LVAiwo7 AhoOWSAA" A 41 a~ W4 .1 L Y N D O N 719 N. Vniveralty Valk- Over 'Cordovans" FOR Men A Leader of Leaders This perfect and super-stylish Boot pictured is one of the most attractive New Models for Fall. - Finest imported "Horsehide" Deep, Rich Brown Shade. Allsizes. -/ Hoffstetter's Style No 39 Walk-Over 'VoRot S p ine Shell Cordovan S ho Price $8.oo 115 S. ain THE ONE PHOTOGRAPHER Who delivers the Goods and has been delivering them for 12 years right here among Michigan Students Sheehan's NEW MANAGEMENT I m = 0O - I -NOW. Enter Contest and get one of our snappy, and-tailored, made-to-measure Suits Free, orth $25.00 to you. For particulars, see our window. rHuron St. KLASSY-KUT-KLOTHES -18 -. Huron St. ENIORS Sit early for your "Michiganensian" Kodak. Supplies VON HINDENBURG* GIVES INTER VIEW Greatest German Hero Makes First Visit to Berlin Since Start of War CALLS FRENCH TOO TENACIOUS Berlin, Oct. 30.-"The Roumanians still retreat and their day of reckon- ing is coming," declared Field Mar- shal von Hindenburg, Germany's great- est war hero, who is now paying Ber- lin his first visit since the beginning of the war. "I welcomed their entrance into the war," continued Hindenburg, "for by it we got out of the trenches. The French have shown great tenacity, but they are exterminating themselves by their.present method of fighting. All their tenacity will be of no use, to them, and finally there will be none of them left. "The French nation owes its fate to the English. If the English ask for another offensive of the same style this coming spring, they will rob France of the rest of her army, and of the rest of her national strength." The war has not changed Hinden- burg's opinion about English military alility. "Great English strategists are lacking at the present time," he said. STUDENT GETS A LETTER FROM PRESIDENT WILSON Says He Is Gratified with the Forma- tion of a Wilson Club at University of Chicago That the presidental nominees are especially desirous of securing the good wishes and support of the col- leges and universites of, the country is shown by the following letter from President Wilson to Donald D. Sells, president of the Woodrow Wilson Col- lege Men's league of the University of Chicago. This league is national and a chapter has been formed in nearly every college and university in the country for the purpose of re-electing President Wilson. The letter follows: The White House, Washington, Shadow Lawn, Oct. 24, 1916. My Dear Mr. Sells: May I not express to you the grati- fication with which I have heard of the formation of the Wilson club at the University of Chicago? The sort of support which such clubs represent is peculiarly gratifying to me, for I be- lieve the Democratic party to be the. party of the future, the party to which Guaranteed Amateur Finishini FOR ALL COURSES TEXT BOOKS and SUPPLIES Mat. ADD1 V Week of Wed. V sat. GARURIIU Oat. 30 DETROIT KA'TINKA ARCADE Shows at 3:oo; 6:30; 8:00; 9:30 xoeU;lessOtherwise Specified. Phone 296-,M. Sat.-28-NellShipman in "God's Country andth oman",.Charlie Chaplin in AshleyCon"heReot." 5 C h M atine s M2 O n e3 4 30 ; v e air 's H a - loween","Dram Firy"9:30.e Gets the Worst of it." MoTue.33ledLuasandIBAleLv YOUNG in-ay uiCOMMON LAr 2hc Wed.-N v.- rocesN so and Arthur Aooey in"STsanRocktheBot. Trangeum ThPedac nate Matinees, 2:00-3:30; Evening, 6:45. 8:x5, 9:30." Saturdays-Holidays continuous. Tues.-31-Wilfred Lucas and Bessie Love tub Pal."PyAutn"AloTi "Hge Coedytar Keystoners i Wed.-ov xr othy Gishand Owen Triangle Comtedy.-Fred Mace In "Bath Thurs.-ri.