4ICHIGAN EXPECTS EVERY MAN TO E J k 11 DUT I Air :43 at ASSOCIATI PRESS DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE L Ui1LE [GiT No. 18. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1917. PRICE THREE CEN' INMACHINERY OF SELECTIVE DRAFT JAN WILL DO AWAY WITH CO-L PLICATIONS OF OLD SYSTEM ETAILS OF SCHEME BEING WORKED OUT ,lieved That Next Call to Colors Will Not Come Before First of Year Washington, Oct. 20.-A sweeping ange in the machinery of the selec- re draft based on division of the 00,000 remaining registrants into e classes in order of their eligib- ty for military service, was an- rinced today by Provost Marshal neral Crowder. Details of the plan, which have been proved by President Wilson, are not iclosed. It is believed it will do ay with all the complicated ma- inery of the first army call. Plan Worked Out The plan was worked out at con- rences with local and district board icials. Its chief features are that ery registered man will know his act position and be able to arrange $ affairs. - No man necessary in any industry or eded at home to support his family .11 be called to the colors unless the litary situation is desperate. De- Lled regulations to govern the new stem are being made for distribu- 5n. Issues Formal Statement General Crowder has issued a for- a statement in ":er that the ards may familiar e themselves th the new regulations. As the next 11 to the colors is to be made under e new plan, it is believed that the cond call will not come before the st of the yea.'. s Announces Plans Following is the announcement of ovost Marshal General Crowder: "With the completion of the draft the first army of 687,000 men, a m system will be installed for the eation of the succeeding army. "Along with the reduction of labor, ere will be provided a system which di classify each one of the nine mil- m men who have not been inducted to military service. Each man will given his place in the kiational hene of defense. . "The method of obtaining this in- rmation is through a questionnaire. is document will be mailed to every an not yet in service, seven days be- g given to complete and return me. "The local boards will examine each Ltement and assign each man to his as. 'The new system fixes a man's class A calls him in his proper turn." GAME CONSUMERS FOR PRESENT kY SUGAR SHORTAGE IN NORTH Washington, Oct. 20.-Blame for the wsent day sugar shortage north of vannah and east of Pittsburg is ced on consumers and on manu- Aurers of candies by the food ad- nistration. En a statement today, the food ad- nistration said that if its request r the curtailment of the use of sugar d been heeded, present conditions uld not exist and it again warned e people to economize. Columbia Protests Hun's Warfare Washington, Oct. 20.-The Colomb- L senate has ' passed - a resolution ainst Germany's ruthless submarine Lrfare, the state department was ad- ed today. Officials regard the action the Colombian senate as signifying e development of a better feeling ' this country and the Allies. W Finds Guilty in Indian Revolt Chicago, Oct. 20.-Gustav Jacobson d three co-defendants were found' ilty tonight of conspiring to foment revolution in India. The defend- ts were also found guilty of violat- g the neutrality of the United States. Mass Tech Has Large Fresh Class The largest freshman class in the aitov of thA niversity has complet- MICHIGAN MEN TO RECEIVE THE DAILY HUN DESTROYERS rTORPEDO 9 SHIPS Board in Control Passes Resolutions to Send Copies to Camps Michigan men in the different train- ing camps and in several of the am- bulance units will have their desire for University news satisfied when the srecent action passed by the Board in Control of Student Publications goes into effect. At a meeting, of the board several days ago a resolution was adopted to the. effect that a certain number of each issue of The Daily be sent to the training camps and ambulance units. The exact number and where they will be sent has not as yet been determined. 4 ORDESTACCNATION TO' STOP SMllPOX SPREAD STUDENTS ASKED TO APPEAR BEFORE UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICE Dr. Harold Forsythe of the Univer- sity health service has ordered all students who have patronized the down town barber shop of Fred Stock- ing, opposite the D. U. R. waiting room, since the University opened, to appear Monday morning for vaccina- .tion at the health service to prevent the possible spread of an epidemic of small pox.4 According to Dr. J. A. Wessinger, city health officer, the case of Harry Hey er, 524 Hill street, a barber em- ployed at the Stocking shop, who was taken to the University hospital Sat- urday, is not serious, but he deems it advisable for t11 who have been in the barber shop and those who have never been vaccinated to be at once as the exposure may have been exten- sive. "Students are often careless, and I thought that it would be the best plan to take all precautions to prevent a spreadof thedisease,"said Dr. Wess- inger. IMPURE MILK KILLS THOUSANDS YEARLY Children and Infants Suffer Through Carelessness of Dealers Lansing, Oct. 20.