_,, l y1 Calkins Drug Co. Two Stores It is by no means presumpt- uous on our part to say that ::' a~ 324 So. State and 1123 So.University Ave. Whitman's Candies suit more people than any other make. - /r w 1 Smart rthes ' . fTi are the best clothes made, - r d because we are sincere in our belief that human minds and hands cannot design and tailor better clothes to meet 4 your needs. Undenscbmidt, Apfel & Cep 209 S. Main St The Stein-F Irr , Co. 1916 In boxes 35o to $5.00 The Eberbach & Son Co. Good Drugs-Toilet Articles Chemicals and Laboratory Supplies. You know the Quality is Right. The Eberbach & Son Co. 200-204 E. Liberty St. Don't, gaze upon the handsome dress of your friends in idle admiration, but wear that kind of a suit yourself. More than 100 amateur horsemen have accepted the invitation to join New York promoters for the show, and many of them will come from distant sections of the country. Clubrooms have been set aside at the Garden for the entertainment of the visitors, and horsewomen also will be given a sec- tion of the huge building for teas and receptions. EGIN ERING NEWS CHICAGO SETS BIG GIFT FO'MMEDICL SCHOOL Plan to Make University Greatest Center of Surgical Researh In World Chicago, Nov. 13.-Gifts were an- nounced yesterday which bid fair to make the Chicago Medical school the greatest center of surgical and medic- al research in the world. The general education board and the Rockefeller foundationfund have each appropriat- ed $1,000,000 to start the work conting- ent on the raising of an additional $3,000,000 by the University of Chicago which will be the nucleus of big re- search laboratories. Friends of the University have already raised $700,- 000 and a campaign for the remaining $2,600,000 will be started at once. In addition the University will set aside a site valued at $500,000. Rush medical college and the Pres- byterian hospital with its affiliated re- search institutions and property of some $3,000,000 will co-operate in the great fight for suffering humanity. These new medical schools and re- search laboratories, will when consol- idated, represent a capital of between $8,000,000 and $10,000,000. A new hos- pital, the last word in perfect equip- ment, will be erected adjoining the campus and will be open to both resi- dent and out-of-town patients. This huge plant will be for the exclusive use of undergraduates while the Rush Medical college and Presbyterian hos- pital will be for only graduate stu- dents. The laboratories for medicine and surgery are to be most elaborate and complete and will offer remark- able opportunities to men interested in creative medicine. The entire staff of the new schools will be based on a full time basis. Professors and assistants will become salaried officials of the University and; give up private practice. It is under- stood that Dr. Frank Billings is one ofa the men who will devote his great tal- ent to the building up of a world1 known graduate school. Some of the foremost surgical authorities of the country will be called to the newi institution and each will have from three to four assistants. The post-graduate school is mainly to offer opportunities to the hundreds of physicians who go to Germany and Austria for their further training. It has long been the dream of all inter- ested in the fight against disease to1 see a center of research and investiga-1 tion on this side of the Atlantic andt there never has been a more propit-l ious time for such an idea to be work- ed out. Plans for such an institutionI have long been under way. Dr. Abra- ham Flexner, of the general education board, brother of Dr. Simon Flexner, of the .Rockefeller institute of New York, has made several trips to Chica- go regarding the matter and is plan- ning on giving much of his valuableq time to the formation of the new school. "It is not simply our purpose to establish a medical training school,"; said Dr. Harry Pratt Judson, presidenta of the trustees of the University, "butf it will be a great attack on disease." of the senior engineers marks a new epoch in the annals of the engineer- ing college. Two hundred pairs of corduroys were received and these willi be distributed in the Engineering so-; ciety's room this afternoon. It is expected that the junior engin- eers will take up the matter of wear-1 ing corduroys at their assembly on Thursday. If they should decide in favor of this proposition, the color of their trousers will be different from that of the upper classmen. M AR QUA RDT cAMPUS TAILOR 516 E. Williams St. LIFE Of TAGORE 'FULL OF INTERESTING EVENTS Hindu Poet Passes Through Many Phases of Spiritual Development