SATYOUR DOOR THREE THE ONLY OFFICIAL EVENINGS A WEEK, 75c SUMMER PUBLICATION Vol IV. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1913. No. 10 CAMPUS LEAGUE FIGHTIS CLOSE" Laws Lead by Narrow Margin While Lits Hold Cellar Position. NICHOLL TWIRLS 6OOl BALL. Standing of the Teams. Won. Lost. Laws.............2 1 Medics............1 1 Engineers .........1 1 Lits .. . . . 1 Pct. .667 .500 .500 .000 The department baseball league is now in full swing and a total of four games have been played to date. The laws had a week's start and have played more games than any of the other teams. Tomorrow the lits will attempt to pull themselves out of the cellar position at the expense of the engineers. On Saturday the second contest between the laws and the med- ics will be staged on South Ferry Field at the usual hour. Engineer-Medic Game. Yesterday afternoon the engineers sprung a surprise when they defeated the medics 8 to 4. One, Nicholl, who. twirled for the engineers, was tried in the box for the first time, and proved to be a find, striking out 10 men and allowing but one to walk. Smith, who allowed but three hits in the game with the laws Saturday, was not in his usual form, and was touched for seven hits. R. Smith did the best work with the stick for the engineers, bringing in three of the 8 runs while Blake starred for the medics. The score: Medics. MAKES WARNING TO KEEP VALUAJILES UNDER LOCK WHEN CIRCUS ARRIVES. Chief of Police Kinney i making ar- rangements to deputize an extra force of policemen in anticipation of the us- ual swarm of pickpockets, thugs and thieves, which are expected to follow the Hagenbeck-Wallace circus into town Saturday, July 19. Chief Kinney has warned the people of Ann Arbor to take special care about locking their houses when away, and against leaving anything of value lying around loose, in order to remove temptation from the path of the light-j fingered gentry, who shadow the big show from town to town, but are in no, way connected with it. ENJOYABLE CONCERT GIVEN TO SUMMER SCHOOLSTUDENTS Faculty of University School of Music Provides Delighiful Entertainment. Members of the faculty of the Uni- versity School of Music gave an en- icyable concert complimentary to stu- dents of the summer school and to the general public Wednesday night in the high school auditorium. The artists All R H Clay, ss ................. 4 0 1 Smith, if and p ........... 3 1 1 Blake, lb .................3 1 2 Wenner, 3b .............. 3 1 0 Harrington, ef..........3 0 0 Jackson, rf .............. 3 1 1 Cuyler, 2b ............... 3 0 0 Carte, c ................ 3 0 0 Tucker, p............'. 1 0 0 Trum, If . ................. 3 0 0 28 4 5 Engineers. All R H R. Smith, ss ............. 4 3 2 Adams, if ................ 4 1 2 Nicholl, p ..............4 1 1 McFie, lb ............... 4 1 2 Naylon, 3b ..............4 0 1 Emmons,o cf............. 4 1 2 .F. Smith, 2b ............. 4 0 1 1. Smith, c .............. 4 0 1 Kerwin, rf ............... 4 0 0 36 7 12 Game by innings: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Medics ........0 0 0 4 0 0 0- Engineers .... .0 0 3 0 3 1 1- E 1 were Miss Maud Hagberg, pianist, Miss Grace Johnson, soprano, and William Howland, baritone. Accompanist, Miss Frances Hamilton. All of the numbers were enthusiasti- cally received by the large audience whose insistence was graciously met by the musicians in pleasing encores. The program was well-balanced and opened and closed with duets by Miss Johnson and Mr. Howland. Both of the singers were in excellent voice and their numbers were well adapted to display the capabilities of each singer. Especially notable were the rendi- tion of "Ah, Fors e Lui" from Verdi's La Traviata, by Miss Johnson and Mr. Howland's singing of a group of songs by Schubert, Schumann and Herman. Hilldach's "Abscheid der Voegel" in which their voices were beautifully blended formed a fitting close to the program. Artistic interpretations were also offered by Miss Hagberg in her num- bers, a "Barcarole" and "En Autom- ne," of Moskowski, and the Straus- Tausig valse caprice "Nachtfalter." These selections called for a variety of technic and feeling which Miss Hag-! berg possesses in such abundance and which she lavished on her numbers Wednesday night. Much of the charm of the program was contributed by the sympathetic and musicianly accompaniments of Miss Hamilton. The concert marked the farewell ap- pearance of Miss Hagberg and of Miss Johnson, the former going soon to the Frances Shimer Academy, Mt. Car- oll, Illinois,where she will have charge of the piano department, and the latter to study in Paris. REFEREE TAKES TEST1fONY OF DEAN RATES AND PROF. E. R, PROMINENT VNIVERSIIY MEN. SUNDERLAND WILL ADDRESS LAW SCH)OOL ASSO('CITION. OF UNBORN CHILD LoclHotel Seene of Important Pro- F U B R HL ceedings in Drainage Dean H. M. Bates and Professor E. Canal Case. R. Sunderland of the law department ---_ will address the American Law School Dr. Peerson Says State Must Care .For Illegitimate Chuild and It is isn't every day that a court association when