riz ''11 ra a 1. ORDERS FOR Thanksgiving, November 3o should be placed now to insure prompt delivery. G. H. ding Merchant T Wild Company 'ilors State Street You will always get a PERFECT. SHAVE if you use one of our guaranteed Old Style Razors H. L SWITZER Co. State St. Hardware NT11 .I" N D AIL Official newspaper at the University of Mfr:.igan. Published every morning except Mjnday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: by carrier, $2.so; by mail, $3.00. Want ad. stations: Quarry's; Students' Sup- ply Store; The Delta, cor. State and Packard. Phones: Business, 96o; Editorial, 24x4. Communications not to exceed Soo words in length, or notices of events will be pub- lished in The Daily, at the discretion of the Editor, if left at the office in the Ann Arbor Press Bldg., or in the notice box in the west corridor of the general library, where the notices are collected at 7:30 o'clock each evening. John C. B. Parker..........Managing Editor Clarence T. Fishleigh......Business Manager Conrad N. Church..............News Editor Lee E. Joslyn.............City Editor Harold A. Fitzgerald...... .Sports Editor Harold C. L. Jackson. Telegraph Editor Verne Ei. Burnett........... Associate Editor Golda Ginsburg.........Women's Editor Carleton W. Reade......... Statistical Editor J. E. Campbell...Assistant Business Manager C. Philip Emery.. Assistant Business Manager Albert E. Horne..Assistant Business Manager Roscoe R. Rau. .. Assistant Business Manager Fred M. Sutter....Assistant Business Manager Night Editors L. S. Thompson E. A. Baumgarth L. W. Nieter J. L. Stadeker Reporters, B. A. Swaney C. W. Neumann W. R. Atlas C. C. Andrews E. L. Zeigler H. C. Garrison Alien Sohoenfield C. M. Jickling Marian Wilson D. Rood Business Staff Bernard Wohl J. E. Robinson Paul E. Cholette Harry 1. Louis Harold Makinson Harold Lance Earl F. Ganschow Walter R. Payne FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1916. Night Editor-H. C. Garrison. ANNOUNCE PERSONNEL Of J-LI COMMITTEES .. Just Received . shipmeuit of LAVNDRY CASES t Slater Book Shop " :- new shoes are stitched with Goodyear Welt machines. use same machines for repair work. We believe we e the most modern equipped shoe repair shop in Ann or. You'll get high class work and courteous treatment his shop and we think!you'll find us worthy of patron- Our call and deliver service is at your disposal. Use it, Famous Shoe Repairing Co. JONE 807 )ETROIT UNITED LINES en Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson un on Eastern time, one hour faster at time. t Limited and Express Cars-8:io a. hourly to 7:ro p. m., 9:10 p. m. azoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. L. and ao hours to 6:48 p. i.; to Lansing, M. n Express Cars-(Local stops west of bor)-9 :48 a. m. and every two hours p. mn. Cars Eastbound-5:35 a. m, 6:40 a. a. m. and every two hours to 7:05 p. P. i., 9:05 p. m., os10:50 p. m. to ti only, 9:20o a. mn., 9:5o 'a. in., 2:05 p. 5P. mn., 11 :45 p. in., x :io a. in., i :20 o Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Cars Westbound-6:o5 a. M., 7:50 a. :ar ers & Mechanics Bank Ters the Best in Modern Banking ECURITY - - - EFFICIENCY ent and Pleasapt 1 Qarters. You Will ed with Our Seg~ice. Two Offices 8. Main St. : : 330 S. State St. IRITERS of all makeS e or Rent. Cleaning & airing~ TYPEWRITING & EOGRAPHING. SUPPLIES 0.e De Mo yrrI 1 301 S. State St. We Offer You SECURITY - - SERVICE - - LOCATION Resources $3,8oo,ooo Ann Arbor, Savings Dank Incorporated 1869 Main Office-- Northwest Corner Main and Huron Branch Office- 707 North University Ave. MODERN BARBER SHOP 332 State St. A Particular Place for Particular People. FRANK C. BOLIGH, Prop, S. State 582-4x F---. ANNOUNCEMENT SAM BURCHFIELD & CO. Gives you the best Tailoring service to be obtained anywhere in the coun- try, coupled with a wonderful line of Woolens. ROUGH-HOUSE IN COLLEGE In Spain there was once a rogue who led his blind master to the foot of a great wall. "You are now at the verge of a wide brook, master," said the