he Michgan Daily A Reliable Directory of Reliable Busines ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1911. MORE LANE BLACKSMIlTIIS ,. r Cf f,1r.,fl Tn fl rYi-N t nuw f[Llnr n7 ISOrUIWES[ERNER'4 TO ORGANIZE 12 ENGINEER IS AMN ) '13 SO TrW'~ f ~1 r~ U A~'1f * * * * * * * * * * * t ' >f Eleven, and restimation of Reasons As- Ten disciples of Vulcan ascended from the dark depths of the under- world last night and returned to their fiery abode, with twice as many sworn' to fealty in the ranks of Hades. Fol- lowing the secret solemnities attend- ant to the reception of humans into the band the feast of Vulcan was held in the Union dining room. John W. Eckhart presided as toastmaster. Dean Mortimer E. Cooley, Professors C. J. Tilden and H. C. Anderson, honorary members from the faculty, spoke of the duties which the new gods must takeI upon themselves. The following sen- ior engineers were initiated: "Bruce" Beardsley, "Stan" Borleske, "Dick"1 Coombs, "Shorty" Heald, "Van" Van- Dyke, "Bud" Parshall, "Jge" Hudnut "Jerry",Webb, "Coop" Cooper, and "Stub" Hannon.1 VI...u ur.11 1-1-1- Air-" IMA-h- N VY IN C Jj A SS U AALUI S. BI3LE II U N4 i inclue Muennront Okado- ma ind Missouri. These Teams and J. Lits to Contest * Steps for the organization of an For Interelass Chianipionship. * Oklahoma and Missouri club will be The Junior laws by swamping the taken in the near future by someof; dents 17-0, yesterday afternoon, and * the Senior engineers by defeating the * the students from the two states. The Juniors of that department 10-0, com- * promoters of the club are at present pleted the trio for the interclass semi- * endeavoring to locate all of the stu- finals. The Junior lits are the other * dents who come from the states and team. * will call a meeting of them at an ear-: Offiials of the law-dent game: Ref- * ly date. eree, Murphy; Umpire, Doran; Judge. * According to plans of the founders, Johnson. * the club will be on the same order a: Officials of the engineering game: * the other state societies of the campus. Referee,Murphy; Umpire, Sessions; * The proximity of Oklahpma and Mis- Judge, Robinson. - * souri and the fact that the interests of A meeting of the managers of the * both communities are common, led tc semi-finals teams will be held today * the idea of forming a joint society. It at 12:05 at the Athletic Association * is also possible that students fror building, at which time drawings for * Arkansas and Texas will be taken in the remaining games will be made * to the club and the organization mad( The first contest will be Saturday "' to represent the southwestern states. morning at 9 o'clock. * UNION CANVASSERS FIGHTERS OF WHITE WILL SCOUR TOWN PLAGUE RALLY HERE: * Brisk Campaign by Picked Delegates of State Anti-Tuber- Moto tnI et Tumn ...inc-in Q^ C - .--.-. II..-...j * VARSITY FABLES. By Our Own George Ade. Now lie's Some Guy. * Two Brothers meandered into * our Burg in the Fall. One * Brother took a Hunch and Join- * ed the Union. He went down * to the Joint on Sundays and en- * joyed himself. The Other High * brows of the Joint noticed what * a Swell Guy he was and his * Stock began to go up. * * In his Senior Year the Other ' Brother joined the Union. The price was still Two Bucks Four a Bits and he looked around at the Fine New Club House he 9 said, "This is Jake, Bub. And r; you had to pay the Same Price 4 for the Old Club House. I slip- ' ped one over on you. * "Chum," replied the Wise Brother, "I paid more than you OF HUM IS NEGLEC C' Over Three Fou ths of tmploved are Kip. Lmplovment,Says ivr ell i. AECLARES .JAWS Craig's Lameness, Rad Shoulder Worry. lea is Made for Judicial Eatuc_.tion. ray to the East toj and players, and for the varsity egins to look as irday is to be one . There is still{ derestimating an se bids fair to be1 HOSPITAL UNDER QIUAIRA'NTlNE . Seven Cases Reported in Last T1woO Days. Four cases of diphtheria were re- ported at the eye, ear, nose and throat building at the University hospital and as a result the building is now under quarantine. Three more also devel-, n consisted of oped at th e contagious disease hospit- al. The cases have looked suspicious ame lineup as. for several days, and were diagnosed; as diphtheria Wednesday by Dr. Jame. ecause of hold- F. Breakey, city physician. Only