LLUIUHEb ANIO Lany Prominent Speakerst In Ann Ar or for First Time Third 1917 Grid I ember Narried June Marriage of Phil Raymond to Speak Wheeling Girl Just Announced A schedule for a series of lectures Phil Raymond, ex-'18E, and star under the auspices of the Wesleyan halfback on Michigan's varsity for Guild officials for the fall semester the last two years, has surprised his has just been drawn up. Several friends with the news that he has been prominent speakers, known through- married since June. Phil is the third out the country for their oratorical of Yost's grid men of last year to an- ability, will appear in Ann Arbor for nounce his marrisige, Maulbetsch and the first time. Joe Hannish having beaten hins by George W. Coleman, Boston, Mass., a narrow margin. founder of the Ford hall meetings The bride is Miss Valta Meyers of begun in the spring of 1907 at Boston, Wheeling, Va., and is a graduate of and president of the Northern Baptist Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y., where union, will speak on October 7. she specialized in dress design. On November 4, Russell H. Conwell, seymaid in dresesign. president of the Temple university at Raymond is at resent located at Philadelphia, will probably deliver his Waukegan, Ill., having been promoted oration "Acres of Diamonds," which from the rankst. the Greata es it s etimte o aveeongsvn oernaval training station. Mrs. Raymond it is estimated to have been.. given overwilemnthrutlthMchgn 5.000 times. will remain there until the Michigan Prof. H. F. Rall to Deliver Lecture division is called into federal service, The representative of the Gernett after which she will return to her Biblical institute of Evanston, 11L, home at Wheeling, Va. Prof. H. F. Rall, will talk on Novem- ber 18. Professor Ral is one of the LECTURES ON SITUATION leading public speakers among the IN OLD BIBLE LANDS .nger men of the Methodist church. . lecture to be delivered by Bishop S. Henderson, Detroit, is scheduled December 9 in Hill Auditorium. s will constitute the Methodist con- ution to the union services given he Auditorium, under the direction the University. Bishop Henderson just returned from a tour about state in the interest of food con- vation during which time he has n a great deal of notoriety on his lectures, "Beans and Bullets," and ck the Plate and Lick the Kaiser." loman Writer Speaks on Jan. 9 [rs. J. V. Straus, Rockville, Ind., 1 speak in Ann Arbor on January Mrs. Straus is the country con-' utor to the Indianapolis News and hor of "Ideas of a Plain Country man," which regularly appears in Ladies Home Journal. he addresses, with the exception of one by Bishop Henderson, will be en in the Methodist church. OIINENT DAYTON ATTORNEY STOPS IN CITY FOR VISIT urton S. Wellman, '04L, a prom- nt attorney of Dayton, Ohio, and Wellman, '04, were in this city terday morning on their way home m an auto trip extending through ther Michigan points. Mr. Well- i was the first student employee of University printing department. (Continued from Page One) quickly depopulated by death and pestilence. During the past two win- ters thousands have died for lack of help. The millions who remained behind in Turkey, Syrian and Greek Chris- tians as well as Armenians, have far- ed even worse. Reports verified by the American consuls state that 10,000 fatherless children from Tiflis, 10.000 from Erivan, and 35,000 in Asia Minor are dying from starvation. American Committee Aids Sufferilig In the last two years the American committee has distributed to the suf- fering people of Western Asia $3.500,- 000, which has been sent to relief ce's- ters at Contantinople, Tiflis, Beirut, Tabriz, Bagdad, Cairo, Teheran and Jerusalem. At no time has there been anywhere near enough money avail- able 'as is necessary to give all those homeless women and children even one meal a day, or sufficient clothiag to protect them properly. Costs $3 a tl1onlh for Each Child American charity is the sole de- pendence of these destitute people. The cost of supporting a child is ap- proximately $3 a month. Contribu- lions can be sent to the American committee for Armenian and Syrian relief, 1 Madison Avenue, New York City. No collection will be talTen at ihis lectpre. nrnni W nnn"I\nNn America neutral, what would these cemetery and read the headstones in measures be? They would be what- order to pick out. our friends and ever commercial arrangements were identify our enemies. Dy to Germany's benefit and to the detri- In this article the purpose has been ment of her competitors. For example to show how German victory would she would compel England and France involve America and the allies in two to admit German manufactured goods common dangers. These two are'en- Editor of Adrian Telegram in Second free, or at low duties, thereby pre- eral dangers, common to all neutral Article Tells of hangers of venting any competing industries from nations as well as to Germany's ac- Hun Supremacy springing up in the conquered lands tive enemies. The next article will At the same time she would erect tariff take up another class of dangers- AMERICAN ALLIES BOUND BY walls at her own boundaries against special dangers peculiar to America, FOUR COMMON INTERESTS any foreign goods that might seek to which the allied powers either do not enter German markets in competition share at all or which involve them German Efficiency and Aggression with German manufacturers. only indirectly or to a small extent. Will Spread to All Countries, Trade and Power One Says Editor In these days foreign trade and po- U. S. Orders 1,000,000 