f Championshi III tieani :bUIBJUN the general library has now on :lbiton a collectign of bookpates, ich fill the nine shoW cases in the in oorridor, hich contains arm- # 1ookpats, signed proofs of tes designed by J. Ynfred Spence- , plates designed by \yillian Edgar her, a case of plates designed by iis Rhead, t-he famos illustrator chlfdren's books, plates of students d others connected with the Univer- y and bookplates of famous men, ;uding Anthony Trollope, Edmund prence Stedman, Richard Le Galli- ne, and Henry Irving. ?erhaps that which is of the most al interest, is the case containing okpates made by stulents and men rnected with the University. A okplate of Albert Mat Todd's, fam- 3 chemist and f1blitical economist, ich was designed by Tiffany of New rk, specimens of work by James use, Jr., '24, one of which was ade for Leo Lawrence Niedjieksli, collector of first and limited edi- an f modern authors. the abookplate of the late M. Henri gnaud, authority on early Amer- n history, whose collection of Am- cana ,--wvas recently acquired by e Library, is also included.' Anoth- interesting bookplate is that of kin B. Q. Robinson, '24, designed by anz Meier of Detroit, which is a stch of the Michigan Vnion,. T'here are also plates of well known nerican institutions including the rary of congress, Michigan state i ary and the Harvard, Princeton and ,tmouth, libraries. This exhibit 11 remain in the .cases during the miner. TO B SH NNTONIGHT Three reels of educational. motion ,tures will be shown in the audi- -ium of. the Natural Science build- g, this evening at 8 o'clock. The first reel, "Beyond the Micro- ipe," will be a scientific picture owing the decomposition of Water :o the two gases, hydrogen and ygen; and how the gases burn and sist combustion. rhe other two reels will be pictures description. The titles being, "Of d New England," and "Of New Or- .. Advies A. 0. If. War on Klan Montreal, July 18.-(By A.P.)-The Icient Order of Hiberians was urged 'oday's session of its convention to age war on the Ku Klux;IKlan. 'es. James Deerey declared]1 that no eater duty faced the order than ex- sure of the Klan.' "It is not Jews or Negroes or Cath- cs who are in danger. It is the nerican liberty," he asserted. Find that lost pin through the clas AI.V 4d" will find it fdr you.-Adv. for this tallest building in Michigan. SUDENTS 11111-1^Special guides will take the party p tirough the entire building and will / Sexplain the various functiolis, meth- n ni - r rn LI ' VII :° Wi od. and pro lems lconnected with the Al U I' U U HR L L _____ ank. . Carlton Wells will conduct the Nams of persons desiring to make Indiancraft made at the University this trp must be in the Summer ses-Fak eighth excursion of the Summer ses- si n office y 6 o'clock Friday after- Fresh Air camp at Patterson lake un- sion Saturday,- July 21,- "through the noon. der the direction of Chief Joe Don- First National. bank building, Michi- I atus and his squaw are now on sale gan's "Skyscraper", in Detroit, take Studeiit: Visit Cadillac Plant at Lane hall. -Jewel cases of birch-! lunch in the bank's dining room, and A partly of 20 students under the di- bark, handbags, beaded moccasins, in the after'noon the party will go ( rection of Carlton F. Wells, of the rhe- down the Detroit river to Bo-Lo Isl- toric department,Cmade a tcor of In- an.-spection of the Cadillac Motor coin= pany in Detroit yeserday afternoon. The bank building, which will be A hour and a half was spent in going visited first, is a 25 story structure gt-s including the roof view and the sub- hrouh the various depwartments un - burgarroo f ad h nu' der the ilrection oftwo special coin basement burglar-proof vaults which y guids. Will' be visited. T O D AY-T ' It towers 312 feet above the street anythigTOsD AY""HJsVJ above the street level and extends 3 quickly. -Adv feet below . Seventy-four bell shaped ___________-A__. concrete sh'rafts reaching do;n into Remember "Jimmie the adtaker's I the earth 85 feet form the foundations nunber-960 -Adv. - - Today- r TJ s:- ~~rUi John Gilbert in TConw'ay-Tearle in i~f 1 "THE LOVE 6AMBLEB" "THE ROAD OF AMBITION" Stan Laur l in "TUE EGG" Conedy and Screen Snapshots. Tri. -Sat- By the author of "JUST LIKE A WMAN-" Fri.-Sat- a"The Covered Wagon" With Marguerite DeLa Motte WOANm steM MATS. EVES. Ralph Graves and Geo. Fawcett. 2 3 T31E W 3AN0A-ME ". "PICK AND SFI;VEL" "A HOWLING SQuCES"," Century Comedy 25c 25-35c Sun. Thru Tues.- tar Barbara IaMarr in Sun. Thru Tues.- in- C OaMENr' WIES" Nazin"ova in Ib~sen' "AU A -CL'SdHOUSE" - I k Charlie Murray in "THE:PILL POl UNDR"- ull zirouta iiin " PNUREPRINCE : SUN DAY-- "Cbildr~ien ii and kettles are some of the specie of handwork by the boys. Thes< tidles are embroidered with pc pine quills or beaded in unique signs. Orders are also taken - for In mocassins at Lane hall. All the ceeds of the sale will go to the m tenance of the camp. Joe Donatus is a chief of the tawa tribe and comes from Goodh Michigan, the Ottawa Indian villa 'GH SATURDAY Emerson Hough 's Widely Read Nobel Bobby Jones He won a title and played the s role in the playoff for that title. F ighinmgin a deadlock witha tob Cruz with I David Torrence 4liee Calhoun James Atorrison COMEDY NEWS ORCHESTRA of Jazz," The Paramount Spich t go values cheap, thru sifted columns.