iBail!'Vol. IX. No. 95. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, SATUIWAY, FEBRUARY 25. 1911. Price Five CentsaroonJUDD WILL DEUVERCONVOCATION ORATIONProfessor aDd Head of Education De­partment to Give AddressMarch 21.REGULAR HOME CONVOCATIONJudd Came Here FrCJm Yale in 1909- ... s rre.ident of Nat:onal Edu_cational Societies.Professor Charles Hubbard Judd,professor and head of the departmentof educariou, and director of theschool of education, will deli ver theaddress at the seventy-eighth convo­cation to be held un Tuesday, Marchb, in Mandel hall.This is the regular home convoca­tion at which it is customary formembers of the University faculty todeliver the address. Professor PaulShorey, head of the department ofI�reek, was the orator at the corres­pending convocation two years ago,and l'rofessor John Merle Coulter,i.cad of the department of botany,la-t year.Judd Graduate of Wesleyan.Professor Judd received his A. B.degree from \V esleyan university inJ�H; Ph. ll., University of Leipsig,l!'!Iti; �\. 1\1., �. ale university, 1907;LL. D., �llami university, 1!J09. Hewas made instructor in philosophyill Wesicyan university, 1896 to 1898;professor of experimental psychology,�'cw York university, 1898 to 1901;professor of psychoiogy and educa-.tion at the University of Cincinnati,l!!Ul to Itll):!; instructor in psychology,Yale university, 11.102 to 11104: assis-t tant professor ill the same, 1904 toH107; professor and director of thepsychological laboratory at the same.1!'()7. to 19U!J.Professor Judd was editor of mon­(,;;raph supplements of the Psycholo­gical Review, from 1905 to 1909; amember of the council of the Ameri­can Psychological Association, 1907to l!)Ot!; president of the AmericanPsychological Association in 1909;member of the council of the Ameri­ican association for the Advance­ment of Science, 1909; member of theexecutive committee of the Ameri­can society of Naturalists from 1909to the present time; and president ofthe National society of' CollegeTeachers of Education, 1910. He hasbeen professor and head of the de­partment of education and director ofthe school of education here since]909.MERRIAM CLUB MAKINGSTRENUOUS EFFORTS TOCARRY PRIMARY TUESDAYThe Merriam club is making strenu,U!lS efforts to enlist more men towork in the various wards on Prim­:lry day. So far the response of thernil·ersity men to the can for Mer­riam aid has heen far from satisfac­t(fry.About cnot;gh men have reported:0 CO\'cr the polls of this precinctJ,txt Tllc�c1ay. More men are neededhowevcr. in other wards of Chicagowhere M r, :Merriam is making a hardfight. Those men who are wilting towork on that day are asked to signU" as soon as possible so that thelIlen can be organized and assigned tothe ,'arion" pol1s in sufficient time.Track i:, hcing- hoomed at Ilart·mouth by the presentation of )5 sil'fer cups. which are given away one alrt·tk to athletes of merit during thelear. TO TAKE CARE OF PREP MEN I w. A. A. PRODUCTIONFratemities Will Look After Visiting I MAKES GREAT SUCCESSHi&h School Athletes Who Com- ••pete in Cook County Preliminaries Balt!-Heacfed Row Aida .. ProdaciqTonight in Bartlett. First Large Prodactioa ill ModelLutNi,1at.All the athletes who compete inthe preliminary athletic meets of theCook County High school league be­ginning' in Bartlett tonight will be ac,. corded royal treatment at the Uni;vcrsity. According to arrangementswhich have been made the "Prep"men who come out to the trials willbe entertained by the fraternities ofthe University.Beginning with tonight the prelim­inary events will be run off everySaturday night in Bartlett for sixweeks. At the end of that time thepreliminaries will have determinedwhat Cook County athletes will enterthe final meet. This final will alsotake place in Bartlett gymnasiumsome time in March. While thesemeets are in progress many highschool athletes who are expecting toeater college later will be at the Uni­versity.To Correct Impression.Heretofore it has been claimed thatthese visiting: athletes have not hadsufficient entertainment to get realimpression of the me at the Univer­sity of Chicago, In this way the pri­mary purposes of the meet have fail­... d in effect.To correct this evil and to showthe visitors that the University is thebest place to do. their college workhe Inter-class Athletic committe"! un­der the leadership of William Kuhis going to see that the men are prop­erly taken care of. It has secured'the services of the fraternities whowill entertain the athletes on the af.;.ternoon before the meet, at dinnerand after the meet,At the final meet in March the com-. mittee is planning some special formof entertainment for the men whohave survived thp preliminary. Menfrom 'the different high schools willhe the guests of the following frater-,cities.Hyde Park-Phi Kappa Psi and. Delta Kappa Epsilon; Englewood­. Phi D�lta Theta; Marshall and Mc­Kinley-Sigma Alpha Epsilon; LakeView-Beta Theta Pi.CONCERT FOR SUFFRAGETTESMiss Johnson to Sing and MissNicholes Give Speech.The Women's Equal Suffrageleague of the University will give anentertainment next Wednesday inKent theater at 4, to which all mem­bers of the