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March 11, 1924 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1924-03-11

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

,:

Of Round-wWorld'Flight

SECRETARIES'

All classes that have not yet ap-
inted their alumni secretaries
"ould do so immediately, urges Wil-
edFJ Shaw, general secretary of the
urnni. association.
Mr. Shaw has recently spoken at
etings of the law, engineering and
erary senior classes and after point-
g o'ut the desirability of. an eatrly
ction of alumfni oficials in the var-
us classes there, the ecretaries were
etdin these- ,classes. TVhe alumni
cretaries appointed so far are: E
egmier, '24E; K. E. Keqrr, '24; James
liEre, '34,-and 1K .' Cx ~ielow, '2;4L.
M. Shaw prai'sed the action takten
thoe engineering class in approving
thte plan, whereby all mnembers of
e ~class were automatically made
emesof the association and sub-
rbrs to the -Michiegan Alumnus on j
,e payment of their class dues. The''
:eary seniors have also approved
is idea and such an action is now
in~g examined by the law classI
ough no decisive measure has beenj
ken so far.I
The duty of every graduating class
leave money to finance the class
cretary's work was also stressed by
r. Shaw. He said further that "every
-auate leaving the University should'
riiiate himself with the alumni club
the. town in which he lives and if
does not find one he should start
ie himself."
H03 MICHIGAN CLUBS
.WILL .UNITE N HREVU
Over 75 in~ from the- universities
Michigan ai'(j Ohio are planned tci pae n t e e t ranm t h t
ill ,le furnished at the Campus Revue
Sbe staged, in ItI e ' Tasonjc auditor-
n, Cleveland, March 22. The Re-
ie is being sponsored by the Cleve-
.d Ohio State university association..

CHAMBER 'OF COMMERCE
LUNCHESNEWI DRIVE
Definite instructions and plans for
the membership) campaign of the Annl
Arbor Clamber of Commerce werel
given out at a meeting in the Chamn-
ber last night. The organization has
set as its goal a membership of 700,
which will yield an income of $3,500
Ia year.
It was brought out in the meeting
that this was an absurdly low mark,
when, one considers that this is ex-:
ceeded' by Ypsilanti, w ith only one-I
half the population of Ann Arbor. The
cam-paign will open this mnorning and
be contiiled urntil Friday night.
-John ,C. Betikmia, of the Muiskegon
Ch amber, related the accomp llishments
of' his organization, 'which is rated
among the highest in the nation. In
his talk he emphasized the need of
getting the best brains of the city in-
to the organization. He mentioned theI
fact that as a rule practicing profes-
sional men are the hardest to arouse
to their civic responsibilities, which
are embraced by the Chamber of Corn-
1me rce.
At the present time the local Cham-
ber has but sixty participating mem-
bers in good standing, according to
the executive committee of the drive.

'Books On Display Say Naming
Of America Was Big Blunder

it

The important historical blunder by
which the continent of America was
named after the wrong man, is care-
fully traced througha a series of books,
relating to Christopher Columbus andE
Amerigo Vespucci which are now onf
display at the William L. Clement's
Library.
The name '°Atnerica," as a title for
the lands discovered by Columbus, was
first invented by Martin Waldseemull-
er, a geographical writer of the early
sixteenth century, who took upon him-
self the responsibility of naming,
America for Vespucci: and not for
Columbus. 'the err'or started by Wald-
seemuller was taken up by other his-I
toriansa. copies of whose works are !
~displayed in the exhibit, and thus the
mnistakep. name became firmly estab-
lished before it could be changed, and
justice done to the true discoverer.
An interesting detail of 'the exhibit
is a facsimile of a letter from Ves-
pucci to Lorenzo di Medici, written in
1503, in 'which Vespucci desoribes his
third voyage to America and which, by
implying two previous voyages,, was
largely responsible for giving thel
credit for the discoveries to Vespucci
rather than to Columbus. There is'
also a copy shown of a work by the
Spanish historian Herrera, who was,
the first of the early historians to
4openly charge Vespucci with falsify-
ing .the dates of his voyages.
E1
Make your skin truy= beautiful
with this most wonderful,
scientific +discovery. There is
Ij=no excuse now for a rough,
blotchy red skin.

The price of tickets to the ball will
he $5.50. The ordler of preference for
tickets follows: service men, R.O.T.C
mem'IIbers, faculty members and re-
mininig University studlents.

