THE MICHIGAN DAILY -,.. M Iv- s -- _ ._ r I THIS COLUMN CLOSES AT 3 P.M. ADVERTISING DAILY CLASSIFIED RATES Charged at the rate of 12c per reading tine for one or two insertions, 11c pe reading line for three tr more insertton,. White space charged for at sam rates. Classifieds charged only to those having phones. Ask about cntract for classified .advertising. 10c per reading line for one or two insertions, 9c per reading line fo three or more insertions, cash in advance. Minimum, 3 lines per insertion Classlfi d Colunon Closes at 1: o'Clock Noon, Saturday. "4immie-the-Ad Taker" FOR RENT A VERY DESIRABLE SUITE on sec- ond floor corner room, large study, mirror door, steam heat. Quiet house, pleasaut surroundings. Four dollars each. Also single room on third floor, clean, warm, and pleas- ant. $3.50. 508 'Hill st. Phone, 1066-J. WARM ROOM with private family. 10 minutes walk from campus. Call 2893-J. TWO furnished light house keeping rooms. 110 N. Ingalls. PIEASANT SINGLE room for a girl. 1209 So. University. Phone 1217-M. TWO NEW THREE room apartments with private bath and rear service porch. Half block from campus. Phone 1873 after 6 p. m. FOR RENT leading makes of type- writers in A-1 condition. Will del- iver. Phone 342-11_ HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE Cor. State & Williams GARAGE FOR RENT, 1111 S. State st. Phone 2989-X-R. Mr. C.,Wooid. ROGM -FOR man and wife with all privileges of kitchen, dining room, etc. 438 Maynard. Phone 3126-R. FOR SALE VIOLIN. Call Miss Hancock. 290. HAMMOND DUPLEX no. 12 typewrit- er cheap. Call.160-J. 1923 WILLS St. Claire roadster. Wonderful condition. New faint job. Friedman. 3070-J. LOST i AMES and Smith Torts book. Berk 344 S. Division. Phone 557-W. WRIST WATCH on Maynard st. near Press Building. Reward. Owner will indentify. Tel 2650-W. BLACK LEATHER sheeplined gloves last Thursday nite on So. Division near Packard. 535 So. Division or call 468-J. BLACK RIMMED glasses coiner 12th and Huron. Reward. 921. GLASSES IN Brown case marked Washington, D. C. Reward. 403 E. Washington, 1463-M. GOLD WATCH in eastern part of city. Initials C. W. G.. Reward. Call 188. GRUEN VERITHIN watch with-chain and knife attached. -Call 394. Re- ward. FIRST FIVE problems in Heredity, somewhere on Washtenaw between Geddes and Natural Science Bldg. Phone 1775. SMALL LADIES purse near Water man gym, last Friday about noon. Phone 2959-M. Mr. Jessup. PARKER FOUNTAIN pen evening of Indiana Game. Please return to R. C. Rueger, 617 Forest Ave., 1801-R, IVANTEl A COUPLE of good men to sell shirts on commission. Call 189 between 6 and 6:30 and ask for Roth.' SUITE OR SMALL furnished apart- ment for married couple to occupy b ein i i n n i 7 v 1 11 COURSE TICKETS for Edith Douglas Deane's lectures on Interior Home Decoration, Alumni Memorial Hall, March 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, $2.00, single ad- mission 75c. Wahr's, Graham's Foster's, Quarry's. BUICK TOURING car, 1916 model, winter topiotor and tires in good condition;.9824-:license, price -$125. Phone 783. A GOOD NINE room house just south of campus. Only $12,500. Terms. .Phone 3034-R, evenings or 441-Fl ;during business hours. WANTED HELP DONALD WILLIAMS, '25, cleared ver $1,000 above expenses last sui- mer. He is one of the many who have paid their way through U. of l. working summers for the Dick- erson Company. Phone 12713-W for aappointment. BE A NEWSPAPER Correspondent with the Heacock Plan and earn a good Income while learning; we show you how; begin actual work at once; all or spare time; experience unnecessary; no canvassing; send for particulars. Newswriters Train- ing Bureau, Buffalo, N. Y. GIRL TO WORK for board. Call Hamilton, Phone 2184. FOUNTAIN PENS A NEAT jo of Gold Leaf embossing en your Fountain Pen. 25 cents at RIDER'S PEN SHOP 302 State St TYPEWRITING I veginning in April. Box 1 Michi- gan Daily. GARAGE IN VICINITY of Church and Oakland. Box M. C. B. GARAGE near 1017 Oakland Ave. Call 2666, ask for Stibich. MUSICIANS for church and com- inunity orchestra, services welcome either occasionally or regularly. Mr. Potts, 1560-J. I IlIiltllt tIItE111JflH tlIIIttIIIIi iil, tII COOLI CONSID DRAMA "Dona Clarnines," the play to be SUCESSOR, TO ENV' given by the Spanish society, will to the journey to Detroit and give one per- Washington, Feb. 26.