University are invited.Miss Jenny F. W. Johnson, the con­tralto soloist of the Kenwood Evan­gelical church, who is also president)f the South Side Suffrage associationwill sipg. Her accompanist is to ber;(�tty Burke.Another attraction of the enter­tainment wil! be Miss Grace Nich­(tIes' speech. Miss Nicholes is the.. i .. ter of Miss Anna Nicholes who� poke to the league a short timeago. Tile Miss Nichole! dre both res­idents of Neighborhood Hou�e andare interesting them��lve" in thework there.Miss Nicholes and Miss Johnsonwere together last summer on theSuffragette Automobile trip throughIllinois. Miss Nicholes doing thespeaking and Miss Johnson the sing·ing. MIDWAY LOCAL WELL ACfEDChoruses Well Trained and HaveBeautiful Costumes-VaudevilleStunts Draw Applause. .With the aid of an enthusiasaic bald­headed 1"0w, ilu: occupants of whichmarched down in file after the cur­tain had gone up, and with a . fullhouse to greet them, the first largeW. A�::':\.· vaudeville and comic operawas staged in Mandel hall last nightand bade fair to out-do the Black­friars in quality and beauty of cos-turne,Make Great Hit.For a time it seemed as though thebald-headed row would break up theshow but things subsided and the per­formance went on smoothly. Themembers of the bald-headed choruswere; ...'leck Whitfield, Vallee Appel,Nathaniel Pfeffer, Nat Rubinkam, Al­bert Smith, William Kuh, Harold Gif­ford. ) ohn Houghland, Al Straube,Phil Comstock, Roy Carney, and RoyBaldridge.The performance was characterizedby graceful dancing and lively localhits_' Gertrude Perry was thoroughlyappreciated in her imitation of "Billy"Merrill's Lenore dance in the "Pseu­Jo Suffragette." Marie Ort�ayer, '06,-and -Agnes 'Wayman, '03, revealedsome startling effects in costume,drew· illuminating cartoons of Uni­versity lights and rendered an abso­lutely new version of the time-wornUncle Tom's Cabin scene in theirnew-old stunt, "The Cherry Sisters� ow and Then."Japanese Two-Bagger Catchy."A Japanese Two-bagger" provedto be a tale of our heroes, RalphWeary and Joe Piggies, who are lostin their way to an important. dinnergiven in honor of' the Chicago teamby Count Sakumurasan. Falling in!,y the way with two picturesque ori­ental maidens, they quite lose theirhearts u'n'til they aiscover that SikuSan and. Sono San are Frank Dollingsan.I rat Sage on their way to thesame unreachable banquet. ... :\ Midway Local:' proved to berl.e hit cf the evening. One Lexing­Ion grew eloquent and uttered theverdict "A Midway Local" beats theExpress. Effie Hewitt in the charac­ter of Miss Fierce drew much ap­plouse in her tart remarks on collegeieople, and Evelyn . Phillips waxedmost enthusiastic in her part as--:heerleader.Chorus Shows Training.Elizabeth Titzel as the wardrobemistress and Petey the Janitor madethe hit that was expected of them.The hasketball drill to the rousing('hicag(l lHarching Song was welt put. :n. and the contrasts of the industri­ous Phi Beta Kappa Corpoutj'.)�chorus and the unhappily fat Hobblech.")nts was well taken. The flower�b ... rt1" proved \"('ry prctt:r in theIhdlts of \'arious hues. FRATERNITY RElAY POSTPONEDIntcr-Fratemit7 Race Has Been PutOff Until TbaracIq AftemooD­Fraternity Captailla to Meet Mon­day to Make FiDal Arrangements.-The preliminaries of the inter-fra­ternity relay have been postponedfrom this evening to next Thursdayafternoon at 4 o'clock. The post­ponement was made because of theconflict of the old date with thePresident's reception. The captainsof the teams will meet Monday af­ternoon in the Reynolds club at 2(J 'clock to discuss arrangements.The finals will be run off asplanned, on Marchll. The teamsrunning in the finals will be thosewinning in each of the four groups inwhich the fraternities are divided.The groups and the places for thepreliminaries next Thursday are asfollows:First race:A lpha Tau Omega .. West side; insidePhi Gamma Delta .• West side outsideSigma N u . _ ....•••• East side; insideSigma Alpha Epsilon •••• _ •...• _'•••• 1 •••••••• _ •• East side; outsideSecond race:PeIta Kappa Epsilon ..•••.• _ •.••. . _ . _ ...•• '. _ . _ •• East side outsideKappa Sigma . _ •..•. East side; in;idePsi Upsilon West side; insidePhi Delta Theta •.. West side; outsideDe-Ita Sigma Phi ... East side; middleThird race:Delta Tau Delta .• 'Vest side; outsideBeta Theta Pi ... __ . West side; insideAlpha. Delta Phi ••• ·.East·side; in�eDelta Upsilon _ ••. .East side; outsideFourth. race:Phi Kappa Psi •.