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May 16, 1917 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1917-05-16

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

'JCIl

1lUlu 1 1 U.. I U U1l
IN FIRST INNING
Westcott's Wildness Worked by Lund-
gren's Veterans for Half
. ozen Scores
DWYER HELPS FOR FRESH AND
LUSH G"OES THE WHOLE ROUTE

American League
Washington ..0 7 10 210 0 0-11
Detroit ......1'01010200-5

13
12

Athletics .....000000000- 0 4
Chicago......510120 0 20-11 16

Boston ........2 0 21 1 0 0 0 0-6
Cleveland .....000032000-5
New York ....013102000-7
St. Louis .....022000000-4

8
11
14
1
9
12

Yearlings Vather Pair of
Brandell Clouts Two
Bingles

Tallies;

National League
....020000000-2
......000050100-6

1
1
3
1
2
5
0
2
1
31
3,
2
3
1.
3

Cincinnati
Brooklyn

The Varsity took advantage of the
wildness of Westcott, a new twirler
that Maltby trotted out for inspection
yesterday afternoon, and they scored
six times in the first frame. The final
score was 6 to 2 after five innings had
been completed. I
Westcott and Dwyer split the pitch-
ing burden for the fresh, while Lush
went all the way for the Varsity. Aft-
er that introductory spasm, the yearl-
ings settled down and played much
better ball. Brandell led the Varsity
attack with two clean hits, while Mraz
was the big boy with the stick for the
1920 aggregation. Mraz punched out
two clean hits, one of which was a
three bagger.
Captain Brandell seems to have
struck his old stride of late. Whether
it is the warm weather or the recent
visit of a big league scout to Ann Ar-
bor is a question, but the captain has
been hitting them right on the nose
the past few games and looking like
the clouter that he has always been
the past two years. Bran temporarily
mislaid his matting eye during the
icicle days, but he is hitting with his
old time vigor again.
NEW ENGLAND INTERCOLLEGIATE
TRACK MEET COMES SATURDAY

Chicago ......0 2 0 0 2 0 0 4 0-8 13
Boston .......001000000-1 5
Pittsburg .....0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0-2 7
Phillies .......0 00 0 43100-8 14

St. Louis .....000000041-5
New York ....000000310-4

9
9

TWO GAMES STILL LEFT
ON INTEROLASS SCHEDULE
J-LITS, FRESH/ENGINEERS, J-EN-
GINEERS AND FRESH
LITS PLAY
Two more games on the regular
schedule will be played in interclass
baseball. They will take place to-
morrow, when the junior lits play the
fresh engineers and the junior engi-
neers play the fresh lits. A number
of postponed games will have to be
played off and several forfeits will be
decided before the season can be:
closed.
Only two games were scheduled
thus far this week, and neither of
them was played. Soph engineers were
to have played the soph lits Monday,
but the literary men did not come out.
Enlistments in various service had dis-
rupted their team. This gave the en-
gineers credit for three games won,
one lost, one postponed, and one for-
feit received.
Junior engineers and junior lits
were scheduled to play the same day,
but the engineers failed to put out a
team. They have not had a team in
any game this season.

MAY SEE HANDICAP.
RACES SATURDAY1
Ceach Thinks of Staging Such Chases
in the Century and HalfI
Mile
DOZEN'EXPECTED TO TURN OUT
FOR EACH EVENT IF HELD
Freshmen Showing up Well in Spite
of Lack of Competition This
Year
handicap events in the 100-yard
dash and the 880-yard run are being
contemplated by Coach Farrell for
Saturday's track activities.
The coach is not fully decided as to
whether he will put on any numbers
this week, but if any are held, these
handicaps will be held.
A dozen athletes at least are ex-
pected to turn out for each one of
these. For the century, as much as a
10 yard lead may be given if condi-
tions justify it. --The main principle
under which the whole ceremony is
to be conducted is to provide as close
a finish as can be doped in advance.
Some of the best material in school is
looked for.
Zoellin, 1920, Captain Johnson, Horr,
Hart, Cagney, Beardsley, O'Brien, and
others will undoubtedly take part.
In the half, Captain Carroll, Fox,
Sedgwick, Huntington, with others
who have performed in both the quart-
er and the mile, are expected to be
seen. Any man in the University is
eligible.
Freshmen are performing with great
credit in the face of nothing to look
forward to for the rest of the college
year. Cross has been clearing the bar
in pole vaulting at over 11 feet, and
seems to bid fair to run this mark up
higher before the season is completed.
Cross is a brother of the foriher Mich-
igan vaulter, and is capable of better
marks.
Captain Johnson has been covering
the ground for a distance in excess of
22 feet with some facility during the
past week or more. Johnson has
stretched this beyond 23 feet more than
once before his entrance in college,
so it is safe to assume that Michigan
will have a clever man in several
events before another year has passed.
Dornick is another freshman show-
ing great promise in the broad jump,
He is working h'ard and has ability.
PRESIDENT WILSON ENDORSES
"Y" WORK IN ARMY AND NAVY

