THE WEATHER SHOWERS TODAY OR TONIGHT I Ab V or ifNr a jIat 3j UNITED PRESS DAY AND \IGHf IRHE SERVICE p VOL. XXVII. No. 172. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1917. PRICE FIVE CEN'h CITIZENS OF ANN AHOR TO GATHER IN HONOR OF DEAD COMPANY I AND WAR VETERANS TO JOIN IN MEMORIAL PARADE WILL HOLD SERVICES IN HILL AUDITORIUM Literary and Engineering Companies to Meet at 1:30 O'clock Today Ann Arbor pauses for a brief moment during the hubbub of the busi- ness world to pay her respects to the deceased heroes of the Civil war. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * WATERBURY TO EDIT 1917 - 1918 INLANDER John E. Campbell, '18, Business Manager licatlon Appointed as of Pub- PROGRAM'0F TODAY'S EXERCISES 9:30 o'clock-G. A. R. veterans will decorate graves of fallen comrades in St. Thomas cem- etery. 10:30 o'clock-Boy Scouts leave courthouse to strew flowers at Forest Hill and Fairview ceme- teries. 10:45 o'clock-Service for sailor- soldier dead at Wall street bridge.. 12 noon-Fire salute at courthouse monument. 1:30 o'clock-Organizations form on Huron street in front of city hall for parade. 2:15 o'clock - Public memorial exercises in Hill auditorium. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Promptly at 1:30 o'clock organiza- tions to march in the Memorial day parade will form on Huron street in front of the city hall, and will be as- signed to their positions. Company I will head the line of march, followed in order by the members of the Span- ish war veterans, Civil war veterans, city council, and citizens' committee. The parade will march out Huron street, down State street to North Uni- versity avenue, and continue on the avenue until Hill auditorium is reached. Literary Companies to Formt Literary companies will fall in at 1:30 o'clock on North University av-- enue, between the Hill auditorium and Waterman gymnasium. The engineer- ing companies will assemble on North University avenue near Hill auditor- ium at 1:30 o'clock. Neither the lit- erary nor the engineering companies will march in the parade, but will march in a body to Hill auditorium where Memorial exercises will be held. The law companies will not partici- pate. Exercises in Hill Auditorium Exercises will begin at 2:15 o'clock in Hill auditorium, opening with the playing of "The Star Spangled Ban- ner." Commander Robert Campbell, Civil war veteran, will preside. The Rev. Arthur W. Stalker will give the invocation and benediction. General Logan's first memorial order will be read by ex-Mayor William Walsh, fol- lowing which a brief talk will be given by President Harry B. Hutchins. Di- rectly after the president's talk Gus- tave Sodt will read Lincoln's Gettys- burg address. During the program an opportunity will be given the repre- sentatives of the various patriotic so- cieties to speak for five minutes on the progress of their respective organ- ization. "Tenting on the Old Camp Ground," "Battle Hymn of the Re- public," and "The Vacant Chair" will be sung by Miss Nora Hunt of the University School of Music. All will sing "America." The meeting will be concluded with a salute fired by Com- pany I of the Michigan national guard. G. A. I. Veterans to March G. A. R. veterans will report at the courthouse at 9:30 o'clock in the morning, secure flowers and proceed to the St. Thomas cemetery where they will decorate the graves of their de- parted comrades. Forty boy scouts under the direc- tion of a Civil war veteran will leave the courthouse at 10:30 o'clock in autos to strew flowers at Forest Hill and Farview cemeteries. A flag will be placed on each grave. At 10:45 o'clock a short service to' (Continued on Page Six.) Lester E. Waterbury, '17, has been appointed the managing editor of the Inlander and John E. Campbell, '18, the businessmanager, for the year 1917-18, according to Prof. F. N. Scott, chairman of the board in control of student publications, yesterday. Waterbury was one of the associate editors of the Inlander when it was first revived in the spring of 1916. Since then he has been a regular con- tributor to the magazine. Campbell is at present an assistant business man- ager of The Daily. Factions Prepare for Deadly Battle Owing to Strenuous Times, Formalities Will Be Dispensed With Yesterday witnessed a great deple- tion in the reserve supply of several kinds of ammunition all around town. Storekeepers seemed to be unable to account for the rush until some kind- ly person stepped forward with the in- formation that this morning at 9:30 o'clock The Daily will meet the co- workers of another campus publica- tion in the annual baseball contest. Both teams have reached a high de- gree of efficiency of training (for them). The crowd present is prom- ised a home run thrill every inning. The contest will be held on south Ferry field under the auspices of President Glenn M. Coulter of the Union. Owing to strenuous war times all ceremony such as throwing out the first ball by a governor, a mayor, or any other high public official will be dispensed with this year. Patriotic celebrating will rather be the keynote. Though not definitely decided upon last night, peacemalers from the rival camps hope to have reached a definite decision for an appropriate sendoff by this morning. Indications at a late hour are that some one will start the auspicious occasion by firing a can- non, or possibly an imported 14-inch gun. This is not certain. It may be some heavier object better adapted to such times as the present. MARRIED MEN WILL NOT BE EXEMPT FROM CONSCRIPTION Washington, May 29.