THE WEATHERI RAIN AND COOLER TODAY I_______________________________________________ tri 'an til ASSOCIATEDI PRESS DAY AND NIGHT WIRE SERTICE VOL. XXIX. No. 79. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1919. PRICE THREE CENTS PEACE CONGRESS OPENS ITSDORS THIS AFTERNOON STAGE SET FOR GREAT FORMAL OPENING OF WORLD CON= FERENCE DELEGATES REPRESENT ALL PARTS OF GLOBE President Poincare to Deliver F Address; to Speak on Recon.- struction Work (By Associated Press) Paris, Jan. 17.-The scene is for the opening of the peace gress at 3 o'clock Saturday a noon with the impressive ceren befitting such an eventful occas The final details were concluded night at the meeting of the supr council, which completed its le and adjourned for the inaugura of the larger body tomorrow. The secretariat of the cong during the evening completed the ficial list of the delegates. It inclh a distinguished array of leading l lic figures from every section of civilized globe, and in personnel in the interests represented it braces one of the most notable g erings of statesmen the world ever seen. Opening to Be Ceremonial Affa The final preparations were cluded- today in the beautiful de la Paix at the foreign o Swhere the ,ongress will meet, the green table now awaits guests. The opening tomorrow the congress will be the ceremo function, the readers making t first bows,- the delegates exchang salitationsl and the Republic g in gorgeous uniform lending col the scene. Poincare to Deliver Address When the delegates are insta around the great horseshoe table, F mond Poincare, president of Fra will make his entry into the hall take his place in the presiding cer's chair at the head of the to The opening address of M. P care will sound the glories of the just won and tell of the moment work of reconstruction entrusted 'the congress. PADEREWSKI FORMS NEW POLE CABINI (By Associated Press) Warsaw, Jan. 16. (delayed).-Ig Paderewski has reached an ag ment with General Pilsudski and succeeded partly in forming a Polish cabinet. General Pilsui will be foreign minster under Pe rewski as premier which will per General Pilsudski to return much his power. The new cabinet is ject to approval of German Pol It will continue in office until e tions are held within the next f night. Amsterdam, 'Jan.. 17.-The Et government has under advisemen draft of a constitution for Germ prepared by a Professor Preuse, Berlin, and has agreed to the fur mentals of the proposed constitut The federal character of Germ will be maintained and the cour will be composed of a number of : eral states. At the head of the government i be president elected for 10 years R a government composed of a cl cellor and his ministers. There be a national chamber "volksha elected by all the people, and a eral chamber "statenhaus" elected the national representatives and federal states. Redkin Gives I. W. Ws. Long Te Sacramento, Jan. 17. - Senten ranging from one to 10 years' prisonment were imposed by Ju S. H. Redkin, of Spokane, on 43 the 46 defendants convicted in I. W. W. anti-war conspiracies. Sentence on Miss Theodora F lock, Basile Sassores, A. L. Fax, only three defendants represented an attorney, was held up by th counsel, who said a motion for a r GIFTED ORGANIST APPEARS TONIGHT Ann Arbor is the envy of many Am- erican cities that have been unable to secure bookings with Joseph Bonnet, the French organist, who plays at 8 o'clock this evening in Hill auditor- ium. Aided by a remarkable memory he plays without score works by Men- delssohn, Brahms, and Liszt. During 1910-11 Bonnet gave forty recitals at St. Eustace, no single number being played more than once. These were the means of inaugurating in Paris a great popular movement in favor of organ music. Le Canada Musical says of Bonnet: "Bonnet possesses the art of rhythm in the highest sense. Above all he has magnetism which impresses his hearers with his artistic conception." '19Man, Released by Huns, in N. Y. Lieut. Paul W. Eaton, ex-'19, ar- rived in New York Thursday, on board the British steamer Belgic, aft- er having been a prisoner in Ger- many for seven months. He was wounded at Ypres last April when a machine gun bullet wet through his lungs as he was flying at a height of 4,000 feet. He fell back of the Ger- and man lines and was made prisoner. em- Some light on Eaton's state of mind ash- at the time of the signing of the arm- has istice is given in the following ex- cerpts from a letter dated Nov. 12, at dr Villingen, Baden, Germany, and re- con- cently received in Ann Arbor: hall "I am writing this from the Gefan- iffice genenlager. It is hard to realize that and I am at last free. No more guards, its no more roll calls, no more German of soup, and no more "no more's." Man! 