CTHU TART CAMPAIGN TO COLLECTCLASS DUES LEASURERS AND COMMITTEES COMBINE IN EFFORT TO CLEAR UP DEBT For perhaps the first time in the story of the University, a concen- ated effort is being made by the asurers of the four classes in the erary college for the collection of Las dues. Several committees head- by the class treasurers have already en appointed and will push through vigorous campaign until sufficient ids have been collected to clear all class indebtedness. Several sub-committees, including >se of fraternity house representa- es, dormitory representatives and mmitteemen at large will be united the campaign. Por years indebtedness to the class 8 been cleared up just before grad- ;ion by means of a lump payment the senior class treasurer. This s proven unsatisfactory from sev- .1 standpoints. It has been impos- le in the past to keep perfectly urate records of class expenditures, ing to the fact that a different in- abent filled the treasurer's office' successive years. Debts contracted" the class, following out the old eme, could not be finally cleared until the graduation of the mem- s. 'he committee of class treasurersl Ends to clear up such conditions ough the present campaign. The ss , dues, while insignificant in unt during each year, amount to ubstantial sum at the end of fourI rs and the collection at that timei auch more difficult because of thisI raternity house delegates will beI ointed today, and the campaign be well under way by tonight.- lhe plan works out successfully thisI r, it will be an annual event, fort s much favored by the faculty and dent council. RMAN BABIES CHIEF t CAUSE OF PRESENT WAR d. E. R. Turner Says Teutons Hadc No Place for Ex-t pansiona War Ban Appears In Nid- West City Saloons, Pool Halls, and "Movies" in Locality of Flour Mills Or- dered Shut Down St. Paul, Minn., April 25.-Minne- sota s public safety commission or- dered all saloons, pool halls, and mo- tion picture houses in certain sections of the city closed today as its first war measure. Mayor Van Lear is di- rected to revoke all licenses on May 1 for those businesses operating in the prescribed territory. In this district are the large flour, mills which will have to supply flour, to most of the United States and the, allies. Numerous skirmishes between guardsmen and alleged spies in this center lead the commission to estab- lish the order as a measure of mili- tary expediency. 1,000 TICKETS-SOLD FOR RED CRDSS BALL1 FRIDAY i WOMEN IN TAKING WORK TO UNIFORM; GIRLS DANCE MINUET APPEAR TO More than 1,000 tickets have been sold for the Red Cross ball to be held in Waterman and Barbour gym- nasiums Friday night, and indications are that many more will be sold be- fore that date. Two orchestras will furnish music. The grand march will start at 9 o'clock, following which the reception committee will hold an informal re- ception in the central booth. Two minuets, "The Green Sleeves," and "A Sailor's Hornpipe," will be danced by young women of the University who have been training under Miss Alice Evans for the past several weeks. Women who have been taking the Red Cross work will be present in uniform and the naval reserves and Company I are also being urged to attend in uniform. The ball will be entirely informal and refreshments will be sold from booths. Tickets cost 50 cents and are on sale at the Farmers and Mechanics bank on State street. BOOKS WORTH READING Scott Nearing of the University of Toledo, who is to preach in the Baptist church next Sunday, has written a timely book entitled, "Income." This book is an eloquent plea for a just economic system in which those who do the world's work shall reap the full fruit of their labor. It makes a serious effort for a fair division of the social product between those who Evork and those who own the means of production. In making his estimates, Professor Nearing places on one hand all in- comes derived as a reward for person- al effort or service, and on the other, all inicomes derived through owner- ships, whether it be called profit, in- terest, or rent. What Dr. Nearing proposes is a new classification "based on function rather than on tradition." The book is a valuable contribution to the arsenal of the social reformer due to the mass of data bearing upon the distribution of social income among different classes of society. The author has ransacked official reports of the federal and state governments and has brought together units of hitherto unrelated data. By supplying what seem to be well-founded and, on the whole, conservative estimates to fill the gaps in the official reports, he has been able to arrive at an approxi- mate estimate of the respective shares that the workers and property owners receive from the nation's annual bounty. The book is written in simple, read- able language, so that those who have not studied economics at universities are able to understand it. Engineering News Lost Marble Holds Up Library Work Preparations for moving into the new reading room have already been started in the Library, although it is not definitely known when the new building will be completed. Work is being delayed by the freight congestion in the country. This has caused a consignment of marble in- tended for the stacks to be side-track- ed somewhere between Buffalo and Ann Arbor. The marble was shipped from Vermont, April 10. Patronize Daily Advertisers. WILL ANNOUNCE INTERCLASS BASEBALL SCHEDULE TODAY Games in the interclass baseball league will be announced, this noon, when the schedule will be given out by the athletic association. Up to last night only eight teams had been enter- ed, but several more are expected to appear in the complete list. Saturday is the date set for the be- ginning of play, if the weather and the drillers on Ferry field are agreeable. Patronize Daily Advertisers. 