that body meets m F ot hi n comes to the witnesses whose Montreal on September 1. Dean Bates h testimony it desires, but that is what who has been president of the associa- happened in this city yesterday. The tion during 1912-13 will make the ASKS FOR GREATERt PUBLICITY. referee appointed by the United States opening address, while Prof. Sunder- court in Chicago it the case of the land will talk on some phase of prac- "It is the duty of the state through United States vs. the Chicago Sanitary tice court work. its University hospital to care for the Commission held an all-day session in The organization is a branch of the illegitimate mother and the unborn the Allenel and Prof. H. C. Sadler, American Bar association which meets child," said Dr. Reuben Peterson in a head of the marine engineering depart- at the same time and place. Prominent lecture on "The Rights of the Unborn ment, gave testimony during the whole among the speakers are Ex-President Child" in the west amphitheater of the period of the court's session. W. . Taft now professor of law at medical building Tuesday night. The federal government is attempt- Yale; Dean Thayer of the Harvard law "I have not lost faith in the virtue ing to secure an injunction to prevent school; and Lord Haldane of the En- of American women," he said, "but the comnmission from diverting any glish bench. with more than 1000 illegitimate births more water from Lake Michigan into in Michigan in 1910 it is evident that the drainage canal. Both Prof. Sad- nnRO iirir S WLL K there must be a remedy." The speaker ler and former Professor Gardner S. rnU VEfL L.I SPEAK considered principally the rights of the 'Williams have been called upon for AT SMOKER illegitimate child to live. "He is here," expert testimony in the case, and Mr. UNION TONIGHT he said, "and it is our duty to protect Williams left last night for New York him until he shall be able to protect swhere he will give his testimony at Informal Gathering Will Furnish Op- himself." an adjourned session of the court on porlnity for Students to Dr. Peterson spoke against the pro- Monday next. Get Acquainted. fessional practitioners and the many baby farms and poorly conduct- Professors Evaluate State Gas Works. An informal smoker will be given at ed maternity hospitals in the state. In Prof. Riggs and Prof. Anderson are the Michigan Union clubhouse tonight, proposing a remedy for these evils and engaged in making valuations of vari- to afford suminer school students an others he said, "Let public opinion be ous gas works in Michigan for the opportunity of getting acquainted with so educated through the press and State Railway Commission. Prof. each other, of meeting various mem- otherwise that the malpractitioner Riggs was in his ofice yesterday but hers of the faculty and incidentally of shall be afraid to apply his evil trade." leaves today for Chicago. Re will learning the purpose and ideals of the He spoke of the Catholic Church as spend the greater part of the summer Union. Informality will feature the having done more than any other edu- in the Upper Peninsula in his work for whole affair and everybody will be ex- cational factor in mitigating the evil. the Commission. peted to speak to everybody else. The speaker said that a woman Following a musical skit by Alfred might be known to be immoral and FACLTY | Eg S 0. Wt illiams, '14E, and Irving E. Lat- lose very little social standing, but FACUULTY GUILLOTINE FALLS timer, former leader of the musical he added, "Let the results of her im- ON MANY LUCKLESS STUDENTS tclubs, Profes' R. M. Wenley will morality appear in the shape of a address the ,gathering. Edward G. child and the finger of scorn is for Kemp will offer a vocal solo, and later ever pointed at her." He believed the Sixty-Nin Iembers of Engineering every one will join in singing differ- University hospital of the state to be And Literary Departments Must cut Michigan songs led by Charles W. the only institution able to give the Leave University. French. Smckes and lemonade will "unfortunate woman" a new start by ----__ be furnished to all, and admission will ]Keeping her secret and caring for the Full reports of the fatalities result- be free to everybody whether a mem- child. ing from the spring examinations have her of the Union or not. Festivities not become available although it is will begin at 7:30 o'clock. EN6LISH EDUCATIONAL over a month since thse axe fell. Not --SYSTElM DEVELOPED HAP- that the victims who had their univer- LAW PROFESSOR FINISHES HAZARD, SAYS WENLEY. sity lives snuffed out at that time have NE W BOOK ON AGE NCY LAW had to wait in suspense thus long. "The Englishman has blundered Far from that! They have been noti- Case Book For Use of Students Now along until he has the whole country fied ere this and by this time they in C'ure of Pub- dotted with excellent universities,"said have doubtless recovered their sang i'tion, Prof. R. At. Wenley in a lecture on froid, as we may say in the Cercle "University Education in England" in Francas. But an expectant world has Secretary