-2-3 Fannie Ward in "Each Pearl a Tear." Also Bray Cartoons. Picture at I. P. NOTE BOOKS FOUNTAIN PENS DRAWING INSTR UME NTS EVERY STUDENT NECESSITY SH EEH C. W. GRAHAM, Mngr. Real Values in Second-Hand Books MAIN STUDIOS 1546-48 Broadway New York, N. Y. , - DI, What we ~ do -to fHats We make hats We sell hats at retail We carry a big stock We have the latest all the time We shape hats to fit the head We clean and reblock hats FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Next to the Delta Cor. Packard and State Also at Ithaca, N. Y. 619 E. Liberty St. Ann Arbor, - Mich. 'fect Portraitures= West Point, N. Y. Princeton, N. J. Northampton, Mass. Hanover, N. H.\ Lafayette, Ind. urpassed accommodations for group photographs CIDER COOKIES Free IDERTo-Nil*e- A Vaudeville Bill of Excellence CARMEN'S MINSTRELS MEDLIN, WATTS and TOW NES MORGAN and LECLAIRE FRAWLEY and WEST Mat. 10 & 15c %IAJEw"STIC Nites-15-25-30 WHAT'S GOING ON Today. 1:00 to 5:00 o'clock-Fresh lit elec- ons in the Library.% 4:00 o'clock-Craftsmen practice at asonic temple. 4:00 o'clock-Soph lit football prac- ce, south Ferry field. 4:15 o'clock-Meeting of the bus:- ess staff of The Inlander at the of- ce in *a Press building. 4:30 to 5 o'clock-Fresh pharmic ection, room 300 chemistry building. 7:00 o'clock-Mandolin - club re- earsals, room 205 north wing. 7:30 o'clock-Meeting of Canadian ub executive committee at Union. Tomorrow. 7:30 o'clock-Forestry club smoker, om 214 natval science building. U-Notice. All students who have changed their dresses since registering or who did >t have addresses when they regis- red, should report their present ad- dresses to the secretary of their school or college. Students in the literary college will report to Regis- trar A. G. Hall. KAISER EATS CABBAGE STEW IN A BERLIN SOUP KITCHEN Berlin, Oct. 30.-Kaiser Wilhelm and the kaiserin yesterday visited a city soup kitchen in the central market hall and ate heartily of the cabbage and meat stew served out. Mayor von Wermuth, Frau Hedwig Heyl, and other prominent persons in- terested in the problem of feeding the city's population, greeted the kaiser. A small boy elbowed his way through the crowd, and thanked the kaiser for tseeing to it that he had a summer vacation at Ahlbeck. His majesty shook hands with the little fellow. BOXING. Private lessons. Work will start im- mediately. See instructor at Dr. May's office, Waterman gymnasium, for terms, etc. O. S, Westerman. tf. icago Milwaukee Detroit y good this season. at 606. !!ll!!t!!!#llttlllt!!1||1|1111lltl!IQ!#!!#tllil###R young men will be glad to have at- tached themselves, when the greaterl days of our national life which lie before us come in their fullness. I appreciate the work that you and those associated with you have been doing and hope that you will convey to the members of the club a very warm expression of my appreciation. Sincerely yours, WOODROW WILSON. Turks Develop Offensive Movement Petrograd, Oct. 30.-The develop- ment of a Turkish offensive movement in the Hamadan sector of Persia is re- ported in today's Russian official state- ment regarding operations on the Cau- casus front. The Turks, who advanced in considerable force, were defeated in a pitched battle and their forward movement checked. Repeat "Ann Arbor Days" at Witney By popular request, the Ann Arbor Civic association will give two more exhibitions of "Ann Arbor Days," the municipal moving picture, at the Whit- ney theater tomorrow and Thursday. The performances will be given at 8 o'clock in the evening. A travelogue will also form a part of the bill. There will be no reserved seats. "Drys" Will Start Campus Campaign At a meeting of student prohibition- ists yesterday afternoon, a committee was elected to take charge of a camp- us "dry" campaign. The members of the committee are E. M. Murphy, "17E, Don B. McCloud, '17L, and Fred Schust- er, '19M. The committee have arranged for £a mass meeting in a few days. SIMPLE LIFE FOR REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE'S ELDEST DAUGHTER Washington, D. C., Oct. 30.