-Adv. te shank in the finals of the opentour- -ney at Inwood the other day, Jone - played the Scotchman to a stanstill in the playoff and won by two strokes. MUSIC AND MUSICIANS By largaret Stuart The concert last evening given by , Grace Johnson Konold and Mrs. Em- ma Fischer Cross, of the faculty in the University School of Music, con- sisted in a program distinctly popu- lar. The 'Verdi aria, a big undertak- ing well handled, displayed a vocal control. Although Mrs. Konold lacks in some measure the lyric range and tone quality, she possesses the musical ac- curacy and the personality of a lyric soprano. The second group, two of the works of Chopin, was chosen from his more popular compositions. Mrs. Cross in her interpretations of var- ious moods the same power of adapt- ability whih renders her as eficient as an-accompanist. In the second song group the Grieg Slovejg's Lied stands out in sad beautiful minor-typically Grieg, though .a song. The last group was perhaps the one best selected for the audience. The composition Petite Valse of Mrs. Cross was well received, Of the songs the Grieg song and the Wind's in the South seemed to receive the best ap- proval. The whole program was well arranged, each of the four groups de- manding an encore. Brokers Returned to Jail New York, July 18 %--(By A.P.)- Edward Fuller and W. Frank McGee bankrupt bucketeers, were returned to jail today for an indefinite period after Federal Judge Goddard denied a motion to release them from con- tempt of court.f The brokerstwere jailed for failing to surrender certain papers confcern- ing the stock brokerage house of G. M. Fuller and company, ordered pro- duced by the supreme court of .the United tSats. Remember "Jimmie the adtaker's' number-960.-Adv.- Just call 960. when - you have a want.-Adv. FACIL HAIRSJ Removed Permanently by Electro-Cosmetic Service 224 Nickel's Arcade FO OD aalways taes -much better if the surroundings are right. There is no pleasanter place in Ann. Arbor in which to eat than TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM MAYNARD STREET 11 pL A 'A 'II Les Mountains classified Ale Artisiog Rates: Two cents per word er day, paid in advance; fif- een cents per reading line per ay, charged. FOR RENT RENT-Three rooms in Nickels' -cad6. See O. D. Morrill, 17 Nick- s' Arcade. 21-c-2 TYPEWRITERS st models, high grade machines, nted and sold Hamilton Busi- ss College, phone 342-R. State d William Sts. 10c-21I TYPEWRITERS ewriters of standard makes ught, sold, rented, exchanged, eaned and repaired. 0. D. MORRILL Nickels Arcade Phone 1718 1-tfr WVAi TE I T D- Interested in purchasing p dog. Call 185r5.2-; LOS' AND OUND T-A brown leather pocketbook, ntaining money and keys on cam- is. Reward. Call 904-R. Missl unbar. 23-c' IT-Straw hat in Natural Science _0 -lac 4 v y R Y ,.- .1 ,11 1 11 111 1 t r I 1 i t 1 1 # i 1 1 1 6 1 t 1 1 l t 1 1 1 6 { 9 x . ' 1' ,. y r - . N . - - The Pack Train has become a relic of the past, along with the Prairie Schooner. Modern methods of transportation have leveled mountains; brought San Francisco nearer to New York, and widened the mar- kets of all our great industries. And the engineering brains and energy, that have developed transportation to the prominence it holds in the business of the world today, are no longer employed in improving means of overland travel alone. Street Railways, Elevator Systems, Inter- urban Lines and Improved Shipping Lines- these are some of the accomplishments of engineering in the development of better transportation. Neither have the builders,,of such systems been concerned only in the actual hauling of people and materials. A study of the methods of handling passengers and freight at the large terminals has developed the Terminal Engineer, who has greatly improved existing methods, and has developed entirely new ones,, as well. Engineering, as it is applied to transporta- tion, has had to concern itself with many kinds of materials and many ways of handling them under all manner of circumstances. For instance the problems surrounding the handling of iron ore, in bulk, are vastly different from those encountered in moving any one of the finished products manufac- tured from iron ore, that must also be transported in large quantities. But Engin- eering constantly meets each situation with improved transportation facilities. Industry, as a whole, and the nations and the people of- the world owe much to the engineers, associated with such large rhanu- facturing industries as Westinghouse. They have not only brought about vast improve- ments, but they have done so at a constantly decreasing cost to 'those who derive the greatest benefit from them. A0W SSS p 01, 'TNIT'w'r V E "j' y.]f rah ,,/ H EE l , liv. A ti ;..