e Michigan Dail Daily E ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1912.9P2 .. ERT STORMS GIVES ST OF LECTURE SERIES, bert Storms delivered the ss of a series of four at hall yesterday afternoon. C. A. having abandoned the ernoon meetings, have plan- st of addresses, the second n this afternoon. The sub- >day's address, which is to men only, will be "Eternal vill Ats of the Wednesday and ctures, for both men and be "The Everlasting Yea" Double Signature." Dr. Michigan graduate of '84, merly president of Ames rs GIVEN MORE TIME, ion to Those Who Failed Pay Class Dues. senior lits who failed to ass dues last week will rief extension of time to d order invitations, Ow- oincidence of commence- and the Seventy-fifth An- lebration the senior invi- year will contain pro- les of the class the payment of from partaking es during com-e igpent seniors obtain caps and >wn stores. ting campaign s Met with con- INITIAL POSITION WORRIES RICKEY Numerous Candidates Trv Out But Ihov Don't Seem To Fill The Bill RLINE GIVEN A TRIAL YESTERMAY Aside from the reticence of spring which is causing Coach Branch Rickey no end of worry, the Michigan tutor has another big difficulty on his hands in finding a man to fill the first base position. Rickey is confident he has good material for the other infield po, sitions, and right now could almost pick three men for third, short and second, who could fill the bill accept- ably. But the first baseman's job is worrying the .coach. Rickey wants a man who can both hit and field, and so far he has not decided which of his candidates come the nearest to fulfilling his require, ments, Gould, Towell,Seully and Poj., tius have all been looked over and still the coach is trying out more men, Kline, a former Kalamazoo high play- er and' last year a member of the fresh lit team is the latest man to be tried at the initial corner. Kline -is big and has a reputation as a hard hit- ter and an accurate fielder. He is a trifle slow, however, and this will han- dicap him no little bit, perhaps enough to keep him from landing the berth. "First base is my big probem," said Rickey speaking i the mtte.' "I'vp jeer} tryij}g Kline at first base, argI e teem to Yave smQthing it the bitir} gll ,l c t }} } 41E Who P i both hit and fielt will get the pb," SAYS THAT TRADE.MAUKS ARE 1NOT A ODERN INSTITUTI oN. "Trade-marks are not a modern in- stitution," said Mr. E. S. Rogers in the first of a series of lectures on "The L.w Lf T a d- ar1s and Unfair Trade" yesterday aftea noon. Icgrerg ppve that they were mse4 as far b ck as e year tiOO B. Q." Mr. Rogers also explained that there wgs no need to copyright tr-40-:rnftpl, and that pIctures were iere tcestr ful as trade-marks than nanes, ,e will continue his lecture today at 4 p. m. in room G of the law building' Alchemists Banquet at U~nion. Alchemist society held its monthly dinner at the Michigan Union last night. Sidney Lawrence served as toastmaster. Prof. ;H. H. Willard and Mr. A, E. White, faculty members of the organization,- gave talks and a number of the student members were called upon: MANY TEACHERS EXPECTED HERE Educators of Note to Attend 47th Annual Session of Schoolmasters SEVERAL FROM OTHER STATES. One thousand educators are expect- ed to attend the forty-seventh annual meeting of the Michigan Schoolmas- ters' Club to be held here March 26-30. Over 3,500 programs of the meeting have been sent to all high school teachers in the state by Secretary L. P. Jocelyn. All of the Toledo teachers are expected to be here and many from Cleveland and Chicago will at- tend. Many educators of note will address the sessions of the club. Prof. C. J. Keyser, of Columbia University, and Miss Sara L. Arnold, dean of Simmons College, Boston, will speak before the general sessions. Two Chicago Uni- versity professors, Prof. James F. Ho- sie, of the English departmert, and Prof. A. A. Michelson, of the physics department, will address different con- ferences. Others from outside the state of Michigan who will be here' are President David Felmley, of Indi- ana State Normal and Prof. E. M. Hop- kins, of the University of Kansas. Many of the university professors will also speak before the various conferences. SOPiIOMORM G4J#J #OI4 1)FORWlAT; SUpjP3E1 TOIA Y Girls of the sophomore class will give an informal supper today at 5:15 to practice songs for the Women's Banquet. The Freshman Spread yield- ed a sufficient surplus to finance the affair .and tickets will be only 15 cents. Those selling tickets for the Wom- en's Banquet request that sophomores desiring tickets bring tl I money fpr the sa'e to the supp1 as the tickets ale gpi}g rapidl and this jill b ably lie the last ppor.tnty tQ se e FIRST.BOUTS IN WRESTLING TOURNAMENT BILLED TODAY The preliminaries in the university wrestling tournament will start in Waterman gym this afternoon at 4 o'clock when the first elimination matches will be held. The tournament this year has attracted considerable interest and the list of entries is larg- er than in former years. Many of the contestants are experienced in the mat game and close battles are expected. The matches to be held this after- noon are: Heavy weights-Morse vs. Thors; middle weights-Longe vs. Feree; welter weights-Bosberry vs. Lewis; light weights-Bogue vs. Wes- terman; feather weight-Yellen vs. Doyle. 