Vol. IX. No. 161HONORARY DEGREES TOCONVOCATION GUESTS . , '{i .... "\ .. �, .. I '• ... •, \I11·. !' ; a·'"·:t·. )0' 'on- -._ ...• � . G � ': ".•. -. � _, , . ; , : . .• r- ; ,,... ".;UNIVERSITY OF C�ICAGO, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 14, 1911 Price Five CeDt5CAP&:GOWNASSISTANTSCIIOSEN. ALUMNI HOLD'REUNION.FRlDAY AND SATURDAY FOO�T�TOCOMlBACKCout YO. Bel1lllorff, haperial GermaDAmlwaador, ad tile Rev. CliffordReceiye Dep-ea.PRESIDENT ·ANNOUNCES GIFTSCount Von Bernstorff Gives Convo,catjon 'Addres<; on the "Founda­tion of the German Empire."At the Convocation exercises yes­,terday two honorary degrees weregiven. The Reverend John Clifford.president of the Baptist \Vorld AI­l-ance w� .resented with the honor­ary degree of Doctor of Divinity, andCount Heinrich von Bernstorff im--- ,perial German ambassador to theUnited States, was awarded the hon­orary degree of Doctor of Laws.The board of trustees of the Uni­versity announces the appoinment ofHarry Gideon 'Veils, associate pro­fessor of Pathology, to the director­ship of the medical work of the OthoS.· A. Institute. The institute, is re­cently established in Chicago and itsfunds will be devoted largely in re­search work for the benefit of hu,manity. Dr. Wells will retain hisposition in the University and willcarryon the work with the coopera­tion of the other affiliated medicalinterests of the University.Gifts for University.Among the gifts to the Universitywhich were .announced by PresidentJ udson are a bronze. bust o� .. .Mr_Charles J. Hull, in whose names thefund was "iven for the Hull biologicallaboratories, and eighty-eight vol­umes from the library of A. B. Meyer,director of the Royal Zoological mu.seums in Dresden. Saxony. Thesewere written by Mr. Meyer and willbe a valuable addition to the Uni­versity library.Dr. Gaunsulus has presented hiscollection of Japanese sword furnish­ings. These will give important ma­terial for the study of Japanese artand history. It will be placed in theHarper Memorial library. From themembers of the Holland society inChicago a fund of $2.000 has been re­ceived to establish a lectureship inDutch institutions for the comingtwo years in the University.Convocation Address.Count Johann Heinrich von Bern­storff. imperial German ambassadorto the United States, made the Con­vocation address on "The Founda­tion of the German Empire," Countvon Bernstorff traced the growth ofthe German empire from the timeof the Holy Roman empire to thepresent. emphasizing the last century.He said in part:"I wish to thank you most since­I, for the privilege of appearing be­fore you today and the splendid re­ception and warm welcome extendedto me in this beautiful city, which Ihave had the good fortune to visitseveral times with an ever-increasingpleasure. I most highly appreciatethe great honor conferred on me bythis University (If world-wide fame.It is Rr:ltifying to me that the decreeof Doctor of Laws brings me intol:l�tin� c(lllncction with the cclehratcdtJni\'er�;tr of Chicago. which al­tbough, one of the youngest of thegre:1t unh'f'rsities of the world, hasalready Njual1('fl her old('r sisters asa cent('r of light and inspiration toall mankind and in holding up to herl'tudents the ideals of a high andsplendid liie_ I am wetl aware, thatio conferring such a great honor onmf' you were less prompt('d hy thewish to reco�nize my small personal Most of Committees for wrbe 1012Cap and Gown" Are SeJec:t"ed­Several Appointments to Be MadeNext FalLMost of the appointments of thecommittees for the 1912 Cap andGown ha ve been made. Because ofthe fact that the elections were heldlater this year than ever before it hasheen necessary to withold a numberIIf the appointments until next fall.The list of associate editors and as­sistants who have been selected is asfollows:Literary committee: Chairman (ex­,.Iiicio! Hiram Kennicott ; WinifredM iller, Myra Reynolds, Helen Gross,ltarrett Clark, Merl Reese, David B.Adams,Art: Charlotte Foss.Athletics: Martin D. Stevers,Classes: Chairman, Mona Quayle,\Villiam