-Married men as a class will not be exempt from draft in the new national army. It is probable that married men who are drafted will be relieved from military service if they have families depend- ent upon them, but merely because they , are married they will not be exempted. "The act establishing the selective draft," General Crowder said tonight, "authorizes the president to excuse or discharge from the draft those in a status with respect to persons depend- ent upon them for support which ren- ders their exclusion or discharge ad- visable. Only those whose dependents must rely solely on them for support should claim exemption, and, of course, all married men between the ages of 21 and 30 inclusive must register." INTERCOLLEGIATE PATRIOTIC NIGHT TO BE HELD JUNE 1 Intercollegiate patriotic night, for the purpose of considering what is be- ing done towards organizing home guards as authorized by the legisla- ture, has been called for the night of June 1 in Detroit. The meeting will be held in the board of commerce building and addressed by General Harrah and others. It is stated that the troops are to be enlisted for the purpose of protect- ing Detroit and its industrial plants from mobs and fanatics after regular troops have left for service. * * * * * * * * * * * * * COLEGE FURNISH 15011 FORMUACE ORPS STUDENTS OF 32 UNIVERSITIESI ASSEMBLED FOR EN. LISTMENT Washington, May 29.-The colleges of the country have furnished 1.5001 picked men for the United States armyI ambulance corps for service in France.4 The corps are organized in units ofI 36 men each for training near Phila-I delphia. As soon as possible after equipment is complete they will sail. Students of 32 universities and col- leges are assembled for enlistment. Contingent organizations to meet the need for medical service was pointed out by members of the French com- mission. Upon arrival in France the various ambulance units will be utilized byI the French government until the ar- rival of United States troops, and then be turned over to the military forces of the- United States. The total num- ber to be enrolled in this corps is moreI than 4,000.1 EXPENSES INCREASE $900,000,000 Is Added to Government'sa Expenditures Washington, May 29.-The govern-! ment's expenditures for the fiscal year1 thus far reached $1,600,000,000 today, more than $900,000,000 in excess of1 last year's expenditure up to the pres-I ent date, and a new high record in1 American history. The chief item of the increase- $607,500,000-was purchase of the ob- ligations of foreign government in ex- change for loans advanced to the al- lies. The sum does not represent by approximately $140,000,000 the total amount authorized in loans. An in- crease of approximately $245,000,000 in the ordinary disbursements of the government, chiefly due to military and naval needs, also is recorded. An- other item going to swell the grand total of expenditures was the payment of $25,000,000 for purchase of the Dan- ish West Indies. Ordinary receipts also show an in- crease of more than one-third com- pared with last year, the total to date being $818,000,000. The chief item of increase is the income tax, payment so far this year having reached the total of $155,000,000, as compared with $28,000,000 last year. Income tax re- ceipts are flowing into the treasury at the rate of nearly $4,500,000 a day. CABINET UNION FAILS Andrassy Unable to Bring Together New Hungarian Ministry Berlin, May 29.- Efforts to form a coalition cabinet in Hungary have failed, according to Vienna reports to- day. It is understood that Count Andras- sy had been selected to succeed Count Pisza in this task of forming the min- istry, and had met with rebuttals in attempting to unite all elements into one cabinet. The news is taken here to indicate that Count Andrassy will be forced to be content with the present state of affairs, although Vienna dispatches expressed hope that certain of Pisza's followers would desert the former premier. Toll of Southern Tornado Increases Memphis, May 29.-Revised reports today from the sections of Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, and Alabama swept by tornadoes Sunday place the number of dead at 160, and the in- jured at 550. Southwestern Kentucky paid the heaviest toll. Property damage in Alabama is esti- mated at $1,000,000. No accurate esti- mate of the monetary loss in the other states is available, wire communica- tions being badly crippled. County Fire Bells to Aid Conscription Eugene, Ore., May 29.-The fire bells of Lane county are to be used in con- nection with the registration of men under the selective conscription act on the date to be proclaimed by Presi- dent Wilson. It is planned to have the bells sounded in this way hourly where possible. OF LIBERTY LON BONDS INVENTOR WANTS CITIZENS OF COUNTRY TO SERVE NATION IN SOME WAY Menlo Park, N. J., May 29.