-Initial con- formance at, the Highland Park high sideration given by President Coolidge school the week end following its to the selection of a successor to Ed-: presentation in Ann Arbor. The pro- r win Denby as secretary of the navy duction is under the direction of Mr. 9 has revolved about Joseph M. Dixon. E. A. Mercado of the Spanish depart-= s governor of Montana, and James T. ment, assisted by Professor Herbert Davidson, Republican National Com- A. Kenyon of the Spanish department 'r mitteeman from Michigan. t of the Engineering school. . Inasmuch as Mr. Denby's retirementj The play is to be given March 12E from the cabinet does not become ef- in Sarah Caswell Angell hall. TheE fective until March 10 and because of authors are the 'Quintero brothers, more immediate and pressing ques- modern Spanish playwrights who do tions the president, it was said, today their work in collaboration with all at the white house, has considered the the other members of the family. filling of the navy post only in a pre- --- limninary way. It was acknowledged Members of the cast and choruses however, that a number of telegrams for "The Sweetest Kiss", the musical and letters had been received endors- comedy that will be presented by r ing both Governor Dixon and Mr. Miies, March 14 and 15, were an- Davidson. nounced last night by John Bromley, '24, who is directing the production Mexioc City, Feb. 26.-The war de- Five students play the cast parts, two partment announces a crushing defeat of whom are cast as women, and two Simplicity has been administered by Obregon choruses of six each are used._ -troops on rebel forces ~under Jose The five members of the cast an- Mora, at de a Curua, and that occup- nounced are: Henry Mark FiggC Hw- anyor, m slkeyi afwand Kennedy, '25; Henry Camden, _ ture or ; days. Walter McCarthy, '26D;. Edith Per-E kins, David Tauff, '25; Peggy Mar- NOTICE shall, Charles Preece, '27; and the thoughts, I ___________________________coon, Milton Blink,26. There are. WE WISH TO EXTEND WORDS no direct leading parts in the play, 1OF APPRECIATION TO THE MANY each of the members of the cast shar- ofther FRIENDS FOR THEIR KINDNESSin AND SYMPATHY AND THE KIND } The girls chorus will be composed WORDSOF RVEREN STAKER f: James Day, '27; Stanley Diminind, (E_' WORDS OF EVERENDSALKE '27; Harry Lackey, '26; Frederick Mc o S p C GIVEN DURING OUR LATE BE- of'2; seerckmep ic REAVEMENT CAUSED BY THE Manus, '25; Lester Whitehead,'26, DEATH OF OUR N AND BROTH--and Clifford Allen, '26. The'Men's ER, VERNON OLSON. d Siste chorus will contain: Hugh Armstrong, ti of a '26; Glenn Harrold, '25E; James Na- than, 26; Sam Levy, '26; Paul Star- USED CARS. rett, '27; and Sterling Smith, '26. thought an Almembers of bth the cast and ' 'WE HAVE IN ourf Used Car DejX. choruses of the show are new to cars in good mechanical conditun. Mimes production never before having Priced from $100 to $1000. USED appeared on the Mimes stage togeth- CAR PRICES WILL ADVANCE AS er in plays or in the opera. The SPRING COMES. We advisL ou play is being given by Mimes in this to buy now. way in an effort to bring out possible ANN ARBOR NASH CO. material for the cast and choruses. A. C. Marquardt of next years opera. X7 311 Mayn IaruPhone 1927 "The Sweetest Kiss" is a short mus- S ical comedy written by Edwin Meiss, USED CCARS all makes priced from '23. It was originally intended to be $50 to $1,000. used as a regular Union opera, but more freed Albert M. Graves was rejected because of its lack of Used Cars of Quality length. It contains the general theme 119 W. Washington of a college opera of the type present- Eare its cha ed by Mimes, having musical numbers - 1919 Ford Touring car, biggest buy in and lines of that nature. The settings town for $65. Albert M. Graves, are less elaborate than those used in f Used Cars of Quality, 119 W. Wash- the opera, but are made along siiil- ington. ar lines. While Bromley has charge of the'. FOR SALE - staging of the show, Lionel Ames, '24, concentrat Homeiun . E. Sectio . leading lady in the past two Union ' - n jaoPeras, and Howard Welch',434.ne ofE Three blocks from High School. the leading dancers in the opera, are your copy, Seven rooms, three on first floor, in charge of the dancing. three on second and bath. Finished=' room on third floor. Plenty of closet Detroit, Feb. 26. - Dr. Henry F. ment appe space in each bedroom, also large Vaughan, commissioner of health, an- closet off entrance hall with large nunced today that night physicians mirror in door. Screened porch off -and six nurses will be stationed im- kitchen. Large basement, good heat- -mediately at the ferry docks to vac-to Set'wha ing plant, lavatory in basement. Single cinate persons crossing from the bor- - garage. For appointment call Mr der cities to Detroit. Burgess with I-: C. .LOUIS ANDREWS Seniors in the literary col- 512 First National Bank Bldg lege wising to order caps and 3064 Office - Evenings 2465. a gowns must place