s s " I I AT THE ARCADE 1* [E CRISIS" Is ichigan Man * AT THE THEATERS * TODAY * Mjtcadie *Majestic-Vaudeville. STARTS Dr. W. G. Law, '99D, One of Few ericans Who Will Remain in Germany Am I s *, x THURSDAY _ / ="..,, ~ .. " , . 1 u t William George Law, of Flint, who is mentioned in recent dispatches as one of the few Americans who will not leave Germany and who is at present employed as dentist to the royal Ger- man family, is a graduate of the Mich- igan dental college, belonging to the class of 1899. Dr. Law practiced in Flint for five years after his graduation from the University after which he went to Berlin, where he specialized as an or- thodentist. He anticipates being placed in a military hospital should war come. Information coming from Law's parents' residing at Flint, states that his sympathies are overwhelmingly American, and that he has retained his citizenship here.j !* * +: :r Orpheum-Dorothy Gish in "The Children of the Feud." Also Tri. angle comedy. Arcade-Clara Kimball Young i "The Foolish Virgin" * * * * * * * * * * * in* * Do You Enjoy Outdoor Sports? If so, you like skating, and > thoroughly enjoy this ealthful exercise you must e correctly corsetted. I You must be comfortable, arid still you want your figure be trim. eet all these requirements. here are models distinctly iade for "sports" wear, and ach model is a fashionable haping corset. efitted to your Redfem Corset. GRADUATES WILL COMPETE AT INTERCOLLEGIATE TRACK MEET Philadelphia, Feb. 12.--Virtually all the teams in the Intercollegiate Athletic association have notified the manage- ment that they would be represented at the indoor championship track games to be held here on March 3. Fred Murray, winner of the low hurdle championship last year, will lead a team from Leland Stanford uni- versity in the graduate relay race, it has been announced. The graduate race is a new feature of the games, and has attraced several well known sprinters. The distance is one mile, the first three men of each institution to run two laps and the anchor man four. Riley of Dartmouth and Mere- dith of Pennsylvania are among- the others who will lead quartets in the. event. Law Students Must Explain Absences The attention of those students of the Law school who intend to receive a degree in June is especially called to the ruling of the attendance com- mittee, which states that the date of any student's graduation will be automatically deferred who has a large number of unexplained absences from classes charged up against his name. The rule on attendance re- quires a regular attendance during the student's course. Independent Girls' Dance Postponed Announcement was made last night that the Independent Girls' club dance, which was to be held on Friday, Feb. 1 , has been postponed until Saturday, Feb. 24. The dance 'will be held in Barbour gymnasium. Try a Michigan Daily Want Ad. LAST DAY CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG in Thomas Dixon's "THE FOOLISH VIRGIN" ARCADE THEATRE 25 CENTS AT THE GARRICK, DETROIT Robert B. Mantell, the only actor on the American stage now attempting the greatest heavy roles of Shake- speare and the classic dramatists, will be at the. Garrick theater, Detroit, this week in five plays. Monday evening he presented "The Merchant of Venice," which he will re- peat for the Saturday matinee. Tues-, day evening he will play "Hamlet," while Wednesday afternoon will be devoted to "Richelieu," the only non- Shakespearean drama in his list. Wed- nesday night "Macbeth" will be given. "King Lear", will be played on Thurs- day night; on Friday evening "Mac- beth" will be repeated; and on Satur- day evening "Richard III." Mr. Brady, under whose direction Mr. Mantell appears for the tenth con- secutive season, has selected a com- pany of credit and distinction in sup- port of the tragedian, including Miss Genevieve Hamper. "Sybil," the latest Sanderson-Brian- Cawthorne success, comes to the Whit- ney theater Friday evening, Feb. 16. This production bears all the usual marks of the Charles Frohman mu- sical productions. There are 18 mu- sical numbers, including Mr. Caw- thorne's well known effusion, "I Can Dance With