THE MICHIGAN DAILY { T 'A WA -v =A-VA -u --z -5\5? l WL RCIV FIs Active Worker For International SUBSCRIiNSTODAY PeaceAndFreedom Voluntary subscriptions to the Uni-I versity of Michigan League building fund for the million dollar national campaign will be received by the local committee from 9 to 5 o'clock to- day and tomorrow in Alumni Memor- ial hall. Life memberships in the University of Michigani League and additional ifts to make up the individual quota of $207 from every alumna may be paid now to facilitate the work of the various teams. Women who are not alumnae but who come under the following classifications are also urg- ed to take out life memberships: Women students (credit earned in the University)................$50 ..Alumnae (credit earned in the Uni- - versity)$................ .$50R Women members of the faculty, for- mer members of the faculty, adminis-! trative officers, and former adminis- trative officers................$50 Women in the immediate family of faculty members, administrative oflic- - ers, and former administrative of- fIcers ..........................$50J Mme. S. Damondt-Hirschman, of Members of the Ann Arbor branch Holland, president of the Dutch sec- of the American Association of Uni- n versity Women................$501tion of the Women's International Wives of officers and members of League for Peace and Freedom, is the board of directors of the Alumni one of the prominent foreign women PROF. To .RED WIL , 01 ADDRESS WOMEN VOTERS Further plans of the National tea- of Women voters for the American Institute of Politics, which will be held at the University from July 21 to! 126 this summer, will be discussed atk the meeting of the Ann Arbor branch of the organization at 7:30 o'clock to- day in the auditorium of Lane hall when Prof. T. H. Reed, of the political science department and director of ANNOUNCE ATHLETIC PRORA FO WMEN'! Notices 1 Sohonir NomenwUllhol.thei University women will have an op- Soph e women will hold their pOrtunity to select work in the phys postponed meeting ati4 o'clock to- dayv in the parlors of Barbour gym- ical education department next fall, nasium. according to directors of the physical education department. Afternoon class. -The following Senior Play prac- es on Friday will be dispensea with tices are announced for the week: Acts 3 and 4 at 4 o'clock today; das far as possible in order to acco - acts 3 and 4 at 7 o'clock tomorrow. modate women who go home for week These rehearsals will take place in ends. Sarah Caswell Angell hall. During the outdoor season, wom- en will be allowed to choose between Tickets for the Olympic) tryouts soccer, archery, hockey or tennis, for their required work. Gymnastics, Friday and Saturday may be obtain- clogging, natural interpretative danc- ed from 7 to 12 o'clock and from 1 ing, and the elements of swimming will also be offered during the indoor . to 5 o'clock today at the Athletic of- ! Women who are interested flice in Barbour gymnasium. ing the book or music for th Girls' play of the class of Athena will hold a meeting at 7:15 asked to attend a meeting at o'clock today in the Alpha Nu rooms tomorrow, in Sarah Caswel for election of officers for the com- lall. Prof. John L. llrumnm ing year. dress the meeting. GumChewing Aids the Teeth You have the authority of doc- torsand dentists for this statement. Your own experience will prove it, if you will use WRIGLEY'S after, every meal. .. . ,. season. the bureau of government, will speak. Mrs.' Louis Warfield and Mrs. Dal- laf Bache, state president of the Ore- gon branch, will report on the nation- al conventtion, which was held in Buffalo in April. The undertaking of ward organiza- tion among the women of Ann Arbor will be discussed t this time. Chair-j men for each ward are to be appoint-; ed, as well as the vice-chairmen, whoj will be college women. New members may join at this time by paying the fee of 25 cents. College women under the voting age of 21 years are allowed to join.' Officers of the Ann Arbor branch of the organization are as follows: Pres- ident, Mrs. George Patterson; first{ vice-president, Mrs. John Waite; ,ec- ond vice-president, Mrs. M. L. Burton; third vice-president, Violet Kidder, '26; secretary, Miss Sara Whedon; treasurer, Miss Louise Georg. Class and interclass tournaments will be held in basketball, soccer, hockey, and frequent dancingmeets will be held throughout the terms. An elective course in rifle will be given next year and Captain Holms will conduct his classes in horseback riding the same as this year. Palmer field house is now being painted on the interior and gas is be- ing stalled. The house is being trans- formed into a clubhouse for women and next year its coziness, coupled with its warmth and accommnoda- tions for making a cup o? tea, will add to the happiness and comfort of Uni- versity women, according to the di- rectors. It's true cM".c-ency to use Daily ClassiefieAs-Adv. Ia 90 Days or Money Back Women who wis to somulate the growthof theirhair should use Van Ess, Liquid Scalp Mas- sage. A glorious head of strong vig- orous hair surely follows its consistent use, and consist- ent use is eas because Van Ess comes fitted wita tent rubber ap- plicator that feeds the medicament di- rectly to the roots of the hair, elim- inating mussy massaging with the fingers. And the flexible nipples of the applieator bring a healthy circulation of blood to feed the hair roots. Buy your Van Ess on 90-day treatment plan. Money back if it fails. SUZDEN DRUG CO., 1112 S. Univ. Ave. Ifu The following quotations from a recent work on teeth and health are worth remembering "Dentists have found that the exercise of gum chewing brings about a better nutrition of the teeth . . . . "The cleansing action of the gum between the teeth helps to keep them free from the particles which lodge in the crevices, and cause decay." The busy man-or woman either-rarely has time to clean the teeth after eating. Yet they should be cleaned, and assocition of the University ..