THE MICHIGAN DAILY TIT RS1 t ', THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, May Be Cardinal MUSIC AND MUSICIANS the fight against unemployment. I ask held by the Junior literary students this for their own sake, and for the this year. sake of the rising generation." The committee in charge has an- Speechles and nmanifestos tonight are DRMtD m I[?1 nounced a plan of making the affair numberless, but there is little new to 1 rIPl w ruFOR T o aIahlti ntue.CochTalWi be said on the situation. Premier Baldwin, Mr. Lloyd George, Mr. As- man and "Herb" Steger, captain of the quith, Mr. Churchill and J. Ramsay Speeches, food, music and smokes 1924 Varsity football team, are the MacDonald, are still making final ef- will be the order for the junior literary speakers on the program. Music will forts to win votes tomorrow in various smoker to be held at 7:30 o'clock next be furnished by Kennedy's Six of Dia- parts of the country. Tuesday night in the reading room of monds orchestra. Refreshments and the Union. It is the first gathering smokes will complete the program. Strauss Writes Opera sic N!,ht,-.500to2.5 Berlin, Dec. 5.-Richard Strauss is Wed.Mat.50oto$1.50 Sat. Mat. SQ. 4@ $2.00 writing music for 'a new opera, the Vie M~ost Excitinag Playr Ever W'ritten book of which is by Hugo HoffmannA - sthal, the theme taken from GrecianCA AD THE mythology. Strauss says it "abounds Presented by Ithe Company Which in humor." Played Chicago All Last Season I I Three concerts are planned under the auspices of the University School of Music, to given Dec. 9, 12, and 16. One, that of Dec. 12, is a part of the regular Choral Union series. Mrs. Willi 'n Wheeler, soprano, Mrs. Maud Okkelberg, and Albert Lockwood all of the School of Music faculty, will present a twilight recital on Dec. 9 in Hill auditorium. The program includes some numbers for two pianos played by Mrs. Okkelberg and Mr. Lockwood. The public with the exception of children under 12,, is cordially invited to attend the rec- ital. Efrem Zimbalist, the Russian vio- linist, will appear on the regular Choral Union series on Dec 12. Mr. Zimbalist is accompanied by Mr. Em- anuel Bay. The concert will be Mr. Zmbalist's debut before an Ann Ar- Sbor audience. Handel's Messiah will be sung by the High School chorus of several hundred voices, on Dec 16. The chor- us will be directed by Mr. George Oscar L3owen, head of the public school music department. The .solo parts will be taken by Mrs. Killian Wheeler, soprano, Miss Doris Howe, contralto, Mr. William Wheeler, tenor, and Mr. R. Winfield Adams, baritone. The public is invited to attend the concert. 5,0.ATOSL XIT MAS fUND OU CAMPUS TODAY Tag day will be held on the campus' today to raise funds for the S. C. A., children's Christmas dinner. Stu- dents will be stationed at prominent corners and all contributors will be presented with a tag. The sum will be, left entirely up to the donor. The Christmas dinner for more than 200 poor children which is expected to be given with the funds obtained from the drive will be held at 3 o'clock next'Thursday in Lane Hall auditor- ium. Clothing and yuletide entertain- ment for the children will be an add- ed feature. David Bromberg, '25, is chairmin of the drive. The committee in charge of the entire entertainment includes the following; R. C. Straub, '25, Lau- rence DLooge, '24. Ralph Byers, '24, Clarence . Ke sn, David Brom- berg, '25, C. A. Stevens, '26, Elmer Lautner, '26, Louise Gallaway, '24, Ruth Rankin, '26 Ellura Harvey, '25, Verena Moran, '25, Thelma Stevenson, '24, and Jessica Megaw, '25. More than 185 children of the total number expected to be taken care of havealready been arranged for. The entertainment conmittec plans to fur- ther use the funds raised in this cam- paign in supplying a Christmas tree for the campus as has been done in previous years. Hugh, K. Duffield, '24 represents the committee on the Student council. To Unite Navy And Merchant Marine HISTORIARN TO LECTURlE. O' N CONFEDIERACY TOA 'A Worthington C. Ford of Boston, . r.yMass., will speak on "Some Aspects of the Diplomacy of the Southern Con- federacy" at 4:15 o'clock today in Tap- pan hall. Mr. Ford is the editor of all the publications, proceedings, and col- lections of the Massachusetts historical