10121E Vj Plan HOLD FIRST REAL REHEARSAL. French Actors Meet at Opera House Sunday Afternoon. The cast of "Le Monde ou 'on s'en- nuye, the French play which the Cer- cle Francais will produce at the Whit- ney theater, March 28, met for the first time to rehearse on the Whitney stage Sunday afternoon. Vigorous work this week and the remaining At least one cla ord as opposed t plan of adorning class memorials. the senior.engine( ute $300 towards igan Union $1,000 memorial will be and will be used days of next week will be given to the fire place w play in order to insure as perfect a constructed. production as possible. The lecture May 11 was on Pailleron's master farce which for the class Prof. Robert Effinger will give Wed- held at the Bi nesday afternoon at 5 o'clock in Tap- class tax of pan hall, will usher in the finishing final date of stages of this year's annual pxpoduo- March 30. It tion. caps and go The cepeVy which will be used this Thursdays af year Will e.ir part that used by the Has Been C Omedy Club, oourtesy of the Whitney The plan o: O, of Detroit, The elaborate sets rials to the M from "Lena Rivers" Co. and "I Loved followed out a .asie" will constitute the interior gineering clw settings for the play. 1907 class fur The seat sale, though not as yet def- in the missic initely announced, will probably begin in use at th at the end of the week. The scale of ceeding elasse prices wiii be $1.00, 75 cents and 50 set aside fund cents. tion of certal ,hen i anno Senior Boilerr to Go on Rec to Adorning Memorials WILL BE USED o. pqsted in the wnd Twppan givlgw" Announces pries i Ja iden DRINKING FO-V IAN TO BE VACV ON CAMPUS SOON. much faF However, erary cla be WK ,A travel sketch Edg Alowrer, y have 13, an impressionistic story by Charl- g good es-_Christoph, '12, an essay by a d Bay al- Robertson, '13, and a story in "lighter e. But vein" by Warren Crane, '12, form the day principal contributions to the March Sia number of the new literary maga-; triackzine, "The Painted Window." This is track. the first issue of the magazine. The nego cover design is by Joseph Hudnut, stomed '12 E, and represents a rich stained- dthsat glass window while the frontispiece )Pese-ris by Mr. Raymond Everett. Other bly t-he-contributors, Harold Scott, '13, How- bly te ard Devere, '13, and Martin Feind- Amer- stein, have written .poems. G. 0. giving Spaulding, '12, has furnished a sketch, gvSo and John Townley, '13, has written a s.er Sopage of musical criticism. ender a The issue will go on sale tomorrow be ob-morning at the State street stores at ,d fromfifteen cents the copy and subscrip- tions at the rate of fifty cents for four; ctant copies of the magazine will be taken sno at the same places. son, he Contributions from all sources in the shape of stories, poems, essays or ti tA. articles of campus interest are wel- res s nccomed by the editors. G. O. Spaulding, evening '12, is managing editor of the maga- if mile, zine and Peter Fagan, '12, is business 2 in manager, 'as the hird in nember Forester Gets GoernmentP ositon. err ran Norman W. Scherer, fifth year for- should ester, left last Saturday for Flagstaff, avor of Ariz., to accept a position with the government at Fort Valley Experiment. Station. He will not return to col- EE lege, having recently taken the civil UNION. service examinations for the posi- tion of forest assistant. a of the -- - - at is to Noted Engineer Speaks Tonight. he uni- Mr. H. MI. Hobart, consulting engi- eventy- neer for the General Electric Co., will i, will speak before the Engineering Society ichigan. tonight on, "Isolated Electric Instal- Twen- lations." The lecture will be held in, on the the west physics lecture room, at vassing 8 o'clock. ils will 8 at this The senior class at North Dakota to meet Agricultural College is planning a gements standard graduation emblem. 