ME lL1V1C1 IU~A1N DILYI uUIibn nfl rc w .5 IN MUSIC WORLD ien a Boy, Urged to Become Vir- tuoso by Anton Rubenstein, the Composer Ossip Gabrilowitsch, the great Rus- in pianist, who will be heard in Hill ditorium on the evening of Dec. 12, s few equals in the musical world lay. A musician by instinct, as well education, he has distinguished him- [f not only as a pianist of the high- t type, but as a composer as well. ye times thei distinguished Russian s visited America, and each time he s made a profound impression. His playing is full of sympathy and arm. His splendid technical equip- ent is ever held in rigid subjection, e true poet's nature being always evidence. Ossip Gabrilowitsch was born in St. Atersburg in 1878. His father was a ominent jurst of the Russian cap- 1. His brothers were musical and .e of them acted as his first teacher. ,ter he was taken to Anton Ruben- ein, who was so deeply impressed at he earnestly urged a career as a rtuoso. Accordingly, the boy was tered in the classes of Victor Tol- off at the St. Petersburg Couserv- ory, which at that time was under e supervision of the great Ruben- ein himself. From here Gabrilo- tsch went to Vienna, where he idied for two years with Leschetizky, other great personality to whose in- ence much of his subsequent suc- ss is .credited. Tours of Europe and nerica served to bring him into ompt recognition. The following program will be pre- ated in his concert in this city: ,riations (The Harmonious Black- smith) .................... Handel ndo espressivo (Ph. Em.).....Bach Coucou....................Daquin ,otte, B minor (arranged by Saint-Saens).......... Bach (3. S.) nata, G minor, Op. 22.....Schumann Allegro appassionato, Andante, Scherzo, Presto. icturne, F major, Op. 15, ude, Op. 10, No. 8, ,se, A flat major, Op. 34.....Choplin es de la Mer... ..........Arensky votte .... .........Glazunow price-Burlesque, Op. 3......... .. ... Gabrilowitsch Traces of Early Settlers Remain Ann Arbor Formerly Thriving Front for Town in Present "Lower Town" Location In many places in and around Ann Arbor, there are still to be seen many of the landmarks that, like ancient re- cords, embody the fast fading rep- resentations of the work and spirit of the early settlers of Michigan. Not only out along the old country roads are these remains seen but also in the little towns built at points along the river, where streams empty into the larger body of water. Per- haps, in no other place is this so evi- dent, as in what is generally known in Ann Arbor as "lower town." Down in the valley of the Huron, where the old bridge arches the water near the present Edison company, is one of the places where may be seen some of the best instances of the ac- tivity of the early settlers. This part of Ann Arbor, in years gone by, was the throbbing center of a frontier town, and all the buildings were clust- ered around the main corner, which was situated almost on the brim of the river. Today these old places are still to be seen, their tall fiat chimneys, and high end walls, reminding one of the fine old structures which one now sees only in ancient cities of the South. Many Southern Frontiersmen While many of the frontiersmen came from the, East in the early days of the republic, a large number work- ed their way up from the southern states, principally Kentucky and Ten- nessee. The fur trading posts, and the military garrisons throughout Michigan, at Detroit, Sault Sainte Marie, and the old fort at Mackinac Island, brought many soldiers up from the sunnier climes, with the - result that after their term had expired, they adopted the land of the pine as their new home. As instance of the fact that the early Indian uprisings called the men up in to this district, in the Black Hawk war, Abraham Lincoln, as captain of his regiment, came up through Illinois, and into the south- western corner of Michigan, although it is not definitely known whether he came as far north as Ann Arbor. This was the only time that the great pres- ident ever touched foot in the Woer- ine state. Old 'Residences Decay Of the old residences on the other side of the river, most are now falling rapidly into decay. Some of them are now used for Turkish coffee houses, and Syrian restaurants. Unsightly smokestacks, from factories, shops and forges rear their sooty heads, and belch black smoke into the fair faces of what were once the. pride of the early aristocrats. The pleasant view of the gently flowing Huron is ob- structed by high piles of old iron, rags, paper, and junk, while the high signboards strike a discordant note. Yet in the dismantled ruin of the old place, there still remains one of the old representatives of the former re- gime. Up on the top of one of the highest hills, there stands an old home with its white pillars shining through the grove of dark green pine trees. It seems to be the only member of a once ancient and honorable communi- ty. And though in .some places it is slowly yielding to the hand of age, it stands alone, proud, and true to the spirit of the early days. COMX ISSIONER COUZENS TALKS AT MICHIGAN CLUB LUNCHEON NUMBER OF ALUMNI IN WEST SHOWS INCREASE Dean Bates Reports Meeting Michigan Alumni Throughout West on Trip According to recent interviews, and reports from the alumnus office, the number of Michigan's alumni in the western part of the United States has reached an exceedingly large figure, and is rapidly growing. California's share alone totals over 1,200. "One of the most pleasant features of our trip," remarked Dean Henry M. Bates, of the law school, in describing his tour of the west last summer, "was the meeting with alumni of the Uni- versity on the trains and at practi- cally every stop we made. We were surprised at the depot in Los Angeles