THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE TUE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE [DAILY OFFICI AL BULLET11 (Continued from Page 2) club (Ga.), Drucilla Hoskins, Sec. (Ky.), and Elizabeth Walden of Tex- as, Atwood Hudson of South Carolina, Jesse Lee Wilder of Florida, G. W. Fatherree of Mississippi, Wallace Duncan of Alabama, and Dr. Thomp- son of Louisiana. Dr. T. Luther Purdom of the University of Michigan will be the master of ceremonies. Other activities planned by the Southern Club includes a tea dance at the League on Wednesday, July 20, and the annual picnic for the last of the summer. Russian Language Circle: The sec- ond tea of the Circle will be given on Friday, July 15, in the Russian room, 21 A.H. The objective of the Russian Lan- guage Circle, which was organized this summer by Lila Pargment and Professor C. L. Meader of the Rus- sian Department is to give the stu- dents of Russian practice in the lan- guage in addition to the regular stu- dies, and to tlus facilitate their task of acquiring the richest possible vo- cabulary within the limited time of the Summer Session period. The last reunion of the Circle took place on July 8, in the Russian room, which was decorated in the Russian style. Around the samovar, the stu- dents of the Russian language were practicing their Russian, while the students of literature heard Profes- sor C. L. Meader read excerpts from Gogol's works. There will be a tea every Friday during the Summer Session, from 4 to 6:30 p.m. All students interested In practicing conversational Russian are cordially invited. Commercial Teachers: Tickets for the commercial teachers' picnic at Loch Alpine to be 'held Thursday, July 13, may be procured at the U.H.S. office. Will you please pur- chase your tickets early so that the committee in charge may make ar- rangements. Hughes And Crew Of4 Attempting Round-The-World Flight flowa:d Hughes, inillionaire sportsman-pilot, and his fo ir companions on a non-stop dash from New York to Paris arc shown with Grover, Whalen, head of the New York Worlds Fair of 1939, before the takeoff. Left to right: Ed Lund, engineering mechanic; Pilot Hughes; Whalen; Harry Connor, navigator; Richard Stoddart, radio engineer; and T. L. Thurlow, navigator. Hughes' time for the first leg of his proposed round-the-world flight wao 16 hours 48 minutes. Social Committee Requests Worker Any student in the Summer See sion who is interested in working o the service or publicity committee for the ice cream social to be give Friday, July 22, were requested yet terday to reporteto the Undergraduat offices of the League from 10 a.m. t 5 p.m. any day this week.' League points will be given to wom en participating in the affair, whic is being given by the Ann Arbor In dependents and a group of Chinet students. The greater part of th profits will be distributed to need Chinese students here and abroai The social wil take place from 8 p.n to 1 a.m. July 22 on the Mall in fron of the Rackham School. Read and Use TheMichigan Daily Classified Ads. os I '1 s- )n es m s- 7- h se ae d. n. at a 44# e N { t I p I /I N 7, If Y/ -am FOR BARGAIN DAY THURSDAY The More You Buy The More You Save! ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED FOR THIS SPECIAL IDAY For $12.95 DRESSES of the better kind - Evening Dresses- Afternoon Dresses -Street Dresses- Sheer Suits Sizes 12 to 46 - 1612 to 2612. Pastel and white 2-piece Tailored Suits. A few leftover Spring Suits and Coats. For $8.95 Union Ballroom Is Ethel M Crmick, social dir W eddings Scene Of Campus Miss McCormick urged persons plan to attend the barn dance to dBarn Dance July 29 pare themselves by first going t _ square dance classes, which ar ven free of charge by Ivan Pa In connection with the square More' students, and especially Eng em ents rdance classes,"held from 7:30 p.m. students, have been invited to _ to 8:30 p.m. Mondays in the League the instruction in country danci The wedding of two University Ballroom, the