1$11 Uts' Itejorlal Will Take Place of Old One Near The Flag Pole. CJEM!CAL NGINE RS, TAKE' 'WRI? V, %]JRI0ET RT ATURDAYi. In eonnectiqi with course 1 in chem- ical engineeriig, a trip to Detroit, open to all enginees, is planned for ne t Saturday. Tl* party will, leave Ann Arbor at 6:5' ' kAm and depart. from D trolt t 5:05 p. m. The fol- Ioviung plants will be inspected: De- troit Iron'and steel Co., Semet-Solvay Coke Oven Pla, Michigan Malleable Iron Co., Mona h Steel Casting Co., and Detroit Se lless Steel Tubes Co. HAIL, GEDDLE SPRIG HAILU No, little one, you no longer have ed for and, ac ding to the econom- to give the excuse "cola and sore ics departmen the amount of ice throat" to the attendance committee. cream sold in n Arbor this season Spring fever is now endemic or will be unusu y large, Oh, girls, words to that effect. did you see th A robin was seen circling around The Frosh wh has yet to make the the rhetoric building about 8 o'clock acquaintance of he boulevard, would yesterday morning, so a debate as to do well to iemCiber that the poet's whether Washington really crossed "ethereal mildnis" refers to the the Delaware, was called off. The weather, and noto the attitude of music stores urge that all serenaders the prof. when heaears "not prepar- order their harp strings before April ed" from two or tree directions at 1, and the canoe hostelries are about once. For inforntion as to wheth- ready to let out contracts at the old. er it is still too slilary under foot for rates. Beefsteak roasts up by the' Prexy to ring the clnes in person, he island are being planned for the next should call up the ;e editor between auspicious day. (Would you go for two and three a. m.['he impression is real live goldfish from the Belle Isle current, however, tit the chimes are aquarium?) In view of the presence usually rung by pro'. of - the Lenten season, all property- The poetry editor ioverworked, and holders are requested to abstain from will have to take a art rest. Please cleaning their sidewalks. To disre- press all flowers be;e sending them gard this advice would surely involve to him, so that the will keep until' the passing of one of Ann Arbor's old- he returns to his de Yes, hearts- est traditions. ease would be approlfte, but he is The Grizzly Bear, Turkey Trot, and fond of violets. all other deviations from the old- In closing, .if you !1 so springy fashioned two-step and waltz, are. now that you are impelled 'spring some- forbidden in the neighboring town to thing "too sentiments for words, the east, so that, from now on, all you are respectfully )rred to The our fussers will be present or account- Gargoyle. An artistic drinking fountain, the class memorial of the 1911 lits, is &idn to be placed in the middle g* khle, em- pus near the e, te we- less old, fQun4tai w 10 It is of simple (|lhi 1A en cens-tsts of a square,' tagpging shaft, of mottled Bedford astone two and a half feet on a side at the base and over six feet high. On each side projects a bowl carved out of the stone, in which there will be a sanitary drinking spout, and above the bowls are class numerals. The fountain is practically finished, and will be put in place as soon as the weather permits and when new pipes can be laid for the water. A general ide of what was wanted was decided upon by -the cltas s before the close of last year, and a committtee, of which Gordon Kingsbury was chairman, was appointed to see the plan carried out. FINAL CLASS BASKETBALL' GAME AROUSES COMMENT. No little interest is being aroused over the final game of the inter-class basketball series, when the junior lits meet the soph engineers to decide the championship of the campus and inci- dentally to determine whether the en- gineers are to retain the Druid bas- ketball trophy or to pass its custody over to the lits. The game will be' staged tomorrow evening, at Water- man gym, and a large attendance is expected. Branch Rickey and "Dutch" Wenner have been chosen to act as officials for the contest. The match will 'be called at 7:30 and an admis- sion of 25 cents will be charged, Junior Girls Win From Seniors. The first of the series of upper-class basketball games held yesterday af- ternoon, ended with a score of 8 to 3 in favor of the juniors. The next game, the second of the series, v ill be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. ' Probably the largest crowd t gathered at the Michigan Uni year, heard the Sunday afterno gram given by the represental five nations. It is estimated t members of the Union attend musical concert, rendered by s from China, Porto Rico, Ind menia and Italy. ' The national songs of the countries were sung in the tongues,along with a number ular airs. The Chinese studeni ed on native instruments, the - and flute. William Welsh, president c Cosmopolitan club took charge program. . FRED LAWTON DROPS INT TOWN IN SEARCH OF J. Fred Lawton, familiarly as "Freddie," dropped into Ann last night in search of three boys" who were arrested here charge of breaking, into freigi No, Fred isn't a father. 'He is a tion officer iik the Juvenile C Detroit and has charge of the quent boys. Lawton graduated from the 1 department last June. While lege he was prominent in cam fairs and wrote several of the for the Michigan Union operas Prof. Winkler to Address Tc Professor Max Winkler, head German faculty, will address t ior and junior men's sections Deutscher Verein on "Bismarl combined meeting tomorrow at 8 o'clock. campus. The olas its fund betWeen women a ncI the me the JQn in th clock, which is nc LARGE CROWD Hl MUSICAL PROi