"NHL; MICHIGAN PAii i 'PA _ _ _. dk F I' V l. P, Ass, I T64? a r I I I I I I. 1 SECOND PLCEIN LEAGUE UNDECIDED Possession of Second Set of Nmeils in Class Football Play Undetermined UP TO SEi1R I1TS AND LAWS A game between the senior law and senior lit football teams is probably to be played this morning for the sec- ond set of numerals which is given out by the Intramural office. The game is supposed to begin at 10:00 o'clock on south Ferry Field. The managers of the two teams are having difficulties in regard to getting their respective teams to play. Last Friday the regular game was sched- uled to have been played, but the laws failed to show up at the appointed time. However, the lits did not claim a forfeit, and as a consequenc- tc- cording to the Intramural authorities, have thereby lost all chance of being allowed the forfeit. Rumor says that the members of the lit team are rather ruffled over this fact and are not tre- mendously keen about playing the game today. On the other hand the laws seem to resent the fact that they have to play the lits a secnd time after having defeated them once, and after having played in the championship game. They think that they should receive the second set of numerals by virtue of their defeat of the lits, and since they were, theoretically at least, the second team in the first division. They contend that the second set should automatically go to the team which played in the championship game. From all appearances the Intra- mural office is not worrying as to whether they play off the game at all or not. It was a matter for the man- agers of the two team tn arrange, and since nothing has been done to get the game played off the whole Affair is being regarded with disfavor. Intramural Director Rowe intimated yesterday that unless the game is played off in the near future, prefer- ably today, there is a good indication that neither team will get the coveted second set of numerals. Yale Crews to Practice on Ilousatonic New Haven, Conn., Dec. 3.-An- nouncement has been made that the Yale crews will have their spring practice on the Housatonic riyer be- low Derby on a four-mile course. This idea was recommended by the crew committee and is being discussed by the campus. The crew will abandon the harbor entirely. Should the Housatonic prove an ideal course, arrangements will be made to transfer by barges the $100,- 000 George Ade boat-house. This recommendation of the crew committee favoring the Change does not come as a surprise, as many form- er oarsmen who have examined the course, say it is better than the old course at New London on the Thames. This new course will be available both for practice and for the inter- collegiate regattas. Ames Eeven Elects Moss 1916 Captain Ames, Iowa, Dec. 3.-Dyewood W Moss, half and quarterback of this year's Ames eleven, was elected cap- tain of the 1916 team. There were four other candidates and 23 ballots were necessary to determine the final choice, Moss being elected because of the split among the other candidates President Hutchins Talks in ClevelanO President Harry B. Hutchins left yesterday for Cleveland where he will aid in enlisting the support of Cleve- land alumni in the Michigan Union clubhouse project. He will return to Ann Arbor in time to resume his work Monday. Establish Book Exchange at Kansas. Lawrence, .Kan., Dec. .-The Stu- dent Council is considering plans for the establishment of a book exchange in the University of Kansas. 2255 2255 2255 2255 CHINESE ATHLETES SHOW FORI IN PRELIlINARY TRACK WORK Farrell Likes Looks o S. C. Hung and V. I Wong; Both FrontOrient Coach 'Steve' Farrell, of the track team, likes the looks of two Chinese students, who have been working out at the gymnasium recently. One of the men, S. C. Hung, '18, is a sprint- er of no mean caliber and should de- velop greatly under the eye of the coach.. The other, U. D. Wong, a freshman in the-literary college, is reported as having done better than ten feet in the pole vault, but of course is ineligible for Varsity com- petition this season. Both of these aspirants received their preparatory training at Tsing Hua college in the city of Peking, China, where they were teammates with W. H. Pau, who is at present enrolled in the University of Minne- sota. The work of the Chinese boys will undoubtedly be followed with interest by the campus, as no Chinaman has as yet ever succeeded in making ti Varsity squad. AVIATOR TO SHOW DETROITERS DEFENSELESS PLIGHT OF CITY Detroit, Dec. 3.-Aviator O. E. Williams will try to show the city of Detroit today what might happen to a city if a hostile nation should try to sprinkle bombs over it. Williams will start down town from the De- troit Golf club and sprinkle blank cartridge bombs over the city from a height of probably 5,000 feet. The feat of sprinkling the bombs is of special notice now that the country is being aroused by the cry of pre- paredness and will show to Detroit some of the aspects of war and how futile the defense of the average city is. Williams is being brought to Detroit by the Aero club of Michigan. 3UNDAY NEWSPAPER CONTRACTS ARE DECLARED VALID BY JUDGE Jefferson City, M o.,Dec. 3.