'nial The end of this week completes for heir .me a seven months' period as a pris- ging oner of war, and that is a long, long card time, I assure you, especially in such r to. a god-forsaken country as this. I must tell you tlytt I've taken that "wonderful," "exquisite" trip "along iled the Rhine" that so many go into ecst- ay- asy over, but if you ever have the nce, travelling fever, go to Yellowstone and park! This "seeing the world" idea offi- is' like charity-it should begin at ible. home. oin- "I suppose you have heard from Bill war Casgrain. He is up in Prussia some- tous where. I to "My position as a silent watcher of the internal situation in Germany has been an 'interesting one. For a couple of days here, history was being made so fast it was practically im- possible to figure out just how it was all going to end. I pity the school kids of the next generation. "Am enclosing picture of Dr. Wil- nate liam H. Gordon, '15M, Johnson D. ree- Kenyon, '17A, and myself-the Uni- has versity of Michigan's representatives new in the American officers' prison camp dski at Villingen, Baden, Germany.' ade- An interesting feature of the picture mit is that it contradicts a recent report of to the effect that Dr. Gordon had one sub- of his hands cut off by his Teuton and. captors. The photograph shows Dr. lec- Gordon in possession of both mem- ort- bers. Eaton also states that he is com- ing back to school, and It is thought Bert probable that lie will return next sem- t a ester. WAR NOT DYER UNTIL PEACE TERMS SIGNED MISS FRASER SAYS LARGE RE. CONSTRUCTION PROBLEMS ARISE "The war is not over till peace terms are sealed and signed," said Miss Helen Fraser in her lecture Fri- day evening in the Natural Science lecture room. "There is too much inclination to regard the war as done, and we do need to realize that the practical task of finishing the work properly remains." Miss Fraser then told of the attitude of the English on the League of Na- tions. The mass of the people there feel strongly on the League of Na- tions. They are not willing to go back to the conditions prior to the war, but want the nations so leagued together that such catastrophies as the one just past cannot be repeated. They do not want the enemy in the League of Nations until he is truly penitent, she made plain. Don't Pity Wounded "Concerning the. practical problems of reconstruction," she went on, J"we must first face the problems of our men still in need of help. When the army is in occupation of foreign ter- ritory, it needs 'these things even more. But when they come home dis- abled, the right way is not to pet them, to pity them, not to talk to them or of them as broken for life, but to show that' we believe they are still fit for life work. "The rebuilding of shattered France and parts of Belgium is another pro- blem that confronts us in reconstruc- tion," she stated. "No man should pass judgment on the terms of the armistice unless he has seen the deso- lation caused by the war. The work of restoring the north of France will take about five million hours of work, and the German prisoners should be made to work on the shattered por- tions and help to retore it.. The peo-. ple of France want to go back to the devastated land, but the very roads must be built first, and other things to make it even habitable." World Needs Justice She gave a new and different con- ception of the duty of the Allies to- ward the people, and said that the workers must be people who can bring into the life of democracy, art, music, and all splendid things, as well as more perfect labor legisla- tion. "We want a full life for every- body, to touch all sides of life, a wider and 'greater vision." In quoting from a poem written by an Englishman recently, she said, "Our men died for a dream, the great- est of all on earth. The task of re- construction is to make this vision real for which men have died. Our duty is not to forget the suffering and the war and all it means, but to answer the riddle of the universe bet- ter than any other civilization,' the riddle which asks, 'are we going to serve justice 'to the world?'" 9 BRITISH VESSELS OFFERED TO TRANSPORT U. S. SOLDIERS New York, Jan. 17.-Nine British vessels with a total carrying capacity of 27,750 men have been placed at the disposal of the Ameican government for the transportation of troops home, it was announced here by the British ministry of shipping. Sailing dates from Brest were given as Jan. 16, 19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 31 and Feb. 1. In addition the Olympic, Mauretania and Aquitania, three of the largest Brit- ish troops ships, will bring additional American troops home in Februa'ry. The Swedish American line an- nounced today that their steamship Stockholm will leave Gothenburg about Jan. 18 and will call at Brest to embark American troops for New York. CONGREGATION OF 29 REFUSES $1,000,000 FOR ITS CEMETERY Fort Worth, Tex., Jan. 17. - The Merriman Baptist church, of Ranger, which already has acquired an income of $200,000 a year through oil wells in its churchyard, has refused $1,000,- 000 for the right to develop wells in the graveyard which adjoins the church. Numerous companies have made the congregation, which has only 29 members, fabulous offers for the bury- ing ground. IOSHEYIM DESIRE PEACE WITH ENTENTE FRENCH GENERAL ASSUMES THE XOMMAND OF ENTIRE SIBERIAN FRONT (By Associated Press) Copenhagen, Jan. 17. - Maxim Litvinoff, the former Bolshevik am- bassador at London, has sent a note to the President declaring that the Bolshevik government of Russia is prepared to cease its world propa- ganda if the Allies will agree to en- ter into peace negotiations with It, according to the Social Demokratem. Omsk, Jan. 16 (delayed) .