THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 1, Our Easter Suitings await your inspection. You should select a pattern NOW and give us a chance to make it up before the BIG RUSH is on. J. K. MALCOLM 604 EASTLIBERTY STREET MALCOLM BLOCK FRATERNITIES MILITARY NEWS A new series of special advanced drills will be held from 7 to 8 o'clock, on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday nights, according to an an- nouncement issued from the R. O. T. C. office yesterday. The first special drill will be held tonight at 7 o'clock. These drills will be classed separately from make-up drills, and the program will deal strictly with special ad- vanced work. "The purpose of these drills is to train a number of men to act as offi- cers and non-commissioned officers in the cadet corps," stated Lieut.- George C. Mullen last night. "I ad- vise all cadets, who desire rapid ad- vancement, to take advantage of this opportunity, which will give them the fundamental principles demanded by the higher positions." Military officials expressed the hope that at least 10 men from each com- pany would turn out for the drills. Every man enrolled in the R. O. T. C. is eligible for this work. Expert in- structors have been secured to teach these classes, and a definite program of special advance work , has been Tomorrow morning the regular Saturday make-up drill will be held from 9 to 11 o'clock for the cadets faving absences on their attendance records. More than 100 names of cadets whose uniforms have arrived were posted on the regular R. O. T. C. bul- letin boards. Mr. Henry stated last night that a number of -the cadets, whose names have been published, have failed to call for their uniforms. No additional uniforms will be given put until every cadet listed on the 1bulletin boards calls for his uniform. At the present time there are 250 more uniforms to be distributed. A. R. Reynolds, 'ex-'19E, has re- cently joined the aviation corps, ac- cording to word received here yester- day. Reynolds is now stationed at Berkeley, Cal. i n,,.«,., v,. ,., nr~r . . xA' TOMORROW 12:35 o'clock-Lenten services 444 South State street. TODAY 12:35 o'clock-Lenten services at 444 South State street. 3 o'clock - Senior lit meeting in room 101, Economics building. 4 o'clock -- Cosmopolitan club meeting in room A, Alumni Memorial hall. 6:15 o'clock-Baptist Guild banquet at the Baptist church. 8 o'clock-Social for students and friends at the Methodist church. 8 o'clock-Michigan-Chicago bask- etball game in Waterman gymnasium. 9 o'clock-Membership dance at the Michigan Union. at 1:30 o'clock-Alpha Nu ciety meets in Alpha Nu versity hall. literary so- rooms, :Jni- Arrange for Your I WHAT'S GOIN GyN GROUP PHOTOGRAPHS HELP OF EVERY CITI~iN NECESSARY FOR VICTORY SUCCESS IS IMPOSSIBLE WITHOUT UNITED EFFORTS OF ALL "How are we going to win the war?" asked Lieut.-Col. Victor C. Vaughan at an illustrated lecture given at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon in the Natural Science auditorium. "The answer depends upon the in- dividual who gives it. Hoover says that food will win the war-and he is right. McAdoo claims that the con- centration of the railroads will win Unsurpassed Accommodations PHONE 948-W 619 E. LIBERTY GET YOUR Text Books and Supplies i -From the "Store with the College Spirit" Detroit Sheehan & Co. Ann Arbor D 3 o'clock-Adelphi debating society meets in Adelphia rooms, University hall. 3:15 o'clock- Intercompany track meet in Waterman gymnasium. 7 o'clock-Upper Room Bible class meets at 444 South State street. 7:30 o'clock-Bayonne (N. J.) club meets at 911 Monroe street. 8 o'clock -- Craftman club meets at the Masonic Temple. U-NOTICE S "Phormio" cast will rehearse at 3:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in room 101, University hall. Tryouts for the Cercle. Francais play will be held at 10 o'clock tomor- row morning in University hall. All female members of the cast and chorus of "Let's Go!" will meet at' 3 o'clock this afternoon at the Union for measurement of costumes. Men of the cast and chorus are ask- ed- to see the Union bulletin board for announcement of this evening's re- hearsal. Specialty rehearsal will be held at 3:30 o'clock this afternoon at the Un- ion. The entire Mast and chorus will meet for a music rehearsal at 9:30 o'clock Saturday morning at the Union. NO SKIP STOPS FOR LOCAL STREET CARS Ann Arbor will not be affected by ;the fuel administration's considera- tion of plans to reduce the number of stops by city and interurban trolley cars in order that there be a saving in the supply of coal, according to the D. U. R. officials in Ann Arbor. Experts at Washington are consid- ering an order limiting all street cars everywhere to eight stops to the mile. A rough estimate was made by one of the heads of the local car company, with the result that Ann Arbor is at present exceeding this number of stops in a very small degree. Aside from this- he stated that the saving of coal in this city would be so small that the order would receive little considera-. tion. Christmas holidays he was detailed by the war department to the University of Michigan to assist in the teaching of military science and tactics. 