E. C. Goddard of the law the west physics lecture room yester- just now learned that 63 of our erst- department has completed his case day afternoon. while campus comrades of the lits and A He characterized the development of iboonot Agency and it is nsw in the Rehactrzdhedvlp nto engineers were requested not to return satds of the printers. St is probabis the English educational system as hap- to our fair city in the fall on account .ha otheprite ioplen hazard. "All English philosophy," he lot this wovrk wil be copleed in of poor work. Ime to be toed by the classes in Agen- said, "is like English whiskey, it is Engineers have long boasted that cy next yea.. Professor Goddard is mostly Scotch or Irish." their department offered the stiffest the author of "Principal and Agent" courses in the University curriculum. hich was first pblished as a part of SEVERAL FRATERNITIES Still there were but 30 boilermakers the Cyclopsdit of Law ad Procedure, WILL FIND NEW HOMES, among the unfortunate 69 while 39 also of Goddard's cases and outlines on easy-going lits made up the remainder Lacciers. The new Ann Arbor will be beautified next of the missing. book will be published by a St. Paul year by the addition of another fine And but two of them were c-eds oncern as one of the American casefraternity house to the large number This momentous fact is put last. Fain book series. already constructed. Changes in the would we men pass over hastily the Professor Goddard leaves today for homes of some of the other fraternities fact that we furnished 67-69ths of the Lakeside, Michigan, where he will will also be made at that time. involuntary hold-outs, or to-be-held- spend the summer. Ground has been broken for the outs, but in the interests of a pure construction of the new $35,000 press, we are forced to print the whole Acacia fraternity house on the truth. GRADUATE AND FRESHMAN site of their old one which was burned These summer school students who ARE MARRIED ON SAME DAY a number of years ago on South are here for the heated term have State street. The construction only the sincere envy of the regular 'Austin Llod Lathers 'L, of Dul- I will bs of rd brick and ifs arhite- 2 -4 -s Three base hits, R. Smith, McFie; two base hits, Adams, Smith; home run, McFie; struck out, by Tucker 1, by Smith, 6, by Nicholl 10; base on balls, off Tucker 2, off Smith 4, off Nicholl 1; hit by pitcher, Kerwin, Nay- lon, F. Smith. Umpires, Murphy, Pet- (Continued on page 4) FIISTI' EGYPLl AN STUDENT WILL ENTER UNIVERSITY, Besides the Turkish student who it was recently learned is on his way to enter the university in the fall, an- other Far Easterner in the person of Shaker Yusif, of Assuit, Egypt, will add to the cosmopolitan aspect of next year's student body. Yusif will enter the literary department where he will prepare himself for work in the med- ical department. He soill be the first Egyptian student to enter the uni- versity. t'niversity Publications are Popular, t The first edition of"Michigan Trees," denizens of the campus. So fan as nth, Mion., amid Miss Effs Godfrey '01, Itlue will add matsrially to the bsamity published by the university, proved to danger of their being "canned out" is were married at the home of the of the large group of handsome struc- be popular. All copies of the first edi- concerned, say the regulars, they bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles tures. It wil he ready for occupancy tion are sold, making it necessary to should worry! 'E. Godfrey, 420 North Fourth Avenue, by next February. order a second edition to satisfy the Tuesday night. The Sigma Chi house which is now demand. This book contains illustra- After a wedding trip on the lakes, nearing completion near the Michigan tions of all the trees of Michigan, giv- Mr. and Mrs. Lathers will return to Union will be ready for occupancy by THE WEATMER IA . ' h* ing also particular information about ETDuluth where Mr. Lathers is practic- the opening of the college year this the fruit, bark, and foliage of each. ing law. fall. Among the other publications of the Forecast for Ann Arbor. Another recent wedding was that of Sinfonia fraternity will move into University to be given to the public Probable showers today, fair tomor- Gladys Tyler, daughter of Mrs. Mary the Chas K. McGee residence at 514 within the next few weeks are "The row. Mcderate variable winds. Hewett Tyler, of Ypsilanti, to Charles Thompson St. Medical Announcement" of the medi- Yesterday's 'Iemperatures T. Newton, '16, also of Ypsilanti, Gamma Eta Gamma which has been cal department, and "Proceedings of Maximum 79; minimum 60. Wind which took place Tuesday. Mr. and at 1008 Cornwell Place will find its the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club," by velocity 15. Mrs. Newton left immediately after home at 807 South State street next faculty members, who are also mesn- One year ago, maximum 72; mini- the ceremony for an eastern trip. They year in the house made vacant by the bers of the organization. mum 52.. will live in Ypsilanti. Delta Sigma Delta fraternity.