SAY, MAY 19, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Eugenie Leontovich Opens Today In James Fagin's 'And So To Bed' Matinee To Be Held In Theatre This Afternoon E genic Leontovich Has Lead In Show Featuring Many Stars Madame Eugenie Leontovich, fea- tured in "Grand Hotel" and "Twen- tieth Century," opens today with two performances in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre in the second pro- duction of the Dramatic Season, "And So To Bed." The play is a comedy of the Res- toration by James Fagin and was originally Miss Leontovich's starring vehicle in this country. The Ann Arbor production willalso feature Rollo Peters, who has played in Rom- eo and Juliet, and Katherine Wick Kelly, leading lady of the Cleveland Playhouse. The plot of "And So To Bed" is centered about Samuel Pepys and his wife. Mr. Peters plays the role of Pepys, who is portrayed as a phi- landering rake, and his long-suffer- ing wife, Mrs. Pepys, is played by Miss Leontovich. Miss Kelly has the part of the flirtatious Mistress Knight of the Royal Opera. Ainsworth Arnold, popular char- acter actor, who has already ap- peared in previous Dramatic Seasons here, will play an important part. He will have the role of Prodgers, keeper of the Royal Bedchamber to Charles IL The part of the king will be played by Donald Randolph, while Robert Henderson will appear as the fop, Pelham Humphreys. The complete cast will also include Margot Loynes, Richard Albert, Lud- milla Toretzka, Oswald Marshall, Ed- ward Ferguson, and Lois Maier. "And So To Bed" will be presented for seven i erformances, including to- day's matinee and night through Thursday evening, May 24, with the regular Wednesday matinee on May 23. Womien Learn Of Business At Conference The secrets by which young women may learn to suport themselves, and eventually become financially inde- pendent, will be made known at the North Central Regional conference of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women, to be held from July 22 to 25 in Grand Rapids. Miss Cora McClench, president of the Ann Arbor branch, has received details of the program from Mrs. Louise Larzalere, general chairman of the conference. The events sched- uled for the program are as follows: On Sunday, July 22, will be held registration of delegates which will be followed with a buffet supper, re- ception, and musical entertainment at the Blythefleld Country Club. Monday, July 23, will mark the opening of the conference, with sev- eral addresses of greeting. The lunch- eon meetings will be followed by oc- cupationlal round-table discussions, while the late afternoon will be de- voted to recreation of various kinds. Following a general session on Tuesday, a panel discussion will be conducted by a national officer, in which well-qualified members in the region will participate. The balance of the day will be occupied with a public relations luncheon, recreation- al activity, and a cabaret supper. An emblem breakfast will be held on Wednesday, at which the national legislative chairman will be in charge of a discussion. The conference will reach its grand finale in the evening at a banquet, at which Mrs. Geline MacDonald Bowman, national presi- dent, and another prominent speaker will give addresses. it is anticipated that the confer- ence will be attended by a thousand prominent business and professional women from the north central states. All Races A tend Dance AL Lane Hail I A new note in campus dances was struck at an affair held last night in Lane Hall under the sponsorship of the Vanguard Club and the Na- tional Student League.nThe dance was especially intended for, and at- tended by, students of different na- tionalities. The success of the experiment was assured by an attendance of almost 80 persons, representing many races. A negro orchestra furnished the mu- sic. The purpose of this dance-of-all- races was to promote closer relation- ships and better understanding among the diversified nationalities President's Mothen Is Honored -Associated Press Photo Mme. Ernestine Schumann-Heink (left), noted singer, is shown as she paid her respects to Mrs. James Roosevelt, mother of the President, at a Mother's day dinner in New Yori where Mrs. Roosevelt was the guest of honor. Many Fraternities, Sororities To Hold Spring Parties Tonight All Classes To P articipate In Lantern Niwht Annual Festivities Will Be Held Wednesday Evening At Palmer Field Lantern Night, given in honor of the senior women, will be held at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at Palmer Field: Although prospective graduates are invited to attend in unlimited num- bers, only 24 members of