-United of command on the Siberian front has been arranged and the French General Jules Jannin, who has been commander of the Czecho-Slovak army, will be supreme commander of the Allied forces in Russia. General Knox, chief of the British military mission, is occupied in the task of electing a representative commission to study and formulate a 'plan for the election of a national assembly. Workmen's co-operative organiza- tions of Omsk and elsewhere have proclaimed their support of the new government. The government is ac- tively negotiating with the powers for recognition and also for partici- pation in the peace conference. REGULATION BY GOVERNMENT OF COAL PRICES STOPS FEB. 1 (By Associated Press) Washington, Jan. 17. - Zone and price regulations on coke and all coal, except Pennsylvania anthracite, were suspended by the Fuel Administration today, effective Feb. 1. Suspension of the price regula- tions includes provisions touching purchasing agents' commissions and wholesale and retail margins. No- tice is given that the suspension is subject to reinstatement if price, labor, production or other condi- tions that arise require. SIX TRANSPORTS ON WAY TO U. S. WITH MANY MEN Washington, Jan. 17. - The trans- port Melita, bringing 300 officers and 1,300 men from France will arrive at Boston Jan. 21 and the transport Or- izaba, with 100 officers and 2,600 men, is due at New York Jan. 23. Other transports now on the way from France are: The Frances L. Skin- ner, due at New York Jan. 30; the Federal, due at Newport News Jan. 26; the Calamare, due at New York Jan. 24, and the Monticello, due at Newport News Jan. 27. INDICATIONS OF BIG FEMALE VOTE AT APRIL ELECTIONS About 200 women have registered for the spring primaries at the city clerk's office to date. Should they con- tinue as they have during the last few days it i sthought that a large per- centage of the city's fair sex will be at the polls in April. Women may register any time between now and Feb. 15 with the city clerk and at the polls at election time. British Tighten Laws of Sinn Feiners Dublin, Jan. 17.-The government, it is reported here, is about to is- si a proclamation tightening the laws against the Sinn-Feiners. Once a proclamation suppressing a Sinn- Fein is issued it becomes a crime to one belonging to the organization and the government can send him to jail. The Sinn-Fein intend to summon its own parliament and has already held two preliminary meetings. The members are looked upon as mem- bers of the Irish Republic Assembly. '94 Man, Research Authority, Dies Mr. Samuel D. Magers, '94, profes- sor of biology at the Northern State Normal, Marquette, MichigEgn, died of pneumonia on Jan. 16 at Marquette. The burial will take place Jan. 18 in Ypsilanti. Mr. Magers is the brother-in-law of Mrs. 0. B. Conart, of this city. He formerly taught at Ypsilanti and was pan authority on scientific research. Yale Receives Gift of $15,000,400 Yale has received the third largest bequest in the history of American universities. It is for $15,000,000 giv- en by John W. Sterling. PEACE CENSORSHIP NUISANCE--SCOTT "Censorship is a necessary evil in times of war," said Prof. Fred N. Scott of the Rhetoric department, when ask- ed for his ideas upon the subject of censorship of the Peace Conference. "Even then it should be in the hands of experts in publicity. In times of peace, however, such as we now en- joy, all forms of censorship are sim- ply a nuisance and should be abol- ished," he added. "All news from the other side has been so suppressed that people on this side are growing rest- less. As a democratic nation, they feel that they ought to know exactly what our government is doing in the Peace Conference." Professor Scott feels that the news- papers can be trusted not to print any unwise statements. He concludes, "Experience has shown that the news- papers, if put upon their honor, will censor themselves effectively. 19191-Hop Date Set For April 4 The J-Hop will be held Friday, April 4. Waterman gymnasium, as usual, will be the scene. The Hop will equal in every way the affairs of former years, even outdo them if possible, according to the Hop committee. The date was not decid- ed upon without discussion, but it was necessary that it be set' for some ime during spring vacation, and it seemed bette to fix it for the fist part, rath- er than to attempt to bring students back to school early. That the committee means to go to work in earnest was evidenced by the plans for a better Hop than ever brought up in the first meeting. That old question of distribution of tickets will be taken into account and han- dled efficiently. While no permanent committees were appointed provision has been made to have every detail thoroughly taken care of. The ques- tion has been raised by a few as to whether the Hop is to be formal. The point was brought up in the meeting, with the unanimous decision that it would be. The men working on the Hop are as follows Karl Velde, chairman; Perrin, Nash, Landis-Lits; Harbert, Hogan, Tracy, Engineers; Ware, Architect; Lazely, Homeopath; Vorys, Dent; Struckman, law, and Halberig, Pharmic. No Medic attended the meeting, and it is not known whether they have elected a man. Th next meeting of the committee will be held in the new Union build- ing, at 7 o'clock Monday evening. PROFESSOR BRIER RESIGNS POSITION Prof. J. C. Brier, of the chemical de- partment, has sent in his resignatic from the University. He will leave in February to take a position with the Howland Aniline company, at Holland, Mich. He will act in an ex- ecutive position, supervising the fac- tory and