IIr•,t,. 1 .. .: ".. .! . e ail!' arann-'�UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, SATURDAY, JANUARY IS, 1910.:'- ... ''; .. "voi; ViII�No. 67.'.... y-' Price Five Cents.The. University of Chicago, startinglate' in a territory where universities, a success.or institutions bearing that name, All plans for the affair will be tak­were already excessively numerous in en up at this time, and the chairmenproportion to the population, acted and committee members will be calledin accordance with the maxim that. on for suggestions. The head of thethere is always room at the top. refreshment committee will make his'Graduate work seventeen years. ago report, and the other leaders will alsowas but feebly and surreptitiously tell what progress they have made.eultivated in the state universities Have Secured Depew's Orchestra.and scarcely at all in the denomina- . The music committee announcedtional colleges of the west. The Uni- yesterday that they have already en­versity of Chicago, by,laying special gaged Depew's orchestra for, the.stress upon research and advanced dance. They have contracted for. tenwork and giving opportunity for it pieces. This is a greater number thanin the summer quarter, became vir- has ever been used for this dance be­rtuaJly the graduate department of fore, and will be able to make musicthese institutions. It is not un com- loud enough to fill .the gymnasium.mon . to find coJleges iii which half Yesterday morning at 10:30 o'clockor two-thirds of the faculty have all the committee heads met in Cobbstudied at Chicago. Texas alone and ratified the idea of authorizationsends 150 students. Every year the of all expense b�' the chairman' of theTexas students charter a special train finance committee," or .by one of thefor�f . Chicago.. I general chairmenc : Under- this plansho�P1aln fqr the' 'be)1eDt, of no cash wilt bensed in' making pay­eastern readers that this is the same ments. All expendit��es' Will be cov­geographically as if 150 Italian stu- ered by checks' si�eci :by-the finance.dents came every year to Oxford. head. It is hoped; �.�ji,'t�is. _�ay toThat· would .be- alludedjo J?Ycbopd�_!t:j .� check .� . (:xp�d��;':��e..,man ..leader-writers as "an'. epoch-making will have an idea} 9f 'j_u,st,:�what has. movement in education":" ..So' is this.. ,be�n paid out .. �, . ; .�" :'," ::j. .t;.' It .must also be remember�d ,th�t the .Reports to Be ilade,'IIOn�y.University of Chicago' uses the post Most of the tini�:"oL�Jje .meetingoffiee and the 'printing press and was taken in discussion or' this ques­keeps a core of educational mission- tion, so that the heads of the com­aries in the field. Last year (1908-9) mittee did not have time to make re­the extension lectures gave' courses I .ports. These will be heard at theof six' lectures each in 125 different general meeting Monday afternoon.cities and towns in fourteen different 'It was decided to get various mem­states. And. this was a poor year· -bers of the University to make post­compared with the preceding. The ers advertising the dance. These willextension work was started by Pro- be put up around the campus, where_ fessor Richard Green Moulton, who i they wilt be. protected, and are to bewas brought from Oxford for that auctioned off at the dance. Roypurpose, and his courses in English Baldridge .. has already consented toand Biblical literature are still the, make a drawing, and other campusmost popular. The reason for it is artists will be asked to contributethat he recites poetry because he their efforts.loves it, not because he wants to tearit to pieces. The number of stu- DAVIS TO ADDRESS PEN CLUBdents taking regular work by corre-spondence was 3,200, about double To Take Picture at Esmoer's Today-what it was five years before. The Dinners Planned.most popular courses here are Eng­lish, mathematics, history and Latin.In all these ways and many otherstoo indirect to trace the Universityof Chicago has perceptibly raised theeducational standards of the west andsouth. The effect is most noticeablein the south because until the Univer­sity of Chicago was opened southernteachers had not been going to thegreat universities in large numbers,and southern colleges and secondaryschools, through an excessive localpride, had not drawn upon the east­ern universities for their instructorsas freely as had the northern institu­tions. I think it is safe to say thatno other university has exerted suchan unlifting influence over so large apart of the country in so short atime.Its success appears the more re­markable when we realize that it wassurrounded by the foremost state un i­versities� which had in their favorstate pride, free tuition and close con­nection with the public school sys­tem. They were enterprising andaccommodating, ready to provide thekinds of training most in demand.The University of Chicago achievedits success, first, by manifesting a(Continued on Pasre 3.)�r�J'_STALLMENT OF" ARn�LE BY SLOSSON\ --- . �: �IAIII-A� Article _ UlliYenity ofCIacap ia "depeMeat ... �aziDe is Co.pIeteLTALIS OF GRADUATE SCHOOLSSays School of Education Is Nowthe Most Progressive Departmentof University.By DR. E. E. SLOSSON. FORPLAN WOKLeaders of Settlemen� Dance �jectto Outline Ideas' at lleetiDg at Mrs.Vmcent's Residence Monday After­noon at 4:30 O'Clock.Notices were sent. out by m�ll yes­terday to all the members of 'the Set­tlement dance committees informingthem of the meeting to be held Mon­day afernoon at the residence of .Mrs.George Vincent, 5737 Lexington ave­nue. This is to be the first generalmeeting of al1 the University mem­bers appointed to help in making thedance, which is to be held February 1,The members of the Pen club willhave their pictures taken for the Capand Gown at 9:45 this morning at Es­moer's studio, 1412· East 55th street.All members of the club. includingthose who have recently been elect­ed, will be in the picture.Two banquets of the club for thequarter have been' arranged to beheld in the prh'ate dining room of theCommons. At the banquet at 6:30next 'Vednesday. 