LYNDON 719 N. University I ST MAS Christmas hvill soon be here THE ONE PHOTOGRAPHER Who delivers the Goods and has been delivering them for 12 years right here among Michigan Students F ES GYM SUPLIES Be prepared. You are better able to reflect the Spirit of the Season if you are becomingly dressed. A hand-tailored suit, made from one of the hundreds of ill-wool fabrics we are showing, cut and fitted to your ndividual measure, will enhance your appearance and add force to your CHRISTMAS GREETING. There's something behind it, when the well-dressed man says, Kodak & aril C i~arante ed A matetr COUNI L 10 PLAN FOR MEMNORIALS Mat. Wed. & sat. 6A RIK Week of Dec. 4 s,, SHIRTS PANTS S HOE S "Merry Christmas" "Tbe Blue Paradi J. K. MALCOLM 604 E. Liberty St. Dress Suits for Hire r, I Board f by gintd Appropriate $150 to Be U cdaIzStudent Or- ganization irts to order 0 - hi Sit Early For Your "MICHIGANENSIAN" PICTURE AT 619 E. Liberty St. 0 Ann Arbor. - - Mich. Perfect Portraitures w4Unsurpassed Aecomodations for Group Photographs. a- "Amateur Work Handled in a Pro- fessional Way. MAIN STUDIOS 1546-48 Broadway New York, N. Y. VA J ESTIC NOW SHOWINC oinas P Jackson & Go. "The Letter from Home' Kate Watson "The Hoosier Girl" Mimic Four "The Day After" 3ernivioi Brothers A Night in Venice" Treat for the Kiddies erian's Swiss Canines 50 Wonderful Dog Actors Rehearsal of the second scene of the' Hindu act of the "Magic Carpet" at 4 o'clock today, Sarah Caswell Angell hall. Rehearsal of the Japanese act of the "Magic Carpet," 4 o'clock tomorrow, Sarah Caswell Angell hall. Junior lits pay their class dues in the corridor of the Library from 2 to 5 o'clock today. Senior lits pay their class dues from 2 to 5 o'clock today at 'west entrance' of the Library. Choral Union ushers please report for Girls' Glee club concert at 7 o'clock tomorrow, Hill auditorium. REQUESTI DAJ FROM CAMPUS At a ineetin of the student council Monday night a committee was ap- pointo f to work on the Memorial and Endowment fund which was started by the class of 1916 and which is to be continued and forwarded by this year's class. The idea of the Endow- ment fund grew out of the plan which was advocated last year to combine the memorials given by the senior cla:s of each department. The fund, which now amounts to $1,600, is in charge of a committee composed of several alumni, the president, treas- urer, and one faculty member, of the University. Minutes to be Published in Daily The council decid :d that hereafter the full minutes of every meeting will appear in The Daily on the morning following the meeting. This will be done in order to further the co-opera- tion between the council and the stu- dent body. The regents have appropriated the annual $150 for the student council. The combined council has petitioned the University authorities for funds with which to prepare the floor of Bar- bour gymnasium for the. dances to be given by the council. . To 'rake Part in Prison Relief Work A motion was passed to the effect that if the sentiment of the campus is in favor of a campaign to raise funds for prison camp relief the coun- cil should take an active and lead- ing part in the movement. A letter has been prepared which is to be sent out to the various campus honorary societies requesting that ideas from them be brought to the council for action. This being done to foster co-operation between the so- cieties and the council. Fixtures are being installed in the new student council rooms on the fourth floor of Mason hall. There is to be a new filing system under which the reports of all committees will be fueled. This will greatly facilitate the work of the council in the future. The rooms will also have telephone con- nections. Favors IntereolleL'iate Basketball The council as individuals placed ARCADE Shows at 3:00; 6:30; 8:00; 9:30 zoc Unless Otherwise Specified. Phone 296-M. Mon.-Tues-Wed.