,...•�" VOLUME VlII. No. 12. e ailpPrice Five Cents.aroonCONTINUED EFFORTS FORRETURN OF KECKIE MOLLDaily Cardinal Prints Supposed TrueVersion of Quarter·s Connectionwith Hazing Episode.The agitation for the reinstatementof Keckie :\1011, the University of'.\·!!'c:msin quarterback who was re­cently expelled. is growing constantlymore active. Tremendous pressurehas been' brought to bear by \Viscon­sin alumni throughout the country.and it .is not believed that the facultycan withstand their demand that thecase be reopened. President VanHise is reported to favor a reconsid­eration of the action of the disciplinecommittee in view of the new evi­dence.The Badger student body have beenrireless in their efforts to prove thatKeckie :\1011 is the victim of a hastyand ill-considered action on the partof the faculty. Evidence has beencollected to show. that Moll was in­volved in the hazing affair for whichhe was suspended solely because ofan effort to protect a Freshman fromnbnse. The true history of the affair,according to the Daily Cardinal, is asicltows: "On the night of September30 a group of Freshmen, under theleadership of Glen Turner, tried to or­ganize at Camp Randall for the pur­pose of opposing the hazing of Fresh­men by Sophomores. They met atCamp Randall and proceeded intowards the Latin quarter, where theywere met by a group of Sophomores,following which a hand-to-hand fightensued, the Sophomores being victori­ous, After the skirmish the second-(Y�;tr. !�-fl started _ to, _'ro�ugh:�ou_�e' a.f;:\V ni �Iie freshmen and some ofthem threw a Madison Freshmannamed Borchsenius to the ground."Standing nearby, but taking nopart in the hazing wa� 'Keckie' Moll,the Varsity quarterback. He knewBorchsenius, having coached the Mad­ison High school team, of which hewas center."He saw the lad thrown to theground, and, knowing his- right as aoW' man to interfere in any hazingwhen he judged it had gone too far,he stepped forward and approachedthe group.,,, You fellows can haze this manjust as well on his feet as you can inthe mud,' said Moll. as he lifted theFreshman to his feet-.. At this minute some of the Fresh­men in the gang of which Turner was1 he leader, and who evidently thought�ton was a Sophomore, caught holdof llolt. One of them kicked him inthe back. lYoU turned and saw Tur­ner. , .. h« was holding him, and im­mediately shoved him away. Theother Freshmen at this juncture pulled'Keckie' away from Turner and threwhim to his hands and knees."When, a few minutes later, theSophomores pulled �Ioll to his feet,he started toward Turner, the leaderot the gang, and struck him twice."The Sophomores then proceededto throw the rest of the Freshmen inthe lake. and among them was Tur­ner."It is. the unanimous feeling of thestudent body that if the new versionof the affair is presented to the disci­pline committee the-y cannot in jus­tice do anything but reverse their for­mer verdict.To Receive for Presbyterians.A reception for Presbyterian stu­dents of the University will be givenon Friday evening at the Hyde ParkPresbyterian church, SJrd street andWashington avenue. A good musicalprogram' will be presented,A co-ed athlnic association hasbeen organized by the fair sex of theUniversity of Minnesota.ANNOUNCE DATES FORVARSITY DEBATE TRIALSPrelimiDaries for Foreuic Contests toOccur on Non_ber 4---u-peel Larce EntrJ.TARIFF TO BE DEBATE SUBJECTSelections to Be Made for Two Teamsto Meet Michigan andNorthwestern.Preliminaries for the University de­bating team tryouts wilt be held intwo weeks. The 'trial contests areopen to all members of the Univer­sity who desire to compete for placeson this year's teams to represent Chi­cago in the debates wi�h Xor'thwest­ern and :M ichigan universities. So faras can be ascertained at �resent theoirtlook promises an unusually largenumber of contestants. The questionto be debated is. "Resolved. That theexperience of the United States hasshown Ithat a protective tariff shouldcontinue to be a national policy."First Trials November 4.The first trials will occur on Thurs­day evening. November 4, in the northlecture room of the Law school andin Haskell assembly hall. Six minuteswill be allowed each of the speakersfor opening speeches and four min­utes for rebuttal. Scholarships fortwo quarters will be awarded the win­ning six who are chosen to positionson the teams.Students wishing to become candi­dates in these tryouts may registerwith Harold G. Moulton, president of.the Delat Sigma Rho society. eitherin person or by application :.!ht:oug� __ .the--rnCiitty""C;"icnange berore 6 p. �. onWednesday, November 3. Speakers'Wilt be allowed chioce of sides in thepreliminaries. The order of speakerswilt be determined by lot and will beposted upon tlhe bulletin board infront of Cobb hall, Thursday morning,November 4.,To Sift Men in Try-Outs.The sifting of candidates in the firsttrial contest will leave 12 to be en­tered in the final trial. the date forwhich contest is to be announced lat­er. Last year's line-up showed 35 as­pirants for positions on the team andan equal showing is promised for thisyear. The question is a live one inview of recent operations in Congress,and Chicago's experience with trialdebates in the past justifies the expec­tation of a large list of candidates forthe coming season of forensic con-tests.FENCIBLES WILL BANQUETWill Try for Debate with DlinoisSophomores-Perfect Organization.The second meeting of the Fenci­bles, the honorary literary society ofthe Sophomores, was held yesterdayafternoon in Cobb hall. The meetingwas an informal one, the purpose be­ing to discuss ways and means forthe coming year and to perfect the so­ciety's organization.A banquet to take place two weeksfrom this evening was decided uponand committees were appointed to ar­range for the meal and make up aprogram. Further business was toappoint Loth to write Illinois in an"ffort to arrange a debate' with thedown-state Sophomores. The menare earnest in getting to work thisyear and are going to try to make theFencibles Successful this year.Skull and Crescent Meet Toda,..The Skull and Crescent, the honor­ary Sophomore honor society, boldsits first meeting of the year at 10:30this morning in the Reynolds club.Important business of the year willhe: discussed, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. TUESDAY. OCTOBER',19. 1909.GIRL BURNED IN LABORATORY,Miss Elizabeth Keenan Is Hurt inExplosion of Test Tube ContainingNitric Acid-Doctors PronounceInjury Not Serious.:\liss Elizabeth Keenan, a Sopho­more, was painfully burned in Kentchemistry laboratory yesterday after­noon by an explosion of nitric' acid ina test tube. A drop of the flyingcaustic struck in the corner of hereye, and. although it burned deeply,her condition is not pronounced dan­gerous. lliss Ethel Terry, who wasthe laboratory assistant in charge,was standing. near her at the time andprobably saved Miss Keenan's eye byprompt work.Was· Cleaning Test Tube.Miss Keenan, who is just startingher work in the chemistry depart-1 ment, was performing one of -the firstexperiments of Course I when the ac­cident occurred. She was cleaning atest tube with nitric acid and pouredin the acid before the glass hadcooled. It exploded and flew over herdesk. llost of it fell on the desk, butone drop hit her full in the eye. fIercries attracted :\Iiss Terry, who heldher head under the water .faucet towash out the burning fluid.. She wasgiven medical attention in -the labora­tory emergency room and was latertaken to her home at 737 West 54thplace by :\Iiss Terry. There Dr. Me­Gonagly, 5500 Halsted street, wascalled and examined the burn. Hesaid that she would be confined forseveral days, but that he thoughtthere would be no permanent injury.Says Condition Not Serious."My daughter_ Elizabeth," . said her.Iather - last: night, - "wa's -painfully-burned, but I flo not think it is seri­ous. Her eye is so swollen that Ihave not been able to see in it, but thedoctor assures me that it is all right.She expects to be back in school nextweek and declares now that she willcontinue her work in the chemistry·department."INTERNATIONALS ORGANIZE"Revival Meeting" of CosmopolitanAssociation Draws Crowd.What ·was termed a "revival meet­ing" of the International club washeld Saturday evening in Cobb hallbefore a good crowd of enthusiasticmembers and visitors. Plans for theactivities of the club for this yearwere discussed and officers wereelected. The following men willguide the actitivies of the associa­tion for the coming season: JohnLee. China. president; Conrado Beni­tez, Philippines, vice-president; W. G.Keirstead, Canada. recording secre­tary; Shiro Tashiro, Japan, corre­spending secretary; Eladio Horns.Spain, treasurer.:\. committee was appointed to re­vive the constitution, which the clubin the last two years of its increasehas outgrown. The committee con­sists of Benitez. chairman; Horns, Loand Lee. ex officio. The next meetingwill be held Saturday evening at 7:30in Cobb 6:\. The purpose of thismeeting will be to settle the policy ofthe club for the year.Score Club lleetinc 10:30 Tomorrow.The Score club will hold its firstmeeting of the year Wednesday morn­ing at 10:30 in the Reynolds club.Important business will be discussed,especially the arranging of the pro­gram for this quarter of the club'sdances and varioas other social func­tions.n.:e head football coach of tbe Car­lisle Indian school is teaching foot­ball by mail to the !MIl in charge ofteams -at s�ry schools. MINNESOTA IS STRONG;SAYS W AWE STEFFENRetuu fro. Mianesota Guae LastSatarda,; Is Impressed b,ShowiDI of GophenUNEIS STRONGER THAN MAROONSDr. Williams Has Seven Veterans­Steffen Writes Impressions forThe Daily Maroon.ay WALTER P. STEFFEN.That Minnesota has an excellentchance of beating the �Iaroons thisyear has been clearly demonstrated tome by the three games which I haveseen them play.Although their chances were some­what lessened by the unfortunate in­jll�y to their star player. Johnson. lastSaturday. they still have a team thatwould prove a worthy foe to any teamin the country.To begin with. they have a teamcomposed of seven veterans, one ofwhom has not up to date won a place,�n this year's team. Of the veteransCaptain llcGovern is a splendid littleplayer. He captains the team fromquarterback position and in everygame this season he has run his teamin splendid shape. He has the teamgoing at top speed all the time. some­thing which has been lacking in Go­pher teams of the past. Besides thathe is a great little player. He hasiots of speed and is a dodger of rareability. The other veterans are Rad­emacher and Pettyohn, ends; Young,tackle; Farnam, center; llohstad,guard, and Ostrand, last year's guard,who· has' fo-content himself" \vith- aplace on the scrubs.Have Many New Mm.-Of the new men, Powers, guard,and Walker. tackle, are two big men,coming with great' "prep" school rep­utations, which they have lived up to.Bot h are over six' feet two tall andweigh over 200 pounds. They haveshown unusual ability for new men.Pickering at fullback is a splendidplayer. He is big and rangy. and notonly is a gcod kicker, but als� runswell in the open field. He does thekicking for the Gophers and averagesabout 40 yards. .Stevens plays one half and John­son's place will probably be filled byRosenwald, These players do notaverage up with the grade of the restof the team, but still they can becounted on for some good bard scrap­ping in the Chicago game.Sizing the team up as a whole, Ishould say they work far better thanany �Iinnesota team that I have everseen. While there are several bigheavy men on the team. most of themare light, fast and clever.Use Open Play.Up to date they have attemptedabout 30 forward passes, and this isquite a different attack than llinneso­ta teams we have met in the pastused. Although they did not executethem with any unusual clevernessthey are done well enough to botherany team.On the defensive they are at theirbest. The big linemen up to datehave been able to rush through andbreak up the opposing team's playsbefore they were started. I do not be­licve six first downs have been regis­tcred against them in the four games'hey have played. Their ends, whilethey are not stars, are hard men toget around. Their experience hastaught them a god deal and they willbe a hard pair to trick.Line Stroncer 11Jan Chicago's.To compare them with our teamwould be a difficult task. as I havenot seen our boys in real play. Butfrom what t gather t fear their line(Continued on Page 4.) HARD GAME TO ILLINI;LOOK TO GOPHER GAMEEacoaracial Practice Last Ni,lat MakesRooten Feel Better---StauIs SatiffieclNOVEL SWEATER USED BY SQUADStory of Saturday Game a Record ofa Close and Brilliant Foot-ball Struggle.With the Illini eliminated from therace for western championship Di­rector Stagg is now looking to otherteams to be conquered.. and foremostamong these is llinncsota. Last nightthe squad was put through paces withthe "ghost hall" and for the first timein the season the arc lamps recentlyinstalled were used. All the squadwere in first class condition andCoach Stagg declared that the prac­tice was snappier than that of lastweek. HirschI was out in a suit andworked with the team, although hewould net have been able to scrim­mage.Four new plays were tried with thelist not yet uncorked. The Varsity 111-ready has a fair start in that depart­ment for tl:e game with the Gophers.The Minnesota squad showed thatthey have mastered the new style ofplay and the "Old Man" will' spendthe rest of this week and next perfect­ing the use of the open play by theVarsity. Except for the game withthe alumni next Wednesday the prob­ability is that the gates will be closedduring the whole of the practice pe-riod. .". -� ..... -._-.�-.-- .�.'''-.�.I..'. ........... -,. - 6-- _-"' .... -._.Novel Sweaters Used iD Practice.The latest improvement in equip­ment for the squad is the purchase ofa complete outfit of sweaters for themen. "Johnny" attended an auctionlast week and took away a collectionof garments originally consigned fora Chinese section gang on the N orth­ern Pacific railroad. They are unmis­takably brilliant colors and there isa rumor that the Maroons will wearthem in the Minnesota game in orderto befuddle the Gophers.Illinois VarsitYs Hardest to Date.Saturday's game was undoubtedlythe hardest-fought contest that hasbeen seen on the local checkerboardthis season, Pure grit and a qualityof fighting spirit {,hat equaled that ofthe Varsity was exhibited by the vis­itors. In fact, the hard fighting ofthe down-staters was the thing whichkept the contest from being placed inOhicago's game bag in the first half.The' notable thing about the vis­itors' play was the viciousness of theirtackling. High tackles were seldomseen and long, low, diving sweeps,which not only struck the runner butinvariably lifted him from his feet,were the rule. Time after time a \'is­itor, taking an almost impossiblechance for a flying tackle, missed hisman and went rolling for yards. Yetin nearly everyone of these cases,though the tackler was unable to holdthe runner, the runner was lifted fromhis feet to be sent sprawling wherehe was easy prey for the other de­fenders. No better example is afford­ed than the fact that Seiler and ateam mate were out of the game al­most the time limit as a result ofcoming together on a vicious try.Dlini Tackle Well.In the tackling game the lIIini hada shade the better of the argument.lIIini was heavier, though not to theextent that had first been thought.and this thing gave a terrific advan­tage at the line-plunging game. Itwas noticeable that Chicago's defenseline for this game was drawn just atrifle tight�r than in previous contests,(Continued on Page 4.)THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19" 1909.ANNOUNCEMENTSGerman Club will meet Friday at 4in Lexington hall .Sociology Club will meet tomorrowat 4 in Cohh hall. room 6:\.Y. W. C. L. will hold a meeting to­morrow at 10:30 in Lexington hall.Historical Club will meet with Pro­Ics sor McLaughlin. Thursday at 8 p.m .. 56C9 Woodlawn avenue.Commonwealth Club will hold aluncheon and election \V cdncsday at1 o'c1ock in the private dining roomof the Commol1s.Girls' Glee Club will hold tryo\1t�tomorrow at 2 in Kent theater.Score Club meets tomorrow at 10:30in the Reynolds club.Y. M. C, A. will have a lecture to­morrow at 7 o'clock. The subjectwill be "The Young Man's Problem,"by Dr. Winfield S. Hall.Brownson Club-:\l1 Catholic stu-THE DAILY MAROONThe Oflicia1 Student Publication ofthe University of Chicaco Those few indiscreet ones who are re­sponsible for the foolishness of Fridaymorning should be shown that a con­tinuance of their tactics will result indrastic action from all persons in theuniversity who are interested in ourwelfare. There is even a danger ofseriously hampering or entirely stop­ping the more than desirable cam­paign for class organizations. \Vehope that a word to the wise is suf­ficient.Formerly.The UDiyenv�icaao WeeklyThe WeeUy_. __ __ .October 1. 1692fbe Daily_ .. __ --- October I. 1902Eataed u Secood-dau Mail at the ChicaaoPOIIoflice. Chicago, 11liDoia, March 18. 1903.UDder Act of March 3. 18]3.P� daiI�. except Suodaya. Mooday.aDd. holidays durma tbree-qualtera of the UDi­'Yemty year. COMMUNICATION.. SUBSCRIPTION RATESBy curia. $2.00 per year if paid before Oct. 9$2.50 per year later. $1.00 per quarter.City mail $1.25 per quarter. $3.00 per year inadvaDCe. The Maroon will print any timelycommunications from members of theU ni\·ersity but will not be responsiblefor the opinions contained. Author'sname must accompany communica­tions, but will be withheld if desired.News coDlributioDi may be left at Ellis Hall orFaculty E.zcb�. addreued to The Daily Ma-rOOD.Editor of The Daily !