F a4 L ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1918. F 1 lATE APPRO VS R EXTENSION tlion to Include Men Reaching Age of 21 Since June ., 1917 Passed IED THAT 700,000 MEN WILL BE ADDED THIS YE AR Chamber Rejects Proposal equire Training of Boys From 19 to 21. to ees shington, Marci-29.-The reso- n extending the selective draft to reaching the age of 21 years since 5, 1917, was passed tonight by senate without a record, after a attempt had been made to add a provision for training youths 19 to 21 years old. is estimated that about 700,000 will be added to the registration year by the resolution. This is >f the pieces of legislation upon h the war department is waiting e announcing complete plans for next draft. It now goes to, the e for consideration with the bill se draft quotas on the number of trants in class 1, instead of on NEED 250,000 BOYS TO HELP FARMERS Enrollment of 250,000 boys over 16, years old to aid the farmers in pro- ducing record-breaking crops this year is the aim of the Boys' Working reserve, according to the assistant national director, Mr H. W. Wells, who was in Ann Arbor yesterday. "These boys," Mr. Wells stated, "comprise the country's greatest un- tapped source of labor, and their ser- vice in the furrows is secondary only to that in the trenches. The boys are placed as near home as possible, the farms first being in- spected to determine their fitness as a place of training for the young labor- ers. Plans are being made for the so- cial welfare of the amateur agricul- turists in order that spare time will not hang too heavily on their hands. Many Boys Engaged in Work Last year between 80,000 and 100,- 000 boys were engaged in this work, although the organization ' of the movement was complete in only a few states. The success of the plan is evidenced by the testimony of one director that two-thirds of his last year's workers have re-enrolled this year, the great majority of whom will work for their former employers. Duty of Boys at Home "If the war* is to be won it must be through the efforts of boys under 21 years of age in the fighting' fallows of the fields at home, as their older brothers are fighting in the trenches of Belgium and France," said Mr. Wells, before the Schoolmasters' club ENEMY OFFI LOCAL ATI BERLIN '* * * * * * * *- Let-up on Meatless Washington, Mar. 29.- sion of the meatless day tions for 30 days begin morrow, was ordered to the food administration structions telegraphed to food administrators. * * * * * * * * WAR UEPATMENT TO CLA. Day J: [ I1 STEPS MUST B] DIATELY OR TI NO SUNK1i University milita still puzzled at the department official The R. O. T. C. ti versity has as yet and unlers definite mediately in this d be no military train city this summer. rlf" m d~' n r^.^ m 'AlEN LiIE. IE WILL BE CAMP if bee: Thi boys I to require training of 19 and 21 was in the mdment which the sen- to 26. debate Senator Kirby nittee member, predict- '0 men would be in th )0,000 in camps before RANGE GUN GOOD FRIDAY eventy-five per- ' 90 wounded, n and children, a German long iurch in the re- ood Friday ser- according to an n issued this yesterday. t*'ai Corn Still Luhusked cour Mr. Wells told of great cornfields only all over the country, where last year's edl corn still lay unhusked because of the terid lack of farm labor. He said it was up plat to the boys between the ages of 16 visi and 21 to enlist their services on the stat farms for the spring harvest, and up H ,to the schoolmasters to -arrange It so "1 that the boys could be spared from adji the classrooms. ing "These boys are ,our second line of ed defense," said Mr. Wells. "Unless "Th this army behind the army is organ- quit ized, the world is going to be short of and food, and our chances for winning the cove war are to be jeopardized." He said stud' that every boy of seven or over in Germany is a producer. Tb the( stud Alaskan Volcanicofm Region Pictredtren . Rd$$$ ffd variE vane "Katmai and the Ten Thousand ing, nior divis 'ding to a ut. Losey An church was struck by a the celebration of High tnday and many casual- ESERVISTS ADVISED DEFECTS REMEDIED ne of the courses -which are in the s for the advanced c Work Intensive advance course desi 3ial statement is tha s in the third and fo ary training. The wi intensive and trea TO Med traitsP who were al- ough possessing fects, have been