one heaply that the building is quarantined at present. No n is not to be students are included among the pa- hi the Reserves tients. ervation of re- PERSONNEL OF BAND HAS asons, as Mich- BEEN DECIDED FOR YEAR of quarters. At At of three avail- At a meeting of the membership a to go through committee of the band held at the ilIan of course Michigan Union the following men is still being were chosen to comprise the personnel y his ankle. He of the band for the year: Cornets-; last night and' Curry, Walthall, Lewis, Dudley, Bergy;I Lefinite idea as Clarinets-Martinek, Anderson, Low- shape. Picard enstein, Clewell, Lewis, Fryberger, ors at the.helm Hanna, Stevenson, O'Hara; Altos-: it but he too is Pyle, Sherrick, Brown, Ballard; Trom- His shoulder bones-Snyder, Forrester, Goddard, rt in the first Gies, Penney; Saxophone-Wilkinson; e been bother- Baritone-Wheeler; 'Basses-Stanley, this condition Worth; Drums-Heald, DeVoist, Har- IVIt~Il LU LdbL. I VVV LuiUsis JOUUIeuLI met on U Davs UN TENI), TO REACH Campus 1,rOO MARK. WAXRTHLIIN )DISCUSSES PROBLEMS, * ,* N did, in the Long Run, I acknowl- edge, But I met a Swell Bunch * . of Fellows, made Nineteen Hon- orary Societies, and now I'm Prexy of the Union." Moral: Do it Now. * * * * * * * * * * * EW WEI ING TANKS FOR HYDRAULIC LABORATORh In order to check off and test thel Forty-five picked men will start a two day "house-to-house" 'campaign for Michigan Union members among university students tonight. Accord- Ing to the plans every house and ev- ery man in the university will be thor- oughly canvassed within the next two days. The campaign will close Sun- day night and by that time the mem- bership list, it is expected, will reach he 1500 mark. Seventy-five delegates representing Anti-Tuberculosis societies of the state of Michigan will convene today in Ann Arbor. A full program has been plan- ned by the committee in charge for the visitors. All the meetings of the con- vention will be held in Memorial Hall. At 9:30 the board of directors will meet in executive session, and at 11:00 a general meeting of the delegates hac been scheduled. At noon the visitors ey re t any their o into - rington; Leader-Fischer. Senior Dents to Form Club. y Senior dents will organize tomor- r row morning at 9 o'clock for the en- o suing year; at this time new officers d will be elected and installed. In or- e der to eliminate dissension which has arisen in previous years du'e to elec- tioneering, the faculty have taken the matter in hand. Their new rule states e that there shall be four offices in the society, one of which is to be held by each of the three dental fraternities s and the other by the independents t Seniors are eligible for full member- ship, and instructors in the depart- e ment and alumni of the society con- - stitute the honorary members. t Silver Broach Goes Unclaimed. A silver broach was found in Bar- bour gymnasium after the Senate Re- ception, which was held about a weep t ago. All efforts to locate the owner slave been unsuccessful and the pin is still at the gym awaiting identifica- tion. 1 A meeting of the committees was held at the Union last night and final will be entertained at the Michigan instructions were given to the can- Union for dinner. . vassers for carrying on the campaign. The most important meeting of the Eachmemer ws gven lede cadssocieties will be held at 2:30 in Me- Each member. was given pledge cards; bulletins, a copy of the Michigan Un- morial Hall when several prominent ion Alumnus and subscription blanks. members of the association will give addresses. Dr. A. S. W arthin of. Ann On the average two city blocks were s. allotted to each man. The committee- Arbor will speak on "The Functions of men will be expected to report to their 'tate and Local Anti-Tuberculosis As- sub-chairman Monday night at the Un- sociations." Miss Ethel McCormick of ion at 7:30. Those who were unable Grand Rapids will talk on "The Prob- to attend the meeting at the Union lcms of Anti-Tuberculosis Work in the last night must communicate with State." Dr. R. L. Dixon, secretary o°" their chairman at once to receive their the State board of Health, will con- te of territory and the sub- clde the afternoon program- with an allotment ofyblank s.explanation of the uses and purposes' scripion b s. of "The