•• West side; outsideChi Psi .... _. '. West side; insideSigma Chi . _ . _ • _ •• _ East side; outsidePhi Kappa Sigma •• _ East side; insideONE MORE CANDIDATEFOR CLUB PRESIDENCY MAROONS WIN DOUBLEVICTORY OVER ILLINOISv.., W.. FJUI Ga.e 01 Series., 19 to 18 Scare ill &IraSeaioLFRESHMEN TRIUMPH 22 TO 18.N orgren �reaka Collar BODe in FintHalf by Colliaion withCheney.Last night W2S Chicago niilat inBartlett. Not only did the ChicagoFreshmen win over the IllinoisFreshmen but the Maroon Varsitydefeated the Illinois veterans in the.final game of the series. The scoreof the latter game was 19 to 18�de­cided only after an extra session offive minutes. The Freshmen scorewas aa 11.The double victory is doubly sweetin that it shows the superiority of theMaroons over Illinois, the team hav­ing won at Champaign in the firstgame. in that it helps atone for theloss of the track meets to Illinoislast Saturday. The game last nightwas featured by the aggressive fiahtbeth teams made for victory, as well: ... � by the fluctuation of the score,.neither team holding the lead lon¥_Illinois Guards Closely.Illinois' play was characterized byrough, close guarding. This is indi­cated by the officia! score. Therewere called on Illinois 11 personal. ..fnuls;-�_�· . heing-·"�qualified·- iu- 'ifie"second half on getting': the Iimit of"'''.Cbjcago fouled five times, four ofthese being personal. The Illinoismen put up their hardest game andfought to the end' with a gamenessmatched by the fight of the Maroons.The play of the visitors was furthermarked by their cleverness ui gettinathe ball free�· Time was taken ou •frequently, Sauer. Fulkerson, andBernstein particularly suffering' frominjuries. In the . Freshman game,Norgren of Chicago met with an un­fortunate accident . in the first half.He collided. with ChaDey and fell,breaking his collar bone •Team play with speed and aggress­iveness was the deciding factor forChicago. The men worked togetherin great style, passing. cleanly and ac­curately. Fumbling marred Chicago'spiay in the earlier stages of the game. ,. The team seemed unable to getstarted well and Illinois soon Iedwith: a 5 to 3 score. Both· teams shotf�.equentlY for long throws. For Chi­cago, Goettler with 3 field basketsa�d· Sauer with 2 and 7 fouls led thescoring, Bernstein of Illinois· wasdedited with 3 baskets. - Sauer mis-·sed -l free· throws. Bell and Fulker­s�n put up a hard and plucky gamepreventing' �any possible baskets bytHeir. clever blocking. Paine at een­�cr also put up a star game, both· iaddense and offense, and woo· thegame when he scored the decidinab.lsket in the final tesL·Game En." in Tie.The game was th� first of the con­fnence season to be decided in the("�tra il\'e minutes allowed· for tiebarnes. The score stood 17 even· atthe pistol shot ending t�e secondt.alf. With the crowd pulling for Chi­cago, the men responded, Paine over­coming the lead set by Illinois of onepoint from a free throw.The Game in Detatl.Po"tl n of Ilinci:-; started the scor­ing :af�r· several minutest of play bygM�ing· a spectacular basket from themiddle floor. Sauer. counted immedi­ately after with a basket. On the(Contiuued OD pale 4) •There are 2.1.)89 Yale men now Ih"­iTig in the United States. Connecti­cut leads with 5,889. Faculty Men to Go to Philippines..Two members of the faculty. to beclecided later, witl repre�ent the Un i­nr!'ity at the spring and summer as­"embly of all the teachers in thePhilippine i�lands to b.e held at'�.lgio. th-: summer capit .. ,. nca':" Man­ila. Professors MacClinlo(.k andStarr were the University representa'tives last year. Louis T. Curry Files Petition onLast Day Permitted for Entriesof Candidates.Louis T_ Curry will run againstRichard Teichgraeber for the presi­dency of the Reynolds club. The an­nouncement of his candidacy wasmade yesterday by the filing of a pe­tition bearing the signatures of 25club members,The last day permitted late en­trants in the race brought out onlythe one petmon, This leaves thefinal official list of candidates as fol­lows:For Praident.Louis T. Curry.Richard TeicharaeberFor V'ICe-Praident.Ralph Rosenthal.Kenneth Lindsay.For Secrwtu7.Anhur O'NeillClyde Joice.William Stanley.For Treuarer.William P. Harms.Paul Renter.For Librarian.Kent Chandler.Mark Savidge.Sanford Sellers.Uallots will be printed today. Theelection will be held Friday March3. and the polls will be open from 9to 5. The election commission,consisting of Nathaniel Pfeifer, chair­man; F. Stanley Benson, Paul Mac­Clinto('k. David B. Adams. George"uh. and Clark G. Sauer, will hold1n important meeting Monday in tht"\..�Itth at 2 oclock. An members arcrequ('sted to be present.'l'HE DAJLY MAROON, skrtJimAY. �iddjAiY 2!, i6ii.THE DAILY MAROON.Miss Hinman has commenced on1 he dances to be used in the Black­f�iars production. Up to this timeshe has : been training the class in�eW8 coutrtuuttons ma7 be left at JDl- other dances of a simpler nature inUa Hull or b'acuU.y Exchaos .. addreued, to The 0<1117 .MarooD order to have them ready for the realdances. She is now working out thefinal details of the dances and sheThc Maroon is' glad to announce will have these completed by next. ·the entering of another candidate for Wednesday, As soon os these arethe presidency . of ready the class will start learningThe.�c:ynolds. the Reynolds club. them.Club SitUation'.' .It does' not believe The meeting .of the Blackfriarsthat an oftic;e so which was to have taken place yes'important should go to any student terday was postponed until next.by default. The very fact that there Wednesday, because of the illness ofshould be but one candidate shows Earl Bowlby. The meeting will bethere is something wrong. held in Cobb 3A at 10�30.