The M. A. C. RECORD. MICHIGAN STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. V O L. 14. / L A N S I N G, M I C H I G A N, T U E S D A Y, J U NE 1, 1909. N o. 34. CADET REGIMENT TAKES PART IN DETROIT PARADE. PERSONAL P U R I T Y. [An address given at chapel, May 2Si by Rev. Win. 0. Hicks, A. M„ Rector St. Pant's Episcopal Church, Lansing, Mich.] take part T he cadet regiment went to De troit Monday to in the Memorial Day parade, and from all reports made an exceptionally good showing. A special train of ten coaches left the college at about 11 o'clock, reaching Detroit at 1 : 3c •Immediately upon arrival, the com panies were formed and marched up F o rt street, where they took part in the Following the parade an exhibition drill was given which was highly compli mented. T he return train left De troit a little before 13 o'clock, reach ing the college a little before 4 Tues day morning. regular exercises. DUTCH PICNIC. On Wednesday, May 36th, oc curred one of the most enjoyable gatherings the -'Deutsche V e r e i n" has held during the college year. At about 4 =30 the members of the society, together with Miss N o r ma Gilchrist, Miss Freyhofer, Dr. R a hn and Mr. Hensel, who kindly the acted as patrons, gathered, on river bank east of farm lane for a genuine German picnic. Races, After demolishing a real picnic supper, everybody turned in for a and time. "good stories were the order and w h en time came to return. .•> happy bunch expressed itself as more than de lighted with the German method of having a good time. songs • . F A C U L T Y- SENIOR B A LL GAME. the highbrow T he annual Faculty-Senior ball game will be played on college field Saturday afternoon. Dean Shaw will captain team. Last year the Seniors won and this the Faculty will go in for re year that some of venge. It is rumored taking daily the old time stars are practice this year's game. in preparation 'for SECOND A N N U AL SUMMER SCHOOL AT THE M I C H I C AN A G R I C U L T U R AL COLLECE Begins June 28th And continues for four weeks'. Expenses low. F or Announcement, address F R E S. J. L. S N Y D E R, East Lansing, Mich. " Keep Thyself Pure," I Timothy, 5-22. "These are words of counsel from an aged to a young man, and should prove of value to men and women of all ages. The counsels of those who have lived long years and have had much experi ence are almost invariably good and the they have helpful, for length of the dusty road of life and have observed its pitfalls and are pre pared to utter notes of warning and to speak words of advice and encourage ment or rebuke as a younger person cannot possibly do, traveled " In view of the fact that St. Paul now an old man and worn down by the fierce .struggle of the years had seen almost every phase of human life and knew as but few men the conditions to right and noble living, this advice to the young man Timothy to keep himself pure, should come to us with exceeding great force and warning. "The inheritance of the young men and women of. today is the accumulated wealth, and thought and achievements of all past ages, and theirs also are the ltopes of all the ages to come. As they stand in the golden gateways of the morning's dawn and look over the opportunities, the high honors and the years that are before them, it can be truly said to them, 'All things are yours.' They are to take up the struggle where older ones weary and lav it down; the tasks which prom• ise so much in the way of reward begun by our fathers and unfinished by them, they are to carry forward to completion; and in view of the inheritance and the almost infinite wealth and unusual op portunities which belong to them, every young man and woman in this chapel needs to be saluted, and with no more no ble words can they be saluted than those of St. Paul to Timothy; ' Keep thyself pure;' for without purity the future will mean little or nothing to us. We shall know nothing of abiding peace or deep joy, and the past will be filled with one long aching regret, and blinding, bitter pain. Purity is a condition, and is the great essential to every true and noble life. To attempt to rise to any height of greatness, or to be anything ourselves without it is like