GT THE MICHIGAN -DAIL DEDAA :TJAIflT AlLY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I PLAN RESUBMISSION Pilots Locomotive OF ARMLEGSLAION Two-Score Years OfF0M ISflig -1 ication in University. amo : the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of Copy received until 3:30 p. m. (11:30 a. m. Saturday.) )VER ESDAY, JANUARY :3, 1023 Number 71 To the Deans and Others Responsible for Submitting Budgets for Iude. pen dent Unit's of the University: A conference of all those responsible for submitting budgets for inde- pendent units of the University will be held in the President's Office at 10 a. mn. Wednesday, Jan. 3. In addition to the Deans, the attendance at this conference is desired of the Secretary of the University, the Librarian, the Directors of Hygiene and Public Health, the University Hospital,. University Etxtension, and the Museums, the Commandant of the Department of Military Science and Tac- tics; and the Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. M. L. BUR'TON. Supleme~ntary Annotincemenf, College of Literature, Science, and thei Art; : Material should be handed to me at once for the Supplementary An- nouncement of changes or additions in second semester courses. These should come though or be approved by the head of the department. ARTHUR G. HALL, Registrar. foindt-gee on Diploma Schools: The University Committee on Diploma Schools will meet in the office of President Burton, Friday, Jan. 5, at 3:30 o'clock. J. B. EDMiONSON. CIVYl Euglneerilig 42: All reports will -be due on Thursday,. Jan. 11, 1923. This includes stu- dents who, by special arrangement, will complete the course in the second semester. J. H. BATFJMAN. Track Theory: Class in Track Theory, Educ. VIII-43b will meet ini Waterman gymna- sium Thursday, Jan. 4, 1923, at 3 p. in. ARCHIE HAHN. Paderew ski Concert, January 8: Ignace Jan Paderewski will give the following program in Hill Audi- torium Monday evening, Jan. 8. at 8 o'clock: Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue (Bach); Sonate Op. III (Beethoven), Madstoso, Allegro con brio ed ap- passionate, Arietta, Adagio molto semplice e cantabile; Sonate, Op. II (Schumann), Introduzions un poco adagio, Allegro vivace, Aria, Scherzo e intermezzo, Finale, Allegro uin poco maestoso.- Ballade F major Op. 38, Nocturne B Major, Op. 62, Etudes Nos. 12,, 7, 3, Op. 10, Mazurka. No. 3, Op. 39, Valse Op. 42 (Cho in) ; Nocturne (Paderewski), Hungarian Rhapsody (Liszt) A limited numer of standing 'room tickets are still av ailable at the University School of Music. CHARLES A. SINK, Secretary. Womn's FacultyClub: The Women's Faculty Club will hold its next.. meeting Thursday, Jan. 4, at 2:34 in the Michigan Union Assembly Hall. CAt .BTS STA~TE REALTORS PROPOSE LAWS FA VO RALE TO A(GRIC"U,- TUBRAL I TEUESTS Flint, Mich., Jan. 2.-Rlesubmission to the people at the next general elec- tioa~ of the proposed constitutional amendment permitting excess con- demnation of land. and legislation fav- orable to agricultural interests are among the various bills the Michigan AReal Estate association will seek to have introduced in the 1923 state leg- islature. This is announced by E. C. Batdorff of Flint, executive secretary of the association. The excess condemnation proposal was defeated at the general election last November. The aids to agricul-. ture desired are improved. markets and better farm credits. Other proposals the association will industrial city at Tsurumi between Toklo and Yokohama, for the Shibau- ra Engineering company, which is as- sociated with the General Electric company of America. This firm has decided, owing to the lack of space in' the vicinity of its present plant, to move bodily to Teur- um. Besides the buildings, there will be water, sewage and street car sys- tems to be installed as well as the 1other public utilities that go to make! up a modern town. Got something for sale;' A "Daily" 6he Daily will find it.