· The lyricConditions in .the last few years for the Chicago song has been heldhave led more and more to the situa- open and the society will considertion we find at present. The entire plans for the writing of the words.structure of student activities is At present there have been moreborne by a small group of men in songs handed in than lyrics accordingeach class, who have to sacrifice ev- HI Aleck Whitfield. This means thaterything else to keep up with the ever more lyrics should be banded in. Al-. increasmg complexity of the organi- :-0 in some cases the same lyric haszation. This is in itself one of the been handed in for two songs. Newgreatest arguments against the over- lyrics will have to be written fororganization of activities. There is thesc and the music for these songstoo much specialization. A small wilt be ginn to those' who wantproportion of each class goes in for words for them.the "gr ind" side of student life only;a srna 11 proportion goes in for stu-dent activities only; and the large Oxford Professor Coming March 11.bulk oi the student body remains in Professor William Allison Phillip-. h -on, of the University of Oxford, whoits lethargic state because it WIS esis now lecturing at Columbia Uni·to jump to neither extreme, but nev-r rthclcss benefits by the whole sys- vcrsity, New York, will comc west.• i'� Chil:ag� about March 11, to deli vcrton in that it pays a minimum of at-f I 1 \\"0 lectures and visit the University.tention to the academic side 0 co-lIc will be accompanied by his wife.lege life. Profcssr.r Phillipson is editor of theTf extra-mural activities are at all ... 'iistorical section of the New Ency-worth while, they must receive thec lopcdia Brittanica.co_operation of the entire studentbodY. And the condition disclosed),\' �hc T\.eynolds club election doesr.�t indicate such co-operation at thepresent.T_ Otftdal StudeDt PDbUcatloD of TileUD1"�ra1� of ClI.lcqo.Formerl,Tile Unh-�ralt' of Chl�o Weekl7FoundedTM W Hkl7 •••••••••••• Oc&ober 1._ 1182Th. Dally •.•••••••••••• October 1. 1102:j.H'.,PulJlblietl Dal17, except ':;04&7.. MOD­.. ,. aud hulldu1.· dUrlDIr tlu'.·qnartera.f tho' UDlvtlralty ��ar.: .: KDtered 1111 �olld-clal .. IWlU at the ehl­CMKO l'olltolli(.'e, Chlcuso, Illlnola, ll.at.rcllIi, l�Ot;, uuder Act of March I, 1871.-- ---------'J.'IlK STAn�·',j. � I N_ A. l'l:.t.:l-·t·ER •a. �. IM.L): •.. � •• (;AKl·ENTEK • .aJ.aD.qiDs .Editor• Ne",. EdUQrAthleUo EdItor! i ,i. � !. '.� I' .'" AS�O(;IAT'& EDITO.K.!j\Y. J. l;ouleC. 1:. 'J:&lylorC. W. Uou;;hlanl) H. 1. A8IlD1COttAI. W. l1eeMV. 1. Breed.: :.;1 REl'OBTEBSJ. K. Beebe AI. D. Steven;� .'� ...... 1111.1'1')" l:ulU�rlllu; }:;ul!lowI). KaJ.llan\\'. LYWIlD�. 1... ::)Ilyre8. W. Vlniawky 8. ".. DunhamIII 1.. Harrla1'. Ke&r1l.,J. B. I'erl"1. StolsW. WellUl&Dl' .....'"j': � �I� : ��! WOMEN'S ·DEPABTIlEN'I'llarjorie Hill. EdUor.ltUlh lteticker, Aaaoclate Editorll&PUltTEll8l ..,� ., �:. . 11. CllwlJbell�'lor�ncc l:atlln Alma Llch�lSunSCRll'TlON RATESB1 Carrier, $2.00 per yenr; ,1.00 per qr.Clt7 muil, $1.2u PC1' lluilrter; p.oo perye�r In advance..• I; ,. ' .,:) , DAILY BULLETIN.Sophomore Dance indefinitely post­poned.Annual Reception of the Reynoldsclub to President and Mrs. Judsonwill be held in the Reynolds club at8:30 p. m. Members and theirfriends invited.) \ !'.- � .n: �:-:: �.'1: ..I t ;'. �. ::..1 ; � ,�! ! .'i • i"!,:'t' �:t·r:I' Registered voters of the 1st wardleave names at Information office.Men Wanted to' work for MerriamPrimary day. Tuesday; especiallythose outside of the 7th ward. Leavenames at I nformation office.ANNOUNCEMENTS."The Religion of Students," will bediscussed by the Reverend C. W.Gilkey. of the Hyde Park Baptistchurch in Mandel at 4 p. m. Sunday .Tuesday's Thomas Concert will bediscused by 1\1 r, R. G. Cole of Wis'consin at 4 p. m. Monday.Theodore Thomas Concert at 4 p.111. in Mandel, Tuesday.Junior .Stag Dinner, \VednesdayMarch 8. Place announced later.Fencibles meet at Roofs for Capand Gown picture Sunday at 2:30 p.Ill. Banquet Tuesday .A WAIT FINAL DECISIONOF SONG CONTEST JUDGESBlackfriars Will Probably AnnounceNames of Winners by First ofNe�t Week.The Blackfriars are now awaitingthe final decision of the judges in thesong contest. Mr. David A. Robert­son has sent his typewritten reportto each of the judges and they willall send in their decisions by the first"f next week.Mr. Stoddard. the coach of theLlackfriars. will' commence opera,tions as soon as the songs are decidedon by the judges. Mr. Stoddard isa new man and the managers of theshow. expect that he will be a goodcoach on account of his previous ex­perience.FOWNESGLOVESare a "good thing to ba'Yeon hand," and all gooddealen have them on band. Heat RegulatiollWE ALSO RENT PIANOS.. ..): •.Tbe JobDlOO Pneumatic",The RKOgnfzed StanclardInstalled in the University of CbLcago BuildingLComplete Systems for all MethocJaof Heating.Steam Control of Humidity .Reducing Valves for Air. Water.Hot Water Tank Regulators,Johnson Service Co.H. W. ELLIS, Mgr.Chicago Office, 93 Lake StreetFits smoothly andkeeps up the sockwith neatness andsecurity. It iscomfortable be­cause its wearerdoesn·t feel it.The Bo�onGarter keeps its�engthandcds in wear­value. Fullyp .....1"p; --00. t :Co&ta.��.. 5Oa."," ... I''''�'I'''''·''�'CEORCE FR03T co. •• "KERS., B .... on. u.s.A.EIGHT DOLLAR OPERA HAT$5.00This hat cannot be equaled bless than $3.00. Latnt style Ot­toman opera hats for young meaOur Price, $5.00Arthur's Hat Store183 Dearborn Street.76 Madison Street81 E. VanBuren Street.2 J"'�.nts Thin" of it -_aa ....... Jk 'Dtllk ........ .,...IUI,.,..,.. "..., IeCI� • .".� �.:t .........Jad ........ tQ' ..,. o.oeAll the news of the campusin The Daily Maroon.Patronize Maroon Advertisers. Theyare reliable business people. AGAIN'Our Semi-Annual Special.Blue. Black and GraySerle or Cheviot Suit,.with extra Trousers ofAllIe or, Outing matem.u.Two Ilona: lSI La Salle Street.44 Jackson Boulevard.DWOODnawOODlLUBWOODGaA.YWOODftIS1IWOOD'S'JIAlItWOODJl..&Pl.&'WOOD'm'C.YOU WILL FIND WHATYOU ARE HUNTING FOR��"DCOLLARS2 FOR 25 CENTS.TRaT A •• IIC C.EEN BOX.S·M.d. b7 EARL lit WILSON•, __ ... � Conan •.. n.r Ibop .. rato.. ..tII0,.. Da7 ... IfiIht.II. Deubom Itnet.Be a loyal student and suhscribrfor The Daily Maroon.Patronize Maroon Ad\"cr li�ers. This Ad. Is Goodlor $1.00CUT THIS OUT.This Coupon will not be publish-ed after February IS. 1911.I f your Piano does not need turn'ing now, save the coupon, as wewill honor it if presented within.3 months of above date .Call us up and we willsend ��e of our expertPiano Tuners. who will ac­cept this coupon as $1.00discount. TIle regular priceis $2.SC.This is a bona fide offer.This Ad. must be presented,if you desire the reduction/ Louis LowenthalPianos that please.112 West Madison StreetTelephone Monroe 2517.HAVE YOU SUN KELLY!--»> :O�Ssed in a perfect fitting, .ma4e-to-measure suit S20Wearing an English Derby S3And a Cluett (nest dressshirt 52Silk cravat, silk hose and fiDeglovesHE LOOKS SWELLSO CAN YOUby purchasing your clothes-AT-SILVERMAN li SON.1125 fast 63rd StreetNear Lexincton.AVAITOB. BATSBe original and wear an up-to-date·lat. Plain, $1.00. With letter or num­�ral embroadered on front. $1.,..State size. Satisfaction guarantee(HAROLD ABRAHALLEast Momaches, Hew York.�]' mit itAiLY MAROON, SATURDAY, rEBRUARY is. 1911.I.. I,: I, i I � ..Albert Cook. formerly professorof english in the University of Cali'fornia. now prores�or of English atYale. ga"-e $1,000 as an endowmentfor an annual prize in poetry to �omec:tudent in the Uniyersity of Califor·nia.--•r..L CARSON PIRIESCOTT & Co.February SaleMEN'SSHOESThe last week of thisannual sale shows ex­ception(\Uy strong val­ues, affording decidedsavings at the re­duced prices, pair,$2.75$3.75$4.75Tan and black calf, blackkid and p&tent leathers Inboth high shoes and lowshoes, in stYles and weiabtssuitable for preseat aDd. spring wearFIRST FLOOR, SOUTH ROOM I'RESIDENT'S RECEPTIONTORIGHT IN CLUB ROOIIS NEW' MEN IN CHARGEOF UNIVERSITY PRESSCharles H. Stone is the new man'ager ' of the Press book store. Asasaistants he has Miss F. La Foll·ette, and T. W. Larsen. Mr. Stonehas had charge of the Universitystore in the School of Education forthe past two years. He is planningto run the store on a more economicalbasis.CHESS TOURNEY IN 'SNELLA chess tournament is being ar­ranged in Snell hall. Several entrieshave been handed in and the sched­ule will be completed by next Mon­day. T!lC enthusiasm that prevailsinsures an exciting contest for thecharnpiorishjj, of the hall .The men who have handed in theirnames are Floyd Lyle, J. H. Rogers,H. G. Moulton, A. C. Trowbridge, M.Markowitz, Alan Loth and HaroldKay ton. -REV. HENRY MABIETO GIVE SERIES OFFOUR LECTURES NEXT WEEKA course of four lectures on "TheSp�il of World Missions," will begiven . next week by the Rev. HenryClay Mabie- in Haskell Assembly hallat four o'clock, The lectures will beh�ld on Monday, Wednesday, Thurs­clay. and Friday.V�sper Service in Mandel Tomorrow.�-\ vesper service will be held to­morrow at 4 o'clock in Mandel hall:under the auspices of the Board ofChristian Uriion�· An address will beli�Hvered by the' Rev. 'Cliarles W.Gi)key: pastor of the Hyde Park Bap,ti�t church.. P�es�dent "Judson will11��Si�e_ : _.;_ ------.-------French-MethodHa�d' LaundryI I 4 6 E. 53n1 St.--.et.P�Qne H. P. 6 I I J-Our II years 'of exPerience inthe laUndry trade - is. the benefitliven to our customers.Our aCent. P. A. Soocbman, willcaD and deliver your laundry free()f charce.lIendinc . and . daminc. Free.All Kembers of University Are In- Will Run Book Store on More &0--vitecl to Keet President and Mrs. Domica1 Basis for StudentsJudson in Reynolds Club. in Future.A NEW BASE BALL BOOKSPALDING·S OFFICIALCOLLEGE _.BASE BALi ANNUAL1911The only Base Ball Book pub­lished that CODtains the OfficialBase Ball D�ta of the CoUeceYear in Base BalLPictures of all the leading Col­lege Base Ball Teams and CollepBase Ball �tatistics. These areonly to be found in Spalding'. Of­·ficial College Base Ball Annualfor 1911.PRICB TEN CENTSA. G. Sualdinf! 