VET BUREAU REPRESENTATIJE HERE JAN 18-20 TO CONSIDER SOLDIERS' CLAIMS ON GDYLRNMENT Charles A. uHmmer, '23, has res ed from the presidency of the I JSANDS of smokers the verdict to you- 1 the other tobaccos approach the finest have proved it--and now NATURE has produced varieties of pure Turkish FLAVOR of the finest Turkish- es the ENJOYMENT of the finest Turkish- 1 SATISFY you as will the finest Turkish- t the highest grade and .personally selected accos is used in MURAD. To enjoy100% pure Turkish at its VERY BEST-to reach the U ~ - PEAK of Cigarette ts kMD Quality-you have but to smoke MURAD--- Representatives of the United States Veterans bureau will be in Ann Arbor three days from January 18 to 20 in- clusive. During this time they will endeavor to interview all ex-service men having claims on the government. Recommendation will be made by them for vocational training, hospital- ization or compensation in other forms. Their headquarters will be in the Red Cross rooms in the Cornell building on Huron ave. at Fourth. Require Affidavits The greater majority of ex-service men now filing claims for compensa- tion have been discharged from the service for nearly two years. In order to establish their claims addi- tional medical evidence is required. This evidence should consist of the following: First,-affidavits from one or more persons who were with the applicant and knew of his disability during serv- ice. Second,-affidavits from one. or more persons who have known the applicant since discharge and who are familiar with his physical condition. These should be from employers or other disinterested parties, if possible. Last, and most important of aLl. written statements from all of the doctors who have treated the appli- ,;ant since his discharge, and from the hospitals where he has been con- pined, if they were not United States Public Health-Service hospitals. Doctor's statements need not be in affidavit form. Ail other statements must be subscribed and sworn to be- ,ore a notary public. Full Details Aid In all affidavits it is necessary that, if possible, dates be given. The date upon which the person first saw the applicant after his return from the service, what he noticed about phys- ical condition, what complaints the applicant made, etc. The doctor should give, in his statement, the date upon which the applicant first appeared before him for treatment, his diagnosis of the case at that time, and if in his opinion, the disability is due. to service. If these affidavits and statements are properly prepared and cover in full detail the facts in the case, they will greatly aid in the rapid adjust- ment of the claims, it is said by those in the work. All papers and affidavits may be made out in the .Red Cross office. State Savings Cqr. 'lain and Washington Capital $300,000 Surplus $3( Resources $4,000,000 20 %erntEDIC .I Try MURAD to- day and "Judge for Yourself-! 20c FEDERAL BONUS WOULD ENRICH MICHIGAN MEN as. Two Engagements Announced Announcement was made at the Kappa Alpha Theta house this week of the engagement of Dorothy Forman Trevor, '22, and Mere A. Bennet of Detroit. The engagement of Clara M. Jones, '17, and Stanley J. Hieft, '18, of To- ledo, was also announced. Hiett is a member of the Phi Alpha Delta fra- ternity. On Our Enture Stock of $36,250,000 NAMED AS SHARE SERVICE MEN IN STATE BY EXPERTS OFJ 'f Detroit, Jan. 14.-If the proposal to pay a federal bonus to former service ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS men materializes upwards of thitty- ° rnra trr ri rt . R BU five mi'lion dollars may be ppid to , Michigan men who served either at IBUS LEAVES CORNER OF MAIN & home or abroad during the war, it is HURON STREETS INSTEAD OF estimated here by persons who have AL LENEL HOTEL made a study of the proposition. The. Read >4. w m rait.'ualu izu t estimate is based on an assumption that sQldiers who served abroad A.M . P.M P.M. A&PM would receive a bonus of $1.25 for : i e ..DaiyD ..a.i 70 each day served, with a maximum of s:es a:os ... Tecumsieh... 