-4-5.6 Mary Pickford in "Less Than The Dust." Her own pro- duction. Thur. 7 - Theda Bara in "Romeo and Juliet"; Chap. _6 of Gloria's Romance" ("Hidden Fires") 15c Fri.-S-Emily Stevens in "The Wager." Drew Comedy. Orpheum Theatre Matinees, 2:00-3:30; Evening, 6:45, 8:y5, 9y30. Saturdays-Holidays continuous. h ~ w~ WHITNEY T EATR E C. W. CRAhAM~ Mngr. Wed.-6-Mary Pickford in "Poor Little Peppina." 7 Reels. Rebooked' Thurs.-Fri.-7-8-Blanche Sweet in "The Storm." Also Bray Cartoons. Sat.-9-Wm. S. Hart in "The Dawn Mtak er." Also Triangle Comedy, Fay r nc et in "A Calico Vampire."iEve- ning 15c, Goodhew Floral Co. '22 E. Liberty. Phone 1321 Choice Cyclemens, Bengonias, Cherry Plants and Primroses. h e ehP SaturdyDe.9 Some shoes, slightly soiled at redu c prios. Joe Weber offers the return Engagement of the Triumphant Musical Comedy Success Book by lwy *~red A. L.athm Novelty Xmas Baskets. With it's great cast, and positively the same company that plays the Garrick Theatre, Detroit ENGINEERING IEWS m sarr~es AT GOING'(ON l1 Today. o'clock-Fresh engineer assembly, n 348 engineering building. o'clock-Barristers' luncheon at Union. o'clock-Fresh lit meeting, new ice lecture room. Fifty cents dues be collected at the door. 15 o'clock-Faculty concert at Hill torium. 15 o'clock-Emma Goldman speaks 7oodmnan's hall. >'clock-Tau Beta Pi dinner at the 7 to 8 o'clock-Prison camp mass eting, Hill auditorium. 7 o'clock-Fresh Glee club rehearsal, cMillan hall. 7:30 o'clock-All-medic 'smoker at Union. 7:30 o'clock-Dixie club smoker at eDelta cafe. o'clock-Fancis Neilson lectures in hall auditorium. Tomorrow. 2 o'clock-Dental faculty luncheon the Union. :15 o'clock-Emma Goldman speaks Woodman's hall. o'clock-Web and Flange dinner the Union. o'clock-Girls' Glee club concert, 1 auditorium. 0 o'clock-Fresh engineer smoker the Union.- :30 o'clock - First meeting of etry club in Cercle Francais rooms. U-Notices. )wing to counter attractions, the ssical club will not meet Thursday ht as was announced. The annual' istmas party will be given Dec. 14; i more definite announcements will3 made later. n exhibit of rare books and bind- s will be opened today in room 2191 ural science building.f The following senior engineer com- mittees have been appointed in addi- tion to those announced previously: Cap and gown-W. F. Gerhardt, chairman; R. F. Kohr, M. W. Patter- son, C. Hill. Promenade-B. A. Sten- berg, chairman; W. J. Schoepfle, K. F. Walker, W. M. Riach, J. L. Whalen. Sing-Don Smith, M. Nicholls. Sou- venir-G. A. Stevenson, chairman; H. J. McFarlan, S. J. Leach, L. J. Rich- ards, R. E. Dickie. Banquet-R. W. Collins, 'hairman; H. Carroll, B. Rose, W. Brodhead, R. A. Hayward. Recep- tion-G. Smith, chairman; A. A. Schupp, E. A. Bartelme, E. A. Thomas, J. W. Neumann. Picture-L. Watson, chairman; T. W. Rea, M. Cutting, L. E. Whitaker, .. Burrows. Memorial- IL A. Taylor, chairman; H. B. Win- chell, J. H. Otis, E. R. McLaughlin, H. W. Sheldon. Cane-C. A. Breitung, chairman; R. S. Scott, H. B. Bassett, L. B. Hadley. A second shipment of senior cordu- roys has been received, and will be distributed to those men who were un- able to get trousers in the first ship- ment. The senior architects will will hold a class meeting in room 312 at 4:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Among the matters that will be considered at this time will be the selection of the class canes, the arrangement of a class dinner, and the selection of the class program. Dr. C. B. Stouffer will be the speaker at the freshman engineer assembly which takes place at 11 o'clock to- day in room 348. The junior engineers will hold a; "slide rule shuffle" at the Packard academy on Friday evening. Tickets, the number of which is limited to 60, can be obtained at the Technic desk or from the members of the social com- mittee of the class at one dollar each. Greenhouses-Observatory and Volland St. Phone, 