Warriner, '12, W. OgdenColeman. '14-Divinity School: To be selected.Dramatic .. committee: Chairman.William Hefferan; Cora Hinkins,Robert Stenson.Faculty: Chester S. Bell.Fraternities and Honor Societies:James Donovan.Law School: Arnold R. Baar,Medics: J- Roscoe Harry.Music: Don Hollingsworth.Organizations: Harold Kramer.Society: Kent Chandler and EffieHewitt.Women's .. Athletics: JosephineKern.Staa Photogiap!len: Fred Holmes,Paul Lavery, Luman Thurber.This leaves the Divinity school de­partrnent and the School of Educationdepartment as yet unprovided Ior,These positions will be flied beforet he close of the quarter and appoint­ments will be made to the Art Athlet­ics and Society committees beforethe beginning of the fall .quarter,merits than by the desire to expressyour friendship and sympathy for thenation I have the honor to represent.SUch friendship seems especially nat­ural at Chicago, as this beautiful cityis now the home of a great numberof the German settlers, who reachedthis hospitable country in the courseof the last century. "These Germanimmigrants have since been Ameri­canized and proved to be very goodciuzens. They now form a naturalbond of an ever-increasing friendshipbetween Germany and the UnitedStates. Most of them left their oldhomes. when the name of Germanyonly lived in the verse and song andthe nation was granulated into manypolitical units. The national devel­«pment of Germany since those timeshas been just as remarkable as thegrowth of the United States duringthe same period. As' a world powert he modern young and vigorous Ger­man Empire is only forty years old.hut it has heen built up on the ruinsof the old empire as a legitimate out­come of a long mstorical develop-111('nt. J t is always a misfortune ift he moods and passions of a peopleare permitted to overthrow the in­-t iturions which represent the histori­\'al development and the expressionof the nation's deepest convictions.ThC' greate!"t statesman Germany ev­er produced. who founded our mod­ern Empire, saved us from such amisfortune, because he Wa!" imbuedwith the helief in the old rule that noin�titution can work wen unless it isthe natural product of previous his·torical development.The �econd lnC't I alluded to is(Cootinac:d 0. Pap t�) Eleven Hopes to Reverse Results ofLast Year in Coming Season'.Games - Expenenced Men AddStrength -Good Teams Elsewhere.'�DefeJlle of tile ·c' " to he Presealedoa Manlaall Field Sat­wdayNiPLThe Chicago football team wilt goupon the field next fall with the dt>­termination to wipe out the defeatswhich various teams inflicted upon itlast season. Several student bodiesrejoiced last fall in the first victoryin years, if not the first in history,over a University of Chicago footballteam. Captain Rademacher and hismen will endeavor to see to it thatthe habit of rejoicing does not be­come too common at the various oth­er Conference universities. It hasbrought to the notice of the teamthat the celebrations are a greatstrain upon the local police, and theChicago men have great regard forthe feeling of the police,One thing that was a great handi­C:IP to the team last fall will not ex.is t this coming season. This is thematter of inexperience. In place ofhaving but one experienced man be­tween tackle and tackle, the ream canIl(l in with five if necessary. Menwho played their first game of col­lege football in the Indiana or Hlin­"is games last fall will go againsttheir first opponents next year withsix: or seven college games behindthem and all the information andability they have gained from the ex­perience in their heads.Strong Teams in West.Next year's season wit be a strenu­ous one, even if the Chicago teamdoes not show enough improvementto be in the running {or the cham-· pionship. It has yet to be settled.however. that the Maroon team can· he counted out of the runing, Thereare, however, two teams which on the· present showing declare that the· championship lies between them.These are Illinois and Minnesota.They will meet next fall, and therewill be no chance for a tie. Bothteams will lose strong men. butboth