rogue, "and if you jump hard you will clear it." The master, who was a burly man, gathered all his. strength ani leaped against the stone barrier, and fell back senseless. Whereat the rogue stole his master's gold and fled, to the great amuse- ment of the people who heard the tale. People may still smile at a tale of medieval joking such as this, but they usually do so with some sense of horror, or at least of its unreality. The public of today turns down its thumbs at the proposal of practical joking or rough-house, which lessens the ele- ment of safety. The American public is thought particularly to apply this more enlightened view of things to initiations and general horseplay in college life. With the co-operation of students themselves, in their hazing of freshmen and their fraternity and so- ciety initiations, the natural tendency of safety first would be greatly assist- ed. Old pictures show Heidelberg fresh- men with their noses pressed against real grindstones which the upper- classmen turned. It is said that deaths frequently occured in medieval initia- tions. But the danger is not yet ob- literated. The story of a woman stu- dent who leaped to death from the dormitory window to elude hazers is still fresh in newspaperdom. There are also stories such as this: In a western university, a party of initia- tors took their blindfolded victim to the edge of a precipice in the Rockies. When allowed to see he suddenly be- held the sky blazing with stars, and the vast stretch of the valley, and fell back dead from the shock. Such in- cidents are not typical but they are possibilities which more frequently result in broken bones or nervous prostrations. When they do occur, such incidents are blots upon college life. Initiations and a certain amount of rough-house, perhaps, are natural events in college life. Ifdhandled with- out restraint, they are dangerous fac- tors. If conducted carefully, they may be agents for good, and, if so, have a natural place among the events that go to make up the life of a univer- sity. PROF. E. C. BALDWIN ADDRESSES MENORAH SOCIETY ON SUNDAY Prof. Edward Chauncey Baldwin, of the English literature department of the University of Illinois, will address the Michigan Menorah society at its next meeting on Sunday evening, Nov. 26, at 7:30 o'clock in Newberry hall, on "A Time That Tries Men's Souls." This marks the second appearance Frank Grover, Thomas McAllister, and Karl Wehmeyer, Chairmen. Hold Smoker Soon President Owen J. Watts of thec junior literary class has announced the following committee appointments for the ensuing year: Social committee --Frank Grover, chairman; De T. Mosier, James Schermerhorn. Jr., J. C. Lane Barron,e Dorothy Allen, Louise Irish, and Mil- dred Hill. Good fellowship committee: Thomas MYIcAllister, chairman; Carl Neumann, Leland Thompson, Victor Simmons, Harold Charles Le Baron Jackson, Philip Pack, Coan Adams, Donald Wil- son, David Pence, and John Sanford Wilson. Finance committee-Karl Wehmeyer, chairman; Donald Bathrick, and Wil- liam Darnell. All committees have begun work in earnest, and before long a definite pro- gram of activity and entertainment will be announced in class meeting. A smoker will be held at the nion dur- ing the first week in December. and the social committee has several other plans under consideration. Within a short time, Secretary George Daniels will appoint a date for the collection of dues. All members of the class are urged to pay atten- tion to the announcement, as the class is very much behind in its accounts, due to lax methods of collecting dues in the past. MICHIGAN LAW REVIEW MAILED AFTER DELAY OF THREE WEEKS Rush of Work in Publishing House Holds Up Printing of Legal Monthly The Michigan Law Review for No- vember will be mailed out today after a delay of nearly three weeks, caused by a rush of work in the publishing house. In addition to a number of nscellaneous articles and notes, the November number contains three con- tributions of special interest., The leading article, entitled, "The