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October 22, 1925 - Image 2

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1925-10-22

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PAGI1 TWO

THE MICHIGAN

DAILY

. . .

f =

TCRsDA1 001T3FR 22, 1925

SENIOR LIT S LIST
NEW COMITE

Baby Plane Runs 70 Miles In Hour On Gallon Of Gas

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7

MEXICO, Oct. 21.-Gen. Fu Kai
Men, Chinese revolutionary h ad
and head of the Cantonese army,
here to confer with Sovi(, oficial so
political, economic, and mili arv :n
tern.
ROME, Oct. -,he Naltio:::1 r.
cist council has firhidU1ii h,
ing of arms or (anl0 bV
parades.

Doyle Heads Advisory Group;
Ball Committee Led y
Robert Weadock

Tt -

Senior

ORGANIZE WORK SOON
Remaining committees of the senior
literary class were announced yes-
terday by Harry G. Messer, president.
The chairman of each committee will
have a conference soon with his
committeemen, and within two weeks
the president will meet with the var-
ious class departments to outline the
work for the year. Members of the
invitation committee were announced
last week, and a meeting was held
at which the style of the program of
Commencement was decided upon.
The advisory committee consists of
Richard F. Doyle, chairman, Kenneth
0. Kellar, and Margaret H. Geddes;
auditing committee, James W. Fern-
amberg, chairman, Robert C. M. Win-
ter, and George Snider; athletic com-
mittee, Steven F. Wilson, chairman,
R. George Babcock, Royal F. Cherry,
H. Frederick Parker, and Miles C.
Reinke; banquet committee, G. H1am-
ond Harrington, chairman, Edwin C.
Mack, Oscar C. Gorenfio, Frank Deans,
Frances L. Adams, Arline J. Ewing,
and Marion Mead; cap and gown
committee, Kenneth G. Smiles, chair-
man, Norman D. Reynolds, Frank P.
Weaver, Marjorie G. Shields, and Wil-
labelle Harper.
Harry B. Koenig will be chairman
of the Class day committee, and is
assisted by Richard Earhart, William
J. Howard, Bernd Baeteke, Margaret
Sagendorf, and Elizabeth C. Smith;
memorial committee, Richard i. Frey-
berg, chairman, J. Glen Donaldson,
Richard E. Barton, Margaret E.
Brooks, and Mary L. Miller; picture
committee, Walker G. Everett, chair-
man, Robert Wedemann, Jr., Joseph
E. Gandy, Margaret K. Efinger, and
Doris M. Gladden; finance committee
Richard S. Griest, chairman, Herbert
J. Wettlaufer, Clark R. Simmons,
Kathryn W. Willson, and Helen M.
Morrow.
The Pipe and Cae committee is
beaded by Robert M. trab, chlair-
man, Stuart C. Johnson, Robert Morey,'
Albert W. Boehringer, and Paul W.
Bruske; publicity committee, Joseph
J. Finn, chairman, Robert S. Mans-
field, George W. Davis, Marguerite V.
Dutton, and Ruth A.rSorge; prome-
nae committee, Robert E. Weadock,
chairman, Raymond F. Hutzel, Thom-
as P. Henry Jr., Margaret M. Brandt,
and Phillis Haehnle; social commit-
tee, Frederick M. Phelps, Jr., chair-
man, J. Bradley Haight, George W.
Ross, Jr., Janet Van Den Berg, and
Amelia Berkhart.
Included on the Senior Singscom-i
mittee are A. Edmund Alla, chair-
man, Kenneth E. Mogaridge, Eliza-
beth Woodward, and Mary T. Lou-
than; and on the reception committee,
William L. Diener, chairman, Harlan
G. Walters, Allin B. Crouch, L. Cath-
erine Mellen, Virginia Bruke, Ruth
A. Rankin, and Robert J. Brown.
State Regulation
M Advocated To Aid
Oyster Industry
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 21.-State reg-
ulation of the oyster industry to pre-
vent typhoid epidemics such as those
which swept New York and Chicago
late in'1924 and nearly paralyzed the
industry, was advocated today at the
fifty-fourth annual meeting of the
American Public Health association.
Sewage was agreed upon as the
source of. oyster pollution. Doctors
Charles Krumweide and William H.
Park, of the New York health depart-
met laboratory, told of experiments
in purifying oysters with chlorine..
Elimination of germs was never com-
plete, they said, concluding that the
real solution was prevention of con-
tamination.
PARIS, Oct. 21.-Finance Minister
Caillaux outlined at yesterday's cabi-
nt meeting the financial projects he
will submit to the Chamber of Depu-
tties shortly after its opening.

