THE MICHIGAN UILY , . Lecturer Will Speak On Need Foi Relief Of Students inOrient Ann Arbor i Contest Offers Five Thousand' hn Prie; For Essay On China Herie Is Today's In Smmriuir New Settlement for part of the shortage incurred during Emmett M. Gibb's nu isredounty clerk, to the extent of $2,000, has been approved by the _.vard of Supervisors. This sum represents bond posted for the years 1937 and 1938, and falls $903.77 short of the amount Gibb allegedly took over that period. The agreement, made with the Seaboard Surety Corp., assigns to the bonding company any claims against any other companies and individuals for that term. Negotiations are still In process with the companies which had Gibb's bonds for 1936 and 1939. Forty local school girls will / canvass down town and campus business areas from 9:30 am. to 5:0 p.m. today selling lapel pins to raise funds for the Women's Field Army of the American So- ciety for the Control of Cancer. Proceeds will help finance re- search into the causes and cure of cancer and to pay for the ex- tension of the educational cam- paign designed to eliminate fear of cancer and spread the word that most cases of cancer are eureable. Junior Mathematical Club Elects Officers Monday The Junior Mathematical Society will hold its annual election of of- ficers at the regular bi-weekly meet- ing at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Angell Hall. A discussion of cubic and quartic equations in polar coordinates by Daniel Levine and Walter Wadey will also feature the meeting. U GO OUT FOR THE O1 Aimericha lit Oient ; Closing Date Is May 15 Five-thousand dollars in cash 'priz- es has been offered in a nation-wide contest for essays written by college and university students in this coun- try on the subject, "Our Stake in the Future of China" with special empha- sis on "why it is to the interest of the United States to 'have a strong, free and independent China." Applications, which must be in the contest office in New York City by May 15, may be obtained in Room 1210, Angell Hall. Essays must be submitted by midnight, June 30. Fur- ther information on the exact details may also be obtained there or from Prof. Charles F. Remer of the eco- nomics department, who is in charge of this campus' participation in the contest. Stimulates Thought Deploring the fact that the Sino- Japanese conflict has become "back page news," the prospectus of the "China Essay -Contest" explains the contest as an attempt to stimulate thought and discussion on "one of the outstanding moral questions of the day." First prize will be $1,200 and a trip to China via "Clipper." Thirty-two other prize essays will be awarded from $50 to $750. In addition, $300 will be given for the purchase of books on Far Eastern affairs, to the insti- tution from which the winning essay is submitted, and $500 in cash prizes o the coi ege newspapers pubishmOli Judges il the essay contest will be: Dr. Roy Chapnan Andrews, Director of the American Museum of Natural History; Dr. James Rowland Angell, son of a former president of this University, president-emeritus of Yale University, now educational counselor of NBC; Pearl Buck, Mrs. William Brown Meloney, editor of "This Week Magazine"; Theodore Roosevelt, former United States High Commissioner to the Philippine Is- lands; Dr. James T. Shotwell, Bryce Professor of the History of Interna- tional Relations at Columbia; Sen. Elbert D. Thomas (Dem.-Utah); Lowell Thomas; Alexander Woollcott, and Rear Admiral H. E. Yarnell, re- cently reitred from the U.S. Navy. SuoMi Club Plans Meeting The program for a joint meeting to be held with the Scandinavian Club will be discussed by Suomi Club members in a meeting 8 p.m. today at the International Center. Plans for the organization, which is open to all students of Finnish extraction, will be made for the rest of the se- mester. Miniature cameras need special care. Buy your films i .. "I Don't Need Have pity on the forlorn burg- ler pictured above. He passed our restaurant today and the sight and smell of the delicious foods just overcame his natural- ly honest scruples. WINES Boled and Draught BEER THE FLfUTZ CAFE 122 W. Wash.-On the Corner We close every Monday. and processing at the Gach Camera Shop. 14 Nickels Arcade READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! CIGARETTE Chesterfield goes, to bat with the Definitely Milder _ Cooler- Smoking while your electric cooker PEND your afternoon shop- ping or at the theater or visiting friends . . . go for a drive in the car. When you come home at supper time, wouldn't it be pleasant to find your whole dinner waiting- perfectly cooked, warm, and ready for the table? That is exactly whot an electric cooker does for you. Cooks a whole meal at one time A roast, two vegetables, pota- toes and gravy can be cooked all at one time-or you can prepare all casserole dishes such as waterless pot roast, Boston baked beans, Irish stew, etc., to perfection. You'll be enthusiastic about electric cooking: No other method cooks with such flavor, such tenderness-even for cheaper cuts of meat. And an electric cooker is simple to use: Plug it into any convenience outlet. 1 , 2 F ) I .;., ti" ), .r. . 3 - I - -::.