TFURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1929 THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THESUMERMICIGN DILYPAE TRE ILLINOIS WILL ENGAGE ARMY AND MICHIGAN ON FALL GRIDSCHEDULE! MICHIGAN HOME COMING GAME SLATED FOR OCTOBER AT URBANA ZONE SYSTEM IS ADOPTED All Applications for Army Game Will Be Mailed; Student and Public To Be Limited URBANA, Ill., Aug. 1.-Assurance that there will be a large chunk of tickets for the Army football game Nov. 9 available to the pub- lic is given by C. E. Bowen, ticket manager, as he prepares to mail University 0 oIllinois application cards and information to nearly 40,000 persons. By limiting applicants in the Army public sale to two tickets each, Manager Bowen explained, it is hoped to gain a fair distribution among friends of the university instead of permitting large blocks to be gobbled up by a comparative- ly few. Army tickets will be sold by mail only at the Urbana office alone. Since each student will also be limited in the number, of Army tickets he may obtain, Manager Bowen advises fans to order direct instead of entrusting the job to a student relative or friend. Cards and information will be delivered in the state of Illinois about August 11, it us expected. This material is mailed under a zone system by which the first let- ters are sent to those who live the farthest, the object being to give all a chance to get their orders back to the office at the same time. All purchasers last season and others who have asked to have their names placed on the per-. manent mailing lst will receive the cards and information which also will be mailed to banks and newspapers. There will be no increase in the price for the Army game, this re- maining at $3, the usual conference charge. There will be no limit on the numnber of tickets which may be ordered for the Michigan and Chicago games. There will be no reserved seats for the Kansas and Bradley games for which the ad- mission is $1.50. The complete schedule is as follows: Oct. 5-Kansas at Illinois, (Boy Scout day.) Oct. 12-Bradley at Illinois, Oct. 19-Iowa at Iowa City. Oct. 26-Michigan at Illinois - (Homecoming). Nov. 2-Northwestern at Evanston. Nov. 9-Army at Illinois. Nov. 16-Chicago at Illinois-(Dad's Day). Nov.23-Ohio State at Columbus.1 PLANS PAJAMA PROMENADE 'GLFIG IS POPULAR SPORT AMONG WOMEN "Golfing is still holding first place in woman's sports," according to Miss Alice Evans, Assistant Profes- sor of Physical Education. "It is the most popular branch of the woman's physical education de- partment this summer." "Tennis runs a close se-ond al- though there are many girls play- ing golf and tennis both, without receiving credit for it." There are many students in graduate school, where no credit is given for ath- letic activity, who are indulging in these sports. Classes in beginning golf are especially popular; and much outside work is done in both branches. No formal organization of wo- man's sports is evident during the summer as in winter aside from the regular class groups, and the short summer session does not per- mit meets or tournaments. Besides those already mentioned are classes in swimming and danc- ing. Dancing consists of folk danc- ing, clogging and natural dancing. At 2 o'clock, Thursday, August 1, I the dancing classes are meeting to give a program as the summation of the work for the summer. Airport Improvement Work IsUnderway With 800 yards of gravel remain- ing of the 2,000 yards obtained for improvement of Ann Arbor air- port, considerable work on a sec- ond runway can be done, it was stated today by Eli A. Gallup, parks superintendent. The east-west runway has already been complet- ed, and the additional gravel will permit the start of work on a south-east and north-west run- way. TYPEWRITER REPAIRING All makes of ma- 'chines. Our equip- ment and person- nel are considered among the best in the State. The result of twenty years' careful building. Q. D. MORRILL C L A S S F I E LOST-Gold ring with brown tiger eye cameo setting. Reward. Call ADVRTIINGMary Kaufman 8817. 