minis PURPLE FOI Fred J. Murphyf Star Half Back and Ail-Round Athjete, Is Selected to Pilot North- western Eleven. HASTHREE-YEAft CONTRACT » •" ■■■ £'; ■:"• "T A ****** j[| Northwestern university has made a change in its football .coaching staff. At a meeting of the University Alt umni association it was decided to let CbaclvDefinis:Grady go. His succes- sor has been, chosen. He is Fred' J. Murphythe former: Yale half-back and member of the Eli advisory:coaching staff.'The hew coach will take up his duties next months .when he will star4t giving his candidates instruction in the rudiments of the game. - . --It has been known for some time that a change in the coaching staff was contemplated. While everyone *pvn flrady credit for what lift gntnutX|torehta^aBt-w:firifc during the short of his squad last year, still many be lieved the team was not ,as representar tive ah eleven" as'rf should have been. v- -Wanted Eastern Man.: For years there, has been .a strong feeling here that the only way to bTingTaboutr success on-- the^athletic field was.tQ name an eastern man, pre- ferably a Yale star, as. coach; K ' ~~ Murpby was a visitor in Evanston two weeks ago at the big swimming =mee^and^okcd ^ger^he^Jo^^^tua^ ■ t Jon at that time relative to .taking the position. He asked: for "time ■ to" consider' the; proposition; "Saturday night word was,-reccived from' the former Eli star stating that ;he was willing1 to take the-position. It is Said he Ms signed, a three-year con- tract. " .'\';. ;' ■ ': ;",, ", ■___ Has Brilliant Record. ;---4- TMurphy: comes with-a brilliant rec- ord in competitive athletics.* In foot- ball he played left half back on An- flovfir jh lgQ^oinrraiiruTitfefeTttea team, j street anflJlifl winniSg from Exeter, 28 to 0. He played on--the--^Yale--^fr^shman--teamr avenuev----Tihe^-consideration--in- tlie left half back, in 1906. This team was A.' J. Byrne has returned from a stay at the Isle of Fines. '•'-.; ?___.. Dr. and Mrs<p. D. Swain had for their guests last week-thelf daughter, Mts. MerTitt'BJgjBlow. ' ' "■ ^--Mr.; and Mrs.^, William Glasner en- tertained at a dinner, party Thursday evening in!thejr;iome, 850-SherIdan read." •' * T ■■ ."__ -. Mrs. Wilbur , Sample entertained members of her' Bridge club in her home, 670-Grovc street. .Monday after- noon. : ■- " • ::--------- - *." : '...-: % Airs, Albert O Qlsen,:775, Sheridan road,, entertained:- members" ofc.i.thB_ Basket club in her home Friday after- noon. f - --- - '■■'■:■■......*_> .Mr. and Mrs.rxJfeseph-.M. Schinler, 859 Vernon aveh«e,; are ;the.;> proud parents of a daughter, born- Thursday, Feb. 5. - - ■.::;'^.j■;,;'.. :.^^-fi ^jSamuel R. ffurford has; returned from Ottawa, Ill^where^ice^as-^alled last Ayeek on account "of the death of his uncle, Joshua ftodgers. ? iA-Ldance.will be given in the Wom- an's cluqi building, Winnetka, tomor- row: night by Mr. and. Mrs, Frank E. Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin E: Miller.' '■ . - . -_ " IJfeMiss' Helen Calhoun, who Is a stu- dent in tUe University: of Wisconsin at; Madison, was- the; guest of "her THE LAKE SHORE N^WS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12,1914. „■ *■» 0nJolihft^MbtV Leader In Student Volunteer Movement, to We Three^Ikslist^ of This Month. \$ A BUSY EVANGELIST vacation between semesters. Dr. A. rS; C. Clarke^ pastor of_. the SjSecohd Presbyterian church of Evans- ton, gave an interesting, talk before the members of the Men's club in the.Uniop ,church Monday evening. - south m^^ ESTATE DKtUtOSED! Dr. John K. Mott, leader of the Stu- dent Volunteer Movement of the Unit- ed States and Canada, will be in^Eyart- stpn^hefmlddie-of this-month.- •* Hois to give a series of- lectures on ^"The Present World Situation and its Chal- lenged"; •■., .-■ ' " , / ■". •• >Tho first iectUre will be February 18 at 8 o'clock, in the First MeiJabflist church and the:qtbers"will bo on Feb- ruary 20^;at (I0"*.a. m. and 3 p. m. in Memorial Chapel, University Campus. ,7.~■■■■'/'".'"'"'.Is Busy Man.".... " - Mr men, esting of college students in the work Of missions, SJJince Its organization he has been chairman of the executive committee - e*fthe7BTudent^yaiunteef MOV£^trt:TqI^h^ Ca^da1 andTha^presjded-at all of-its seviph ^nventiohsr"TheTlasTof Uhese Ygfeat contentions was held in Jan- uaryvofal^his. year, in Kansas City and. waa^tciid'etl-by-eight^thnJttsan"1 '" Pfpperty at the Southwest Cor- vniKof Hjnmari Avenue and; Main*StreeMsSold. ■-'■**• ^Mr. Frederick M.^Murphy bas pur- chased-fromiRober^t^I^Eld^dgeTthe business and apartment vacant, locat- ed at the southwest corner of. Main Main street and 175 feet on Hinman deed'awas $10, but it is supposed Mr. not scored upon, 'defeating Harvard I Murphy paid Joff.OOO. Hejgave in part freshmen, 2JM}; defeating Princeton 'payment the leasehold clear, at-422-24 freshmen, 14-0. '?■. This was'the first; pVYest Sixty-thlrcli.itree$, at."a, valuation year that freshmen were-incligible for | pr|2'0,000. Murdobk, James: & Corrop-- varsityf rseasbn -1^06-0^7,- oh ^the teamTresghttJd^iiSr^ Eldridge^and "Mr. M;uc tions," and; this "was. the only, reason that this: wonderful freshmen aggrega- tion of\Yatc7 did iiot play oifthe var- - sity. iiri907: MurphyiPlayM^^hair ""back on the Yale, varsity and played ___i;i the game in which Y,ale defeated Princeton, 12-10 and defeated Har- vard, 12-0. In; 1908* he was- again-at the post, right half back, and defeated --^Princetonj 12-6, but lost, to^Hatvard, 'v. 4-0. .In 1909 he played, on Ted Coy's ^le&nv^KhMh ^efjeated^ Princeton, 27-0, ^^ and defeated HarJardl S-grziil" ?T: Zz 7 r ; AtV AH-roiind Star. ----itfur^phy^was ■ iioi: alone a star in football, but haa had great experience in basketball as -well. He • played on the Andoyer-basketball team^two sea- sons, left guard, acting as captain and ---coachr=lost to;Harvard by :foufe-points; lost to Wesleyan by one point, and - woji twelv«reut-t>fr'fou^teen-games. In his college basketbaHTie played on the 'varsity, seafeon 190G-07, on the team that won the Eastern' college ehahv pionship. In 1907-08, 190S-0M ho wns berg and Reninger .will have, the man t^ement T>fHfoeH&uildirig-and also at-', tell his-interesting story- in-^-most tend^to the construction of. same. This convincing manner, is one of the best unimproved busi- ness„corner8^o.n_JtJiel:no.rth sJlox9._,___ --on the varsity7 basketball'■- teaffi In __ISOMMie did_hotgo..^nVtor^iajcam^ owing toTllness. " ""■ In baseball his record is perhaps the most, brilliant; of all. He-played on ■ Andover two geason&-a3- center_fielder,_ defeating Harva^ Princeton, ^pnee each; and Yale and Exeter twice. In 1007 freshmen were ineligible for var- - srtyr-baseball-^hdThk^ayedi on the freshman team^as eenter-fi'elder,.....dc^ _ feating Princeton freshmen and tying the Harvard ?reshinen. In 1908 he played center field on the varsity. In 1909 he was captain of the varsity and •"■ won the intercollegiate championship a nd wa^^rr>elex;1?^d^captainr-ior-15107 but declined to serve, - ■jjhy- was" *eJ^ES^SS^t3BS^ft&MB * Reninger. Mr. Murphy will at once improve the 175x75 feet ofi Main rsSteet by ajuodeti^::ulbto-date;-0\re&- story building containing 'stores, office;-,, and two. and three-room flats and; bachelor apartments. Same will ;3hw^r~rehtar~of ~?i8;ot)0~per~annum and cost at least_ $|0,000, and the lQQx 475-feet facing Hinman-=a=venue^with: a thirty-six apartment building, four* and five rooms, that wiU show, a rgntaj iBtTabd'ut:$ili6fl0rprer "annum. Ro'sen- Mott is one of the busiest of ; His tlnje is devoted to the Ihter- ■. >• t »♦ »t m t ifiittifiiiiiii 11 What People Are Doing i '■'*** innigiiianiiram*^* Mr. Hairy P:R»xon is In New York city on business. Mr. and; il'rs. Robert Ware have moved into Chicago; --: "i MessrSi/J.acBb and W. E. Brand have left foFa' business trip to Texas. Mrs. Herbert-P. Beers is home from an extehaed;Btay in Philadelphia. .Mrs. Daniel Cobb has as her guest •thftA week Miss Magot Street of Chi- cago." ..■ v~: ';... :<:,'■' \"--_'-y .":_'. ■" . iMrs.cJames Warrejv^eft^Mondayfor a visit of several weeks in Kalamazoo, Ttttcnr r~z ->---■- ;■ XeohardT" Woic<Jft has" "returned east tp~resume h^|a studieaj at Williams college. Mrs. 3: A. Mr. and-Mrs. dan road; • "^~7 Mrs. P; C. Wolcotr left this week for Magnolia Spring.-, Ala. She will be gone several weeks. -Z^Tiss^Murgaret Bunnell, I who-jat^ tends Kemperrhali at Kenosha, Wis.» visited with" lier parents the 'latter part of last week. Principal S. A..'Hud.son of the Higli- wood grammar'school is- at the Au- gr.stana hospital in Chicago suffering with typhoid foveiv__ Mr. and Mrs.'C. E. Thompson now ^are-occupyihg: their home on Linden avenue and Lincoln street, which was damaged b>" Are shorUyJhefpre Christ- mas. < .^.-. '■:..£!i-r.:.,..~ . [..:'./':'_. Spring is the .guest of E. P. Seswick of Sherl- CONCRETE ROADS ARE APPROVED IN REPORT dpnts.. xThoV.stUdetits who went from North\vestern tpll ,of ths.remarkable way in which Mn Mdtt-TKonducted. the convention. »\ /^X- - Since 1895^10 po|ltion)i6f General Secretary of thXWorid fetiideiit Chris^ tion Federation ^s. been held by it&t. Mbtt. He was uimnlmously elected president4 of the World Missionary con- fei'ence--in -^Edinburgh, Scotland^ Iffi 19J.0 and since;that time has served as chairman of the Continuation c'ommit- -tce. Hi's invcstignJionR of the missions a ry sjtu^tvA^tjiara^tah^n h im a'cveral Comniigsidners of Wayne ich.vCon^ISert;on- crete Best for Streets. times around the world....lijoljon better qualified to present * compFe- hoTisTve view of "The World Situa- tion." »"',.. ^Author of Several Books. - --With all his activities he^has found time :;Jto write >*overal-- boolks- on • his favorite subject, all: most „Mtet<M{jj(jL azid informing. "The Pastor and Mod- ei1tf"Missibhs,"'-'Evaugcllzatibh of the. WorhLJU tllis Generation,"' and "The Decisive Hour of Christian-.Missions?': are a few of the best known. ■ In Tccognitioh Of his services the ^^rggy'Tle^e^^f^r^'l^'was' con- ferred on him in June, i9JL0^ by the University of :Edinburghi .and- by: Princeton University in 1911. Y ... .^.yAnston,Js jnmst 'fgrtuha't'e 'in se- cui;ing Dr. Mbit for those lectures. He Is an unusually fine" speaker and will" LOSES SILVER KNIVES ON WAY TO iVIrs,"I N. Hardin of Evanston, TJrops' Si'l verWaf e/on to Safety Vault, ; Mrs. I. N. Hardin, .11-11 Hiuman ave- nue, Evanston, reported to the police the loss ^f ten "solid--silver-r-lHitter -kMvesr valued at $25; firon^-a-iaaek^g^-l-tTro she was carrying from her home to the bank Thursday afternoon.