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May 30, 1917 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1917-05-30

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY WED

I

.T Y bU R
Amtuer Finishing to a Reliable Photographer1

In fine tailoring the cost of good
workmanship exceeds the cost of
the fabric.
Workmanship is the ability behind
the shears, behind the needles.
It plays the most important part in
a successful suit, fixes the cost, the
selling price, as well as the value of
the garment.

'-U

who has an established reputation and you will be assured of
Results that will not be a disappointment.
L Y N D 0 N S 719'N. University Ave

SHEEHAN & CO.
Book Sale !

'orkmanship

Established 1905, and
Growing bigger and better every day.

II-

. .

,

t

OUR TAILORING HAS
STOOD THE TEST.

J. K. MALCOLM

son L. McCarthy, '17L, acted as the
toastmaster for the evening.
The initiates were: John D. Hib-
bard, '18E; George F. Hurley, '18L;
Norman H. Ibsen, '18E; H. C. L. Jack-
son, #18; Horace K. Keena, '19; Allen
Shoenfield, '18, and Rollin R. Winslow,
'19L. Each initiate was called upon
to give a short talk. Other speakers
of the evening were Prof. Herbert R.
Cross, Prof. Arthur C. Cross, Don
Smith, '17E, and Earl Pardee, '17. W.
M. McKee, '18E, and Norman H. Ib-
sen, '18E were elected president and
treasurer, respectively, for the com-
ing year.

Pop. Mat. Thes. in IQ i Wk. May 28
Thrurs. andSat. AR1 I K Nights
25C and 5oc 25C, 5C, 75C
DE'TROIT
TheBONSTELLE COMPANY
(i in
"Hit the Trail Halliday"
ARCADE
Shows at 3:00; 6:30; 8:00; 9:30
15e Unless Otherwise Specified
Phone 296.-M

"

list the offerings.

Come

Space will not permit to

604 E. Liberty St.

Malcolm Block

in and look them over.

,,,_!''

FRATERNITIES
We havelunsurpassed ,accomodations for group photographs
MAIN STUDIOS
1546-4i Broadway New York, N.Y
Perfect Portraitures
inu7a "Amateur Work Handled'in a Pro-
fesional Way.

S -

It

f

WHAT'S GOING ON

s p

.1

619 E. Liberty St.

PHONE 948-W

STUDEDAKER MOTOR CARS

H. F. GAYLORD,

hone 1927

311 Maynard Street

RAE THEATRE
TODAY !
SPECIAL I)ECORATION DAY
PROGRAM
THE BLUE-BIRD PHOTO
PLAYS
present

Goodhew Floral Co.
225 E. Liberty. Phone 1321

Today
9:30 o'clock-Daily-Gargoyle game
on Ferry field.
2:15 o'clock-Memorial day exercis-
es in Hill auditorium.
3 o'clock-Varsity-All-fresh game on
Ferry field.
Tomorrow
6 o'clock-Dinner-dance in Harris
hall for benefit of Red Cross.
7:30 o'clock-Saginaw club meets in
Lane hall.
8 o'clock-Classical club meets room
A Memorial hall.
U-Notices
Company E lits will assemble at,
2:15 o'clock this afternoon at the cor-I
ner of Ingalls and East Washington
for the Memorial day parade.
The engineering regiment will meet
this afternoon at 2 o'clock at the us-
ual place.
CITIZENS OF ANN ARBOR WILL
MEET IN HONOR OF DECEASED
(Continued from Page One.)
honor the nation's heroes will be con-
ducted at Wall street bridge by the
members of the Women's Relief corps.
school children, and members of the
Welsh post No. 137, department of
Michigan. Autos will be in readiness
shortly before 10:45 o'clock at the
courthouse to carry those who desire
to take part in the ceremony to the
bridge.
Us. the advertsing ooumnns of The
Michigan Daily in order to reach tka#
best of AnnArbor's buyers..

Show beginning at 2:00 and
running continuous. 15c.
Clara Kimball Young in "The
Price She Paid" and "Fatty"
Arbuckle in "A Reckless
Romeo."
Miss Young has never had a
part which afforded greater op-
portunity for the display of her
remarkable beauty than in "The
Price She Paid." the widely read
novel by David Graham Phil-
lips. If you did not see this
photoplay the first two days it
was shown at The Arcade, you
will certainly not want to miss
it this time.
Then, too, you will have a
chance to see "Fatty" Arbuckle
in his latest Comedy, "A Reck-
less Romeo." This comedy
shows "Fatty" as a sentimental
philanderer, who flirts frivo-
lously in the park, although he
has a charming little wife and a
vigilant and active mother-in-
law. His escapades result in a
chase by jealous rivalJ, and,
after the police take a hand,
"Fatty's beauty is seriously mar-
red by numerous bumps and
bruises, a solid caking of mud
and a marvelously decorated
eye. He tries to explain to his
wife that he protected a perse-
cuted old woman from a gang
of gunmen. The next evening,
however, he takes his wife and
mother-in-law to the "movie"
and thefirst picture flashed on
the screen is an uplift film on,
"Flirting in the Park," showing
the true incidents in Fatty's es-
capade which a zealous camera-
man had snapped.
These two attractions will
provide a couple of hours enter-
tainment on Decoration Day
that you cannot afford to miss.
The first performance will begin
at 2 o'clock, after which the
show will run continuously till
11 p. m. Only 15c.