attempting to fly with out wings, or to walk without feet. The impure life is a curse both to one's self and to society, and is sooner or later to be miserably blotted out for sin is self retri butive and exacts the most awful pen alties. . The greatest force in the world, as one has reminded us, is not money which can buy railroads and men, raise the pauper into luxury, and shake the markets of the world; it is not power, whether it be the ability to penetrate deeply into the hidden things of nature, or the power represented by exercising the functions of government and which makes us the supreme dictator of men. Money, power, courage; these are all use ful and serve high ends, but they all van ish or become impotent. Money is squan dered or lost; courage, in a supreme mo ment of crisis, breaks down and fails; power languishes in exile on some St. He lena. The greatest force and possession in this world is character. This is the one abiding possession which survives all the vicissitudes of time and of change, and which death itself is powerless to overthrow or annihilate, and the great factor in determining character is pur ity. Purity is life, it is that which is the foundation of all true character and manliness. We know that many think that true manliness is obtained only through wide acquaintance with the world, by which is meant its seduc tions, temptations, and impurities; that a period of sowing wild oats is almost essential, and that it is the rake who makes the best husband, and this sug gestion and idea acted upon, invariably leads to the kind of manliness and char acter represented by the prodigal son, when he made up his mind to see the world, and when feeding swine ' he would fain have filled himself with the husks which the swine did eat and no man gave unto him.' There was never a mote damnable error and doctrine pro mulgated than this. ' 'We do not say that a man ought to isolate himself from the world, for that type of character is not highest which can only thrive in seclusion. Riotous living has never added strength or no bility to any human character; purity is not obtained by bathing in the waters of polution and impurity; no man is made virtuous by plunging headlong into vice; the heights of heaven are not reached by way of the lower depths of hell. j ,u . . . t .V . >, -., • 'A young gentleman was one day rid ing in a fine steamer down one of the world's broad rivers when he fell into i-.r vr=ation with the pilot. 'Howlong,' i : u; ^iliOt Oil Llie>e waters'.'' The old man replied, 'Twenty- five years, and I came up and down many times before I was pilot.' Then the young gentleman said, T should think you would know every rock and every sand bank in the river.' The old man smiled at his friend's simplicity and replied, 'Oh, no I don't, but I know where the deep water is.' And so it is not necessary to know where every sand bank, and bar of moral danger is and every rock of temptation on which life's hopes may be shattered as we steer our way through life. Enough for us to know where the deep waters of purity are and to keep the course of life well in them, and any other course inevit ably leads to ruin. Thousands are the and women who would give up men years if they could begin life over again; if they could recall the days of immor ality and go back to childhood once more; if they could rid their minds and their memories of those ghosts of evil that haunt them, of those unclean thoughts and foul suggestions that have taken dwelling there, and, if their testimony goes for anything, it would say in almost trumpet tones, 'Shun the appearance of evil, and keep thyself pure.' INFLUENCE OF PURITY. And now consider, if you will, the in fluence of purity. It is the source of unwonted strength, and its effect upon every man is such that he is the stronger and braver, both of heart and body. It enables one to hold high his head and look every man honestly and squarely in the face when others hang their heads in shame, and its influence upon the world is such that it sweetens and glad dens everything with which it comes in contact, clothing one with a mysteri ous influence and a power all its own. We cannot come into the presence of