freshman, sophomore, and junior classes will march. Selection of these women is based on activity points. The four students in each class with the highest number of points will act as leaders. Two will head the group and two will follow, thus main- taining an orderly line. The office of aides, eight women active in class affairs, has been abolished. Lantern Night is marked by a re- vival of Field Day which is now re- ferred to as Play Day. The last Field Day was held in 1925 by which time it had taken the form of a pageant. The following year the pageant be- came the freshman project. Play Day will honor the six mem- bers of each dormitory, sorority, and league house who. have shown great- est interest in intramural sports dur- ing the year. These women will com- pete in tennis, bridge, archery, golf pitching, horseshoes, and relays, from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Following these sports the finals of the intramural baseball tourna- ment and the finals of the women's double tennis matches will be run off. W.A.A. will entertain the 137 participants in the afternoon activi- ties at supper on the porch of the Women's Athletic Building. The new W.A.A. will be installed and Billie Griffiths, '35, out-going president, will speak. The proces- sion will begin at 8:30 p.m. with the Varsity band playing. The march will end with a block M formation. Dean Alice Lloyd and Dr. Margaret Bell will be introduced by the new W.A.A. president, Ruth Root, '35. Miss Lloyd will announce the members of Mortarboard, Senior Society, Wyvern, and Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman honor society. Dr. Bell will present athletic cups and W.A.A. awards for points. ARCHITECT DIES NEW YORK, May 17.- (Al)-Cass Gilbert, the famous architect and de- signer of the Woolworth Building, died today in Brorkenmurst, England, his office here was notified. Alpha Phi'I Alpia Phi sorority will entert ain with a formal buffet suuper and dance tonight. Prof. anct Mrs, John S. Worley and Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Bas- set will act as chaperons. The house will be decorated with spring flow- ers. Al Cow ans orchestra will pro- vide the music. Alison Tennant, '36,, is in charge of the arrangements. Alpha Epsilon Phi The Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority en- tertained last night with a spring formal. Helene Lindenbaum, '35, so- cial chairman, was in charge. To suggest a spring garden, trellises were twined with apple blossoms and pur- ple lilacs. Wallace Gail furnished the music. Alpha Kappa Lambda The closed spring formal dance held at Alpha Kappa Lambda last night was planned by Joseph Steiger- wald, '34E, and chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Claude Sampson. The guests were: Ruth McDonald, '37; Shirley Berner, '35; Ileene Peters, "34; Dorothy Shappell, '37; Esther Theurer, '35; Constance Drysdale; grad.; Marion Anderson, '36; Mary Andrew, '37; Kathryn Bishop, '37; Margaret Austin, '35; Lenore LeGen- dre, '34; Alice Banting, Toledo; Ma- ian Higgins, Ann Arbor; Elizabeth Turnbull, '37; Maxine Sheppard, '37; Emma Schmid, '36; Althea Mindley, '36A; Barbara Bullard, '34; Eleanor Meade, Betty Sprague, Betty Ronald, June Bert, Mary Louise Sturner, and Jeannet Beck from Monroe. Alpha GammaDelta Mrs. F. Tennant chaperoned the closed spring formal which was held at Alpha Gamma Delta last night. Martha Cook Will Entertain Faculty The annual faculty May party giv- en by residents of Martha Cook will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. this after- noon. Sybil Spencer, '34, is chair- man in charge. The party is to be in the garden, with refreshments served on the ter- race. In the receiving line will be Mrs. Delos Parker Heath, Mrs. Stuart G. Baits, Detroit, and Mrs. James D. Bruce, Ann Arbor, members of the Board of Governors. Miss Spencer, Miss Margaret Ruth Smith, social director, Miss Sara Louise Rowe, house director, Celia Gunthrup, '34, house president, Lucille Alm, '35, president-elect, will also assist in re- ceiving. 