jt i a u x ix 1" t ASSOCIN] AY VI- (XV. No. 48 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1924 EIGHT PAGES PRICE, . - t IfiN L PEN BANQUET FOR FOOTBALL SQUADS IORS To 0BE GIVEN FIRST OPPORTIUN ITY TIO BUY 'TiCKETS ALL MEN INVITED liange, 1lwants and Rotary lus Co-operate In Arranging Program 1 members of the Varsity football 1, the reserves and the freshman will be the guests of honor at a+ ball banquet to be given by the ). at 6 o'clock next Tuesday night, 25, in the main assembly half he Union. All men students on the pus may attend the banquet. nice 1920 the. Exchange club has California Citizens Block Los Angeles Water Supply In War Bishop, California, Nov. 17. (By A. P.)--Fifty additional citizens left to- day for Alabama waste gates, 50 miles south of here to reinforce and relieve the Owen's valley citizens who yes- terday seized that section of the Los Angeles water supply aqueduct and opened the gates divErting the waters to Owen's lake. Occupation of the intake canal of Los Angeles's water supply by citizens was indorsed and approved in a reso- lution made public today by the Cham- ber of Commerce. The resolution reviewing difficulties between the Owen's valley people and the Los Angeles aqueduct officials declared that Los Angeles had promised to submit a dependable plan for settlement of difficulties from time to time, but that its tactics were de- structive. ELEVEN CITIES TO SEE MIMESOPERA ON HOLIDAY TOU WILL APPEAR IN ANN ARBOR DURING WEEK OF DEC. ' PLAY To 28,000 j Bill Mill's Orchestra Of Flint To Play At Publications D Music for the "All-Campus Publica- replicas, in miniature, of tions Dance" to be held in the new and between the dances Masonic temple on Friday, Dec. 5, will be presented. Featu will be furnished by Bill Mill's ten- will be furnished by thec piece orchestra of Flint. This is one The Masonic temple is of the orchestras that played for the completed now, and the N J-Hop last year. ( quite spacious and the flo The dance, which will be formal, is I polished. Lighting effects a social event which was prominent ed so that any degreeo here in the years preceding the war from the dimest light and is being sponsored this year by Pi moonlight to the very bri Delta Epsilon, national honorary be had. journalistic fraternty. A limit of The committee in cha 225 couplee has been set. dance arrangements is R A number of special features are I grim, '25, chairman, Halse being planned by the committee in 1'25, Clifford Pratt, '25, an charge. The programs will be exact Kirschner, '25. )ance The Daily, short acts re numbers orchestra. just being ball room is or is highly are arrang- of intensity resembling ightest may rge of the Ronald Hal- y Davidson, d E. Arden UPHEL BYGO URT Says Congre s Has Supreme Right To Issue Emergency Orders of Preference HOLDS CAR CONTROL RENOWNED AUTHOR S'PEAKS TO IMORRO 0Wl Talked At Yale, Johns Hopkins, Smiilt College and Wellesley On Present Trip WILL DISCUSS FICTION Cast of 19th Annual Production Have Special Train on 2,0004 Mile Trip to "Tickled to Death," the 1925 Michi- gan Union Opera, will be seen in 11 cities throughout the middle west 1 3 i I the football team a banquet at Washington, Nov. 17.-(By A. P.)- only members of the Varsity Congress has the constitutional right e club were present but this.to authorize the issuance by the In- was decided to make the din- ter-state Commerce commission of en to the students and to con- t under the auspices o. the preference orders for the use of ;rail- Business men of Ann Arbor road cars in times of emergency, the -operating with the Union and supreme court held today in an s cluthe Echangclub are opinion delivered by Justice Holmes nmittee of arrangements. in a case brought by Edward T. les the banquet there.;will also Avent, Jr. of Union City, Michigan, umber of speeches by members from the federal district court at team and business men and In inment will also be furnished. Cincinnati, Ohio. That congress has nmnodations for the banquet will such power "no longer admits of dis- ited because of the size of'the pute," the court declared. )ly-all. Because of the fact that Congress did not exceed its author- ill be the last opportunity that ity the court declared, when in the s on the campus will 'have to I transportation act of 1920 it author- a football banquet they will ized the commission, whenever it is m the preference in purchasing of the opinion that shortage of equip-, cfrom 2 o'elock tomorrow to ment, congestion of traffic or other ck Thursday, after which time emergencies exist in any section of. may