purity without instinctively feeling and knowing it, and there is something about it that is as refreshing as a breeze from off the hills laden with the scent of cedar and pine. The pure minded carry about with them an atmosphere of purity, and to breathe it is to breathe life and the out-of-doors and great draughts of health, and in their presence we feel we can never do the things we have done before, and we ourselves become pure. unconscious "One of the most beautiful illustra tions of the imperial influence of purity that we meet anywhere is Brownings' 'Pippa Passes.' It isthe song or the story, as voir recall, of a young factory girl named Pippa, a winder in the silk mills. One holiday when the mills are closed, innocence and purity in the person of the yonug girl goes strolling up and down the hillsides, singing to herself, everything almost save God and the beautiful world in which she wandered, and those vine clad hills upon which she strolled; and in four tragic moral crises, past the scenes of which she goes, her pure, sweet voice throws evil off the track and res cues victims from sore temptation. In the first, Sebald and Ottima are sinning shamefully the mad delirium of in the girl's unhallowed passion, when sweet voice comes over the garden wall and into the shrubbery, singing this song: of "The year's at the spring, and day's at the morn, Morning's at seven, the hillside's dew poarted; The lark's on the wing, the snail's on the thorn; God's in His heaven — all's right with the world. "This, only this, reaches the guilty them to their lovers, but it brought senses and the vision of God before eyes. The spell in which those sinning souls were bound is broken, and Pippa, by her song of innocence, steeped as it is in the purity of her own nature, lias love virtue. made two sinning souls "In the second, a young sculptor is beside himself with anger at the discov er}- of a plot against him, concocted by a brutal gang to ruin him. His rage has driven him to the verge of deciding upon cruelty and murder to his.enemies. Just at this time the little silk winder hap pens along, singing another song. Some thing in her song arrests his attention, causes his anger to cool, clears his moral vision, createsin him new artistic ideals, and both man and artist are saved. In the third crisis Luigi, a boy patriot with excessive energy ana' zeal, is about to start out for Vienna to assassinate the emperor. While he and his mother in a ruined turret are talking of his rash and wicked undertaking, and she pleading with him to desist from his murderous designs, the factory girl, with glad heart and singing voice, passes underneath, and her song, mingled with his mother's pleadings, brings quiet and calmness to his hot heart, tempers his madness, weakens his evil purpose and makes it impossible of fulfillment. In the fourth, a worldly and luxurious bishop, with a soul already made foul by unfaithfulness, sits in his palace, at that moment tempted by great and hideous wickedness, when the clear sweet voice of Pippa is borne in unto him sing- (Oontinued on page 2.) T he M. A. C. RECORD. T he M. A. C. RECORD PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY DURING THE COLLEGE YEAR BY T HE MICHIGAN S T A TE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE w J. W R I G H T, ' 0 4, M A N A G I NG E D I T OR SUBSCRIPTION *- 50 CENTS PER YEAR Entered as second-class mail matter at Lansing! Mu*h. Remit by P.o. Money Order, Draft or Registered better. Do not aend stamps. Aildi'i'ss all subscriptions and advertising matter to the College Secretary- Blast Lan sing, Mich. Address ail contributions to the Managing Editor. Business <>tlu*e with Lawrence & Van Bui-en Printing Co., tS8 Ottawa St. Past, Lansing, M Lch. TUBS DA r, JVNB r, 1909 PERSONAL PURITY. (Continued from page U ing of nature and of God. anil the bishop, listening to the song and awak ened by it, sees, as if by the light of ce lestial luminaries, the black abyss yawn ing at his feet, and with a loud cry starts back affrighted from its brink. Thus in four tragic moral crises her pass ing by with songs of innocence and pur ity on her lips arrests tragedy and brings Salvation and leaves a moral perfume sweetening all the air of the little town. Such is the influence of purity in what ever form it touches life. "The most perfect example of the in fluence which purity exerts is seen of course in the life of our Lord. 