THE I1VMr HIGAN DAIL f,0OR CAMIGN FUND GRAMN) RAPIDS GROUP RISES ! $500 OF MfEMBERSHIP PLEDGE According to reports that have been tecelved at the Alumnae council head- quarters, alumnae in various Michigan ,Cities, have been showing great inter- e st as roups, in the campaign for the Univerity of Michian :League build- ng ;funrd. Mrs. 'Athur H1. !Vandenberg, of ran Rapids, in 'a recent letter to M7rs.Mollie Price Cooke campaign ad- visor, announced that $500, which is half of the Grand Rapids membership pledge, is being sent to the council to ;fe used in helping to defray adminis-. trative expenses. The Grand Rapids women inaugurated several plans for rsing money for campaign purposes last year and during the club year of 1923-24 earned ;approximately $2125. Mrs. T. G. Yoemans, of St. Joseph, ~resident of the Berrien county alum- -tae group,, in a ommn unicaton to Mrs. Cook, stated that 200 'tickets at $1 each, were issued among ,the alumnae from Berrien Springs, Dowagac and B.ridgeman, for a bridge party which was held on Dec. 8. The .procee. from this affair will be given over foi campaign purposes. A joint meeting for the alumnae and alumni of the lberrien county asoca- tiohn is being pl anned for January. The alumhnae will also give a tea and mus- kcale bar the benefit of the University Of Mihigan League building fund dur- ing the latter part of that month. 008BSWILL ABOREsS AMERICAN SSOCIATION The Regular monthly meeting of the Ann Arbor branch of the American Assocation of University women will be held at 3 o'clock Saturday, Jan. 5, at Helen Newberry residence. Prof. W. H. Hobbs, of the geology departmWent has been secured to speak t this meeting. The subject of his. talk Will be, "Earthquakes and the Foretelling of Earthquakes." He will llustrate his talk with appropriate I~ntern elides. Po du cts Of Near East On Display Anl exhibition of the products of the 'tear fast will be hield from -2 to 6 o 'clock today at the home of. Mrs. arion L. Burton, 81 outh nver- sity avenue. Two weeks ago Mrs. Burton took rders for more than $200 worth o Near Eastern andiwork, among which are many, flussign cross-stitched pieces, bags, handmade adkerchiefs, l etcetera.: Those' who ordered articles it that time may obtain them this aft-I ernoen -at Mrs. Burton's home. There w1ll be additionl articles 'on display,1 some of -which will be for sale. Mortarboard has now received the1 French gloves ordered by the women earlier in the fall. They may be ob- tained from those women who took the orders. She Lectures Law And On Politics! Hospital Mailma, With Letter- "Dear Santa Claus : Iam writing you this letter to tell youI am in the hospital with Imany sick boys and girls. Please do not forget to come and visit each one of them. know the children want you to bring each one of them a gift; X would like you to bring me an elec- tric train. And there is another boy, I will tell you to brim; him one too. "Good-bye, dear Santa 'Claus, "from George J." This letter by an 8 year old boy, is a sample of those written by 150 child patients at the University hos- pital. George and 149 other little suf- ferers, some hopelessly crippled, have been waiting for Santa Claus 'to come for days. Christmas is the one bright spot in their lives. They wait for it patiently, making toys and ornaments to adorn the trees which will be placed in their wards on Christmas eve. Some of these children have spent months in. the hospital, and face a future of be- ing permanent cripples and invalids. Four year old Jack, who has been in the hospital for a long time receiv - ing treatment for an almost incur- able disease, wanted Santa Claus to bring him a sled last year. When Christmas eve arrived and the hour for all of the children