matrons" is a comedy-
drama, and it is said that only those
who have to live in New York board-
ing houses can fully realize how.near
to tragedy the comedy which that at-
mosphere'provides for the on-looker
really is. The story is one which deals
with the lives of those who live and
suffer under the bright lights of New
York's great white way, and which,
while not intended as a preachment,
certainly carries its message of the
need for strength and courage when
the odds are against one.
MAJESTIC
(Second Half of Week)
Double duty has been demanded of
Charlie Chaplin in his new comedy
"The Idle Class" Which will be shown
at the Majestic the latter part of the
week, beginning Wednesday. In this
picture Charlie dons dress suit, and
full evening regalia, to show his
screen admirers that he can get the
laugh even in such a costume. How-
ever he changes to the old familiar
ragged attire before the picture is
finished.
"The Idle Class" will be but on of
the pictures on a double feature bill
the other feature being the First Na-
tional release "Courage." Naomi
Childers plays the lead in this drama
of life. The story deals with the im-
prisonment 'of an innocent man, and
his wife's devotion to and belief in
him. The situations developed are
said to be unusually intense.
WUERTH
Douglas Fairbank's latest release,
a picturization of Dumas's novel "The
Three Musketeers," comes to the
Wuerth theater for an entire week
starting this afternoon. The film is
said to be the finest thing that Fair-
banks has ever had the opportunity
of doing, and is alive with action, there
being 16 duels fought during the
course of the picture, in one of which
D'Artagnan and his three companions
engage eight rivals.
"The Three Musketeers" has been
'based not only on the novel by the
same name but also on D'Artagnan's
Memoirs, and is heralded as a scenic
masterpiece. The numerous sets de-
piciting old Paris, the Louvre, and
parts of the French palaces have been
made as nearly exact replicas of the
originals as is possible. Special music,
composed by Louis Gottschalk, will
accompany the picture. No other
films will be shown, since the feature
requires two hours in the screening.

WE'VE GOT 'EM ALL

Individual or Group

Pictures

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"719 N. UNIVERSITY

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enough said -

IT COSTS YOU NO MORE

What's Up Here?,
The little mfouse may have
something to do with the
high estate of this damsel's
skirt, but perhaps it's a
show of feminine vanity-
'she has just} purchased here
the very latest in Hosiery.
A wide assortment in silk
and wool.

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PHONE 1891
WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER

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STATE ST.

Never Before

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Have you had such a
wide selection of up-to-the-minute
offerings in photography.

b

a4.

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Oh me, Oh my, Oh see
-what this young lady has
to show.' A brand new bit
of Neckwear, and she says
that if this set doesn't ex-
actly coincide with your
fancy, there are many other
attractive styles assembled
here to choose from.

LOOK!!

Engineers!

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Our Price on

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ORIGINAL AND
CLEVER PORTRAITS

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DID YOU EVER
HAVE DEY TAKE
YOUR PICTURE

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If you want careful considera-
tion and assurance that you will
be heartily pleased-

Who Wouldn't Cry-
If it gave one an oppor-
tunity to display the adora-
ble whole of one's novelty
Handkerchief ? One always
wants the pert colored cor-
ners of a Handkerchief from
our new selections just
peeping out of one's pocket.

Slide Rules
$13.50

I

SLATER BOOK SHOP

MAKE IT A DEY PORTRAIT !

LIBERTY AT MAIN

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