While Writing Sir Rabindranath Tagore, who speaks in Ann Arbor, Wednesday evening, Nov. 15, has been delivering lectures throughout the United States since Oct. 1. During the past four years he has become one of the most widely read of modern poets; the facts of his life, however, are still a closed book to the majority of the American public. Tagore was born in Calcutta, India, in 1861, son of the Maharshi Deven- dranath Tagore, a famous spiritual leader who belongs to a family dis- tinguished for many generations throughout India. While still a young boy he lost his mother, a grief which deeply touched this sensitive child and sent him to Nature for consolation. The first, or Calcutta period, of his life was a quiet time of growth and development; its most striking inci- dent was his visit to England when he was 17. By this time, he was already writing verse. Life on his father's vast estates led to his coming into touch with the real life of the people. His best known works of this period, perhaps, are: "The Crescent Moon," "The Gardner," "Gitanjali," and "The Hungry Stones." The second period of his life, which lasted 17 years, had a sad ending, as he lost in rapid succession by death, his wife, daughter, and the younger of his two sons. At the age of 40, in 1901, he entered on his work at Bolpur, which he has continued to the present time. Here is situated his school, "Shanti Niket- an," or the "Abode of Peace." This school, while strictly Indian in char- acter, has in itself embodied the most advanced educational ideas of the world today, while retaining also the best traditions of the Indian garden and forest schools. The self-government of the school is modeled after that of the famous George Junior Republic. Here Tagore has brought the power of his per- sonality to bear upon an increasing number of the young men of India. While in England several years ago, Tagore delivered a series of lectures, which were afterwards repeated at Harvard University. These lectures have since been published with' the title of "Sadhana: The Realization of Life." In 1913, Tagore was awarded the Noble prize for idealism in literature. This brought him into world promin- ence. These prizes of $40,000 each are awarded for distinguished achievement in various fields of medicine, science, and peace. Kipling, Swinburne, Echa- garay, D'Annunzio and other have been the recipients of prizes in literature. Tagore was the first Oriental to re- ceive a prize. Sir Rabindranath Tagore was edu- cated in India and at Oxford. He speaks English without any apparent accent and has most usuallly been his own translator. Tagore has had many interesting ex- periences while in this country and in Japan. In San Francisco, he was the victim of the plots of several Hindu sects who are opposed to some of his most idealistic teachings. Another in- cident, this time not so serious, o- curred in Japan, when the curiosity of the Japanese reporters and their en- ergetic insistence that he see all the sights of the city proved almost too' much for the mild-mannered man. Requests for tickets for Mr. Tagore's lectures are coming from all the near- by cities. A special block of 200 seats has been on sale in Ypsilanti and it is probable that a special car will be run. Mail orders have also been re- I itoriClothes We are showing the Nobbiest Suits a n d - Overcoats in Ann , Arbor at Popular \ -Prices. Everything we sell guaranteed. 116 E. liberty Young Moos Shop lii11111111111111111111111111111 lii1111111111111111111 liii Ii111111111111111111111111111111 II COPY~RIG.HT. 116. L. ADLXR. ROS. & CM Come REULE, CONLI N FIEGEL 200-202 MA "Provide yourself v a smile an4 air of pros ity. Wea your best I ness suit a a cheerful necktie.I you have best suit-- one. We I to appear 1 sperous, if are to be g sperous." Do l NATIONAL HORSE SHOW IN NEW YORK OPENED SATURDAY By United Press New York, Nov. 13.-More than $30,- 000 in prizes will be awarded to win- ners in the 31st annual show of the National Horse Show association, which opened Saturday in MadisonI Square Garden, continuing until next Friday night. The prize list will contain 153 classes for horses and ponies of almost every type reared in the United States. Beside the usual, classifications sev- eral new ones have been offered, among them a costly challenge cup donated by I. J. R. Muurling, treasurer of the United States Racing associa- tion, for registered thoroughbred hunters. It is to be ridden for by women over a course of four-foot fence jumps. Another new trophy, valued at $250, will be given by the Smithtown Hunt club, Long Island, for hunters, to be ridden for by