1857 Dry Goods, Furniture and Women's Fashions 1917 I r I I Intercorregfate I z 'I Princeton: No action has been tak- en by the senior class to provide a memorial fund owing to the unsettled condition among the members of the' class because of the war. Yale: A fund of $15,000 has been raised by the Yale club of New York City for the Yale aerial observation unit. The fund will be used for the purchase of two balloons and equip- ment. Kansas: The number of students withdrawing from the university to enter military organizations or to fol- low the plow now number 140. Many who have withdrawn without the pro- per authorization may not receive their semester's credits, according to Registrar Foster. Indiana: There will ,be no Indiana Union Revue this year. The event was called off at a recent meeting of the union board because of the dis- concerting influences caused by the war. Colorado: Compulsory military training for the students in the engin- eering school of the University of Col- orado will go into effect next fall, ac- cording to a decision of the faculty of that school. The intent is to establish a regular officers' reserve corps at the university. J j Fashioneecils for Today Specially purchased groups just in from New York-clear- aways and sample lines that our buyers found last week during a tour of the important markets. Good styles and materials at prices customers will instantly recognize as unusual. s AT THE THEATERS TODAY Garrick-George Bernard Shaw's comedy, "Getting Married." Majestic - Sarah Bernhardt in "Mothers of France." Arcade-Joan Sawyer in"Love's Law." - Orpheum-Mae Murray in "On Record," and Paramount com- edy. Rae- Mable Talliaferro in "A Wife by Proxy," and Purple Mask, No. 12. J 1 r *. s s *' i AT THE MAJESTIC That the increasing number of Ger- man babies was one of the chief causes for the European war, is the belief of Prof. E. R. Turner of the history de- partment, as expressed in a lecture be- fore one of his classes. "Germany found her population in- creasing at a rapid rate with no pos- sible chance for expansion, and no means within her borders of satisfy- ing the rapidly growing number of nouths to feed. From her standpoint w'ar was almost biologically justified. As one historian has expressed it, 'she had to go to the kitchens of her neighbors to get it." ' "As far as colonization is concerned, her lack of colonies to which to send her surplus population is the result of lack of foresight on the part of her statesmen. Bismarck condemned col- mization and it was not until 1880 hat her leaders saw the mistake, by hat time all the desirable portions of the world that were free to colonize were taken. Her only chance lay in South America and Turkey. We blocked the way in South America and Russia and England in Turkey. She had to fight if she wanted what her leaders called a 'place in the inn."' .:= 3olumbia Balloon Corps Start Work New York City, April 25.-Following he arrival of the first captive balloon for the Columbia balloon corps, active raining has been started at the arm- ory at Fourteenth street and Sixth avenue. A maximum of 40 men can be used n the corps, most of the number hav- ng already volunteered. The service s the first of the kind in the United Mtates. The men are trained in sign- ling of all kinds, methods of observa- ;ion, and air navigation. Prof. L. Waterman to Talk on Religion "Religion in Its International As- Dects" will be the subject on which Prof. Leroy Waterman of the Semitics. [epartment will address the class in nternational relations at 7 o'clock to- ight in room 302 University hall. Plans are to be discussed concerning he "wienie roast" which will be held aturday afternoon up the river. Have those rooms redecorated for our May Festival guests. Phone 237. H U. Major & Co.-Adv. America's finest watches are Hamil- ons. J. L. Chapman, Jeweler, agent. 13 So. Main St.-Adv. tue-eod; For live, progressive, up-to-date ad- ertising use The Michigan Daily. < KILLED BILL MEANS STOP OF TUBERCULOSIS SURVEY Work to Be Continued as,-Long as Money Holds Out As a result of the bill carrying an appropriation for $50,000 to be used in continuing the state tuberculosis survey being killed by the ways and means committee of the state legis- lature, the work which was planned for 14 counties of the state will have to be abandoned, according to Miss Carol F. Walton, secretary of the Michigan Anti-tuberculosis society. The work of conducting surveys in the different counties will continue as long as the funds hold out, but it will be impossible to reach the counties which were scheduled for surveys this summer and most of which are in the northern part of the lower peninsula. The failure of the bill came as a heavy blow to the Anti-tuberculosis societ), and will result in much of the work which has already been done under the appropriations of the last two years going for naught. It will also be a blow to Michigan's prestige which she has enjoyed for the past two years, as one of the forerunners of health legislation. PRESIDENT TAPPAN'S GRANDSON DIES WHILE AT PRINCETON Word has just reached Ann Arbor concerning the death of Rudolph E. Brunnow, professor of Semitics at Princeton university. Professor Brun- now was a grandson of Henry Tap- pan, first president of the University, and was born in Ann Arbor in 1858. His death was due to pneumonia. Professor Brunnow was given an honorary degree by the University on the occasion of the unveiling of the Tappan tablet in Alumni Memorial hall in 1914. Lecture on "Late Migrants" Tonight Dr. M. M. Peet of the Medical school, will talk to the Ann Arbor Bird club at 7:30 o'clock tonight in room 355 Natural Science building on "Late Mi- grants." The talk, which is the first of a series on the late migrants, will be illustrated with lantern slides. Illinois Calls Off Spring Contests Champaign, Ill., April 25.