Pounds of Wool litical power go together. The na- The United States government has This is the second of the series of tion that is dominant politically ca T eent deStdte,0goernmentnds articles by Stuart H. Perry, editor-of compel weaker countries to grant all recently ordered 1,000,000 pounds of the Adrian Telegram, which were first sorts of commercial and financial fa- wool to be me info sweaters for the printed in the Telegram and in the vors-to let in its goods by low tariffs, soldiers. It will probably be distrib- Detroit Free Press. to keep out competing goods by high uted among edross groups through- tariffs, to let valuable contracts, to out the country for knitting. I-Common Dangers grant franchises and concessions, etc. In the last issue it was explained It Germany became the world's chief Professor Rood's Course Completed how America and the allies are bound political power, Germany would thus Prof. J. R. Rood's classes in mor- together by four important common dictate the world's trade and finance. tuary and probate law completed the interests-the maintenance of free Indeed the former is Germany's real regular summer session courses this government against military despot- end-the latter only the means. afternoon. ism; the preservation of the political Today's Dangers Count freedom of nations; the preservation It is the interests and dangers of of commercial opportunities; and the today that count-not those of the last j C H OP $VZ Y maintenance of the existing status of century. Our enemy is the nation that Open Buing Summer School British and American territory in and can and may strike us, our friend is ii1A.M. o 1 P.M. near North America which a German the nation that can and ill fight on P MICHIGAN INN IpPhone 945R61E l~t t victory would disturb. Today the ques- our side. We must not go to the6 E e tion of common dangers will be con- sidered. Just as common interests draw na- tions together, common dangers force them together. There are two common dangers that confront both the allies and the United Summer School Supplies States, in the event of a German vic- and Books Now Ready tory. The one is political, the other commercial. Political Danger 1. The political danger. This dan- ger is so apparent that it hardly needs Go LY N D O N 'S , 719 N. University Ave. to be called by name. Germany is the most highly organized and ef- ficient nation in the world. It also is Eastman Kodaks a Eastman Films the most aggressive, the most am- - -i - bitious, and the least bound by pre- cedent of any kind. Moreover, it is Enlargements from your Negatives a Specialty the most warlike nation since ancient Rome, and the most skilfull in the I have led while others followed in amateur finishing for twelve arts of war. Upon this foundation ye s. Now we are still leading. We guarantee perfect results stands a superstructure of militarism or no charge. We give you "Peace Time Results" as we have and autocracy-a caste of nobility and a plenty of Metol (which we could sell at $50.oo per lb.) and professional soldiers, closely allied we venture to say that no other firm is using Metol for finishing. with the nation's money power, and led by one of the ablest, most daring If you want the best results you will bring your films here. and most ambitious monarchs that Two doorsfN 'S7North ever sat upon a throne. Suppose the ll Auditorium Unversity Avenue combination wins, and the rest of the world loses; what may we expect? First: Germany's present enemies will be left incapable of crossing her path again. France will be crushed, D etroit her army disbanded her richest terri- tory taken away, and a financial pen- to alty imposed which will break her Put-in-Bay - Cedar Point back forever. England's fleet will be seized, her financial power permanent- Clevelan d - Sand usky ly crippled, and her empire broken up and distributed as the spoils of war. Day-ght Across theLake Italy vill be left helpless and bank- rupt. Russia to Remain One great nation will remain in eastern Europe, , too big to be de- stroyed-Russia. But Germany will do something better than to destroy \ rt o , her. Germany will set the Russian autocrack back in power. Then the Trm kaiser and the czar will work hand-in- glove. Russia's natural resources and man-power, coupled with Germany's asa - - technical skill, and both dominated by Every Day Excursions to Put-fn-Bay sympathetic despotisms, will dipose Round Trip Fare Round Trip , of all problems on this planet. Japan Some dsy 7undaysoreDa 1 00 will work in perfect harmony. Cedar Point Excursicns $125 Round Commercial Danger Sunday,.Monday, Wednesday and Friday .12-5 Trip 2. The commercial danger. 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State St. A GOO DSTRONG BANK WITH EVERY BANKING NEED The New Catalogue, of the Ilivorsity of ichigall IS NOW READY Complete information concerning the eight Colleges and Schools: LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND 'THE ARTS, EN- GINEERING, MEDICINE, LAW, PIIARMACY, HOMEOPATHY, DENTISTRY, GRADUATE, AND TIE SUMMER SESSION Special Courses in Forestry, Newspaper Work, Land~ scape Design, Higher Commercial Education including Railway Administration and Insurance, Architecture, Conservation Engineering, Education (affiliated with Ann Arbor Schoolsfor Observation Study), and a Course for those preparing for the scientific administra- tion of departments of sanitation and public health. For Copy of Catalogue, Special Announcement, or Individual Information, address The Dean of the School or College in which interested, or SHIRLEY W.. SMITH