Attaint," is the contribution of J. M. Zane, a member of the Chicago Bar association, who receved an honarary L.L.D. degree from the University of Michigan in 1914. The other two ar- ticles, "Direct Primary Legislation in Michigan," and "The Lability of a Carrier When the Goods Have Not Been Received by the Carrier," are the contributions of A. C. Millspaugh, pro- fessor of political science in Whitman College and Howard S. Ross, a mem- ber of the Montreal Bar association. SALVATION ARMY TO INVADE CHINESE REPUBLIC NEXT YEAR Chicago, Nov. 23. - The "heathen chinee" will soon be "dropping his yen on the drum" according to an an- nouncement made yesterday by Com- missioner HenryHoward, chief of staff and second highest officer of the Salvation Army. The Chinese republic will be "open- ed up" during the early part of the coming year for the work of the or- ganization. Commissioner Howard, who arrived in Chicago on Sunday to conduct a series of special meetings and to inspect the work of the Salva- tion Army here, was interviewed yes- terday. "Pioneer work has been carried on by the Salvation Army in China for some time and next year organization will be firmly esttablished there," he said. The recently inaugurated plan of the organization to transfer British women from England to Great Brit- ain's overseas dominions was declared by Commissioner Howard to be work- ing out satisfactorily. PROF. J. W. GLOVER SUPERVISES PUBLISHING. OF LIFE TABLES BUY NYAL HUSKIES for throat and PAPER VESTS for warmth at game e VARSITY TOGGERY SHOP 1107 So. Univ. QUARRY DRUG CO'S., Prescription Store Cor. State & N. University Takes Pictures Develops films makes Prints and Enlarge- 713 E. Vn mrslty PHOTOS. I~ 106 E. Huron Street Opposite Court House WE GRIND EYE GLASS LENSES IN OUR OWN SHOP DAINES Time.sFlin - Order Them NOW- PERSONAL GREETING CARDS The samples this year are much more artistic than usual-Ask to see them-Leave your order with us for CHRISJMAS ENGRAVING. Mat 11ta!0 = t. St. VNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES =.111111!1111111IIill lU 11ll lsll lllllllllllii ll!lllllllllllllll GO AND SEE ABOUT YOUR HALLER & FULLER STATE STREET JEWELERS MICHIGAN ENSIAN Winter -Wear FOR MEN SAM BURCHFIELD & CO. 12 -'2 Special Tea and Rice Served P'LA I N HOP SUEY 25c1 day Special 12-5 - - 6oc cken meal with soup, celery, olives, ie bread and hot roast pie, Oolong coffee and miik. Chigan Inn 611 E. Liberty Telephone 2082 J EWELERsAlarm Clocks eiLAND P EYFRIC $1.00 up z Fountain Pens- 1 SWaterman and ConklinE U. of M. Jewelry Schlanderer & Seyfried ing dialogue, music or lyrics, meet in. Barbour gymnasium at 3 o'clock Fri- day. Girls' Glee club will practice at 10; o'clock Saturday morning at Newberry hall instead of Sarah Caswell Angell. hall as was announced. Dean Arnold, Miss Stearns, Miss1 Malcomson, and Mrs. Gertrude Martin, will be in town all day for the purpose of holding interviews with girls inter- ested in their special lines of vocation-t al work. Those who wish such inter-t views must sign up for a certain timet on the schedules in Barbour gymnas-z ium. f. S. Fetter Attends "Y" Convention{ "Y" TEAM GOESTO ST. JOHN'S Delegation of Seven Men Leaves for Up-State City Friday St. Johns' will be the destination of the "Y" deputation workers on their initial trip of the year. A delegation of seven men will leave Ann Arbor Friday noon and arrive in St. Johns in the evening where a general banquet will be given at which the pur- pose of the work will be explained and the influence of the University upon young men described. On Saturday forenoon all the busi- ness men in St. Johns will be visited and a canvass of the town relating to the social and moral conditions taken. In the afternoon of the same day sports, such as football, basketball, and indoor baseball will be taken up. In the evening there will be an in- formal get-together for the older boys. Sunday the team will speak at the Sunday schools and in the evening at a union service, held in one of the local