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May 22, 1917 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1917-05-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

1 i £.. YAA%-.'A11111"11\ l.! ama..

TE

J illil l ILAI
MS TEORNAMENT,
YEAR MEN ARE E1L1-
TO COMPETE IN
AEET

Three Nore Class
Games This Week

Encounter Many Difficulities in
of Weather Conditions and
Defaults

Way

ALL FIRST
IBLE

Since Varsity and All-fresh sched-
uled tennis games have been called off,
to keep up interest in the court game
an All-fresh tennis tournament will be
held. All who are spending their first
year in school are eligible to com-
pete.
Due to the splendid material among
the first year tennis men keen com-
petition will be furnished and many in-
teresting matches will be played. A
silver loving cup will be presented to
the winner of the tournament.
All eligible men desiring to enter
the tournament are urged to see Intra-
mural Director Floyd A. Rowe at the
Athletic association offices in the Press
building.
ANNOUNCES TEAMS

Three more games on the inter-
class baseball league schedule will be
played this week. Weather conditions
have been interfering with the course
of the race for campus championship
but authorities are expecting to run
off the remainder of the games in
short order.
Defaults have been plentiful and
several teams have profited hugely by
the failure of some of their prospective
opponents to appear on the scene of
battle. However, these have been an-
ticipated by the heads in charge of
the series and although this year's title
may be somewhat cloudy and not quite
so clean cut as in past seasons due
to the fact that fewer games have
been played, yet the teams will con-
tinue to play until the series is com-
pleted and the title awarded to some
one team whether by virtue of multi-
farious forfeits or earned victories.
Wednesday's schedule follows:
Fresh lits vs. senior lits, soph lits vs.
soph engineers, and senior engineers
vs. junior lits.
is Holds Lead

COLLEGES.VARY AS TO
CONTINUING ATHLETICS
MOST TRYING TO KEEP UP SCIIED-
ULES BUT FIND HARD
SLEDDING
Grinnell: Preparations for football
are being continued here despite the
war. A schedule has been arranged
for next fall as in all previous years.
It is thought that the loss of a few men
will not prevent the games from be-
ing played.
Indiana: In spite of the depletion
of the track team, Indiana continues
to train for the state and conference
meets. Indiana's prospects are con-
sidered good in the coming meets. The
varsity tennis schedule has been sus-
pended for the year.
Wisconsin: Courses given during
the summer in athletic coaching will
afford prospective coaches an oppor-
tunity to learn Badgermethods. The
courses will include training in the
technique of football, baseball, basket-
ball, and track.
Minnesota: Dr. Harry L. Williams,
the gridiron coach, states as his opin-
ion that it was a mistake for Minne-
sota to cancel the football schedule
until the exact conditions under which
football will be played next fall are
known. "By September the situation
may be considerably changed," said
Dr. Williams.
Ohio State: Although the teams are
seriously crippled. by withdrawal of
men, Ohio State will not cancel any
of the athletic events which have been
scheduled for the remainder of the
year. Owing to the fact that so few
entries have been made, however, the
tennis tournament is likely to be
called off.
Purdue: Because of the general
loss of track men, the Indiana state
meet, which was to have been held
here next Saturday, has been called
off. All but two of the competing col-
leges have emphatically opposed hold-
ing the meet, on account of their de-
pleted teams.
Patronize Daily Advertisers.

TRAD. PARK

ADELPII HOLDS ANNUAL UP- and adjourn en masse to the place of
RIVER WIENIE ROAST TODAY the entertainment.
Cascade glen, on the banks of the
Adelphi house of representatives Huron, will be the scene of the hi-
will hold its annual trip up the river larity. This is the closing event of
and wienie roast this evening. The the year for the Adelphi, its last regu-
members will meet at 5:30 o'clock in lar program having taken place a
the Adelphi rooms in University hall, week ago.

Contracts for 38 New Submarines I
Washington, May 21.-Contracts I
the construction within a year of
fleet of 38 new submarines has be
let to three corporations, it was 8
nounced by Secretary Daniels tod
They are being constructed on t
profit nercentage plan.

~~hat "Cord" Means In
GOODR I. S

CORD TIRES

Women's Interclass Baseball
Given Out by Athletic
Instructor

Nines1

Women's baseball teams for inter-
class contests are announced by Miss
Alice 'vans, instructor in gymnastics,
as follows.
Senior team: Harriet Walker p,
Olga Shinkman c, Mildred Crissey ss,
Janet MacFarland 1b, Laura Miller 2b,
Margaret Henkle 3b, Grace Hess rf,
Carry Baxter If, Gladys Hamilton cf.
Junior team: Olive Wiggins p, Vera
Brown c, Hilda Smith ss, Ruth Mac
Lachlan 1b, Pauline Cohn '2b, Claris-'
sa Vyn 3b, Marian Holden rf; Jessie
Saunders lf, Weltha Mac Lahlan cf.
Sophomore team: Selma Giertz p,
Lucile Duff c, Phillis Eggleston ss,
Ethel Glaus 1b, Helen Davis 2b, Mary
Morse 3b, Margaret Knevels lf, Dor-
othy Sample rf, Eliza Harris cf.
Freshman team: Laura Peacock p,
Katharine Loveland c, Florence Field
ss, Anna Kirkpatrick 1b, Grace Hall
2b, Frances Cooney 3b, Susan Verlen-
den rf, Constance Hopkins lf, Elsie
Erley cf.
The first game will be played be-
tween the juniors anA freshmen
Thursday at 4 o'clock.
LEE CHOSEN 1918 TIGER
BASEBALL NINE LEADER
Princeton, N. J., May 21.-P. B. Lee
of Silver Springs, Md., has been elect-
ed captain of the Princeton baseball
team for next season. The extent to
which Princeton's athletics have been
blasted by the national crisis was
shown at the election, when there
were only three men present to chose
the next year's leader. The others
have left college to enter some form of
service.
PARKS, VARAITY PITCHER,
SUFFERS FROM APPENDECITIS
Vernon H. Parks, Varsity pitcher, is
suffering from an attack of appende-
citis. Parks has been removed to the
University hospital.
It is not known at present just how
serious his condition is and the ques-
tion of an operation will depend upon
future developments in his case, ac-
cording to announcements made by
attending physicians.
Postpone Big Nine Football Meeting
Chicago, May 21.-The Western
conference football committee has an-
nounced that there will be no meeting
of the football officials with the coach-
es in June this year, as is customary.
The meeting has been postponed until
early fall on account of the unsettled
condition of Big Nine athletics, dueJ