purchase tickets. They the country to suspend its rules as to iced at $1.50. car service and to make such reason- tickets will be placed on sale able rules with regards to it as in the main desk of the Union and it commission's opinion will best pro- necessary to show a member- mote the service in the public inter- ard to receive a ticket. ; est, and among other things to give - - directions for preference of priority mn : in the transportation or movement of 19A1EFRun TRAFFIC traffic. Declaring that an emergency which iRi AT P iHR PATIIonlIV I1required immediate - action existed Walter de la Mare, the famous Eng- lish poet and novelist, will deliver his first lecture of two which he will give at this University at 4:15 o'clock tomorrow in the science auditorium, on the subject "Atmosphere In Fic-j tion." At his second lecture which will be given Thursday at the same time and place, Mr. de la Mare will speak on "Robinson Caruso." This is the first time since 1916 that Mr. de la Mare has visited this country. It was in that year that he came to receive in Rupert Brooke's stead the Howland Memorial prize which Yale university had awarded to the latter. This year Mr. de la Mare also spoke at Yale, Johns Hop- kins, Smith college and Wellesley. Mr. de la Mare published his firstl volume of poems called. "Songs of Childhood" in 1902. This volume is now considered a rarity. His "Poems" was published in 1906. In 1910 he brought forth his novel, "The Re- turn" which 'wasawarded the first Edmond de Polignac prize. It has re- cently been republished in this coun- try. Mr. de la Mare's "Memoirs of a Midget" broughtmore fame to the author as a writer, and he was named as "one of the century's few crea- tive novelists." His latest works in selude "The Three Mulla-Mulgars," "Crossings,", "A Fairy Play" and & ti e n 2 jei ix o: Sc. 21 D C IJ; 5 h ti ID p ?T d r, t] C. n t er uring the coming Christmas vaca- on according to Homer Heath, gen- oral manager of the Union. The an-, ual trip will cover a'distance of overI ,000 miles, playing to ,a total audi-I once .of 28,000 persons in the 15 per- ormances that will be presented. ilwaukee is the only city included n this year's schedule in which an pera has not been presented. The intinerary is as follows: De- ;ember 19, Grand Rapids; December 0, Bay City; December 22, Saginaw; )ecember 23, Port Huron; December 4, Flint; December 25-29, Detroit; 'ecember 30, Toledo; December 31,1 leveland; January 1, Cincinnati; anuary 2, Milwaukee; January 3 and , Chicago. The larger cities will ave several performances, Detroit aving four and Chicago two. Ann Arbor will see the debut of he 19th annual production of Mimes+ n December 8, when "Tickled tol )eath" opens its week run of seven erformances at the Whitney theater. here will be an interim of severalI ays between the closing perfor-' nance here and the beginning of the oad trip. A special train will carry the opera cenery and personnel during its trip rsyear as in the past. it will con- ist of three sleepers and abaggage ar. The cast will makle the Pull- ians their headquarters while in :he various cities, as the cars will be, ut on sidings during the stay. Ar- mngements are being made in sev- ral cities by alumni for the enter- ainment of the company, and it is ex- ected they will be given opportuni- ies to visit the various points of in-j erest in the towns in which the Opera plays. Detroit Business Man Offers To Go Bond For Indian In response to the appeal made hrough The Daily Friday morning, Prof. H. E. Riggs of the civil engi- EINTHO YEN SPEAKS TO MEDICS TODAY University of Leyden Physiologist, Also Famous as Inventor, on Lecture Tour. AWARDED NOBEL PRIZE Prof. William Einthoven of the University of Leyden, Holland, one of the world's most famous physiolo- gists will address the faculty and students of the Medical school at 4 o'clock today at West Amphitheatre, University Hospital. Professor Ein- thoven came to this country to give a number of lectures at Bolton and was invited to visit Ann Arbor by Prof. Frank N. Wilson of the internal medicine department of the medical school. He arrived here Sunday. Professor Einthoven also has a reputation as an inventor. The string galvanometer, an instrument which has a wide use at the University Hos- pital, was one of his inventions. It is of important value in the study of the heart beat and in the diagnosis and control of the treatment of heart disease. It is a delicate affair which registers electrical currents produc- ed by the heart beat in the body. To- gether with his son he has also in- vented a galvanometer which re- cords radio signals. While in Boston he learned that he was to receive the Nobel prize in medicine for this year for his work on the physiology of the heart. Besides his lecture today, Professor Einthoven will also address the mem- bers of the physics department, Wed- nesday. .1 1 Believe Kelsey WillReach City Late This Week American Attitude Makes Impression on Delegates in Conference at Geneva DANE NAMED PRESIDENT Geneva, Nov. 17.