11h en Doris Young, '35, was in charge1 of the dance, and Berr Mulig and his orchestra furnished the music. Tonight, a Founder's Day banquet will be held at the local chapter house. It is to be a formal dinner,. and it was plannedaby Helen Doris Young, '35. Miss Emily Butterfield, Farmington, one of the founders, and various alumnae are expected to at- tend . Kappa Nu A birthday dinner was given for Professor Emeritus Joseph H. Drake by the Kappa Nu fraternity last night. Kappa Sigma Guests at the spring formal given last night included Louise Sprague, '37; Billie Griffiths, '35: Pauline Brooks, '34; Gladys Margraf, '37; Es- telle Standish, '35; Helen Barr, '35; Anne G. Laub, '37; Emma Luening, '34; Barbara Otte, '37; Grace Ben- nett, '37; Josephine Cavanagh, '37; Barbara Hahn, '36; Beatrice Baker; Jean Hatcher, '37; Jean Ewalt and Jeannette Nilson, of Warren, Ohio; Mary Claire Rice of Ypsilanti; and' Helen Richiert of Detroit. Vaudie Vandenberg, '36, was in charge of the arrangements for the dance. Phi Kappa The members of the Phi Kappa fra- ternity wish to announce the pledging of Robert Bergin, '36E, of Detroit. Where To Go Dramatic Season: "And So To Bed" with Mme. Eugenie Leontovich; 3:15 and 8:15 p.m. in Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Motion Pictures: Michigan, "You're Telling Me" with W. C. Fields; Ma- jestic, "We're Not Dressing" with Bing Crosby; Whitney, "One Year Later" and "The Intruder"; Wuerth, "Kennel Murder Case" with William Powell and "Big Moment." Dancing: Union, Chubb's, Preke- tes, Den Cellar, Tavern, Hi-Hat Inn. Canoeing: Saunders on the Huron. Chapter House Activity Notes Days Of Ginghams Mud-Pies Return In Fashion's Favor Remember the little gingham frocks you used to wear for mud-pie making? Well, that isn't so far in the dear dead past as it seems. Today gingham is back with a vengeance, not only for baking, or whatever the grown-up equivalent of mtud-pie mak- ing is, but for much more sophisti- cated wear as well.' If you are continuing your pur- suit of mud-pies on the beach, ging- ham is definitely the thing. Wear it for shorts or slacks or for blouses to go with either one. For sports, of course, gingham is very good. It is shown in sleeveless tennis frocks and in almost any va- riety of simple one or two piece frock. Checks are very popular, all sorts of vivid shades being good. The sim- ple school girl note is carried out in the gingham dress with the little round white collar and almost any frock of this kind has some sort of white accent. One very clever two-piece frock was of red, white, and blue checked material and its only trimming con- sisted of big white buttons straight down the front. Another brown and white check made an ensemble with a solid brown jacket. If gingham is your favorite ma- terial you don't have to limit it to sports wear this season. It's the very smartest thing to be crisp and tail- ored in the evening, and the gingham formal creates the desired effect. Cercle Francais To Give Super DaneAt League The Cercle Francais will end its program for the year with a supper- dance Friday, May 25, in the League Grill. Bertha Carry, '34, president, is in charge, assisted by Harold Barnes, '35. Prof. and Mrs. Rene Talamon and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Koella will chaperone. The tickets are 80 cents a couple. With the end of the semester ap- proaching very rapidly the social ac- tivities of both fraternities and so- rorities seem to increase each week- end. Nine houses have planned par- ties for tonight. The Chi Phi, house will entertain with a closed summer formal forj which Wayne Andreae, '37, is mak- ing the arrangements. Mr. and Mrs. Al Healde are chaperoning the party. A closed formal dinner dance will also be given by the Acacia fraternity. Charles Swartout ,'36, is chairman of the dance at which Marvin. Cline's orchestra from Detroit will furnish the music. Mr. and Mrs. T. Hawley Tapping will be guests of the fra- ternity. Dexter Goodier, '35, is making the arrangements for the closed summer formal which is being given by Delta Upsilon tonight. Ray Harrison's or- chestra from Battle Creek will play and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Titus will chaperon. A closed informal will .be given by by Phi Kapa Tau. C. J. Davis, '34, is chairman of the party and Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Nette, Detroit will attend as chaperons. Delta Gamma is entertaining from{ 5 to 8 with a tea dance. Al Cowan's' orchestra will furnish the music and the arrangements have been made by Betty Aigler, '35, and Kay Carpen- ter, '35. The annual spring formal of Alpha Omega fraternity is being held to- night at the Huron Hills Country Club. Among the chaperons are Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Galin, Detroit. Pi Beta Phi will hold their annual summer formal at the chapter house tonight. The dance, which is closed, is being planned by Mary Jane Cum- mings, '34. Bill Marshall's orchestra will supply the music and garden furniture will be placed about the lawn. The chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. G. Carl Huber. A closed formal will also be given by Phi Sigma Delta. Ken Lunsford's orchestra will play. Delta Sigma Delta will entertain with a closed