laboratories. This company specializes in sulphur dye stuffs. Professor Brier has been connected with the University for over a year and a half, and his resignation will be passed upon at the next meeting of the Board of Regents. BRUMM EXPOUNDS LIFE IDEALS TO STUDENT MISSIONARIES Prof. John R. Brumm address- ed the missionary volunteer student band last night in Lane hall. The speaker told the society of the high ideals which come into every man's life, saying that when one receives that call to the larger life, he should answer it and thereby benefit the whole world. Professor Brumm praised the so- ciety, which is a branch of the na- tional organization headed by Mr. John R. Mott. Its work is to furnish voluntary student missionaries to any part of the world where their work may be needed. County Treasurer Prepares Sale Book The county. treasurer is now at work on the tax sale book, an an- nual catalogue of property to be put on sale because of non-payment of tax- es. The book contains information on about 200 pieces of land which have been taken over this year. FOCH PACES NEWO BOCHE BOUNDARY ON HINE RIYERi ALLIES PLAN NO RENEWAL OF HOSTILITIES ON GERMAN GOVERNMENT . SOLDIERS "SUPERB," SAYS GENERALISSIMO Change of Frontier Protects Civiliza. tion; Marshal Lauds Help of America (By Associated Press) Paris, Jan. 15 (delayed).-It is the conviction of Marshal Foch that the Rhine is to be made the barrier be- tween Germany and France. He ex- pressed this clearly today when he received an American newspaper cor- respondent. The marshal is here in connection with the meeting concern- ing the extension of the German arm- istice. Marshal Foch pointed out the diffi- culty that had been overcome and said that peace must be commensurate with the price of victory. Germany now was beaten, but with resources especially in men, recuperation in a comparatively short time was quite possible. It was no ti$e duty of the Allies to prevent further aggressions. Foch Praises U. S. Troops Marshal Foch praises the work of the American troops and said that Generol Pershing had asked that the American forces be concentrated for an attack on one sector. The Allied generalissimo admitted that the Ar- gonne and Meuse front, where the Americans began their offensive on Sept. 26, was a "sector hard to tac- kle." The marshal said he had told General Pershing: "Your men have the double dev- ils' own punch. , They will get away with all that. Go to it." "The American attack succeeded," the marshal continued, "and here we are on the Rhine." Armistice Not Concluded Too Soon The armistice was not concluded too soon and the Allies got all'they asked for from Germany without continuing the fighting. The Allies, the marshal said, were prepared for another offensive which would have forced the Germans to give up. This was to have been made in Lorraine on Nov. 14, with 6 American and .20 French divisions. "This is, for me," Marshal Foch said, "a happy opportunity to say all of the good things I think of the American army and of the part it played on our side. Your soldiers were superb. They came to us young, enthusiastic and carried forward a vigorous idealism and they marched to battle with admiral gallantry. Yankees Were "Superb" "Yes, they were superb. There was no other word. When they appear- ed our armies were, as you know, fatigued of three years of relentless struggle, and the mantel of war- laid heavily upon them. "The youth of the United States brought a renewal of the. hope that hastened victory. Not only was this moral effect of the highest importance, but you also brought enormous mate- rial aid and the wealth which you placed at our disposal, contributed to the final success. Nobody among us will ever forget what America did.'' Germans Gave Their All Marshal Foch was asked by the cor- respondent: "But was not the armistice heed- ed too soon?" "It was not possible to do 'other- wise," answered the marshal, "be- cause the Germans gave them every- thing that we asked for at once. They satisfied our conditions. It was dif- ficult to ask more. The Germans were lost. They capitulated. There is the whole story. Guarantee Against Future Wars "And now we must make a peace which will correspond with the mag- nitude of our victory. We must have a peace as absolute as was our suc- cess and which will guard us against all future aggressions. "France has a right to effective measures of protection after the for- midable efforts she put forth to save civilization. The natural frontier which will protect civilization is the (Continued on Page Six) SOPH LITS TO ORGANIZE CLASS NEXT MONDAY SURE To elect a president and appoint a committee which will'confer on the soph prom with those committees al- ready appointed by the sophomore, class of the other colleges, a special meeting of the soph lits has been call- ed by Vice-president Alice E. Beck- ham, for 4 o'clock Monday in Univer- sity hall. STERETEE CALLS MEETING OF FRESHMAN LIT CLASS President Frank Steketee has call- ed a meeting of the fresh lits for 4 o'clock Tuesday in University hill. Puans will be discussed for class as- sessments and a committee to ar- range a frosh frolic will be appoint- ed. Dean John R. Effinger will ad- dress the meeting Classes in economic' at the Univer- sity of Kansas are over-crowded this year. An unusually large number of women have enrolled in commercial