-(By A.P.)- An American offensive launched at the very start appeared to have impressed the delegates to the international opium conference which opened at Geneva today that the United States is determined to do everything hu- manly possible to bring about results from the international gathering which has been convoked to strike another effective blow at the wgrld evil of opium and narcotic drugs. After taking preliminary steps for organization under the presideficy of Herlus Zahle, of Denmark, the con. ference adjourned until tomorrow af. ternoon. This was to meet the con-. venience of those delegates who had not yet completed their work in con- nection with the preliminary confer-j ence and who desire to frame some kind of a convention. ?a OF THREE TO P1 MISS MATTHISON GETS PR FROM GEORGE BERNARD SHAW SCENERY NOT USI Play Wais Written by C. R. Ker Who Acts Male Part in Production Edith Wynne Matthison and Ch; Rann Kennedy will present Chastening" at 8 o'clock tonig Hill auditorium. They will be a ed by Margaret Gage, the con consisting of but three players. The company has appeared thrc out the entire United States as w Canada and England. They carr scenery or lighting of any kind them. Each community in which play is expected to furnish wha setting they want. Their aim provide any community with se drama of universal appeal, don competent actors. "The Chastening" needs but scenery for it is a play which with problems which have exist long as the human race. Itis work of Mr. Kennedy who author of note, having written eral other well known plays su "The Servant in the House"' and Admiral." This piece is the fir a number which, Mr. Kennedy write for the same purpose of n wide production on 'a simple and- with a small cast. Miss Matthison is considered c the outstanding actresses of this tury, both here and abroad, she received unanimous praise such critics as George Bernard and H. M. Walbrook. Mr. Kenne as well known as an actor of as he is a playwright. The little amount of scenery I b~liVIN 1 MRVII pecial arrangements for the hand- of the traffic due to the Michi- -Iowa game here Saturday are be- made by the local police. Sixty ce officers will be on duty to pre- t traffic jams and to keep order mg the thousands which will mg Ann Arbor for the final game .he season. The local police force be increased to 25 men, and 25 :ial police are to be provided by state. Ten uniformed traffic of- rs have also been promised from ado. hief of Police Thomas J. O'Brien s all townspeople to :ars at home and thus irking problem. No leave aid in special lace for visitors to park can be pro- ided in the city, so all parking will ave to be on the streets. A number f streets including Packard and tate will be restricted, and these will .11 be plainly marked as they were or the Wisconsin game. 7up Offered Best Decorated House Charles Graham, owner of Graham's ookstore, has donated a cup to be iven to the best decorated fraternity, ouse for the Iowa game. All houses vho plan to enter this contest should otify W. T. Coleman, '26E, at his esidence, 615 Monroe or by tele- )hone, 63, not later than Friday night. Judges for the contest will be Mr. Alfred G. Pelikan. of the architectural department, WNilfred B. Shaw, '04, eeneral secretary of the Alumni as- ociation, and Mr. Bruce M. Donaldson of the fine arts department. This week's Student Council meeting, will be held in the council rooms at :he Union at 7:30 o'clock today in- stead of Wednesday. Plans for the an- nual Fall games Saturday will be out- lined. upon the railroad lines east of the "Ding Dong Bell." Mississippi river the commission, in _"_ingDogBell."