'Vi11 J. Davis, man­ager of the Illinois theater, will bethe guest of honor. All members willbe out to receive Mr. Davis, as he isa man who can speak from long ex­perience as a theatrical manager.No definite arrangements have beenmade for the other banquet, whichwill follo'" on February 2. RobertsB. Owen, newly elected president ofthe organization. intends to havesomebody talle to the members onsome subject connected with theno�·c1. A ladies' night. for which nodate has been set. will be held thisquarter, at which se"eral authors ofnote will speak before the club.The musical c1ubsJlf Michigan havereturned from a tour covering 3,000miles. Definite steps were taken yesterdayat an interclass committee meetingtoward inaugurating at once in theUniversity a system for interclassathletics which has been suggested 'bythe athletic department. Dr. Ray­croft presided at the meeting, atwhich were also representatives fromthe four classes, from the Law, Med­ical and Divinity schools. I twasunanimously voted to begin the im­mediate organization of class basket­ball teams, to be followed later bythe organization of class teams infour other important branches of ath­letics.The new system, as adopted, is totake the place of that which previous­ly existed, when the student body was-divided into colleges, but it is pro­posed to make it a much more elab­orate and attractive one. Its purposewill be to create a general interest in KAPPA SIGMA BEATS A. T. O.athletics among students, and moreparticularly to develop men who have Gets Two Games Out of Three Ronednot shown striking qualities as ath- at Reynolds Club.letes, and to seek to find for themcertain events in which their ability Al h T 0 d f d b. p a au mega was e eate y the two. forwa rd positions will tiewill excel. K 5" . , b Ii• • appa rgma In yesteraay s ow IDg. filled by Edwards, Clar�, Sauer or..Ad4...:�,ud-S.mmlDl. c;pu� -matdl� 'The-·games which' sboutd· heNe � ���lfyj�aros: b3s;'the'·iarit�'·oit.;·-:-Contests among college teams were been rolled between Phi Kappa Sig- .f th la 't f th ',. l' . .one 0 epees on accoun 0 ' eonly held In three events, basketbal , ma and Sigma N u were postponed d h h b tti. f' . . d goo game e as een pu lUg upwrestling and encmg, Track an and will be played off the first part of dnri th 1 t k f 'ctiswimming are now to be added to next wee� Hun!,,� eb as w:he. �, phr:a ficet·. . . OlVever ecause '.. IS IS t e rsthese. Teams will be organized from Yestetday's scores were: f'th '11all classes and from the graduate ,gal'kmle °b . e yeatr, evetry man" WI,b 1 I . f h . Kappa Sigma.. ley e given a ryou.sc. 00 s, a arge. senes '0 c ampion- 1 2 3 The Purple . lineup will probably beship contests Will be arranged, and lloore 116 140 150 the same' as in the Wisconsin gamat the conclusion of these contests 99 184 ..,' e,b h . divid I d . '11 Hubble .........•. 160 , which ,was as follows: Boswell, r. f.;ot In IVl ua an team prizes WI Lightner .... : ..•.. 135 153 141 L" k' 'I f B'b Thb bl b d d em e,·. .; e e, c.;. ompson, r.pro aye awar e . Bowlby 147 ,120 136 a d He' 1 g Le k dThe urgency of the immediate or- Burke 139 104 122 g.; n rID,.. mean... f b k b 11 t . d . . . . . . . . . . . . Thompson are the men who showedgamzatron 0 as et a eams IS ue the best form against the Badgers.to the fact that games have already (1)7. 616 733 d '11 b bl t th diff an WI pro a y pu up a s rongcommenced among tel erent Alpha Tau Omil"Cr.:l· f hei -. h Th. . -.- game or t err team tomg t. omp-classes, and the sooner organization 1 2 3 h 1 N h' son was t e on y ort western mancan be perfected, the greater the num- Harries ••.••.••... 135 136 92 h bl . theib f hi h bId t at was a e to score In err gameer 0 games w IC can e p aye Jack .......••••... 109 151 116 last week. 'before the quarter closes. Schneider' ••..•.. . .147 . 148 134 'S T h· f ..._ Walls. A ki . 107 131 105 Hoffman Fears Bard Game.uggest rop y or "3&&'& t IDS ••••••••••••That prizes of some nature will be Sayles· ••.....•...• 168 174 108 "We are going to have a hardawarded in connection with class game tomorrow," said Captain Hoff-competitions was made certain by Dr. 557 740 555 man last night •. "Northwestern is go-Raycroft. The individual prizes will . The games which are on the sche- ing to put up a much harder gameprobably be ribbons, as heretofore, dule for the first part of next week titan they did against Wisconsin.but for the teams it is hoped that are: They had practiced together onlysome kind of a banner or shield suit- Monday-Delta Upsilon vs. Alpha twice before that game, and playedable for permanent preservation will Delta Phi; Sigma Chi vs. Phi Kappa against a team that had' had a monthbe used. Dr. Raycroft thinks that Psi. of steady team work. Northwesternperhaps one large shield, which could Tuesday-Delta Tau Delta vs. Phi usually plays a strong defensive gamebe hung on the walls of the gymnasi- Gamma Delta; Delta Kappa Epsilon when they come down here, and weum, showing the year, the names of ,·S. Phi Upsilon. expect to have a lot of trouble inthe five different events and the scoring. We will also have to watchnames of winning classes, would be MATHEMATICAL MEN TO DINE Lemke, who played such a fine gameappropriate. He said that the depart- last year. The team has not yet beenment would continue to issue special Will Give Dinner at Quadrangle Club picked, but it is very likely that Ed-prizes to individual students. February 8. wards will be given a place at for-Eligibility rules for students who ward tomorrow."wish to participate in class contests An-angements were made for a so- The ticket sale for the game willare yet to be worked out. No man cial dinner of the graduate students start at 9:30 o'clock this morning inwho has won his "C" or his class nu- who are taking courses in the mathe- Bartlett and will continue during themerals, or no members of the Uni- matical department by the members day.versity squads will be permitted to of the Mathematical club at theirtake part in class contests. It is not meeting in Ryerson yesterday. Thislikely that eligibility will be deter- dinner will be given in the Qudran­mined by a student's gradings, but gle club Tuesday, February 8. Allrather by his presence in college. Ap- those who attend must wear infor­pearance in class contests will not be mal dress and meet at the Reynoldsregarded as a public one. It is club at 6:30.thought that any student in the Uni- Preceding the arrangement of theversity, other than those named, dinner, Professor Young, Professorshould be permitted to take part. Slaught and Dr. Lunn made briefThis includes graduates and under- talks on current mathematical ques-graduates. 