THE MICHIGAN DAILY t t- BEE "The Popi~zle.r Place" Home Made Candles Light Lunches Ice Cream Soda We make our Candies and Ice Cream in our own Klean Kandy Kitchen 313 South State St. N THE MICHIGAN DAILY Official newspaper at the University of Mich i ga n. Published every morning except Monday dur- ing the university year. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Offices Ann Arbor Press Building. Subscription Price: By carrier, $2.50; by mail $3.0. Want Ad Stations: Press Building; Quarry's Pharmacy; University Pharmacy; C. H. Davis. Cor. Packard and State. Phone: Bell,t96o. Maurice Toulme...........Managing Editor Adna Johnson.............Business Manager IN CHARGE OF THIS ISSUE. Editor--Gordon C. Eldredge. Manager-Myron W. Watkins. Assistants to Editor-W. A. John, C. L. Kendrick. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1913 HATS OFF! Hats off, to the 1913 team. Hats off, to Fielding H. Yost, America's fore- most football mentor, America's best sportsman. Hats off, to."Bubbles" Paterson, Michigan's captain, as good as the best that Michigan has ever had. The glory of Michigan's team is Michigan's glory. Never has the team been better coached, never better cap- tained and never has it appeared to better advantage to the world, as a perfect machine, perfect physically and perfect in sportsmanship, perfect in defeat and perfect in victory. If -Ver, in the future, a Michigan team is beset with difficulties, if ever again there is a disheartening defeat, early in the season, just let that team back the pages of history, turn back to the story of the year 1913. If that team is not inspired, if that team does become possessed of faith, then that team will fail to measure up to a certain Michigan team, that we have in mind. GOOD-BYE AND GOOD LUCK. Good-bye "Bubbles," "Jimmie," "Brute," "Squib," "Aqua," and "Babe." Goodbye, it grieves us deeply to have to say it. Your past will always be an inspiration. Your future is assured, if you will but labor as consistently for the larger world as you have for Michigan. In these years, that you have serv- ed us, you have grown precious to us, as a part of Michigan. We have suf- fered with you in defeat and shared your joy in victory. It will be hard to become used to new names, harder to establish new confidences. Michi- gan can never be better represented. All of you are sportsmen, in the high- est sense, you are Michigan men. Good-bye and Good Luck. CAMPUS FOOTBALL CHAMPS DECIDED BY NEW METHODS Old Elimination Contests Discarded For Percentage System Formerly Used. Athletic authorities, realizing that the system of carrying on class ath- letics was in need of direction, se- cured Floyd Rowe to take charge of all intramural sports. The first in- novation that Rowe inaugurated, was to change the method by which the campus championship in football would be awarded. Instead of the old elimination con- tests, which have been in vogue in the past, the percentage system was adopted. Each team entered in the race played every other eleven of MANY OLD STARS HELP COACH TEAM Roll Contains Players With National Reputations-Several On All American. GRAD SYSTEM NOW ESTABLISHED More than a score of Maize and Blue gridiron stars of the days of old have helped Coach Yost put the final edge on the Varsity for today's game. Some of the old boys could not return to their alma mater until Thursday or Friday, but others have been here for several weeks. The roll of the former stars is long and imposing. It contains many play- ers who have been given national rec- ognition. Michigan's two greatest players have added their efforts to those of their former teacher to groom this years machine for this afternoon. "Willie" Heston, halfback from 1901 to 1904 and captain the latter -year, held by many to be the greatest foot- ball player of all time, was with the team on the Vanderbilt trip, and has been on Ferry field the last day or two. "Germany" Schultz, center on the Wolverine team of 1904-5-7-8, and probably the greatest defensive play- er Michigan ever had, has served as assistant coach this year, after two years' experience as line coach at the University of Wisconsin. The first of the graduate coaches to report this year was "King" Cole, star tackle in '02 and '03 and assist- ant coach in '04, Cole, one of the prem- ier All-Western linemen of his day, has coached both the University of Virginia and the University of Ne- braska, since leaving college. He is now a ranch owner in Montana, and at this season of the year has been able to devote several weeks to the tutoring of Yosts charges. Walter F. Bennett, '99 captain, and Hugh White, '01 captain of the first team coached by Yost, have also been on Ferry field for several weeks. "Cap" Redden, left end on the teams of '00 to '03, and picked with Neil Snow of the '98 to '01 teams as the two best Michigan ends of all time, have both been back for a short time. Redden was really the originator of the grad- uate system at Michigan, coming back year after year to aid the Varsity. Snow was the only Michigan athlete to ever win the Varsity letter twelve times, competing each year of his course on the baseball and track teams, as well as on the gridiron. Tom and Harry Hammond, fullback and end in the Heston days; "Hal" Weeks, quarterback in '00, '01, and '02, all returned to Ferry field during the past week. The former was Yost's choice as the greatest Michigan full- back. The dean of the old boys who re- turned was Frank W. Henninger, cap- tain of the famous 1895 team that tied Harvard on the memorable eastern trip when the Varsity played Harvard, Yale and Princeton on successive days, and wanted to go back the next day and play off the tie with the Crimson. Among the younger alumni who re- turned to the aid of the Maize and Blue were "Shorty" McMillan, quarter- back in '10 and '11, "Honk" Conklin, captain in '11, his third year on the Varsity, and "Babe" Benbrook, '10 leader of the Wolverines, Yost's choice for left guard on the All-Time Michi- gan team, and recently chosen as an All-Time All-American guard by a Chicago critic. their department and the winners of the departmental championships are to meet the champs of each depart- ment. The class winning the greatest percentage of their games in this last series is to be the campus champions. It is worth 10 per cent on any Suit or O'Coat in the shop. I want to see how many people Daily. Not g Nov. 19, 1913. read the ood after It is not good on an order already placed or on account. J. K. Malcolm Cut Out This Ad. and Bring It To Mly Shop 604 E. Liberty JMalcolm Block Insist on having the new Brain Food on your table Butter Krust Bread Made only at THE CITY BAKERY "By doing our work well and not you, is the reason we have made a success,, C. F. Meyers Print Shop Established 1897 Dance and Banquet Programs a Specialty See the room we have set aside exclusively for our customers 215 South Main Street, Entire Second Floor Phone 281-L 206 E. Huron St. FRED. HEUSEL, Prop. Phone Goods Delivered Special rates to Fraternities and Boarding Houses F' j j After the Game Eat at Rex's The Club Lunch The. Ca-mpus Bootery Men's Fine Shoes Women's Fine Shoes Bostonians and Florsheims Made in Lynn and Rochester 712 .arbor St. Opp. State and Packard Local Agents ROYAL TAILORS 308 South State Street Opposite IHuston's i M