170-M. itself on record as being in favor of having intercollegiate basketball at Michigan. A committee is still working on a solution of the peanut politics evil and probably an open meeting will be held in the near future concerning this question. COUNCIL TO PRESENT SIGNED LIST TO BOARD IN CONTROL (Continued from Page Three.) teams as the Rayls and the Buckeye Paints. These aggregations are won, derful basketball machines who have played together for years and against who the ordinary college team would stand no chance whatever. We should gain very little by playing them. Try a Michigan Daily Want Ad. GORKY AND TCHEKHOV DEALT WITh IN GOLDMAN LECTURES "Anton Tchekhov is considered the bridge between old and young Rus- sian literature," Miss Emma Goldman said in her lecture yesterday after- noon. "Being primarily a novelist, he did not sermonize or theorize, but painted life as it really existed. He was a great creative genuis and a social psychologist. "Woman is independent of man. She is not an appendage". She must not necessarily cling to man. She has a just right to voice her own opinions, and is not confined to the task of echoing the ideas of her husband. Tchekhov pointed out woman's rights long before suffrage advocates did." In the evening Miss Emma Goldman spoke on "Maxim Gorky, the Voice- of1 Revolt." She stated that his message was that life was here for a. purpose a WA. SHOP EEARLY SHOP EARLY and that the living dead were obstacles in the path of progress. 'mber Will Decide Drill Question Whether Michigan's military train- ing corps is to be continued or aban- doned is a question that will be de- cided tonight when those interested in the organiation will meet at 7:15 o'clock in Waterman gymnasium. The number of students present at this meeting will probably be the deciding factor and it is urged that every one who has any interest whatever in seeing the work continued be on hand. All men attending this meeting -are requested to bring tennis shoes to wear during drill. The tennis shoes are to be carried and not worn to the meeting. U se the advertising columns of the Michigan Daily in order to reach the beat of Ann Arbor's buyers. Schumacher Hardware Co. A STORE OF INDIVIDUAL SHOPS 308-10-12 South Main Street ONL .dmm rY TI P/ FE EN Shopping Days Before Christmas SUGGESTIONS Our Toyland is ment in our store. and up to date. Work Benches. the busiest depart- Fvery article new A bit of a compliment to the folk at home, were a giftie of somthing niftie from the James Foster House of Art. tf Twine Holders. Scissors Sets. Percolators. Chafing Dishes. Sandwich Trays. Cake Baskets. Mahogany Stands. Candle Sticks. Mahogany Lamps. Tobacco Jars. Dinner Gongs. Cigarette Boxes. Traveling Sets. Pullman Slippers. Silver Cases. Relish Dishes. Lemonade Sets. Pie Dishes. Crumb Trays. Casseroles. Salad Dishes. Candy Boxes. Sewing Baskets. t.. ' ' ' ' lLIBEKTY AT 6 061 MAKE GIFT SELECTIONS EARLY The joy of Christmas giving is often marred by the problem of what to give. You can however select with ease any number of beautiful and use- ful gifts from our large stock. D E. GR ENNAN Custom Tailorin Golf Riding Knickers LIBERTY AT 606 Breeches Tool Chests. Skate-mobiles. Black Boards. Ten Pins. Coaster Wagons. Veloscipedes. Flexible Flyers. Boxing Gloves. Footballs. Skates, roller and ice. Cash Registers. Automobiles. Drums. WEDNESDAY SPECIAL For- the Ladies MAHOGANY TEA TRAYS Regular Price, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 Sale Price, 59c, 89c, 99c HELLO, BOYS Come and see the New Erector Bigger models, more for your money than any other toy. S5c to $15.00 Coaster Sets. Serving Dishes. Book Ends. Black Cat Door Holders. Ice Hot Bottles. Manicure Sets. 5 o'clock Teas. Electric Toasters. Electric Irons. Electric Corn Poppers. Electric Stoves. Electric Electric Electric Electric Grills. Eden Washers. Vacuum Cleaners. Chafing Dishes. -1