-With a three days' stubble of white beard on his face and with eyes tired from in- cessant work for weeks, Thomas A. Edison was coaxed out of his labora- tory today, and made a statement urg- ing his fellow countrymen to buy lib- erty loan bonds.1 Need Spirit of Service "The spirit of 1917 in America should be a spirit of service," he de- clared. "From the highest to the low- est the uppermost idea should be how we can serve our country. Some of us are going to sacrifice our lives on battle fields in France and on highj seas, some of us are working night9 and day to solve scientific questions, some of us expect to do our bit in farm work or in factories. There is a place for all of us if we but look for it with patriotic eyes. Pay What Citizenship Is Worth "Pay what it is worth to you to be American citizens. Figure it out cold- blooded if you are built that way. Con- sider what the country has meant to' you and what it will mean to your children and to humanity of the future generation, and when you have thought over these things, take your pen in hand and do your bit for the liberty loan. To buy a bond is to pay the first premium on an insurance policy against militarism, against fu- ture wars and its horrors." INLANDER APPEARS Final Number of Magazine Meets with Large Sale Heralded as the most complete is- sue of the year, the May number of the Inlander met a ready sale yester- day. The table of contents is ex- ceptionally comprehensive and is typ- ical of the standard which has been set during the pat year. The leading articles are both on the same subject, "The University Next Year." A woman student sets forth her belief that the women will have a great deal to do with the activ- ities of the campus next year and that their influence should prove of great benefit to the men when they return from the trenches. Her argument ie met by Frank F. Nesbit, '17-'19L, who believes that no radical trans- formation of the University need be expected. Among the other contributions are: "Space and Time," by a woman stu- dent writing under the pseudnyom of "Mary Langhorne"; "The Tie That Bound," a story, by Helen G. Davis, '17; "St. Martin's," a sketch, by Lucile H. Quarry, 18; "Footprints and Foam," a prose poem by Isabel P. Snelgrove, grad.; an .article on "The War Class of '61", and several poems by Mr. M. C. Wier, of the rhetoric depart- ment, Mrs. Jane Harris Crane, and Lester E. Waterbury, '17. There are a few copies of the mag- azine still on sale in the bookstores. Discover Old Fort in Indiana Gary, Ind., May 29.-An old fort, 450 by 420 feet, has been found in Porter county, Indiana, five miles southwest of Gary. The fort is similar to the earthworks now used to fortify the permanent camps back of European battlefields, but is at least 150 years old. Blockhouses at the four corners, four foot embankments with perpen- dicular, drained trenches on the inside, form the chief features. Dean Bates Goes to New York City Dean Henry M. Bates of the Law school is in New York City attending a committee meeting of the section of legal education of the American Bar association. The committee is arrang- ing a program for the session of the American Bar association to be held next August. Russia Orders Locomotives in U. S. New York, May 29.-Russia has. placed an order with American manu- facturers for 500 locomotives to cost approximately $25,000,000 and 19,000 cars at $15,000,000, it was reported in financial circles today. SEVERAL VACANCIES REMAIN BE FILLED; APPOINT, SERGEANT TOI Temporary organization of the third government ambulance unit to be known as C unit, was completed last! night at a meeting of the intelligence bureau committee in charge of this work. A number of vacancies remain to be filled in this unit., Another step in the permanent or- ganization of the first and second units to be known as A and B units was taken, but they are not considered as final yet.£ C. F. Weaver, '19E, was appointed temporary sergeant of C unit and E.1 G. Dorfner, '19L was chosen as one of the corporals. Following is the listI of the men who were placed in this unit: E. M. Carroll, grad.; Shirley Galen, '17L; V. L. Watts, '19; L. J. Curby, '17L; C. V. Sellers, '17; A. F. Paley, '18L; T. B. Oglethorpe, '17; C. A. Brown, '17E; W. K. Nieman, '17; P W. Steelsmith, '19E; G. F. Wales, '19L; o. M. Rathbert, '19A; Leigh Hoadley, '19; W. S. Kammerer, '18.; W. A. Stevenson, '17; H. C. Otis, '17; R. M. Lewis, '19L; J. E. Simmons, '17; F. B. Lyon, '19; E. R. Speer, '20; F. M. Reed, '20E; L. A. Sappo, L. H. Haskins, '19; G. E. Geekin, A'. M. Mc- Connell, and L. B. Dimond, '16. The initials of Gallop and Sprague are not known. The executive committee in charge of this work is as follows: Dr. James F. Breakey, Dr..Howard H. Cummings, Prof. Joseph A. Bursley, Homer Heath, Prof. Walter T. Fishleigh, and Francis R. Bacon. WILL MORGENTHAU BECOME U. S. AMBASSADOR TO JAPAN Washington, May 29.