___________________________________ L.A IL.. LVJZ~....L 1I"..i1-UN LLt-iIL, I TUL' ftffTI~LJTf'~ A W.T ~ A TY '.7 TPF lk4TrLJTf _ A TAT ^t A TT V - _.Am I lvl Ikm-1-11I. IA1V UL 1L I > M 1927. FORESTRY STUDENTS HEAR MOON' EXPLAIN CONSFRVATION PLANS, . ^ P" A P Ir - - - - - - . . .. .. . ... IR PFk O E PIFO RESTIRY SCHOOL ±'T S YRA 1CUSE NEW SCHOOL IS PRAISD T~e~hy.YI'IrMll nTrees - ff~f eard" til , 1 (' j r, k i , k S7iATISTICS OF CLASS OF '73 ARE ITOLD IN OLD NEWSPAPE1? ACCOUNTS Fifty-f ye years ago when the mem- feet tw~o and three quarters inches [rs of the class o' '73 were seniors, jwNhile the shortest had attained a 'mass historian prepared a report heghth o.' fi'~e feet, three and a halfi =.-:= pulihedintheloal aprs l. The; largest weig;llefl 19 , tite, vapbihdi h oa poundsi-iand lthe smallest1l,148111 -2 ~e tmebeing the alerage. Oi'd ing to this report, the class of Two int enided to lpreach the Go spiel fibers had spent a total of $14 4,- t.-one alPre sbyterian and the othter, .)'3 (luring their four-year st~y in Ann !who was brought up a Baptist, and o av eiag in g in d iv id u ally $ I146.07 th en jo in edl th e ?t eth od isv ch u rch , iin74 2 o h o r e t ,t n ed t e o e r! : i c I a c r - ther :Stated that the largest man.s . ,t~tt Sp: nli by any single student Fift y-four memzbers of the class had was -,.J00, or $1,125 per year and, the been suspCftendd from college, one of last $50, or .2162 yearly, these "'the :soberest, steadiest fellow"' At graduation, the average age of 1: the cl1asslhad been suspended t wig ' wiiinaer., of the class was 23 mnd another felIlow of somewhat dif- a12 and1 one month. Thirty-nine fecrerit character had been sapeildet ere beardless; the tallest was six , hlrce times. _ ~Ar COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN will find the Packard Restaurant bigger and better than ever. . ...s. ° ,,. a 1 703 Packard St. A : e rior 12I It is at th - - . Franlin F. Moon, dean of the New, York State college of Forestry at syraciise, N. Y., visited the School of Forestry and Conservation here Mon- day. He came here from a meeting f &'ER of commercial foresters called t gether by the National Chamberc Commerce at Chicago, ill., recentl Moon was much impressed with t work of the new forestry school he and expressed himself pleased wi' its progress. Monday morning he : dressed students of forestry and toi of the forest situation in his hom state._ - "Your school has a great fuur here," he said in an interview. "Yi have had a great past and have pro pectT' for a greater future." In his speech to the students Moca spoke on the forest situation in Ne York and of the outlook anu lessor. he learned from his European e perience as a delegate to the World Forestry congress, held in Rome to years ago in which Dean Samuel T Dana led the American delegation t the convention. Give Aiin Factors "New York has an area of fore soil, rainfall in the proper amount a nearby consuming public ftdequat transportation, and a number of oh or factors which make for a 1nancli success," Moon said in his tal "There is now a proposition befor thwe pubic of planting a large amouri of trees. A group of paper and pul men are behind the movement an have as their motto 'One Billion Tree by 1942.' We are now putting in some tw\\enty-three million trees a year. to n irope Moon found that asa result of centuries of experiment tha forestry :Irogras have become a integral part of all prog~ressive cou. tries. Germany, Sweden, Switzerlan, 'inland, and Sweden have all embark ed on reforestation programs, accord ing to J)anl Moon. "In Great Brit ain, follwg the Go'et Woo, in whPi she was caugt .,hornt oflmber, (x t ensive forests have baten Iplnted uan huge sums set asut' for [eon years o til Iat fui'pO5& itMoon said. '"The te year"s is almost up and England is al ready pflig for the future" Zs Joint Author Dean lona, whao is a joint autho of several boos on forestry and wh has writen vaious reorts on for e't ry subjec t. haIns had an interest 1119 cansew.' lie was engaged in fores I ecnuaissaxnce in Connectict an( Kentucky in 1908 and 1909 after grad natinig from the Yale forestry school Later he Joined the U. S. forest ser fvice. In 109-10 he was in charge o the 1-14rhlands o fbe Hudson fores reser(Vaioi l . coming a professor i sorest engineering, he rose to be dea of the New York State Forest Schoo at Syracuse N. Y. MAN STRICKEN AT MINNESOTA GAME Arthur J. Himebaugh, 924 Gladstone street, Detroit, collapsed of heart failure in the stands last Saturday while watching the Michigan-Minne sota football game. He was carried out of the stadium by several by- standers. He was immediately rushed to the University hospital, but died on the way. It is thought that the excite- ment occasioned by the witnessing of the game was responsible for his col- lapse. He was employed by the Garr Fastener Co, of Detroit. Schoarship Charts 1Are Being Corrected Dune to an error in the office of the dean of suidents in the compilation of the fraternity scholastic charts which were' recently mailed to the houses on the campus, new charts are being prepared and will be ready to -he sent out by the end of the week. Certain ratings and rankings among the group of professional fraternities were incorrectly made out, necessitat- ing the preparation of the new charts. Osteopathic Physicians Dial 5669 Drs. Bert and Beth Hiabererl 338 M1aynard Street Specializing in F'eet '?F' " F'______ l i)NESI)AY 3ckJonesI NOW SHOWING U,'4rED ARTIS~rS PICT UR } 2!-cenix DOLOv "iipported byi i gter l ES DEL RIO.1 LASMT lIII 1 I1N l ,T One of the best moving pictures that has been made this year.-JUDGE Magazine. ON T/ lE STA(GE- 7 DT CAPR O ~ Preseniting , "SMUGGLED GOODS" £0AMa -ALO AAN ALICE DAY COMEDY, "DOZEN SOCKS" NEW AESOP PARAM)iTTNT nAmong Men . toter of the old world's-famed Lovecr clsi at needs no introduction C FABLES NEWS 2:0- :30 7:00-8:40 IMAJESTIC ORCHSTRA Matiniees;,10c, 30c, 40~c Prices, Nights, 10c, ~'Oc aRUDOLPII XCIILD RUT JIINIOROGRLAN-SAM D& ORAS- G lDS saOCSCWML-VIRNl1'dA BMDWORD"- a wns lEUI AEA*IX FX'IRA! MICH. vs. MINN. Fotball Pictures The story of a heroic soul thlit never faltered mlien stinging reverses wvithi smiles and radiated hap- pinless and cheer at every fireside-YouilIl love him. i __ s "Discovery Night" and-RENEE ADOREE Co"Back tor Ii ALSO HI CIII (.'A N- MOIN STX P'I(1'Iu {,IS ANov elly (artoon (Good for :Itally I,.affs I N'ews SCOOPS, Art and leallty And for our Entertainment Feast THANKSGIVING DAY SN PLEASE NOTE: This theatre w iji ;)regent 5 sh-r'ws Thursday with full Orchestra all afternoon, 1 :259 3:00, 4:40, 7:00, 8:40 e"~~000 iota na ffl n,, ____ ,.nn -n n 7 G t z ' , ,, , , . . ° ?: I: : is I: f. 1: = - ( le '") ,: i 1 : ; . . : = ................................................................. .............. w-..Ww a -.. -. . m I "Back to Joes andthe Orient" We are serving a Special Thanksgiving Dinner of Turkey, Goose. or Duck on Thursday, from 11:30, a. M. until 9 p. m. Dancing every noon and evening. Make your reservations early by phoning 9006. We are also serving a Pan Hellenic Breakfast after the Pran Hellenic Ball from one until three. Make your reserva- tions early. JOE PARKE r-R' II II :I i . .E f I .I l I E I : = l I E; f :i (!i E! I : i ' Five minutes to play The score 21-0 against dear old Siwash. Brown, the great- est Siwash quarter-back, gets the ball. Lie rushes down the field for a touchdown. But one isn't enough. He makes anoulher . , another . . . another . . . until the score stands 28-21. And Siwash wins. 50,000 people go crazy. They yell themselves hoarse. Brown marries the girl and is now mining fire-proof coal in Labrador. Well ! WXhat of it? Brownie, his girl and all the bunch drank "Canada Dry" after the game, the coolest, most thirst-quenching ginger ale they'd ever tasted. Because it contains only pure Jamaica ginger, it has a delightful flavor . . . tang to it. . dryness... sparkle. Because it blends well with other beverages. Drink "Canada Dry !" The Champagne of Ginger Ales. WhVlen your friends drop in . . . on every occasion. Le". U. S. Pat. Off. «