-Sitting, at an uncovered table and taking a 51 cent bowl of soup with the working' women of Washington as her compan- ions, Miss Helen Hughes, elder daugh-' ter of the Republican candidate for president, not only sets an example of democracy but gives every evigence of enjoying it. Miss Hughes came to Washington several weeks ago to place her younger sister, Elizabeth, at the National Cathedral school. 'Miss Hughes is a voluntary worker in the girls' clubs of the Young Women's Christian associa- tion, and it is on the days her work keeps her in town that she democrat- ically dines in the cafeteria run by the association. With her 5 cent bowl of soup Miss Hughes either pays a penny for two soda crackers or a cent apiece for slices of bread and a like amount for a pat of butter not bigger than a quar- ter. She likes the good home-made pies at 5 cents a slice. There will be state and dignity in the White House if Mr. Hughes "gets in," but for the present his eldest daughter, who may be the leader of next season's younger set, is leading the truly sim- ple life. WANT $10,000,000 IN 1917 FOR JEWISH WAR VICTIMS New York, Oct. 30.-What was said to be the largest charitable project ever undertaken was started here yes- terday when it was announced that a campaign to raise $10,000,000 in 1917 for Jewish war sufferers in Europe had been begun by the joint distribu- tion committee. This will be in addi- tion to $6,000,000 which already has been expended. Definite plans for the work will be made at a mass meeting in this city to which Jews of prominence from all parts of the country will be invited. 4e, - ~-- Te attractive fiure _ of the well dressed woman is not the result - of chance cosetting. - t is the result of a careful selection of a _ Cerset thas is scientific ally correct in design, and made Hof selected fabrics and "stays,, - w- , Back Lace Front Lace remsent the best in tors thrThet are high class in every de, tail, and there is really i no more economical purchase for the girl or woman who is inter- ested in her appearance and wishes to preserve her good figure lines or the years e come. Be fitted to a PRed' S fern, and learn for yourself oradmirable they are. a From Three Dollars Up FOR SALE BY Craftsmen Will Hold Practice Today Craftsmen will hold a special prac- tice at the Masonic temple at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The session will be a combined practice and every man on the team is requested to be present. On Saturday of this week the club will confer a third degree for one of the local lodges, preparatory to the De- troit trip. x] (2_ 3-- thing with of back measure )henaworthy man dies, his relatives rest his remains in a plush- lined box-built es- pecially to themdimen- sions of his "silent shell." Rather a, morbid re- minder, perhaps. Still, if a soulless shell is entitled to made-to- measure consideration, how much more so is a live, throbbing and moving personality. Why not have your new suit built to your order; built to your body and your taste? Why snot have it Royal Tailored to. your order at $18.50 to $40.00? Why not? THE RtOYAL. MLOfAS For Sale By CAMPUS BOOTERY 308 S. State St. Authorized Dealer F M. Afor 6 Air Man Starts Long Flight to N. Y. Chicago, Oct. 30.-Victor Caristrom started his flight to New York yester- day morning carrying a sack of mail. His plane is one of the largest ever seen in Chicago. r London Minneapolis Ch WE WILL BE PLEASED TO SHOW YOU OUR LINE OF Wool Hose are ver Crane's Distinctive Stationery Highland - Kara - Berkshire STUDENTS SUPPLY STORE Liberty Pianos for rent; terms right. Schae- berle & Son, 110 South Main St. oct3tf 1111 So. University Opposite Eng, Arch, Phone 1160-R I p.