I LYI I-I _______________________________ JEWELERS - of - I', Xmas Photographs. are now in or( u f 11 Randall Studio iN . ,;: , ,,, .,ui;, ., unp. t ° ' i I 4 I f ?A't/j I Seniors, make appointments now 121 E. WASHINGTON PHONE 598 I Town and Gown Under the spell of d brains are relieved. briar breaks in sweet burn through. The guarantee. Ask any . NEW YORK OF FINE PIPES Will agree that 4 Co. C E R S h I's The Best lish 10 Shoe ; ." :. ' .. "DOC" NAGELE AND HIS DINNER BELL. "Doc" Nagele Called Classes In Medical School Together By Bell Lyndon and Company -Established 1905- M Books, , Albums Eastman Kodaks and Supplies Amateurs Finishing and Enlarging We lead while others follow 7'19 North University ,.+ _ ,, ° - :e this model. i brogues are id-of-weather DE $16-00 BOOT SHOP 115 So. ala St. (By Winifred Biethan) For 50 years Medic classes were called with a hand bell. "Doc" Na- gele rang the bell. Janitor of the Medical building, formerly an uned- ucated German boy, rough, but kind- ly, "Doc" Nagele was a friend of the department and the students. Every hour of every morning"during the University sessions from 1850 to 1900 found this man in front of the. old Medical building, where it stood north of the place occupied by the present structure, ringing out the old. class and in the new with a common dinner bell. A favorite pastime of the students was devising ways and means to de- lay him, but "Doc's" bell was always on time. Dr. Warren P. Lombard, pro- fessor of physiology, said he used to wait for that bell to ring to close his lecture. Then when the bell stopped ringing, he knew it was time to be- gin the next lecture. This precious time piece was once stolen by the students. Dr. Victor C. Vaughan told of this incident in the following way: "Doc" Nagele's heart was cearly broken after the bell dis-' appeared, and the students all con- tributed to get him another one. It was never found, but two or three years ago a man, now of international reputation, entered my office with a package under his arm. "He. said, 'I have brought you a present, Dr.*aughan. You can't guess what it is.' "'T can,' I answered. 'It is the hand bell you stole 25 years -ago.' I "'Did you know who took it?' 'Of course I didn't, but I said that I did, and added, knew he took it and that :some day he would bring it back.'" The bell is now in Dr. Vaughan's possession, and he says he is going to put it on exhibition in a glass case in the hall of the Medical building. Old "Doc" Nagele was dismissed by the Regents when the University pro- cured the clock, but he was so broken up about it that he appealed to the dean. From then on as long as the dinner bell did not ring, the profes- sors of the Medical school did not lecture. They went on a strike. Dr. Vaughan went to the Regents, and he said, "You do not need professors, you do not need.a dean, but you need Na- gele." "But why do we need Nagele? He's too feeble'to work." "You need Nagele to ring the bell." "We have a clock to announce the hour." "But Nagele must ring the bell or the Medic classes won't meet," saia Dr. Vaughan. So the "old doctor" retained his posi- sition until the spring of his death in July, 1900. He was for Michigan. All persons on the 'campus were his friends, and those who knew him still miss him. Patronise tne uminy aavertisers. Subscribe to the Michigan Daily. Pay your subscription to the Daily Tkin-lined and heavy I ---- " - I garments, won 't have in wear * t e rr , !/ f ! ./ I + : . 4 Cleaning is a protection \\ F velours, velvets and plushes. ning and pressing has no N "Se }Come of Snergine" { a _ = HAT'S and CAPSI aa. I An Attractive Collection of _ r IAUTUMN and WINTER MODELS ~ - _ Exclusive in Style and. Pattern - - - a Y _ _ - a _ - i. Wadizamws &Co. - I For Business Men! A IKSCHBAUM Suit Of The New York-Custom Type THE AMERICAN Wearing the American, you can walk into the office of any business man knowing that your clothes are of the cut he is sure to approve- quiet, yet very smart I 0 $25 rw;5 Phone 2508 FRED W. GROSS SOUTH FOURTH AVE. 309 SOUTH MAIN STREET State Street at the Arcade