'It was the secret of a majesty,' one has said, men •could not comprehend, of a spell which men yielded to while they hated him. It fell upon them like a great and silent light; silent as the light it wrought its magic; strong as the light it miraculously prevailed; beautiful as the light it shamed the darkness and drove it hack dis- comfitted. Filling Pilate's guilty heart with alarm it led him to say, T find no fault in him.' Unquenched by in famy and death it broke out anew upon the cross, at whose foot the very execu tioner cried, 'This is a just man. impurity and for to defile and soil "We need scarcely tell you that many are the forces and influences around us that make that seek the young heart and life. In some cities and com munities more than this—veritable cess pools of moral defilement wait to destroy young life, and the miasma and death that arise from them would fill with dis ease and defile one of God's angels were he not aware. The bleared eyes, the hard and seamed face, and the sheepish look of men and women living in our midst tell us all too plainly of what these places and temptations are. for no man can defile the inner sanctuary of his be ing without the evidence of it appearing in his face and coming out on his body. "Particularly would we warn both young and old against the use of opiates and drugs. In certain cases, with a physician to administer them, they may be made a blessing, but ordinarily better almost to suffer any pain than to get in the habit of using them, and the time to break off their use is in the beginning, b'efore the strength of the will is broken and the reserves of our nature are used up. They bind with chains that cut in to very flesh and bone; they paralyze and destroy the affections; dethrone the will; create unnatural desires, and make human life a drawn-out martrvdom and hell. praying 'Lead us not into temptation,' and then with eyes wide open walk into the presence of temptation, or say 'De liver us from evil,' and deliberately go and do the things which are evil ? We do not want to be delivered. We are not to pray for personal purity and then bathe in a cesspool. Neither God nor any other power can keep us clean if we do. It is like praying to be delivered from smallpox,and then sleeping with a small pox patient. And so purity is kept first of all by ourselves avoiding all impurities. We do not mean, as has ahead}* been indicated, that one should go and bury one's self in a monastery,for we are need ed in the world, but though in the world we are not to be of the world, and though in the midst of defilement we are not to partake of it. "There is a river in Switzerland,we be lieve it is, which rlowsinto a lake at one end a dirty, muddy stream, but when it flows out at the other end it is a river clear as crystal. All its impurities it loses and leaves in the lake through which it flows. So when our lives are allowed to flow into Christ's life, however impure it may be, because of hereditary taints and tendencies or willful transgressions, it comes out of his life purified, cleansed, a river, as it were pure as crystal. "And now notice the further fact It may be that purity is easily lost. the slightest marred and effaced at touch, and when thus marred can never again be as beautiful as before. There is nothing which leaves so deep a mark upon the soul as unehasity and im purity. It extinguishes love, deadens the sensibilities, and its penalties are irreparable. inevitable but not only Few sadder words have been written than those which Robert Burns, with his life mined by this very thing, writes to a young friend warning him against such a course: " T waive the quantom of the sin The hazard o' concealing, But Och! it hardens a' within, And petrifies the feeling.' ' 'You can afford to endure almost any thing but this deadening and petrifying of the soul, which indulgence produces, and this is the real death of the soul. "Oli, how great is the world's need of purity and