I I VIIl.F-l.UI L/TAIL. I ' THE TREAT TODAY stie-Vaudeville de-.Virginia P evil Kate." Mut * * * * * iiiir rni l EHS * BGESLLGUE flS ( ACULTY MEN ENROLLED 1 l t i earson in t and Jeff eum-Douglass Fairbanks 'he Half-Breed." Triangle dy-Joseph Belmont in "A abaret." * * * * * * * * * * *1 * I * I * * * * * AT THE MAJESTIC. udeville is again on the boards e Majestic theater. e big act on the program is Imhof, and Corenne. Roger Imhof, as >elated peddler, seeks lodging in fore the War Hotel." Hugh Conn ars as Hank Louder, a porter, is hard of hearing and ambitious{ e a fireman. Marcelle Corenne a a dual role, appearing first as andlady's daughter and finally as ined nurse. e Kaufman brothers both { have al voices and a new line of com- le. LaToy has four educated dogs are not of the usual run, but pose in reproductions of master- s making entertainment for both rtistically inclined and those who comedy. The comedy pantomime ry good. cRae and Clegg have a bicycle The man is a good comedian, e the girl is an expert on the al. ibs and Alton are clever enter- ,rs. They sing, dance and play violin and piano much to the sat- tion of the audience. They are young and have a neat way of ducing their act. hmen to Smoke Next Tuesday Eve. ans are being made for a mam- a freshman smoker to be held at Union next Tuesday evening, Oc- r 17. ris srhoker is for the purpose of ng the freshmen acquainted. A ed entertainment will be provided. Workers Will Strive to Get Full Re- publican Registration of Voters. More than thirty thousand college alumni are now enrolled in the Hughes National College League which is rap- idly organizing branches in hundreds of cities and all the states of the Union. Landon P. Marvin, an over-: seer of Harvard University, and Sam- uel J. Reid, Jr., secretary for the Princeton club of New York, are in charge of the work of organizing the' branches. Of the thirty thousand alumni now enrolled seventeen members of the league are residents of Ann Arbor. Eight of the seventeen are members of the faculty of the University. Lists of the local members, classified ac- cording to the work they have volun- teered to perform, are promptly for- warded to each new chairman. Men in all the branches are volunteering to speak, canvass among the voters, get out a full Republican registration and all the vote on election day, and carry on other campaign activities. "Our whole effort," says national campaign manager George Brokaw Compton, "has been to energize all these college men, systematize their efforts and make this fund, of energy available for actual work with the regular organizations in this cam- paign. Under the leadership of our' president, Senator Theodore E. Burton, we have succeeded admirably and have added thousands of men to our fight- ing force who could not have been reached in any other way." According to a letter recently receiv- ed from the Hughes National College league the local members of the league are: President Harry B. Hutchins, Prof. H. H. Bartlett, Prof. W. H. Hobbs, Prof. J. W. Bursley, Prof. F. R. Finch, Prof. G. W. Patterson, Prof. A. L. Cross, Mr. F. M. Chapin, Mr. L. l I I ' S Y 1 1 1 c j A. Wikel, Prof. W. J. Hale, Mr. C. C.c Wolcott, Mr. J. W. Langley, Mr. C. B. U Lewis, Mr. J. C. Chalmers, Mr. J. B. SE Comstock, Mr. Linton B. Dimond, and o f Mr. W. H. Hanhart. C. . C. TOISH HEREd EXTENSION DIVISION TO AID First Appearance of a Rival Cross-, HIGH SCHOOLS IN ORATORY Country Squad on FerryF Field. The extension division of the Uni- . - . For the first time In the history of versity of Michigan, co-operating with Frcheanrthtimsthe hssory the department of oratory, has de- Michigan athletics, the cross-countryI vised a new phase of extension service squad of a rival school will appear