l . A. v1 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1914. PRICE s I I EVENTS FOR TODAY Michigan Union opera, Whitney thea- ter, 8:15 o'clock. Prof. George R. LaRue lectures in Mu- seum lecture room, 7:00 o'clock. Mr. Baldwin lectures in room 348 new engineering building, 11:00 o'clock. TEACHERS TO HEAR GERMANDIPLOMAT Chicago Consul-General Will Speak at Bismarck Celebration on April 1 . VETERANS LINE UP IN FIELDING DRILL Lundgren Puts Abbreviated Squad of Diamond Candidates Through Stiff Grind INFIELD ITEN IN REAL PRACTICE Coach Lundgren accomplished more yesterday afternoon in the first work- out with the abbreviated indoor squad of two dozen men, than he has been CHEMICAL SOCIETY ELECTS EIGHT 31E TO iMEMBERSHIP" Phi Lambda Upsilon, national chem- ical honor society, with Delta chapter at Michigan, -has elected eight men from the advanced courses in chemis- try to membership. Scholarship and personality form prerequisites in the selection. Those to be initiated at the banquet to be held at the Union next Monday night are: E. M. Honan, and R. L. Novy, graduates, R.E. Christman, '14E, B. A. Standerling, '15E, H. E. Wheeler, '15E, J. W. Robinson, '15E, C. P. Field, '15P, and R. F. Smith, '16P. VARSITY TWO TEAMS I DO BATTLE EVENT IS OF STATE INTERESTI WELTL. Be Popular of edy, ex- pea make ne sev, 'A Model Daughter" irst time last night om the picturesque t act in the art stu- de France until the ped on the brilliant ,abaret Mornet the spell bound by the ,scent spectacle of, EVENTS OF TOMORROW University Oratorical contest, Univer- sity Hall, 8:00 o'clock. Fresh architect dance, Packard acade- my, 9:00 o'clock. Triangles and Sphinx annual Unionl opera party, 8:15 o'clock.' Prof. Robert W. Hegner lectures in Newberry hall, 8:00 o'clock. Weekly Lounger, Michigan Union, 7:30 o'clock. Reception by Prof. E. C. Goddard and Mrs. Goddard for Chinese students, 1212 Hill street, 8:00 o'clock. Michigan Union opera, Whitney the- ater, 8:15 o'clock. ISSUE DIRECTIONS FOR FUMIGATION' No New Cases Reported Yesterday and Cummings Thinks Epidemic' Is Checked ALLINGTON IMPROVES STEADILY Directions for disinfection with for- maldehyde gas, by Dr. H. H. Cum- mings. Preparation of Room. Make the room as tight as possible by closing cracks and crevices. Ar- range articles in the room so that the gas can gain free access. Hang cloth- es on lines across room. In center of room place a pan to contain the fumi- Consul-General Alfred Geissler, of Chicago, will be the principal speaker at the Bismarck birthday celebration to be given in Hill auditorium on April 1. The event will mark the opening of the 49t4 meeting of the Michigan Schoolmasters' club, and will be given under the auspices of the German so- cieties of Ann Arbor and the univer- sity. President H. B. Hutchins will give the address of welcome. Prof. W. W. Florer, of the German department, will preside. Alumni of the various German uni- versities are planning to take this op- portunity to organize in Ann Arbor an alumni association of German univer- sities. Prominent Germans throughout the state will be present. Invitations have been extended to all German churches, both Catholic and Lutheran, to all German organizations and to people interested in German culture and language. The Harmonie Maennerchor of De- troit, one of the best known musical Captain Kohler and Seward Crack Squads of Track on Saturday Night STARS ARE PITTED AGAI EACH OTHER IN ALL 'Relay Will Probably Decide Freshmen to Compete First Time ho handled Le Dupont, surpassed portrayal and his in- n the Cab- be desired lifficult to erson was George as Caro Ientwo sented rk and I was ws, '14, as P " and a ne'er honors in hi e was ably ass orf, '14L, and G s the Count am , when during e three prese m a Nut," wh lause. The bus especially clevq "If I Only Ha one of'the son uage of Method. Figure out approximately the num- took the ber of cubic feet of space in room. hter" de- Deprees Formaldehyde Fumigators in at the may be procured at any drug store for left va- 25c, 50c, 75c, and $1.00. , Place the s injured, proper size fumigators in a pan or pail. make the Ignite and close room for eight hours. portrayal At night open windows and air out the ely satis- room fumigated. m more Instructions. s Rose in Isolate patients affected in one room. Let one person attend to their needs. line Sed- Provide a receptacle for expectoration. rth Sed- Have the dishes, silver, and linen used a digni- in this room, boiled for at least five his sing- minutes before allowing anyone to use notewor- them. Disinfect sputum and throat washings with carbolic acid. Fumi- ierre La gate room after recovery. do well No new cases of throat trouble were s comedy reported to the University health ser- sisted by vice yesterday. Dr. Cummings, head ;ordon C. of the service, believes that the fum- d Count- igation of the various fraternity hous- the cab- es and rooming houses that have been nted the infected, will greatly aid in checking hich met the epidemic. -- iness for The condition of H. J. Allington, who- er. Fel- is ill at St. Joseph's sanitarium, was d a Girl," reported as improved yesterday. In- g hits of jecti6ns of blood serum are still being. made by Dr. Mark Marshall. For this y" Dunn, purpose several men from the Psi Up- ce by his silon house are being bled each day at of a hap- the University health service. d abroad. "The use of the common napkin," late lady Dr. Cummings declared in response to specialty the report that several men used the applaud- same napkin in' certain fraternity houses, "is one of the easiest ways of E. Kline, spreading this or any other disease. t's sake" He says that this unsanitary practice Parsons, should not be tolerated. g friend, The Whitney theater was fumigated1 Tuesday by the city health officers. The Majestic theater was fumigated e excep- last night. Dr. Wessinger, city health mble mu- officer, says that the theaters will be d. Prac- compelled to fumigate at least .once a l) week in the future. able to do in several practices, with all the candidates on hand. Following the batting drill, the coach lined .up his infield and gave the men a long session of fielding and base pegging. Tward, the veteran first sacker, was not out; and Dwyer, the youngster on the first string, appeared at the initial corner. His work was close up to the standard of the older men, and apparently favorably im- pressed the coach. "Tommy" Hughitt was at his old stand on third, and although andi- capped with a sore hand, showed all his accustomed "pep." The veteran combination of Baker and McQueen around the middle sack was working like clockwork, and with Hippler at the plate, the gym fans were treated to a lightning fast workout. Benton was given a brief stunt with the big mit, before the coach -chased his men down stairs. In the batting practice, Quaintance and Baribeau, the veteran hurlers, let, themselves out, each having a world of stuff. The doctor's spitter was. break- ing well, and "Ack" was mixing all his balls In excellent form. Baer and Hippler handled the two veterans, but the coach would not let Baer throw any, as the latter's arm is in bad shape. Hughitt and Davidson are the other cripples on the squad, both having a bad hand. Lundgren is making his men work out 'on the track this week, to -build up their wind, and from now-,n the1 new lines of work will follow each other rapidly. Early next week the coach will probably begin teaching the squad team work. Seniors Nominate Class. Day Officers At the senior engineer class meeting today the following men will be voted on for class day officers: orator, R. Keliher, F. Miller, and W. Schomburg; historian, F. Dubois, C. Crowe, and F. Abrams; toastmaster, G. Ballantine,l D. Dudley and R. Yerington; poet, C. Barnett, R. Hill, and H. Cope. Bridge Players Must Catch Up Tonight, Those who are behind in the Union bridge tournament will have a final opportunity to make up their back games at 7:30 o'clock this evening at the Union. The final round of the tour- nament will be played tomorrow night. Pewter steins will be given as prizes, to the winners. 1914 LAWS OPPOSE USUAL MEMORIAL For the first time in the history ofl the law department, the graduating class is leaving without bestowing some sort of a memorial to that de- partment. This drastic action was! taken at a recent meeting of the senior law class when it decided it would leave no memorial to the department,1 other than the class picture. Many suggestions were made, pro- posing new ideas relative to the gift, among those being an addition to the memorial fund left last year by thef 1913 class. This fund is used to assist self-supporting students through col-I (Continued on page 3.) 1 CONSUL=GENERAL ALFRED GEISSLER Frank Pennell, '12, Gets Advancement Frank Pennell, '12, has been advanc- ed from a desk job to editor of the In- dustrial Review, one of the three pub- lications of the Western Underwriter Co., insurance publishers of Cincinnati. He has also been appointed insurance editor of the Cincinnati Enquirer. Pen- nell was managing editor of The Mich- igan Daily last year and prominent in campus activities. FOUR MEN PICKED FOR 2-MILE RELAY Haff, Jansen, Griest and Murphy Will Race Big Red Men in Meet at Pittsburg BROWN IS SUB; TRIALS SPEEDY Trials, held yesterday afternoon, de- cided the makeup of the quartet that will run against Cornell in a two mile relay race at the Pittsburg meet Sat- urday. Haff, Jansen, Murphy, and Griest were the runners who made the best times in the trials, and Brown will be carried as a substitute. Trainer Farrell maintained sphinx- like silence on the exact nature of the marks made by his half milers, and gave out nothing except the informa- tion that Jansen made the fastest time of"the four. The Trainer did not seem' to be- dissatisfied with the result, so there is some reason to believe that all of them clipped off the half mile] distance at close to two minutes. It was expected that Fox would beat out Brown for the substitute position, but, the veteran showed some of his last year's form, and came back strong1 enough to cinch the fifth berth. Brown won the first race over Lam- ey, but according to Trainer Farrell, made the poorest time of any of the leaders in the other races. Jansen won the second race, with Griest second, and Fox third. The third and last, race was won by Haff with Murphy second. NEW HONORARY FRATERNITY MAKES SPRING SELECTIONS Tau Beta Sigma, Alpha chapter, hon- orary architectural and landscape de- sign fraternity held ,their spring elec- tions on March 17 and the following men were admitted: C.C. Cohagen,'15A, Billings, Mont., C. E. Firestone, '14A, Canton, Ohio, John B. Jewell, '15A, De- troit, G. M. McConkey, '14A, Ann Ar- bor, R.C. Perkins, '15A, East Orange,N. J., H. 0. Wittimore, grad., Owosso, and David H. Williams, special, Duluth, Minn. -. .A -, _.. Special Geology Lecturer Called Away Frank Leverett, special lecturer of the United States Geological ,Survey, who has been delivering a series of talks before the class in Geology 20, has been suddenly called away for spe- cial service for the government. He will go to Louisiana to conduct.some special work and will not return to Ann Arbor until some time after East- er vacation. The lectures which Mr. Leverett has been giving for the past two weeks will be discontinued until further notice.- organizations in the country will ren- der several selections. The Wartburg Verein, under the leadership of Pastor William Hopp, has made arrangements to come to the celebration in a body. Prof. ,William Howland, of the school of music, will give a vocal solo. The 'varsity' quartet will sing several songs common to German students,and Frank Taber, of the school of music, will render several organ selections. Mrs. G. A. Hastreiter, of this city, will also give a vocal solo. PAGEANT SUFFERS SCARCITY OF MEN Though the time for the production of the Joan of Arc pageant is still dis- tant, keen interest is being shown by those signing up on the lists as can- didates for the cast, and Prof. H. A. Kenyon is receiving many questions about the pageant. The women are turning out excep- tionally well to try for the pageant,' but owing to a misunderstanding of the' time for signing the lists, the men have been fairly slow to report. Therefore,: the senior and junior men may both sign up today at Prof. Kenyon's office in the old engineering building. Soph- (Continued on page 3.) Instead of an interclass struggl Varsity meet, scheduled for Satu will be a contest between a tear by Capt. Kohler and an opposing tion led by "Howdy" Seward. F men, as well as Varsity track cr dates, have been entered. The Varsity meet will serve tryout for the squad that will mee Cornell track team next week. It also serve as a final indoor wom for the all-fresh athletes, whose in season is over. The entrants for, this Var ty have been chosen by Trainer Fa and Captain Kohler, and apporti among the two teams so that - strength will balance as evenly as sible. Captain Kohler states tha expects the meet to be so close the relay will be the deciding eve: All men who entered the Va meet of last year were require make certain marks in their eventi fore being allowed to compete. was done because the meet was gether in the nature of trials to en the trainer to pick the team to op Cornell, the week following.. It not been neceskry tto follow sua plan this year, because the men been arbitrarily picked, and only t have been chosen who are figure have some chance. Precedent, set last year, has shattered by the entrance of fresb in Saturday's meet. This year's fresh has several promising stars, Trainer Farrell is anxious to I them working all the time. In past years rivalry has always high between factions in the Va: meet, and with the two teams ev matched, there is sure to be pl of spirit developed Saturday n when the Kohlers and the Sew lock horns. The entries for the Varsity meet low: 35 yard dash: Sewards-Sew. O'Brien, Herrick, Hughes, Root, B er; Kohlers-Bond, Smith, Foni Kurtz, Leslie, Burbey. 440 yard dash: Sewards-Augs] er, Plummer, Donnelly, Ufer, R( son; Kohlers-John, Darnell, Ste Larson. 880 yard run: Sewards--Fishl Kucera, Lamond, Gregory; Koh Kirby,.Kohr, Lamey, Dillon. Mile run: Sewards-Carroll, J ston, Walters; Kohlers-Fox, G mann, Young, Watt. Low hurdles: Sewards-Corbin,C Skinner, Klopfer; Kohlers-McE Armstrong, Crumpacker. High hurdles: Sewards-Co Klopfer, Cohn; Kohlers-Armstr Thurston. Shot put: Sewards-Cross, Le Phelps, Edwards; Kohlers--Ko Quinn, Cochran, Quail. Pole vault: Sewards-- Wilson, 1 ner, Chatfield; Kohlers-Cook, C Kessler. High jump: Sewards-White, kins, Hammond; Kohlers-Water Martens, Berray, McCabe. A. M. Reed, '15L, as "Kipp won the hearts of the audien natural and unaffected actingc :y-go-lucky American strande His dancing with an inanim friend was probably the best in the opera and was heartily ed. Jerry Borden, played by B._ '14, a "believer in art for hearl and Raymond Fibbre, by Roy '14, as his none too obliging were convincingly done. Music Tuneful The individual songs wer tionally tuneful and the enser sic left nothing to be desire (Continued on Page 4 - U IL 2 WOMEN'S I . BANQUET for 50c I ME' STUDENTSand ALUMNAE BARBOUR GYMNASIUM