,Copies of early chr'onicles are dis-lx
played, wi ch give us the meagre ands
uncertain knowledge we have of the l
more intimate details of Columbus' life
and character. One of these states i
that Columbus of Genoa was a "deali-,
er in illustrated books, a mlan of mutchl
mind but of little learning." Besides'
the historical works the exhibit .con-
tains interesting illustrations of cer-
tain incidents in the career of Colum-
bus, with a copy of his heraldic coat!
of arms, and a series of sketches pre-
senting different versions of his ap-
pearance as seen by early artists.
MILUTARY BALL TILCKET
BRI!l, ISSUDTODAY
Applications for tickets to the an-
Arl25 in Waterman and Barbour
gymnasium, will be given out irom 1

to
Srto'
the

Wash Hair Without
Rinsing
~The alkali in hard water makes rinsing bad
for the hair. Takes the life and color out of the
hair.No rinsing when you use Cleero, thepopu-
lar new shampoo.
? hair with a sub-
stncf o odrh
A hair N harm*-
faily ine ith
1- '" + , ' I ler b rin s it
for the ltoproft
fectmimcea!Hr
fai nscoire
11so con veni n ty

1

The roijte w hleh the LUnted States arny avators N ill follow on their flight
around the :globe

The greatest air adventure ever undertaken, a flight around the globe,
will be begun by army aviators from Clover field, Los Angeles, Calif.
They will go from there to Seattle.. From there their route will extend
zip the coast and ou~t over the Aleutian Islands to Attu; thence across
Bering Straits and dlown to Shimashn Island in Japan, on down through
the empire to -Nagasaki; thence to Shanghai, China; to Canton, on, ,to IHa-.
not in -French Indo-China; thence to Mandalay, lndij; Calcutta, 'Delhi,,
Karachi, to 'Choubar, Persia; thence to Bagdad, Mesopotamia, to ams
cus,, Syria, Aleppo, Turkey and Constantinople; thence 'to Adrianiople i
Bulgaria, Bucharest, Rumania, to Belgradle, 'Serbia, to Budapest, Vienna,
Munich, Strasbourg; thence to Paris and London, whence they will fly to-
ward America, either by the northern route oyer Iceland and Greenldana d
down into L.4birador, or across from Ireland to ,the Azors ndthen< et6 ~
Johns' NeWfoun land.

"Jimmie the Adtaker" sells anything.
quickly.-Adv.

"It'son even. when tsof
(Does this slogan abiout the gFin ge-Cap deserve a prize ?
If not,~ what better one can you .suggest?, Read our off'er)

Pric n Men s,
Wear Linhand g

Mlr. P. L. Radcliff of the Worthing-
ton Pump and _Maciiner corporation~
will interview senior mechanical en-
gineers tomorrow in room 221, engi-
neering building. He will be there

f; 4

the University of -Michigan club 01 j There is no posbiiy oflwr.
ClevelandandstheiigiTenounversity, from 10 o'clock to 4 and wishes to talk
Clubn adteBi e niest prices for new style in men's clothing' to all men who are interested in se-
The program for the Revue Ahas not this year, says the research depart-,j curing positions with his company af-
as- yet been announced but it is stated ment of B. Kuzppenheimer and corn-; ter graduation.
that the best singing, dancing, and panry. There, is a world shortage of
performing talent of the two'univer- wool, and prices of woolens are about DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BRING
sities will' be combined in the enter- seven per cent higher than last year.I BIG RESULTS-?
tainment. Immediately following the I Cloth, trimming, labor costs and sell- O'N LITTLE INVESTMENT
performanc'e a dance, complimentary! ing expenses are established at high
to. those attending the Revue, will be l levels and ny change wiltI tenrd to be -
held at thq- lasonic hall. . hlgler m them rpt o«e) v a.j
Tikesr to be o aea uit -I-n ecg iint.- the demn i or sie; { Tlk iz ;.tile Country by S4Q'XI
esCleveland, at $1.50, $. n ~ il a ~i , piayfcorn h opee e nbih
'20 s, he capacity of tl,'e audtr ; ,szr q #b ,Wrnleese i rih
$ 0 s ~ne lbhihg industry ni e t', n s olz ,44 tiles, 116 count-
ri is liijfited, all alumni, iutndi ye n~teBstya, infa turersI!eris ra i'sl, 2 dice, boot
to jattend tlpRevue are urg,&l toW iiL 3t u s o> lnVt7i ftfli~o o rllos<anitinstructions;
in itheir apications as, soon as ji r syi,:'er of> and al4an lantegm
bIo forth rqustswilne m1inultes. It's veryth gme°
th,, order n1asvdcRmanng iz a sinpesntag, All in attrac-
wi1 go o sale at Wurli zer1, er relation to costs nd rafj C 6 b nt, prepaid on3
MBirch 1..+-d ythe delayed wintere aca f1.00. (Canada 3
s lj yl>. -emands of the public.
raw' "Mfable Coers;
KAUStCURE' L XIIf Vey ttactive black .sat
LEARN TO e MhTog Table Cover
w th.coored dragon de
STAII PUNRIC LAW'S ? Y PiEns; tred e tges.
_____ize card table. 1G counter
t lthzough Michigan is a lea der- it i ith esikig tcoord
o phases of pharmacy,. namely #HA 4LT N inary -value. Special price _
pharmaceutical education an~d nanti- B SNE SCQ(. I1 Aj2f tNFE1 i
farn g hray e asgvr-B S N S W ilsidpeadbecmlt-f the requirementsto be met before COL EGEMah-Jon~g set and tabile 'over as
one can become a registered pharmr-! described above on receipt of $2.50.
acist are so lax that it rapidly is, be- STATE &. WILLIAM STS. OIIJNRA-AMERICAN4 IMPORTING CO.
coming a dumping ground for those I3 - -~1. 1Vest 68t), St. INew York
from outside states where strict reg-- __________________
ulation is provided, Dean Edward H. !
Kraus, of the pharmacy college, de-
clared in his talk given before the Iii-
wanis club yesterday.
In Michigan a graduate of a high "
scthe ean deca regitd, hil i 2 I l ays atsf
nischan ecaregistered 20 phar-is ie
states a man must become a ;graduate!
of a college~of pharmacy before he can
qualify for such a position. Up, to j,
the beginninlg of the year a Michigan
youth wi~h but a tenth grade educa-
tion- could be. a registered phar macist. at
It is this fact, it was emphasized, that
makes this state the dumping ground
fromx other states.
Glee Alen Sing in Tuttle's Lunch Room-
Faculty Recital1 338 Maynard St., South of Majestic
'The IUniversity Glee club. singing