of men and women who shall wear this virtue as a jewel on their hearts. We need them in public and private life, in the marts of trade and industrj*. in the home, in our state capi tals, in the voting booth, in our col leges and universities, in the public hall, and in the drawing room—men and women who, by their pure lives will shame wrong and impurity into obliv ion, and who will make vice afraid to lift its brazen head. "The world wants men, large-hearted, manly men, Men who shall join its chorus and pro long The psalm of labor and the psalm of love. "The age wants heroes—heroes who shall dare To struggle in the solid ranks of truth; the monster error by the To clutch throat; To bear opinion to a loftier seat; To blot the error of oppression out, And lead an universal freedom in. If thou wilt be a hero, and will strive To help thy fellow and exalt thyself, Thy feet at last shall stand on jasper floors, Thy heart at last shall seem a thousand hearts, Each single heart with myiiad raptures filled, Whilst thou shalt sit with princes and with kings, Rich in the jewel of a ransomed world." "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." ALUMNI C. L. Grimes is principal of schools at Diller, N e b. '76. G. S. Stannard at Charlotte, Mich., is now at Phoenix, Ariz. for several vears located '78. II. V. Clark is pastor of the Pres byterian church at Helena, Oklaho ma. 'So. F. A. Gulley is with the Cincin nati, Georgetown, and Portsmouth R y. Co., with headquarters at 101S Ford Building, Detroit, Mich. ' Su H e r b e rt Bamber is a civil en gineer with offices in Philadelphia, P a. II. L. Rosenberrv is medical di rector of the Great Northern Life Insurance Co. of Wausau, W i s consin. '82. A . J. Chappeli is superintendent of schools at Carson C i t r, Mich. 'S3- W i n. A. Bahlke is an attorney at Alma, Mich. . J. S. Dixon '86. the firm, Mvers & Dixon, general con tractors,. Chicago, 111. is a member of \\ . A. Kinman is examiner of patents, U. S. patent office, W a s h ington, D. C. ' S9. W. L. Rossiuan is with the Hu ron Milling Co., Harbor Peach, Mich. '91. A. F. Gordon is a dentist at 21S Washington Ave., S., Lansing, Mich. On the cover page of the animal husbandry number of the Illinois appears a picture of Agriculturist If. W. Mumford,of the above class. T he leading article in the magazine is also written by Prof. Mumford, and deals with Beef Production in Agriculture. Another article," YVhv Show at International ?" is by Eugene Davenport, '7S, now dean of agriculture anddirector of the ex periment station in that institution. T h e re are also letters from E. S. Good, '03, and P. U. Flint, '04. the HOW* PURITY IS KEPT. "And now, notice more fully how pur ity is kept. St. Paul says to Timothy, 'Keep thyself pure,' with emphasis it would seem on thyself. We should never lose sight of our own part and responsi bility here. We frequently speak of what God's grace can do for man, and it can do wonders if we permit it, but it can do absolutely nothing unless we act to gether with God. What is the use of "And heaven wants souls, fresh and ca '93- pacious souls. To taste its raptures and expand like flowers, Beneath the glory of its central sun; It wants fresh souls, not lean and shriv eled ones; It wants fresh souls — my brother, give it thine. Benj. F. Bain is president of the Wolverine Supply & Manfg. Co. at Pittsburg, Pa. '96. Chas. A . J e w e ll is teaching botany in the South Central H i gh School, Spokane, Washington. If thou, indeed, will be what scholars A. F. H u g h es is now located at should; American Falls, Idaho. '96. J. E. Tracy was a college visitor the depart last week. He is with ment of agriculture' at W a s h i n g t o n, D. C. of Sp. '97-'9S. Mr. and M r s. H a r ry A. Burnett, their honeymoon, visited Lan on sing vesterdav, guests the groom's father, C . J. Burnett. T he couple were married Tuesday night •in Detroit. T he bride was Miss Elsie Moody, 144 Locust .St., daughter of Mr. and M r s. Samuel is super B. Moody. T he groom the directors intendent and one of of the R ay Chemical Co. of Detroit, where he has been a number of years. He was reared in Lansing, having graduated local school and having been a high