Season
G. A.B.
Sisler......24 93
Speaker ....25 81
Cobb ........23 83
Monday
G. A.B.
Sisler.......1 2
Speaker ..... 1 4
Cobb ....... 1 4

R.
12
15
14

H.
'37
28
27

Av.
.398
.347
.327
Av.
.000
.250
.400

IL. H.
0 0
1 1
0 2

SISLER STILL FIRST

NEW FIELD FOR MEDICALLY
TRAINED WOMEN OPENS UP
Within the last 10 or 15 years an en-
tirely new field has opened for the wo-
man who has a medical training, says
the Homoeopathic Observer. Boarding
schools and colleges exclusively for
women, as well as public health de-
partments, all appreciate a medically
trained woman. This is a specializa-
tion that is minus all the disagreeable-
ness of common neighborhood practice,
and it commands considerable re-
spect.
SIXTY COLORADO STUDENTS
LEAVE TO ENTER FORT RILEY!

Ohio State ...........
Indiana .............
Northwestern'.....
Illinois ...........
Iowa ................
Chicago...........
Purdue ............

W. L. Pct.
4 1 .800
4 1 .800
4 2 .667
3 3 .500
2 3 .400
1 5 .167
0 3 .000

To

BIG NINE STANDINGS

Yale Enters Intercollege LaCrosse
New Haven, May 15.-Yale will be
represented in the Intercollege La-
Crosse league this year for the first
time.

Boulder, Col., May 15.-Sixty stu- in this country.
dents of the University of Colorado, The Chicago board of trade, i
including the football captain-elect, the afternoon, ratified the' action
coach, and a large share of the pro- representatives earlier in the d
spects for next fall's football team, in conference with representa
have left school to enter the officers' other grain exchanges recoin
training camp at Fort Riley, Kansas. that all trading in wheat futi
The senior ball was called off be- ,ately.
cause the loss of so many mn made , The ban was put into effect h
the affair impossible. . -oollou . [nI ltiun,, penu

RESENTA

ate this
of its
ay, who
tives of
mended
-ures be

E S

Confer with Government Offle
in Attempt to Cut Down Big
Wheat Exports

Chicago, May 15.-Three representa-
tives of middle western grain ex-
changes were scheduled to leave for
Washington tonight to confer with
government officials concerning the
elimination of wheat speculation.
Among other things they will ask
the government to devise some means
of cutting down wheat exports to our
allies, contending that this is one of
the principal reasons for high Drices

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Eight Colleges Entered in Event to
Held on M. I. T.
Field

BeI

it

Cambridge, Mass., May 15.-The New
England intercollegiate track and field
championship events will be held on
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
field here Saturday.
As entries were only about half the
usual number, because of the with-
drawal of several colleges from ath-
letics on account of the war, it was
decided to omit the usual preliminary
afternoon and put on both trials and
finals Saturday.
The colleges to be represented are
Brown, Holy Cross, Massachusetts In-
stitute'- of Technology, Middlebury,
Trinity, Boston college, Worcester
Polytechnic institute, and Tufts.
Andrew Kelly of Holy Cross, holder
of the New England intercollegiate
100 and 220-yard dash records, will
not compete this year, as he has de-
cided to enlist in the Seventh New
York regiment.
ANNUAL ILLINOIS COLLEGE
TkACK MEET CANCELLED
Peoria, Ill., May 15.-The annual
Little Nineteen intercollegiate meet
scheduled here May 24 and 25, for
the Illinois college track champion-
ship, was tonight called off by the
Bradley institute athletic board. The
action of a majority of the colleges in
calling off athletics until after the war
was the cause. An invitation golf and
tennis meet may replace the track
events.
PRINCETON ATHLETIC RECEIPTS
SHOW INCREASE FOR SEASON
Princeton, May 15.-Athletics at
Princeton netted $18,116 during the
1915-16 season, a gain of almost $3,000
over the profits of the previous sea-
son. The gain was due to increased
football receipts. Football, baseball,
and basketball were profitable and all
other sports showed a deficit.