will have many veterans. Min­nesota's losses will be most apparentin the back field. while Illinois willsuffer in the line.Wisconsin has a new coach inRichards, a man of known abilityhoth as a player and a coach. Heis an alumnus of Wisconsin and thestudents look to him to bring theirteam up in its Conference standing.The men are made more spirited bythe first victory over Chicago sinceroor and wil make a hard fight to re­peat.MANY REPUES. AlE RECEIVEDAlumni to Make . Reynolds ClubHeadquarters-Fraternity SingFriday Night on Campus.The committee on the Homecom­ing and Alumni reunion to be heldt he latter part of this week held animportant session yesterday after­noon down town. and reports fromthe several committees were beard.The contract for the fireworks dis-play. "The Defense of the 'C'" hasbeen let. and Secretary Hansen de­clares that it will be the most mag­nificent pageant of its sort ever wit­nessed by the University. The pag­cant will be held on Marshall field011 Saturday evening and will be opento all members of the University.Many Alumni Expected.Answers from the alumni havebeen corning in rapidly during thepast week. All of. the .fraternitiesexcept two have sent in lists of theiralumni and most of them have sig­nified .their intention of being pres­ent. Most of the present Senior classwill also be present, and, with the. exception or- the alumni cof the oldUniversity of Chicago, every classthat has graduated. wiII be represen­ted by scores of its members. The.graduates of the old University ofChicago have not been at all encour­:tging in their replies to the letterssent out by Secretary Hansen. Theydo not seem to consider tl.c reunionin the light. of a homecoming to theirown Alma Mater, but neverthelessmany of them will be in attendancetoo.Headquarters in ReJ'llolda Club.Friday and Saturday the alumn,will make their headquarters in therooms of the Reynolds club. Somem:emher of the Alumni exchangecouncil will be in charge all the timeand each alumntfs will register assoon as he arrives. Harry DelmontAbells will be in charge of the reg­istration on Friday morning. Fridaynight, as heretofore announced is Pennsylvania has installed an x-rayto be the night of the fraternity machine lately for the use of students"!'ing" on the campus, and on Satur- ,in the surgery .department.day the reunion exercises and the:!geant on Kushan field wiII be theevents, -Iowa State and Massachusetts Ag­riculture are leading the inter-col.legiate rifte shooting competition with8 victories and 0 defeats. There areI;"; teams in the league.DR. SLAUGHT GETS DEGREENotre Dame has added fi"e acresAssociate Professor Get. Honorary to their present football fieldDegree from Colgate University.Thirty six men entered the singlesfor the championship of the Univer;,ity of \Visconsin.rl·cei\'e the honorary degree of Doc­t or of Science from Colga te nnh·er·!>ity at its coming cOIl\-ocation. Pro_i(':\:\nr Slaught is a graduate of Col­gate, in Hamilton, X. Y. H� recei\"C'dthe degr�e of Doctor of Philosophyfrom the Fnh-ersity in '98. aft('r­wards coming to the l:ni\'Crsity as afellow at its inception and becominga member of the faculty in '99. Tuskegee University recently re­ceived a gift of $10,000 from D. K.Cornwall of this city.Three men and two women willCf)1llpo�e the hoard to get out theIC)I z Indiana year hook.The deh:lting t�am!' of Princetonorganiud a local chapter of DeltaSigma Rho, the d�hating fraternity. HONORS AND DEGREESGIVEN AT CONVOCATIONElectiODl to Phi Beta Kappa aDd SigmaXi Fratenities areAmaollllced.WAS LARGEST CONVOCATIONFour Hundred and Seventy-Four De­grees Conferred, Greatest Num­ber in University's History.Two honorary degrees and fourhundred and seventy-four other de­g-rees and titles were conferred yes­trrday at the Seventy-ninth convoca­tion held in Hutchinson court. Fol­lowing are the lists of honors. de­grees, and titles awarded:The following were elected mem­hers of Sigma. Xi on nomination ofthe departments of science for evi­dence of ability in research work inscience: Warder Clyde Allee. Clif­ford