TRI MCkIGAN DAILY OiF W, am ew IN } t y r R t 4 HIGHEST 0 0 LSITY SECURES 20 ACRES for the construction, of a new 1 garden for the department y of the university are now be- pared by the department of s and grounds. The total cost= roject is estimated a't $19,000. len will be built at the end of card street city street car line, ie university has secured a 20 ct of land. Actual work pro- .11 begin in about two months. .ans call for four greenhouses, g plant, wells and windmills, underground piping system for n purposes. The four green- will afford the botany depart- >ut 4,000 square feet of ground ass. d botanical garden east of the ich has been turned into a m, will not be cultivated any and with the 10,000 trees and vhich have been planted there, uade into a tree and shrub about a year. o years, five acres will be put Qltivation outdoors 'at the new and it is planned to add a s house and more. green- .ome time in the ftiture. Op- y will be given here for much worlk which up to this time y.iT EXCLUSIVE AGENTS KNAPP:-FELT AND DOBBS FIFTH AVENUE HATS BAU,.N-lGARTNER*S DETROIT'S FINEST APPAREL SHOP FOR YOUNG MEN ?HOP The Bauragartner label in a garment is a mighty important thing to you Mr. Man. It is an absolute unequivocal guarantee that you have the lastword in all that is late, new and clever in Young Men's Wearing Apparel. That you may make your spring selection of a Baumgartner Suit-or Top Coat without any additional Cost to you, we will allow the amount of your fare to Detroit and return from the purchase price of any garment in our Young Men's Shop. GRAND RIVER AVENUE tion of the new garden under the direction of wcombe, of the depa-rt- , and Prof. H.'A. Glea- ne department, is to be AT WASHINGTON BLVD. DETROIT ; All Wrong-? eadOn Ad See s all wrong," we agree,."Goldie 11 wrong." on south Ferry field there are embers of the class of 1917, who orking out under the competitive n for the selection 6f assistant ic- managers. South Ferry field e baseball training station, and 'working one's way through a about three deep which sur- s the diamond, one can see i Lundgren's candidates at work. circle through which one must his way is made up of would-be ants to the Varsity baseball man- a while it was believed by some he plain clothes men were Var- >aseball tryouts on the coach's list, but later investigation has{ d that 24 of the audience of 25 ophs who want an assistant man- hip. The rian who made the : of onlookers number a quarter ed was Coach Lundgren. All the 24 were baseball tryouts. on Ferry field proper are two of white, unused goal posts, two ng standards and an oval cinder Closer inspection reveals. four e rumiers at the far end of the' and one lone hammer-thrower d the runners. This is the track ce. But wait a moment longer, e reader, who do we see pushing roller over the cinders? Who is man with the rake? Where is rowd of willing workers who are ryouts for track assistant man- hip? t crowd. is a negative quantity. stalwart figure rolling the cin- fown into nice condition for the rs is none other than Captain: ., Michigan's veteran dash man. nan who is raking the cinders is e J. Farrell, Michigan's track in I repeat. "It's all wrong." OWSHIP AWARDS TOTALING t0o MAY E COMPETED FOR legiate fellowships aggregating have been announced by the York School~ of Philanthropy. fellowships, consisting of four Is of $600 each, are to be awarded adcuates of colleges of recognized ing during the years 1913, '14 15. o awards will be made to women wo to men, a regular entrance ination being given the candi- Evidences of ability and apti- for social work are also demand- all candidates for the fellowships. plication for candidacy must be by May 1. Awards will be an- d about June 1. Further infor- ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS MAKE TRIALS OF NG BURAEN LIGHPTAS Test 10 Brands of Lamps, Taking About 6,000 Photometric and Other Observations Experiments on the comparative light output of various manufactured brands of tungsten lamps, just finished in the department of electrical engin- eering under the direction of Prof. H. H. Higbie, pare expected to, save be- tween $9,000 and $15,200 to the univer- sity and other state schools and public institutions on a single purchase of lamps, if the brand of lamp recom- mended by the department is adopted by the state board of purchasing agents. The experiments were made on the basis of a $5,000 purchase of lamps, in an effort to find the lamp which would give the greatest number of candle-power hours of light output for one cent expenditure in lamps and energy consumed. 10 different brands of tungsten lamps, represented by 240 samples, were put under test, and about 6,000 photometric and electrical observations, and more than that many calculations, have been taken on the samples. 'On the basis of the quantity of light output to be expected from $5,000 worth of good lamps in a year's time, the cost to produce this light by the best lamp tested, the price of which is 20.7 cents each, was $32,900, with energy costing three cents per kilowatt-' hour, as against $41,900 by the cheap- est lamp tested, the price of which is 18 cents. This means a saving of $9,000, due to the selection of the best lamp notwithstanding its greater init- ial cost. With energy at seven cents per kilowatt-hour, the difference be- tween the cost of energy necessary to operate the lamps was fqund to be about $15,000. 