Al Your Door Three Fifteen Hundred Sum- Evenings a Week, 75c mer Session Student; Vol. III. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1912. No. 18. DOCTORS WALLOP SLIDE-RULE BOYS Ideson Wis Second Game for Medics Agalnst; Engineers by Big Score of 21-7. WHEAT IREPLACES MOR. BLAKE. The medics walloped the slide rule boys by the lop-sided tune of 21 to 7, which leaves only the law game be- tween them and the championship. Ideson pitched a good game for the victors, but it was chiefly the breaks in the luck and the wildness of the engineers' which made the contest pit- iful. The engineers only made one more error than the doctors, but the wierd work of the S and R sharks invariably was inserted when the bas- es were groaning. The physicians, however, chose more pleasant weather for their vaudeville. This accounts in a large measure for the crape at the arch, as the inhabitants thereof made seven hits to ten of the surgeons. The medics opened up with three runs right out of the bag. Ward walk- ed, Baribeau hit to center, and Wen- ner sacrificed. Oliver came through with another hit, scoring two runs, and got the rest of the way when Blake tried to rival the bull dog, throwing the ball into the chicken yard quite frequently. Clark then fanned and Betzner popped into the box, which relieved the embarassment. The engineers looked like the Tigers in their half. With one down Blake singled to left, making two when Clark dropped the ball. Metcalf was the second out, but Morse drove in the run taking second on the play at the plate. Craig. followed suite with an- other single, reaching third on a few assorted crimes by the doctors. Jim- mie later claimed it was a triple, but the matter was finally peacefully set- tied by calling it a double. The debat- er sneaked home for the third and tying run while Wheat fanned. The second was a carnival for the leaders, a little party netting them seven runs and the game. Wheat took the mound with none out, and managed to retire the side, as men- tioned above. His teammates failed to threaten in this act. In the third, with two down, two runs were presented to the pill mix- ers. Wenner struck out, but the little trick of dropping the ball by the play- ful catcher allowed him to reach first. Wheat then made two wild shots, and Craig let the ball through for the fourth error on "Dutch" which sent him all the way around for nothing. Two other men struck out and later scored, Ideson in the fourth and Oliver in the sixth. It is the latest thing in base- ball-"as she is did" at Michigan. The trailers picked up a couple in their frame, Ideson striking.out two men and tossing out the third, after losing hope in his fielders. The Medics celebrated again in the fourth, doing the grand tour five times before the "umps" got desperate and called Gebbart out for not touching second on his tripe. A pretty double steal by Oliver and Wenner featured this inning, Dutch negotiating home as Wade touched second. After this festival an inning and a half of baseball was played. Ideson struck out three to finish the fourth. The medics failed to score for the first time in the fifth, a fast play, Wheat to Craig cutting down Clark at third on Ideson' roller. Betz- ner got a freak infield hit here. The ball fell between first and second, no one going after it, as Brodie, who was calling them on the sacks, was mistak- en for an infielder. To close the fifth, a goose egg was handed back to the engineers, a fast double play shutting off a good chance for blood for the cealk side. Continued on page 4) KDS IN SWIMMING RAISE STUDENTS LOST VALUABLES Hole in Huron Near Dexter Filled With Money, Kodaks and Other Treasure. Up the Huron River several miles from Dexter, a number of youngsters are of the opinion that they have at last found Captain Kidd's treasure in their swimming hole. Watches, coins of all denominations, gold pins, cameras and other modern trasures have been taken from the river, and new discoveries are being made by the kids daily. Needless to say the articles are the lost effects of unfor- tunate canoeists who capsized at that point, because of the almost impassa- ble rapids above. On Sunday two students who made the river trip to Lakeland saw a youngster recover a wallet, contain- ing seven dollars, on the first dive, while on the second he gathered in a pocket camera which had been bur- ied in the mud of the river bottom for some time. The young diver told one of the canoeists that he had recovered enough money this spring and summer to buy a new suit. STEVE FARRELL TO BE TRAINER Former Ohio State University Coach is Selected to Succeed -Dr. Kraenzlein, Steve Farrell, former coach and trainer at Ohio State University, will come to Michigan September first as successor to Dr. A. E. Kranzlein, who resigned last June to enter business. Trainer Farrell was a professional athlete during the time of Mack of Yale, Donovan of Harvard and Murphy of Pennsylvania. He worked one year with Murphy at Yale with track men and foot ball squads, and for six years was athletic coach and trainer at the University of Maine, while he has spent the last three years at Ohio State University. The present summer makes his sixth season as coach and trainer at the Montreal Amateur Ath- letic Association of Montreal, Canada. "Fight, Keep agoin' don't look 'round, use your head" is the tribute under the name of Trainer Farrell in the Ohio State College Annual. These oft repeated words of his are typical of his ideas of training. He is the man who introduced' and made