^ She started with a doz«n of the knives to dSSORNEr-EREAKS RECORD. Howard Osborn, crack sprinter *of 4fej^^4iJorthwestern- university--track team, again - distinguished himself Saturday evening v-hen ho clipped off a half, mile in 1:57 1-5, lowering the previous-record by 1 3-5.Becpnds in.the. twentieth annuai" indoor--track- meet given by the tflrst "Itegiment Athletic association, -t:--- :- = • - z^T' The lowering of the record by Os- born caused a great ovation to be Tttven hini. -After-appearing to.be put of the running, Osborne, who was a son, the Illiribis^AtTiTetlc" runner^ who was second. ■■';-* ": • .' ' l\:_ The -Evanston academy track team place them in a safety deposit vault j v.pn the one-mile relay race for high at the bank." When she arrived at the | school steams in 3:29 2-5. completely Gpod; roads- enthusiasts- -will- be interested in \a * report recently made by the .county roa<i .commission- ers^df Way ne coiuij.ty, Michigan, where Concrete7highways^ arc becoming pop- ular. A group of Evanston officials lust summer■■visited>Wayne county and in- scratch man, sprinted past the entire jifaln t.ho last lap and Won the half mile run. He was sixty yards behind the leaders: until the fifth -Inpj-wrhen h^ jstarjted to pass the stragglera, He te tape -.ftvo',yards ahead of Ofr ^g-oyer-theTroadyat any ;one-point-ltt forty-three miles of roads in Wayne county that Were put dowiLibfitore Jan-: iiary, 1913, and it was found there wer? 500 transverse cracks and 1,156 longitudinal cracks in 9421 twenty- fivo "foot sections of concrete laid dur- ing 1909, 1910, 1911 and 1912. Thus, there was one crack for every fiv«f and one-half sections, op in an area of about 1,650 square feet. -' The' traffic ceneus' taken on the roads leading out of Detroit produced some interesting'. rasultB. These rdc- prds coVer seven dayB in August and the corresponding seven days in Sep- tember^and-were-continuous for twen- ty-four hours a day; They show_ that the: average number^ of vehicles pass- the twenty-foufliours was as follows Single horse .."........ Team' ................... Automobile runabout Automobile touring car ,195 207 137 512 4 59 LARGE AUDIENCE AT HARRIS LECTURE Annie May Swift JHtell AlVas Well Crowded to Heaf Proft Gonklin Speak. r "This is my Psychology assignment for Wednesday," remarked a student emerging from Annie May Swift Hall Monday night at the close of the first of the ^ Norman W. Harris lectures, "but, believe me, I'd be here tomorrow night if I didn't have to come.' Say, wouldn't you like to have a course under that fellow, thought?" In which genuine remark he voiced the. .sehtimenW Of the large majority of the big audience whicn neara t*ror. Conklin deliverfhls lecture on "Facts and Factors "in the Development of Man," . . * The lecture room was crowded and late-comers were forced to stand' in the hallway or along the walls of the unaincroom1_;:_Tlm^attractlyenes8 of the general subject and tho.tJBpute.bt^he; speaker combined to bring out a larger audience than has berih seen at one of the Harris lectures in many a day.' The speaker was introduced byPrbf. liacy and talked for about one hour anfi a halfT^during which time;4ie4»eld-^hi8 hearers in close attention. He took up the general fundamental proper-' all living organisms and showed how they are identical in the case of ev|ery sort of animal. He showed a large number of slides indicating graphically the physical development-of ^several different-typeaofianlmal-life and.made plain their essential similarity, i Prof.