Everybody But My Wife." The scenes of "Sybil" are laid in Russia, and the story deals with high officials of that country. The principal figure is that of "Sybil," an opera singer, who in her effort to free her soldier sweetheart from arrest, poses as a grand duchess. When the real duchess arrives, and later her hus- band, numerous complications are in- troduced. The book is the work of Max Brody and Frank Martos and was Americanized by Harry Graham and H. B. Smith. AT THE .MAJESTIC Patricola and Meyers, billed as "The Girl and the Dancing Fool" were the hit of the program which opened the heek at the Majestic. theater last night The "Fool" was a master of. clever foot-work, while his dainty companion found her way to the hearts of the audience. "A Whirl of Girls," song and dance revue, headed by Vic LeRoy and Mae Cahill is noteworthy for unusual dis- play of custumes and scenery as well as for the grace and beauty of several of the "girls." Arnold and Florence are seen in a equilibrium act entitled "The Man With the Bottles." A playlet, "Any Couple" depicts the trials of a wife burdened with a hus- band who is a professional grouch. The Michigan Daily for service. This is the last day on which our U patrons will be able to see Clara Kim- ,,.L_ OD-ilre iloGb ball Young in "The Foolish Virgin" LIVELIHOOD.-Wilfred Wilson Gib- by Thomas Dixon, the second of the son. The Macmillian Co., N. Y. Clara Kimball Young photoplays since Mr. Gibson, like so many of our she has been heading her own com- modern poets, has gone to industrial pany. life for the material of his poems. The Arcade will show "The Man He writes of the ordinary experiences Who Forgot" with Robert Warwick to- of middle class people, the iron work- morrow. This is an interesting story er and the shop apprentice and the of a tremendous political battle in farmer's wife working in the fields. Washington. He writes of these people as they are touched by some moment of great joy WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY or sorrow, such as the fisher's wife PARTY FOR GIRLS IN GYM left alone for the first time after the drowning of her husband, or the man Physical Education Department to Glve sitting alone in his room after he Annual Cotillion Friday, learns that his brother has stolen Feb. 23 money. These poems are well named, for The department of physical educa- they are poems of the livelihood tion for women will give its annual which' includes more than living. They cotillion for university girls Friday are the records of the moments of evening, Feb. 23. The affair will be exaltation which occur in the most in the form of a Washington's birth- commonplace lives. There is the fine day party this year and will take fervor of simplicity about them which place in Barbour gym. Tickets may hangs about long clean stretches of be obtained' without charge in the of- country. Though it were possible to fice of the dean of women, and as the write of just such things as form the attendance is limited to three hun- substance of these poems and produce dred, they should be secured at once. the crudest and bitterest things, Mr. It is requested by those in charge that Gibson has been able to make a poetic people plan to remain throughout the version of the unpoetic, and has caught entire evening. a little of the intinsic romance of life. The cotillion will be preceded by There are lines in "Livelihood" the annual athletic banquet, tickets for which are commonplace and there are which may be purchased from mem- lines which do not satisfy, but once in bers of the athletic committee. Ath- a while one runs across a line or two letic honors and emblems woi during of real literary savor. The reminiscent the past season will be officially tone which is present in all the poems awarded at this time. seems to increase in power and in- sistency the more the poems are read. TRY TO BRING BACK OLDTIME Because of this and because of the distinct individuality of the poems, F A1ILY WORSHIP IN THE HOME "Livelihood" presents a very interest- Chicago, Feb. 12.