to hang up their stockings came, Jack looked WHITNEYSaturday SMessrs. Schubert are bringing fdirect from its two year run in New York the entire GREAT CENTURY THEATER CAST AND PRODUCTION in the most delightful operetta of two generations. Based on the life *and romanice of Franz Schubert. Not only do the 'children appreciatet n Is ~ luge what is done for them at Christmas s TO S anta Claus time, but also do the 500 adult pati-1 ents. They are as mtuch touched byl[ attention as the children. One pati- worried, and, when asked why, he re- ent a former inmate of a prison, wept plied that he didn't see how Santa! last year when presented a small but Claus was going to get a sled in his ! useful gift, saying that it was the first stocking. However, he was not long present he had received in 19 years. in devising a remedy, and he hung a( "In giving to the patients," said Miss pillow slip in place of the stocking.I! Dorothy Ketcham, director of social The next morning the slip containedi service, "one should consider, aside the longed for sled. This year Jack from. the pleasure der'iv'ed from the wants an automobile, and he is going. giving, the contribution to the devel- to get it. l opment of the person receiving it. One litte girl lay strapped to her Make the gifts as permanent as pos- bed, reading a book "like Santa Claus sible." ,:t1 is going to bring." She ton will be One hundred and :fifty dolls have j happy on Christmas morning. An- i been dressed by the University Y. W. ether lad lying with his leg strapped C. A. and numerous other gifts for old I in the air is ,waiting for mechanical and young have been received from toys with which to busy himself. others: And Santa will come on Christ- Forty or fifty trees ranging in size, mas eve. In all probability the child- from large to small, "are needed in the ren will awaken as he .enters the wards for Christmas morning. The wards, as they have in other years. staff is relying on the various houses, Will feel of the fur on his coat, pull= donating their trees from Christmas his beard to see if it is real, and take' parties, as they have other years. hold of his hands. In the morningl Houses are urged 'to call the sociali they will think it was a dream untilI service department immediately if they see the tree andI tneir gifts. they are willing to donate trees, in .. r - RC D : . euuSS tc t'tFtt7 P: x 11N1f 14R'boR:? I TODAY AND SATURJ]FDAY -1 order that the truck may be sent for them on Friday. It's true efnclE Classiefieds--Adv. 'i U 64 I Id It's Jammed. Full of E& citement That You Shou] See-- X"- Unseen Dangers! Mysterious Rites! , Strange Secre r-- /,« , Abound in This Photo- Sylva Bremer uy Mashall. ly. °-=- Miss Sarah Wttmbaugh Miss Sarah Wambaugh is ,a former member of the secretariat of the Lea- gue of Nations and attended all its sessions. She is an authority on in- ternational law, has lectured before the American Academy of Political and Social Science and was the only wom- an to be invited to speak at the In- stitute of Politics of Williams college during the summer of 1923.t Miss Wambaugh was born in Ohio. Her father, Prof. Eugene Wambaugh, of Harvard university, is a student and teacher of international law. She fol-. lowved in her father's footsteps and graduated from Radcliffe college in 1902, taking her master's degree in 1916. Since then she has taken grad-I uate work in history and "political sci- ence at Oxford and in the University of London. She has taught law at Rad- cliffe and Wellesley. Spending considerable time in Ger- many since the wvar, Miss Wamjbaugh has interviewed all11 classes of pr ople '-peasants ,clerks,' railway wr rkers, diplomats and government her is. Patronize The Daily Advertisers. Your C'hristmas