recognized hunt clubs over post and rail fences, brush jumps and other obstacles. A number of other awards have been offered by prominent horsemen. As a result of the recent house to house campaign the, membership of the Engineeri4 society has been in- creased from 450 to 650. In point of numbers the Engineering society is therefore the third largest organiza- tion on the campus, the Union and the "Y" being the leaders. Although no official returns have as ,yet come in, all indications point to the fact that the engineering college was represented by more men who "bummed" their way to Ithaca than any other college on the campus. Inasmuch as this is an enviable honor, it is expected that the count will be contested by the other colleges. Tickets for the Engineering's so- ciety's dance have been placed on sale at the Technic desk. The price is 60 cents for members, and 75 cents for outside men. The number of tickets on sale is limited. The dance will be held at the Union on Dec. 1. The chaperones are Prof. and Mrs. John C. Parker, and Prof. and Mrs. C. T. Johnston. The commit- tee in charge of the affair is, C. M. Burns. '17E, R. W. Collins, '17E, H. M. Stephen, '17E, and N. H. Ibsen, '18E. The arrival of the corduroy trousers t . y.' i I -------------- ) A pen to write smoothly and legibly must suit the peculiarities of your hand. There is such a Conklin point. And it's ready to write without any "breaking in"-unlike a steel pen. And a Conklin point never Wears out. It lasts for all time. Fills in 4 seconds-can't blot or leak. At all sta- tioners, druggists and jewelers from $2.50 up. Students everywhere use and recommend them. Every Conklin is guaranteed to write and fill exactly as you think a pen should-it either does this or you will be furnisheda new pen or your money refunded without ques. tion. There are no ¢is" about it-YOU are the judge. THE CONKLIN PEN MFG. CO., TOLEDO, 0. -- ceived from Detroit, as the price that is to be charged in Ann Arbor is only half that which was charged in De- troit. MICHIGAN RAISES FUND FOR PANEL IN WASHINGTON CHAPEL dividual contributions, $320 has bee raised in Michigan. For the remaini] $180 an appeal is now made to the cit zens of Michigan. All contributio- are to be sent to Mrs. E. B. A. Rat bone, 538 Thompson street. MISCELLANEOUS TYPEWRITERS of all makes bought, sold, rented or ex- changed. Expert repairing, factory service. Sole agent Under- wood & Corona. TYPEWRITING, MIMEOGRAPHING & SUPPLIES. 0. D. MORRILL, 322 S. State St. (Over Baltimore Lunch). 582-J. WANTED WANTED-An instructor in baking. Must be a competent baker having a high school education or better. Address Board of Industrial Educa- tion, Mfgrs. Home Bldg., Milwaukee, Wis. 14 LOST. LOST'- General Chemistry: Smith. Name of owner outside, and name, address and telephone number in- side. Paper cover open-end note- book containing lecture notes with name, etc., on outside. Reward. F. L. Robinson, 1118 S. University. 1070-J. 14-15 LOST-Pair of bone-rimmed glasses, last Friday or Saturday. Return to Our alarm clocks Chapman, jeweler, street are good clocks. 113 South Main tues-eod Remaining $180 of State Fund to Sent by Personal Contributions to Mrs. Rathbone Be) Daily office. 141 The best place to try out VICTROLA RECORDS Is in your own home Our Approval Service permits you to do this Call us up and ask us about it. -.'ft LOST-A love's Calculus,, probably in room 348 Engineering Bldg. Finder please notify 1910-M. 14-15 A beautiful chapel has been erected at Valley Forge dedicated to George Washington. The funds for the church were raised in Pennsylvania, but the building committee, wishing to make this memorial national and to have all the states participate in it, has ap- pealed to each- of the states of the Union to contribute a richly carved wooden panel for the ceiling with the coat of arms of each state represented in the center. Through patriotic societies and in- Prof. R. Magoffin Speaks to Ch Prof. R. V. D. Magoffin, '02, of t history department of Johns Hopki University, will be the principal spec er at Wednesday's luncheon of ti University of Michigan club of Detrc at the Cadillac hotel. Professor Magofin is.known throu the east as an entertaining speak During his career he has served in t Spanish-American war, spent a ye in Italy as the holder of the Americ classical scholarship, and played foo ball during his college years. Dancing classes and private lesso at the Packard Academy. 18 g4 seats for the LOST-A silver wrist watch. Arabic L. J. Torsch, lettering. Return to 412 Camden 14-15 Place. Phone 1580-M. Reward. 14 Grinnell Bros. 116 S. Maif St. PH1ONE 1707