deficiencies re- mmer of 1918 for Df these is that of abolishing, in professional ma for tain the This advice came in a letter from the surgeon general's office and was signed by F. C. Waite, captain of ,the tablished sanitary corps, N. E. The other four ldren of reasons given are as follows: First, oys are the desirability of having a surgical re shown operation precede entrance into .ac- tive service as long as possible; sec- fthe Al- ond, surgeons will be more and more work of busy during the ensuing summer; aid Mrs. third, rooms at hospitals will be at a supplies premium; fourth, military necessity and the may result in the calling of medical pend on reservists sooner than is expected at ported to present. suc rnmittees as n, "depends over from A of the .war LEADING HOTELS R WHEAT PROIUCTS w7 Washington, March 29.-Wheat pro- ducts were wiped off the menus of EODAY several hundred of the country's lead- ing hotels today in response to a re- e toast- quest of the food administration that lunch- "every independent, every well-to-do day in person in the United States" should Dever- pledge complete abstinence from wheat until the next harvest in order affair to supply the entire needs of the Al- ill act lies. Hotel managers who had come from lunch- every state in the union to hear new ean of conservation regulations explained, H. W. were told by Food Administrator Over Hoover that the need for wheat was o'clock even greater now than when the reg- e sale ulations were promulgated. one. Mr. Hoover said the renunciation at the of luxurious foods must begin at the sium. top of the social scale. ved by Junior Miami Not to Dismiss Men Early en pol- Miami men will not be dismissed early l prob- this spring for service on farms, ac- it first cording' to the statement made by Smokes" was the subject of a lecture delivered in Hill auditorium last night by Prof. Robert F. Bribgs, of the bot- anical department of Ohio State uni- versity. In 1913, Professor Griggs visited the Katmai peninsula and mountain to study the true nature of the disturb- ances which occurred there in 1912. Since then he has made three expedi- tions to the same region under the au- spices of the National Geographic so- ciety. In describing the mountain proper, he declared that its eruption in 1912 had been so violent ass to deposit ash- es to a depth of 15 feet in Kodiak, a town some 100 miles distant from Mt. Katmai. The crater of this volcano was found to be 3,700 fewt deep and three miles in diameter, and the whole of it was filled with a brilliant blue] lake of boiling water. tProbably the most important dis- covery made by any of the parties was that of the valley of "Ten Thousand] Smokes" upon which the explorers stumbled while looking for the source of great clouds of steam which they had seen from a distance. Here, on a broad and almost level plain lying between gigantic mountains, were tens of thousands of small craters em- itting steam, which rose to a height of 500 feet. Slides depicting the beauty of the country about Katmai and the volcano itself were shown during the lecture. , Take Over C(ermian Owned Mills Washington, March 29.-Six great I German owned New Jersey woollen mills, with, a total valuation of more than $70,000,000 have been taken over by the alien property cdstodian, who has named governing boards of direc- tors to assume control of them. The regulations, to martial procee manual for tional relation discovery to th growth of and tional law eml lomacy, legislE chology of wa: strategy, and n icy. .ties Sumnuer Camp in 1920 By applying general orders number 49, there will be no summer camp near here until 1920, unless the sys- tem is changed by the war authorities at ,Washington, or by some possible action of the military officials at the University. The course was prescribed on Sept. 4, 1916, and since it is imperative that each university or institution of learn- ing, which adopted military training in that year, give the students a firm foundation of two years instruction in the basic course, the action of the war department will determine wheth- er they will be allowed to have a mili- tary camp this summer. MR. CHARLES MOORE TO GIVE y history "Washington, the P the title of a lecture Mr. Charles Moore, c o'clock Monday eveni school auditorium. views, said to'be unus City" is given by s - war wi f-', fh