-That contam- inated milk slays thousands yearly, was the assertion of Henry L. Oakley, assistant secretary of the Michigan board of health today. "We laugh at the ostrich hiding its head when in danger, yet that is the human trait in regard to milk," says Oakley. "When the danger is not vis- ible to the naked eye, we shrug our shoulders-and let the children and invalids suffer. Customers should visit the place where their milk is bottled and investigate the sanitary condi- tions surrounding the dairy. The state board of health is informed that in some cities the old habit of carrying milk in a large can and filling the bot- tles enroute is still in vogue. City ordinances should prohibit this and if there is such an ordinance, the health ot a community demands that it be enforced. Do not wait for the calam- ity to come before you start your cam- paign against impure milk. While many children become infected with tuberculosis from milk of tuberculous cows, many more are killed by dirty milk from healthy cows. Ordinary germs getting into good milk render it poisonous and milk of this kind slays thousands every year. Badly contam- inated milk or -dirty milk is highly actiye poison and is the greatest fac- tor in the high mortality of infants." FRATERNITIES MAY INITIATE NOW WITHOUT RESTRICTION Campus' fraternities may now in- itiate their pledgees immediately, ac- cording to a resolution passed yester- day by the senate committee on stu- dent affairs after a formal request of the inter-fraternity conference. The resolution passed by the committee is as follows: "Resolved, That in view of the .pe- culiar situation -created by the war, the rule restricting initiation into fra- ternities to students having earned 11 hours credit of at least C grade, earned in one semester, be waived for Sea Tragedy Costs British Two Destroyers and 9 Transports 135 Lives,) of 12 GERMAN CRUISERS BREAK UP BRITISH CONVOY IN NORTH SEA Enemy Air Attack Meets Five Zeppeins Brought by French Guns Reverses; Down (By Associated Press) Germany scored on the water in Saturday's news developments, which recorded the breaking up of a mer- chant convoy in the North Sea by raid- ing cruisers that sank two British de- stroyers and 9 of 12 convoyed ships. The enemy suffered little less than a disaster in the air, however, when four and probably five Zeppelin air- ships, believed to be returning from a raid on England, were brought down in France. The sea tragedy cost the British 135 lives. The men on the destroyers were left to their fate by the German raiders. About 100 of the merchant sailors are known to have reached the shore in boats. The story of Germany's reverses in the air began with the account of the raid on England Friday night in which the bombs the Zeppelins dropped killed 27 persons and injured 53 others. Reports soon began to be received, however, of Zeppelins brought down in France. If, as appears from the dispatches, these were the airships which raided England, their struggle to get over to German territory was a long and des- perate one. The situation of the Russian fleet, which was caught by the Germans in the Gulf of Riga, is serious. The Ger- mans have placed mines in the gulf to blockade the exit of the Russians. On the western fighting front the artillery battles are continuing. STUDENTS A 51.1000U TO LIBERTY LOAN QUOTA LOAN DRIVE FAILS TO MEET ESTIMATE Progress of Campaign Falls Below Totals Expected by Of- a Scials Washington, Oct. 20.-The Liberty loan campaign today progressed to the threshold of official expectation and paused. Treasury officials had hoped the two-billion-dollar line would be crossed. Apparently the total stopped just short of the mark with an estimated report of $1,983,000,000. The result means that the sum of $500,000,000 a day must be subscribed every day of the week of the cam- paign with a few millions to spare if the five-billion-dollar goal is reached when subscription books close next Saturday night. Detroit went over her .maximum quota of $43,000,000 today, taking first honors for a major league city. Ef- forts are now being made to reach $60,000,000. I We HOAG TO SPEAK AT FIRTNON SERYCE ANN ARBOR BAPTIST CHURCH IN CHARGE; SIX OTHER CHURCHES JOIN *. s * * * * * * * * * * * * MICHIGAN AVENGES PAS EET ARMERELEVEN INTO CA9 SUIDURY Michigan.........6 0 Aggies.......... 0 0 7 0- 14-27 0- 0 * * * * .* * * I -1 Michigan M. A. C. Goetz.........L.E....... Ramsey Goodsell........L.T..... Corryell Boyd ..........L.G........ Leffler Lambert........ C......... Archer Culver ........R.G....... Bailey Weske........ R.T........Frouson Cartwright .R.E......Bassett Weston......Q........Kellog Cohn....... L....... .Oas Genebach. R.H.......Turner Wieman.:.... . F.B...... Hammes Touchdowns-Wieman 3, West- on. Goals from touchdowns-Wie- man 3. Substitutions - Froemke for Genebach, Cress for Goetz, Hen- dershott for Cress, Cruse for Rye, Barnard for Cruse, Wellford for Barnard, Weaddock for Wellford, St. Clair for Cartwright,. Hanish for St. Clair, Fortune for Culver, Rye for Cohn. M. A. C.