INDIANA BEATS ILLINOIS,
Jioosier Captain Strikes Out
Illini Hitters During
Game

5 TO 0
Twelve

T" ":i{
:1.

ii i

Bloomington, Ind., May 15.-Indiana
defeated Illinois, 5 to 0, in a game
featured by the superb mound work,
of Capt. Ridley, Hoosier pitcher, who
struck out 12 visitors, despite his hard
game against Ohio State Saturday.
The Orange and Black kept Ryan on
the slab until the beginning of the
eighth, when he was replaced by Peter-
son. The Hoosiers got 10 clean hits.
Score:
Illinois..........0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0
Indiana .... . ..:..0 0 0 1 3 1 0 0*-5
Errors - Ryan, Schuler, Ridley.
Three-base hit-Isenhower. Two-base
hits-Swayne, Hyatt. Stolen bases-
Halas 2, Cox, Schuler, English, Rayl.
Struck out--Ridley 12, Ryan 3, Peter-
son 2. Bases on balls-Ridley 2,
Ryan 1.
Shirts made to measure. G. H. Wild
Co., Leading Merchant Tailors. State
St. ti
Beautify and preserve your screens
by using Major's Screen Paint. All size
packages. Phone 237.-Adv. 11-17inc

Princeton, May 15.-In a letter to
John R. Mott, general secretary of the
international committee of the Y. M.
C. A., President Wilson recently ex-
pressed the hearty endorsement by the
government of the Y. M. C. A. ~rork
in the army and navy.
Syracuse Undergraduates Leaving
Syracuse, N. Y., May 15.-- Many of
the prominent undergraduates of Sy-
racuse university, especially athletes,
are leaving for government service.
Most of those leaving have entered
training camps, while others have gone
back to the farm or enlisted for the
mosquito fleet.
Dartmouth Versus Strongest Western
Hanover, N. H., May 15.-Dartmouth
college football eleven may be the
New Year day attraction at Pasadena
against the strongest of the western
football teams.
Fountain Pens repaired, straighten-
ed, and adjusted. Hailer & Fuller,
State St. Jewelers.-Adv. 10-171

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..9
X--
'~~ P~ainted FromLf.
H E-~ influence of Society Brand Styles
inl SeSODwill be seen in the gen-
ten of clothes next falL. But why be
SsiX month late when you can be six
mo!ths first
C-, i 'he authoinz. Soc y LS:d store yc r city. Se s
the n tyic toclhes ine th xt f a dll. utvwhs and fabrics.
A LF RE DECKG pR '; C O2 1, I M\kr, C hica go .
N For Can da: SOCIETY' B2ANTYD~ C) O'IV"' L.M iD.L. iMontreaI
~- ..
Society Brand Clothes do not make the man, .ut they re his cash value. You'll
understand why when you see the oou o a c an mode3 we r shoving.
Mont!istgf
T HE ST OR E T H AT SE LLS SO CIE TY B RA ND CL OT h'ES
hN3. -.-. , i : ,. ..n. . . . . .
1 1 . 'i : . . L N A R N _ . i + , N '.. y G . f b , .' J' S 3$. S r 1 , C . '. . ..c . 'a . .g . .
: _i _(______________ 5. i_ ____________Y r$i "4. k"( s

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I

Pushes Mercedes 116 Miles an Hour
Cincinnati, 0., May 15.-Louis Fon-
taine, driving a Mercedes, lapped ,the
local speedway at the rate of 116
miles an hour while taking his first
warmup preparatory to racing in the
250-mile international sweepstakes
race Decoration day. A number of
other racers began practicing at the
speedway.
Shirley Smith Goes to Philadelphia
Secretary Shirley W. Smith of the
'University leaves today to attend a
meeting of the Philadelphia alumni to-
morrow at Philadelphia.
THEjJ FOLKS AT HOME
can have you ever near them even tho
you are far away, doing your bit for
your country, if they have your pho-
tograph. Rentschler makes portraits
of quality.-Adv. 13-6
There is opportunity in The Michi-
gan Daily Ada. Read them. ...

1-Vn.

curtains are made to
measure and satis-
faction ,guaranteed.

ii t

PILBEAM & MARZ CO.

720 Peter Smith
Bldg.
Detroit, Mich.

301 No. Main Street
Ann Arbor, Mich.
Phone 2380

6404 Utica Ave.
Cleveland, Ohio

.......
.. .. .

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the

GROUPS
tglhest Qualin. GROUPS

#S9T'

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319 E.

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