- Conklin then took up the. psyr )>>>f IIM1 ilii>yif if;i.i.i5 ii What People Are Doing; in Lake Forest Dr. and Mrs. G. O.t French are in Sarasota. Fla., for a month. " Mrs; :R-"N,^l*«rinentetr "is^vlsitlflg her. parents In Kalamazoo, Alich. Mr. and Mrs., TJlfney Blake are spending .»: fe>^<weeki"1ln Florida, v Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Darrow •*viBited with Mr. and Mrs. Martin Melody the first part of the" week. Dr. and Mrs; Stnrdevant have left for a month of winter sport on their farm ih *New Hampshire. Miss Kathertne Halsey has left for Hazelton, Pa., where she will organ- izfeajaran'ch of the Y. AV. C:; A, _ Mr. Robert J. Thbrne has purchased the Granger Farwell place on Sheri- dan road. He recently bought the Place adjoining this; which gives him a' fine estate of twelve acres. --~ DOG HAS THE W7WtE8r~ A dog belonging to Dr. Will Walter, 1607 Hinman avenue, developed a case of rabies Sunday morning and was later chloroformed by a veterinary surgeon, A close, watch was kept on the- animal and, according-to the po- lice, while it was being taken to the veterinarian, it snapped at several persons in.Davis street. : Health Officer Richard Lind periehced a cold ride Saturd in discharging,his duty of q« ins the home of Stanley Lies tdn-8treet,--near the brick^':y&&a case of scarlet fever was :'"' Dr.fSnitzei of Nilea Center. home is located In the extret west section of the city andhji In the-boundary line. Chicago LITTLE^ TOW AY AT SiiiilS*! line Art* B»f Fourth Floor, HisneiBrm »wwi»Thyi ALL SCATS SI T^ird Tonfi FINE-I ARTSJigS IDEN PAYNE PI (Ur.lor the auspices of the N* ■ • ■' .- Drama League of Amerid SHAKESPEARE' Measure for chological development Of this devel' nient and brought out the actual devel- opment of the mind, diacussing-chietty rentiaOensitivU^ llo-411ustrated4 his-point- witlFa citation of the trial and error method of learning and iex- amples of organic-^memory. The lec- ture was concluded with a summary of the points covered.^ Prof. Conklin is a faBcinating lec- turer and is assured of. largo and inter- ested audiences throughout the wpek during the-course of six las^ureSi^he subject matter is of necessity some- what technical, but the speaker's if enioyable for anyone. Tomorrow's suTtfectTs" "Tlie Phenomena^THejred raer visited .Wayne county^raadr-^n-ftreatment is popular enough to make spec'ted-tbe road v&lch Is described Jn: ^pie'reportr Since fhatTtlme TikeToad-" ways 'have bc"en?completed"in Church street' west of Kvaitsten, in the fear of Calvary 'cemetery and near itavina park._ ;', *^T '■ ■■yf. '.; ,_.4 ...... . ^ '■■' Atl over Cook county and in other 'sections .'o'f'-riHnd^i^te concrete road ts; growing in pbpu!arlty-With roatihex- jija,nea ,,t pertB, It has *beert^proved by testa -^tarelr ?o--be-an economical^method of read improvement and one -which will ,be reasonably permanent; " ■ Cracks in Concrete Easily Fixed. ,The report point,|..out that the only serions objection so far. advanced againBt concrete roads-Is^fhe develop- ment of.cfacks and the commissioners do not consider %his. a material ,objec? Teadily-^wtth-a-^litfle-hot tar and Hhe formatlon-^of-eraeks can be-minimizecv by careful workmanship. -HA-carefui-count-was-made-of-afl the cracks that occurredi-in -more-- than . PIANO BECITAJL^ -KVr. "Tlie-Music Study class" of Wiintette announces the second piano, recital jto be "giveir. by »Uv__llcaty FurnTbrt the Woman's club house f-ifrtifl- pnwr"MTr Eau«es will bo assisted by Miss Sereiia Stere, soprano, of: Chicago, recenily from 'Europe, where she «has spent -eight-years- in- ardent study. She :4s an artist of unusual ability. . Mr. Eamcs is the director of the piano de-. pa r tin en t of the Cosmopolitan School of Music in Chicago, and his ability and. achievements, are too well known fo^require-further comment.. -The Musie^Study^elaBs-exteiidS; a Icordlal invitatlon^o-tlw-pubUc-to^attehd^this- recital. 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