student two years in the Michigan Agricultural College. F r om Lan sing Mr. and Airs. Burnett went to N ew Y o r k, Atlantic City, Lake George and other points east. T h ey will continue to live in Detroit. — State Repttbl can, M ay 2S. from the ' 0 1. . R. L. Brown is superintendent of the Denton Creamery Co., Denton, Texas. ' 0 2. . Burt W e r m u th is still assistant at editor of The Michigan Fanner Detroit. Crisp articles his pen enliven that paper each, week. from J. M. R a n k in is with the C. S. Department of Agriculture, doing work in agriculture. At present his address is Willits, Calif. H. M. Eaton is with the Bay C'ity Gas Co., Saginaw, Mich. '04. is engaged A. C. Dodge in en gineering business in N ew York. His private address is 6lS E. 17th St., Flatbush, L. I. a vacation Howard Severance, w ho has been teaching in the Phillipines, is now the United taking States. He has been unusually successful as a teacher of agriculture in the employ of the bureau of ed ucation. in A. E. Rosenberg is treasurer of the graduating medical class at Ann Arbor this year. farm ;°5- O. B. Burrill is now in charge of the agricultural at Lamao, province of Cavite, about 20 miles distant His from Manila. P. I. the sea coast, is farm, though on very fertile, and Mr. Burrill sees great possibilities in the work ahead of him. W o rd has just reached us of the birth of a daughter—Cecil—-to. Mr. and M r s. George Nichols, at their home in Pittsburg. M r s. Nichols will be remembered as May Butter- field. Born, to Mr. and M r s. Meek, a Meek, at Mines, Canada. I i. C. son, Robert Paddock their home, Cream Hill Prof, and Mrs. Y. R. Gardner, of the University of Maine, expect to be at M. A. C. for commence ment: '08. Ernest of Har J. Shassbcrgcr, vey, 111., secured a license to marry Miss Nellie F. Miller, of Lansing. — State Republican. T he M. A. C. R E C O R D. Fishing Tackle Cutlery Carpenter's Tools Glass, Etc. EVERY KIND OF FURNITURE FOR YOUR ROOM. Cots Folding Beds Matresses Book Cases Desks flORTONS HARDWARE 111 Wash. Ave. South. C O L L E CE B US H E A D Q U A R T E RS All Goods Delivered Free. M. J. & B. IM. Buck. THE J. W. KNAPP d- CO. STORE Where you will find the largest, and most complete :— stock of = ^ = = = =^ Women's Hisses' and Children's Ready-to-wear Garments, Knit Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves in Laces, and Ribbons. All the new things Embroideries, and Wash Goods, : : See our New Silks, Dress Goods and Trimmings. If you want an Exclusive Gown or Suit, go to : Lansing's Reliable Store. : : : : J. W. KNAPP & COMPANY SUCCESSORS TO J E W E TT & KNAPP 2 2 0 - 2 22 AND 2 24 WASHINGTON AVENUE SOUTH, L A N S I N G, MICHIGAN Class Caps, Hats, Sweaters, Ties, Pennants, Underwear, Hosiery In fact, all the late things In Ladies' and Men's Furnishings. S t u d e n t 's p a t r o n a ge s o l i c i t e d. E L G IN M I F F L I N. SHOES F OR S U M M ER ^ * AN Shoes for Spring and ^•^ Summer wear. America's leading makes in Boots, Pumps, and Ribbon Tie Effects. n in d o u b l es a nd l o st in s i n g l es to M i c h i g a n. C o r n e ll is t he o n ly o t h er c o l l e ge t e am w h i ch h as w on o v er M i c h i g an t h is y e a r. SUMMARY. T a ft a nd H. P r a t t, w on o v er P r i ce a nd S h a f r o t h — 0 - 6, 6-4, 8-6. S h a f r o th w on o v er H. P r a t t — 6 - 0, 6-1. L e i dy w on o v er I t a n o — 6 - 1, 6-2. P r i ce w on o v er T a f t — 6 - 3, 7-5. t wo g a m es on W e d n e s d ay a nd l a st w e ek M. A. C. t wo t e am t he first b ut to s t r e t ch t r i p- in a s e n s a t i o n al T h u r s d a y ' of in w on o v er t he De P a ul g a m es m a de by h e a vy b a t t i n g. M i l ls w ho w as to b at h it o ut t h r ee b a g g er w as c a u g ht o ut in t r v i ng o ut i n to a h o me r u n, p i es w e re m a de t he De P a ul e v e n ed M. A. C. g ot f o u r th a nd t he s e v e n th m a k i ng 5 a nd 4 in f a v or of final l o c a l s. i n n i ng n e t t i ng it up in e a c h, of o ne first t he t he t wo o t h er by M. A. C. fifth a nd De P a ul o ne in t he s e c o n d. t he in c o u nt t h r ee s c o r e s. • T he s c o re by i n n i n gs : R H E M. A. C D e P a ul 3 0 0 1 1 00 1 ) 0 -5 11 3 