31, 32, 33 ''YPEWRITING AND MIMEO-LOST--On State street between GRAPHING promptly and neatly Huron and M. Hut, gold pin done by experienced operators at one 21566. heirloom. Reward. moderate rates. College work a j___Phone ______21566.____ specialty since 1908. E. D. LOST-A brown notebook with im- O. D. MORRILL portant notes and two letters 17 Nickels Arcade with a brown pocketbook. Re- ward. Call 4918. THE RAGGEDY ANN BEAUTY' SHOP OFFERS A LOST-Dickinson's Excursions in Marcel at 75c; Finger wave at $1.00; Musical History. Phone 6654. Permanent wave at $8.50. Dial 7561. Reward. 1217 Baldwin. MACK TUTORING AGENCY TYPING Open for Summer School TYPNG 310 S.. State St. Phone 7927 W A N T E D - English, French, F~-~~N TG e rm a n , or Ita lia n . M rs. F . F . FOR RENT TcA1ar D^A s FOR RENT-Forest near Hill; 141 rooms party furnished. 3 baths.! Double garage. Phone 5740. FOR RENT-Large one-room com- pletely furnished apartment forj two girls or young couple. Also newly decorated double for girls. 422 E. Washington. Dial 8544 or, 9714. FOR RENT- Unfurnished apart- ments-upper and lower. Southeast section. Modern. Call 5929. LOST LOST-Orange Sibraffer fountain pen in main library, July 29. Leave at library desk or call i e , 42 b. Division. Phone 6946. 32, 33, 34, 35, 36 TYPING-Theses a specialty. Fair rates. M. V. Hartsuff, Dial 9387. WANTED-At once, an agrecrive salesman for new business. Exo cellent opportunities for a pro- ducer. For information and in- terview write, Box 209. Classified Ads Bring Results Undaunted by gibes, W. O. Saunders, Elizabeth, N. C., editor and advocate of cooler clothing for men, walks through New York streets in pajama outfit with which he has been startling his home town. 21456. s a ww e : w 9 ! iTr4 7 7 a^V Oft ,,. _ ,.. LEAGUE MEETINGS Stewart Recommends ARE EXPERIMENT Check On Production The convocation to be held at 8 Abolishment of the use of radium p. m. August 4, in the Lydia Men- paint for making luminous dials on delssohn theater, is sponsored by watches and clocks has been rec- the Students' Christian Association as an experiment in the attempt to find some sort of religious service which will appeal to the majority of students. "These summer services are pre- liminary to a series which the S. C.- A. is contemplating for next fall," said Chester Bennett, secretary of the organization. "Many types of programs appealing to the varied interests of the students will be studied and attempted. The thea- ter in the League building is an ideal place in which to give these services. Its atmosphere con- tributes much to them."' The Reverend Allison Ray Heaps, who will talk on Tolstoi's "Resur- rection" next Sunday night, has made a hobby of selecting certain scenes from well-known moving pictures and having them colored. He has traveled several summers for Chautauqua, showing the slides and telling the story in his own words. He has now been in Ann Arbor approximately a year as the pastor of the Frst Congregational church at Williams and State streets. An attempt will be made Sunday by Rev. Heaps and the S. C. A. to organize a service which will be built around the theme of Tolstoi's story, namely, "The resur- rection of a soul into a higher life through penitence and sacrifice." ommended in a bulletin on radium poisoning by Ethelbert Stewart, commissioner of the Labor de- partment's bureau of statistics. He I suggested that importation might well .be prohibited at once, and then a mutual agreement for its abolition be secured in the United States. From an inspection of 31 estab- lishments in which 253 workers were directly subjected to possible harmful exposure to its effects, a total of 23 fatalities and 19 living cases were found, apparently thel result of poisoning from radium. t-- -e - CANOELG Every Afternoon and Evening Saunders' Can he oetivery On the Huron River at the foot of Cedar St. 17 Nickels Arcade Phone 6615 I i I I I : i . - . ' h f..a .4' ' . :: ','4.1,...., +jt + : : ; ; : . y1. ; r; { :;;;2 v rt}' , :