onl for high schools of the state in con- Ferry field. The athletic association nection with their class work in pub- yesterday afternoon announced the lic speaking. scheduling of a dual distance runi Any Michigan high school will now with Syracuse University on Saturday,s be furnished upon application by the October 28, the day of the Orange-1 superintendent, or other reliable per- son, material onrcurrent topics suit- Wolverine gridiron tussle. This will>1 able for debating or public speaking. be the first dual meet ever indulged' In case the material listed in the bib- by the Michigan hill-climbers and liographies is not available in the 10- is being heralded as the fore-runner cal libraries pamphlets and books in of a new era of prosperity for thist package form will be loaned by the much-abused sport. The scheduling of University library for a period of six the Orange men gives the Maize and weeks. Blue squad a chance to appear twice Formal statements of questions for in competition this fall, the team be-I debates with briefs for affirmative and ing also entered in the I. C. A. A. A. A.r meet at New Haven, Conn., November negat ve arguments will be sent upn25. -In this meet the team will com- request. This service will be free of .Intimetheea wllc -f charge. pete with Cornell, Harvard, Maine,. Princeton and other schools with big IN NDERT OL BUSINESS reputatio in cross-country work. 1 STNE TR-O UIS TODAY The sport at Michigan is compara- STAFF TRY-OUTS TODAY 1 tively a new one, but two Varsity teams having preceded the present one.r The Inlander is making an urgent The competition has hitherto been con-1 request for men to try-out for the posi- fined to the annual eastern classic, in7 tion of business manager. The men which the Wolverines finished last in who were out for the managership are 1914 and tenth in 1915. The Uni- unable to return this year. Juniors versity of Maine septet, which gained and sophomores are especially re- first honors in the run last year, the quested to apply, although there are squad .of Red flyers from the shores< good opportunities for freshmen to of Lake Cayuga, who have won the come out and get in line for future meet six times in the eight years of Jobs. All those desiring to try out its existence, and the plucky Prince- should see K. C. Kayes, the present ton bunch, third place winners in 1915, business manager, at 4:00 o'clock this are the teams that Michigan must down afternoon. to land among the leaders this fall. The one thing that will militate Anbassador Page Returns to London against the chance of a Maize and London, Oct. 9.-Walter R. Page, Blue victory this fall is lack of ma-. American ambassador to England, re- terial, but twenty men having re- turned to London today after a visit ported to Coach Farrell for workouts to the United States. Iso far. Two hundred and sixty-five candidates presented themselves to Coach Jack Moakley at Cornell for the first call last week. The University of Maine, a school with but 1,400 stu- dents, had a turnout of 60 candidates. The squad at present is composed of the following men: Carroll, Meehan, Bouma, Cook, Cantor, Strenfert, Walker, Kuivinen, Maynard, Matthews, Fuess, Sawyer, Denne, Fox, Murphy, Harsha, Herlihy, Hayes, Sedwick, and Langley. U-Boat Scare Hits Stock Market New York, Oct. 9.