'The brand of lamps selected by the department is known as the "Edison Mazda Lamp," manufactured by an eastern firm. The "Mazda" type of lamp, on the average, gave from 16 to 21 per cent more candle-hours for one cent than any other type of lamp tested. Michigan Chess Men Leave for Chicago Michigan's chess team left early yes- terday for Chicago, where the univer- sity representatives will face seven other western colleges and universi- ties in the biggest chess conference the local club has yet entered. E. C. Roth, '15, F. Sacia, '15E, S. Cohen, '17E, W. G. Given, '16E, and W. T. Adams,, '17, are the men chosen to represent Michigan. The visiting teams are to be cared for at Chicago fraternity houses during their stay, and elaborate entertainment has been provided. The match with Work Will Start April 22 and Extond Throtig h Sunday Afternooni April 25 NAME n ECESSARY CO1MMITT'EES Practically all of the plans for the carrying on of the annual Busrah can paign of the university Y. M. C. A. have been made, and the campaign will start on Thursday, April 22 and continue through Sunday afternoon,1 April 25. A committee composed of 25 captains and 125 privates will handle the canvass among the men, and the women have been divided up into two teams under the captaincy of Anneta Wood, '17, and Laura Feige, '15. To as- sist these two captains the following committee has been appointed: Grace Fletcher, '16, Estelle Hooper, '16, Mar- ion Stowe, '16, Nellie Hanna, '15, Gita Tucker, '16, Josephine Randall, '17, Amelia Wood, '13M, Clara Sargent, '15M, Huldah Bancroft, '15, and Edith: Moiles, '15.r P. V. Ramsdell, .16, who is general chairman of the campaign, has ar- ranged a series of daily dinners for the men and women who are to work in the canvass, and these will be held the same as last year, on the days on which the actual work is being done. P. C. Lovejoy, '16, has been appointed executive secretary of the campaign, and will have charge of making all of the 'business arrangements. The Busrah project, which is a med- ical mission located at Busrah, Arabia, was started by the local association in 1910, as the result of an agitation be- gun at the Rochester Student Volun- teer convention. That year $609 was .solicited and paid in by the campus. Each year since that time, the amount annually pledged has gradually risen until last year approximately $4,500 was pledged,,and of this sum, $3,357.13 has been paid in. -This year, the com- mittee will endeavor to raise about $3,500, and this sum will be used to support the Michigan men and women who are now working in Busrah. At present there are five Michigan repre- sentatives at the mission, but the sup- port of only three of these devolves upon the university student body, the other, two being supported by funds received from the hospital patients. At the present time Yale, Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania, Har- vard, Oberlin and Dartmouth maintain foreign missionary projects in the, Orient. McCain House can give seats to two people after vacation. Opens Sundey noon, April 18. 139-40 FOR CO L1LEGE 'WOMEN FE CI 11 1 Variious Classes to Rle Representce in New Strlwtor('s; Pass on ReitiJ Fees Details of the administration of the two new halls of residence for univer- sity women were decided upon at a recent meeting of the boards of gover- nors at the home of 'Dean Myra B. Jordan. Of the 112 women who will be housed m the Martha Cook building, from 12 to 15 will be chosen from each of the sophomore, junior and senior classes. All the others will be freshmen. There will be 10 from each of these classes in the Newberry building, and fresh- men to bring the total to 68. Room rent will be $50 per semester, payable in advance, and board $4 per week, payale probably in two install- ments each semester. . The rooms are practically all single, furnished with a single bed, flat-top desk, desk-chair, easy chair, dresser and bench in grayish-brown oak. The dining rooms will be furnished with sm:all tables. A sitting-room and kit- chenette, completely equipped, will be a feature of each of the bedroom floors, and there will be laundry and sewing facilities in the basements. Applications for rooms, including an initial deposit of $5, must be made to Mrs. Jordan in writing by April 20, when they will be opened in the order received and formally accepted. As- signments of specific rooms in both buildings will be made by lot in the fall. Two officials will preside in each hall, a social head and a professional business manager. In both halls some form of self-government will be em- ployed. 