-The va- lidity of contracts for advertising in Sunday newspapers have been upheld by the Missouri supreme court. The decision was written by Chief Justice Woodson. The case at issue was a suit of the Pulitzer Publishing Co. (St. Louis Post-Dispatch) against Henry J. Mc- Nichols for part payment on a con- tract for Sunday advertising. Mc- Nichols' defense was that the pub- lication of a newspaper on Sunday was a violation of the state labor law. The opinion of the chief justice of the supreme court says: "The great service the press is rendering human- ity is performed on Sunday as well as on Monday or on any other day of the week, and its beneficence is more potent on the former than on the latter, for the simple reason that the toiling masses have more time to read the papers on Sunday and therefore acquire greater knowledge and in- formation from them on that day than upon any other day of the week." 3tate Grange Delegates to Convene Delegates from the State Grange will meet in Ann Arbor on December 14. Rooms for their accommodation are being solicited by the Civic asso- ciation. Anyone having extra rooms and wishing to rent them for this oc- casion may list them by calling 1779. Rates are 50 cents for each person if two occupy one room, otherwise they are 75. cents. Dance and Banquet Programs-At- tractive Ones, at The Ann Arbor Press. (*) Christmas islnear. A photograph of yourself will be appreciated by your friends. Make an appointment at once at Hoppe's studio. 619 E. Liberty St. dec4,5 We print Anything, from your Name on a Gird, to a Book. The Ann Arbor Press. (*) Most Leadng Coaches At Game For 20 Years By Fielding H. Yost NEARLY all the coaches of leading strong teams. He was coaching Penn terms in harnes for 20 years-Yost Charter high school at Philadelphia (Coach Yost has had charge of when I started. college football teams for a long You might call Stagg of Chicago time, and it was suggested to him the dean of the coaches. He has been that he could tell some interesting holding his present job for twenty-five things of coaches and coaching. years, and looks good for another The following article is the result twenty-five. . of the suggestion.-Editor.) Percy Haughton, who made such a (Copyright 1915 by the Central Press big success of this year's Harvard Association.) team, broke in about the same time I It never occurred to me how long I did. As I remember, he was coaching had been coaching football teams un-' Cornell then. til someone asked me about a weekI Brooke, "By" Dickson, and Wharton, or two ago. When I counted up the cld Penn men, also have been in the time, I found that nineteen years have game about twenty years. They have passed since I started. all worked on the Pennsy team this It may seem that I am getting to be year. something of a veteran, but as a mat- Sharpe, Cornell coach, and McGugin ter of fact, many of the leading col- at Vanderbilt have been going about lege coaches were in the harness when twelve years. "Speedy" Rush, now at I started, and had been for some time. Princeton, has been in the game about Stagg, Dr. Williams, Warner and that long. others who are still handling big uni- Benny Owens, who has made a win- versity teams were on the job ahead ner of Oklahoma, is my oldest pupil of me. Even the so-called younger, now in the coaching business. He FANCY SHOOTING EXHIBITION WITNESSEi) AT FERRY FIELD W. F. Evans, Champion One-Armed Shot, and J. It. Cole Show AbilityW1t1-Rifles. A good-sized crowd turned out yes- terday afternoon at Ferry Field to witness the fancy shooting exhibition given by John R. Cole, Jr., and W. F. Evans, representing the Union Me- tallic Cartridge Co., of New York City. Mr. Evans, who holds the title of one-armed champion shot of the world, gave what was perhaps the best exhibition of shooting under a handicap which has ever been pre- vented in Ann Arbor. Both of the men proved themselves most capable shots with all sorts of guns. One of their favorites was the throwing into the air a number of eggs, then hitting all of them with a rifle before they succeeded in reach- ing the ground. Another stunt was the hurling of chunks of coal into the air and then pulverizing the black lumps so thoroughly that they seemed to have disappeared. Train Wives and Mothers at Columbia. New York, Dec. 3.-Columbia Uni- versity is this year giving new courses for the training of wives and mothers. Matrons who wish to become efficient and scientific managers of their own homes may take the courses in their spare time, though the women who take the courses in this way will not become candidates for a degree. SOCCER TEAM UNLIKELY1 TO RE CEIVEANY INSIGNIA Scarcity of Games May Bar Members of Aggregation from Rewards, Members of this year's Varsity soc- cer team are not likely to receive any insignia. The reason for this is not known, but the probable one is that the team did not play a sufficient number of games to warrant awarding either numerals or any other kind of insignia. In the eyes of the athletic- authorities, the sport is not on a firm enough basis to insure it a high standing. Captain Tripolitis of the Varsity squad does not know whether the team will receive numerals or not. He ex- pressed himself as hoping that insig- nia would be given out by the athletic office, and said that he was of the opinion that the members of the squad deserved something in return for the time and work they had given to the success of the season, and that al- though the schedule only included two games, yet this was no fault of the soccer men, and they had done their part in ' that they had won both of these contests. However, it