'il Bros.147 Wabash Ave., Cbfcago. The annual Reynolds club reception:n- President and Mrs. Judson will beheld tonight at 8 :30 in the Reynoldsclub parlors. All members of theUniversity. not merely club members,are urged by President Baldridge tobe present as this will be an excellentopportuntiy for all to meet PresidentJudson and his wife. There will bedancing after the reception.POSTPONE PEACE CONTEST --Scheduled to Be Completed by MOD'day-Seven EDttants.Only One Contestant Causcs Action-Prelims Probable Next Week.The preliminaries of the Peace Ora,rorical contest which were scheduledfor yesterday afternoon were calledoff because the number of contest­•• nts dwindled from three to one,Hirsch Soble being the only speakerremaining. The contest will not beheld until several other contestantsenter. The object of this contest isto choose a representative for Chi­cago in the State contest which willbe held at Northwestern in the laterpar of March.French Baron to Be Here May 1.Baron d'Estournelles Constant willbe at the University about - May 1.He will be entertained by the facultyand may deliver a lecture here.Dines Lectures to Mathematical Club."The Solution of a System ofThree Analytic Functions in theK eighborhood of Branch Point," wasthe subject of a lecture given by Mr.L. L. Dines before the Mathematicalclub yesterday afternoon in Ryerson.NEWS OF THE· COLLEGESThe military baU :af Illinois is Iimi­ted to 200 couples. ....-' :Harvard has made' radi�' - changesin its system of �ntm.ce �;':lIIination.Thirty men reported for fenCU;g atthe University of Illinois.Pennsylvania has 35 baseball games:-�heduled for' this spring.Mr. Robert Mantell gave a benefitperformance of Ricnelieu for theproposed theater at Yale. UDiversity.A prize is offered to a divinity stu·dent who makes the varsity "debatingteams at Yale. 'Mrs. Russell Sage has presentedVassas:. college with $100.000 withwhich to erect a new dormitory.Two skulls have been placed on ex­hihition at the University of Michi­gan that are supposed to be 15,000years old.Students at the University of Illi­nois game a music recital, the wholeprogram being composed by ama­teur talenLSeventy-five students have beenplaced on strict probation at Stan­ford on account of poor work andtwenty-eight have been expelled.Tn an exhibition race at the Car­�('gi� �wimming pool at New Haven,C. M. Daniels broke his own wor ld ,"­record in the 1:;0 yard swim, cuttingthe time down from 1 ::l-l 2.5 to' 1 ::l23_5. Chicago Kent' CoU�e :.0( LAW8fo • lawyft'. GoOd J&WyftS· an u. eonetaDtdt"n .. nd� HlllaNt paid �OD. EYftllacoouna. � L.L.B. ID tIIree�)"earS. Larc·est aDd ·bat equipped eYeIIIIW Law 9c:hoolill th,. world. We ftDd pomu.. ID I.w of­ft� tor- b�. of .tudedt8 Jftr)y. .0they.1P&l' earn � nDe worltlac fora . d� Ra� cltance for ambitioue yOUIICmIm. and for 1I'rft Catalope.. AdclftaCHICAGO KENT COLL£8E OF LAW.lOOt . 140 Deubon 8tnd.Lectare Rooas. S L V .......... St.. CIalcaco L I. Prendee Ct�Enaineen an. Steam andtun'OII,-2 ...... IIDFOID. 2i iL ... CoDtracton Hot WaterAIfi{ow for. HeatiqHot BlutaDd�otch COLLARS H-dDc andSIt_uP7totbe oeck,tbe tops meet lIedwUca1 VentilatiqIII froat and there .. ample apacefor th. CTaVtlL V_tiJatiOD Apparatu8l5c:..2fOl'l5c. -:::Iuett,Peeboch,& Co .. Maken� L.MANASSBW" � OPTICIANrSTABLISH ED 186888 Madison �t. Tribune Bldg.Eye glasses and spectacles scien'tifically fitted and adjusted. Ez·amination Free of charge.A ... k to !'cc the New Idea Mounting J. C. VEEDER CO.(Not Inc.)PRINTER. OFEVERYTHING915 East 63rd StreetNear Drexel Avenue.Telephone Hyde Parle 1213 Power Plants and Power Pipinc24-26 SHERMAN STREETN ear Board of TradeCHICAGOPntItMbrthe .......... cI .... ad .... wcdd.-.:�""""�s-..... HotW ...............THEStudent's norist·�A. McADAMSS3rd St. and Kimbark Ave�Phone H. P. II.Patronize Maroon Advertisers.· All the news of the campusin The Daily Maroon. All the news of the campusill The J)aDy Maroon.SPRING 19111911Noble D Soper extends a personalinvitation to you to call and inspecta very select line of woolens for this, .season swear.Noble SoperD.TAIL".175 Dearbom Street. Cem_� M .. oeSecond Floor.What the New York Life Did ill 1910WITH EACH DOLLAR 0 .. CA8H mco ...P.ld to Aambl • • .. _Paid tor Death Clalma • 22 ceata For Braaela omce upeua. .a.a-qPaid to LinDe PoUq Bolden 28 c:eata 8DpenialoD aDd IIedIeal 18-Set •• Ide for a_ne aDd DITt. apeet10D • e. ..dead. • • 40 CIIIlta For AdmlDlatradoD aD. Iaftd-.eat � ••• S .. taTotal 80 c:ea ta For lonraaee Dept. Taue. LI-cea_. 1 _,Total • • : •• 10 ...II .. 18Ne .... I ... fartt.er .. ,.. ..... ...................A. I. JACOBSON, General Agent.Me New Y.rIl 1.11. ..... In loa ........THO.PSONS LUNC" 880.1 he best lunches in Woodlawn are servedin a very appetizing and hyltienic manner atTHOMPSONS LUNCH ROOM808 bST SIXTY·IHIRD SlREETPOST CARDS - Latest noveltia, Comica, lIottoea, etc. Beat C1�,Park and University Views 10 for J eta.VALENTIES - Art Motton, Hand Painted placque-. choice comic...new 1911 Novelti�STATIONERY for School Houae and Olice Kapzinea, Booa.Sheet, lIusic, SportiDg Goods, Cigar and Tobacco.'l'BB STAR L1BRARY,I361 Eat 63m Street.THE DAILY MAROON, sktuimAv, FEBRuARy 25, 19ft.(AMUSEMENTSILLINOISWILLIAM GILLETTEin his four act drama··SECRET SERVICE"': .' E����.:' 1e1.K.,. 'UFormed,. the TrC'YdlDirection Sullivan & Considine. L I. MCIDtqQe, ManaauDirect From Drury Lane TheaterLondon.THE SALAMBOS"The Wonders of the ScientficWorld.'