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0—4 8 3 B a t t e r i e s — P e t e r s on a nd C r i s s ey : W i l- h'oit a nd C l a p p. . .. C A LL ON . . . Eawrence $ UanBuren Printing Co. W H EN IN N E ED OF C A L L I NC C A R DS 1 22 O T T A WA S T. E. BASE B A LL GOODS W I TH THE FAMOUS " S PA L D I N G" TRADE MARK. NONE SETTER NEW GOODS JNEW PRICES J. H. L A E R A B E E, 325 W a s h i n g t on Ave. S. F . N. BO V E E Optician - Photo Supplies T HE S E C O ND G A M E. ISGERSOLL BLOCK R a in w h i ch t he h o me g a m es h as p l a y ed t h is h a v o ck s e a s on s h o r t e n ed W e d n e s d a y 's w i th a nd w h i ch in t o r r e n ts T h u r s g a me c a me d o wn s ea of d a y, m a k i ng t he a nd n e c e s s i t a t ed m o v i ng m ud b a s es g a r d e n^ w h e re t he t he g a me w as p l a y ed u n d er e x c e c d- t he d i a m o nd a i n to o ut t he b ut a d v e r se l o c a l s, c o n d i t i o n s. a l l o w ed B u s c h. • i n g ly t h r ee f or h i t s, w h i le 10 m en w e re s e c u r ed off a nd B e r r v, w ho w e re l ed U r a b W tt s l a u g h t er to P a u l. De f or M, A. C. in p l a c ed S h a n a h an t h r ee in a nd g a me t h is to g et a h i t. t h o u g h' he r u n s, t l ie by f e a t u r ed f a i l ed i n n i n gs : T he s c o re by W a s h i n g t on a nd M i c h i g an A v e s. C O ME A ND S EE US N EW IN o n: L O C A T I ON in G r a nd A v e n u e, S o u t h, A L L EN P R I N T I NG C O M P A NY B o th P h o n es A LL M E A T S. . . May look a l i ke to you. b ut t h r r i' is a t he q u a l i ty we v».TV g r e at difference by- .some o t h er h a n d le t h at a nd t he very Kj.ark.ets. We h a n d le none but best: L i ke t he p u d d i n g, t he proof of good m e a ts is in t he e a t i n g. A t r i al will con vince you t h at you o u g ht to t r a de w i th us. sold in is, H. E. It A. C D e P a ul 1 0 '2 0 Q 7 - — 10 10 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0— 1 3 6 B a t t e r i e s — B u s ch a nd C r i s s ey ; B r a b- b i t t. B e r ry a nd K l a p p. M o n d ay a n o t h er g a me w as p l a y ed w i th De P a n! at L e a g ue p a r k. L a n a s i n g, w h i ch M. A. C. w on s c o re (jf 4 to 2. by M. A. C. 7. O L I V ET 5. We m a ke daily t r i ps to t he College. YA >TH I*H< iNKS. Careful a t t e n t i on g i v en to p h o ne o r d e r s. G o t t l i eb R e u t t e r. 822 W a s h i n g t on Ave. S o u t h. D I R E C T O RY L A N S I NG B U S I N E SS A ND P R O F E S S I O N AL M E N. Tin- n a m e- in t h is Directory, as well as t h o se of nil cuir o t h er a d v e r t i s e r s, a re of r e l i a b l e . p a r t i e s. We. hope t h at t he faculty a nd s t u d e n t- will t a ke pains to p a t r o n i ze t h o se w ho p a t r o n i ze as. - P u s ch M. A. (_.. w i th w on in a g a me w as i n n i ng p i t c h i n g, f r om O l i v et at O l i v et S a t u r d ay in w h i ch h e a vy h i t t i ng f o u r th in w h i ch f o ur ' n e t t ed M. A C. p i t c h e rs w e re e a c h, w h i ch f e a t u r e. t he In b r e ak f o u nd c a me t he t he f or h i ts f o ur r u ns a nd O l i v et t h r e e. S c o re by i n n i n gs : M. A. G O l i v et 0 3 0 4 0 0 0 0 0—7 0 0 0 3 10 0 0 0—4 B a t t e r i e s, B u s ch a nd C r i s s e y; S a n f o rd a nd H i l l i e r. h i t s, M i l ls 2, T w o - b a se B u s c h, P r i c e, S o r e n s o n. B a s es on b a l l s, S t r u ck o u t, off B u s ch 1, off S a n f o rd 2. by B u s ch 5, S a n f o rd 3. U m p i r e, G r a y, A d r i a n. L a ke E r ie C o l l e ge w i ll c e l e b r a te i ts 1 5 th a n n i v e r s a ry J u ne 2 0 t h. BARBERS. C O L L E GE B A R B ER S H O P. — T h r ee c h a i r s. Andy—<'lias.—Emit—where all t h e ir work done, in n ew t he fellows get B a th H o u s e. BOOKS AND STATIONERY. A M. E M E R Y, 11« W a s h. Ave. X. Books, .Stationery, E n g r a v ed Calling Cards, F o u n t a in Pens. Pictures, F r a m e s. F i ne F r a m i ng Up-to-date styles. a s p e c i a l l y. • F i ne S h o e s. We shoe t he s t u d e n t s. See ad. BOOTS AND SHOES. G R A N G E R & G U L L E T T— Boots a nd BOOK BINDERS. G E O. G. B L U D E AU & CO.