_t July 1922, when the railroad shop- t men strike was in progress, issued an '" T erDQD re TO t emergency order regulating the use 11 . I L of coal cars at mines. It classified the different demands for coal; and NILL ILL provided the order in which ship-" "' nments could be made to meet them.; In th'is order the making of gas fell With the intent of organizing a into the second classification, rifle team to represent the University While the emergency order was in unit of the reserve officers' training effect Avent ordered a shipment of corps, Capt. L. M. Bricker of the mil- coal from Kentucky to Union City, itary science department, has been upon the representation that it was given charge of instruction in pre-jt Sto be used by a gas company thiere. liminary training in marksmanship. } P When the coal reached its destination: Prospective team members are now P it was diverted by Avent to the Peer- enhgaged in acquiring a knowledge of n less Portland Cement company which the proper methods of rifle handling of used it in the manufacture of cement. and sighting; actual target practice a As Portland cement was in the fifth will begin next week on the R. O. T. a classification .min the commission's C. practice range. d emergency order, Avent was indictedi for fraudulently inducing the rail- it roads to ship coal in violation of the U POESR commission's order. die pleaded gullKI S ty and was sentenced to a fine.a Later he raised the question of the TCLUB TDOAYb constitutionality of the order con- L tending that it deprived him of duec process of law, was an exercise of Prof. T. H. Reed of the political power reserved to the states, and that science department will address the it granted an illegal preference to Woman's City club of Detroit this places in one state over those in afternoon on the topic of "Paities anda another. Politics." Next Thursday afternoonv he will speak to a meeting of the 20th Century club of Detroit on "The Wo-r URICCY AlflhI~I~man's Part in Politics." SIImaProfessor Reed will also representt the faculty at the Iowa pep meeting at Hill auditorium Friday night. theCDINE An ro ulcshosl OMAN ENINER SPAKi Otto AWHaisley, superintendent of speak tonight at the Chamber of I nmn £u 15aWIT Commerce banquet which will be Uf l UON W UILILI I held at 6:15 o'clock in the ChamberC of Commerce Inn. This banquet is Dr. Lilian M. Gilbreth, consulting the first public school program of tengInDr.,ila M.k yiesth cornsingin - year to be put on by the Chamber,eorm 411 of the West Engineegin, and will be in the form of a greeting building on the "Place of Motion C to the new superintendent. Study in the Development of Manage-5 - Profs C. 0. Davis of the school of .ment." education will act as chairman. noetor Gilbreth took up the devel- veering department has received an offer from a Detroit business man to act as one of the bondsmen for the admission of Pritam Singh, East In-I dian, whose case has been before the immigration officials for some time, nto the United States. For ten months Pritam has been waiting to enter the United States as a student and now the permission has been granted by the Department of Labor, Pritam is being detained be-' cause a $1,000 bond is necessary for the first year. Professor Riggs, with whom Pritam has been corresponding has written the Secretary of Labor and is expecting a form of the bond within a few days. Although the offer received this morning is the second to be turned in Professor Riggs is of the opinion that there ought to be no difficulty in se- curing a half dozen or more Ann Ar- bor citizens who would be willing to jointly go on such a bond as surety. Union WillList Rooms For Game Word had not been received up to a late hour last night from Prof. Francais W. Kelsey of the Latin de- partment as to whether he would ar- rive in Ann Arbor today. It is the belief of his son, Easton T. Kelsey, '26, that his father will not come be- core the latter part of the week.' Professor Kelsey arrived in New ( York Monday of last week on board the Leviathan and it was reported at that time that he would arrive in Ann Arbor today. Stopping in Ann Arbor will give but a brief intermission to Professor Kelsey's travels for he will start out again either in December or January, for Rome, where he will do research work at the American Academy with the material secured byathe expedition I which he headed to Asia Minor. New York Shivers h been furnished by the Orator In Grp Of Sixty is of the simple variety and will Die sist merely of a' few flats cov M ile Gale, 2 Diewith green cloth. The company not wanteanything in the least el New York, Nov. 17.