v . l '*
;. -s
'
r

o settle exactly what the care-
lessly used, much abused term

Season
G. AB. R.
Sisler .......30 116 13
Speaker ....31 106 17
Cobb ........29 104 16
Sunday
G. A.B. R.
Sisler .......1 3 1
Speaker .....2 8 2
obb 1 3 0
f''.".. .. Saturday
G. A.B. R..
Sisler .......1 4 0
Speaker. . .1 5 0
Cobb ........ 1 5 1

if1

r0

-_1 ,- _1 1

H.
41
30
34
H.
2
2
0
H.
0
2
2

Av.
.353
.330
.327
Av.
.667
.250
.000
AT.
.000
.400
A40
ru~ o

YESTERDAY'S

drNAl* i

GAMES

American League
No games played.
National League
Cincinnati ...0 0 0 0 010 0 01-2
Boston ......0000001000-1
(10 innings.)
Chicago.......010000110-3
Phillies .......040000000-4
Pittsburg.....10 0 0 0 0 0 0 2-3
New York ..1200 0100 0-4
St. Louis .....04 010 010 0-6
Brooklyn .....10 0 10 0 0 0 0-2
LEAGUE STANDINGS
American League
W. L.

I

6 01

6 3
80
9 0
5 2
9 2
10 1
7 2
Pct.
.643
.630
.629
'.529
.455
.433
.379
.280

l t ,:

Boston.............18
New York..........17
Chicago...........22
Cleveland ...........18
St. Louis ...........15
Washington........13
Detroit ..............11
Athletics...........8
National League
W.
New York..........16
Philadelphia .........17
Chicago...........22
St. Louis ............15
Cincinnati ...........14
Boston.............9
Brooklyn.............9
Pittsburg ...........10

10
10
13
16
18
17
18
20

A~lll' cord tire orsnlouici mean, we
have here stripped back the thick,
hugh tread of a Silvertown Cord
Tire and laid bare its rubberatu-
rated, cable-cord body.
Were you given sight into all tires,
you would find three
- types of bodies:
COTTON FABRIC, swathed in
FIVE to SEVEN plies;
THREAD CORD, or WEB (strings
.the size of a trout line, held parallel
Silvertown the circumference of the tire by
Cordinterspaced crossthreads), gummed
X-Cels together in FIVE to SEVEN plies,
1 Increased en- MEANING INTERNAL HEAT.
2. Smoother rid-
ing.
N4Suesaving CABLE-CORD, the unique, patent-
IS5. Coastfarther. protected, CROSS-WRAPPED,
.6. Start quicker. TWO-PLY structure, found ONLY
7. Easier to guide. in SILVERTOWN, the original
mileage. cord tire, MEANING THE CON-
9.More resistiv QUEST OF INTERNAL HEAT.
10. Repaired easly
and permanently.
You can not afford to be
Without the extra-size smartness
and ultimate economy, you find
at the mark of the RED-
DOUBLE-DIAMOND.
Order through your dealer
THE B.F. GOODRICH COMPANY
Akron, Ohio
Goodrich also makes the famous fabric tires-
Goodrich Black Safety Treads
"Silvertowns make all cars hzighgrade" I"" I
Goodrich Tires are handled in Ann Arbor by

L. Pct.

8
9
12
13
19
15
15
21

.667
.654
.647
.535
.424
.325
.325
.323

Brown University Students to Sai
Providence, R. I., May 21.-Twenty-
four Brown students have been se-

to the war. lected for an ambulance corps. The
corps will leave at once for France.
For fine Watch Repairing, J. L.
Chapman, Jeweler, 113 Main St.-Adv. For results advertise in The Michi-
Tues. e.o.d. gan Daily.
n C z=0m 0 g cD O a0CV=VA 70,=40KT L < I

PQ
V'
0e
0
n-

In Sport
or Study,
Work or Play
0
The acme of deliciousness and refresh-O
meit 'whether you're "burning the mid- 0
night oil", or after a stiff game. A treat mennd thegenuine e$
at any time. encourage substitutin
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. ATLANTA. GA.
=.a0 o y QK=0Ems Q =c0'1 o 0 K ,0O =-

DIXIE WEAVES
will be the big things in hot
weather suits this year. They're
going, to be very popular and
every young man should have a
suit in his wardrobe.
HART SCHAFFNER
& MARX
have supplied us with a fine lot
of these suits. They have good
lines and are extremely well
tailored. Look these over.
KNOX STRAW HATS
have the qualities that make
them the choice of best dressers
everywhere. We handle them.
Reale-Conlin-FiegeI Co,
Southwest corner
Washington and Main Sts.

Cadillac Garage
32 7 S. Main. St.
Phone 1625

Ann Arbor Garage
206 W. Huron
Phone 1101

IWL

fAmwe ,rm w _f rrl A ' a VS A A i dC" i f 1 dA

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