$50 who will tour the country on the Members of the governing board "Pax" special train in the interest of and administrative officers of the Un-i international peace. iversity dormitories, as approved by With Dr. Aletta Jacobs, Holland's th'e Board of Regents ............$50 first woman doctor, she organized the Women of the faculty of the Univer- first international congress of women sity School of Music for whose cours- !at the Hague in 1915, and organized es University credit is given .....$50 an international conference for a Women of faculty members of the new peace at the same place in 1921. University School of Music for whose Mme. Damondt-Hirschman has been ; 1 . i IG courses University credit is given. $50 Wives of alumni ..............$100' Women eligible for committee mem- berships will be solicited by the cam- paign workers at a later date. The time of complete payment for the' pledges made at this time is set at three years. PLACES IN CONFERENC STILL REAIN YCI Applications may still be rec for places in the Michigan deleg to the Central Student conferen be held Aug. 15-25, at Lake Ge Wis. The conference offers well bala combination of summer camp re tion and discussions of the esse of Christianity in connection wit questions current on the modern lege campus, according to Miss Ross, secretary of the Universi W. C. A. Morning hours will bb d ed to informal discussions of questions as race relations, int tional problems, our attitude to war, and the relations of men an men. Experts in various lines will be sent at the camp for the purpo advising students upon the prol in whichthey are interested. Afternoons will be spent in re tion, including tennis, swimming the preparation for the pageantC will be held in the natural ampl ater near the camp. A visit t nearby Yerkes observatory of th iversity of Chicago is also inc in the program. Ella Farnsworth, an 18-year-o Paul, Minn., girl, has been ru her father's backsmith shop sinc death some months ago. She does forging, welding and shoei I . . Consider the Lii They Toil No Neither 'Do They Spin. The Sayings of Soloinoi (n E OF TIH. E ANTI eived ation ca tol neva,! anced an active worker in social movements for many years. At one time she was president of the Hague committee for education of mothers and girls of the labor classes. She is also a member of the committee for the reconstruc- tion of Europe and for a world lea- gue of cities. ALPHA PHI LOSES TO DELTA GAMMA Delta Gamma won from Alpha Phij in the interhouse baseball tourna- ment yesterday by a score of 9 to 4; Betsy Barbour defeated Kappa Alpha Theta with a 19 to 9 score; Alpha Om- icron won from Adelia Cheever, 11.to 4, and Martha Cook defeated Jordan house, 16 to 1.- OLYMPIC TICKETS ON SALE FOR WOMEN Louise Roberts, '26, has tak- en over the sale of Olympic try- out tickets among the women on the campus. Miss Roberts urges that all organized houses on the campus co-operate with her and subscribe for these tickets in blocks. Tickets may also be ob- tained by the women at the W. A. A. o'fice in Barbour gymnas- ium. Tryouts will be held in Ann Ar'or May 30 and 31. The tickets are good for either day. Price $1. a I : ' A NSew Patterni ji will do It. Also it will aid digestion and furnish welcome refreshment to mouth and throat. Sealed in its purity package, bringing all its original goodness and flavor to you. Ir E k f ___. after every meal 1 0 1 'f SAMPLES Permanently on Display at GUY WOOLFOLK & CO 36 S. State Street Ann Arbor, Nich. Designed by f 1'° L.EEI' AINXW IERE, BUIT EAT AT REX'S THE CLUB LUNCH 712 Arbor Street Nenr State and Packsrd Stre"1s -i t 3 { i i WHITEHOUSE &- HARDY tNCC"PORATED BROADWAY AT 40^' STREET 144 WEST 42"° STREET >. VThOpouTA1N OPEPA Hons. Bwo. KN CKg'aSOCiKsR S'ILDJNO NEW YORK Get your Wrigley benefit today! Try Wrigley's after smoking The PFlavor ,La, E d W. PM922. J crea- i. I _______________ _ ___________ ntials I h thel AT T H E THEATER I col- Mary Now Playin ty Y. Screen-Today Playing evot. s uch!I Arcade-Corinne Griffith andIflc*' war- Conwaye ae "Lilies of ELAINE HAMMERSTEIN, d the Field." BERT LYTELL, LEW CODY, Majestic--"T l akingPoint.' BRYANT WASHBURN, se ofI , HOBART BOSWORTH, blerns IWuerth-"Rupert of Ilentzau." I m CLAIRE WINDSOR c Orpheum-Gladys Walton in A DAW, )crew- MTeNa ay"iARJ.ORIED W *and i erLd. which ADOLPHE MENJOU hithe- Stage-This Week I D the e Un- ;ided Carrick (Detroit) - Bonstelle I Company presents "It Hap- ' ld St. pened! nning e his does "Jimmie the adtaker" sells anythingWN ng. quickly.-Adv. SIR ANTHONY HOPE'S Sequel to "THE PRISONER OF ZENDA" .r~ lies, 1 l1IIII~ f 1 I 11111 l I 1*11 l II I IIIII 1 1 1111i11i11t1 t w n TONIGHT AND WEl)NESIIAY A searching poirtray al of the tr uth K' able New York society set. pj A picture strong in dramatic in- - terest with a rich vein of humor Iith and pathos. From the famous stage IHere you have four pictures actually pack- N1it hi play by WILLIAM HURLBURT and ed into one! A society hove story, a fas- Nity Nad directed by JOHN FRANCIS DIL- cating murder-mystery, a flaming romance PatsyR LON who has attracted national at- w -dyh the scenes and a rattling George Filler Mat More; NtaNarit '.wrsY.s nrW.. ,u. ;nu xa IOYAYIWIIiC 'MYf.IYYW.®6 h I A New and Enlarged Edition of the II C A- so DAVIS B OOK NOS Ready 48 Pages of Michigan Songs and Songs Used b e Boys in Camp For Sale at I Allmendinger's Music Shop Wahr's Book Store Grinnell Brothers' Music House CO-STARRING CORINNE GRIFFITH And (f"t'NJA Y Published by I