TIE DAILY $1.50 NEWS OF THE WORLD AND THE CAMPUS OP. x ' Phones:-Editorial 2414 Business 960 ELEGRAPH SERVICE BY THE NEW YORK SUN VOL. XXVI. No. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1916. PRICE FIVE GENTS w __ A I :IL A YT '1! Il m.o, IS REPOR TED IN MEDITERRANEAN DISPATCH FROM COPENHAGENX QUOTES STORY FROM , G ERMA N SOURCE OERMANS ADVANCE !N WEST Rebel Arabs Captured from British Egypt; erma iians Think They'-ve Made Trimble for ToImmies in London, Feb. 22.-A news agency dispatch from Copenhagen quotes the statement from German newspapers to the effect that a Japanese fleet has arrived in the Mediterranean with a. number of craft. It is believed that the long promised aid from the Ori- ental ally has been fulfilled by the coming of the Nipponese expedition. Gernaans Make Trench Gains London, Feb. 22.-Two considerable German gains on the western front are announced in the official statement issued today. The first was in Artois, where the Germans won the first line French trenches on a front of 800 meters, and continued to the com- municating trenches behind, gaining a foothold there. The French counter attack drove the Germans from all but a few of the positions they had seized in the communicating trenches but the Ger- mans still hold the first line position. The German force amounted to seven battalions and, acording to the-French report, suffered heavy losses. The at- tack was received by a very heavy (Continued on Page Six) NINE DIE I GN RARAD CRASH Three Trains on New Haven Road Collide Near Bridgeport, Conn.; More May Die YALE GRID STAR AMONG INJURED Bridgeport, Conn., Feb. 22.--Nine people were killed and 39 injured, .some fatally, in a wreck involving three trains near here yesterday af- ternoon. A crack express train known as the Connecticut River Special, on the New Haven Railroad, which was about 25 minutes late, had stopped for a min- uto .or more about nine miles east of here, late this afternoon, when a lo- cal, running at a high rate of speed, swel:t around a curve just'back of the stalled express and crashed into it. An instant later a freight train, also bound westward on the scodl or in- ner west-bound track, struck the buckled wreck bulging from the out- side west-bound track. Among the injured passegers are John R. Kilkatriclq, of New York, former Yale athlete and football play- er; Allan Corey, son of William E. Corey, former president of the United States Steel Corporation, and former Yale baseball captain; Morgan O'Brien the son of former Justice Morgan J. O'Brien, of the New York State su- preme court: and Ford Johnson. All are Yale men and were on the last car of the passenger train. It is not believed any of them suffered serious injury. Pu' blishIniial Issue ofChallenge Radical Student Magazine, Fdted at Columbia;, May -Receive Faculty Celiso-shi~p New. York, Feb. 22.-The first num- ber of "Challenge" and the attitude of its editors, Columbia and Barnard students, toward prospective faculty censorship seemed today to serve well the title of the new radical intercol- lege magazine which was organized to stimulate the free discussion of opinion among American students. Chalenge" was out at noon today. It was difficult to ascertain tonight, however whether the faculty'of either Columbia or Barnard College would disapprove of the magazine and shack- le it by censorship. LUMSDIEN CONSCIOUS IS LATESTr REPORT At 3:00 o'clock this morn- ing the supervising nurse at University hospital reported Lumsden, the injured student, to be conscious and resting comfortabl. A more thor- ough examination of his in- juries will be made some time before noon. ffegyin ?Iembership CampaignTuesday Thirteen Captains Will Have Charge of Canvassing; Round-up to End March 3 The Union life membership cam- paign on the campus will be started next Tuesday night at 6:30 o'clock following a dinner for the entire body of s.olicitors at 5:30 o'clock at the, Union. The canvassing will ast for; three days and will end March 2. The leading team of 15 men will be givenI another banquet at a later date. SALE Of TICKETS EOR UNION OPERA TO BEGIN FRIDAY Announce Program For Band ounce List of Entertainers Includes Some of the Best Talent on 31101ig allCa' u An announcement of the program for "Michigan's Biggest Band Bounce" was made yesterday afternoon. The entire list of entertainers, and the acts which are to appear in Hill auditorium is as follows: I. a "Ann Arbor University" March Barnard EACH TO STUDENT TO BE ALLOWED PURCHASE SIX; HOPE TO AVOID ERRORS RESERVE TUESDAY FOR WOMEN Life and Yearly Members of Union Are Asked to Get Slips; General Sale Next Wednesday An official announcement