society, and is the foremost authority on the lives of the Massachusetts Adams family, President John Adams, President John Quincy Adams, Charles Francis Adams, the American ambas- sador to England during the Civil war, and Henry Adams.. Mr. Ford has spent many years of extensive research in the study of the archbishop Georg'e Wiillant diplomacy of the southern confederacy. r undeleinh iHis discussior- of the subject will be T usXin ea -open to the public this afternoon. To- That Pope Pius Xi will create Arch- morrow he will talk again to an in- bishop George William Mundelein, of vited audience in the Clements library. Chicago, a cardinal at the secret con-, For many years Mr. Ford held the sistory in Rome Dec. 20, is the report position of chief of the bureau of stat- emanating from the Italian city Arch- I istics of the department of state, and bishop Mundelein has been mentioned that of chief of the division of manu- frequently for the red hat in rumors scripts of the library of congress. The that a new American cardinal is to be titles of a few of his noted works upon created. historical subjects are as follows: "The Journals of the Continental Congress," Baldwin Issues "The American Citizens' Manual," and "The Standard Silver Dollar." Appeal For Votes While in Ann Arbor, Mr. Ford is the guest of his cousin, Professor Ulrich London, Dec. 5.-(By A. P.)-On the B. Phillips of the American history de- partment. eve of polling day, Premier BaldwinI issued what is assuredly one of the Reds Gather hIornmanoff Papers ..IIlllllll ~ lllllltllllln llnlllllilliiglil i gi llglilli llltllll lliltlll PAY YOUR Save° - NSIAN S=c Subscription Before Dec. 13th. Press Building. Opp. Majestic Theater. aIllitII II I I gIII iIIIIIf111i f fIIt1 1 I liIIII11 IiIitI111111111111lilii No Refunds No Exchanges SPECIAL SALE on all WINTER HATS A Good Selection. L....:._: .,, r Y s Jr ....hh,, A#. . 1. '° %y 1c,. A ' f2 4 ,sJa "'.. ?.i vY! N -. W :'i w. G. 4;,':" ti "F' . . ',r Ji ;« p Christmas Sale simplest and briefest election appeals in the history of British electioneering. In it he says: "I appeal to my fellow countrymen and women to give me their support in Moscow, Dec. 5.-Th'e Reds have or- dered everybody having any papers dealing with the Romanoff dynasty in its last two reigns to hand them over to the Soviet. jo FURS PUYEAR & HINTZ 328 S. 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Buy now and save mightily Note These Low Prices: Northern Seal Coats ....................$79.50 Muskrat Coats .........................$110.00 Full Length Hudson Seal Coats..........$235.00 Raccoon Coats ..... ..................$235.00 Jacquettes...........................$25.00 Up Chokers..............................$9.75 Up. Remember, you buy these garments from the maker, thus' assuring you of service at all times. SAMPLES Permanently on Difplay at GUY WOOLFOLK & CO. 3-6 S. State Street Ann.Arbor, Mich, Designed by WHITEHOUSE & HARDY INCORPOR"60 - BROADWAY AT 401"'STREET 144 WEST42MO STREET METROPOLrAN OPERA HOUSE BLDG. KNICKERBOCKER BUILDINg NEW YORK Washington, Dec. 5. - Senator Walsh, democrat, Mass., announced today he would introduce a bill pro- viding that the government merchant fleet be made a part of the Navy and that a second assistant secretary of the Navy take over the duties of the shipping board and the emergency fleet corporiat on. The bill would provide that the sec- ond assistant Secretary in time of peace operate all merchant ships now being operated by the government. Foreign Students To Hear Sanders Cosmopolitan club will meet at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow night in Room 110 of the University library to hear Prof. H. A. Sanders of the Latin depart- ment tell of his experiences and ob- servations in Europe. Prof. Sanders has just returned from a year abroad during which he visited in Germany, France, Italy, and Spain, and is ex- pected to give an explanation of the conditions of the monetray systems as well as tell some of his experiences on the continent. The public is in- vited. t t I r I m , . A Small Deposit-Now Will Reserve Your Selection. Ls W c4fl,679 b, ZWERDLING BLDG. ANN ARBOR,MICH. CORNWELL COAL Kentucky Egg and Lump West Va. 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