those orders Brooklyn Ave. ththe George Moe sport shop = On the Dai asso spossible. On-h One of the most desirable lots onC this street for immediate sale. CAP AND GOWN L. I). Carr & C. J. Tremmel COMMITTEE. me twillp 17 Sav. Bank Bldg. Phone 441-F1l__ _ _ _ you will g advertising Chotice ofa Career sentatives. THE NINETY-FOUR Someone, probably an insurance agent, was quoted recently as saying that from the mass of one hundred college graduates one individual only rose to the Polo and butler class, peril- ously near the top of the financial lad- der. Five others became comfortably off and found themselves after twenty. - years at the small yacht and chauffeur - stage. The other ninety-four presum- ably congregate in the great section of the American people who drive their own Buicks to the golf club. In other words, dreaming about being a rich man is one thing, and making the grade is "something else again." Yet the ninety-four presumably work just as hard as the sumptuous six. Their = business is the axis on which a small and uninteresting world revolves. They have become devotees of the dollar and when that fickle deity deserts, have nowhere else to turn. Jammed in a dull, straight rut of business they can never leave the road and jump the fence the portion of ninety-four men out of every hundred now on the campus. The answer to the problem lies in the proper choice of a career. Between now and Commencement we shall have something to offer on the subject of "Careers." Watch for the space with the Famous Signature. endures---in art, architec- advertising. Complicated programs or structures fall vn weight. The great virtue ty is based upon the repeti- Ln understandable, simple id thus evolves persuasion. fits every business and the [om in a business the greater nces to progress. The ch ej plicity m~ Lvertising advertising is the power tO te the reader's attention on so that when your advertise tars the reader will be eager MISCELLANEOUS- THE I NORTH RIDGE Brush Co. has a most attractive ofer to make to students desiring to make real money thOs summer vacation. Try our Spring Vacation approval trip and be convinced. For particulars phone 233-J. L. B. Abbott - R. J. Chick 1.6 Daily Office Open at 336 S. Division St. GROCERIES FANCY APPLES and cookies. Open Sunday and evenings. College Gro- cery, 516, E. Williams. t you have to say. !'- ily, the Copywriting Depart- plan your campaigns so that et the best results from your SPECIALS. Naval oranges. Extra good. 24 for 35c. Three large grapefruit for 15c. Weinman-Geis- endorfer Co. Phone 1500. . s They will be your repre- GRENNANS CAKES, fancy apples Candy bars. College Grocery, E. Williams. and 516 MUJSICALA SPECIAL UKULET F i NEW CLASS IN SHORTHAND IS BEING FORMED. LEARN TO TYPE HAMILTON' BUSINESS COLLEG COR. STATE & WILLIAMS TYPEWRITING and MIMEOGRAPHI promptly and neatly done. Theses, students notes and college work a specialty. 0. D. MORRILL The Typewriter & Stationery Store 17 Nickels' Arcade - TYPEWRITERS of the best standard makes $15.00 up. Easy terms if desired. Renting, cleaning and repairing a specialty. Largest stock in Ann Arbor. 0. D. MORRILL 17 Nickels' Arcade Dealer: L. C. Smith & Corona type- writers. Typewriters supplies, Rub- ber stamps, Rubber key caps, ribbons, carbon paper, eic. TYPEWRITER REPAIR G ALL MAKES. Agency Woodstock and' Oliver typewriters, Sundstrand add- ing machine, Line-a-Time copy holders, rubber stamps, ribbons, cushion keys, type cleaners and sup- plies. Machines rented. ANN ARBOR TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE. Phone 866, downtown 516 E. Williams. SALE Your choice of 21 fine instruments, from $4.50 up, at a discount of 10 per cent. costs no More for ?ter advertising" Gibson Mandolin Special Your choice at 25 per cent discount. This week only. Pay as you play. UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE KEEP PHYSICALLY fit by the daily{ use of Walter Camp's Daily Dozen on Records. Complete outfits sold by Schaeberle & Son. ED. THOMAS' ORCHESTRA, House dances, Initiation Banquets. Phone 179 at once. VICTOR RECORDS of the Great Art- ists and all the latest popular rec- ords on sale. Complete stock atI Schaeberle and Sons. 110 S. Main St. 1)RESS"1IAJING & TAILORING SAVE 17 percent on your cleaning, pressing, tailoring and repairing.!! $5.50 cash card for $5.00. Expert work done, prompt service. Press- ing done while you wait. HERMAN- THE-TAILOR. 802 S. State. Exclusive collegiate styles for young women. Needlework of all kinds. Experienced workmanship. TRS. R. T. REAM 411 Thompson.. Phone 2768-W. The [ichigan Daily Phone 960 Y dlL - - - -- I OISTEOPATHIIC PHYSICIANS