was made yesterday of the ticket sale for the 1916 Union opera, "Tres Rouge." The sale will begin on Friday and con- tinue until the following Wednesday. Complications and mistakes as to the ticket schedule and application time can be avoided by a careful no- tation of the complete schedule as announced. Several changes have been made this year to eliminate the sale difficulties and to give the people the best possible chances at the seats for the five shows. This year the opera will be given on March 15, 16, 17 and 18, including a matinee on Saturday, March 18. According to the present schedule each person will be given an oppor- tunity to purchase six tickets, which (Continued on Page Six) REVUE TICKETS GO ON SALE TOMORROW To Be Sold at Hill Auditorium, Ger- nian-American and State Say- ings Banks; Also by Mail Tickets for the All-Nation Revue will go on sale at Hill auditorium tomorrow afternoon at 2:00 o'clock. Following this opening of the box l office, tickets can be procured on Fri- day and Saturday from 9:00 to 5:00 o'clock at Hill Auditorium, and at the German-American and State Sav- (Written about 1890) b Selections from "Chint Chin" Caryl Varsity Band II. - and Music" L. B. Emerman; W. J. Kellar at the piano UNHEARD LOCOMOTIVE SER I OISLY INJURES H. M. LUMSIJEN, III. "In old Japan" Girls' Glee Club assisted by HelenI '19 Ely, Inez Gose and Louise Gould IV. "War Marrh of the Priests" Mendelssohn Varsity Band V. "La Revue da Campus" or "The All-Campus Revue." 1, Beauty et Beast; 2, On the Level; 3, Alabis; 4, Purity Ball; 5, In Union There Is Strength; 6, Preparedness; 7, Deliberations; 8, "La Revue des mations." (Under the direction of George M. Olsen)! 9, "When Night Falls, Dear!'" C. M. Burne, '17E, W. W. Dalzell, (Continued on Page Six) UIVERSITY PRESENTED WITH VAGHANPORTRAIT Preparedness for Nation Urged by Colonel LaGarde in Address on Founder's Day Advocating preparedness for the na- tion, Col. Louis A. LaGarde, U. S. A., delivered the Founders' Day address on "The Dum Dum Myth," in Sarah Caswell Angell hall last evening. Ste reopticon views were shown of the various kinds of guns and of the ef- fects of various kinds of ammunition on different parts of the body. The speaker was introduced by Peary And Wood To Speak Tonight "Preparedness" to Be the Joint Sub- ject of the Two Representu- tives of Defense General Leonard Wood and Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary will speak upon the general subject of "Prepared- ness" in Hill auditorium at 8:00 o'clock this evening. Both men have entered into a care- ful study of existing conditions and appear here to express the result of their researches, and to advance what they consider advisable plans for the United States to follow for national protection. The lecture is the second of the free series given under the auspices of the local Nationaf Secur- ity branch. The two speakers will come from Chicago together this afternoon, but General Wood will continue to De- troit, where he is scheduled to pre- side at a meeting before returning to Ann Arbor for the evening's speech. Rear Admiral Peary is endeavoring to perfect a system of aerial coast patrol with the use of hydro-aero- planes operating from stations spacedat some .regular distances upon our seaboard. He would form a net- work of these flying boats on both the Atlantic and Pacific, which in times of war could be used as scouts to give notification via wireless of an ene- my's approach. and in times of peace could be used to watch for derelicts. WhAIT'S.GOING lON Weather for Ann Arbor and vicinity: warmer with southwest winds. Al TEMPT TO AVOID FREIGHT TRAIN ; HIT BY FLYER ON NEXT TRACK ONE ISUNHURT Emery T. Jones, Third Member of Trio Returning from Tramp In Woods, a Escapes Uninjured DEAD STUDENT WAS ORPHAN Is Survved by a Sister in Hemlock, Mich., and a Brother in Fort Worth, Texas E Ibert S. Bryant, '19, of Sag- . Inaw, was killed, and ft. Mason Lumsden, '19, of Virden, ill., was seriously injured when they were struck by Michigan Central pas- senger train Number 2 at the curve near Barton dam at 3:40 "'elock yesterday afternoon. Lumsden and Bryant, in company with Emery T. Jones, '19, were re- turning from a visit to the woods north of the city. As they walked along the tracks a freight,, train headed to- ward Detroit came around the curve. The trio stepped to the other track to avoid it.and insdoing so found them- selves directly in front of the swiftly moving passenger train coming from the opposite direction. Jones Is Unhurt Jones, who was not near the rails, escaped uninjured. Lumsden, how- ever, was walking near the track and was struck on the