the "crying" athlete at Ohio State University. "I haven't any use for a fellow that doesn't cry after he is licked," Farrell says, though he is a good loser. As an expression of their apprecia- tion of his excellent work while at Ohio State University, Trainer Far- rell was given a $200.00 bonus by the Athletic Association upon his leaving, while the students presented him with a silver loving cup containing $129.00. The track team gave him a gold watch, and the freshman Pan-Hellen- ic, a traveling bag. The Columbus High School students, whose track team he coached last spring presented him with a gold headed cane. Son of Professor Dies Suddenly. The year-old son of Prof. J. A. Burs- ley of the engineering department, died Saturday evening. He had been ill for only a week with cholera in- fantum. The funeral will take palce Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'clock. Oratory Class Will Give Macbeth. Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock sharp, in Sarah Caswell Angell Hall, the members of Professor Hollister's class in Shakespearean reading will give "Macbeth." Everybody is invited to attend; and it is requested that those who come try to be in their places before eight in order to avoid POLITICS LURE MICHIGAN MEN Local Alumni Ready to Accept Re. sponsibilities of Office Holding, COLLEGE MEN ARE CANDIDATES. It is an oft repeated charge that college bred men do not buckle down and work for improved civic condi- tions in the state and nation. They are said to be willing at all times to criticise practical politicians and po- litical methods without manifesting a corresponding willingness to show the way to better things; to accept the responsibilities and opportunities of office-holding. That Michigan men cannot be charg- ed with any such dereliction to duty, is amply proved by an examination of the list of candidates for the nomi- nation for governor, lieutenant-gov- ernor and United States senator and representatives on the Republican, Democratic and National Progressive tickets in this state. Out of some six- ty men who have filed petitions with the secretary of state, twenty-five are either graduates of, or former students in, this institution. Woodbridge N. Ferris and W. D. Gordon, candidates for the nomination for governor and lieutenant-governor respectively, are former Michigan men. For senator, Alfred Lucking and for Congressman-at-large, Pat- rick H. Kelley, are both law gradu- ates, the former of the class of '78 and the latter of the class of '00. Of the twelve congressional dis- tricts, only three, the first, the tenth and the twelfth have no aspirants for the nomination for representative, who are Michigan graduates or for- mer students. In the second district, Congressman Wedemeyer, '95L, S. W. Beakes, '83L, and S. A. Moran, '88, are all out for the nomi- nation in their respective parties. In the third district, Howard W. Cav- anaugh, '87L, George L. Bolen, and Claude S. Carney, '96L, are making a three-cornered fight for the Demo- cratic nomination. The university's representatives who are in the field in the fourth district are James H. Kinnane, '84L, and George M. Valen- tine, '75L. In the fifth, we have Carl E. Mapes, '99, and Congressman Ed- win F. Sweet, '74L. Congressman Samuel W. Smith, '78L. is trying for a renomination in the sixth district as is Congressman James C. McLaugh- lin in the ninth. In the seventh dis- trict three Michigan men are making the fight, L. C. Crampton, '99L, W. E. Brown, '87L, and George H. Brown, '80D. Emory Townsend and Miles J. Purcell, '92,, have qualified in- the eighth, while in the tenth three more Michigan men, Congressman Francis H. Doods, '80L, Dennis E. Alward, and John W. Patchin, '84L, are out. Doubtless further investigation would prove that ,the university is equally well represented among the candidates for the nomination for les- ser state offices, and a study of the nominating lists in other states would show that the University of Michigan has its full quota. TOR LOVE)YLL'S RIlkO I hiv- AS CIIEN S ASTsAKE, Camepus tobebler Wies IsoIExl'in Damning Accusation Ann Arbor's Ton iLovell, who is cobbler, preacher, poet, etc., is busy, very busy, this week. He is trying to protect his reputation; not as a cobbler, nor as a preacher, noe as a poet, nor as etc., but his reputation as a sober, law-abiding citizen. Cobbling is for- gotten, and the neglected Muses lan- guish about the Castalian sprin. while Tom goes anxiously fro place to place, explaining that he is not the Tom Lovell who was recently arrested for drunkenness and for fracturine the peace of staid old Ypsi town. "Hi 'ave never seen this hother Tom," says the local Toni, "but Hi 'ave 'erd of 'im before, and 'e usually seems to be getting' 'imself harrested. Hit isn't me, hanywi; hand, w'ile Hi don't suppose hany of my friends would ever think Hi would do such a thing, Ili think hit would be just as well for you to explain hit to every- body hand save me talkin' a lot." Tom, the cobbler, is well-known to Michigan students because of his preaching, his inordinate desire t buy up and fix up old shoes, and because of sundry metrical ebullitions in a style all Tom's own. MICHIGAN TO HAVE A FINE NEW ORGAN Boston Firm Will Build Instrument For Hill Memorial , Aiditorium When the new Hill Memorial Auditori- um is dedicated it will contain one of the finest modern pipe organs that can be constructed. The Board of Re- gents has contracted with the Hutch- ings Organ Company, of Boston, Mass., to build the instrument. The