·2 SboWINitbt1;:y. DaiJ;:y MrtiD ...1000 Relerved Seat. at 10 aDd 20 eMU6-Captlvatlng Feature Acta-8"f�. . : ., il' .: .,;' 'if.r. i'; � ", .,! BLACKSTONEDAVID BELASCO-: PresentsDAVID WARFIELD-IN-The Return of Peter GrimmI' /, i. ' ·;1:'1:,. ..'l,,'�:: :;,' Sam and Lee Schubert. Ine,announcesLULU GLASERin the greatest operatic success of herartistic career"THE GIRL AND THE KAISER".. '!,�' ••�I":. l: ,I� f. : ': � GARRICK�,:, . �:Q. -:.I' Forbes-Robertson inTHE PASSING OF THETHIRD FLOOR BACK....POVVERSt, ,,i> "", Charles FrohmanPresentKYRLE BELLEWin the best of ,,!1 detective playsRAFFLES�.', .,' '.,; ;, I � : �"rGRANDMR. GEORGE ARLISSin the new comedy of intrigue-o ISRAELIhinLouis N. Pareker.STUDEBAKERRUTH ST. DENISand 49 other dancers.. Orchestraof 30.CORTComedy Ten StrikeHenry W. SavaC. OjferaHenry Kolker in"THE GREAT NAME"LA SALLETHE GIRL I LOVE"The Best Comic Opera in theCity."WHITNEYDAVE LEWISin"DONT LIE TO YOUR WIFE"COLONIALJOS. M. GAITESpresents. The musical and humorous treat ofthe season.··KATIE DID"McVICKERSTHURSTONThe Great Magician.pRINCESSERNEST VON POSSARTGERMAN REPERTOIREOLYMPICGeo. M. CabanaGET-RICH-QUICKWALLINGFORD Rossiter G. Cole Will Give Lecture­Recital in Mandel-Monday on Mus-ic-Three Parts to Program for uext play. Sauer fouled and PostonTuesday's Concert. cbtaincd the free throw. Sauer fol-lowed with a free throw, and Bern-Mr. Ros sitcr G. Cull' will give a -rein obtained a beautiful basket fromlecture-recital of the Thomas Orches- t hl' middle floor, the score standingtra progr am on Monday afternoon, :: to J for Illinois. Chicago ralliedFeb. 27, at .J p. Ill. The Theodore and in a brilliant spurt Sauer ob­Thomas Orchestra will give its con- t ained in succession two free throwscert on the following day, Tuesday, cud a Iield basket and Goetrler addedFeb. �S, and thc program is as fol- two points more. Poston, 011 Bell'slows: Ioul, broke up the rally with a freeI. Overture to .. Der Iruprovisa- I :.rcw and the half ended with thetor" ' e '••••• , ••••••• d' Albert .. cure standing S to ti for Chicago.2. Symphony, D. Minrjr •..... Franck Second Half.:�. Scenes de Dallet, Opus ;j�.... Bernstein tied the score with a bas-. Glazounow ket. Fulkerson was hurt on an Llli-To Give Recital Monday. :lui" foul and time taken out. SauerMr. Rossiter G. Cole. who will give »l-tuincd t he throw. Bernsteinthe lecture-recital on the above pro' jumped the ball in for two pointsgram, is a well known teacher and e-ver Fulkerson putting Illinois in thecomposer of music in Chicago. He lead. Sauer failed on a free throw.was professor of music and director ! 'oston was recalled and DerringerI,f the School of Music in the Univer- ,'. ent in. Sauer aga.n missed a free-ity 01 Wisconsin, and during the t hrow and Derringer missed also.<urnmcr of 1!)10 was professor of mus- Sauer counted on a free throw tyingic in Columbia university. :he score. Leo put Illinois ahead byFor many years he has been prom- ;,!d ting a basket, Sauer obtained air.ent in the affairs of the Music free throw, and, Derringer againTeachers' National association and c-runtcd for two points. Goettler tiedhas served three terms as president. with two more, Leo followed wit two,He has published nearly sixty com- and Sauer tied it up again with apositrons for orchestra and for voice, l.a sket, Chicago took the lead withthe best known of the latter being, two free throws by Sauer. Woolston"Dearie" and "My True Love Hath .ied the score with a basket and timeMy Heart." ,\ as called with the teams tied, J 7 toThe lecture which he will give to' J n the added five minutes, aftermorrow in Mandel Assembly hall is ; II\! rest folowcd, Gates placed Illi­open to all patrons of the concerts. nois in the lead with a free throw ont ;·;ettkr·s foul, aided by perfect teamSOPHS BREAK TIE BY work pulled Chicago ahead, the Ma-DEFEATING LAWYERS 22-15roons winning by the score of 19 toCONCERT TUESDAYmoMASPush Law Into Third Place LeavingFreshman and Sen ion in Leadin Basketball.The Sophs defeated the Law schoolteam yesterday afternoon by thescore of 22 to 1;" and broke the tripletie for first place by shoving the law­vers back into third place. TheSOPhs "came back" in a man ncr thatsurprised the "legal lights," and be­fore thev had· recovered the Sophs'had the �a�le. Catron and Goddardof the winners playcd st:-�r games,getting four baskets apiece.Lineup:Law (15). Sophs (22).llebb, Levinson .. R. F ..... Rothermel,GreenYoung L. F CatronPicken .. _ '" C , .. ,GoddardWilliams R. G DuckGrey _ .. L. G ....•.•. MurphyRadnitzerField goals-Young 4, rickens 3,Green, Catron 4, Goddard 4, Radnit'zero Free throws- Young, Catron,Radnitzer. Time of halves-I;; min'utes.DR. STEITS SPEAKS TOGERMAN CLUB ON �OETHE MAROONS WIN DOUBLEVICTORY OVER ILLINOIS(Continued from page 1.)18.Freshmen Win.The Chicago Freshmen won froml llinois Freshmen in the curtainraiser by the score of 22 to 11. Thegallic was close at the start but Chi,cll�a slowly pulled ahead. The line­up: 'Chicago-Molander, Norgren, andKolvinsky, forwards; Pollok. center,Nett, Dan, Scruby, and Brooks,�uards.Illinois-Thompson, and Hoffman,f,)rwards;' Cheney, center; Sparlemand Louis. guards.Daskets-Pallak. 4; Kolvinsky, 2;Molander. 1; HofImaon, 2; Cheney,J; Thompson, 1. Free throws-Mol­ander. 3; Hoffmann, 2; Cheney.l.Chicago (19). Illinois (18).Sauer R. F BernsteinGoettler L. F Poston, Der-ringer. GatesPaine ........•... C ... Leo, DerringerDell ' L. G ....•. WoolstonFulkerson R. G ...•.•.•• WhiteField baskets-Goettler, 3; Sauer, 2;Paine, 1; Bernstein, 3; Leo, 2; Poston,I; \Voolston. 1. Free throws--Sauer,i'; Poston, 2; Gates. 1; Derringer, 1.Refcrce-Reimaan; Umpire-Reyn­(Jlds. Time of halves-, 20 minutes.SC0rers for Chicago-Hargrave Long;ior Illinois, Poston and Gates.Gives Interesting Facts of Goethe'sEarly Life Before Members of WILL HOLD VESPER SERVICESGerman Club.Dr. Steits spoke on, "Goethe andFrankfort," yesterday at the regularmceting of the German dub, in Lex­ington. As Dr. Steits was himseliborn in Frankfort-on'Main and livedthere many years hc is especiallyqualified to talk up his subject. Hediscussed Goethe's early liff: ira­Frankfort and his relation to thefamilies of the town. Xext Dr. Steitstook up Goethe's car�y poetry beforehc left Frankfort for \V cimar. 1!! UTILE ARr CORNER1528 E. Slat ST.Arts aDd Crafts GoodsTHE. i1..ACE TO BUY YOUR GIFTS TODAY IS THf LAST DAYOF THE SHOf SALf.A vail yourself of the Opportunityoffered by Carson, Pirie Scott I: Co.- a department store whose reputa·tic n is unimpeachable-and ask themto show you the shoes they are of.fering at such, prices. Saturday is thelast day of this sale, SO take the firstI. C. Express, north bound Elevatedor north bound Cottage Grove car,for Carson. Pirie Scott a: Co's. store,State &: Madison Sts., you possiblycan. You will be amply repaid.Whether you need Shoes now or not,you will find it profitable to buy now,as the sale includes the advancespring styles."When Carson, Pirie Scott & Co.advertises anything, it is SO youknow.'-Chocolates, Bon BonsUnequaled FountainDrinks,ORDERS FILLED BY PHONESHIPPED ANYWHERE'59 State St. 184 Michigan Ave.179 La Salle Street.Yes, anybodycan buy glassesfor a third of what weask. But they don'thU7 anything with theglasses. and it's whatgoes with the glasseswe fit that make themworth while. and lackof service that makesover-the-counterglasses dangerous.You understand. � eLr� Foar-Drawer" -=- VertialLETTER FILE$1 3820lda5 zoOen';eredSOLID 041[ (aoldn or'''eathf'rN) Dnl'l' raoor,Roller s""ri ..... Pat"D' Fo,"lo_r. (..a. I aDd 8,11 !hu<oproportlODllt .. !J' low priced.2 Drawf'rFlltl.7.70a Drawflr I"l1e •• 1.001"_I�bt Pnld Ea.t of )(oata ...."·:romi C"lorado. OU.burua, Te.lu, 1.aud t .. t tb_ •• 1.1 I:'",�nd Ii., l'.I.kc "c" of Card J...wa ...Clipe, P •• tal 5",,1 .. aDd 015c .. belpe. C .. I.­_luI·' D" s.Mi'·n.l n.1("'(_"'�The�.e Mfg. Co.Ullin fUrHt JOnt .n.N. Watry � Co.OPTICIANS.99-101 Randolpb StreetTOG wID __. baYe eyeQa.. comfort.cwau I_ce OI"'_' efficiency 1Ud117O'1'__ SHUR-OH eyev ...... __ fit-,"-a. s.- your old le_ put IDID •�-.,".�., � MountiDg. ---,... CLASSIFIEDADVERTISEMENTSRates-c- Three lines for 2S cents.Si� words to the line.Five insertions for the price of four.No advertisement taken for leut�:m 2S cents.Cash must accompany order.'l'ry a want ad in the Daily Maroon.Sma 11 ads bring large results."ALWAYS AT HAND"M. CRIMBEROFFLadies Tailor5653 KUDbark Ave.Tel. H. p. 3283Repairing & Pressing a Specialty7HCBlS1lA· Repeating 'ShotgunsUSED IN THE U. S. ARMY.The U. S. Army authorities knOll' a gun; thatis why, wheOl they decided to equip some troopswith repeating shotguns, they selected the Win­chester, in preference to all other makes. TheexPerts of t!Ie U. S. Ordnance Board also knOll''i gun; that's "'hy, after submitting a Winches­ter Repeating Shotgun to all sorts of tests, theypronounced itsafe,sare, strong and simple. Ifyou want a shotgun-buy the ODe whosestrength and reliability led the U. S. Armyauthorities to select it and the U. S. Ordnance"Board to endorse ��·a the Wmch __ •'R ELI A BLE- /R E PEATE RSRev. Charles Gilkey to Speak on"The ;Religion of the Student."teams wore the colors of 50me soreority. The winning team was ginna silver luving cuP.�orthwcstern college defcated ettAt a recent cross country run at. Cornell won the championship ofMinnesota. each of thc compctmgthe Ea�t by defcating Dartmouth inhockey.A ,sistant Professor G. A. Reisnerof E��tology at Han'ard has dis'ccovered from recent investigationsthat the anc:ienl:i u�cd i.D.k. President Judson will preside atthc vesper senices to he beld in,f:l ndel hall tomorrow at 4 p. m.Il.l· :,ubjc('t of the address by the,,'\Trend Charles W. Gilkey, -pastori 11:(' Iiyde Park Baptist church, is:"T he Rcligion of the Student." The;'.1tt�ic will be provided by the choird Ule church. This service is inlccognition of the Day of Prayers for\:ol1cges. We print the DailyTh(' Frcshmen at Pennsylcania.how their individuality by wearing a�p(.'cial pill..There are 123 men out for the vari­ous crews at Pennsylvania. MEDICAL SERVICETel. 4S4$ R. P. Rn. Tf'l. 82D4 II. r.DR. BJlORY M. LOTTSDENTISTomce N. W. Cor. 6.'rd St. nndKlmbark A"�. Suite H. rt'l. n. 1',4:145. n�. Tel Onk 2!l24GEO. W. 1. BROWN, M. D."ral'tlre lImltffi to dll'e1ltleS of theJ:\'F .. NOSE AND TH_OATlI,ltlM1 !l to 12 n. m.. 2 to 5 p. m..�\,f'nln� find 811n(1:\),8 by ftppolntment.f'mM'. Suite 14. 12:l0 E. 63rd 8t. N. W.Cor. Rlmbark ATe., Cblcaco.