MILITARY NEWS ii Pictorial Review 3 ,y A u' ot Shop. Cadets in the R. O. T. C. were ad- vised by the military authorities yes- terday afternoon to wear the collars of their shirts inside the uniform. They were also instructed to keep their coats buttoned, not to wear campaign hats, and to use the regula- tion puttees and insignia. The R. 0. T. C. insignia is to be worn one inch from the end of the collar, and the U. M. insignia, one-half inch back of the first marking. The R. O. T. C. in- signia letters should be 11-16 of an inch high, and one and 15-16 inches long. H. G. Muzzy, president of the 1917 literary class, and Travis Beal, ex-'17, son of Regent Junius E. Beal, have received commissions as ensigns in the United States naval reserves at the Great Lakes training station, ac- cording to information received here. Both have been ordered to report im- mediately to "some Atlantic seaport." An announcement has been made of the engagement of Sergeant T1. Per- ry, ex-'18, of Flint, to Miss Margaret Christian, Pontiac. Sergeant Perry is now with the ambulance unit at Camp Dodge. He is a member of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. The wed- ding will be held in Pontiac on Sat- urday, March 23. April Patterns Now On Sale / I L Easter Silk Sale STARTING FRIDAY MORNING MILLEN'S BUSY STORE In time for your Easter Dress. Over 700 yards all choice new Spring Silks, values up to $2.00, Your Choice Friday and Sat- urd ay, Charmin Easter Dre= Silk and So $13.50, $15, ._ 50;--Amd I city of Michigan very smart models in Fop-coats gabardines wits Handsome Foulards, Taffetas, Striped Silks, Messalines, and Wash Silks, all 36 in. wide, beau- tifully fine. Come Friday and Saturday for your Easter Silks 9- _ r of them. Fashions Harry Mann, ex-'20, and Milburn R. XIS Inn ris i nnnnI~fIIE ifrlnIf ...._ -i A TWO-DAYS' 1 OF SPRING DNS silk skirts- tailored styles-with plenty dues to choose from- of for dress wear and for afternoons- and fieckwear. day of the showing-;-be sure and Palin, ex-'17, have recently received commissions as ensigns in the United A U IN L~ U I States naval auxiliary which is now stationed on the Atlantic coast.T They Even Train A change in the physical and athlet- ic contests under the direction of Dr.rA s George A. May was announced last night. * The members of the First reg- There is one man in the University iment will be given the following con- who is in training right. He spends tests at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon: his days and nights in Waterman First regiment-Companies I any K, gymnasium, pole vaulting and prone cross country run, wrestling; com- falling. He fences and jumps rope. panise L and M, two-mile run on out- He is clubby with the bars and door track (if weather permits), hor- weights; he knows their every whim. izontal bars, rope climbing, and sprint- There are times when discourage- ing, ment almost overwhelms him; it is then that he rushes forth in to the Prof. Arthur E. Boak spoke to the cool night and scanning the heavens, cadets on "Military, History" at 4:15 swears "Sainted Diana, can it be the o'clock yesterday afternoon in Hill cheese of others days?"- He gallops to auditorium. Professor Boak will give a mirror and admires the muscles of another lecture to the cadets next his arms, bulging like clustered base- Wednesday afternoon, balls. fe looks up his last summer's log . and finds the note: "Barton's dam to boat house-8 min. flat. He i1 QI U chins himself 20 times in memory. T-eIitear 1i Y Says No, about - to -be - enlightened - one; he is not training for baseball-he is bOOTH TARKINGT©N, by Robert merely awaiting the opening of the Cortes Holliday. Doubleday, Page _le Huron season. and company. WRESTLERS START ANNUAL "Round Mr. Tarkington's luminary, TOURNAMENT AT GYMNASU1 the boy, always revolve his natural satellites, the dog and the darkey. The Two Matches Were Held Yesterday in fates which so well looked after and Middleweight and Welter- catered .to the ' talents of the author weight Classes saw to it that he was born in a city which was practically a southern city, Two well-contested matches marked where the barbers, the coachman, the the beginning of the All-campus nurse-maids, and the waiters were wrestling tournament yesterday aft- 'colored'." So says Mr. Robert Holli- ernoon at Waterman gymnasium. day in his late book "Booth Tarking- In the middleweight division, E. M. ton," in which he has combined an in- Clifford, '21, seured a fall over F. timate and more or less . humorous Andrus, '21, in jpine minutes, ten sec- study of the author's personal life onds. The match was hard-fought with a serious and careful analysis throughout and it was impossible to of his writings. pick the winner until the last few With the exception of a few persenal seconds. Andrus put up a game fight sketches, practically nothing has been and at one time in the first few min- written about the Hoosier author utes seemed to have the advantage. whose "Penrod has become the com- However, Clifford came back strongly mon property of the English speak- and secured the fall with a bar arm ing world. And if we are to judge and half nelson. from Mr. Holliday's book, this has The other contest was not so leng- not been because of insufficient or thy,. but was faster while it lasted. It uninteresting material, for we are here was a welterweight match in which confronted with a wealth of anecdotes of every sort. Beginning with the O early childhood of Mr. Tarkington, the WHAT S GING ON writer follows through with us his college career, where he tried almost everything that one can try in TODAY college, thence through his eight years 12:15 o'clock -. Dental faculty of apparent stagnation, takes up with luncheon at the Michigan Union. us the study of his va'ious writings, 12:35 o'clock-Lenten services at and finally concludes: "By what he 444 South State street. has done he has 'let himself in for' a 4:15 o'clock-Faculty concert in great deal. By what he has *irritten, - Hill auditorium. we may know that he has not yet 7:30 o'clock-All-engineer smoker begun to write." at the Michigan Union. Mr. Holliday is a facile writer, and TOMORROW his book is clever throughout, .com- 12:35 o'clock-Lenten services at bining delightful bits of comedy with 444 South State street, real insight and thoughtful enter- 6 o'clock-Engineers' banquet at pretation. He has made a careful the Methodist, church. study of his subject, but he has not 7:15 o'clock-Alpha Nu literary so- allowed himself to forget the person- ciety meets in Alpha Nu rooms. . n - ality of his man. versity hall. 8 o'clock-Michigan-Wisconsin de- City Can Easily. Raise Airplane Funds ;bate in Hill auditorium. "Enough money for the construction U.N4TICES of an airplane factory in this city can The Varsity Mandolin club will re- be easily raised within a few days," hearse at 7 o'clock tonight in Univer- said Mr. Charles Brooks, chairman of sity hall. L . . GET Text Eat a Plate of Ice Cream every From the College ICE CK EA AnSheehan & Co. Ann Arbor D W. J. Davies, '19, defeated H. M. Now- with a body hold. len, '19. The fall came after three About half a dozen matc minutes, 20 seconds, and was secured run off Saturday afternoon. - _ Delicious, Refreshing, .fl e Easter Opening Thursday and Friday March 21st )nd 22nd Tonight Spring's loveliest Fashions will be formally exhibited by a Y jto Prof. W. L. Miggett, superintendent IING of the shops. Professor Miggett stat- ed yesterday that this is the only pos- bably sible way of meeting the shop short- the age. Official action on the matter has not been taken yet. f the e by You will always find bargain In Daily advertisements. Rad them. PROMENADE OF LIVING MODELS rertleers.-A t nf in the Second Floor Salon. Hats, Suits, Shoes and Accessories will be presented i bf original styles for all Spring and Sum Here .fashionable Ann Arbor can reviet modes of New York, London and Paris. 8B The whole every section freshing Sprir The Fashi the doors will time for a lei collections.