BY WAR POLITICS ston Bank Sees Momentary Falling Off of Buying Due to Peace Notes SSIBILITY OF WOOL TARIFF RAY OF HOPE TO MERCHANTS ease in money, banks are beginning to show active signs of buying bonds of this character. The bond market so far in 1917 can be summarized in a few words as follows: Active, strong, and with the demand exceeding the supply. Since Jan. 1, 'money has been ac- cumulating in the banks, reserves have risen sharply, and rates, both time and call, have receded. In this mar- ket, time money has softened ma- terially, rates ranging from 4 per cent up. Call money rates have decreased rapidly from six per cent at the turn of the year to three and one-half per cent. The present tendency is for even greater ease in money. MICHIGAN'S FIRST TEAM HAD BUT ONE FOOTBALL B1,SEBAL WS INTRODUCED13 Y FRESHMEN IN 1863 #j S 5 * * * * * 9 AT THE THEAT * TODAY * Majestic-Vaudeville. * Ohu-aeWad rebitliii-Fainniie Ward I ERS n "The * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * : *x * Years of the Locust." Also Bray cartoons. b ti a v IE a c v c I ti F Arcade-Julius Steger in Stolen Triumph." Drew edy also. "The com- ufacturers Fear That Cessation Hostilities Will Find Them Overstocked of * * # E * * # * *# * '9 AT THE i ITN Ey According to the First National bank of Boston, war politics have played an important part during the last month in trade calculations. Enthusiastic buying by dealers has been dampened, momentarily by the fear of beingj caught with high-priced goods should peace come unexpectedly. This rather conservative attitude which has spread through the country is in itself a factor of great strength in the trade situa- tion. The business already contracted for may be likened to a huge storage bat- tery to tide over a lack of purchasing during a temporary slackening in ac- tivity. Manufacturers and jobbers are refraining from speculation in raw ma- terials and are supplying themselves only for their normal requirements. The financial statements for the year show in the main large, and in many instances startling profits, but with first represented The dawn of ath- letics at Michigan began with the clos- ing days of the Civ- il war. It was about this time that the University was by a recognized col- lege athletic team. In that day base- ball was the most popular sport, and because the schools throughout the country had not yet taken up football as the representative college game, the greatly expanded merchandise ac- horsehide contests were the most counts, due to extremely high ma- prominent. terial and labor costs. As it was, baseball was played with The railroad situation is acute, any team available, generally with blocking the intake by factories and some small college or seminary in the mills of raw materials and choking state, and often with teams represent- the shipment of finished goods. While ing various athletic clubs in Chicago domestic buying of steel seems for the and Detroit. The game originated here moment slightly less active, the de- about the year 1863 when some fresh- mand is tremendous and the industry men having heard of the strange, oversold for many months ahead. popular game, then being played in Railroad buying, especially of cars, the east by a few clubs, wrote, out to continues heavy, particularly by for- New Jersey for some information eign countries. about the game and asked to have a Cotton manufacturers are unable to copy of the rules sent to them. So foresee any early reduction in the costs well did they like the new sport that of production. The exportation of cot- they sent letters to same week order- ton has greatly increased while even ing bases, balls, and bats, and a dia- domestic demand cannot be satisfied. mond was laid out in the old field, just This leads to the inference that raw north of the Medical school, where material can continue high for some Waterman and Barbour gymnasiums time, and at present there is little or Inow stand. no indication of an early decline in The first regular team was organiz- other costs. ed in 1865, and it was not until a de- Cloth Buyers Holding Off. cade later that football was introduc- In cloth markets, buying is going on ed by Judge Wayne Hayman of Mis- strictly for consumption. Buyers for sud ensmT. ae of Illnois, both home and foreign markets are and others. The game was then very holding off, and while a great deal of;unlike anything dat resemblesthe hesitation is entirely seasonable, and gridiron sport today. It was mostly warranted by the sold-up conditions, a a kicking game but not like Rugby. more critical attitude toward future However, sometime later Mr. Cable. merchandising is manifested. returning from Germany, brought mercandiing s maifesed.with him a round leather covered As an index of wealth and economicbathenim uatrounveathe styver strength, the railroad mileage of the} ball, then quite a novelty. The style strngt, te riloadmilageof heof playing was changed to the Eng- United States is impressive, exceeding ish g asechnge, t theng- the combined mileage of the nine other game of Rugby, with 15 men on WILLIS CLAIRE AND BETH GRO ES-YOUNG IN "THE GIRL WHO SMILES" AT THE WHITNEY TOM ORROW. Yost. His novel methods t or a? country by storm and his fast foot- ball machine, going like clokwork outplayed all rivals and won lastin fame and the title to the leadership in the west. His famous name "Hur- ry-up", came from his system of lin- ing up