1IeWeiVe P~oles ior P'ow'er 1l4)ae Sp r Poles to be used in the electriiica- lion of the power house spur of the1 M[ichigan Central have been received by the department ci buildings and grounds. The electric locomotive, which is to be put on the line, has been purchased at a cost of $6,000, and will reach Ann Arbor in about a monih. The entire cost of the project is esti- I mated at about $18,000, and actual work will start as soon as the materi- als to be used in the construction ar received. A slium s Receives lHonors at-Princeton Henr VanWesep, '12, has just been awarded a .fellowship at Princeton Utniversity. The fellowship, \:hich am- ounts to $1,000 a year, is the highest awarded at Princeton. Van Wesep will receive his masters' degree in June, after which he will devote one year to original work. Van Wesep is writing a book entitled, j "Gorgias, the Greek' Sophist." 1NTERCOLLEGIAT E Engineering and law students ati Missouri recently staged a fight, which resulted in the burning of a float be- 'longing to the engineers. The fire was put out with some difficulty by mem- bers of the faculty. -o-- Texas seniors have presented the university with a set of chapel chimes. -0-- Princeton crew men are planning to remain in training during the spring vacation this year, 50 men having agreed to give up all but one day of the. holidays in order that the work may not be interrupted. The coaches are planning for daily pulls of from 20 to 30 miles in preparation for the meeting with the Navy at Annapolis on April 17. Plans are already under way for the annual Yale-Harvard regatta, which is to be held June 25, on the river Thames. This year's Varsity races are{ to be rowed upstream. -0-r Neither Oxford nor Cambridge will w be able to compete in the-Penn relays this spring.. In a letter to the athletic officials at Pennsylvania, the English- men say that practically all of their able-bodied men have goner to thea front. -O- .Iowa students working on' the daily paper at that university are awarded a letter for journalism. -0- ' Scandinavian students at Minnesota' are going to hold a fete on the campus on May 6. The program will consist largely of costume dances and the pre- sentation of two northern plays. -0- Some iPen archeologists discovered loaded lice among some Egyptian relics. -o- McGill's hospital corps, made'up en- tirely of students, has gone into bar- racks to await the call to the front. -0- Prohibition is in high favor at the University of South Carolina. The entire student body went on record r~ecentily as endorsing the movement. Women debaters of South Dakota,r Kansas Agricultural and Iowa State have arranged for an annual triangu- lar forensic contest. -0- Cornell has received a gift of $150,0001 for the purpose of building its first- resident dormitory, and the Schoell- kouf family donated $700,000 to com- plete the University's track and foot hall field which is to be named after the family. the University of Illinois, another strong contender looms up as a winner in the eastern intercollegiate meet. Cal- ifornia, with a welt balanced te'am and a number of individual stars, com- pletely overwhelmed the Illinois team, which is ranked as one of the strong- est in the Conference. The final score was 71 to 51. Only 25 men reported at the first spring football practice at Harvard recently. Captain E. W. Mahan has issued a call for more men. I 0 -0- By superior base running and well placed hits, the Chinese students from Hawaii defeated the Texas Longhorns. The Chinese hit the ball hard and. at the opportune moment, and succeeded in rolling up 11 runs 'to the Texans' five. 1915 FOOTBALL ASPIRANTS TO COMMENCE PRACTICE APRIL 20 Coach Yost Will Be on and to Drill Athletes with "Germany" Schultz and Cochran Outdoor football practice will com- mence on April 20, the day after the re- opening of school. Coach Yost will be en hand to direct the training of the gridiron athletes, and in all probability "Germany" Schultz will assist the coach and Captain Cochran. The first moves thus will be mhde in the preparation for the 1915 football season. The long grind will continue until next fall, as the players are re- quired to keep in condition through the summer vacation. All the men who have been working out in the gym during the winter months will be asked to report to the coach on the first day. The work probably will consist in running, charging and punting, but the exact program will not be known until Yost arrives. The outdoor workouts will be continued for several weeks, with the coach remaining for the first two, at least. "Germany" has not yet let the offic- ials know whether he will be present; but he will not be able to resist the call of the moleskins, according to Captain Cochran. Both veterans and rookies will be included in the squad to assemble after spring vacation, no one being excepted from the call. Real and Leland again Chosen Regents M Regents Junmius E. Beal, of Ann Ar- bor, and Frank B. Leland, of De- troit, both Republicans, were re,-elected by the voters of the state on Monday over their Democratic opponents, Sam- uel W. Douglas and Elwin F. Brown. Although official returns have not yet been made public, unofficial figures give both of the Republican candi- dates comfortable pluralities. I Harvar + is being played by cor-' will be continued during As the -0--f a result of the showing made by University of California track. I team in its meet e