-McCool' for Oas, Miller for Bailey. Officials-Haines, Yale, referee; Holderness, Lehigh, umpire; Ken- nedy, Chicago, head linesman. * * * * * ,* * ,* A. C. FAILS TO MAKE FIRST DOWN IN CON- TEST John Wellington Hoag, pastor of the * Woodward Baptist church of Detroit, will be the speaker tonight at the first Sunday evening Union services of the , year. The meeting will be held at * CHINESE CLUB, COMPOSED OF MEN, PLEDGE $2,500 TO FUND - 261 Michigan students bought $10,600 worth of the second Liberty loan bond issue from Friday noon to Saturday noon, according to the committee Sat- urday night. The Chinese club, composed of 26 members, has pledged $2,500. (Continued on Page Six) Be- * * * * * * * * * * * * * DO YOU KNOW THAT- - * * * * Liberty bonds are as strong as * Gibraltar. +* We must finance our men who are fighting in France. Bond houses and banks handle * Liberty bonds as readily as cash. * Liberty bonds, up to the value * of $5,000 are exempt from every * kind of tax. The United States has pever * repudiated its debts; Liberty * bonds are an indebtedness of the * nation.* "Money makes the wheels go round." Without cash neither commerce * nor war can be carried on. 'hat * is why the United States govern- * ment is floating a second Liberty * bond issue. * There are two ways by which a * government can raise money to * conduct its business-by taxation * and by bonds. When taxes are levied every * man must pay whether he can af- * ford to or not; when bonds are * sold each man may invest only the * amount he can afford. * Failure of the people to rally * to the government with their sur- * plus wealth in this time of need * may necessitate imposing of war * taxes spread over the entire popu- lation of the nation. * Rally to your government and * give the enemy a knockout with * an oversubscription to the $3,000,- * 000,000 asked. * * * * ** ** * *1 7:30 o'clock in Hill auditorium, and six Ann Arbor churches and the Un- iversity Y. M. C. A. wil take part, with 'the Baptist church in charge. The Reverend Hoag has been col- lege preacher at Amherst college and at the University of Chicago, and for five years was pastor of the Calvary Baptist church, New Haven, Conn. He gave the convention sermon at the Baptist state convention ,and is now pastor of the largest White Baptist church in Michigan. Ministers of the churches will sit on the platform and Professor Leroy Waterman will preside. The Scripture will be read by the Reverend Henry Tatlock and Dr. Thomas Iden will of- fer the prayer. There will be a solo by Irving Miller, of the Sohool of Music, and the Reverend N. C. Fetter will lead the singing with Mr. Frank Tabor at the organ. Football Results Camp Custer officers, 7; United States naval training station, 0. University of Detroit, 26; Kalamazoo college, 0. Detroit Central high, 20; Toledo Scott high, 12. Northeastern high, 14; Wyandotte high, 7. Northwestern high, 66; Michigan School for Deaf, 0. Saginaw high, 21; Owosso, 0. Arthur Hill, 17; Alma high, 0. Nebraska, 7; Notre Dame, 0. Case, 9; Baldwin Wallace, 0. Minnesota, 33; Indiana, 9. Chicago, 27; Purdue, 0. Wooster, 0; Akron university, 6. Illinois, 7; Wisconsin, 0. Western Reserve, 6; Kenyon, 0. Army, 26; Tufts, 3. Harvard Informals, 13; Maine artill- ery, 0. Kalamazoo Normal, 83; Notre Dam freshmen, 0. Army Movements Must be, Kept Secret Washington, Oct. 20.-An order has gone out to all national officers for- bidding them to communicate with state authorities formally or informal- ly any information as to the move- ment of their own or other units of the federal armies. Two instances where messages of this character have come from Europe resulted in the ac- tion of the war department. Adjust' Labor Strike at Portland. Portland, Ore., Oct. 20.-The ship- yard strike of the 'Portland district was officially declared off tonight and the majority of the unions involved have voted to rettrn to work. The federal labor adjustment board left to- night for San Francisco. Estimates of Cornell's subscription to the Liberty loan place it at near $100,000. * * * * * * * * * * * * * FORTY FIVE ATTEND 61Y DR. J. R. MOTT ADDRESSES GROUP; CAMP BAND PLAYS "VICTORS" Members of the faculty and stu- dent body of the University broke all expectations of the "Y" officials Fri- day when 45 instead of the estimated 25 turned out to attend the Y. M. C. A. day. at Camp Custer. The group left here at 8:50 o'clock and arrived in Battle Creek about noon. In the afternoon they went to the meeting in the Post theater and listened to an address by Dr. John R. Mott, a member of President Wilson's Russian commission. After this meeting they accompanied some of the Battle Creek business men to the cantonment. Upon entering the new