Daniel Carpenter, Carl RobertEnglund, Thomas- Bruce Freas, Ed­ward Maris Harvey, Walter SamuelHunter, Maurice Goldsmith Melli,Charles George MacArthur, WadeMcNutt, William Abbott Owens.Fleming Allen Clay Perrin, RoswellTalmadge Pettit, Paul David Potter,Mildred Leonora Sanderson.The elections to the Beta of Illin­ois chapter of Phi Beta Kappa wereofficially announced at the Convoca­tion yesterday. Members are elected(,11 nomination by the University forespecial. .distinction in general schol­arship il' the University: LeonardGalvin Donnelly. George Harold_Earle, Harvey Fletcher, Mary Cor­nelia Gouwens, Olive Louise Hagley,Elsa Irene Henzel, Alice FergusonLee, Davis Hopkins McCarn, EdithPrindeville, Ruth Reticker, Ella M_Russell, Carola Schroeder Rust, MaryElizaheth Titzel. Plorence White.Honorable. Mention.Honorable mention for excellence­in the work of the Junior colleges wasawarded to Chester Sharon BellMary Eliza Clarke Homer Casne�Dawson, Richard Allan Granquist,William Le Roy Hart, .David EliasJohnson, Hiram Langdon Kennicott,Edna Hjldergnrd Kron, Anna Eliza­beth Moffet. George Spencer Monk.Kenneth Potter Monroe, Jane Mc_Donald, James Sydney Orr, MyraAdeline Paine, Norman Carr Paine,Edith Putnam Parker, Charlotte Ot­tilie Pauli. Ina Maud Perego, MonaQuayle. Harry Ofshi Rosenberg,Sarah Greenehaum Sander. WilliamA�hert Schneider, Walter HenrySmith, Hirsch Soble Martin DelawavStevers, Charles Co�ger Stewart, R;·gina Straus, Ardis Ethelyn ThomasOlive Jackman Thomas, C,rolin;Irene Townsend, Adele Whitney,Katherine Denise Wollaston.Honorable mention for excellencein the work leading to the certificateof the .Collt'ge of Education wasawarded to: Mary Elizabeth Davis,Marg:tret McPherson Gordon. Edna,Mahon. Rec;s Reed Peacock. Theo.,rlora Goldsun Pottle. Sarah FrancesR�s<. Lucile Shaw, El�a Wolf, Doro­thy Mary Yeisley.Scholar .. hip« in the Senior collegesfor excellence in the work of theJ11nior ("otteges were awarded to:Chester Sharon RC'll. Political Econo­my: ];:,lith L(,OIlt)Te Rradley, 7.0(l10�\"Ora nrll(' ('ole. History: Gertr�;l;Emt'rspn. English: Ethel hahel(;ro:lt. French; \ViHi:lm T.eRo,· Hart�fathe1l1atic�; Clifton M:'Ihie - Ktclrr:r.('o�raJ)hy: Edna Hildegard Kron,r.reek: Kcnnt'th Porter M onro('Chemistry: Martin Delaway Stc,·ers:Phy .. i<"!': Charles Conger Stenvart,(Cl ntinued on pace .1...... - 'l'HE :t;>AILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14. tOU- ....I!I!!.:i ]I.: I n�g�� Guman; Karl Kd�ne�I-��������������������������������Darrow Ma-thematics and Physics;Edith d1i\'e Davis, French; LeonardGalvin Donnelly, Geology; GeorgeWendell Dunlap. Anatomy and Path­ology; George Harold .Earle, PoliticalEconomy; Mary Cornelia Gouwens,German: Olive Louise Hagley, Math­ematics; Adele Aurora Charlotte He-deen. German; Earl Henry Huenk­cmeier, Mathematics; Ethel Kawin,Sociology; William Henry Kuh •Chemistry; Alice Ferguson Lee,French; Alice Ferguson Lee. Hist·orv: Melitta Anna Margaret, Germanand Latin: George Shrader Mathers,Physiology and Anatomy: MauriceGoldsmith Mehl, Paleontology andGf'olngy: Helen Mary Parker. Eng­li-h ; Edith Prindcville, Latin: HazelLeigh Stfllman, German: GeorgeSutherland. Chemistry; MargueriteSwawire. English; Florence MaySWC:lt. Latin and Greek: Esther Lu­cile Tarkington. Englisb ; Carl Wil­l.elrn Toepfer. German: Garnet Em­ma Trott" Philosophy; Garnet Emma"Trott, Latin: Garnet Emma Trott,TO DAlLY IIABOOB cause it has believed that htose activoities are overshadowing the more sereious and fundamental purposes of acollege education. . I t bas asked theabolition of intercollegiate competi·tion in athletics, because it bas feltthat that institutlo» fosters methodsand ideals beneath an educated man.It has voiced its opposition to thesethings with full knowledge that onthem rested that which has come to be. known as college spirit, but with theadded conviction that the convention,al conception of college spirit hasbeen provincial and insular .The Daily Maroon has taken theposition that college spirit must oflogical necessity be subordinate· tothe higher