churches. MILITARY SQUAD DRILLS IN PLATOONS AT PERRY SCHOOL The military squad, held its week- ly drill at 7 o'clock, Wbdnesday night, on the play-ground of the Perry school. About 60 men attended the drill which consisted mainly of work in the platoon formation. The leaders of the squad are en- deavoring to interest the campus in their movement so that they may form a second squad. The Hay bill pass- ed by congress is very favorable to- ward satisfactory college work in mil- itary training and the would-be sold- iers here are bending every effort to meet the requirements. For this rea-! son all men are strongly urged to join the company and partake of its many benefits. The finest Floral Shop in the city will open soon in the Nickels Arcade, State Street. 3-ti WOMEN'S ENROLLMENT LARGER Shows Increase of 139 Over Last Year; Dormitories Responsible The enrollment of women in the University is steadily on the increase, this year reaching the high water mark of 1,130, an increase of 139 over last year. The 1915 enrollment showed a gain of 100 over that of 1914, this increase being partially due to the dormitories. The greatest increase this year was not, as might be expected, in the freshman class, but in the junior. How- ever, the freshman class came next, followed by the sophomore and senior classes. A very large percentage of the increase comes from Detroit and other cities of about the same size, showing that there, at least, the pref- erence for the eastern schools is being outgrown. The enrollment of women in the graduate school has been augmented considerably. Last Dollars Are Placed on Display Students whosaw the display of silver dollars in the window of a lo- cal book store Tuesday saw the last dollars to be coined in the United States since 1902, and probably the last that will be coined in this country for several years. The small demand for the silver dollar has left the gov- ernment with a large surplus on its hands and none have been coined in recent years. The coins in the dis- play were made in Philadelphia in 1902. Sunderland Speaks on Law and Ethics Prof. E. R. Sunderland of the Law School will address the Unitarian Young People's Religious Union at 6:30 o'clock Sunday evening in the church parlors. His subject will be "Law and Ethics." Florence B. Pad- dock, '17, will give a solo. High grade Kodak Finishing at Sug- den's. Wfomen The second meeting of the vocational inference will be held at 4 o'clock is afternoon in Sarah Caswell An- 11 hall. Miss Gertrude Gog:n will induct the meeting from 7:30 to 8:30 clock this evening at Newberry hall. A second section of the beginning ass in aesthetic dancing may be rmed after the meeting of the class next Tuesday. This section will eet at 2 o'clock on Wednesdays. All ris are to report at the class on iesday of next week, at which time Under the supervision of Prof. James W. Glover, the census bureau has brought out a series of United States life tables which are attracting widespread attention. Although stat- istic tables of life insurance compan- ies have been published before in this country, this is the first publication devoted to general life tables. They are intended as a source of informa- tion for public health officers, students of vital statistics, physicians, sociolog- ists, and statisticians. They are also ex- pected to be of use for legal purposes in connection with old age pensions. Guess who sells haberdashery at 119 Main. 21&24 E. S. Jacobus' Flye-Piee Orchestra for dances, enter aInmexts hi son- eerts. 620 M. Fifth Ave. Phone 1487. N. S. Fetter, secretary of the Univer- of Professor Baldwin before the Men- sity Y. M. C. A., is in Cleveland this orah society of the University of Mich- week attending the convention of "Y" igan, he having spoken before it last secretaries now being held in that year on "Job." city. Among other things, Professor Bald- win is the editor of the editions of "KEN" BOUCHER, BELL SOLO- Dickens' "A Tale of Two Cities" and IST, AT ARMORY TONIGHT. 24 "David Copperfield." I ted in writ-: