I IAL MA"(,-HIUAIN UAILY -I Mid Winter Clearance = OF - Suits and Overcoats STEIN-BLOCK and MICHAEL-STERN 1-4 Off CLOTHES 1-4 Off Entire stock fancy and mixed Entire stock blue and black Suits and Overcoats Suits and overcoats _ AT 1-4 OFF AT 20% OFF Our entire stock All trousers over $4:00 MACKINAWS AT 20% OFF AT 20% OFF . Lindenclmitt, Apfel & Co. I llIllI I I illIll lru frlliti lii i i nliriilI111l 11 l 11 llIrIu 111111li I Theatrical lake Ups Grease Paints-Liners-Powders Burnt Cork-Rouges Spirit Gum, etc. The Eberbach & Son Co. 200-204 E. Liberty St. Here it, is Men Now is the time for Action on your part, the final clean- up prices are now in effect and that is the equal for you to come straight to Reule- Conlin, Feigel Co. and choose one of these fine Winter Suits or Overcoats at this BIG REDUCTION SALE Gargoyle Will Expose Letters January Number of Humorous Maga- zinc to Print Missives by Woman Student County Infirmary Melancholy Place Wanderer Describes Gloomy and Dole- ful Scenes Out Washtenaw avenue Reule Conlin, Feigel CO A complete expose of the fickleness I Anyone who wanders out Washtenaw of a woman student. of the University while on her vacation, consisting of r One of Our Dinners Served from 11to 1 Regular Dinner 35c consists choice of meats; mashed or boiled potatoes; one vegetable; choice of pie or pudding; tea, coffee, or milk. SPECIALS, as served Soup .io with meat order .05 Roast or Fricassee of chicken .25 Roast Prime Ribs of Beef .25 Roast Leg of Veal with Dressing .25 Pork Sausage with Sweet Potatoes .25 Pork Chops Breaded. Extra Special .25 Small Steak with Onions. Ex. Spec'l .25 Bread and Mashed Potatoes included with above meat orders. Side Orders Extra Potatoes mashed .05 Stewed tomatoes .05 Potatoes boiled .05 Stewed corn .05 Potatoes fried .05 Stewed peas .05 Potatoes german fried .05 One holiday season is over, but we are already prepared for the next. J-Hop season is almost here again. We manifest the same in- terest, skill, and sensible judgment in these special garments that we do in our others. two letters which were later discov- ered, is promised in the January num- ber by the editor' of the Gargoyle. The magazine is billed as the "Brok- en Resolution" numbed and the full page drawing very cleverly portrays the batting averages of the Swear-off league, the figures being compiled from their records up to and including Jan. 15. A new style of art, showing skaters in their various poses will make its debut in the January number. The drawing is perhaps the most unique that has yet appeared in any issue of the magazine. The Gargoyle will go on sale Friday. t avenue on a ramble through the coun- try may see (if his tramp takes him far enough) one of the most doleful and melancholy scenes that his ad- venturesome fortune may ever present to him It is the Washtenaw county home. The way leads along a pleasant road, over sloping hills with turns and wind- ings. In the spring and fall, the flow- ers of the season fringe the road, and the scent of clover or the smoke of autumn fires floats over the meadows on either side. Out a mile or so, a thicket of trees guards the approach r . _., Sippers for D]ancing FOR MEN Pumps in patent and dull leather also popular dancing Oxfords FOR WOMEN Party slippers in all colors of satin. Dull, or Patent leather and also Gold and Silver cloth pumps BuiY Comfy Slippers for Xmas W~AH 'S Shoe stores MARQUARI CAMPUS TAILOR 516 H. Williams St. Home made pies per cut .05 tard .05, with cream 10. Coffee .o5 Tea .05 t Milk per bottle .o5 Rice cus- Chocolate .50 Cocoa .10 'TATE SEET LUNCH Open All Night. J. A. QUACKENBUSH, Mgr. SKATING CARNIVAL, Wed., Jan. 17, 7:30 to 10 P. M. Fancy skaters from Detroit. Weinberg's Coliseum. Tickets at the Delta, Wahr's and Moe's Athletic Store. 16 Enroll now for a course in Short- hand and Typewriting at the School of Shorthand, 711 No. University Ave. 16 ENGLAND'S LOSS OF OFFICERS 53,122 SINCE START OF WAR London, Jan. 10.-(Delayed).---Casu- alty lists published by the war office show that in October the British army lost 4,378 officers, of whom 1,459 were killed, 2,736 wounded, and 183 are missing. In November the total was 2,305, of whom 806 were killed, 1,386 wounded, and 113 are missing. These figures bring the total losses among officers since the beginning of t'he war to 53,122, of whom 15,696 have been killed or died of wounds, 33,970 have been wounded, and 3,456 are missing. A large proportion of the wounded have since returned to duty, and the total under the heading of missing includes a portion since re- ported as prisoners of war. Foresters Must Have Worke Hard During the past year the e were constructed in the