Neatly combed, 'well-kept hair is 'a
bjusiness and social asset.
STACOMB makes the hair.stay combed
in any style you like even after it has
just been washed.
,STACOMB-the original-has been
used for years by 'stars of stage and
screen-leaders of style. -jWrite today
for free trial' ®, -
1Tubes 4=35c ' Jars-75c - ,
insist on 3 'AgCOMB-in the black,
yelow an~d gold package,
, Vor al a; our ~druggist'or wherever'
to~let tuos a sold.
1 $anaaid Laboratories, Ic ~
t 113 West 1th Street, New York City
? Seiidcoupon for Fre.TAW Tulles
STANDARD LAB rT( tIpt Ini
*Please send are ices trial tp«}+

emon
Fwia"kx

$250 in Prizes
For the best sentenceof tent
words or'leas on the value
of the Willi acs Hinge-Cap,
we offer the,-followin~g
prizes: 1st prize, $100; 2nd
prize, $50; two 3rd iprizes,
425 each: two L4th ptizes,$Io
each; six Sth prizes,$5 each.
Any undergraduate or
graduate student is eligi-
ble. If two or mote persons
submit identical 'slogans
deerned.. worthy of prizes,
the full amount of the prize
will ,be awarded to, each.
Contest closes at mid-
night March 14, 1424. Win-
ners will be annrounced
as soon thiereafter as,
"p~sile.Subit ny
,number of slogans but
write on one side of paper
only, rutting name, ad-
dress, college and class at,
top-df each sheet. Address
lAetters to Contest.EdIltor,
The]. 13. WIiliai~q Co.,
Glastonsbuty, Conti.'

W1ILLIAMS is a wonderfully
popular shaving cream. Here's
why:--It's heavier, faster - working
lather, the way it lubricates the path
of the razor and eliminates painful fric-
tion, the soothing ingredient which
keeps the skin so smooth and cool even
i6~ daily shaving-these.,'are qualities
men like ! They also like its purity-
no artificial coloring., With the new
Hinge-Cap, Williams is winning more
friends .than lever b efore. See if. you
ever. used A shavin~g creamn as good.
Wiliaw
Shaving Crea

I

e songs which won it second place
ithe Chicago Intercollegiate contest,
gas the feature of last Sunday's fac-I
ty concert. Opening with Stanly'sI
Laudes Atque Carmina" with thel
iaracteristic vigor, they combined1
armnony and unity, and rendered their
art of the program with merit. Their
iging of Bucks "On the .Sea" was
specially pleasing, with its fanciful
ins reminding one of ocean waves,
inally and inevitably came "College
lays," with the warmth and sponitan-
ty which only the.NMichigan Glee club
an produce.-
Mr .G o g .R a ,p als ,T r-,e the rem ainder of the program
lying Tchaikovsky's Sonata, opus
a, -nd two lighter numbers. She
'enied naturally at ease in the intri-
ata passages and performed the rapid
i.asageos with facility.. Her interpre-
tioif of Tchailkowsky revealed an o r-
stic taste.
H. A. W.
Grid Stuedtits aund Faculty leet
Graduate students and faculty mom-
ers of the school of education held a
nference last night in the school of

._._..... _ ....

q:.

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The Quick Safe Can Opener is made especially for house-
hold use. It opens cans of all sizes and shapes with equal ease.

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