by a number of alumni who insisted on our joining them in a banquet. At San Francisco, over 80 members of the association gave us, together with Professor Gomberg of the chemistry department, another banquet. At Lake Tahoe up in the Sierras one of the first persons we met was a member of the law school last year. Michigan graduates seem to be very numerous all through the west." Dean Bates accompanied by Mrs. Bates, stayed in Berkeley, Cal., six weeks, where he conducted a course in constitutional law in the school of jurisprudence of the University of California. During their stay there they spent a week-end on Mount Ham- ilton, where the Lick Observatory is located. They were invited here by Director W. W. Campbell, a former Michigan man, who now holds an hon- orary LL.D. degree from his alma mater. = They spent two days at the Grand Canyon on their way to California, and after leaving there, took an extended trip through Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. They spent some time at Glacier, a resort in the Canadian Rockies, and were in Lake Louise, another resort, when -the threatened railroad strike cut their vacation short and they returned to Chicago, Dean Bates' native city. German Draft Bill Pushed in Reichstag London. Nov. 27.-A Reuter dispatch from Amsterdam says that at the open- ing of the German reichstag yesterday the president paid a tribute to Emperor Francis Joseph and then proposed that the first reading of the bill for compul- sory civilian service should bp taken up next Wednesday. After determined opposition on the part of both Social- ist groups the proposal was adopted. The finest Floral Shop in the city will open soon in the Nickels Arcade. State Street. 3-tf "Tough Guy"Cop Is Not Popular New York Inspector Bids Chicago Po- lice Be Civil, Polite and on Alert Chicago, Nov. 27.-The good police- man is not the "tough guy" with a "14 carat look," but the man who Is suave and polite and always on the alert to perform his duty. This was the lesson conveyed to 200 Chicago police sergeants yesterday by Inspector Cornelius F. Cahalane of the New York police force. His lecture: was one of a series arranged by Presi- dent Coffin of the civil service commis- sion for the benefit of sergeants who are about to take the examination for lieutenant. "Safety First." "I never saw one of these martinets, these 'tough guys,' who wasn't a co-W- ard," said Inspector Cahalane. "If I had to go out after a burglar with one t them, I know he would practice safety first and stay at the bottom of the stairs. "The day when the big, burly officer yelled out, What do you want? to a citizen who happened to come into the station ought to have been long since passed. Our business is to serve the public, not to bully it.I "We should have a proper estimation of our work; we should consider it a profession, and not a job, but at the same time we should not think we are the king of England every time we're promoted and try to make everybody else kiss our toes." Patrol Work First. Inspector Cahalane asserted that pa- trol duty, the work on the street, is the first essential in coping with crime. "If you get the patrolmen to do their duty you will reduce the work of the detective bureau 75 per cent," he said. "The detectives are doing work that the policemen should have done. "Some day somebody is going to wake up and lay about half of us off. If he has 10,000 men he'll fire all but 5,000 live wire men who have their eyes and ears open to prevent crime. "That will be a sad day for the pa- trolman who walks down the street thinking his uniform is a scarecrow, and only using his eyes looking for the sergeant so he can duck when he sees him. "A few years ago a policeman's motto was, 'See nothing, hear nothing, say nothing and do nothing,' but that won't go any more' Mirliens for What? "Chicago spends $7,000,000 a year for police, New York, $18,000,000, and the whole United States enough money to build a navy to fight England. For this enormous sum the public is insist- ing more than ever on results." STRICKLER EXPLAINS CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Lecturer Shows Purpose of the Re- ligion; Tells What Mrs. Eddy Has Done Virgil 0. Strickler, C. S., of New York, In his lecture on Christian Science, given in University auditor- ium last Sunday under the auspices of the Christian Science society of the University, explained in detail what has often been termed the "mys- tery" of that teaching. In his lecture Mr. Strickler pre- sented the following points: "As it becomes more generally un- derstood that through the ministry of Christian Science people are being healed of sickness, sin, unhappiness, worry, fear, and other discordant con- ditions there is an ever increasing de- sire on the part of the general public to learn how these results are accom- plished. It is the purpose of this lec- ture to explain how Christian Science does these things. There is no mys- tery about Christian Science healing, nor is it difficult to understand. It can be stated without any reservation whatever that every person who is willing to do so may learn how to heal sickness and to destroy the de- sire to sin for himself and for others through Christian Science." Shows Purpose. In speaking of the purpose of Chris- tian Science, the lecturer said: "Chris- tian Science aims to destroy erroneous religious beliefs by substituting a knowledge of truth in place thereof, and to destroy out of the human mind all evil qualities by planting good qualities in their stead. It wages re- lentless warfare against all wrong mental qualities. It seems to substi- tute love in the place of hate, unself- ishness in the place of selfishness, honesty in the place of dishonesty, and truth in the place of