arm and side. Bry- ant, who was walking on one of the rails, was carried about a hun- dred feet and thrown to one side of the track. The train stopped and the two in- jured students were put aboard. The. crew then took them on to the depot. Shortly after they were taken from the train Bryant died. . Lumsden was re- moved to the University hospital where. an examination showed him to have sustained a broken arm and internal injuries. According to reports from the physicians he will recover. Both Students Orphans Bryant, who lived at 531 Thompson, and cane here from Saginaw, was an orphan, as is Lumsden. He is sur- vived by a sister living in Hemlock, a town near Saginaw, and a brother at present in Fort Worth, Texas. News of Bryants death has been telegraphed to his relations, but as yet no orders have been received as to the disposi- tion of his body. He entered the liter- ary college last fall, with the inten- tion of specializing in forestry. Lumsden, who with Jones, roomed at 712 East Catherine, comes from Vir- den, Ill., and has a brother in Chi- cago. His guardian has been notified. "We started out to take a long walk at about 12:45 o'clock," declared Jones. "We went into the woods the other side of Barton dam. Both Bryant and Lumsden were planning to enter the forestry department, and were deeply interested in nature. Bryant had a bag of different kinds of moss over his shoulder when the train struck him, and that was the last thing I saw when I looked back at the place after (Continued on Page SIx) TODAY 4:00 o'clock-John E. Kellerd lec-I ings banks, on Thursday, Friday and Dean Victor C. Vaughan as one whose tures on Shakespeare, U-Hall. Saturday during banking hours. To name will go down in history as 7:00 o'clock-Meeting of the Forest- avoid delay, tickets may be obtained one who played a great part in the ry club. by mail order, the address being the Spanish-American war by introducing 7:00 o'clock-Fresh Glee and Man- modern methods for taking care of the dolin Clubs meet, McMillan hall. All Nation Revue, ill auditorium box wounded. 7 :30 o'clock-Prescott club meets, office. After Colonel LaGarde's address, Dr. room 300, Chemical building. SNo Fresh Engeerig Assembly Today G. Carl Huber formally presented to 8:00 o'clock-General Leonard Wood the university the portrait of Dean and Rear Admiral R. E. Peary speak There will be no fresh engineering Vaughan which was recently painted on Preparedness, Hill auditorium. assembly today. Room 348 in the en- by Gari Melchers. Doctor Huber made Morning, afternoon and evening-~ gineeringt building will be used fr mention of several of the dean's ac- 'Short course in Highway Engineering, the short course in Highway Engi- complishments, among which were his Engineering building. neering which is now being conductedI leadership of the American. Medical as-___ by the College of Engineering. sociation, his instruction in the iedi- TOMORROIV G - s cal school, service on the advisory 11:00 o'clock--Senior eng. assembly, Gnerard, Ambassador, Hlas Aeceldenut board of marine hospital service, and West Physics hall. Berlin, via wireless, Feb. 22.-James his many writings. The portrait was 4:0 --Seniorhlit class meeting, Tap- W. Gerard, the American ambassador accepted in behalf of the board of re- pan hall. fell yesterday while skating at Par- gents by Regent Junius E. Beal of Morning, afternoon and evening--- temkirchen, Bavaria, and broke his Ann Arbor, who also highly praised Short course in Highway Engineering, left collar bone. (Continued on Page Six) Engineering building. T COL. LOUIS A. LAGARDE, U. S.A. Who delivered the Founders' Day ad- dress last night. i. mm . i Book by 11. i. P. JOhN and HAROLD S'iiRADZ~il Lyrics by 1'. A. P. JOHN Music by A. "I J. )RNE TZKY and C. S. LAWTON P'roduction Under General Direction of CHAS. S. MORGAN, JR. XANNO1"CING SE1T SALE FOR Anmual University of Muchiugan Union Opera at HILL AUDITORIUM BOXIE Sale to Union Life Members begins Friday, Feb. 25, 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. and Saturday, Feb. 26, 9-12. Sale to Union Yearly Members, Saturday, Feb. 26, 2 to 6 P. M., Monday, Feb. 28, 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. and Tuesday, Feb. 29, 9 A. M. to 12 noon. Seat Sale to general public, Wednesday, March 1, Hill Auditorium Box Office. Thereafter at the Whitney Theater up to time of performance. PRODUCED AlT WHITNEY THEATRE WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIIDAY NIGHTS SATURDAY MATINEE AND NIGHT MARCH 13, 16, 17, 1S PRICES: $2.00, $1.50, $1.00, Nhc p general HILL' AUDITORIUM T ONIGH T Wood and Admiral'Peary mommwmmm Eight o'Clock ADMISSION, FRE