\laroon:-Thesystem of student admissions nowused for the football games ought tobe very effective to prevent the abuse01 t he special privilege. Yet it at thesame time exposes a defect in the sys­tem of sale which seems capable ofdoing much to reduce Chicago'sstrength on the bleachers. I refer tothe rule that a student can buy butone special ticket.In our urban University many ofthe friends of the students and there­lore friends of the University are res­idents of the city and not members ofthe University. If a student wishesto be in their company during thegame he must sit in the "general"bleachers and the rooting body looseshis support. As in the case of a youngbusiness man I know, who attendsevery game, the support of both stu­dent and guest is lost. In anothercase. the student might feel unwillingto be at the game and not a part ofthe rooting aggregation. Rather thancome alone he then stays away alto­gether. Is there not great possibilityior real loss in support?A simple remedy for this conditionwould be to give each student theprivilege of signing for two tickets.Then at the gate the identification ofsignatures should be continued and alloutsid�rs not accompanied by the stu­dent who obtained their tickets shouldbe refused admittance.There may be Conference regula­tions which forbid such a plan orthere may be other good causes fornot establishing it. If there are itwould be of interest to the studentsto hear them. I f possible some changeshould be made, and if not possiblesome one in authority should explainwhy. May we hear some replythrough the columns of The Daily)Iaro�n:STAFFA. LEO FRlDSTElN.N. A. PFEFFER. . .A. G. WHITFIELD. . Managing Editor· . News Editor• Athletic EditorCHAS. L SUWV AN. JR. Business ManagerASSOCIATE EDITORSHUWaYe A. Long. H. F elseothal.vaUee O. Appel H. C. Burke.R J. Daly. M. F. Carpenter.REPORTERSMiss Lioa M. Could. M. H. Briggs.W. J. Foute. B. H. Lunde.R C. Buc:k. H. R Baukhage.J. M. Houghland.We believe that we express the sen­timent of the entire University whenwe extend to MinnesotaMinnesota's our sincere sympathy forLoss. the accident which befellJohnson Saturday. BothChicago and Minnesota have hopes ofa championship this fall, and are mak­ing every effort to realize these hopes.Johnson's absence boosts Chicago'schances tremendously. But every truesupporter of the Maroon feels that he'would rather see Chicago lose to Min­nesota with the Gopher's full strengthin the field than to capture the gameand the championship from a crippledteam.For the second successive time inmany years Illinois nearly defeatedChicago on the grid­The Aftermath. iron Saturday. Cer-tain dubious andpessimstic critics have loosened them­selves from the opinions that Chicagowas outplayed, that we deserved tolose and that we will have to playm�ch .better football than that againstHlinois to retain the western ch _pionship, amNot to belittle the judgment ofthese honorable and able ".• cntlcs, Itseems .to �s that Captain Page led histeam 111 Just about the way he hadbeen coached by 110 less a person thanfhc greatest football coach in thewest. He seemed to us to b 1 .f . e paYInga sa e ga�e with an eye on the fu-ture. Chicago has many tim b· es eencalled lucky. Is it not rnor 1h e ncar ytnl� t at the team has been taught towalt for blunder .. in the 0 '. pponentsplay and make the most of themrather than uncork our 0\' b ff . � 11 est 0 -cnSlve resources?I11inois doubtless has ""' g d• " 00 teamand they played a mo .. t ad . bl. • ... mIra e�ame agmnst the Varsity. The scoreIS. nevertheless, a fair comparison ofthe total strength and merit of thetwo teams. Respectfully,Sophomore.DAILY BULLETINFreshman Class Meeting today at10:30 in Kent theater.Botanical Club will hold a meetingtoday at 4:30 in the Botany building,room 13.Chicago Alumni Club-Weeklyluncheon, 12 to 1 :30 today, at the Col­lege inn.University Public Lecture-"ThePlace of Missions .in the ModernChurch," by the Rev. Henry C. Mabie,D. D., in Haskell.. \ meeting of the Frc .. hrnan class i ..planned for today in Kent. Such:Jmeeting has beenAn Opponunity 11<'1(1 annually forfor the Freshmen. t h e purpose olpermit tine theFr c shrncn tn cct acquaint cd witht l-c msclvc-. 'Inch may he done or1111(10I1e hy t hi .. meeting. Recent oc­r ur rr-ncr-- (111 the carnpu .. have .. howntb.lt at least :l <;m:ll1 !:ronp of Fre .. h­men h:l"(' ';""\\'11 .. i�ns of a tendency. n ,·ioblc ()�.\ .. ,f the most rigid tradi­tions of tl'e eni'·er .. ity. \Ve mean thepolicy of :1h.;n1t1�e prohihition of vio­lent method .. of interclass rivalry.': i .. ";,'(""crcly hoped hy the saneand sensihle clement of the Uninr­. , :11:l1 ;"c meeting this morningwill rc�u1t in t1-c control of the Fresh­man class hy its rational me�h�rs,who it is hoped arc in the maJorIty. dents desiring to join the Brownsonclub hand in names and addresses toBox 155. Faculty Exchange.University Public Lecture-"TheModern Household:' by . AssistantProfessor Breckinridgc, Thursday at4, in Emmons Blaine hall, room 384.University Public Leeture=-v Pres­cut-Day Forms and' Factors of the1\1 issionary Enterprise," Rev. H. C.Mabie. Haskell oriental museum at 4Thursday.University Public Lecture-"The:\ ew \\' orld Consciousness and theKingdom," by the Rev. H. C. )Iabie,to be held tomorrow at 4 in Haskelloriental museum. Visit "Little ·Hungary"H_priaa Cafe aDd Itedaan.DtSoatla.eat CorDer Clark aDd MOIII'Oe S�Maia EalraDc:e 184 Clark Street TelephoDe CeDtraI 1029Famoua HuqariaD Cypay Buad CoDeelta 5 p.m. till 1 &.IlL. aboS�y MatiDeeD. L'FJANK. 1I r Ledl •• " Souvenl .... tt.r T .... t ...ttle Hu '7 C.t.rln. Co. Specl.1 R.t.. for P.rtl ••WILLSON &. HARVEYPAINTERS AND DECORATORSFull Line Wall Paper, Glass and Painters' Supplies.Telepbeee Hyde Park 3667. 427 East 55th Street, Chicago.To�NigbtSTAGG TO ADDRESS FIRSTALUMNI LUNCHEON TODAYTo Arouse Interest for Games atMeeting of Alumni Club atCollege Inn.Director Amos Alonzo Stagg willspeak before the Chicago Alumni clubtoday at the first of their weeklyluncheons. He will talk in connectionwith the big games on the footballschedule, especially the Wisconsingame, for which the club is trying toarouse enthusiasm among the alumni.The luncheon will be held today at12-1 :30 at the New College inn, Clarkstr cct, between :\Iadison and Wash­ington, in the private dining room onthe third floor, which Arthur Beifeldex-'04, the manager of the restaurant'has fitted up as a Chicago room. Aligraduates or former students of Chi­cago have been asked to attend, anda large gathering is expected."All undergraduates who are down­town at noon are invited to theseluncheons," said George O. Fair­weather, secretary of the Alumni clubyesterday. "They will find it muc1�to their a�vantage to attend, for atthese meetmgs they will meet many�hica�o men who have become prom­ment m the commercial and educa­tional world. They will thus makeacquaintances which they will find \"3.1-uable to them in after life." "Are Your Collar Button­holes Tom Out 1"The SILVER Brand collars we car­ry are the best two for 25c collarsmade.Most makes of collars have button­holes that stretch and tear out, thusdestroying both style and fit.SIi.. VER Brand collars (and theyonly) have LINOCORD eyelet but­tonholes, that are easier to button andunbutton, won't stretch and don'ttear out.ACTUAL LAUNDRY TESTSprove they wear longer than othermakes. The "SLIDE-EASY" bandsallow for easy moving back and forthof scarf-no pulling. no straining.You ought to see the new "BEV­ERLY," a close fitting SILVERBrand collar that is sure to appealparticularly to college men.NOTE-We carry a large aSSOTt­ment of nobby scarf pins and linkcuff buttons that are different-and atreasonable prices.Neckware, Shirts, Etc-NICHOLS & NICHOLS,264 South Clark Street near JKboo Boulevard.Up til data FamisIIen of TIiIIp far .....FIVE LAWS ADMITTED TO BARState Board Passes Chicago J. D.'sNot Examined in June.!h� examination conducted by theHlinois state board of law examinersheld last week at Springfield resultedin five University of Chicago men be­ing admitted to the state bar. Thenumber is small because of the factthat most of the graduates were eitheradmitted last June or will practice inother states.The five successful candidates areas follows:Roy R. Hel.m, Metropolis; Louis W.Mack, Chicago; Claude O. NethertonC?icago; C. W. Paltzer, Chicago; A:Lincoln Weber, Chicago. All of thesemen hold degrees of J. D., except R.B. Helm. Modern BusinessJust compare our prices andour 2000 novelty patterns forFall and Winter with the bestyou have seen elsewhere. Thenyou'll realize the advantages theNICOLL SYSTEM offer you.We take all the responsibilitiesof _p!easing you.Will you come in today?Prices $25, $30, $35 and up­wards..NICDLL The 'TaIlor�.JEIQlZMS acnesc:.LARK. AND ADAMS S'ISHeadquarten forthe Nicon SystemClark & Adams Sts.Braaches in aD Large Cities.Mandolin Club Meets.The first meeting of the llandolinclub was held yesterday afternoon.The newly elected members werepresent and several pieces were goneover in detail. Among the severalcontestants for membership severalwere succesful. The next meetingwill be held in Haskell on October 25.Clothes make the Manand I make the Clothesthat make the Man. T.I. MIcIw.7 2708J. FIELD,Ladies' TailorCleaning, D�eing, Press­ing and RepairingGonts· Garments Cleaned and Re­paired.5508 Klmb .... Awe.I h.ve mH •• c .... ful .tud:r of the w.nt..nd wi ..... of m:r trod.. .0 I c.n •• "!':ofy• "'7 t •• t •• nd m •• t ••• .,. po.,uh· .. .,..�,..,·SEE MEBenedict Wald1445 East 55th StreetT .. I. Spec. R ....... d forLOEB-KAHNWEILER CO.Diamond Merchants & Jewelers11-10 East ,_ ... Str.tCHICAGOT.I.p"on. H.ITI.on 31153 I BROOKSClothe. for MeD aDd Y ounl Men138 E. Madison SLThe "KnowingWhere!"The young man of to-day won'ttolerate anything that jars hisnerves- par-ticularly atailor.He. doesn'tneed to!In the prog­ress of thingshe has dis­covered thatthere hasbeen as muchof it in youngmen's clothesas in machin­ery, electric­ity, etc, Hedisc 0 V ere dthe BrooksClothes longage. We dis­covered him.Why not you?FRIDAY AND SATURDAYwe set as a time for specialsales. This week we offer two .lots of one hundred each, oneof black and white yarn andpheasant .grays, overcoats, andthe other of fancy stripe andplain . blue heavy $1 5·serge suits cut inthe height of fash-ion for young men MDand men who want $20to stay young, atTwenty and Twenty-fiveDollars are what thesesuits were made to sell at.BROO.KSCLOTHES SHOP138 E. Madison StreetOpen Saturday Night.Be Strong and WeD�RED-BLOODED HEALTH,VIGOR, STRENGTH ANDSUCCESS-all yours for theexpenditure of ten minutes aday.SEND NO MONEY. Simplysend for free printed matter con­cerning my method, which hasrestored 30,000 run-down per­sons to VIGOROUS, RED­BLOODED HEALTH.My System tells women howto become more beautiful in faceand figure, more graceful in car­nage and repose. It aids mensuccessward by showing themhow to develop nerve force andbrain power. Tear out this ad.and write your name and ad­dress on the margin and mail tome. and I will be glad to sendyou a complete statement of mysystem .SYLVESTER J. SIMON,16 Quincy Street, Chicago""Make Your Garden Glad.'I PLANT NOW ---! TUUPS, HYACINTHS" DAF' ADILSCatalogue FreeUWintersons Seed Store,"45 Wabash Ave. Chicago. rTIanfa,0:lyit.tlec11.-titti,DneaIly.n-aser-D-)wicear-lenem.ndad.ad-toend imyago'OILS (STORE NEWS)-MOSSLER CO.SO JacksoD Blvd.The Black & WhiteYams, in Suits& OvercoatsMany today at $25.These early styles are theanticipated correct mode forfall.The patterns in suits aremostly neatgray effects,interwovenin diagon-, als, herring­bones, stri­pes and in­visibleplaids;most-ly the neat dotted effects.They're rich yet modestin design and character.If you'll stop to considerthe great convenience andeconomy of both time andmoney, you'll investigate.It's tailor service-ready-to-walk-out in.We are specializing todayon English Cheviot Suits- Black and White yarn-- Pin Dot, Cris Cross,D i am 0 n d weaves. All!-':�s ::i�e.d •. '". $25Others at $30, $35, $40.Overcoats $20 to $50.MOSSLER CO.Clothes for Men and Y ouna Men50 Jackson Blvd. MEN'S SHOpAI. SchlossmanCOMMONWEALTH CLUB MEETTHE DAILY M�ROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1909.Hold Firat Meetinc Tomorrow Noonin Commoaa' Dinina Room.The Commonwealth club will holdits first meeting of the year Wednes­day noon at 1 o'clock in the pr ivatedining room of the Commons. No­tices have been sent out to all themembers by Secretary Sidney Salkey,acting for President llacCracken. Atthis meeting, officers for this year willbe elected and the plans for the year'sactivities will be discussed. Organi­zation is to be the key-note of all theclub's work.The club has as its purpose the bet­terment of civic interests and poli­tics. During the last year it has hada number of men prominent in thepolitical and business world' as guestsand speakers at its various functions.The "ARA-NOTCH"makes the "BELMONT"anARRowCOLLAR. sit perfectly15c., 2 for 25c.Cluett, Peabody & Co .• MakersARROW CUFFS, 2S �nts a pairE. A. HOLMESThe Place toRestaurant,Bakery,Delicatessen,Cafeteria... __ 1317 East � strwt.0lIl __ 391-400 E. � Strwt..... "'* Pm 3711 The bowling alleys at the Reynoldsclub opened yesterday afternoon andwere immediately occupied by mem­bers of the club. The opening hasbeen delayed owing to the improve­ments that have just been completed.The alleys are now in better. con­dition than ever before. The surfaceshave been planed off and refinished,making them as good as new. A loop­the-loop receiver has been installed atthe terminals of each return. track.This device drops the balls withoutthe usual impact, which is injuriousto the balls. -Six new compositionballs have been ordered. 'New pins have been placed Oft allthe alleys, together with automaticpin spotters. These spotters make Itpossible to set the pins with greaterrapidity than by hand and with per­fect accuracy. An efficient corps ofpin men have been employed. About, $450 has been expended on these im­provements. Scotches Lead This FallThe smartest fabrics this IlCaSOD areScotch Twilla.Very English. Extremely durable.They take the tailorm, well and holdtheir shape.Stripes and invisible plaids are bothcorrect. Gray is the favorite colorand comes in many tones and shades.Come in and see these new Scotchfabrics.Select one and let us tailor for youa suit in the JERREMS WAY -at ourrisk.Come in today, if only to look overthe new styles.We make riding breeches.Special CoUeae Suib $35.00.List of Engagements Grows.Another addition has been made tothe list of former University studentswho have become Cupid's victims.The latest engagement is that of MissHortense L. Becker, who received herdegree in the spring of 1908, to �Ir.Charles Stumes of this city. The en­gagement was announced Saturday.DR. W. S. HALL IN ANNUALTALK TO MEN TOMORROWDean of Northwestern to Lecture inKent on "Young Man'sProblem."Dr. Winfield S. Hall, who has ad­dressed the men of the University an­nually for the past few years, willgive a lecture on "The Young Man'sProblem" in Kent theater tomorrowat 7 p. m. All who have heard himknow how clear and lucid he is as aspeaker, and how he understands menand the problems they have to solve.Dr. Hall is the dean of students ofNorthwestern University Medicalschool and is known widely as anauthor ity on the subject of which hespeaks, having made a special studyof it because of his keen interest inmen.He talks plainly, using terms thatall men understand in such a waythat every man who hears him knowsthat in the lecturer he has a friend.Dr. Hall believes thoroughly in thedictum, "Know thyself." I t is his ell­deavor to make known to colle 6e menthe physical and sexual facts of life.MANY LECTURES THIS WEEKThe Rev. Mabie, D. D., to Deliver Se­ries-Many Club Addresses.There will be an unusual number oflectures on the campus this week.Fhe Rev. Henry C. Mabie, D. D.• theUniversity preacher, will deliver a se­r'(;s ot three daily public lectures be­ginning today at 4 o'clock, on "ThePlace of Missions in the ModernChurch." The subject will he classi­fied under three heads, namely, I,"The llissionary Achievements of theLast Century;" 2, "The New \VorldConsciousness and the Kingdom;"and, 3, "Present Day Formsand Factors of the Missionary Enter­prise."Also today at 4:30 o'clock AssistantProfessor Cowles will deliver a lec­ture before the Botanical club on "AnEcological Excursion in \VesternOntario." Associate Professor Thom­as will deliver an address tomorrowbefore the Sociology club. his subjectbeing "The Folk Mind in History:'The Historical club will be addressedThursday by Professor Breasted on"Recent Research in Oriental His­tory."E. D. MELMANFashionable Ladies' Tailorland ImporterHigh Grade Workmanship.1012 E. 63rd Street, Near Ellis Ave.Tel. Midway 2539. CHICAGO.CROSS COUNTRY CLUBFINISHES WITH A SPRINTCandidates for the Team Take a BriskRun Over the ShorterCourse.The cross country squad went outin charge of Norman Barker in theabsence of Captain Comstock. Abunch of ten runners followed the oldVarsity star on a run around the shortcourse. Those out were: Bauman,Carpenter, Donovan, Jennings. Lech­ler, McNeish, O'Neil, Price, Reed andSeegars. The' pace was fairly fast.The run ended with a sprint from theSchool of Education to Lexington av­enue to develop the finishing powersof the men.It was learned from the Illinoisrooters Saturday that the Orange andBlue will be represented by a -teamin the intercollegiate race. This isthe first appearance of the lllini sincethe initial run in 1903, when theytook second to Chicago by the mar­gin of one point. The down-state in-­stitution has a number of good dis­tance runners, including Herrick,Rohrer, Redhead, Freeland andBarnes, last year's Freshman miler �The Illinois contingent expressed thebelief that they would be able to cleanup the race.BOWLING ALLEYS OPENAT THE REYNOLDS CLUBExtensive Improvements Have BeenMade-Club Expends About FourHundred Fifty Dollars.FRESHMEN TO ORGANIZE;MEET IN KENT TOD� YGreen Caps, Elections and OtherThings up to 1913 Youngstersat 10:30.With all possible obstacles removednow, the Freshman class will holdits first meeting this morning at 10:30in Kent theater. Several importantQuestions will come up for discussionat this initial assembly of the class.The meeting will probably be ad­dressed by Dean George E. Vincent,who will tell the yearlings severalthings that they should know.J. E. Dymond, president of lastyear's Freshmen, will preside. accord­ing to the usual custom. The wear­ing of green caps will be brought upand it is expected that the first-yearpeople will adopt them without pro­test, as has been done every year sincethe origin of the tradition at Chicago.Officers will be nominated, if notelected at this meeting.Subscribe NOW for the Maroon. The ShinerThe HatterThe Beat for AllOccasions63rd & Ellis Ave. TAILOR FOR EITHER STORE:YOUNG MEN 131 LaSalleStreet44 JacluoD Blwd.EatThe Parent - The Boy - The SchoolThe pamII mUll think. The boy anlltbe uudentoocl The puent mUll iuvell�ate.The boy mUlt be taught toltUdy. fheparent mUll decide. The bo) mUlt be de-\'eIoped. ••••••••••If you haTe tho .... t. if you haTe in\'eshgated,you will decide th.t the School where all arouaddeTeiopmeat is aaaiaec! �here high lC�lanhipis maintained, where hi8h ideals ate sustained, ISthe bat IChooi. MUlY ha'ft: found the bestKhooI iu theCoIIqe School of Kenilworth, III.00 you wish • Calalope? That will makethink. 00 you wish kIhmoaiaIa? Tnese:i make you iD� AD iDformlllioa tohelp 1'" deCide will be fanai.bed byAIIea H. Cupe.ler. H ...... ater, 80:11: 622 BOURNIQUE'S SCHOOLS FOR DANCING.SOCIAI.-ESTHETIC-GYMNASTIC.Claues for Men. Women �. ju\'eniIes.. Pri\'ate Ieaona by �ppoiatmeal: Mea', c:lua is ofparticular value to youag mea upmng to physacal betterment aad social accomplishment. Catalog ODrequca.. Phone Calumd 529. Addrea 31 S East 23rd Street. Kenwood Parish House. 46th aadWoodlawn Ave.. 1134 Dearbom Ave.. Near Elm Street.Special rates made to University FraternitieS for use of Ball Room aDd for tuitioD charges to cluaes.Quick Service ••••••LEXINGTON CAFEAnd Lunch RoomMeals 2.0c. and Up.1 .. 23 East Sixty-third Street, Chicago.Between Le:ll:ington and Greenwood Aves.StetsonHatsOperaHatsAll kindsof HatsatLowestPrices.ExclusiveHat StoreA FairDealWithEachHat -- E6T. 187a -ft GET THE. BE.ST"so E.MADISON ST.TRIBUNE BLDG. _WAN TED. --- Every Student to try aMONARCH VISIBLE TYPEWRITER10 Days Free TrialSpecial Rates to StudentsThe Monarch Typewriter Co.,25 E. Madison Street. Phone Central 6362We can supplyevery want in the drug Iine ,We either have it. will get it. or it isn't made.JOHN J. McCLUGAGE, Ph. G.PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST.Phone1140 East 63rd Street Hyde Park 135N. W. Cor. Lexington Ave.The BISHOP U. of C. TELESCOPEChicago'. Largest Lines$3 $4 $5 $6We wish to reiterate our claim, which thisfaIr, business has peeven, that you get espen 'hatters' aenic:e when trac:lins with the OLD RE­LIABLE HOUSE OF BISHOP.We specialize for immediate weat the famousimported Brush Hall, which ., lately havesprung into pomiDeDCe and demand. Ask to beahowa the.e ocuble prod1Idiona of Europe', 0-dasne lDden ia the .... en· ad. No. 2583. $3THE SEASON'S CRAZE& CO.A. BISHOPTHE OLD REUABLE HAT AND-·FUR HOUSEEc. 1860 156 STATE STREET. CHICAGO. c.t.. FreeTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 19.1909.AMUSEIIENTSIL L I H 0 ISROBERT HILLIARDINA Fool There Was.GLOBEThe �:,!,� RAYS. I NKING CASEYCOLONIALTheatre BeautifulFollies 'of 1909STUDEBAKERMONTGOMERY & STONE"The Old Town," by Ade and luders.GARRICKLOUISE GUNNINGMARCELLEpOWERSKYRLE BELLEWINThe Builder of BridgesGRAND OPERA HOUSEIF I HAD MONEYWITHMADGE CARR· COOKMCVICKER'STHE BARRIERwrrn'THEODORE ROBERTSCHICAGO OPERA HOUSEMADAMEAUDITORIUMCOHAN & HARRISMINSTRELSPresentingGEORGE EVANSTHE CLIMAXBERT A.WlLUAMS"MR. LODE OF KOAL"MAJESTIOContinuous VaudevilleAMERICAN mSIC HALI.CONTINUOUS VAUDEVILLEMISS CATHERINE ROSE LARIERTNdIIr " ....,_. rx,nnt" DI -lIlLU __ T .1634 T ....... ltI. A". •Subscribe NOW for the JlarOOD. Sabscnbe NOW for tile Maroou.L. H. B Bernstein and WatsonR. H. B � ..•..... .RobertsF. B .........••. Mountjoy and GummTouchdowns-s-Kelley, Worthwine,Roberts. Goal-Page. Goals fromfield-Page, Seiler. Brace Up!There is nothing like a well fitting suit to make aman feel right. You can't look your neighborstraight in the eye and tell him to go to Joliet withan eighteen-dollar-ready-made-baggy-kn ee suit on,but with a stylish Soper made suit and a place tostand, you can move the world!HARD GAME TO ILLINI;LOOK TO GOPHER GAME(Continued from Page 1.)though for the main part 'the forwardswere depended upon to break up theline plunging. The 11lini attack onthe line was centered through Butzer,the giant guard. who time after timeopened nice holes by smothering hislighter opponents Yet the big fel­low did not deliver the goods in thequantifies that had been expected, asis evidenced from the visitors' styleof play. For the most part of thecontest the visitors' line was able to"hang it on" the Varsity.Seiler Versus Page.The entire contest was a duel be­tween Pat Page and Seiler. Seiler'sboot was a bit the better of the two,but for this Page made up by morecrafty generalship. Yet it is to beremarked that Seiler is to be classedas mighty clever.Sheer ability ,to follow the ball allthe time. and to take advantage notonly of Illinois' errors of commissionbut the errors of omission did morethan anything else to give the Ma­roons the contest. As has been truein preceding contests, Ohicago scoredbecause the Maroons were on the ballall of the time. Some critics havebeen wont to call this ability "Chica­go tuck." but others believe that theysee in it the work of men who havemastered one of the basic principlesof the pig-skin game.On several occasions Seiter gavePage a dose of his own medicine byreturning punts, During the earlierpart of the contest Page held back onthis style of play, waiting until l11inivigilance against it had relaxed a bit.When he did spring the Quick-returnkick the Maroon forwards came with­in an ace of getting away witih it.Few New Plays Tried.Not many new foolers were sprung.Only on a few occasions did Page letloose and then it was when a desper­ate remedy seemed necessary to savethe situation. Neither team was ableto get away with the old shoe-string,however, the men on each side beingtoo vigilant. I11inois had the nerve,or bad' judgment, to try it with theend near the Chicago bleachers. Andof coarse the bleacherites took a handin the fray. though it was entirely un­necessary, for Page had seen the mansneaking out. Chicago's .forward passwork showed a great improvementover that of a week ago, although inhtis department the Illinois men didwell in the spoiling line. Time aftertime the visitors succeeded in shov­ing aside the man who was to get thepellet and rested content to let it hitthe ground for a penalty. Chicagoshowed a great deal of zeal towardsgetting the ball and as a result thevisitors were occasionally successfulwith the play.Looking Ahead.Undoubtedly there is a great dealof work ahead for Page's crew beforethe coming contests. :\Iinnesota willplay a slashing fighting game. Thatis proven by the fact that the Gopherswere repeatedly warned at OmahaSatarday against the use of rough tac­tics. Clean tackling and hard tacklingwill be an. absolute necessity, for ofall 'western teams this year it is saidthat the Minnesota backs are the mostdangerous in the open field.Line-Up Saturday.Chicago (14).R. E Sunderland and YoungR. T KelleyR. G Gerend. Ehrhorn, BadenochC BadenochL. G Rademacher and SmithL. T. . HoffmanL E. ..; KassulkerQ. R. Page (Capt.)R. H. R Crawley and SauerJ_ H. B RogersF. B. . WonhwineIllinois (8).L. E Baum (Capt.) and LyonsL. T '.' SpringerL. G .....••... Butzer and DallenbachC. •.........•........•.....•••• HallR. G TwistR. -r AndersonR� E Richards and McCleary MINNESOTA IS STRONG;SAYS W AWE STEFFEN(Continued from Page 1.) NOBLE DSOPf«·TAILDRwill be .a bit stronger than ours, whilethe backfields are about equal. Theirends as a pair witt probably outplayour ends, but I feel that in CaptainPage we have a man who will notonly outplay Captain McGovern, buthis work will go a long way towardsoutweighing the advantage that theywill have over us in the line and onthe ends.Then a good deal will depend uponthe condition of the men and the waythey will be coached to meet the op­posing offense. This is when I pinmy faith that Chicago will retain thewestern championship. For it wouldnot be the first time that the "OldMan" has fooled the wise ones, and Ilook anxiously forward to see ourfr,,.nds from the north outfought byour men and Dr. \Villiams again out­witted by llr. Stagg. 175 DUllOIII STI££T. Cor •• 01lI0£SUOIID FLOOIT£L£PIIOIIE CEITRAl. &444.Carson Pirie Scott & CoCollege Styles inYouths' Overcoats$15 to $35Men to Swim on Mondays.The facilities of the Bartlett nata­torium are to be stitt further increasedthis quarter, according to an an­nouncement made yesterday by Dr.Joseph E. Raycroft of the departmentof physical culture and athletics. Theannouncement, which has been postedthroughout the gymnasium, is to theeffect that in the future the natatori­um will be open for University menon Mondays from 5 to 6 p. m. Here­tofore the USf' of the natatorium onMondays has been restricted to Uni­versity women, and the men havebeen (Jarred altogether. We show very attractive styles that can be worn eitherwith the lay down collar and lapels or with the turnedup military collar-in fact these coats really embody two stYleS inone. Plain bla-k or neat dark mixtures, also light and dark mix­tures in grays. 52 inches long, made with broad shoulders, flapor vertical pockets, satin sleeve linings, worsted serge body linings.Sizes 33 to 38 chest. Youths- overcoats .... $15.00 to 35.00SECOND FLOOR. SOUIl-l ROOM.EXPENSES IN COLLEGE$250 cash or a year in College can be earned: by ODe ·youngman or young lady in each county in the United States. Plan easyand does not interfere with other occ:apation. No money required.For particulars addresa. M. H. PEMBERTON, CoI�a, Miuouri.CbASSIFIED .aD\lEBTISINGFRONT ROOM�Newly furnished,double or single bed; quiet, cheap,convenient. 817 E. 58th', 3d fiat,near Jackson Ave. Kee & Chapell Dairy Co.SUPPLYVOCAL INSTRUCTION-Specialattention to voice placing andbuilding. Near University. Favor­able rates to students. TelephoneMidway 1335 or address Daily Ma­roon. Tbe Freshest and Purstx MILKTOTHE Q�ADR�NGLE CLUB, THE FRATERNITIESAND MANY OF THE PROfESSORS. ./,HOMES.(· . /WANTED AT .OHCE--A good livestudent with selling ability to rep­resent a first class down-town tail­oring establishment on the campus.Very attractive offer made to rightman. llake application in writing.Address Dept. K, Daily Maroon.Investigate our method of handling milk. You will be pleased.Milk bottled in the Country. Phone Oakland 1880.4540-42 Champlain Avenue.��.»: /ENERGETIC sruDENTS canmake GOOD PROFITS in their,spare time as SALESMEN ofour various �_of p�apparatus; • � ater­eopticoD; • soIU lantern forcountry Kh.,., cIau-rooma,etc. Money can aJ.o be madeaiving atenopticoD eatel'tain­meats or opera __ the .... ternfor WUldS. chmdHs, 1ChooIs,etc. The best IeUOD for salesis NOW. Excellent tenDs. Ad­cIreu The H. F. PattoD Mfa.Co., 2853 Detroit AYeDae,CJe.eIaDd, Ohio. Robert Staedter Co.: 'I, !155 sTATE .. sT.Between Madison and Monroe. Pboae central S334Furs, Suits,Skirts, Coats, Dresses,fMininery.McADAMSStudent'sFlorist.53rd St. and KlmlNlrk AveA.The. E. c. MOORE·FloristTel. Hyde Park 38 1377 East 55th St.�Sabscribe NOW· for die ..... -Q. B Scdc:r _- - '-._