-Adv.' Patronize Daily advertisers.-Adv. I LEARN TO DANCE HALSEY'S DANCE STUDIOS Ilours 1-5, 7-10 Wuerth Arcade i I seek to have brought before the legis- laturo are: {Establishment of a preferential tax rate for Michigan securities for the benefit of Michigan agriculture and ~industry and to keep Michigan money at home. Changes in the corporation tax law, passed as an emergency compromise measure at the last session, which would eliminate from the tax con- rtact assets otf realty companies, which can be cashed in only at discounts, and elimination of the $10,000 maxi- mum tax, and reduction of the min- imum, which now is $50. Simplification of the numerous laws governing termination of land con- tracts, regarded by the realtors as complex. Liberalization of building and loan 'ssociation laws to encourage estab- lishment of such, organizations, the as- sociation believing w'ich concerns have a stimulating influenrce on build- 'ng and home owning. Establishment of a separate real estate department in the state govern- m rent to supervise issuance of licenses -nd administer general real estate ~.atters.I i. i- t I a I STRICTLY ROME COOKING* HEPLER'S STUDENT LUNCH 409 EAST JEFFERSON I1 ' I Engineer Billy Nalsnilth Billy Naismith has been driving a locomotive over the Cheyenne division of the Union Pacific for 45 years with- out an accident or a call-down. He now pilots the Los Angeles Limited and is rated as one~ of the system's crack engineers. A1MERICAN BUILDERS WIN MNY JAPANCONTRACTS' ?Tokio, Jan. 2.-Construction wvork 1923 CALENDARS AND DIARIES EXCELSIOR Lair~'~ of MiichigAn Varsity Band: Jan.. 3, 2923-Formation at Waterman Gymnnasiumi for Mich.-M, A. .. r-.4.. -. f v fi li. nifo'rm. BookS. W A H ' * UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE, C. DAVIS, EI)MONSON, WOOD)Y under way contracting in Japan by American firms represents several basketball game. Instrumnt CHAT'S GOING NOT ICE--Copy for this coluii be submitted by 5 :30 a' the day before publication. WEDNESDAY 7:00--0,ha mber of ComImerce in room 302, Union. 7 :30-31. A. C. Nasbetbmll Water man gymnasium. L-NOTICES All gFrp pictures forr the 19 igAnieiulan must be taken the mouth of January. Al patties, sororities, house cl' camUpus organizations must their space in the 'Ensias tl &ese pictures can be taken Penn Library IJ Trysting P 'WILFRED WILSON, Director. ATEDTAHR'ME million of yen, with prospects of a AT DTECESMETmuch larger, volume.} The. George A. Fuller company. al- farmerst will have prominent places, Prof. Calvin 0. Davis,, Prof. James' ready has completed several office on the programs of the annual meet-;,113. Edmonson, and Prof. Clifford, buildings in Tokio, Yokohama and ings of the farmers' organizations of I moody, of the school of Education, at- !Kobe and has started on others in the I the prairie provinces at their meet- tended a meeting of the 'Michiganj capital. Stone and Webster, Inc., of ings this month. a State' Teachers' association held Boston have in hand the construction r-- The United Farmers of Manitoba? 