work of this company is reputed to be of the highest grade in every respect, and organs such as those in Symphony Hall, Boston, Woolsey Hall, at Yale University, and hundreds of churches scattered through the east testify to the high ideals of Mr. Hutching's as an artistic organ builder. The most important features of the specifications of the new organ as finally decided upon by Professor A. A. Stanley are: there will be six dis tinct divisions, viz., great, swell, choir, solo, echo, and pedal. The key-desk or console is to have four key boards and pedals; it is to be movable, and will be connected with the pipes by means of an electric cable 125 feet is length. The action is to be electro- pneumatic, and a huge fan blower will supply the wind at high pressure. The total number of pipes will be 4008, ranging in length from 32 feet to three-quarters of as inch. These pipes speak from seventy stops, and the possibilities of combinations are further enlarged by means of 32 couplers. In order that the organist may manipulate these stops and coup- lers with ease and speed there will be 28 push buttons under the manuals and twelve pedal combinations all of which are adjustable. Everything that modern mechanics can devise has beeni incorporated in the console of this organ. A complete of cathedral chimes, a harp, and two vox humanas are among the stops which will attract most at- tention in the new instrument. The echo organ is to be located in a remote part of the building in order that the effect of great distance may be obtain- ed in the building of this organ only such portions of the instrument now in University Hall will be used as are equal to, or better than any that can be obtaiied at the present time. In its day, the Columbian organ, brought. here from the World's fair in 1893, was MUST CONTINUE TO BUST TRUSTS 'rofeso snillei nsl Timeeis . o Combnations. E lvlAlI)N FRST NEC'ISSMAI "Bust the trust! 'The tie is not yet ripe for the legalization of com- binution," said Prof. I. S. i Smalley, yesterday afternoon in his lecture on the Present Trust Sitution. That the present trust problem tas not been disposed of by the Sherman Anti-Trust law, and that to solve tiss problem we iust again take up the big stick and smash the so-called trust seas brought out in the lecture. In the treatment of his subject Pro- fessor Smalley gave a sketch of the changing aspects of the problem, ho in the past the slogan was for disso- lution, but that within hiIast few years a constantly increasing number has been crying f r legalization, and subection to government control. "There are many considerations which lead to this belief, continued the speaker. "Firstly, combination is de- sirable from an economic standpoint. It permits of the diffusion of trade secrets, large scale production, and specialization. Then too, combination is natural. A thorough study of social psysolog shoss tha tconminations spring up naturally. It is unis, even ffle, to try to break it u. Also there is the idea that combination is inevitable The thirst for power by men of transcendant ability, results in the building of ilie huge industrial cumpire." But even thouh there is much mer- it in the idea of combination, Profes- sor Smalley declared that the time has not yet come when we should l.e- galize combination. Indeed, such re'- ulation at the present, he said, would result in a flat failure, for the reason that popular opinion still clings to the idea that competition is the life of trade. The people "must learn from experience that this idea is false, the speaker stated. They must chan e their thoughts in three respects: first, they must denounce io petition; se'- ond, they must approve stringent leg- islation of cotbiiauon and thirdly, they must agree to purely 'mi nistrat- ive control without. judicial revie. Until these three propositions are ar- cepted, Professor Snaley claimed, we iust increase our efforts to bust the trusts. We should not be deceived ino whinking, said the lecturer, that the decision of the Supreme Courti thile Standard Oil and Tobacco trust cass disposed of the monopoly problem. Up to that time the monopolistic con- trot was exercised by a holding con- pany, before that time by trusts, and now by common stock ownership. "Hence, the so-called trusts," he con- eluded, "have simply changed thseir clothes. the finest of its kind in this country; best twenty years have seen many rad- ctal improvements in the art of organ building, and it is to take dvantage of these advances that the Board of Regents decided Ito reconssiuct the instrument when it is placed in Hill Auditorium. Michigan will then have an organ which will be second to none. in this country. it order that the Coluibian organ may be heard once more before being dismantled, a recital has been sched uled for Tuesday, August 13, at 8:00 p. m., in University 1,1l1. Hart V. -'Moore, '12, of the organ faculty of th University Scloot of "uusic will pre'- sent a program designed to display lie various tonil possibilities of the .instrument. Analytical notes sill ic company the prograi. No a m'issioh will be cl are . *c: *K * *~ . * * *5** *5*5* NOTICE ! All students who desire credit for work done in the summer * graduate school or the lit- * erary department should call * at the office of the sum- * mer session and fiell out a * blank. At the same time they * should leave a stamped ad- * dressed envelope for the return * of credits after the close of the * session. * * * * * * * * * * * all trouble in the matter of seating. *