J. ineer- ersity For E YOU will find the manded in custor aua ?StI to1 de ready-to-put-on gar you will make is consider Coupled with this is t isfaction and full value in fabric. I ring department, everal other stu- >on, but that the could not be es- J. AT'S GOING ON TODAY 'clock-Lenten services a. lit mixer in Bar- per room Bible .th State street. class club Congrega- church. clock-"Gunner" Depew speaks Methodist ch ck-Mixer at T. E. Rankin rch. the Michigan i e class meets at 444 6 o'clock-Young Peoples' society neets in Presbyterian church. 6:30 o'clock-Prof. W. R. Hum- hreys speaks to Plymouth Round 'able at Congregational church. 7:30 o'clock-Mr. J. A. Burns speaks a Methodist church. U-NOTICES Economics 2 lecture for Monday will e given in Room 101, Economics uilding instead of Room B, Law milding. Dress rehearsal for "Phormio" will e held at 9 o'clock this morning in Jniversity Hall. Costumes will be iven out at Dr. O. F. Butler's office a Alumni Memorial hall after 8:30 'clock. I INCREASED PRODUCTION URGED AT LOCAL FOOD CONFERENC 1' it [ONS OF THIRD LIBERTY 'O BE PUBLISHED MONDAY WN d of in n Friday again to E PEACE Be Mov- IWashington, March 22.-Conditions of the third Liberty Loan will be made public Monday by Secretary McAdoo in the form of recommendations to congress on the size, interest rate, and other features, which will require legislation. Some 'of the bankers and business men who conferred today with the secretary, advocated a loan of $5,000,- 000,000 or less, at four and one-half per cent, but the secretary did not disclose his opinion definitely. (Continued from Page One) doing the work ~of the men who have gone to fight for them and for us." Mr. Manwaring Speaks Mr. E. B. Manwaring, of this city. who spoke on "What the City Can Do to Help the Farmer," emphasized the same facts. In his talk on transportation prob- lems, Prof. George Dowrie set forth the causes of the tie-up of railroad traffic which culminated in the taking over of the roads by the government. Transportation Connected "Transportation is connected with food conservation, because, if food cannot be gotten to its destination be- ,fore it spoils, it is lost," Prof. Dowrie stated. The other two speakers were Charles Kyer, an Ann Arbor grocer, and L. W. Bibbins, of this city. The former explained retailers' problems in handling food with respect to war regulations. Mr. Bibbins read a pa- per on "Price Fixing from the Pro- ducers' Standpoint," in which he gave arguments for fixing the prices of all commodities and for allowing a larger maximum price for wheat. This morning a war bake sale will_ be held from 10 to 12 o'clock in Bar- bour gymnasium. Miss Blackman, of Ypsilanti Normal college, will talk on flour substitutes, giving recipes. Dean Arnold will lecture on "Reducing the Price of Food Substitutes." Confer- ences may be had with Mrs. Williams in regard to farm work and the unit plan, between 9 and 10 o'clock, in Miss Alice Evans' office. Mr. Ray Bassett. city forester, will speak on city gar- dens at 2 o'clock. with Ger- German One Speaker for Bible Chair House euBut one speaker will deliver ad- ;inues, the dresses at the Bible Chair house dur- ing served ing Holy Week, which comes the first objective five days of next week and ends with Good Friday. This will be the Rev. ted in the Cyril B. Harris, curate of the Episco- the Ger- pal church, who will be the single scow from speaker for entire Holy Week instead west and of having different speakers every day as formerly. hevik for- Reverend Harris has been commis- the Soviet sioned as a chaplain in the army and informally expects to leave for duty after the that it is spring vacation. - - Charl Railway Occupatoii False Ch v, aMrch 21.-(Delayed)-Ru- ron, t Austrian and German pris- sectic war have occupied the trans- yeste railway are characterized as pital Ls in a dispatch received by ppera otzky, the Bolshevik foreign Mr. in response to inquiries tany rvnnaantoatives nf the Bol- les K. Dodge, '70, Dies Suddenly Lrles K. Dodge, '70, of Port Hu- associate curator in the botany on of the Museum, died suddenly rday morning in a local hos- was 74 years c - and books on survived by his )rt,, The