'hursdlay, December 28, 1922, in Lan- of a high dam, hydro-electric plant - hul meet in Branden, January '9-12, the, sing. t on the. Slo river in Toyama Prefect- un souldUnited Farmers of Alberta at Cal- An address by Prof. Allen S. Whit- I ure,:1 which is the largest in Japan, its 'clock o Igary, January 16-19, and the Saskat- rey, who wvas unable to attend, wau ulim ate capacity being 70,000 kilo- " ~chewan Grain Growers meet in Sas- 'ad by Thomas E. Johnson, super-' wats. It is designedl to supply the katoon January 26-30. The Farm Wo-1 tendent of public instruction, at thef various industries of -the west coast as men's organizations will meet at the; association's Banquet Thursday night. well as those' in the larger industrial lnceting same time. The three conventions will - centers. represent approximately 50,000 organ-! The Michigan Calendar-limited edi- The most important of the new game W ized farmers.I tion, 75c. Take one home with you. work, for which the -American firms Since the last convention the farm- Wahr's University Blookstore-Adv. wxill bid, is the building of a small ers in Manitoba have gained control------ of the legislature and formed a gov- iF IA A~!ltt~t l l 93ernment.. Political organization will 4 b~Eh!iI hu~UU ~23 ich-form a part of the discussions as the n during three. organizations are committed to E'I a 1.A AC.ANDR.. va I Ifrater - political action, provrincially andl fed- i lb,,and erll. EASAN t pay for : AHISTORY MELT,' STEAM FTTN Prof. Arthur E. Beak, of the history oc ldeatmnread 'a paper dealing wit]-; 215 E. HURON PHONE 214-Fl jone of the papyri in the University's : "10111 X3MS colletion t themeet n f theAmer - _________________________________________ MARSHMALLOW WRAPPED IN CARAMEL. MacDiarmid's Candies 71 5 North University Avenue Ann Arbor "~ii ?~imi tifffiditwn i1uiW'} Start the New Year, right! Make up your mind you are going to hear the new Victor Records every month. Here are the new ones for January.; We are ready to play them for you. Drop -in. hiladelphia, Pa., Jan.; 2.-Students - o1ecil'LG m ils 1L m_-- using the library of the Univer- jIscan 'Historical association held in: V of Pennsylvania, as a trysting New Haven, Conn., December 27, 28. .c instead of a place of a study and 29. Several other associations mecA J and an addition is needed to take at 'the same time all of them bein; e of the surplus. the guests of Yale university. tudenta have complained that On Friday evening, December 29. ,ny use the library as 'a place to Secretary of State Hughes 'spoke on et and whisper "dovetalk" and in th oiyo u oeneti el s manner crowd: out the studious' Ing with economic conditions in Eur- opt. Mr. Hughes recommended that. s" I an economic commission consistinY~ Lfl additional floor was added too ersnaieso aiu on ;library last summer and thisac-j triJ~i meet to consider a solution to ximodates '200 more students, but; these conditions. overcrowded condition still pre-, Other members of the University ,Is. It may be necessary to, erect a fclyt tedwr rfsosC w alfo td purposes. H. Van Tyne, Boak, U. B. Phillips, and A. L. Cross, and W. Freeman Galpin, NADIAN FARMERS WILL i Eber M. Carroll, and Arthur S. Ai- DISCUSS MARKET PROBLEMS ton, instructors in history. Winnipeg, Man., Jan. '2.-Grain mar-, Michigan Song Book, Memory jung problems, featuring the cea,' Books, Banner and Pennants at n of a National Wheat Boar~d and Wahr's University Bookstore-Adv. Canadian bank act as related to , _ ___ .question of longtime credits for~ For Taxi 25c 445.