-New York 'rate for their presentation. The 1i shivered today in the coldest Nov. 17 ing effects will be equally unpre for the city in the records of the weath- tious. bureau. A 60 mile freezing blast swept "The Chastening" is being bro in from the Atlantic to put the ther. to Ann Arbor by the Oratorical mometers at 18 degrees above zero I sociation as the annual dram at 7 o'clock this morning. number of their program. Two persons, a man and a woman died as a result of the storm. Ships F fought their way into port several Final Figures hours late and wearing coats of ice I and small crafts were swept to sea Show Increas with their half frozen crew. On shore less havoc was wrought with trees In Etnroin] e and window pains. Five men were rescued at sea from an open motor boat, found by the Final registration figures until coast guard cutter Feminole. complete enrollment is issued la The heavy winds this afternoon the spring have been given out a whipped the Greek liner Edison from registrar's office and show an ine: the grip of a dozen tugs which were of 393 students over the enrollme pulling the 11,000 ton boat to a North last year. The enrollment inclu river pier and flung her on the umud the registration of summer schoo flats of the upper harbor. It was an estimate of 600 registrations thought she would be floated before ing the second semester is 12,155 night was out. Her crew of 200 was total registration for the present reported to be in no danger. sionis 9,775. The White Star liner Adriatic made The greatest decrease is notA her dock, the season's first ice covered the enrollment of the engineering boat to arrive, 11 hours overdue. Her l lege which has a registration of captain reported heavy gales which as compared to a total of 1,73 carried a member of the crew over- Nov. 1, 1923. Decreases are also r board to his death and smashed four in the Medical school, and the ph life boats. acy college. Slight gains are re The Ward Liner Monterey, from Mex- ed in the enrollment of other col ican ports, arrived several hours late. 1 and schools. The Fort St. George from Bermunda The greatest gain is reported i , due this morning, did not get in until School of Education which has a tonight. .rollment of 434 students as corn to 283 registered for the 1923 SExplosion Kills session. The figures in the lit $T IIcollege show a gain of 17 with, a Two; W recks Two [rollment of 5,542. This total i, ees the students registered in tl V Ne Jersey Ship tra-mural classes which total 78 [dents. Linden, New Jersey, Nov. 17.-Fire i,:The Law school with a total e 1 starting after an explosion on a barge ment of 528 shows an increase n of the Lambert Transportation com- over the registration of 478 las thy r n potto at this, time. The enrollment i ypan docked on Staten Island sound in the Grduatehschool show a d here tonight,caused the death of at of 34 with a total registrationc least 2 men, injuries to probably a against 542 last year. The rep ~- dozen more. The barge and a steam- the dental college shows an in ... _ 1 of l _swth a x..toal. .enro.17~ment.x 0 f_ fe T;a nnrl d ,SfA1 -A list of rooms available about the campus will be placed at the Union every afternoon this week for the use of students who wish to find accomo- dations over the week end for alumni, of friends coming here for the Iowa game. The list will be at the com- Taste Of Fros When the mercury dropped to 16.1 degrees early yesterday morning An Arbor awakened to the coldest dad which has as yet been experience( this fall. The roofs of houses an( 'the heretofore green grass of the cam pus were coated with silvery frost a nid man Winter heralded his approach o C' S t. ship from which it was taking a cargo of 10 with a total enrollment of , Reports from the other college m,.,itpA deskin the ma~in lobbyhv' ery --'-,,. ~I. HOT WAFFLE The University of Michigan was successful in an attempt to de- feat the Ohio State University in AISSUE APPLICATIONS '. FOR PROMTOMORROW' I i II 1 opment~oftmanagement and the de- afternoonffrom:2e'clock tof5a'clock The maximum temperature was Ut soUie wer Ue LeIUU- as follows: Medical sc vetopwent of science in management.,[and Saturday morning from 9 o'clock reached at 2:30 o'clock when the The first explosion occured short- against 597 last year, Nur vi ato12 'clock. It wrill asom be avila- [thermometer read 29 degrees. ly after 6 o'clock and the fire was ing school, 203, showing a ble Saturday afternoon from 1 to2 still raging fiercely at 8:30. The pharmacy college, 72 as c Few Box oeats oclock and Saturday evening from i Organize '27 Band flames quickly leaped from the barge 'Business Administration Remain For Game to 8 o'clock. For Games Today to thesteamship and then to the docks. m l__________ The only persons on the barge at enrollment of 18 for its firs the time of the explosion were its . sg next Harding W idows All sophomores on the campus who captain, Fred Myers of New York, Directories a chool, ses' 'Z gain ompar Scho repor. t yea 7y