Cravat O F COURSE you'll look your best. And a Cheney Cravat adds that final,,dis- tin ctive touch which is: al- ways apparent in the dress of men who are mindful of detail. Craftsmanship of weave and design, wide combinations of colours, and long-wearing qualities have made the name Cheney, on the neck- band, mean something to college men. Made by CHENEY BROTHERS Makers- of Cheney Silks Sold 4 IAdded "UPIN THE AIR" Suislilne Comedyf We extend to our manyM e r patrons and friends returning Aer home for the Holidays, a Xa most pleasant-.vacation and-,k11~1 :.:-COMING SUNDAY-. ;Here's a. Mystery That Baffled Scotland Yard for Years!. I of- 1' I ...NOW 1 N. F. ALLEN & CO. WADHAMS &' CO. J. F. WUE RTT MACK & CO.. ITS A , iV COIAN itid HAM MRS- PROI)UL'CT IO N The Problem-" Who Killed EVERY LAST CHARACTER A REAL STAR Andrews Prentice? M t + c= = m OaIws s x = M im 11 mr mu o o n a r m I~r ld r r 1Mi lr s TOD)AY anid TOMIORROW ""Th ci" All women who-are planning to stay in Ann Arbor during the Christmas vacation are asked to sign in the of- fice of the dean of women so that theyj mnay be reached for any activities of the Women's League. Sororities and league houses re-' maining open during Christmas vaca- tion which are willing to rent rooms to women who are spending the vaca-, tion in Ann Arbor, are asked to notify' Miss Mildred Sherman at the office of the dean of women., AL SO "T-EVICTOR RECORDING ORCHESTRA" II ii II I i E I 1: I HOLIDAYION 06-m-ymw OUR" 1 rl'4 IT UP FOR.*REFERE C I: 1~ 4 AS USUAL' THE BEST SaSunday thru Wednesday, December 16, 1 7, 18, 19. "THE SILENT COMMAND" with ALMA TELL, EDMUND LO WE and MARTHA "Snub" Pollard in "California or~ Bust,"' and Pathe News. Thursday thru Saturday, December 20, 21, 22. SHIRLEY MASON in ""THE ELEVENT HHOUR, " with Charles :Jones and Alan HaIle:. Joe Rock in "In Bad in Bagdad," and Pathe News. Sunday thrua Wednesday, December 23, 24, 25, 26. Unusual Christmas Presentation. JOHN GILBERT, BARBARA LA MARR, and B ESSIE [.QVE, in "STo ELMO." "tour Gang", in "A Pleasant Journey.'" Pathe News. MANSFIELD. in an ENTIRELY NEW PROGRAM rte' ',l ................ .. ...........~.. :........................................... ....as~ru....be......w....b................. .w......s 11111!UI 11l1411 III"'TRINITY COLLEGE 11111 ,p 11114u o tWASHINGTON D. C. 1111111 4II llj 111111 nuns1411141 4411 MNONCSADAC il 1111111 ' i mill cT4TrA~.C)k11114 1111111 \14C1NN THURSDAY EVENING DECEMBR127thmolt1 1 ,111 ';;+ (411 7 t l1 D E C4 E M BE 1R Clop 44111 11:14 p.1411 111114 ') 4 1 11111 II lil - -1111114 N411 F 11 l - 11t4144i4Dll rsIti 4~i1 none~lja 111111 I I' II I' 11 In Thurs~day thru Saturday, December 27, 28, 29. "LOYAL LIVES,",with Mary Carr and William Collier, Jr. Mont~y Banks in "A COLD RECEPTION," and Pathe News. Sunday thru Tuesday, December 30, 31 and January 1. PERCY MARMONT, the star of "If Winter Comes," with Cullen Landis- and Alice Calhoun, in "THE MID- NIGHT ALARM.", Ar_ .her of the famous "Spat Family" comedies, and Pathe News Attractions Coming to the Wuerth extSeester Include JACK LONDON'S great dog story, "THE CALL OF THE:WIL.". MRS. WALLAC REID'S "HUMAN WRECK.AGE." RUTH CLIFFORD in "MOTHER'S-IN-LAW. ELINOR GLYNN'S "THE WORL D'S A STAGE MARY PICKFORD and HOLBROOK BLINN. in "ROSITA." CHARLES CHAPLIN presents.EDNA PURVIANCE in "A WOMAN OF PARIS." And "TEA WITH A KICK," with Louise Fazenda, Chester Conklin, Hank Mann, Doris May, Z asu Pitts, Creighton Hale, Ralph Lewis, Stuart Holmes, Sidney D'Albrook and Rosemary Theby. The WUERTH ORCHESTRA, under the personal direction of Nicholas D. Falcone, accompanies the feature at every evening performance and at the Sunday matinees. With the excellent features, the fine comedies, and the best in music, the