—Bookbinders, r u l i n g, l i b r a ry a nd fine a rt b i n d i n g s, file boxes, m ap m o u n t i n g s, a l b u m s, p o c k et books, e t c. Citizens p h o ne N o. .56. In City N a t i o n ai B a nk B u i l d i n g. a c c o u nt book m a k e r s, p a p er CLOTHING. LO U IS BECK,—Clothier. G e n t s ' F u r n i s h ings, H a ts a nd Caps. 112 W a s h i n g t on A v e. N o r t h. CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE. H H. L A R N E D .— C h i n a, Glass & L a m p s. DENTISTS. Wo W a s h i n g t on A v e. S. E. S T O F F E R, D. I). S Office 303 City . N a t i o n al B a nk Bldg. Citizens p h o ne 1049. F o r m er M. A. C. s t u d e n t. " N H. MOORE, I). D. S. Office 411-113 H o l- lister Building, L a n s i n g, Mich. Citi zens p h o n e, A u t o m a t ic 9190. . W. M O R S E, B, D. S. H o l l i s t er Block, r o om 517. C i t i z e ns p h o ne 52, Bell p h o ne 886; D E. P A R M E L E E, D e n t i s t, 11734 W a sh i n g t on A v e. S., L a n s i n g, M i c h i g a n. A u t o m a t ic p h o n e, office-3104; residence, 3403. . a nd best l i g h t ed s t o re in L a n s i n g. DEPARTMENT STORES. CA M E R ON & A R B A U GH CO. L a r g e st DRUGGISTS. R O U S E R 'S C A P I T AL D R UG S T O R E. Up to d a t e. C o r n er s t o r e. Opposite H o l l i s t er Block. "P OBINSON DRUG CO.. successors to Als- Xv dorfcVSon. Drugs a nd D r u g g i s t s ' S u n d r i e s. In2 W a s h i n g t on A v e. N. DRY GOODS. W. K N A PP A CO. successor to J e w e tt & . K n a p p. Dry Goods—222-224 W a s h. A v. S. ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES. CA P I T OL E L E C T R IC E N G I N E E R I NG CO. — E l e c t r i c al Supplies a nd Toys, T e l e g r a ph Instruments.,. S t u d e n t s" L a m ps a nd E x t e n s i on Cords. 117 Michigan Ave E. FURNISHING GOODS. ' L G IN M I F F L I N . — L a d i es a nd G e i t l e- > m e n 's F u r n i s h i ng Goods. See ad. FURNITURE DEALERS. M .I. * B. M. B U C K . — F u r n i t u r e. C o r n er . W a s h i n g t on A v e. a nd Ionia S t r e e t. See "ad. HACK AND BAGGAGE LINES. o R D ER YOUR H A C KS for p a r t i es at Oarr's H a ck R a m. L i v e ry in c o n n e c t i o n/ lln W a s h i n g t on A v e. N. HARDWARE, STOVES & TINW'RE. AT 0 It TO N ' S H A RI) WA R E.— G e n o r al J.N H a r d w a r e. T i n w a r e. G r a n i t e w a r e. Cut lery, S t o v e s, e t c. Ill W a s h i n g t on Ave. S. See a d. ICE CREAM, SHERBET AND ICES. DAY is A CO.. 127 Michigan Ave. K... m a ke .all k i n ds of F a n cy Ice Cr.-am, S h e r b et a nd Ices. Both P h o n e s. JEWELERS. C I I A S. A. Pi ELLA.—Jeweler a nd Opti 121 W a s h i n g t on A v e. N., L a n cian. sing, Mich. L K.VYE youi' Fine W a t c h es a nd J e w e l ry i v p a i r s. He will ,""•..,; .."• with J . X H e a tn please yon. • - for MANICURE AND HA.IRDRESSING. M R S. O. T. CASK.—Manicure anil H a i r- d r e s s i ng Parlors; M a s q u e r a de wigs for r e n t. S w i t c h es m a de of cut h a ir or c o m b i n g s. The F r a n c e - A m e r i c an H y g i e n ic Toilet R e q u i s i t e s '* s p e c i a l t y. New p h o ne lis. 222V., W a s h i n g t on Ave. s.. up s t a i r s. MUSIC, PIANOS, ETC. / ^ R I N N E I .L BROS.— Pianos, Organs a nd line of m u s i c. 218 V.J e v e r y t h i ng in t he W a s h i n g t on Ave. N. OCULISTS. P H A S. G. J E N K I N S. M. D .- Diseases ."of V_x E y e. E a r, Nose a nd T h r o a t .1 H o u r s, i)"to 1 2 a . m. a nd 2 to § p. m. Citizens p h o ne 1030. R o o ms 208-204 P r u d d en Block. J O S E PH F O S T E R, M. D— E y e, E a r, Nose a nd T h r o a t. H o u r s, a to 12 a. m .; 2 to 4 J p. n i .: S u n d a ys 12 to 1; E v e n i ng 7 to X. Cor n er Allegan St. a nd Capitol Ave., L a n s i n g. Both phones. PHYSICIANS. D R. H. W. I.ANDON. Office [and resi d e n ce M . A . C. Office h o u rs from 7 to B:S0 a. m. a nd 12:30 to 2 a nd 6:80 to 8 p. m. S u n d ay office h o u r s, 4 to 5_and 7 to p . m. New p h o ne lpOGu D R. OSCAR H. B R U E G E L. H o u r s, 7 to H:30 a. m .; 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 8 p . m. S u n days, 12 to 1 a nd 5 to 6 p. in. E a st L a n s i n g, Mich. Citizens p h o ne 1844. PLUMBERS. SH I E L DS & LEADLEY'.— P l u m b i ng a nd H e a t i n g. 300 W a s h i n g t on A v e. N , L a n sing. B o th p h o n e s.