his team directly after using a play and shooting in again before the opponents had recovered them- selves. To him we owe the glory of the early days. Track and field sports began to re- ceive encouragement in the early sev-t enties but there was no intercollegiatea competition in this brand of athletics until 1893. It was then that the West- ern Intercollegiate conrerence was Michigan. In this braneli of sport, Michigan has achieved much success. securing for many seasons represent - atives on the select list of America's best athletes. CAMPUS FLAG AT HALF MAST ' IN HONOR OF ADMIRAL DEWEY; Flying at half mast, the flag on the! campus is expressing the grief of the University over the death of Admiral George Dewey. "Admiral Dewey," said President Harry B. Hutchins yesterday, "was a national hero and it is nothing more than right that this honor at least should be accorded him at his death. Some public-spirited citizens asked that the flag be at half mast and it was done with the full approval of the' University." Flags have been ordered to fly at half mast on all the public buildings of the country by President Wilson. For results advertise in the Mich- gan Daily. Want Negroes to- Remain inSouth Tuskegee Convention Adopts Resolu- tions Against Northern Migration Tuskegee, Ala., Jan. 18.-Negroes from every section of the south attend- ing the twenty-sixth annual Tuskegee negro conference adopted "declara- tions" today admonishing negroes to remain in the south and co-operate with white people in the improvement of labor conditions. The "declarations" deal principally with the migration of negroes northward, the boll weevil, and distress among colored people be- cause of floods. The chief cause of unrest among the negroes, it was declared, is lack of adequate protection under the law. "Now is the greatest opportunity the south has ever had for white and black people to get together and have a thorough understanding with reference to their common interest and also to co-operate for the general welfare of all," the statement said. Before the conference convened to- day there was a parade of floats de- picting various activities at Tuskegee institute. The conference will con- tinue Thursday. Special Sunday evening luncheon, twenty-five cents. Bloomfield's, N. Un- iversity. 19-20-26-27 Girls attention! For rainwater shampoos and scalp treatment for falling hair go to Mrs. J. R. Trojanow- ski, 1110 S. University, side entrance Phone 696-W. 5-.two wks "The Girl Who Smiles,' will be the the attraction at the Whitney theater tomorrow afternoon and night. The ' musical comedy will be given as or- iginally produced at the Longacre' theater of New York, where it ran for 200 performances. Prominent in "The Girl Who Smiles" is Angelo Romeo, who for a nnumber of years was identi- fied with the Now Fork Hippodrome' stage. A clever chorus. numerous song hits, and excellent scenery are part of "The Girl Who Smiles." Among the musical numbers are: "Teach Me to Smile," "Let us Dance." "Tempta- tion Waltz." "Life Has Just Begun." "Your Picture," "At Last," "NIy Paul- ine." "The Story of the Sparrow," "You are My Little Cupid," "A Iloney- moon in May," "Who is That," "Dance Me Good-Bye," and "0 Dear Marie." AT THE MAJESTIC "Six Little Wives," the musical com- edy appearing at the Majestic this week-end, presents a problem in in- ternational complications surpassing any that have lately disturbed the po- litical equilibrium of the world. Rogers, suffocated with wealth, fears that the women love him only for his money. His father, rather old and hopelessly unromantic, wants him to marry and settle down, perhaps think- ing that after his becoming a benedict he will have fewer inclinations to call on his father to settle up. Rogers marries six of them, with all their attendant jargon, "dimme a tiss," and nationalities. That is, he marries them but only by proxy, for he has a! most natural trepidation about becom- ing a modern Mormon. But of course he finds the girl, the! one he had been looking for. Then he stops looking. Incidentally, it might interest the good-looking Rogers to know that Ja- pan is not a European country. When he tells his father that he has a wife from every European country he vis- ited, and then introduces an almond- eyed maiden from Japan, he is prob- ably romantic, but wrong in his geog- raphy. There is good comedy in it, Big Fel- low and Little Fellow offering some- thing that is probably a hybrid so far as its originality is concerned, but which has many entertaining qualities. Even Doris McNeil, with a real name of Iska Murff, is above the average for the Majestic. SIX MICHIGAN STUDENTS WIN IN SCHOLARSHIP COMPETITION During the past three years, Uni- versity of Michigan students have been highly successful in the nation-wide competition for scholarships conducted by the educational department of the Review of Reviews. Within this time, University students who have made records are: Arthur Henkel, $2,500; Cyril E. Bailey, '17, $1,100; J. Stern, '17, $1,300; James H. Tuttle, '20. $400; Ida E. Mines, '20, $750. and Z. W. Tenekejian, '17E, $300. The plan now proposed to students all over the country makes possible a complete college education with all ex- penses paid. In order to interview interested Michigan men and women, Ira M. Smith, western representative of the Review of Reviews, will be in this city today and tomorrow. He may be reached at 1315 