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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.

January 18, 1922 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1922-01-18

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TES SET FOR ANNUAL
JUNIOR GIRLS' PLAYI

AT THE THEATERS

March 23, 24, and 25 are the dates
set for this year's Junior Girls' play.
Three performances have been definte-
ly decided- for Thursday and Friday
nights,and a Saturday matinee with
a Saturay night performance if the de-
mand is great enough.
The cast has been chosen and is al-
ready rehearsing regularly. Work on
the play was begun earlier this year
than ever before in order that the
training would not have to ber so in-
tense immediately before the play
was to be given.
Girls who have been selected for
choruses will notbegin practice until
after examinations. They are being
notified of the choruses in which they
are to take part this week.
Pictures of the cast and committee
will be taken at 12:15 o'clock Tues-
day at the Spedding studio.
WIomen
Music and lyrics for the Junior
Girls' play should be given to Jose-
phine Connable, '23, 1205 Hill street.
The Y. W. C. A. vesper services will
be discontinued until next semester.
Practices for the Junior Girls' play
will be held at 4 o'clock tomorrow
afternoon, and at 9:30 o'clock Satur-
day morning in Sarah Caswell Angell
hall. All members are requested to
be present and lines should be learn-
ed.

11

TODAY
Snre

I.

Arcade-Marshall Neilan in "Bits
of Life."
Majestic-Betty Compson in "The
Law and the Woman."
Wuerth - Eugene O'Brien in
World's Apart."
Orpheum - Violet Mesereau in
"Out of the Depths."
Rae-"The Great Day," an all-
star cast.

,-PROPRIETOR OEF FOMER
STUDENT RETREAT DIEIS
Thousands of Michigan alumni
heard with regret the news of the re-
cent death of "Larry" Damm, at Lima
Center, which was received yesterday.
Before the passage of the prohibition
act, Laurence Damm's place was a
landmark -of Ann Arbor and its bar
was at all times thickly populated with
students.
The place was restricted to the use
of sophomores and upperclassmen
and no freshmen were ever allowed
within its doors. Few townspeople
ever went there. It furnished a place
of revelry, of rest, or of study for
thousands of students. Mr. Damm
knew all of his customers by sight
and name in the early days of the es-
tablishment but as time wore on his
eyesight failed him and soon after
his retirement to Lima Center, he be-
came totally blind.
Mr. Damm was a native of Germany
and worked in Detroit for some time
before opening his business here. His
funeral will be held at 2 o'clock Tues-
day afternoon from his home near
Lima Center to the burial place in
Chelsea.
CHIMES RECEIVES STORIES
SUBMITTED FOR CONTEST

contest, announcement of which was
made in the January issue. The con-
test, which is to be an annual feature,
was made possible through the inter-
est of the Graham bookstores.
One hundred dollars in prizes are.
R A E
Last Times Today
"THE GREAT DAY"
It's a Paramount
Also TORCHY COMEDY
This "AD" with 15c will admit you
today
Tomorrow - "The Witching Hour"
Next Week - "THE SHEIK"
R A Ew

to be given: $50 for the first prize,
$25 for the second, $15 for the third,
and $10 for the fourth. The length
of the stories must not exceed four
thousand words nor be less than one
thousand.
SHUDERT Mat. Sun. wed. & Sat.
MICHIGAN 25C 51-c and 750
(DETROIT) ,ights . . .oc to $1.00
MUTT AND JEFF
--IN-
CHINATOWN
GARRICK mtwe S u
DETROIT t5
"Rest Musicomedy Since Maytime"
Arrestina
T1HE RSE GIRL
With FREDHI I P BRAND and a Wonder
Cast of Comnedians. Sinners Dancers from
Ambassador Theatre. New York.

Wednesday - Thu
Violet
Mergere
f
"Out of the Dep
Coiedy-l"enny Al

f

P-

i
ji {
4 .
f

THIS WEER

Matinee
20o

- 2-3:30
Kiddies 100 Adults

Adults

Evening
300

6 74

Stale

i

Garrick (Detroit)-"The Rose
Girl," a nusical comedy.
Shubert Michigan (Detroit) -
"Mutt and Jeff in Chinatown."
.Whitney- (Wednesday) -"Pyg-
malion," played by the Com-
edy club.

Wednesday-Thursday

Eugene O'Brien

Wyvern society will
o'clockThursday night
Delta house.

ieet at 7:30
at the Kappa

There will be a meeting of sopho-
more women at 4 o'clock' this
afternoon in the middle parlor of Bar-
bour gymnasium.
The Graduate Women's club will
hold its regular tea this after-
noon in Barbour gymnasium. All
graduate women are invited to come
and bring guests.
The cabaret party which had been
planned for Friday afternoon has been
postponed because the Irish players
will be at te Whitney theater under
the auspices of the Ann Arbor branch
of the American Association of Uni-
versity women. The entertainment is
being given for the benefit of the build-
ing fund for the University of Mich-
igan league.
All girls who took pledges for the
University of Michian league durino'
the vacation should report to Suzan
Fitch, '24, at once, whether or not the
pledges have been paid.
The Girls' Mandolin club picture for
the Michiganensian will be taken at
12:30 o'clock tomorrow at Dey's studio.
The meting of the Girls' Mandolin
club scheduled for this evening has
been postponed to 7:30 o'clock tomor-
row evening in Newberry hall.
The Y. W. C. A. cabinet will not
meet this afternoon.
Junior advisers are requested to re-
turn their questionnaires immediate-
ly to Margaret Macltyre, '23.
There will be a representative of the
Women's Athletic association in the
parlors-at-Barbour gymnasium from
4:36 to 5:30 o'clock on Mondays and
Thursdays to give information in re-
gard to the association to all girls de-
siring it. Memberships will also be
granted at these times to those girls
presenting 100 honor points earned
under the new schedule of grading.
There v'' be a picture taken of
the official Panhellenic delegates, the
retiring officers, and the newly elected
officers at 12:15 o'clock Friday at Dey's
studio.
Mortarboard will meet at 7:30
tomorrow evening at the P1 Beta Phi
house.
Senior Girls' play committee will
meet at 4 o'clock tomorrow at 1705
Hill street.
Masques will meet at 3:30 o'clock
Thursday afternoon in the parlors of
Barbour gymnasium. Dues will be
payable at this time.
Something for sale? A Classified
Ad in The Daily will find a buyer.-
Adv.
Patrconi .se onm AdvartgAers.-Ae1v
TRAVEL INSURANCE!
The perils of loss or damage to
your traveling outfits and valuables
are constant and many:
snaarde of
FIRE THEFT WRECK
In or on
Hotels, Depots. C1ub, Railroads.
Steamers. Buses. Taxicabs, etc.: or
you may similarly lose belongings at
your Country or Golf lnh. or Laun-
dry and many other plaesa.
POTTER & ALLSHOUSE
6014 FIRST NAT'L BANK BLDG.