'tions.To Encourqe AD lien.The questions as put by Dr. Ray-(Continued on Page 2.) EXPEer EXCITING GAMEWITH PURPLE TONIGHTPIuaiac to Acc_-.l.te a LaraeCrowd ia Bartlett for tIae FmtV mity Bukethall Caae.UNEUP HAS NOT BEEN DECIDEDNorthwestern to Use Same Team asLast Saturday-Varsity HoldsLight Practice.Only a light practice was held bythe basketball squad last night in fin­al preparation for the first game ofthe season with Northwestern tonightin Bartlett at 8 o'clock. The gamewill undoubtedly be an exciting onefor the spectators, according to Cap­tain Hoffman. A large crowd is ex­pected and preparations have beenmade to accommodate four or fivehundred rooters.In spite of the fact that Northwest­ern was badly beaten by Wisconsinat Evanston last Saturday, they shouldput up a good fight against the Var­sity. Director Gillesby has severalexperienced men in his squad andseveral of the Freshman team of lastyear should make classy additions tothe five.Varsity Lineup Not Fixed.Neither Dr. Raycroft' or CoachSchommer would announce a definitelineup for the game. Captain Hoff­man and Page will undoubtedly bein their regular positions at guard,Hubble or Sauer will play center, andCharges of professionalism pre­ferred against Andrew Smith, centeron Michigan's 1909 football team, wiltbe investigated by the Michigan ath­letic board of control. Smith aver!;his innocence of the charges and sayshe has never wrestled for money.Ohio Wesleyan and Syracuse havesigned contracts for a joint debatethis year and next. This year's de­. bate will occur at the Ohio school onthe question of the federal incometax .APPROVEORGAN�TIONFOR CLASS ATHLETICS SUBIlERGED TENTH OUT IN FUllReynolds Club Hard Times PartyDraws Social Outcasts of Campus­Kasson Dodson and Lina GouldGet Prizes for Costumes.£ucatiye C .. -jHeet ,.... aD UaiYer­aity Departaeats aM DmsioaMeet Wida Dr. Ia,croft. The Municipal Lodging House was.moved to the Reynolds club last nightwhen social outcasts of all descriptionturned out to make merry at theReynolds club "hard times" party.Never before has the Mitchell Towergroup of buildings held so many"rough-necks" as it did last night. Ifa police officer had been present theentire crowd would have been arrest­ed for vagrancy. Organ ,grinders,peddlers, street sweepers, "second­story" men, maids, cooks, nurses andplain tramps were in abundance.Prizes for the most poverty-strick­en costume were given to Kasson M.Dodson and Una Gould, who werein Italian garb. Second prizes wentto Esmond Long and Elizabeth Hurd.Henry I. Hutton took the individualprize.An uproarious dance was enjoyedin the latter part of the evening. Solarge was the crowd that both floorshad to be used. Refreshments inkeeping with the nature of the even­ing were served and the club waspicturesquely and appropriately deco­rated.WILL BEGIN BASDTBALL SOONGames Win Take Place of Old Inter­College Contest-Prizes forMen and Teams.Syracuse University will celebrateits fortieth anniversary in June.I,"II II,.j.\!.I:�1I..,'....'"�q! THE DAILY MAROON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 15. 1910.DAILY MAROONTHEFormerlyThe UDivers� 01 Chicqo WedtlyFoUDdedThe Weekly October I. 1892fbe Daily October I. 1902SUBSCRIPTION RATESrooD.STAFFA. LEO FRIDSTEIN. Managing EditorN. A. PFEFFER .. .. News EditorA G. WHITFIELD. . . . Athletic EditorASSOCIATE EDITORSH�ve A. Long. H. F elseothal.R J. Daly. H. C. Burke.W. J. Foute.Never before has the University,its, regulations, customs and institu­tions been subjected toThat Slosson so searching an inquiryArticle. as was given them bythe article of Dr. E E. son.But all these things are left unme�-tioned by Dr. Slosson in not on!y hisartivle on the University of Clll�ago,but in all the others he has written.For these reasons it can truthfully besaid that while Dr. Siosson hasbrought up some interest�ng fea.tureabout each university, hIS re.vlewshave on the whole been producttve ofnothing.. \_ Slosson in the Independent magazine,which is completed in today's is sueof The Daily Maroon. That the arti­cle is' eminently worth. while andis full of comments which it is everystudent's duty to read, must be grant­ed. That he makes some suggestionswhich are pertinent and some criti­cisms that �re reasonable and se!1si­ble is no doubt true. His vie�s ofthe summer quarter situation, hIS at­titude toward the quarter system 'lndmany other institutions that are or:g-inal with Chicago are the most saneKalailu Picture at Esmoer's today:tbat have evtr appeared in any peri-at 9.·�iodica1. On the'other hand, ho.wever, Ticket Sale on all day for basket-'there is much that will meet With thed b d wh!chdisapproval of the stu e�l 0 y,is after all the final arbIter ..One. specific charge which manyh t( makeund\:rgraduates will av: •. t Dr Slosson's article Oli theaga�ns. '. .' an adequateUmverslty IS that It IStreatment of every subject e�ceptingd their inter-'the undergraduates anIe stillests-and there are some pe?p that. h to beheveold-fashioned enoug dthe undergraduates are even. to ay ant Importantimportant, if not the mos. .f educational lI1stltution,part 0 an •t ry not-many educators to the con rawithstanding. One can scane ��Slosson's article with great carw the theater.find very little mention of hod Northwestern-Chicago Basketballundergraduate� live and wh�t they o.hI t . and in game today at 8 p. m .. in Bart-He has two lines on at e I��e other lett. Ticket� arc on sale from 10:30four or five more sums up.to _? 1·11 tIle g.vmnasium.. .. He goes With greatstudent acttvlt�.'ccare into a discussion of wl�) therec week­i� no literary monthl).· or C�)J111. ]) lores theIY here, but he bhsSlU. y Igi.fact that :-;tudents of htcrar) .inclina- Tiger's Head will meet Tuesday atlions can \'cnt their enthU�lasm inCd Gown, the 10:30.writing for the ap anUndergraduate Council will meetT '1"'cr", l·t\.· nlagazine, The Daily :\Ia·., \'-' • J II :\Ionday at 10:30 in Cobh ,1 ••roon or by joining tht· Pen cluh. eaho is ohli\'iou:, to the iact that there Mandolin Club Rehearsal and try-i� here the Reynolds cluh, which is out .. will be hd(1 :\[ onday at 5 in Has-regarded by authorities of ?ther col- kell.leges as the greatc�t lIl�titution Settlement Dance Committees witlhere. He thinks an organization like l11eet :\Ionday at �:30 at :\lrs. Vin-the Blackfriars is not worth a line, cent'�.and that the Univcrsity Settlement, Pow Wow wi]) meet at Esmoer'�where scores of students deprive ior their picture next Saturday atthemselves oi pleasure to teach chil- 9:30 a. m.dren of the poor and ignorant how toPublic Lecture by �Ir. A1ired East:writ eand speak English. 1 S' 1President of the Roya. oClety 0\Vhen a powerful and we]) read '[ dBritish Artists, wi]) he gl\'en .\ on aymagazine like the Independent undcr-at 4 in Mandel hall.takes to present a series of articlesSeniors may have their photos tak-DAILY BULLETIN, ",; .