State Board of Health Car."; - is that Kallet, the e in the game Sat- fair sample of wha All reports from ontrary it's a saf ey will not come up 1 eleven husky men d out that does not stories and that is ave found a punter, y have not had so is known that they backs and that it and considerable Liem. If the latter t Saturday in the e they ought to if not there seems i why the pigskin Ann Arbor. Carl Adam's Condition Critical. I The condition of Carl Adam, '10, whose serious illness was mentioned in a recent issue of The Daily, has taken no change for the better ac- cording to reports received here. The attending physicians disagree as to the ailment. The first impression was that Mr Adam had become blind but this is not the case although the disease is rapid- ly causing a loss of sight. Mr. Adam was business manager of The Michi- gan Daily in 1909-'10 and a student at Harvard Law School last year. He is at his home in Indianapolis. Chess Club Plans Games. That Michigan is to enter into an- other branch of intercollegiate compe- tition was announced last night at the first meeting of the Chess and Check- Prof. Rich Speaks on Good Roads. Assistant Professor Edward D. Rich of the civil engineering departmen' spoke in Salem township Wednesday under the auspices of the Farmers' club on the general purpose of gooO roads, and the advantage of the coun- try plan over the township plan. The supervisors of Washtenaw county have already submitted this plan to the people and it will be voted on at the coming spring election. Various members of the engineer- ng faculty among them Dean Cooley have expressed themselves as being + ,rongly in favor of this movement wnich has been successful in over thirty counties in Michigan. In no' one of these counties where the'systeir is in force have the people made use of -heir power of appealing it. accuracy of the formulae in use for' measurements in the engineering de-' partment hydraulic laboratory an in- vestigation will be conducted. The two large reservoir tanks in thy, hydraulic laboratory will be used as a means. of correcting the existin, formulae. Each tank is built with it own weighing scales and the weighing beams are brought together so that the weighing operation in both tank9 can be performed simultaneously by' one man. In the bottom of each tank: is a valve, operated by a hydraulics cylinder, and the piston is controlled by cocks and valves that are arranged along side of the weighing beams Spouting mechanism is provided tc, direct the water first into one tanrl and then into the other; and this al so is controlled by power. this ar- rangement permits the weighing, con- tinuously of a uniform discharge o 10 cubic feet per second of water, anon, weighing intermittently a very muc larger quantity of water. Senior Society Elects New MembersI The senior society elected six wom- en of the class of 1912 yesterday. As yet no date for the initiation of the candidates has been selected but it iq I robable that it will be held next wee The following seniors were chosen Mary Woodhull, Marguerite Wells, Le da Stellwagen, Gladys Greenfelder, Grace Streibert, Agnes Delano. Pharmics Receive Javanese .Gift. The School of Pharmacy has re- cently received as a gift from th- government cinchona plantation of Ja va, the finest collection of cinchona bark in this country. From this wood the drug, quinine, is prepared. The collection will be placed in the Muse um of Pharmacognosy. KLEXANDER'S*RAGTIME BAND" IS TABOOED AT ANAPOLIS ANNAPOLIS, MD., Nov. 1.-Tha' tuneful composition "Alexander's Ra Time Band," has been placed under ban at the U. S. Naval Academy. Un- able to stand the strains of this num- ber, sweeping through the banque, hall, the authorities have forbidden al" whistling in the midshipmen's dormi- tory. As long as the students limited their melody to "Anchors Aweigh," the authorities did not complain, and they even showed a disposition tc stand for "Every Little Movement," and "The Barber Shop Chord," but that latest "rag" with its stirring invi- tation to "come and hear" proved the last straw. ihousands u1oA tcu - ne accidenus o~Cur y aY ,e Lnited'S a1es hat .cu.,.. l. . L.erted," decared Joha M - ..As address on ' Industral Aid N Lni.ersity Hall last ni.ht. '36,000 are killed1 or maimed an - om industrial