Hill street, tele- phone 1460. Try a Michigan Daily Want Ad. SCHUMACHER. HARDWARE CO. A Store of Individuals Shops 308-10-12 South Main Street Special Sale for to days and a 10 % discount on all Fire Baskets and Irons Fire Screens and Sets We have the Fire Screens in Black and Brass 24-30 and 26 inches high- four folds. Fire Baskets all sizes. r principal railroad countries in thea Ripped Ball ieays Game world. Equally impressive is the fact For a long time there was only one thato 25 pergcenteofhthis mileageyisni that 25 per cent of this mileage is in football in the college and it is easy the hands of the receivers. There is C to imagine the pique and disappoint- a sharp decline in net profits which ment which the members of the teams plainly reflects the influence of car!felt when some iron toed booter of shortage and traffic congestion and the days of yore kicked the ball so also of the increased costs of all ma- viciously that he ripped the caved off. terials entering into railway operation. As Mr. Sterling Bullock, now caretak- New England shoe factories are still er of Ferry field club house tells, the very 'fully occupied, but this condition' boys would very frequently come reflects previous rather than current rushing up to- his shop on William activity at the selling end. New busi- street, imploring him to stitch the ness in shoes is at a low ebb, and with cover immediately, for the game had the slowing down or the demand has been stopped and they feared that un- coT ea r1quie1r7 fr the o trade has less he did a quick job the Challengers The ear191 fo th wol tadehaswould hitch up their horses and drive opened exceedingly strong and bids back home to Detroit in their covered fair to be a year of record prices. In wagons. Mr. Bullock still has a most the past it has been necessary for us most constant reminder of the old to supplement our own supply by im- days, for among his papers is a bill portations from other countries. Now of 35 cents against the team of 1878, we will have to turn to neutral mar- "for sewing cover on ball." kets for even a larger supply than During these early stages in the usual. - gradual evolution of the Michigan May Place Duty on WooL gridiron game the schedules were of- One "straw in the wind" favorable ten varied and uncertain. Thus while to our manufacturers is the possibil- Michigan played Harvard, Yale, ity that congress will place a slight and Princeton inb1881, the year before duty on wool for revenue purposes, that there was but one game sched- and that will call for an additional uled, with Toronto, and the year after compensatory duty on wool manufac- there was no regular team and no tures, which will be sadly needed at outside games. The year following the close of the European war. this, Yale and Harvard were again Since Jan. 1, the demand for invest- met in the big intersectional battles.. ment bonds has been very active with and also Wesleyan and Stevens In- strengthening prices. Massachusetts stitute. Of all these games, Michigan savings banks have begun to come into was victorious only in the last, but the the market, but are finding an ex- score in most cases indicated the tremely scant supply of bonds which closeness of the fray and justifies are legal for their investment. The both the ancient and modern conclus- result has been an advance in price, ion that in the west, Michigan is king. particularly of high-grade railroad For nearly ten years after this our bonds. The unsettled condition of the games were played almost entirely stock market has resulted in a great with teams in the central west, and many investors turning their attention the record shows a proud line of vic- to bonds. Municipal bonds continue to tories; for the first five years every be in active demand, with the supply game being won. not plentiful. Since Jan. 1, there has Yost Responsible for Present Fame been a consistent and increasing de- During the most important period in mand for well-secured public utility the development of the game, however, bonds, and this demand has come very the destinies of Michigan have been largely from the private investor, but bound with those of Coach Fielding H. the last few days, with the continuing founded, largely at the instigation of 7 r r s U pA~ J - HOP 1917 0 IThese Great Bargains MUST BE SEEN to fully appreciate their ,t V4. IMMENSE VALUE. GRINNELL BROS. After Inventory Sale of Jiusical Instruments and Cases BANJO MANDOLINS-VIOLINS- GUITARS UKULELES--Drums and sticks-Banjos-Leath- er and canvas Cases at prices that will interest you. See Our Window for Display About,100 copies Popular Music slightly soiled at 5c. About 80-88 note Played Piano Roll at 30c, For anything in the Musical Line call at 116 So. Main PHONE 1707 Pianos for Sale and Rent Brandegee-K Incaid Clothes "Itng Worsted" and "Snow Linen" We carry every big and little needful of Correct Evening Dress, from our "College Chap Eton" Link Button Swallow- tail Suit to Link Sleeve Buttons for your White Pique Shirt. White Waistcoats, Silk Hats, Silk Hose, Dress Neckwear, Silk Mufflers, Dress Gloves, Dress Shirts-Pique and Fancy Stripe, Pique, and Jewel sets. We can fit you out complete for The Hop, a pleasure to show you our complete line from Suit to Hose. TWinker & Company Clothes, Furnishings and Hats FOR PARTICULAR DRESSERS 342 S. State St., Cor. S. State and William Sts. We make a specialty of new Dress Suits for Rental 1