\� ball game.Pen Club will meet at 9:45 today atEsmoers. New members come.Moot Court Trial of the Hall Lawclub will be held today at 2 p. m.(Court.)Girls' Glee Club will meet t?day �t12 for their picture at \Vaters studiOon 63rd street.Girls' Glee Club picture will be t�k­en at \Vaters' studio. 63rd and Klm­bark, today at 12 m.Dramatic .Club will meet today atII for their pictures at . Esmoer·s.Cast rehearsal today at 9 in KentANNOUNCEMENTS en free for the Cap and Gown at Mar­tyn's, 5705 Cottage Grove avenue,dailv between 10 and 2:30. All pho­tos und honor lists must be in by Jan­uary 20 to insure publication. Fac­ulty exchange 280.(Continued from Page 1.)ver sity organize teams at once torepresent them in basketball competi­tions?" and "Shall all of the classesorganize teams to represent them lat­er in wrest ling. fencing. swimmingand track?" Both questions werecarried without any objections.Speaking of the new plans after­wards, Dr. Raycroft said: "What wewant right IIO\\' i� to get the men outfor the basketball teams and to getthem organized. Later on we shallcomplete organization of the otherteams. I have purposely had P. C. 6changed from 12 o'clock to 3 o'clockin order that all students may have achance to play. I f this hour is notgenerally satisfactory I shall be gladto have it changed again. It is quitelikely that we shall also' hold cham­pionship meets in fencing and wrest­ling for the individual members ofdifferent classes when the season forthose events has terminated, and thoseteams which do well in track may getan opportunity to perform on Jun­ior day:'Laws.country. it is inconceivable that itshould do so merely for its own pleas-ure or for the purpose of providing aThe Official Student Publication of f tion forgenteel means 0 remunera 1the University of Chicago. Dr. Slosson, The only imaginablereason for running the series is to in­form thinking parents as to what dif-1· . ti vould APPROVE ORGANIZATIONIercnt cducationa mstrtu Ions wdo to make their sons better citizens. FOR CLASS ATHLETICSI n this connection the average par­ent docs not care to know the historyf.oleled .. Second-clau Mail at the Chicago of the movement for summer schools croft to' executive committees were:POIto&ic:e. Chir ....... Illinois. March 18. 1903. 1 ld the ar U .--- I'll the educationa wor • nor -"Shall all of the classes in the m-uader Ad of March 3. 1873.b igumcnt s pro and con on the su jectM _.1. of whether grades should be markedPublisbed daily. except Suodaya. onoa�a .aod bolidaya during three-quarters of the UD1- in letters, percentage or honor points.vemty year. It is immaterial to him whether stu­dents arc rcgistercd in classes or clas­sitied in colleges. He is not inter-By carrier. $2.50 p�_year. $1.00 per quartere stcd in knowing how President l Iar-Citv mail $1.25 ._. quarter. $3.00 per yur in II I' ideas and what=r r-' per came to get a liS I :.advance.Ieffect was produced by them on t ieNews coDtributions may be leh at Ellis Hall or educational world.Facuky Exchange. addressed to The Daily Ma- "What will that college do to makemy son a good citizen ?" is the ques­tion that is uppermost in a man'smind when he reads an article on aUniver sity. One could read Dr.SI05:,on's article through very, verycarefully and still be perfectly igno-CHAS. L SUlliVAN, JR. Busineu Managerrant on this point. It is agreed byc\·crybody today that citizenship andmanhood do not depend on whetherclasses recite once or twice a day orwhether they are conducted by text­books or lectures. If the UniversityREPORTERS has an organization like the ReynoldsMiss Lina M. Gould. H. R Baukhage. club, which will provide clean amuse-J. M. Houghland D. L Breed. ment in a gentlemanly atmospherePaul D. Kanten. J. H. Gist.and will enable the young man toC. W. Houghland. Elroy M. Phillips.meet his fellow students and allowH. G WelliogtoD.hhim to make helpful friends, then t atorganization is what the parent is .in- LAWYERS IN MOOT COURTPreas of McElroy & Chamberlain. 6236 Cot-tercsted in. If there is something TRIAL AT 2 O'CLOCK TODAYtageGrovc. Telepheee Wentworth 7761. like the University Settlement to helpyoung men and women to. realize that J. P. Hall Law Club to Conduct TrialoJd Under Strict Practicetheir debt in life is to society an notto themselves, then that organizationis contributing to the real develop­rncnt of the student. The otherthings are unimportant in cornpari- The moot court trial to be given bytbe James Parker Hall Law club willbe decided by Judge Professor Ros­coe Pound and student jury this aft­ernoon at 2 o'clock in the club roomin the Law building. The membersof the club have hee n working on thecase for some time, ever smce the be­ginning of last fall, in fact, and prom­ise an ideal exhibition of court pro­cedure.Dean Hall of the Law school hasworked up the case, and it is one inwhich he participated as attorney,while practicing. Professor RoscoePound, who held the office ofjudge of the supreme court of thestate of Nebraska, will conduct thetrial after the manner of a commonlaw court, following somewhat close­ly the customs of the courts of thestate of lllinois. This is the first ofa series of annual trials which willbe held each year in th ... future.The jury commissioners have drawnthe jury from a wheel composed of24 members of the first year hwclass, "subject to be drawn for juryservice. I f the first wheel is ex­hausted another will be drawn fromThe following men wiH take part inthe trial:Officers of the Court-Professl.)rPound, Frank Taylor and Roy Beel-ereLitigants-Plaintiff, Tom Moore,assistant cashier of the Traders' N a­tional bank. Deiendant, Dean Ben­ton, alleged obligee on t:'e bond.Witnesses-\V. A. Trimpe, hand­writing expert; .-\. C. �lcGi11, notarypublic; John Anderson, real estatedealer; and Irwin Church, cashier ofthc :\Ierchants' Xational bank.Atorneys for the PlaintifI-J. C.Pryor, Earne:,t Linderholm and G:\1. \ \" a ter:'.Attorneys for the Defendant-V. D.Du:,cnhury. ] .. \. Knowlton and \V.D. Frcyburger.Jury Commissioners-Frank Bev­an .. -\ndrew Collins and Iloral'c \';.:\lcDa\"id.QUAYLE CO. 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SIMONSFIRST EDITION, 1909This is a bookthat every studentshould have, espe­cially those whoare students of lawor accountancy.There are morethan 500 pages de­voted to. such aplain explanationof the law thatanyone can under-stand law termsand questions in aglance.This book used alone or in connec­tion with other books necessary, inyour studie:l will make your prepara­tory training in law and business ex­ceptionally easy •COMMERCIAL LAW SIMPLI­FIED must be examined, and we arewiDing to let you exame it in yourown borne for TEN DAYS FREE,and if not entirely satisfactory, thesame may be returned.Write for our FREE EXAMINA­TION OFFER and know what Com­mercial Law Simplified means to you.The Business Man's Publishing Co.,LimitedRoom 441, Fort and Wayne Sts.,Detroit, Michigan MAGNESIACOVERINGSTHE divideoc:l-eamiog capacity o( a Iteam plantis greatly inaeued through the use of Cuey sCoveriop OD Iteam pipes. boilers and COGDCC­boas.Carey s Coverings will keep the heat inthe pipes-DoDe is lost through radiatioD andcondensation. They greatly reduce the amOUDtof coal Deceaary to run the plant. because es-c:cssive firing is obviated. 'Carey a Coverings are DOt harmed by the es­� or CODtractiOD of pipes or by vibadioo.They last longer than other, coverings. �eywill ioaeue the capacity of the plant by deliv­aiDs dry steam to the eugioa. E.odoUed aodutell by the United States Navy. War ad s..aeDeputmerdl.. Rccoauoeaded and specified byardUteda aod eagiocers. Recommended b,.tecIuaic:al iomtutioas.Write tor catalogue and further putiaIIaa.The Philip Carey. CompanyGeueral 0fIic:cs: Sta. R. Cincinn.tj 0 .. U. S. A8� FIIdOries'10 d luae cities through- LodJ·nd Ohiooat the UD4ed States Hamiltaa.. Oat.Cauda ad McUo. PIymouIh Meetias.P.Ste Alban's SchoolFor Boyse. Knoxvi1Je,I_-I Dlinois.P� for 8--' or CoUeae- Diplomaof Gmdaatioa Kapted �1 � andUaiftaibes. AtbIdics, raiDiDg. lodi-'fidaal AItemboa.W'mIeI Tam bqiDa JaDaUJ 6th. 1910. Seodfor CataIope.IllinoisTrost&SaliIulsBankCAPITAL AND SURPLUS$1 }.<400,000.00 Lucien F. SeD nett, Head Muter.Heat RegulationThe Johnson Pneumatic SystemThe Recognized StandardLa Salle Street and J.chon Boulevard .• ChicagoThis Bank LoansExclusively on Collateral andis Conservative in ita Methocla. Installed in the UniYersity of Cldcaao BaildinpComplete SJstems for II Methods of HutlnlINTEREST ---Allowed on Current Accounts.Certi6cate of Deposit, Savings Deposita. Hot Water Tank RegulatorsReduci .. V.I� for Air. Water. Stf'amControl of HumidityBond. F nreign Exchange and Trust DepartmentsCORRESPONDENCE INVITED.WNOIS TRUST SAfETY DEPOSIT co.SAfE DEPOSIT VAULtS JOHNSON SERVICE CO.H. W. nus, Mil'.Chicalo Office, 93 lake Street.Advenise in the Maroon.ant::ysec:-CIt-mbey:liv­aaditaael byb,..nyi.ABoP·01.ioma.aadIacli-[)DIi1dinl1!'amco.treet.1 THE DAILY MAROON. SATURDAY. JANUARY 15. 19lO.(STORE NEWS)-MOSSLER CO.SO Jac:bon Blvd. (Continued from Page 1.) the influence of the school will begreatly extended, provided, of course,that men of originality and power arethere to attract and hold the students.The graduate school is divided intotwo parts, the School of Arts and Lit­erature and the Ogden School ofScience, and the number of doctor­ates conferred by the two schools haskept near ly equal. The mere enumer­ation of all the different lines of in­vcstigation now being carried onwould be impossible here, but it maynot be improper to mention a fewmerely as samples. Professor Breast­ed is excavating the ruins on the Xu­bian Nile. Professor Starr collectstongues and beads from the Philip­pines and the Kongo. ProfessorChamberlain is dissatisfied with theway Laplace constructed the solarsystem, so he has taken it apart andis putting it together in accordancewith modern Arner ican methods ofbuilding. using planetesimals mixedin the cold, a kind of concrete con­struction. I take it. In the nine yearssince the Nobel Foundation was cs­tablishcd thirty-three persons havereceived its prizes for scientific dis­cover)", hut only one of them lives inAmerica. This is Professor Michel­SOil. whose echelon spectroscope andinterferometer have carried the anal­ysis and measurement of light wavesto an unprecedented degree of refine­ment. Astronomy early received amagnificent equipment through thegenerosity of a Chicago street-carman under the influence of Dr. Har­per's hypnotic suggestion. TheYerkes observatory is located on ahigh hill overlooking Lake Geneva.76 miles from Chicago, and containsa refracting telescope of 4O-inch aper­ture, which is four inches larger thanthe Lick telescope belonging to theUniversity of California. The Kentchemical laboratory has from thestart been one of the most productivedepartments of the University, bothin papers and men. Professor Nefhas got into the habit of astonishingthe world once a year by promulgat­ing an original theory of organicsynthesis and then astonishing it stillmore by backing up the theory witha hundred pages of solid experimen­tal work in Liebig's Annalen. Pro­fessor Stieglitz is one of those veryrare individuals who have an equalmastery of the laboratory and of thelecture-room, and who are able to di­rect research and elementary studentsat the same time without neglectingeither. When the Hull Biological lab­oraories were going up people from"universities" where one man taughtall the natural sciences without over­working himself, used to wonder whatthese four great buildings marked Zo­ology, Anatomy, Physiology and Bot­any, were needed for. Now theyknow if they are still about the cam­pus, for all the buildings are crowded,especially since the affiliation of Rush�Iedical college. The fundamentalbranches of the first two years of themedical course are given in the Hulland Kent laboratories :tnd the clinicalwork of the later years at the down­town buildings of Rush.On account of the presence of the,t.heological .school such studies ascomparative religion, Hebrew, Ara­bic, Asyriology and Biblical Greekhave been prominent and productivefrom the beginning. The Germanicdepartment has always been strong­er than the Romance, as is proper ina state having such a large Teutonicclement. The classjcs lo .. t three goodmen last year, but they cannot he saidto be weak when Professor Shorey isat the head of the Greek and Pro­fessor Hale at the head of the Latindepartment. The University of Chi­cago was one of the first to give thesocial and political sciences the at­t e ntion which they deserve in mod­ern education. and these courses havebeen among the most popular bothwith resident and non-resident stu­dents. It is sufficient to mention thenames of Professors Laughlin. Jud­son. Small. Vincent and Thomas toindicate the character of the 'Work.Reference should be made here to theefforts now being made to give theundergraduates practical training inthe new or rising vocations of politi­cal and business administration,Professor Hitt has started an agri- cultural guild, to combine theory andpractice and turn out men capable ofmanaging large farms and makingthem pay, and he is engaged in pro­moting a plan of co-operative agricul­tural production adapted to a partic­ular community. There is a Collegeof Commerce and Administration forthose who intend to engage in bank­ing, jouralism, transportation or tradeand industry, or who seek a consularor commercial career in South Amer­ica or the far east. There is a col­lege of Religious and Social Sciencefor those who propose to devotethemselves to what might be calledthe business of applied Christianity,such as the management of religious,charitable and philanthropic organiza­tions. It is another instance of thepaucity of the academic vocabulary,to which I have often referred. thatno better title has been found forthese future bankers and Y :\1. C. A.secretaries than bachelors of philos­ophy, the same degree given with nomore appropriateness to the studentsof literature.The University of Chicago has fewLatin-Amcr icau students comparedwith Pennsylvania or Cornell, but hasmany Japanese and Chinese. Thenumber of the last is likely to begreatly increased in the future be­cause of the interest which the Uni­versitv is taken in Chinese education.Profe�sor Chamberlain and Profess­or Burton-apparently representingscience and religion-were sent lastyear to China with a competent corpsof assistants to investigate the possi­bility of esablishing in one of theprovinces a gr-eat university, or, rath­er, an educational system leading upto and including a university. Theirplans have not yet been made publicand it would be unprofitable to dis­cuss the newspaper rumors of themany millions which arc to be givenfor its endowment. since newspaperinformation about the University ofChicago is notoriously unreliable.Here. however, is an opening for uni­versity extension on an unprecedent­ed scale, and it should, therefore, bean especially enticing field to a uni­versity like Chicago.The Universitv would be more at­tractive to foreign students if it hadschools of applied science, and this,indeed, is its most conspicuous de­ficiency. Of course the state univer­sities close by give excellent oppor­tunities for such training, but tech­nology is needed by the University it­self, if for nothing more than to cor­rect the tendency toward abstractionand aloofness which is inevitablewhere studies are pursued without re­gard to their application to the prob­lems of actual life. At one time itwas expected that the Armour Insti­tute of Technology would be affiliat­ed with the University of Chicago,but the negotiations were broken offat the last moment. The objectionsraised were, I believe, similar to thosewhich prevented the annexation ofthe Massachusetts Institute of Tech­nology to Harvard.I have left the School of Educationtill the last for two reasons; first, be­cause I felt that it was one of themost important branches of the Uni­versity, and, second. I did not knowexactly what to say about it. I couldwrite for hours about the influenceof that band of devoted discipleswhom Professor Dewey collectedabout him and then dispersedthroughout the west. carrying a neweducational gospel. I could say asmuch about those who acquired asimilar inspiration. though a differ­ent philosophy. hy sitting at the feetof Colonel Parker. But Colonel Par­kcr is dead and Professor Dewey hasgone to Columbia, and it would rc- quire a Mendel to determine whatcharacteristics are dominant and whatrecessive il; the institution which re­sulted from the union of these twoschools. Besides, it is now at a crit­ical point in its career, and whatwould be true of it today would nothold good tomorrow. The School ofEducation might, in fact, bear a signboard such as we see on restaurants,"Under entirely new management.No connection with over the way."For Professor Judd ha s come iromYale to take charge of it. ant] theschool has led a somewhat independ­ent life and has de,·cloped a differentmode oi thought irom the rest oi theUrriv e r .. ity. For example, manualtraining. h.uidicruft anti applied artarc the prominent feature.;; of thetraining in the School of Education,from it .. kiudercurtcn up through itshigh school. out when its pupils enterthe university-if they do-e-they findthemselves in a different atmosphere,where neither the tine arts nor theapplied arts arc cultivated. Then. too,the School of Education retains areadiness to experiment, to strike outon new paths, which the rest of theUniversity has, it seems to me, part­ly lost. The l"ninrsity High schooland elementary school are regardedas educational laborator ics, not as"model schools" of a fixed and per-fected type. •There has been a disposition ob­servable in the profes:,ors to look up­on the training of the teachers as be­neath the dignity of a university,and those in other departments tooklittle interest as a rule in the workof the School of Education. Recent­ly, howe"er, there has been a changein this respect. The importance ofthe department to the University ismore generally recogni�ed and someof the leading members of the facul­ty arc devoting especial attention tothe problems of secondary education.Professors Mann in physics, Smith inchemistry, Slaught, Young and My­ers in mathematics, for example, areadvocating very radical reforms inthe teaching of these subjects. It isgenerally conceded that a year ormore could be saved in the period ofcollege preparation by more efficientmethods, but these have yet to beworked out. The custom of easterninstitutions, especially Harvard, hasbeen to stand off and scold the sec­ondary schools for not sending thembetter prepared students. Some ofthe western universities, especiallyChicago and Wisconsin, are lookingat the question from the standpoint ofthe secondary schools and are tryingto help them do better work, not onlywith the pupils being prepared forcollege, but with the nine-tenths whodo not go on to college. I f this canbe accomplished the University ofChicago will have made another im­portant contribution to American ed­ucation.Fast TrainsDay andN i g h ton the1: ... :111:1:111111'Best ServiceBetweenCHICAGO, LAFAYETTE,INDIANAPOLIS, CINCIN­NATI, WEST BADEN andFRENCH LICK SPRINGS.LOUISVILLEFRANK J. REED Gen. Pass. Agt.B. E. TAYLOR, Gen. Mgr.202 Custom House Place, Chicago.THEWOODLAWNCAFE63rd ST. ANDCOTTAGE GROVE AVENUE.HIGH-CLASS BILL OF FAREPOPULAR PRICES.Is the Finest ana most Completely AppOinted Res­taurant on the South Side.SELECTED ORCHESTRAL PROGRAM EVERY EVENING.TODAYDiscount of 2S percent off Everything!Our "twice yearly" clear­ance sale is now on. Suitsand overcoats for business,dress, storm,and everywear- readyfor your se­lection-at adiscount of 25per cent.You're sav­ing big moneyand gettingthe highest inquality.This is a very good timeto fill your wardrobe.$25 values at $18.75.$30 value at $22.50.$35 values at $26.25.Business, semi-dress, dress'suits-nothing reserved.Every size to 50 stout.MossIer Co.Cloth •• for Men and Young Men50 Jackson Blvd.THAT EXTRA PAIROF TROUSERSA .alack or .Blue Serge orCheviot Suit with ExtraTrousers of the $30same or stnpematerial.: : :TAILOR FOR TWO STORE:YOUNG MEN 131 La Salle Street44 JacboD B1.d.U NIDI HOTEL& RESTAURANTWiD fiad ReuUlallb on two 800aWill 6ad • special AIle -ThemeMeauWaD fiad Spleadid ServiceSemag 00Iy the Best the Mmd Atoniarmat 0rche.Ira in the City.Hold Your F ratemity aodAlumni Dinners Here111-117 Randolph StreetE. D. MELMAN1012 E. 63rd S1.LADIES TAILORINGDuring our dull season wewill make $45.00 man tai­lored suits for $30.00 and up1400 Samples to Select fromTel. Midway 2539.Patronize Maroon Advertisers.AD makes II � to ..... D, for 'rent, saleOf eschaaae- Belt arade of �&e. foraD aaachiaes. TI-lE AMERICAN WRITINGMACHINE COMPANY. The Typewder u­-... BrucJ...) 191De.rbona St.. Chicaao. LAST INSTALLMENT OFARTICLE BY SLOSSONstill greater originality and adaptabil­ity, as in summer work, extensioncourses and the use of print, for ex­ample, and, second, by rising abovethe zone of competition in grvmgmore advanced work in pure scienceand the humanities. • Now some ofthe state universities are learning howto beat Chicago at its own game, andif Chicago would maintain its prima­cy it must be by the methods used inits early achievement, that is, theUniversity must show the same dar­ing and initiative as in the beginning.and it must find a way to draw fromany part of tile world men who arerecogizcd leaders in modern thoughtand investigation. It ought to beeasier to get distinguished men nowthan it was at first when the Univcr­.s ity had no prestige and Chicagowas regarded as beyond the habita­ble frontier. I f rumor is to be reliedupon the list of those ... vho have de­clined calls to Chicago would be evenmore illustrious than its presentfaculty roll. Perhaps the same is trueof other institutions. I f so, it isgreatly to the credit of their presi­dents.The University of Chicago has nowthe largest number of graduate stu­dents of any American university ex­cept Columbia. It stands at the headof the list in the number of doctor­ates conferred in the last twelve years(448; Columbia, 436; Harvard, 418).The mere catalogue of the books andpapers published by members of theUniversity during its first ten yearsoccupies 180 quarto double-column-pages, constituting the second of thetwelve volumes of the "DecennialPublications of the University ofChicago." This contains a series ofpapers, representative of the research­es of the different departments, whichit would be difficult for any of theolder universities to match in valueand variety. The first volume of theset giving. the history of .th_e fisst dec­ade could also be called the' recordof a piece of original investigation, alaboratory notebook of experimentsin methods of university administra­tion, set down with a frankness andclearness unsual in such official docu­ments. The development of the vari-\ ous departments of the University or'. Chicago has been unequal but notone-sided. It was President Harper'spolicy to develop a few departmentsas schools at a time, leaving the oth­ers comparatively neglected until hefound the men and money to putthem on a level with the best in theland. Consequently the appearanceof the campus in the early days wassymbolic of the faculty. The visitorwould see there a venerable Gothicedifice flanked by another much new­er and with one side unfinished, andbeyond a low brick temporary struc­ture and then a vacant lot of weedsand brambles. President Judson hasmade it his especial business to fin inthe outlines of the great plan and topromote an even, steady and sym­metrical growth of all departments.The machinery of administration hasbeen simplified and the burden offaculty meetings, committee workand complicated reports has been al­leviated. Life is more calm and peace­ful than under the old regime andin somewhat the same relation toeach other as do the administrationsof Presidents Roosevelt and Taft.The growth and dominance of thegraduate school at Chicago is due tothe fact that President Harper putthe advancement of knowledge fore­most among the functions of a uni­vcrsjty. He established the Univcr­sity pre-s a s one of the equal and co­ordinate branches of the institution.He started or annexed a large num­ber of scholarly journals and expect­ed his faculty to fill them. He select­ed men who were inspired with thezeal for rese:lrch. and they in turnpicked from the throng of maturestudent!" passing through the summerquarter those who were capable of re­ceiving this inspiration. If the pro­posal of Dean Small to abolish thetuition fees of graduate students aft­er their first year is put into effectAMUSEMENTS THE DAILY MAROON, SATURDAY, JANUARY IS, 1910.STAGG GIVES TRACK MEN ALFRED EAST TO LECTUREHARD WORK IN PRACTICE IN MANDEL HALL MONDAY�t�t :IIt.,l'fIrIrI!Patronize Maroon Advertisers.ILLINOISBluest Comedy hit In Twenty Years !7 DAYSSpecial Cast and Production. Trains Runners in Starts and Stride­Track Athletes Are ShowingFast Form.\Vork in starts and keeping thestride was the feature of the trackwork this week for both the Varsityand Freshman squads. Director Stagghas taken charge of the men him­self and is putting them through longsteady work. About twenty dashmen were out last night. A contestwas arranged between the regularsand the Freshmen, resulting in a tiebetween Kuh of the Varsity andSpringer of the Freshmen. Daven­port entered and beat out Straube,but he was disqualified for gettingaway ahead of the starting gun. Bairdwas put out for the same reason. Inthe final race the Kuh brothers,Springer, Earle and Crawley ran to­gether. Kuh and Springer pulledaway from the rest and tied for first.Springer is a new man at running andKuh is not a regular dash man on thesquad. Both have excellent chancesof making their respective squads.Earle Makes Good Showing.The outcome of the dashes makesit look as if Earle would be used inthe quarter. He has as much speednow as he had at his best last win­ter, and seems to be improving daily.He took three laps on the track in54:2, a record that he equaled onlyonce last year. Last night he ranfour laps, but did not let himself out.The main object of all the work inthe last week has been to practiceform, and Earle has shown this ingood measure.Davenport is as fast or faster thanhe was last year. Yesterday he ranthree laps in the fast time of 50 flat.This 'would be good for a mid-seasonperformance and coming as it does inthe early training period, augurs wellfor Chicago in the meets with III i-LA SALLETHE·FLIRTINGPRINCESSCOLONIALTheatre BeautifulANNA HELDIN"MISS INNOCENCE."STUDEBAKERH. B. WARNER"Alias Jimmy Valentine"GARRICKHello People, People Hello! !J A S. T. POW E R SIN HAVANA.GRAND OPERA HOUSETHE GREAT PLAYFOURTH ESTATET-HEMcVICKER'SIN OLD KENTUCKY6000 Times in America Friday,Jan. 14, Souvenirs for the ladies.OLYMPICTHE FORTUNE HUNTERWHITN�YThey Loved a Lassie nois.Menaul a Strong Man.Menaul was given a workout inthe quarter and although he did notlet himself out, showed that he wouldopen the eyes of the rooters in faststarting. In the start Thursday hewas off two yards ahead of the manthat he was running against and fin­ished in fine easy form. The chancesseem best that the "Old ).lan" willuse Menaul in the shot-put, relay andthe high jump. He is doing sensa­tional work in all these events.Long distance work has been most­ly in the shape of jogging, but sever­al of the men have been running themile. Last night and the night be­fore Stophlet went through the mile.He made it in 5:08 and 5:10, bothtimes without any effort at all. Hehas all the speed he had last year andwill give any man in the west a runfor his money. He looks good foranother 4:30 race. Carpenter andLong are both working out with him.CORT"THE KISSING GIRL."CONTINUOUS VAUD�ILlL.Virginia Hamed & Co. R. C. HerzImogene ComerHyams & Mcintyre Agnes Scott & Co.Artois Bros. World & KintptonSoler & Roger. The Mc:Gradys.Muon. Wilbur & Jordan. Lucille Laogdon.Prices 15-25-SO-75c. Phone Ceotral6480AUDITORIUMBOSTON OPERA CO.In a Fortnilht ofGrand OperaMoiiHERN SUCCESSPHENOMENALMARIE DRESSLERIN " Tillie's Nightmare" Nicoll's Way of KeepingTheir Good TailorsBusy.That's the Primary Re .. on for this offerThere's twice the wear in asuit if you have an extra pair oftrousers. Make the experiment;-find out for yourself. Here'syour opportunity-A Suit andExtra Pair of Trousen for theprice of suit alone. Trousers ofthe same material, or different,Just as you prefer. This offerholds good on our entire stock.Prices 525 to 550 for suit andextra trousers. Made to fit youperfectly=A T OUR RISK..NICOLL The Tailor� JER1t.EMS SORaCLARK. AND ADAMS STS.Hctr�Al�����r.�eemin all l..arge Cities.AMERICA" MUSIC HALLMatinee Dilly.4 Headliners. Festival of LaughterBransby Williams. Four Mortons.Sidney Drew & Co. eenaro & BaileyPolo Team. Sharp & Montgomery.Five Olher Stars.pRINCESSThe GODDESS OF LIBERTYGLOBE THEATER.Wabash Av. and Hubbard Ct.VAUGHAN GLASERIII"S T . ELMO."Advertise in the Maroon. Noted English Artist Will Talk onLandscape Painting at4 O'Clock.Mr. Alfred East, president of theRoyal Society of British Artists, willlecture in Mandel hall on Monday at4 o'clock on "The Art of LandscapePainting." Since Mr. East is a mas­ter of the art of landscape parntmg Inoil, as well as of the art of landscapepainting in water color, and an expertetcher of international reputation, hislecture on Monday afternoon affordsa great opportunity for members ofthe University to gain an insight intothe diffiCUlties and problems, as wellas the pleasures of a painter's lifeand art.The lecture will be adapted to theneeds of laymen and is open to allmembers of the University and theirfriends in the city.FORMER NEBRASKAECONOMIST JOINSCHICAGO FACULTYAlvin S. Johnson, formerly a pro­fessor of the political economy de­partment of the University of Ne­braska. will receive his appointmentas assistant professor in that depart­ment here on the first of next Octo­ber. :\Ir. Johnson has been conduct­ing classes in the Universiry since thebeginning of last quarter, and he as­sisted in the department here duringthe summer.As a member of the faculty of eco­nomics in the University of Nebras­ka he conducted courses there from1905 to 1908. after which he went tothe University of Texas. He cameto Chicago from Texas last summer.Last winter he gave a course in thedepartment of economics.CbASSIFIED:ADVERTISINGLOST-A lady's gold watch. Returnto Information office.LOST-Library book, "HumorousHits," in the Reynolds club. Find­er return to the public speaking de­partment.FOR RENT-Two good rooms onfirst floor at 6024 \Voodlawn.FOR RENT-New residence for oneto two years. Call 5730 KimbarkAve.WILL PAY ten cents each for DailyMaroon, issues of Dec. 7, 1906, andFeb. 6, 1907. The University ofChicago Press (H. L. Leupp).FOR RENT-Single room in Hitch­cock. Splendid location. InquireRegistrar.FOR RENT-Xew residence. 5730Kirnbark Avc., after April I. forone to two years.LOST-.\ Phi Beta Kappa key.Highly prized. Return to businessmanager, )'laroon.WANTED-Candidates for assistantbusiness manager of The Daily Ma·roon. Apply at Maroon office.BOARD AND ROOM suitable fortwo. 6102 Ingleside Ave .. Ist flat;�lidway 2228.FOR RENT-Two furnished modernrooms. 5704 Jackson Ave., flat 1.FOR RENT-2 pleasant rooms,steam heat, electric light; privatefamily. Near I. C. and Elevated.$2.50 and $2. 'Call 6522 Monroe:h·c .. Apt. 3, or 'phonc H. P. 5296.PICTURE FRAMING-Pictures, col­lege posters, art craft goods, artnovelties of every description atThe Dudley Shop, 1130 E. 6J'rd St. States RestaurantENTRANCE 52 ADAMS STREET9-COU�E TABLE D'HOTE WITH WINE $1.006 to 9 P. M. Daily1 to 9 P. M. SundayMIDNIGHTVAUDEVILLE11 P. M. to 1 A. M.A Varied Program of Classic and Popular N urn bers,Including Ensemble Singing of LatestIllustrated Song Successeso. B. STIMPSON, Manacer. Telephone Harrison 5171Gilbert Wilson & CompanyMake a SpecialtyRepairing Gas ofStovesTelephone Hyde Park 1160.1307-11 55th Street---New Number.338-42 55th Street---Old Number,We can supply every want in the drug line.We either have it. will get it, or it isntt made.JOHN J. McCLUGAGE, Ph. G.PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST.Phone Hyde Park' 1351140 East 63rd Street N. W. Cor. Lexington Ave.Esti",al,s du,rfully f.,..ni.lud. R.j,,..,,u,_c {".'Cdld"&,,,i.1342 £aut Jrortg-&tnrtttly &lnrt ��!=!J����TELEI"HONI!:OAKLAND 1949wailnrrb&uit.6 (60WlUiaub QIoats�nUtU ilakrrWORTH KNOWINGThere is. a charm about our Clothes that pleasesthe most fastidious. A pleasing appearance isthe latest· key to success. We are ready andwaiting for you to call and see our goods.NOBLE DSOP[�TAILOR175 DEARIOn STREET, car. IIOWROESf COlD R.OOITELEPHOIE C01Ul 1444.