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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 26, 1921 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1921-10-26

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

_ y_ 1

te Svins Bank

Car. Main and Washington

THIRDhAMISTICE
PLA.NNED BYPOSTS
UNITS OF AMERICAN E E G 10 O.
THROUGHOUT COUNTRY
TO TAKE PART
INTEREST WIDESPREAD
IN HOLIDAY OBSERVANCE
Large Public Gatherings and Symbolic
Pageants Will Be Included
In Festivities

broadening the minds of the Africans,
Chinese, Japanese and other rising
countries. I have made as much as
$125 in three weeks on the book."
Dr. Lovell feels especially free to
go at this time. His more practical

occupation of cobbling shoes, it is good business manager, a bright young
feared, will be seriously hindered man who wants to make money. Har-
shortly, due to certain mundane com- vard, Yale, Kokomo, all the larger
plication. "Now is the time," Dr. Lo- colleges are calling me. I shall speak
vell says, "for me to branch forth in- on Philosophy, Ethics and Common
to my literary work. All I need is ,a Sense-especially common sense."

ital $300,000 Surplus $300,000

Resources $4,000,000

.,

A Greater Michigan-the hope

/.R\.

Fashionable

of tomorrow-

Heavy S
with t
Rounded S

stitch
he new
Square Toe

A new stroke in men's styling by
Walk-Over. Rare good taste with all the
trifles of perfection in custom bench work.

mt

AW I/er

115 S MAIN ST.
-7

'You Know-"-

Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 25.-Posts of
the American Legion throughout the
United States are arranging for cele-
brating the third anniversary of Arm-
:stice Day. The national headquarters
of the Legion here has received infor-
anation from the posts and from units
of the Women's Auxiliary which indi-
oates that interest in the proper ob-
servation of this new American holi-
lay is widespread.
Large public meetings are being ar-
ranged in many communities and more
han a thousand Legion posts will stage
symbolic pageants. Plans have also
been completed for large meetings in
Vew York, San Francisco and Chi-
,ago at which the audiences, by means'
f amplifiers used in connection with
long distance telephone wires, will
'ear the addresses made at the buria'
services in Washington for an un-
known soldier.
Emery Issues Statement
John G. Emery, national command-
r of the Legion, today issued-the fol-
owing statement to Legionnaires re-
garding Armistice Day celebrations.
"At eleven o'clock in the morning
of Nov. 11, 1918 an entire world, weary
,nd worn, bent under the disaster
of the world's war, knelt in thanks to
rod. The guns ceased booming. The
roar of their firing no longer smashee
around the world in terrible thunder
A new note was in the air, high, clear
and strong, a symphony of Joy. A
new hope was in every heart, a hope
'nd a prayer that the fighting of nation
against nation, of people against
people had ended for all time.
Let's Go Back in Spirit
"Three years have passed. We are
?.bout to celebrate the third anniver-
sary of that occasion when, for the
last time, the runner dashed across
the field of death and carried to the
farthest outpost the order 'cease figtit-
ng.' We want to go back in spirit
and thought to that grand moment
We want to recall, in full, the purpose
common to every one at that moment
to do each his or her share to make
impossible, ever again, such a dis-
aster. Let us do this in celebrations
that will include every American citi-
zen.
Remember Our Heroes

On Liberty, between Playnard and State Streets

A realization
Ann Arbor's

of

I .. ii }

to day

largest.

cafeteria

Satisfaction - or money back

i n

.5

I

L

Hart Schaffner
&Mars
Clothes

j

I,-

That the goods
ve a guarantee

bought at our store
back of them like

his: "If they are not right we make
hem right!"
Wall-paper, paints, oils, glass, wax-
s, brushes, polishes, cleaners, shellacs,
olors, in fact everything in the wall-
>aper and paint trade.

It's

Real economy

To buy a Hart Schaff-
ner & Marx Overcoat

C. H. Major & Co.

TfHE saving com
the long wear
will serve several
sters, motor coats,
greatcoats. Styles
twice as much for

lTN

203 EAST WASHINGTON

es in the fine fabrics and

you get. These coats
seasons. Here are ul-
Raglans, Chesterfields,
and qualities you'd pay
at any good tailors.

PHONE 237

i

"We want to recall. the thrill that
came to each of us, whether at the'
front or at home, in the knowledge
that we had done our duty. We want
especially to turn aside from the rou-
tine of daily life and to remember the
sacrifices of those whose pride is that
they gave of their dearest and best,
and of those among us, torn and
crippled, who gave of themselves.
These are heroes-our living monu-
ments to American ideals, to Ameri-
can principles, to American citizen-
ship."I

$25 to $75

Fall

Renovating

There

are many

uses

for

N FALL RENOVATING NOTH-
ING GIVES A NEWER, FRESH-
ER NOTE THAN DO CHARM-
ING WINDOW DRAPERIES.
WE HAVE A GREAT VARIETY
OF DRAPERIES.

Poet Cobbler In
Limelight Again
Dr. Tom Lovell, lieutenant colonel
of archery, author and philosopher'
has again sprung into prominence.
Dr. Lovell would go on a .lecture
tour. "I feel that I could make mil-'
lions in it," Dr. Lovell said yester-
day. All I need is a business man-
ager."
Dr. Lovell has received informa-
tion to the effect that all of the larg-
er. universities are holding open pos-
sible engagements with General
Pershing, Herbert Hoover and other
famous men in hopes of obtaining an
engagement date with Dr. Lovell.
"I have become very famous," Dr.
Lovell said, "through my book, 'The
Educator,' which is now being used
as a text in Harvard, Princeton, Yale
and Oxford college, England, and is

Woolen Blankets. Only $5.50

Warm, fleecy blankets of Oxford gray wool make
fine automobile robes and couch throws. Great for
football games, too. 66x 84 inches, in good weights.
$5.50 is a low price for them.

Reule Conlin Flege

CO*

PILBEAM & MARZ CO.

I

Main at Washington

'N

NIT

CURTAIN SHOP

A (~

-3

For Electrical
Repair Call the

Washtenaw -lectric Shop

Telephone

273,

Q
JkOp Of

200 E. Washington

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