1: the war-and he is right. Garfield urges the conservation of fuel-and he is right. Baker asks for the aid of the industries-and he is right. We will win the war if every American ,citizen does his or her duty, and in no other way will we win the war. * More Than Sherman Said "War is all what Sherman said it was and more," asserted Lieutenant Colonel Vaughan. "The odds are against us. We can only think of the war terminating but in one way, which can only be done by the united efforts of all the people. "We are in the war because we stayed out of it so long that we could no longer watch the other nations fight our battles without blushing with shame. We are in this war be- cause we are horrified at the barbar- ism displayed by the central. powers, who wantonly destroyed sacred soil in Belgium and France. We are in this war because we know of the bar- barous deeds performed by Atilla and his Huns; to protect our own coun- 'try-our churches, our cities, our universities, our wives, and our chil- dren. Fight German People "We are at war with the German people, and as long as they follow their leaders this must be true. We fight a people who have debased Ger- many." Lieutenant-Colonel ~Vaughan des- cribed the healthy condition of the United States soldiers in the different' cantonment camps, and the whole- some food the fightingmen were serv- ,ed every day of the week. Immediately after the lecture four reels of motion pictures were flashed on the screen, which showed the de- vastation of the Huns in France, and the wonderful manner in which the Allied soldiers followed up their suc- cesses after the first turn of the tide. The films were official records of the French war department. Lieutenant-Colonel Vaughan will give the same lecture at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon in the Natural Science auditorium. The samebreels of mo- tion pictures will also be shown. POLITICAL TRAINING HERE BEST IN UNI TED _STATES OFFICE OF CONFERENCE OF CITY MANAGERS NOW IN ANN ARBOR One of the finest collections of or- 'iginal material in politics will be ad- ded to the University through recent action of the Regents in locating the office of the Conference of City man- agers here. The location of the bureau in Ann Arbor means that there will be facil- ities offered for training men in pub- lic service unequalled in the United States. The bureau, formed last November, represents a group of 30 organizations which are interested in research in economy and efficiency. The bureau will not only keep an acurate account of all current re- search work done by organizations in- terested in this field and issue weekly reports on the same, but it will act as *a clearing house of information as to the lines of research taken up by the individual members .and attempt to correlate the work. Professor 'Robert T. Crane, of the Political Science department, is ex- tremely interested in the possibilities which such-'a bureau located at the University will bring in training men for the field of public service, COL. W. G. CAPLES TALKS TO SENIOR ENGINEER ASSEMBLY Juniors and sophomores as well as seniors heard Col. W. G. Caples, en- gineer corps, U. S. A., talk yesterday morning at the assembly of the senior engineers in University hall. Colonel Caples took as his subject the conditions which engineers might expect to meet on entering the ser- vice. E CON OMY must be accompanied by good judgment, and depends on SERVICE not Price CURTIS TIRES -I SGeorge Hudson McLellan, U5M, of the medical corps of the U.IS. A. has ben visiting his aunt, S a FR OM IS Mrs. M. A. Sweeney, in Ann Arbor. n ,McLellan is enroute from Douglas, P B bLLM OF PROFESSORAriz., to Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Fowler L. Osborne, ex-'19E, former- CAPT. F. E. BARTELL WORKS IN ly radio instructor at the Great Lakes, NITROGEN PRODUCTS has recently been recalled to the sta- PLANT ,tion. He left last night to report for Aactive duty. Osborne returned to the University in November to continue According to word just received his studies. - from Greene, R. I., another facultyr Use the Daily classified columna. Isafe PlazaRestaurant 'The Most Popular of the Downtown Restaurants l Serve only the Best Quality of Food give 6,000 miles of service CURTIS 'TIRE & RUBBER C0* Muskegon, Mich. member is doing valuable work for" the government. On Feb. 1, Floyd E. Bartell, professor of general chemis- try was commissioned captain, and stationed at Green, R. I., with the Nit-, rogen Products company, where he is working on the production of am- monia from the nitrogen in the air. The Nitrogen Products company was started soon after the outbreak of the European war, but after the entrance' of this country into the struggle, ' Interest in the preliminary indoor inter-company track meet tomorrow afternoon can be shown by the results obtained in the different contests be- ing given to the cadets by Dr. George A. May. The following contests will be given at 4:15 o'clock this after- noon in Waterman gymnasium: Second regiment: Companies I and K, relay racing; companies L and M, rope climbing, standing broad jump. 