-Adv. I 0 .. No matter where your business may call yeu, your family .is no farther away from you than the nearest telephone., MICHIGAN STATE TELEPHONE CoU. Let~ Them Hear Your Voi- Ue Long Distarze* } I i i i i t { ADDRESSES BY THE PRESIDENT Address at Hoboken (May 23, 1921)' President Warren G. Harding Address at Washington (November 12, 1923) Pr~esident Warren G. Harding POPULAR CONCERT AND OPERATIC 21adoline (E. J. Gill-S. Nelson) Emilio de Gogorza :Three O'clock in the Morning (Terris-Robledo) John cCoramack Tosca-Vissi d'arte. (Love and Music) (Puccini) In Italian Maria Jerltza Mother in Ireland (Gfiffen-Kahn-Lyman) John McCormack Madame Butterfly-Un bel di vedremo In Italian Amielita Galli-Curei Purltana-Ah per semnpre (To Me Forever Lost) In Italian Giuseppe, de Luca Songs My Mother Taught Me (Dvorak)* Geraldine Farrar Romeo and Juliet--Juliet's Waltz Song. (Gounod) In French Lucrezia Borl MELODIOUS INSTRUMENTAL Auscassin and Nicolette (Canzonetta) (F. Kreis'er) Violin Solo F. Kreisler Waltz and Elfin ]Dance (Greig) Piano Solo Sergei ;Rachmaninoff March of thie Caucasian Chief (Ippolitow-Iwanow) Philadelphia Orchestra Spanish Dance (Granados-Kreisler) Violin Solo Jascha Heifetz Les Preludes-Part i (Liszt) t Mengelberg and N. Y: Philharmonic' Orchestra Les Preludes-Part 2 (Liszt) M1endelberg and N. Y. Philharmonic Orchestra, Ifungarlan Rhapsody, No. 10 (Liszt) Piano Solo Ignace Jan Paderewskl lanisot March Arthur Pryor's Band Iili~tes March Arthur Pryor's Band 'Twas in the Month of May-Katinka International Novelty Orchestra Chinese Billikens (from " Chauve- Souris" International Novelty Orchestra Pianotlage (No. 4 from "Piano Syncopations") Piano Solo Roy Bargy Knice and Knifty (No. 6 from "Piano Syncopations") Piano= Solo Roy-Bargy LIGHT VOCAL SELECTIONS Bella the-Belle o' Dunooni Sir Harry Lauder The Sunshine of a Ronnie Lassie's. Smile Sir Harry Lauder Apple Blossoms Elsie Baker C0p0i's Garden Olive' Kline 'Neath the South Sea Moon (from "Ziegfld Follies") Lamnbert M1urphy Japanese Moon Olive Kline The Hens of His Garment Homer Rodeheaver Better Each Day Homer Rodeheaver-Mrs. William Asher Carry Me 'Back to liy Carolina Home Campbell-Buirr. A Picture Without a France Peerless Quartet Lovin' Sam (with The Virginians) Miss Patricola Away :Down East In Maine (with The Virginians) Miss Patricola Homesick Billy Murray-Ed Smualle You Tell Her, I Stutter Billy Murray 35718 66103 66109 66111 66112 74786 74787 87350 87351 ,66104 66105 66106 66110 74780. }74781 74788 18970 12 10 10 10 10 12 12 10 10 10 10 10 10 12 12 12 10 Em ~ Ii I-Il II i - /1,, eSordon Is made of Oxford, in a fine tailor-like way, with sound big buttons put on to stay. The shirt has an attached collar made by the expert Arrow collar makers. The cuff's are of the French model, or they have single cuff's which button with one button. $300 See the New. Caps! SHORT \VISORS $2.50 . iI Genuinte Angora Sweaters New Shades A De luxe grade--Heavy and Fuzzy II I 4 I I I J k l t 6 G' f DANCE RECORDS A Kiss In the Dark-Mled, Waltz (from "Orange Blossoms") The Serenaders The Waltz Is Made for Love--Med. Waltz (from "The Yankee Princess") The Serenaders All Muddled Up-Fox Trot Zez Confrey and His Orchestra True Blue Samr-Fox Trot Zez Confrey and His, Orchestra Sweetheart Lane-Med. Fox 'rot Whiteman and His Orchestra (From "Greenwich Village Follies" The Yankee Princess-Med. Fox. Trot Whitemnan and His Orchestra Kiss Mama, Kiss Papa-Fox Trot The Virginians Choo-Choo Blues-Fox Trot Tihe Virginians The World is Waiting for thme Sunrise-M-fed. Fox Trot The. Benson Orch._.of Chicago. Tomorrow Morning--Fox Troit The Benson Orch. of Chicago I'm Going to Plant Myself inInMy Old Plantaion Home-Fox Trot Zez Confrey and His Orchestra Swanee Smiles-Fox Trot Clyde Doerr and His Orchestra Pack Up Tour Sis-Fox Trot (from "Music Box Revue) Whiltemnan and His Orchestra Crinoline Days-Fox Trot (from "Music Box Revue") 'Whiteman amnd His Orchestra 18979 "'10 18969 '10 55179 12, 45331- 1.0 45332 10 1,8971 10 18975 10 18976 10 18982 ,10 18972 10 18973. 10 189'77 10 18978 18980 10 10 I I 18981 10 18983 10 ~ 'I I II