building which was being dedicat- ed that day, they were greeted by the strains of the "Victors" from one of the Camp bands. All the soldiers stood with them and the entire crowd sang the Michigan song. After the song was completed the University delegation gave Michigan yells, after which they listened to speeches by Major-General Dikeman, commandant of the camp, and by Dr. M. S. Rice of Detroit, whom they are going to try and secure to come to Ann Arbor in the near future. DAILY STAFF BEATS RECORD. ON M. A. C FOOTBALL EXTRA The first M. A. C. extra was on the streets yesterday afternoon three min- utes and 55 seconds after the final whistle sounded over Ferry field. Last year'srecord for placing the extra on the streets was five minutes, while that of the year previous was eight minutes. A crowd of newsboys met the first throng leaving Ferry field at the Delta and their papers were quickly sold. At 6 o'clock every person on State street was supplied with a copy of the extra. About 2,500 papers were run off the press. Mrs. Cider Hurt in Auto Accident Mrs. William Cider, a resident of this city, was knocked down and bad- ly cut about the head Saturday night by an automobile driven by Stewart Warner, 1321 Wilmot street. The ac- cident occurred at the corner of Wash- ington and Main streets. Mrs. Cider was taken to St. Joseph's hospital. Spring athletics may be given up at Cornell next year because so little support is being received from the stu- dent body. WIEMAN AND WESTON STAR FOR WOLVERINES Big Tad Scores Three Touchdowns and See Quarter Adds An- nother Counter Michigan secured just '27 points' worth of revenge over the Aggies yes- terday afternoon when the Wolverine eleven trounced the East Lansing ag- gregation by a 27 to 0 score. In 1913, the Farmers kept one of Yost's best teams from a perfect sea- son by a 12 to 7 victory over the Wol- verines and again in 1915 the gridders from the agricultural school went home with a 24 to 0 victory hanging from their belts. The defeat Michigan handed the Ag- gies last fall was not enough to wipe out the sting of these disgraces. So the Wolverines picked on the poorest Farmer eleven that has been on Ferry field in recent years and slaughtered its attacks and pummelled its tackles and ends until they were crying for mercy. When the dust of battle had cleared away, Michigan's antiquated score board showed a 27 total for the Wolverines and a blank space for the Aggies. Weston and Wieman proved to be the long and short of it as far as Michigan's attack was concerned. The little Soo quarter wiggled through the Farmer Iine almost at will and scored one touchdown on a beautiful run around left end. Big Tad tossed the opposing defense aside and swept on for innumerable gains. He ran 37 yards to one marker with all the Ag- gie team hanging onto his legs. The Michigan line and ends come in for their share of the glory also. The threatened weakness of the flanks failed to show itself, while the linemen had no respect for the opposing wall and tore through to stop numerous plays behind the line. Boyd, Goodsell and Weske were the best of Michi- gan's forwards in this respect. Boyd acts as captain for Wolverines. Michigan won the toss and elected to defend the east goal. The play by quarters: FIRST'HALF First Quarter Culver kicks off for Michigan to M. A. C.'s five-yard line. 'Hammes fum- bled and the ball was returned to the 15-yard line. Hammes bucks through center for a yard. Hammes goes through left guard for two more yards. Hammes drops back for a punt and kicks to Michigan's 30-yard line. Wes- ton makes 12 yards but the ball is carried back tg Michigan's 37-yard line. Genebach makes one yard. Weston adds five yards through. center. Wie- man ploughs through right tackle making first down. Genebach ploughs through tackle for four yards. Wes- ton turns end for two more. Mich- igan makes a hole in,Aggies' line for one yard. Weiman drops back for kick and punts to M. A. C. 15-yard line. Hammes is downed in his tracks. Oas tears through center for three yards. Kellog adds another yard. Turner fumbles and is thrown for loss. Hammes drops back for punt and kicks to Michigan's 50-yard line. Wes- ton fumbles and is stopped. Weston makes a hole in Aggies' line and makes three yards. Tad Wieman adds two more. Wieman goes through cen- ter for first down, making 8 yards. Bassett out but returns to game. Genebach goes through left tackle for five yards. Michigan penalized five yards for offside. Weston makes three yards through right tackle. Michigan makes 25 yards on forward pass to Genebach. Now on 12-yard line of Aggies. Weston goes around left end for three&yards. Crowd yelling for touchdown. Wieman makes only one yarn through center meeting stone wall. Fake play adds two yards and making first down. Wieman on first play. makes only three yards, failing to make first down. Hammes drops back and punts to M. A. .C. 30-yard line and Weston fum- (Continued on Page Four)