accidents. " in -nited Sates three-iourhs of .inployed are kiiied .n course o ,ioyment, which is far greater any other country in the world " "The conser ation of the w wealth of the country is a nat great concern but the conservati .iuman resources is one of greater importance," continued ,abor leader. "Society does not u otand the gravity of the situation one that concerns every person s is the duty of every citizen to t remedy the defects in the presen tem. "The inadequate laws of this co are the cause of the larger numi accidents as compared with fc countries. If the lawmakers more attention to human affairs to abstractand useless question tariff legislation the country wot better off. The main object of the err ment is to protect the liveso people." "In most of the states there more men employed as fish and . ardens than as factory inspecto is morednecessary to protect the of children than those of fish game," said Mr. Mitchell, The fact that more is paid in fees by the injured than is obt vl compensation for the mijurie eived was brought out by him,. 'one third of the judges of the co should be done away with, is the .3r of the famous unionist. He advocated the use of museums achools by the state to show v 3afty devices. in view of the fact that ther ;ncre killed in time of peace in i xeial pursuits in one year than t- ire casualties of the Ci. il War, t'e Continental army in the I iht years of the Revolutionary why doesn't tevery American e is every thing in his power to rent it?" SYCHJCLOGY TEXT WTNL-EE TR'NSL i TED INT S? . Prof. W. B. Pillsbury's text t6 sycholo y is soon to be transat o Spanish by Charles L Tra who was graduated fromu the u ity last June. Prof. Pillsburys .s a standard work in this countr; the translation will be made in to give all Spanish-speakin I he benefit of a book already tes American universities. Mr. Traverso has been. tra eli the east recently, studying socia ditions, as a representative of t ruvian government. He expec sail for Peru on Nov. 9th, whe will take a position in the dipl service. A Japanese professor will be t ator at the next convocation c University of Chicago, December DON'T GET THE IDEA THAT' TOO LATE TO SUBSCRIBE. BIIG ISISUES ARE YET TO CO 3 Y ' E, T" P a s . , That over 800 names were forged to a referendum for an appropriation for the University of Washington, has de- veloped in the trial held Eugene, Oregon. last week atI * * * * * * * * * * * * TE ,TE. B. Hutchins, Dean J. rar A. G. Hall and Sec- Smith all left Ann Ar- to attend the annual the Michigan State ciation, being held this vill speak officially at it the other represen- Lie university are not >n a professional topic. * * * * * * * * Sale of Seats at 50 Cease. - .--~ Cents to The sale of student 50 cent seats to the Syracuse game will be stopped at 6 o'clock this af- ternoon and after that tinie no more tickets will be sold for less than $1.00. er club held at the Michigan Union _ 'ast night. Games by correspondence L ESAy PRIZES OFFERED OR with Cornell and Wisconsin, and trips ESAYS ON SOCIAL PROBLEMS, to M. A. C., Detroit University, and I the Toledo Chess club form part of Five hundred dollars in prizes are the schedule now under considera- offered again this year, by N. W. Har- tion. Over 15 men have already sig- ris, president of the Harris Trust and nified their intention of joining the Savings bank, Chicago, for the best club, but there is plenty of chance for essays submitted dealing with social good en, especially checker players oblems of the day. Undergradu- The election of onicersc cill take placer ,ates at Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wiscon- Te Telectio ofsin, Iowa and Michigan are eligible to next Tuesday. compete. The subjects to be written Chicago will hold tryouts for her on this year are: "The Short Ballot," teams in the Central Debating League "The Corrupt Practices Act," and "The today. Employer's Liability and Workman's Compensation Act." Essays are limit- HAVE YOU HE .1iD OF THE YEL- ed to ten thousand words. Further in- LOW SOUVENIR SPORTING EXTR 'formation concerning the essays may * * * * * * * * * * * * * SUBSCRIBE FOR THE FOLKS AT HOME AND WRITE FEWER LET- IMEDIEIATELY AFTER THE PENNSY be obtained from Professor Reeves of TERS. G1aJIE? the Political Science department.- I