Home And Folks
Goal Of Belgian
An unsung but not unhonored hero
went through Ann Arbor yesterday-
Jean was his name, and he is on his
way from Belgium to California. He
is 16.years old, he-had been in "the
beautiful America" 16 months; andthe
thought that it would be perhaps 16
year more before he could earn
enough money to carry him to Califor-
nia where he expects to find his long-
lost parents.
He was a pathetically eager little
figure as he peered anxiously out of
the train window and asked his seat-
mate how far it was to Jackson. He
was anxious to get there and see what
kind of a town it was, before he de-
ceded whether he wanted to stay there
and work at his trade as a baker or
whether he should take the chance of
stealing a box-car ride to Chicago
from there. He had a tragic history
behind him, this youngster with the
fld face. Deserted in infancy by his
oarents who came to America, he had
"just grown up somehow."
During the war he suffered all the
agonies of his trampled Belgium, and
the long misery of two winters in a
German prison camp, but now he is
'here. How he came, he wouldn't say,
but what he wants he stated determ-
'nedly. "A home and folks" is the goal
he has set out so pluckily to find. A
faint clue is leading him to California
and so in implicit trust he's headed
West. Good luck. Belgian Jean!
....... . ..... .........................................
NOTICE

Several stories have already been
entered in the Chimes short story
Try a Daily Want Ad. It pays.--Ad'

O'Brien has excellent support from a cast headed by Olive Tell.
ing society drama lavishly staged.

CUSTOM TAILORI G

Draf red and Cut to
Your Measure to
the Latest Style
SUITS $39 TO $60

Comedy-"THE CUSTARD NINE"
From Roy Octavius Cohen's Popular Stories of Darktown's Elect Society.

"WORLDS

APART"

An interesV

COME IN

+"."##.##.##ii#iM####i#.####t .....t.....ii .................i..........#..t............................#...........".. .#...". .##J ~~~ ........
ss
STARTING TODAY

A. G.

MARCHESE 1

Merchant Tailor

321 S. Main St.

2621-M

.f ~'
PL t
'3
co

- ql(111iI. I I
I

'.:ems a i - _ -.av

F

I I

'.' N*

I I

trr'A

4,N

FOR THE
JUNIOR-HOP
f '*st class Hair Dresser and
la.urist from Detroit has
been engaged to assist
MRS. T. L. STODDARD
707 No University
Phone 2652
Make Your Appointment Early.
Gentlemen's Manicuring
by Appointment

FIRST rate, high grade, A No.
1 plumbing is the only kind
of plumbing we do and there's
just one good big chance we've
got of proving this to you. Ask
us to attend to some plumbing
job in your own home, and af-
ter we get through you'll say
our work is right and our price
seems fair to you.

4the
it If Im ILEZ"AAL

?rr

WM. HOCHREIN,.
PLUMBER
Phone 525
211 South Fourth Avenue

A tale of miscarried "justrce" that
beauty and daring put right.
For when one woman. through hate.
htd sent a man to prison, another,
through love. set out to make him
free.
See her slip into the habits and
haunts of the wasters she dcspisedt
See her play their reckless game, run
down the lie and wine
A drama revealing. the genius of
Betty Compson like nothing else
since "The Miracle Man.

r
/

''l' .: Il ti~ '
,, .'
I l
1

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1l

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...,.... .............................................. {

f3

I

TUTrTLES

C/

/

A Place to bring your friends
Nowhere is the food better
Nowhere is the service more prompt
TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM
Maynard Street

I

7

e eff,
171

I

. .
_
: ,
' ,

atrri
9armun

" llttlll ll11.:111lll I i l iilllll1I lllilll1I11t llIttlil 1Illlt11 l II llUtttlil I
How Much Is Your =
- Health Worth?
It is certainly worth a little care on your part.
Don't abuse it by using impure dairy pro-
ducts when you can have the best for the
same money.
SThe Ann Arbor Dairy Co.
Phone423
Th oe u
wTeHm fPr ikE
_ .HHIINHHinin A rb orlHunlninnHHH~nHHI

i

Adapted from "The Woman in the Case," the Noted Play

by Clyde Fl

ON THE STAGE

Ray V. Troy's 1922 Song Rev
In an entirely new program of straight musical numbers

COMING

WOMEN"

DE MLE'S "Miss Lulu BeWIT

L O IS W IL S,
MILTON S1
THEODORE ROBE

STARTING SUNDAY
NOTE: Despite the great cost of "Miss Lulu Bett," the Majestic will attempt
it at regular prices of 35c all over, hoping that by great added patronage 1
clear expenses.

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