6:2s ta:, $625, and that soldiers who did not s: a:25 . Clinton .6:os Ii'5. leave this country would be granted 4 15 :s A S Ann Arbor L. 6:45 to :° one doLlar a day, with a maximum '.M. P W P.M. A&PN of $500. up "eFootwear of Qual and Distinction " r r , Atfrd' J. igubg. ww Illi M A -- - M lO1P IM IIwn IM I M - The - 145,000 To Apply One hundred and forty-five thousand' ex-service men in Michigan filed ap- plication for the state bonus voted by the citizens more than a year ago. It is assumed here that a like num- ber would be eligible for a federal bonus. A number of soldiers unable - to collect from this state because they enlisted in another state, giving the latter as their place of residence, would be given a part of the federal fund, it is pointed but here. Assuming that Michigan solders on an average, 250 days each during the war, and that each re- Svd one dol'ar a day for the serv- ice, the amount available to Micbir n mnn wou'd be $36,250,000. In some quarters here this figure is regarded as conservative. Legislation Expected Bonus legislation, sidetracked some time ago by congress, will be revived, it is believed in some :,guar- ters, through decision of the admin- istration to press such a proposal. The decision was made by President Harding and leading republicans at a recent White House conference. Under the decision it has been ten- tatively proposed that the money for the bonus come from debts owed the United States by her al'ies during the war. This proposal is pleasing* to, American Legion officials here. The $36,250,000 estimate for Michi- gan is based on the assumption that all of the proposed bonds would be paid in cash. Scott Discusses Language Orrgint P.M. 8 :0 4:05 4:25 SIa s Lv... Adrian ..At. .... Tecumseh .... .Clinton ... S.lWne Ar. Ann Arbor Lv. P.w 9:oo 3ag 8:05 6:4s P.M SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS Irk STARTS TODAY AtuAro Perfect CIeaning Agent ENER G INEI COSTS US TWICE AS MUCN AS ORDINARY CLEANERS Ask Any Chemist About Ordinary Cleaners, or notice the' number of Carburetors, Vaporizers and Carbon Removers advertised. THE ORDINARY CLEANERS CONTAIN A HEAVY PERCENT- AGE OF GREASE AND FOR- EIGN MATTER 0 PHDNE Atie, .ti IB 25W11 A - TH, T'S WHY - THE SWISS C. C. CO. DOE USE ORDINARY CLE A FOR DRY CLEANIN SWISSILIZED GARMEN STAY CLEAN LONGE " Vie Kobe of Snerg Re " CLEANERS, PRESSERS, Psychological explanation of the physical or motor reactions to the dif- E NOTferent stimuli which act upon us in -S NOT our daily lives, was the subject of NERS the first series of lectures, delivered CG by Prof. Fred N. Scott, of the rhetoric department, before the class in psych- ITS ology of language during the past According to Prof. Scott, there are two general lines of research fol- lowed by those interested in the or- igin of language, the first of which attempts to trace, in an inverse order, the origins of different words, fin- ally reaching the time when there was no speech. This method has given rise to the extensive study known as comparative philology. The second of these, having perhaps a more an- thropological and psychological inter- est, aims at the reconstruction, in- ferential.y, of course, of an age when there was no speech, and, working for- - ward from this general hypothetical DYERS basis, to finally trace the coming of speech. JE In an attempt to explain the almost T involuntary movements which come as apparent reactions to different exter- ior stimuli, Professor Scott went ex- tensively into the psychological treat- ises of Darwin, James, Baldwin and others upon these primary emotions. w ' t 1._ . z. i. yR a . . - SHOWNG - MATINEE 1:80-:00-4:30 EVENING 7:00 and 8:30, amouni r:McourN Every side of "Big Bill" Hart and the whole of the frontier West., In a love story loaded with thrills that go off like a fusillade. - PRICI 25,35c Lo 25c, Asewa Children Alwa, ADDED "TORCHIY'S FRAME-UP" 209 S. FOURTH AVENU ANN ARBOR r S A KNOCKOUT FEATURING IT'S A JOHNNY DINES TAKEN FROM THE FAMOUS SEWELL FORD STORIES SURE GLOOM Z,- COMINSON :=-RMARSHALL NEILAN'S "BITS OF I