I PAY,
BEST PRICES
- For Men's sed Clothing.
Phone 4310 I W. Washington
it. BENJAlWIN

na-
ves

For Co('OnhilllediCo ~~:
Conle ho
Joh If s
Dinin , R O111
714 Monroe Sl-.
one Bloch Soul h! i1Ru,
XI WjAYS CM
Bolard by Meal, illy el. Wep k

qw.

A flivver plane developed by
tional air meet at Mitchell field, L.

C. H. Powell, who won the honors in the race for
I., has a 1E-h. p. motor that runs 15 minutes on a

tiny craft in the inter]
quart of gas and mov

the machine through the air at 70 miles an hour.

200 High Schools
May Register In
Forensic League
G. E. Densmore, of the public!
speaking department, who is state
director of the Michigan High School
Debating league, said yesterday that heI
expects 200 high school debate teams
o be registered in the league debate
contests before the first prelimin-
ary series is staged Nov. 20.
Mr. Densmore has been working1
earnestly in an effort to make the pro-
gram of the league this year the most
successful in history and to date
many new schools have been showing
.nierest in the debate contest.
F'our dates have been set for the
point winning preliminary series:
Nov. 20, Dec. 11,ran.15, and Feb.
12. The program calls for four de-
bates from each school, two affirm-
ative and two negative. They will bel
alternated at home and abroad. "The
Child Labor Law" will be the subject
i'or debate.
Teams having the largest number
of points in the point winning prelim-
inaries will be selected to enter the
,tate elimination tests and will be !
awarded wall-plaguestrophies.
LONDON, Oct. 21.-The appoint-'
ment of the Very Rev. William Fox-
ley Norris, dean of York, as dean of
Westminster to succeed the Rt. Rev.,
Herbert Edward Ryle, who died last
Aug'ust, is -expected. to be announced
shortly.-
IRON MOUNTAIN, Oct. 21. - Mar-
quette today was still isolated froml
the rest of the upper peninsula whilel
the Michigan Bell Telephone company
crews were striving to restore at least*
temporary service.
DANCING PARTY AT DEXTER
FRIDAY, OCT. 23rd
GOOD MUSIC

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OUR PATRONS ARE

RECEIVED

AS GUESTS--

81

AND IT IS THIS REMARKABLE AIR
OF HOSPITALITY THAT ATTRACTS
PEOPLE TO EAT HERE.
TUTTLE'S

LUNCH ROOM

338 MAYNARD

_.

! l-w
ern eli--Cal--Coke
Scranton, Pocahontas, Kentucky
and West Virginia Coal
Solvay and Gas Coke
This business has been growing ever since it was established.
The secret is "GIVING ABSOLUTE SATISFACTION
TO OUR CUSTOMERS."

HATS CLEANED
AND BLOCKED
Shoe Repairiug
and
Shoe Shining Parlor
"We make old hats and old
shoes look like new."
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
ANN ARBOR
SHOP
65 East Libeiry St. Mal 3353.

r +er
Ths
-
I ,
The latest in suits and overcoats ! 1This sn appy double-.S
~breasted is an, overcoat sought by every up to the-i u te col-
~lege man. The best of material and our tf, : r vi make
you oner which you will be proud to w ear c a ,ny occasion.
Our suits have that perfect fit arnd c~utv~h gte
will give that distinctive appearance desired by h well-
dressed man. You will be pleased with our rates and more
than compensated by the satisfaction derived froan o(r work.
'.Drop in and look us over.
IN
Aa e
bEverthng in Tailoriu'
619 WILLIAM STP.
Don't Borrox-Sm t bscribe T oea.

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We believe it pays to do business in a friendly way.
think so too, let's get together.

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DETROIT THEATRES
THIS WEEK

Baisteloe Playhouse s1gut 75t.
Mt.5cand 75c
Woodward at Eliot Tel. Glendale 9792
The BONSTELLE CO.
Is. the Fantastic, Wise, Witty. Satiric Comedy
"The Beggar cen Horseback"
KWEes. - 50c to $1.50
GARRICK Wed. Mat. 50c to i 50
Sat. Mat. 5oc to $2.00'
25th Dig Week
THE MIRACLE PI AY 01?kAMERICA
ANNE NICHOLS'
ABIE'S IRISH ROSE
SE rE T!YouWill Ev.tu aliv

___ _ _ _ _ __EATD
ADDED FEATURES
CHAS. CHASE FOX
ISN'T LIFE TERRIBLE? NEWS

'I

-NEXT SUNDAY-

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