-Spring athletic contests have been called off by the athletic board of the Univer- sity of Illinois. Training and farming are the reasons. Madame Sarah Bernhardt in "Moth- ers of France," which will be at the Majestic for three days, has given to the public an example of her work at its supreme point. It would be hard to conceive of a picture produced under more intense circumstances than this which lays the heart of France bare to the world. It con- tains a message from the mothers of France to the mothers of America. Dartmouth Men Respond to Colors Hanover, N. H., April 25.- Dart- mouth's students responded 1,095 strong to the first call for volunteers for the new Dartmouh regiment. Drill is being given daily. Rifles and other equipment have already been shipped, and orders for uniforms are being placed as fast as the measurements can be taken. A home guard has been formed by 125 faculty men and towns- people. Iowa Gets Big Sum for Improvements Iowa City, Iowa, April 25. - New buildings, repaired and refurnished old buildings, and all other conveni- ences can now be had by the Univer- sity of Iowa. The legislature has ap- propriated $2,535,000 for use of the university for the two years from July 1, 1917, to June 30, 1919. Like Farm Life Better Than Trenches Champaign, Ill., April 25.- Illinois students favor farm work to military service by a proportion of 100 to one. One hundred petitioned in one day to leave to take up farm work, while one signified his intention of joining the aero corps. Major C. W. Castle will address the sophomore engineers at their assem- bly this morning at 10 o'clock. For all those who are back in class dues provision will be made after the class meeting to pay up, and during the re- mainder of the day a table will be placed at the main corridor of the Engineering building. Junior engineers will hold assem- bly in room 348 of the Engineering building at 8 o'clock this morning. Prof. R. M. Wenley will talk. REV. T. F. GAULD TO LECTURE AT CHURCH SUPPER TONIGHT "Religion and the World Crisis" is the subject of the lecture the Rev. T. F. Gauld of Toledo will deliver fol- lowing the Unitarian church supper tonight. Daniel F. Zimmerman, '02L, will ,present a flag to the church, which will be received by Mr. J. W. Langley, who left the city in 1861 to serve as a naval surgeon in the Civil war. Mr. Zimmerman plans to go to the Fort Sheridan officers' training camp May 8. Students of Unitarian families who are enlisted in the naval reserves will be special guests. After the supper a dance will be held for members of the church and their guests. 10,000 VILLISTAS GRAPPLE MURGUIA'S CARRANZA FORCES El Paso, Texas, April 25.-An en- gagement between 10,000 Villistas and General Murguia's Carranza forces is reported in progress at Montezuma, Gallego, and Carmen, according to an- nouncement received here this after- noon by Soriano Bravo, Mexican con- sul. The report said the Villista leaders, Manuel Ochos and Francisco Beltran, have been killed. The Villistas have gained control of the railroad line both north and aguth of Montezuma, preventing movement of Murguia's trains. ; f . . 1t an r _ ,, f: ' - r' 'i' I' r l; 'fe' 'l h i '° - } u $25.00 SILK DRESSES AT $19.75 Taffetas, silk pongees and combinations of taffeta and Geor- gette crepe, charmingly designed in sport and dress effects, in- cluding the straight, loose models and Rusian coat dress styles. The colors are white, navy, old blue, rose, gray and orchid. $6.50 AND $7.50 GEORGETTE WAISTS AT $5.00 . A lovely collection featuring all the newest frilled effects, the fashionably large collars and flaring cuffs. Some are tucked or shirred with touches of hand embroidery, but otherwise plain. We could not have chosen a more timely period of the season to announce them. Cral, Nile, gold gray white, peach and chartreuse. i RAINCOATS AT $5 A rackful of rubber lined, rainproof rain- coats in all sizes-gray, navy and black and white checks with black velvet collars.. All sizes. Regular $6.50 values. Irfl am- nn~ r . I I I,.'' $25.00 AND $30.00 SUITS AT $19.75 Patronize Daily Advertisers. 4/ 6n 2 . Refreshment when you're thirsty-A brimming glass of pure deliciousness when you want a palate-pleasing drink -Exactly what you're looking for any time. 0 IIII I Serges, poplins., Poiret twills, gabardines and wool velours in all-the favorite colors of the season, but principally black and navy. Smart tailored and fancy models trimmed in various ways: With white broadcloth or silk poplin over-collars, patch pockets, rows of bone buttons, gathered or box pleated backs, Paisley and figured linings, and other distinctive features. A great variety, all shown separately on a rack. $25.00 FASHIONABLE COATS AT $18.75 I Mustard colored velours, delicately stitched in silk; wear proof; Poiret twills and cut velours in conservative and unusual colorings. Handsome full length coats with broadcloth over-collars, ornamental stitching, peg pockets and belts. An extraordinary showing. All sizes. 11 (SECOND FLOOR) I1 a a