-Henry Mor- genthau, rumored as newly appointed ambassador to Japan to succeed the late Ambassador Guthrie of Pittsburg, was unconcerned at widely circulated reports here today, following a long conference Morgenthau had with the president last night. Morgantham was formerly ambassador to -Turkey. ENGINEERS AND FORESTERS TO TAKE FIRST. AD EXAMS All engineers and foresters who are taking first aid work under Dr. C. B. Stouffer will take their examinations for Red Cross certificates on Friday from 4 to 6 o'clock or on Saturday from 10 to 12 o'clock at the Homoeo- pathic hospital. Golf Club to Hold Tourney Today The members of the Ann Arbor Golf club will hold a tourney at 1:30 o'clock this afternoon. A prize of two balls will be given for the lowest score for 18 holes. Two other prizes of two balls each will also be given to the players who are ninth and twenty-fifth in rank at the end of the tourney. Cosmopolitan Club Postpones "Roast" The Cosmopolitan club "roast" which- is announced on another page of this issue to be held this after, noon, was postponed at a late hour last night. REGATTA ATTRACTS MANY CONTESTANTS Entry Cards Miay be Secured From Officials; Several Have Signed Up According to reports from the places of entry this year's regatta, which is to be held Saturday,isalready attracting wide-spread interest among the stu- dents of the University. A consider- able number of men signed up for the different events yesterday afternoon soon after the cards were made out. All students who intend to enter any of the contests are strongly urged to do so as soon as possible. Cards for this purpose may be secured from the following committeemen: Waldo Mc- Kee, '18E; N. J. Brazell, '18E; B. W. Malfroid, 'ISM; A. L. Kirkpatrick, '18; Luther Beach, '18E; Robert Patterson, '18; H. A. Knowlson, '18E; K. L. Wehmeyer, '18, and L. A. Glover, '18, Entry lists have been placed in the following places: Huston's, the Un- ion, the boathouse, Ferry field club house, and the registrar's office. COMMITTEE ORGANIZES THIRD AMBLNEUNIT GERMAN SCHEMES IN SOUTH AMERICA ISOH9EXPOSEDBY U. S. PLOTS GROW SERIOUS IN ARGEN- TINA, VENEZUELA AND COLOMBIA PLOTS CONDUCTED BY CABLE FROM BERLIN Brazil Prepared to Declare War on Germaniy; Chile Repulses' Teuton Influences Washington, May 29.--A campaign by German propagandists to allign South and Central American countries against the United States was exposed by the state department today. In three South American republics --Argentina, Venezuela, and Colombia --the propaganda has assumed menac- ing proportions. In Brazil activities of propagandists have proveda boomerang culminating in the chamber of deputies voting overwhelmingly to revoke the declara- tion of neutrality for the declaration of war on Germany by Brazil. Argentina has become a hotbed of pro-German and anti-American propa- ganda, according to the information. 'Ihe aim of these propagandists brand- ed by the state departmentais an effort to create an irritation against this country. Plots Handled by Cable There is evidence that the propa- ganda has been conducted directly from Berlin by use of the cable from Spain to Buenos Aires. The govern- ment of Argentina had no part in en- couraging this propaganda, it was stated. German firms in Argentina have been the agents of the Berlin govern- ment in stirring up anti-American feeling in that country, it was official- ly declared. May Be Clue to Destroyer News No official would say that this cable provided the means by which the news of the departure of American de- stroyers reached Berlin in time to permit mining the port before their arrival. but it was accepted as a clue to the leak. An inquiry, by the United States, of the Argentine government to learn the facts concerning the reported embargo on shipment of Argentine wheat to the allies was distorted by these propa- gand4sts into an attempt by the United States to dictate Argentine policies, it was declared. Feeling Strong in Columbia In Colombia, the anti-American feel- ing that has existed since the separa- tion of Panema has been fanned great- ly by the pro-Germans. A constant effort has been made by the kaiser's agents since the United States dec- 1 aration c°war to keep the Colombians stirred up. In Venezuela, the program has been to revive the bitter feeling that existed in the days of Castro's power. As in Colombia the efforts have been exerted not at the government but at the peo- pne. Chle has repulsed these German in- fluencs. Indications now point to her. e. .nen_ into the war with Brazil against Germany. It is expected this step will have a sobering influence upon the other South American coun- tries. Be!iev +panisl Ships Aid Germans Buenos Aires, May 29.-Belief that Spanish ships clearing from Buenos Aires have acted as supply bases for submarines raiding allied commerce off the Spanish coast, was increased this afternoon by numerous'dispatches. The Spanish steamer Leo XIII is reported to have been taken to Likar by the British recently and forced to unload explosives and submarine air apparatus. Violent Storm Holds Train Stationary Charleston, Ill., May 29.-The Char- leston Courier prints the following: "The force of the wind is indicated in the experience of a Big Four south- western limited, westbound, which en- countered the storm between Charles-. ton and Mattoon. So terrific was the velocity of the wind that the train remained stationary for. a while, al- though the engineer had the throttle open." * * * * * * Due to the fact that today is a national holiday the registrar's office will be closed all day. Registration for military service will be resumed tomorrow. *' * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *