The Michigan Daily VOL. XIV. ANN ARBOR, MICH.. WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1904. No. 169 PORTRAITS OF ALICE FREEMAN PALMER Professor Geo. H. Palmer, of Har- vard University, has collected in a volume reproductions of the portraits of his wife, Mrs. Alice Freeman Palm- er, at different periods of her life. A very few copies only have been print- ed. Professor Palmer has presented one to the University library, where, under proper restrictions, it will be shown to those who desire to see it. As Mrs. Palmer is one of the most dis- tinguished women who have been graduated here, and many of the pres- ent students never saw her, the oppor- tunity to examine these portraits will doubtless be welcomed by many. CLASS DAY AT CALIFORNIA Class day at the University of Cali- fornia tomorrow will begin with the farewell pilgrimage from building to building, the entire class journeying together in the final tour of the cam- pus. The co-eds will wear white duck dresses, white hats and red parasols. while the men will be clad in the tra- ditional white duck trousers, dark coats and black senior plug hats. Pre- ceded by K military band, the full four hundred graduates will head the pro- cession of classes in its morning march. The first spot to be visited by the class will be the Le Conte oak, in 'Lovers' Lane, where Richard O'Con- nor will dedicate a granite block bear- ;ng the metal plate originally given to th.' tree by the class of '98. This was pac'd first on a cement block spiked into ihe hollow of the 'ss huge arms, but the college bt:nists dis- covered that the spike was eating into the core of the tree, and the whole block was removed. The eng -ed de- sign on metal is now replace the foot of the oak, and the tree will be rededicated by the class of '04. The pilgrimage will next v0st the "senior oak," a little further. where Scott Hendricks, the presideA1 of the class, will turn over senior prestiges and senior customs to the scceeding class of '05. At South Hall, Max Theln will make the address and at the agricultural building J. Edwin Roadhouse will speak. Cross'ng Strawberry Creek to Hearst Hall, Miss Tallulah Le Conte will speak for the women. Then the chemistry. mining and mechanics building will be visited, the speakers at these places being Jacob K. Neighbor, Fletcher Hamilton and Edward Abenheim re- spectively. At the library and art gallery Miss Martha Rice will speak, and at North Hall, where the pilgram- age will stop, Phillip M. Carey will talk. Class day will further be signalized by the big extravaganza in the after- noon at 3:30 o'clock in the Greek Theater, for which invitation tickets have been issued. In the evening. the senior men will hold their banquet in a SanFrancisco down-town restau- rant. GERMAN PLAY Members of the "Deutscher Verein" will present on Saturday, May 28, Ben- edix's "Die Hochzeitsreize," a comedy in two acts. The play under the di- rection of Dr. Warren W. Florer. It will be presented in Sarah Caswell Angell Hall. The cast is as follows: Professor Otto Lambert...... .... ............. Mr. Neumarker Antone, seine Frau.... Miss Freeman Edmund, sein Famulus ...G...... . . ..,,,,,,,,Mr. Goodrich Hahnensporn, Steifelputzer ........ . ...............Mr. Lauer Guste, Kammerjungfer ........... ...,..,...........Miss Kingsley VIGER ELECTED MANAGING EDI- TOR OF INLANDER N. T. Viger was yesterday elected managing editor of the Inlander for next year. Mr. Viger is a prominent member of the 1905 Lit. class and is generally considered one of the most popular men in the class, having been president in his freshman year. He is also a member of the Quadrangle Club. TilE INLAND-R FINAL CLASS GAME TODAY TENNIS TEAM BUSY Some Features of Michigan's Monthly Championship of the University Will The 'Varsity Tennis Team of three Magazine-How It Compares With Be Settled at 4 O'clock on 'Var- men will leave Friday afternoon for Similar Publications of Other sity Field.-Freshman Lits Kalamazoo where they will play a Universities-The Statis- vs. Freshman Medics-No on Saturday. tics. Admission Fee Sunday the men will go to Chicago where the Western Intercollegiate wil During the last twenty years jour-. This afternoon at four o'clock the begin on Monday, continuing through nalisn his taken wonderful strides final class game will be played on the the week. and nowhere has this been more clear- VarsIty Diamond between the Fresh- In the play-off, to decide which man iy manifested than in the college pub- mant Lits and the Freshman IMtedics. of the present team will drop out licatiions. There is not a college to- Both teams have won their way to when the number is cut from 4 to 3, day, even including those of an at- the finals by consistent playing and Lee, St. John and McNiel will each tendance of scarcely 200, which does the best class game of the year ought play the two others.. not print a monthly magazine. to result. The first round of this "round rob- Alany of the leading college publica- The Medics strength lies largely in in" conies occurred yesterday. Lee tions of today have come into exist- their pitcher, Sibley, whose work defeated St. John 8-6; 6-4. Today ence within the last quarter of a cen- against the the junior Laws Monday St. John will play MNiel and Thurs- ury. On the other hand there are, stamls him as a capable pitcher. day Lee will play MNiel. however, at the od institutions of The Lits rely on the strong arm of learning, magazines which date back Shulte to keep down the Medic scores. SENIOR HOMEOPS HAVE GOOD as many as 60 years. The oldest col- Killifer the Lit catcher is probably POSITIONS lege periodical is the Yale Literary the best backstop on any class team Monthly which was established in and is likely to keep the Medic run- At the mieting of he Homepathic 1836. It is also the oldest extant lit- ners pretty close to the bases. faculty lastwink Leon J. HGibson and erary monthly in America. Manager Lee Jenney stated last farolil L LLu "The Inlander" of the University of night that absolutely no spectators r Lawn were appointed In- Michigan was founded by the class of will be allowed on the field or run- teres at the hospital for the coming '91. It has however not been a senior Wing track. A crowd on the running year. Of the other students who be- maaiebtrte ulcto ftrack would interfere with the work lng to the senior class, Harold h mgazine bitt rather a puiblication of trctawker itefeenid bswiF. Schnell will be on the all departments and classes of the of the track team and Manager Baird stakf f Dr .Lee's hospital at Roc-h University. has consented to allow the use of the st i DN. . sVirgil L Weir has ac- An examination of the larger col- 'Varsity diamond only on conditioneL r lege magazines reveals many interest- that the crowd keep on the bleachers eptiediatuit in the Toledo gen- .iig facts. The following table has and grandstand I. If this is not done era Aho,-tsth as hospital Interne. biein pirepared fsir this use. The first the gume will be stisppeid soil transEu AwanA Hoytiitasi Itucster, N. th column refers to the number of pages ferred to South Ferry Field. No ad- antanss Hospital, Rochester,oN.Y. in each issue, the second to the num- mission fee will be charged for the and JamsW. Saoy at the Metropol- ber of issues each year, the third to game. tan Hospital, New York. Corde T. the price per year and the fourth to Both departments are working up Graham will be at his father's private the price per month: enthusiasm for their freshmen chain- sanitarium, New York. Luther Peck Yale Lit pions and the rival rooters are pre- and W. E. Doran will enter upon gen- Magizine -.M.. .68 9 $3.00 $.35 paring for a battle royal. oral sitftheipractice. Wesyan Lit Month-students are members of Wesleyan Uni.) 55 9 2.00 .25 HALLIDAY WINS AT LEXINGTON the class of 1904 and most of them be- Nassau Lit.luag.-W A T ng to the recently organized soci- zine (Princeton) .64 9 2.50 .30 Ernest M. Halliday of Michigan won ety of drug testers. Univ. of Cal. Maga- first place in the Interstate Prohibi- zinc-.............80 9 1.50 .20 tion Contest Friday night, held at Lex- PRESS CLUB BANQUET. Monthly Maroon ington, Ky. There were five other Univ. of Chicago) 55 9 1.00 .15 speakers each of whom had won his Thursday of this week the Press Minnesota Magazine 53 9 1.00 15 state contest, representing the states Club will hold their first feed. The Smith Monthly of Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennes- committee has worked faithfully to (Smith College) ..67 9 1.50 20 see and New York, yet Mr. Halliday make it a success and at present it The Mt. Holyoke . .46 9 1.50 20 won out by a good decisive margin, looks as if their efforts would be Brunonian winning first place in thought and crowned with success. The affair will (Brown Univ) ...55 9 1.50 20 composition and second in delivery. be pulled off at Oyster Bay. An elab- Wellesley Magazine 51 9 1.25 15 Lexington papers commented very fav-. orate menu has been prepared "which The Illinois-........39 9 1.00 15 orably on the masterly way he treated will equal if not surpass anything held Cornell Era-........46 10 2.00 25 his subject. at the Bay yet this year," says Mr, Amherst Monthly...44 9 2.00 25 Mr. Halliday is a senior Lit and Willetts. The toasts have been se JJournal (George- fresh Law, and has been prominent Iceted with due regard to the abilities town). .55 9 1.50 20 in debating and oratory during his col- of the individual members who will be The Inlander (Univ. lege course, having qualified in the invited to speak and the feast of rea- of Mich.)-........64 10 1.00 15 Oratorical contest in the past two son promises to equal the feast of The Inlander compares very favor- years and having won the place of al- edibles early in the evening. ably with any cuhege magazisse in the ternate on the team that defeated it being the first affair of the new country. From the above statistics Minnesota. He won the 'Varsity Pro- 'Varsity Club all members are antici- the following comparison may be hibition contest, followed it up by pating it with interest and are doing seen: winning the state contest, and now all in their power to make it a sou- wins the Interstate. This victory cess. T'he University of California Maga-care acskpieofftdlas zine contains the greatest number of carries a cash prize of fifty dollars pages. This, however, loses its force in gold and the privilege of speaking PROF. STANLEY'S LECTURE when one consideres that it is an inch before the National Prohibition Con- narrower and not within fully an inch vention at Indianapolis, in June. Ow. ; to a misunderstanding the as long as "The Inlander." In ma- This National contest will be quite Daily announced yesterday that Prof, terial, its 80 pages contain about the an important affair. Six men chosen Stanley would deliver his lecture on same as the 64 pages of "The In- out of some seven or eight hundred the Nibelungen Ring, Tuesday after- lander." contestants from all over the country noon. The correct date is Wednes, The "Cornell Era" and "The In- will speak, Of these six men two will day afternoon. There were a few per- lander" are each published ten times be Michigan men; J. G. Welch, who sons who gathered in the lecture room a year but the former contains 46 to won the Interstate contest last year of the Museum yesterday, but Prof. the atter's 64 pages. The magazines and Mr. Halliday Stanley had announced the correct are exactly the same in the size of 'The judges in this Interstate con- date to his classes so that very few the cover, test were Col. Bain and Prof. Milligan were misled. The Yale Literary Magazine is the of Lexington and the Rev. Mr. J. C. The lecture will be given at 4 most expensive publication. Its rates Halliday of Cincinnati, on delivery, o'clock in the lecture room of the Mu- -re $3.00 for 9 numbers a year or 35 and Prof. Scheel of York College, Neb. seum. It will be illustrated by 60 cents a cpy. The MinnesotarMaga- Prof. Clark of Eureka Coll, Ill., and slides, showing all the principal zine, The Illinois, The Monthly Ma- Hon. George T. Wells, editor of "Back scenes in those great operas that com- roon (Chicago) and "The Inlander" Bone" St. Paul, Minn. pose the Nebelungen Ring. The lec- sell at $1.00 a year, the cheapest rate Mr. Halliday's subject was "The ture has been given here only once of any college magazine. "The Inland- Paramount Issue." before and then in the summer school. te,"er however, printstOmmteswhl th oher i ts bu ne. ie BASEBALL TEAM AT CHICAGO. INTERSCHOLASTIC THIS WEEK the hTODAY The Interscholastic meet which will STANFORD TRACK TEAM AT CHI- Today, the 'Varsity baseball team be held here the last of this week CAGO. meets Chicago at the Windy City. promises to be the best ever held un- Three games have been played be- der the auspices of toe University of Nine men, the pick of the Stanford tween the two teams, of which Chi- Michigan Athletic Association. Inter- University track team, arrived in Chi- cago has won two. The wearers of scholastic Manager Hayes has re- cago yesterday where they will train the yellow and blue will make a hero- ceived over 300 entries and at least at Marshal Field in preparation for ic effort to win today's game and thus 200 individual contestants are expect- the Intercollegiate meet a week from even up the series. Wendell will ed to compete. The program which Saturday. The Chicago men are probably pitch for Michigan aid Ells- is now in the hands of Sod Millard, watching the practice of the Califor- worth for Chicago. the printer, will consist of about 20 nians with a great deal of interest. The Daily will receive telegraphic pages. The Championship banner, They are especially interested in Dole, reports of the game and the result medals and ribbons are on view in the champion pole vaulter of the will be posted in Shehan's window Shehan's window and make an at- world. as soon as known, .tractive exhibit.