SHEEHAN

11

y&
Last Times Today!
MAJIESTIC
3, 7, and 9 P. M.
John H. Kunsky offers America s
Greatest American Story
The Crisis

& CO.

C. W. GRAHAM, Manager

By Wpnston Churchill

Production by Selig.

Staged by Colin Campbell

Everything in the line of
fresh cut flowers.
Good variety of flowering
plants.
Greenhouses-Observatory and
Volland St. Phone, 170-M.

Augmented Orchestra

I

I

THE

EAGLE'S
WINGS
A THUNDERING DRAMA
WITH A THUNDERING

TOASTMASTERS MEET
Hold Farewell Banquet and Take in
Seven Initiates
The Toastmasters held their fare-
well meeting and initiation banquet at
the Catalpa Inn last evening. Harri-

A

The Story that makes Memorial Day
what it is

I

'

EI

Special Notice-All Seats 25c; children 15c at matinees

Try The Daily for service.

There Is opportunity in The Michi-

gan .y Ad2. Rttead them.
Shirts made to measure. G. H. Wild
Co., Leading Merchant Tailors. State I Read today's Arcade advertisement
on page six.-Adv. 30

-a

- -

i,

MESSAGE

A Stupendous Picture also
THE WILLIAM FOX COIKEDY
"HIS LOVE FIGHT"

Sl

3 Shows Daily 3-7-8:30 P. M.
ALL SEATS 25ci

NO LONGER NEED MOTHERS TELL THEIR DAUGHTERS ---- JUST SEND THEM TO SEE THIS PICTURE

with

HANK MANN
SEE IT AT THE RAE

Wuerth Theatre

II

Matinees 2, 3 30.

Nights 6:30, 8, 9:30

Saturdays-Sundays-Continuous
Tues.-Wed.--29-30-I1ouse Peters and
Louise Huff in "A Lonesome Chap."
Also Strand Comedy and Gaumont
Travels.
Thurs.-Fri. -31- - Win. Desmond in
"Rlood Will Tell." Also Keystone
Comedy, "Villa of the Movies."

"The story is so vividly portrayed, so sad
and so true that it carries bitter self-reflec-
tion in it-daily recurrence in life due to
careless or too trusting parents and ignor-
ance on the 'part of our boys and girls. If
all the rest of the story was omitted,. the
opening pictures are not only so exquisite,
but they teach a wonderful lesson in them-
selves in a most appealing manner. I be-
lieve that this story as depicted on the
screen should be seen by every boy and girl
over 16 years of age, as well as by every
man and woman. It preaches a never-to-be-
forgotten sermon in a delicate but forceful
manner, that grips the heart and holds the
interest every moment from beginning to
end, On a subject usually avoided in our
homes and pulpits, but which is so vital to
humanity as a whole. To see this picture
would, I believe, save many girls from
tragic fates, and many mothers and fathers
from broken hearts."
Mrs. Ruby M. Zahn,
Mother of the Mothers' Pension Bill for
Michigan; Founder of the Political and
Civic League.
Detroit, April 14, 1917.
"All parents and young people should see
'Enlighten Thy Daughter,' for it teaches a
great lesson. I think the name 'Enlighten
Thy Son,' would apply to it just as well, and
perhaps set people thinking that the stand-
ard of morals which applies to girls should
apply to boys also. I should like to see
more of such productions on the screen and
stage, and shall urge all of my friends to
take advantage of the opportunity that Mr.
Kunsky has offered."
Mrs. Louise Clarke Pann.
Detroit, April 13, 1917.

3 Days TCommencing My3

"In acting, interest and well told plot.
'Enlighten Thy Daughter' is superior to any
similar picture that has ever preceded it.
The action is swift and there is a. careful
avoidance of anything that would make the
scenes unpleasant or distasteful to the most
puritanical."
Detroit News.
April 16, 1917.
"Every mother and father and every young
girl in Detroit would be well repaid by see-
ing 'Enlighten Thy Daughter.' It is not a
sex picture in the generally accepted term;
not a scene in the play is suggestive; the
tense situations are delicately handled, and
the old story of all ages and nations, is re-
told with a modern touch that should appeal.
to all womanhood."
Detroit Free Press.
April 16, 1917.
"A photoplay of unusual subject matter,
that of teaching sex hygiene to the young
and the inculcation of one standard of mor-
ality for both sexes is presented in 'Enlight-
en Thy Daughter.' The delicacy of the theme
is deftly handled, and there is no offense in
any of the incidents or in the manner of
their presentation. For a film lesson on the
teaching of truths essential to the health
and morals of the race, 'Enlighten Thy
Daughter' is more to be commended than
any other film dealing with the same sub-
ject which has gone before."
Detroit Times.
April 16, 1917.

Orpheum Theatre
Matinees 2, 3:30. Nights 6:30, 8, 9:30
Saturdays-Sundays-Continuous
Wed- -Sixth McClure Pic ture. Sev-
en Deadly Sins. Shirley Mason and
George LeGuere in "Passion." Al-
so Pathe News and Pathe Cartoon.
Evening, 15c.
Thurs.-Fri.-31-House Peters and Myrtle
Stedman in "As Men Love." Also
Triangle Komedy and Paramount
Pictograph.

11

Here is a picture so well

acted and story so
by public, clergy

forcibly told that it has been endorsed
and press

Banquets given particular attention.
Ata Cafe.-Adv.
Try a Michigan Daily Want-Ad.

11

NOTE---THIS IS NOT TO BE CONFUSED WITH THE
TRASHY SEX PICTURES

1R

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