'The two groups will be reversed after the first half hour. SPECIAL WEEK DAY DINNERS 35c SUNDAY SPECIAL DINNERS We take care of Banquets and Special Parties on short notice. 117 E. Washington St. Phone 1293 W ' /" \ o t' S Eat a Quarter Pound, if not satisfied awith your purchase, you may return the remainder within ro .days and we .will refund your dollar. D.ARK SECRETS are a wonderfully delicious creamy chocolate (with real fruit filling and bitter-sw"eet coating) that is so de- lightfully.palatable, so different from the ordinary chocolate, that they make a rare treat at any time for all lovers of good candy. DARK SECRET CHOCOLATES have been made and sold in our own store for many years and have become famous throughout many sections of the U. S. and hundreds of you Stu- dents will be eating them before long. This is no A IKE SCHE ME to get your DOLLAR-it is simply one of our advertising plans, by which we .shall secure thousands of new-customers throughout the state of Michigan. W>, WAN T YOU to try these DARK SECREITS-you'll betsurprised how delicious they are-and you will become _ IIOOSTER for DARK SE- CRETS. We are a reliable firm and able (financially) to handle any proposition we may offer you. Kindly fill out the order blank, en- close in a sealed envelope, together wi.h your remittance and address to ROLLER CANDY CO., Muncie, Ind. Please send.....bxs. Dark -Secrets to Name ............................... Street ....... ......... Lieut.-Col. A. H. White, also profes- sor on leave from the University, was (This is the second in a series of assigned by the government to take autobiographies of army officers de- charge of the new $4,000,000 plant for tailed by the government to the Uni- the production of nitrogen. This plant 'versity.) is under the nitrate division of the First Sergeant Charles Meisel, U. S. ordnance department. A. retired, enlisted in Baltimore, Jan. Treating of Steels 9, 1883, and served continuously for a Another Michigan professor work-, period of 25 years, until his retire- ing in the ordnance department is ment from active service on Sept. 10, Major Albert E. White doing the mett. 1908, at Camp Columbia, Cuba. allurgical and mettagraphical work His first five years of army life 'connected with the heat treating of: were spent in Texas, where he did steels to be used in making shells. border duty, guarding against smug- Professor John D. Rue, chemical en- 'gling and cattle thieves. During the gineer, has for some time been work- 10 years following, he was stationed ing in thegas warfare department in at Vancouver Barracks, Washington. Washington, D. C., on the composition At the time of the strikes between the of poisonous gases. Besides these miners and the Chinese, First Ser- professors, who have actually left the geant Meisel was among those called University, practically all the profes- 'out to quell the riots. The neighbor- sors and instructors in the chemistry ing county was in an uproar and it department here are engaged in lab- took nearly nine months for the men- oratcry research work. to bring order out of the general I chaos. PENNSYLVANIA DINNER TO BE From Vancouver he was detailed to HELD AT UNION MONDAY NIGHT the Phillippines. He .left for San Francisco in May, 1898 and took part Tickets for the Pennsylvania din- in the raising of the first American ner which will be held next Monday flag on the Island of Suam. evening, March 4, are now on sale at In July he crossed the Bay of Man- the Michigan union desk. The com- ila and saw active service in engage- mittee wishes to emphasize the fact ments 'with the Spanish troops from 'that all students from the Keystone July 31, until the fall of Manila on state, whether they are formal mem- Aug. 13, 1898. bers of the organization or not, are He then performed garrison duties invited to attend. The dinner will be: in Manila until the opening of. the attended by both men and women. Phillippine insurrection in Feb. 1899, Notices were mailed yesterday, and in which he went into action four dif- tickets should be purchased by Sat- ferent times. Sergeant Meisel went urday evening, in order that arrange- through all the engagements without ments may be completed. - being wounded. While a member of the Army of Cu- Rugs cleaned and washed. Satisfac- ban Pacification in 1908 he was retired lion guaranteed. Koch and Henne.- from active service. During the SPRING HATS Emery Shirts $1.50 to $7.00 All New Our new stock of Hats is now on display Adler- Rochester Clothes The New Spring Models are here $25 to $4 All the late Swagger Styles are being shown Patterns in Freshmen Wear Green Caps' hmen at the University of Ore- wear their green caps at drill, t all times, was the decision by the student council last-week. tion was made in the case of two nen who are commissioned offi- {utz Clothin Store 4DLEI RRHESTE RCLOTHES ANN ARBOR la 1