Summer Session social that the barn dance will go committee is planning a costume barn smoothly, with all the guests pa graduates, Miss Margaret Grant and dance for July 29 in the Ballroom of pating in the group dancing, E. J. McCormick, both of Monroe, the Union. McCormick said. will take place at 11 a.m. Saturday, The barn dance, which will take Aug. 13, at nuptial mass in St. John's place several days following the third Catholic Church, in Monroe. Miss lesson of the square and country jean Kyer Paces Play Grant is a member of Collegiate Sor- dance series, will feature the old-fash- osis and Mr. McCormick was the ioned dances prominently, although In State Women's ( president of the Michigan Union [modern ballroom dancing will have a DETROIT, July 12-()-Pac when he was an undergraduate on large part in the program. Prizes will this campus. be given for the best costumes, Miss Jean Kyer, of Ann Arbor, th Dr. Wilfred Sellars and his bride --fending champion, favorites ro have returned to Ann Arbor from a parents on Ferdon Rd. and was wit- to easy victories in the firstn short honeymoon trip. The bride is nessed only by his parents, Prof. of the 25th annual State wo the former Mary Sharp of Oxford, and Mrs. Sellars and the bride's mo- golf tournament over the long M England and met her husband while ther, Mrs. G. M. Sharp of Oxford owbrook Country Club course hie was studying there on a Rhodes who came from England last week. today. Scholarship from 1934 t 1937. Dr. Sellars received his A.B. from Miss Kyer was impressive in The wedding ceremony took place the University in 1933 and his mas- feating Mrs. Carleton P. McLai last week at the home of Dr. Sellar's ter's degree from Buffalo in 1934. Detroit, 5 and 4. LIBERTY AT MAYNARD Offers Values You Cannot Afford To Miss! BARGAIN DAY! There's hardly a woman who will not appreciate the exceptional values offered in this event . . . in a season of remarkable sales, this one is an outstanding event. THREE GROUPS BETTER DRESSES formerly to $12.95 formerly to $16.95 formerly to $25.00 Cotton and Plain and Printed Washable Silks and Ellen Plain and Pastel Crepes, Crepes. Kaye Cottons. Prints, an Chiffons. . $ .95 $6.95 $8. 195 Si3s 1to17 . 1612to 20%2. . . 12to 42 SUMMER HATS BRADLEY TWO GROUPS KNITTED COATS $C*00 FORMERLY to $12.95 50 $1.0$0 Formerly to $3.95 Formerly to $6.50 BRADLEY KNITTED DRESSES 1/2 Price WOOL SKIRTS B L O U S E S FORMERLY to $3.95 FORMERLY $1.00 .95 69C Formerly $2.95...... Sale Price $1.95 GI RDLES. . . . . . . . . . .00 Formerly $3.95 .. . .. Sale Price $2.95 Formerly $2.50 to $3.50 Formerly $5.95.......Sale Price $3.95 rS U I TS WHITE SUITS PASTEL SUITS WOOLEN SUITS Formerly $6.95 1/i Price Formerly $12.95 Not All Sizes in All Styles KID GLOVES.....$1.00 FABRIC GLOVESx.....29c Formerly to $2.95 Formerly to $1.50 Collar and Cuff Sets ... 25c One Group Gaberdine and Leather Formerly to $1.00 PURSES . . . ...1. . / Price ONE P R E n GROUP PURSES EVENING .uun Formerly to $3.50 $3,95 and ector, s who pre- o the e gi- arker. men take ng, so off rtici- Miss Golf ed by e de- mped round omen's Aead- here de- n, of S i 675 Pairs of Beautiful SUMMER SHOES All kinds of Dresses - crepes, chiffons, laces, sheers, pastels, wahable cottons. group includes Paula Brooks shirtwaist and Sophie Wagner cottons.) For $5.00 prints, (This dresses I Pastel crepes and prints, darker crepes and prints, Bembergs, cottons of all kinds, Evening Dresses and groups of pastel summer coats. Values to $10.95. For $3.95 Play Suits, Slack Sets, Cotton Dresses, odds and ends in better Dresses, all better blouses. At $2.95 Cotton Dresses and Play Suits. At $2.00 Culottes and Play Suits, Blouses, Skirts. At $1.00 Odds and ends in Blouses. Pajamas and. Gowns. Jo Voh NO CHARGES - NO APPROVALS ALL SALES FINAL Cthe iizabeth 'Dillon 0 SHOP 309 SOUTH STATE STREET I_ A w t :::: k4 t { y. .. ' 4j. "., :. } ,; v }:::::' ..' ;. ? .. , :, t- r :. .;. :::::. . I , i ,.- rsi inn Arbo ______________ - . .Ogmw- . WI..I