-The stock mar- ket was demoralized at today's open- ing, standard issues as well as war stocks breaking, 5, 10, and even 12 points at the outset on enormous liquidation. The break was attributed to the German submarine activities and their possible consequences. FALL TENNIS TOURNEY BEGINS (Continued from Page Three.) pairings below, in order that the first round may begin right away. Mr. Rowe will be on hand at Ferry field to see that entrants are given im- mediate use of the courts. Two sets out of three will decide all matches until the semi-finals. The pairings are as follows: Palmer Sutton (1016) vs. S. Booth (2467), M. B. Doty (1460) vs. J. P. Hart (131), J. H. Mutchler (904J) vs. Paul Steketee (319), Albert Ohlmacher (1016) vs. W. G. Davidson, G. N. Earle' (1552W) vs. Irving Beckwith (1600W), J. L. Mooney (264J) vs. P. T. Smith (799M), H. L. Popp (878J) vs. H. J. Schlee. (2246J), Milton Goldberg (1808W) vs. E. L. Moloney, G. H. Chid- ester (385W) vs. Emil Safarick, C. E. Heuen (188) vs. Bill Beatty (319), F. L. Froemke (188) vs. Herbert Selby (1234W), Lawrence Ecbert (1197M) vs. Sam Cohen (1104), J. I. McClintock (264J) vs. H. D. Bronson (385W), L. D. Hiett (812W) vs. R. M. Hays (7993), Ray Swanson (954M) vs. R. S. Breckey (1504), V. H. Waite (1823W) vs. E. S. Chipman (1608M), Howard Kelsey vs. Walter Rogers (355), D. C. Mittlesdorf (374) vs. Henry A. Lewis, Sam Kauf- man (1104) vs. D. A. Diffenderfer (475), H. R. Bell (1216W) vs. F. E. McKee (1780). S. Shartel (236) vs. B. C. Colcord (1582J), H. J. Bair (1317J) vs. D. F. Didier (799M), H. B. Lewis (1168) vs. C. S. Cohn (557M), H. B. Adams (799MO) vs. Hilton Nowlen (1582J), Chester Parmerlee (1322R) vs. Ben- jamin Rose (410), Geo. C. Codd (131) vs. Ashley Hatch (410), C. A. Towler (1119J) vs. Eugene Steketee (319), G. K. Briggs (18) vs. Larry McArthur (1949), L. G. Gamble (1896F2) vs. Robert Kerr (1264R), Nicholas Bartz (2283W) vs. H. E. Mitchell (264J), Richard Goldsmith (110M) vs. Albert Goorin, R. W. Jennings (1273M) vs. A. K. Berkowitz (1408M), C. A. Bur- ton (954M) vs. B. W. Donaldson (355), N. F. Shambaugh (1848R) vs. G. B. Riker (475), S. Pinel (188) vs. C. F. Wells, L. E. Waterburg (33) vs. O. A. Kaufman (2413R), W. W. Dawley (1809W) vs. Wm. Seff (1324J), J. W. Codd (131) vs. N. C. Roegner (1808W), Ward Batty (2467) vs. G. W. Hurlbut (1359M), R. S. Cooper (1599M) vs. W. R. Borinstein (1054M), C. H. Hsia (1150M) vs. T. R. Harrison (2366J), R. T. McDonald (799M) vs. Winfield Goong, W. H. Dor- rance (2236M) vs. L. S. Hecht (2420J), J. C. Post (938R) vs. Hayden Palmer (131), Sanford Wilson (18) vs. H. P. Simons (843J), H. R. Hansen (2467) vs. H. Easley (350), C. C. Wolcott (144) vs. S. J. Miller (1104), O. H. Morton (2236M) vs. J. V. Tracy (71J). C. V. Hicks (120) vs. L. G. Hulbert (1551); A. K. Strouse vs. N. A. Hoe- feld (1813M); L. J. Thorsch (1408J) vs. H. J. Hamer (1466R); Earl Weiner (1104) vs. L. A. Abel (954M); E. Petty- John vs. F. E. Davis (1602W); C. H. Adams (236) vs. S. H. Eaton (236). To learn tpQw 't wel requires close applioatiOt A t.pewM3t-r adire inst rct ion o from will c o .tae rest p MUSIC 1916 - 1917 .. . . OCTOBER 12 JANUARY 26 LOUISE HOMER, Contralto Metropolitan Opera Company BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHE STRA Dr. Karl Muck, Conductor NOVEMBER 8 FRITZ KRESLER, Violinist Renokvned Austrian Artist PEBRUARY 28 DECEMBER 12 OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH Pianist Distinguished Russian 'Musician HAROLD BAUER, Pianist PABLO CASALS, Violoncellist A n Unsurpassable Combin- ation MADAME LOUISE HOMER HAROLD BAUER DR. ALBERT A. STANLEY, Director Ann Arbor Concerts To Be Given In HILL AUDITORIUM ONE OF THE WORLDS FINEST MUSIC HALLS Reserve Seat Ticket Sale FRITZ KREISLER Monday Oct. 9, 8:00 A. M. Block "A" - Tuesday Oct. 109 8:00 A. M. Block "B" - Wednesday Oct. 11, 8:00 A. M. Block "C" - Wednesday Oct. 11, 1:00 P. M. Single Tickets - $4.00 - 3.50 - 3.00 $1, $1.50, $2 OSSIP EABRILOWITSCH COURSE TICKETS contain cover coupon good for $3 when exchanged for May Festival course tickets in the Spring. AN ALL STAB SERIES BV MUS C iANS Of WORLD FAME See Special Choral Union Announcement PABLO CAsALS DR. KARL MUCK