nationl forests 227 miles of new road, 1,975 miles of trails, 2,124 miles of telephone line, 222 miles of fencdy 545 dwellings, 89 miles of fire lines, 81 lookout struc- tures, 40 bridges,: barns and other structures, 17 corrals, and 202 water improvements. You have not shop pd Unless you have stopp6d At the James Foster House of Art. tf For results advertise in The Mich- igan Daily. Girls attention! For rainwater shampoos and scalp treatment for falling hair go to Mrs. J. R. Trojanow- ski, 1110 S. University, side entrance. Phone 696-W. 5-two wks Get your shoes fixed at Paul's Place 611 E. William St. 5tf Rumors JMust Stop; D~r. Has Copyright Campus rumors must stop The prominent literary geniuses and crit- ics at the University of Michigan are all wrong when they come to judging contemporary poetry. They may be all right in saying some old duffer like Shakespeare or Milton is good, but when they think Dr. Tom Lovell's "Good Bye, Sweetheart" song is like the popular rag "Blue Bell" of a few years ago, they had better take up) a course in archaeology, and let it go at that. For Dr. Lovell has just been awarded a copyright for his song. That his song will make a hit the doctor is convinced. Yesterday he ap- peared in The Michigan Daily office and gave a gratis concert for the com- bined staffs. If the paper this morn- ing is better than usual one should lay the inspiration to the real cause. This all proves that the doctor is a philan- thropist as well as philosopher. Since the doctor has seen "The Mag- ic Carpet" play all suspicions of "Abe" Gornetsky having stolen his "Dickey Bird" have vanished. However, lie thinks that Field's poem does not compare with his at all. All this makes us think that these literary people are all jealous, and life for them is just one suspicion after another. NEW JOURNAL FOR FORESTERS; OLD ONE STARTED BY ROTH Chemists, botanists, and foresters in particular, will be interested in the announcement that the Forestry Quarterly and the Proceedings of the Society of American Foresters, two official publications of the students in these courses have combined. The new magazine will be called The Journal of Foresters, and will have eight instead of four publications an- nually. The old Forestry Quarterly was started in 1902 at Cornell University by Professors Frenow and Roth. Prof. Filibert Roth is at present head of the department of forestry at the Univer- sity of Michigan and has been for some time on the editorial board of the Quarterly. The new journal will be published in Washington, D. C., the subscrip- tion rate being $3 a year. The Michigan Daily for service. to the poor farm which surmounts the crest of a rather steep hill: The house is an old red building, facing north so that the sun hardly ever shines upon the front of it. Old black fire escapes and window cases painted a dull black contribute the only note of architectural decoration on its exterior. In the yard in front of the building are a few withered bushes, and a huge thorn tree, brist- ling with sharp points. Scenery Is Symbolical. So appropriate to the dreary impres- sion that is produced by the mention of a poor house do all these things seem, that its surroundings seem to be a kind of stage scenery to depict all that is symbolical of poverty and gloom. Across the way in the midst of an old dead orchard is a vineyard once fruitful and covered with verdure, but now a tangle of matted vines. clinging to their trellises, now fallen apart and rotting away. Only a few hundred feet away from the house is the old burial ground or potters' field-called "Halcedama." All the fields and pastures about it are smooth, because of tillage and the cul- tivation of crops. Gloom on All Sides. Within this little piece of land that is the last place of rest for the poor of long ago, there is nothing but ruin. Brush is thrown over the fence into the plot; dead trees are fallen across the graves; and the marking stones with numbers cut in them, are lying in disorder all about the ground. Instead of being mounds, the graves must have been very shallow, for they are sunken into the earth, and in some cases where two bodies have been buried together, the graves have dropped to a depth of more than two feet. A luxuriant growth of rank weeds and wild grass reaches to the top of the barbed wire fence which marks the bounds of the lonely plot of the dead. No one has been buried here now for a long time, for many years ago, the authorities began sending the bodies of the poor to the medical school of the University. Still it is a rather cheerless place for some of the kindly, old unfortunate men that poverty has driven here to spend the last few