-The importance ing collection of verse. of bringing back to popularity the old- time custom of family worship where- Dance records, 12 inches double disc in the other members gathered round with just the right swing, only $1. while father read the Bible, will be Allmendinger's Music Shop, 122 E stressed at the metin, of th St Liberty St. 20-tf Speak on Crime A iexander BCrknian, Noted Anarchist, to ITalk Thursday Night in New Trwde Union Hall Alexander Berkman, anarchist and editor of The Blast, will speak on "Crime and Punishment" at 8 o'clock Thursday night, in the new Trade -nion hall, 308 South Main street. Mr. .Berkman is a member of the Typo- graphical union of San Francisco, and is also a special delegate from the In- ternational Workers D'efense league. The proceeds from this lecture will be forwarded to San Francisco to be utilized in the defense of the labor prisoners accused of placing a bomb in the Preparedness parade last July. The disaster resulted in the death of several participants. Bourke Cochran, noted criminal lawyer, is defending the accused without remuneration. Mr. Berkman will speak in Detroit on Wednesday. He is the author of "The Prison Memoirs of an Anarch- ist." PENN STATE FORESTERS VISIT MiClIltVAN FOREST DEPARTMENT Prof. G. R. Green, '10, now head of the forestry department of Pennsyl- vania State university, conducted a tour through Michigan and Wisconsin between semesters for the benefit of the senior foresters of that university. About a dozen senior foresters made the trip, staying in Ann Arbor over the last week-end to visit the forestry department of the University of Michi- gan. le who pays cash deserves discount. We give it in cash-coupons. Davis, at 119 Main. 13-17-18 r712 Z t LgL~t! 1 e.Jt t14U W )LU- dent 'Workers' organization of the Episcopal church in America here to- day. "And God may speak in the home," said Secretary William E. Gardner of The General Board of Religious Educ- ation, of the 'church, "in many other ways than by formal family worship." BASKETBALL PLANS ARE PROGRESSING RAPIDLY (Continued from Page Three.) been donated by Ann Arbor business houses, one for the winning team, which will become the permanent property of the school wining it three times, and one cup for the play- er scoring the largest number of points. Nearly 60 teams may enter the meet. Thirty-two already have accepted, while 25 have indicated that they may come. Jackson, Lapeer, Grass Lake, Wayne, and Grayling have agreed to come sincedthe list last was published in The Daily. Hart, Fremont, Elk Rapids, St. Louis, and Lawton are pos- sibilities. Try a Michigan Daily Want Ad. LAST DAY CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG in Thomas Dixon's "THE FOOLISH VIRGIN" ARCADE THEATRE 25 CENTS. February's new records are now ca sale at Alimendinger's Music Shop. 122 E. Liberty St. 20-tf LAST DAY CLARA K IMB ALL YOUN(G in Thomas 1Dixon's "THE FOOLISH VIRGIN" ARCADE THEATRE 2 CENTS "THE CRISIS" STARTS THURSDAY $3 and up For Sale by HAVE YOU TRIED THE GRILL ROOM As a solution of your eating problem? It COMBINES boarding house advantages with the FREEDOM of the restaurant. Announcement in toarn to take personal and permanent charge of Ward is WARD & CO. Klassy Kut Klothes Phone 244-R 118 E. Huron St. reduction on all stock in order to make room for spring cloth. S.,uWRI#id.Y'9Mn. 0:? r.aaa-Jrnta.'aro,..csaw ~f.nm4 V (MARK ERADE' v ! A Real Pipe for College Men These are two of the 24 popular shapes in which you can get the Stratford 75c and up W D C Hand Made $1.00 and up Each a fine pipe, with sterling silver ring and vulcanite bit. Leadingdealers in town carry a full as- sortment. Select your favorite style. WM. DEMUTH & CO. New York r1 110 0 GET the best results in tele- phoning, speak directly into the transmitter with the lips in front of but not touching it. Speak distinctly in a moderate tone. Michigan State Telephone Company J. J. Kery, Manager Telephone 500 It serves only the B STEAM - COOKED at surpris- IEST ingly low rates. Easily accessible-RIGHT UNDER HUSTON'S-it gives quick service AT ALL HOURS. Only by comparison can you judge our well balanced, excellently pre- pared meals. TRY US TO-DAY THE GRILL ROOM UNDER HUSTON'S food-- Genuine French Br iar ., . ,.., ... ."