error. It lays tremendous emphasis upon the neces- sity for 'bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ,' as the Bible commands. It teaches with- out any reservation whatever that the truth taught and practiced by Jesus, when understood and applied, is suf- ficient without drugs or any material means to heal the sick and regenerate the sinner, and Christian Scientists everywhere are engaged daily in dem- onstrating and proving this to be true." Mrs. Eddy Discovers Law. The contribution of Mrs. Eddy, the discoverer and founder of Christian Science, to the world's religious teach- ing was her discovery of the absolute law or divine principle of spiritual truth which results in' healing wherever it is correctly applied. She "studied the miracles of the Old and New Testaments, and came to the in- evitable conclusion that all of those transactions were correlated by means of an'underlying spiritual law that had been known and understood by the men who wrought them, and she said that if she could discover the law it would be found to operate in the same manner now as in Bible times; that it would be a healing law and would now heal people of sickness and sin and every evil human condition the same as then." BOOKS WORTH READING THE MODERN DRAMA, Emma Gold- man. Mother Earth Publishing Co., N. Y. "The Modern Drama" contains a critical analysis of the modern drama in its relation to the social and revolu- tionary tendencies of the age. Com- prising 50 plays of 24 of the foremost dramatists of six different countries, it deals with them not from a tech- nical point of view, but from the stand- point of their universal and dynamic appeal to the human race. It is a book for all times and all nations; and is not regional in its aspect, but above all is inclusive, inspiring, and didactic. Life, in an editoral comment upon this work, says: "Emma Goldman's book ought to be read by all so-called respectable women and adopted as a text book by women's clubs through- out the country. For courage, persist- ency, self-effacement, self-sacrifice in the pursuit of her object, she has hith- erto been unsurpassed among the, world's women." Miss Goldman is the author of nu- merous essays relative to the funda- mentals of anarchism, of which the most widely known is "Anarchism and Other Essays,' and she is the publisher of the Mother Earth Magazine. The Michigan Daily for service. I * * , i41 " ! m # *1 AT THE THEATERS * TODAY * Majestic-VaudvIle. * * Orpeum-Norma Talmadge, in * "The Social Secretary." Also * Triangle Comedy. * * Arcade-Lillian Walker, in "The* Kid." Mutt and Jeff Cartoons. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * AT THE MAJESTIC.l Novelty was the prominent feature i the bill that opened at the Majestic eater last night. A game of basket- I on bicycles, and a clever panto- ine act are among the features. "Onetta," the Dervish dancer, who as a sensation at the Panama exhibi-; on last year, opened the bill. Her incing is clever, especially when she glances a chair in her mouth while virling in a highly fantastic manner round the stage. Knapp and Cornalla, who followed, resented some clever acrobatic stunts nd kept the audience in good humor ith some jokes, some of which could e really called original. They also ut across a couple of songs in first ass manner. Pantomine as it has never been seen fore was the feature of the little laylet, "The Broken Mirror," which as presented by the Schwarz com- any. Tlie audience is kept in sus- ense till the climax. "Making-up" on the stage is the fea- ure of the act presented by Emily arrell and Ford Hanaford. Miss Dar- ell is a very clever actress, while [anaford possesses a creditable voice. he act probably drew the most ap- lause of any one the bill. The Imperial Troupe, who introduce novelty in their entertainment in he shape of an aerial basketball game n bicycles, were playing in Germany rhen the war broke out. Ypsilanti nd Ann Arbor are the two opposing eams, the game finally ending in a ie, after the ball had been knocked ff the stage into the audience many imes. 0. G. Andres for shoe repairing. 222 . State. 'Phone 1718-J. tues-eod Alarm clocks, $1.00 up. Chapman, eweler, 113 South Main St. tues-eod The PROGRESSIVE BUSINESS MEN 9 1 M l Xmas Holiday ANNOUNCEMENT James Couzens, present police com- missioner of Detroit, recently appoint- ed, and former vice-president of the Ford Motor Car company, will be the principal speaker at the weekly lunch- eon of the University of Michigan club of Detroit at Hotel Cadillac at 12:15 o'clock tomorrow. Mr. Couzens is known as the only millionaire who holds a police commissioner's office. Mr. Couzens hiad also turned over his salary of $5,000 to a bonus fund, to be distributed among his force according to their merits. It resembles the prof- it-sharing plan of the Ford Motor Car company. Unitarian Union Elects President Otto T. Kreuser, '17, was elected president of the Unitarian Young Peo- ple's Religious Union at their weekly meeting Sunday night. Prof. E. R. Sunderland of the Law School gave a talk on "Law and Ethics." Taxicab Driver Fined for Speeding Leonard Bucholz, a driver for a lo- cal taxicab company, was caught speeding .at a rate of 28 miles per hour on South State street Saturday night. He paid a fine of $10 and $3.45 costs to Justice William G. Doty yes- terday morning. Use The Michigan Daily Want Ads for results. Patrons of ROYAL TAILOR 'Made-to - Measure Tailoring should place their orders now for Xmas: SSu'its and Overcoats OF Ann Arbor ADVERTISE IN T --I IC-ION DAILI It is to Your Advantage to TRADE WITH THEM the of the most exacting tailoring are assured to every one who honors us with his order. Campus Bootery 308 S. State St. P. S. "We require 8 days for delivery.