is still a question with the athletic authorities as to whether soccer shall be a representative sport of the university. coaches have been at work for ten or twelve years. Back in 1897 I began coaching at Ohio Wesleyan. I wanted to see the country and become familiar with the game as played in all sections, so I worked west. In 1898 I went to Ne-] braska, and to Kansas in 1899, going on to Stanford in 1900. In 1901 IJ moved to Michigan, and have been there ever since. I remember "Pop" Warner, an old Cornell man, was in harness when I started. He was with North Carolina then, and went later to Cornell and Carlisle. Now he is at the University of Pittsburg. Then there is Dr. Williams, who has been at Minnesota for sixteen years, and who has developed many was quarterback at Kansas. He has been coaching for seventeen years, fourteen of them at Oklahoma. Two other coaches who are getting to be veterans are Donahue of Auburn and Heismann of Georgia Tech. They have had a lot of victories to their credit. The game is much more interesting now, from a spectator's standpoint, than it was when I began. That is on account of the open game, and - the doing away with mass plays. While there is plenty of line plunging today, it is in the nature of driving or de- ception in attack, rather than mass play. The players know more of the science of the game now. There is more skill and headwork than in the old days. THE DAILY SPORTOSCOPE 1 -- i Dobie lay Coach Yale's 1916 Eleveu Portland, Ore., Dec. 3.-Gilmour Dobie, for eight years coach of the un- defeated eleven at the University of Washington, is quoted by Everett May, assistant coach of the Oregon Agri- cultural college football team, as hav- ing told him that he would be found at the helm of Yale's 1916 'eleven.; Dobie, according to May, said that his negotiations with the University of Wisconsin had been dropped. Craftsmen's Club to Hold Meeting Craftsmen's club will hold its reg- ular meeting at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the Masonic Temple, and will put a candidate through the third degree. Following the meeting an oyster stew and a musical entertainment will be! given. Willard Neets F ilton on March 3 New Orleans, La., Dec. 3.-Jess Wil- lard, heavyweight champion of the pugilistic world, has signed articles to meet Fred Fulton, of Rochester, Minn., in a twenty-round bout for the heavyweight title in this city on March 3. Willard signed a contract several weeks ago to meet any fighter the prcmoters might name before Dec. 10. Efforts were made to get Moran and Fulton together in an elimina- tion contest to decide which should meet the champion, but it is said that Moran would not fight the Minnesota man, so the promoters gave the match ts Fulton. Willard is to receive $32,500 for the fight .whether he should win, lose or (hraw. Dear Put: daily would have to get a man for my I have got so disgusted with the job in a awful hurry. IHe was nothing mich. daily I do not know if I will but only a freshman last yr. and I keep my job much longer or if I will ain't knocking him none when I say not keep it, because how could a he was only fair at best, and some guy like I hope to rite for a paper times when I have saw him jump I what keeps running them stories have concluded that he would have which have been rote by coach Yost. to practice for about 40 yrs. to even I fully know that as yet I have not be fair, but I guess he must have got quite so big a rep. as Yost since done itthough, for he looks like the I am only. about /2 so old and have real article now. not coached no ft. ball teams at all There was a bunch jumping off en like he has, but maybe if I had of the matt and some 1 put the bar up done so, Yost mite not be riting no to 6 ft. I was looking around for articles now on his rep. at all but the spring board for I 'did not know would be working some place for $2 Mich. even had a high jumper what or $2.50 a day on a job what was not could go high enough to knock the nearly so intellectual as riting. bar down at 6 ft. to say nothing of I ain't making no kick, Put, and you going over it, but there wasn't no probably know your business, but spring. board any place in site, and why do you not put his stuff on the a minute later this Simmons went back page where it will not be so clean over the bar like he done it for prominent and will, not take up so a living. much of our space on the sport pg. This guy may not win the inter I was over to the gym again the colleguts, but if you want a little tip other day, Put, and let me give you from yrs. truly,- fasten 1 of your op- some inside dope rite here, and it is tics on this kid and see what happens. about a new high jumper that will be He's good, that's all, Put, andhe looks on the mich. team this year. His like he was a commer. name is Simmons and if I could high Yrs. jump like that guy, Put, the mich. HAL. DINNERS AND DYSPEPSIA These two killjoys have left wee in their wake ever since Eve banqueted on the fateful apple. Why not change all this and take a new lease on life by dining regularly at THE R ENELLEN A PLACE OF DISTINCTIVE SERVICE H OSPIC E In order to feel well you must have good -food-in order to work you must feel well- the sick man has no chance in the strenuous life we now lead. He is licked before he starts. Fat with us and keep keen. EXLs dZ - Good Printing-The Ann Arbor Press. (*) Patronize Ile Advertis