spring formal. Stuart Swanton, '35D, is in charge of the party at which Dr. and Mrs. Richard Kingery will attend as chaperons. "4 Mw i IMS ri1 I liii 4inliMMnil Ml lli z. Ir FaMi11 1 1R k .. -_ _ ._ ._ ._ _ya..... LL _ _ _. .. _I LIGHTING II he GD-fABOUT . . - I I Although dark glasses are being seen, still nothing really'counter- acts the glaring sun that hot days bring. So "doctor" Elizabeth Arden provides all the necessary medi- cants for eyes that ache and burn. For daily use the best is Venetian Eye Lotion, and if the orbs are irri- tated and inflamed Crystalline Eye Drops do the trick. The Quarry Inc. handles these preparations. But how can that "come-hither" operate without the proverbial fringe of eyelashes. For long thick ones and for mascara in the day time hours make an experiment with Arden's Eye Lash Grower. We beseech you! .* , * * At last the shampoo that con- quers even the A. A. water and does what the hair needs for sheen and fineness. That is why La Gerar- dine, carried by Calkins-Fletch-w er, has received a rush of popu -_ larity and de- serves every bit t; of it.Not only is 'r the hair bene- fited but it will help to wave the locks if they be unruly, with its assistant, La Ger- ardine wave lotion. The latter is sprayed on and honestly truly, it dries in no time at all. The set can be obtained for your vacation travels in a water-proof bag with the atomizer for ease in applica- tion. In spring in a college town the gang goes hoydenish with a capi- tal "H." Matching the informal dress, one isn't in the swing with- out low-heeled white brogans such as Jacobson's carry.- The modes Jacqueline and Connie, in the price Hail the king cotton, queen cot- ton, and all the princes cotton! The reign supreme for this summer. That's displayed in ,I the frocks at the.- t Elizabeth Di 11 o n S h o p which are "right" for all occa- r° sions and all cotton at its gay best. We're mad about linen, seersucker, piques and prints for sports 1 and street, and tom- l boyish and frilled organdies for evening. Among them there's a thrilling yellow organdie with pleated touches, and a goo-little- girl collar that does things to one and is ultra-vogue. Cotton is the practical way to summer style as shown at the Dillon Shop. Dining out, in these days of ris- ing mercury, -is apt to prove almost as wearing on the nerves as stay- ing in and facing the same people you've disliked all winter. The Fingerle's, at this point, enter the picture. .. and provide the really Ismart places . . . which add so much zest to this everyday matter. Whether your taste runs to the quaint wayside inns of Merrie ... and usually cool . . . England, or the delicious dignity of Early American pine .. . you'll find that better food. . . served very rea- sonably .. .is a constant certainty at the two delightful Fingerle cafe- terias . . . the Den and Tavern. * * * House parties! That implies the gala time of the year when borish Everything Safely MOVED A AND NO WORRY! We are making up part loads of furniture to the folfowing points: * FLINT * SAGINAW * JACKSON --*DE TCROIT YOR:HOME for Comfort. . Convenience ....beauty I N YOUR HOME, lighting is designed for beauty as well as for utility. With good taste and a little care in selecting and arranging lighting fixtures and lamps, a decorative touch can be achieved which may transform a room magical- ly. And, the practical end of home lighting- to provide adequate light for easy sight - is ob- tained by placing the right lamp in the right socket. -Jome lighting begins on the front porch. A pleasant, well-lighted porch makes for a cheery welcome when guests arrive and creates an impression of modernity and cleanliness. As a general rule, 60-watt la ips in either ceiling or wall bracket will provide most suitable il- luminating for the average front porch. The exterior of your home - the part peo- ple see first and mSost often - can be given charm and distinction by good lighting. To complete your porch lighting, a genuinely prac- tical service is rendered by an illuminated house number, supplied with a 40-watt lamp. Your eyes cannot tell when lighting is not adequate. Only the Sight Meter can tell. To make certain that each room in your home is properly lighted, call The Detroit Edison office near you. Our Home Lighting Adviser is at your service, 'without extra charge. The 1 17 N. First Phone 4297 (N ights 2-3811 ) Thosc who mnake a habit of saving need never worry about the uncertainties of the future. RDgular and wise saving leads to a scAure life. A small account, started now, will sond grow to a formidable amount. d exams are over and done. But putting blue thoughts aside I 11 r