days of their life. Dentists Smoke Tonight at Union The Dental college will hold a smoker this evening. at the Union. Smokes, eats and plenty of cider are on hand. Members of the faculty staff will address the students. There is opportunity in Michigan want ads. Mati St. PROF.PAWLOWSKI GETS LEAVE TO DO AERO WORK WITH U. S. Work in University to Be Conducted by Professors Sadler and Fishleigh Porf. F. W. Pawlowski of the aero- nautics department will leave the Uni- versity at the end of this semester on a year's leave of absence. He will go to Washington where his official title will be aeronautic engineer of the United States army. Professor Paw- lowski expects to attend the aero- nautic exposition in New York City on Feb. 8-15 and will deliver a lecture on Feb. 9 at the exposition on "The Evolution of Aeroplane Wing Truss- ing." Prof. H. C. Sadler will also de- liver a talk at that time. His subject will be "The Education of Aeronautic Engineers." The work, which has been done by Professor Pawlowski, will be divided up next semester. Prof. H. C. Sadler and Prof. W. T. Fishleigh will teach several of the courses. W. F. Ger- hardt, '17E, and J. M. Munson, '17E, will also act as teaching assistants. VEN. LEONARI WOOD TO SPEAK ON MILITARY. TRAININ GSOON Major General Leonard Wood, late chief of staff of the United States near future, under the auspices of the local branch of the National Se- curity league. General Wood will speak this time on the subject of "Un- iversal Military Training and 'Ser- vice." In common with all other military experts, General Wood believes that if the country is to continue to exist as a nation, it can only be through the adoption of universal military service, and he favors especially the Austral- ian system. General Wood and General Hugh L. Scott, the present chief of staff of the United States army, recently appeared at a hearing before the senate com- mitte on military affairs and testified to the entire failure of the "federal- ized" national guard system, provided by the recent Hay bill, and both ad- vocated universal military training. General Wood's letter refers to the spring as the probable time for the lecture. When General Wood spoke here last year in Hill auditorium, five thousand people turned out to hear him. Texas Cities Face Shortage of Gas Dallas, Tex., Jan. 15.-This city, with Ft. Worth, Denton, Gainesville, and other northern Texas points, will be entirely without gas before night, the Lone Star Gas company announced. The temperature is 25 above zero and wide-spread suffering is predicted for hundreds of thousands of persons in this section. Try a Michigan Daily Want Ad. Stat St. - .' .. ": t " J }. r i 'I Dentists to Learn Tricks in East Doctors R. W. Bunting, C. J. Lyons, M. L. Ward and L. P. Hall leave today to attend the dental teachers' meet- ing at Philadelphia. A lrrv 12. TIlFOP.?Vj For results advertise igan Daily. in The Mich- SSuit and Overcoat.Sale Leave Copy Leave Copy a t t Quarry's and -Students' ADVERTISING 1-3 Off On Suits and O'Coats You take no chances,' when WANTED WANTED-STOCK & BOND SALES- MEN. For Detroit and Michigan. To graduates of the University of Michigan the Investment Banking Business offers great opportunities. Salesmen in our employ now draw monthly $150.00 to $1,000.00. Ap- ply by letter, giving age, experience if any, family residence, and extent of acquaintance in Michigan. Care, Box S, The Michigan Daily. 5-9-12-16 WANTED-To buy a Corona or.Ham- mond typewriter. Address A. B. D.. Michigan Daily. 13-tf WANTED-Two neat appearing girls for salesladies. Call 820-J or 411 E. Univ. Mr. R. F. Brisbois. 16 WANTED-Let The Michigan Daily get you results through its success- ful want-ad columns. FOR SALE FOR SALE-A. B. Chase piano. Must sell by Feb. first. Very slightly used. Address Box X, The Michigan Daily. 13-14-16 FOR SALE-Set of Harvard Classics -Dr. Elliott's Five Foot Shelf. Call R. A. Kimberley at 906 or write to 1824 Geddes Ave. 14-2Oincl LOST LOST-Gold bowed spectacles on East Univ. or Washtenaw near N. Univ. Call 1123-M. Reward. 16-17 LOST-Alpha Chi Omega pin. Call 781-R. Reward. 16-17-18 FOUND FOUND-Small purse, contains money and other things valuable to owner. Call 1399-J. 16-17 buying a suit our goods are date. or overcoat of us, all new and up to Another big shipment of Spring Hats. A Victor Record Dance Hit NO. 35593 TOM CORBETT 116 E. Liberty Street Our alarm clocks are good clocks. Chapman, &eweler, 113 South Main Medley Waltz One Fletuin Hour! I'm A-Longin' Fo' You! Only a. Year Ago! St. tuea-eo Grinnell Bros. 116 S. MaSt. PHONE 1707 Special courses in Typewriting or $5.00, at the School of Shorthand, 7 No. University Ave.