interests of the community.of society, and that if the two conflictthe former must give way, howevermuch a recession would deprive col­lege students of pleasure and a cer­tain kind of sentiment. The DailyMaroon's posit'ion has been based onthe feeling that student life is a weakmimicking of American so-calledstrenuousity, American materialism,I t does not charge student activitieswith being the cause of the material­is tic views of college students. It seesthem rather as the effect of thoseviews throughout American society.And because it thinks that the edu­cated man should lead and notfollow, that the dufy of the educatedman is to direct evolution by an in­telligent inquiry as to what is bestfor the whole, it does not believe in.present undergraduate tendencies. Itmaintains that the only college spiritthat rests upon a solid foundation andcan truly be everlasting is the spiritthat arises from the knowledge thatthe education obtained at any institu­tion of learning has enabled thosewhom it has sent forth to expendthemselves to best advantage for thebenefits of society. And the truestand deepest Chicago spirit will be felthy him who knows that only by theknowleflge received and the ideals as­similated within its quadrangles fromthe deeper things was he given thepower to reach ab�ve the prejudice 01the maSSC5 and make some contribu­tion to the progress of mankind.� Omdal 8t114elat PDbUeaUOD ot TheUDlftMt7 of ChkqoII;, 'I'ormer17TIl. UDlftnlt, of Chlca.o Weekl7l'ou4ecl� Weeki, •••••••••••• October 1. 1882�be Dan, ••••••••••••• Octobel' 1. 1102 BISHOP'S· SPECIALI, I, !Curl M�ckinawA PencilPubl1ahed DallJ', except Swada, .. MOD·u,. aDd bollda,.. durlDC LIlree-quarten.f Out Unlveralt7 ,eaf.•Entered .. �oud-cUt" mall at LIle Cbl- .... 0 l·o.tolUc:e. ChlCll¥O, lWnola. IolareblH, 11108, under Act of l1ILrch I, 1813.TilE STAFJ!l'. A. Itl··EJ:·1-'ER • llaDaclllc Edllor of extreme styleand grace• Nc\IU EditorAthleUc EdItorK. oJ. VAL� • ._.H. 'J):. CARl·E.'tTEBA STRAW HATfor young menand the hat ofthe seasonASSOCIATE EDITOBS11. L. KeDulcottM. W. BeeBeD. L. Breedw. J. It'ouLe•• Y. TQlolM. V. Steven,� ,:' German.Scholarships in the graduateschools for excellence in the work"f the Senior colleges were awardedto George Baumann, Botany; MayJosephine Carey, Household Admin­istration ; Olive Louise Hagley, Lat­in; Marx Ernest Holt, Physics; EarlHenrv Huenkerneier, Mathematics;.\lice- Ferguson Lee, History; Es­'mond Long, Chemistry; MauriceGoldsmith Mehl, Geograpby andPaleontology; Howard Harper Mc­Kce Geology; Marguerite Swawite,English.B.&POB'I'.EJUIC_ 10'. lJuuhamlA. L. BarrlaP. Kearne7s. B. 1'.r.leeBarr, Comer)lax Enelowa .: KapluW. L71D&1l $3.00L L. Ha7n 1... �tolUB. W. VlDluky W. WellmauWOMEN'S DEPAB'I'IIKN'I'llarJorle uui, KclltorButh lLeUcker, .Auoc1ate Editor.BBPOB'I'BBSM. Campbell Alwu Licht1J'lor.nce CaWn Ilury a Tltaell1Wtr6!uerlte Swawlte A. Bishop & Co.SlJasCBIP710N BATBS'.7 Carrier, $2.00 per year i '1.00 per qr.ett7 ID&11, $1.26 per quarter i f3.00 perJ'ear lD IldvuC8. Associate Titles.The title of associate was con-·ferred on: V�stal Raul AbrahamDonald Admiral, Martha Elizabeth Al­exander. Orpha Lorena App, Flor­cnce Elberta Barns. Emmet Lewis,l!each. Jr- Chester Sharon Bell, Jon­as Bleadon, William Varner Bowers,Edith Leonore Bradley, ElizabethIlr edin Donald Levant Breed, AliceLucil1: B�rne Barrett Harper Clark,Mary Eliza barke, Abe Clevering,Ora Belle Cole, Ruth Theresia Craw-ford, Daisy .Edna Cressey, LouiseSiesel David, Homer Casner Dawson,Albert Henry Dekker, Mina Vera De­y ries Ralph Alfred Doyle, AnnaDuns:nl'or Dril Helen Earle, Alwin,William Robert Ehrhardt, EmanuelFink, Annie Louise Ford, TheodoreEnglish Ford, Clarence Preston Free-man Allen Charles Germann, Eva IGold'stein, Alonzo Charles Goodrich,Jr., Edith Anna Gordon, HerbertWigren Granquist, Richard AllanGranquist, Albert Lawrence Green.:E$lCl Isabel· Groat •. Chester Arm­strong Hammill, William LeRoyHart. Samuel Heller, Dwight Lind­ley Hill, Faith Lee Hoel, Bertha loneHunter. David Elias Johnson, Clyde:\fnrton Joic:e, Elizabeth VallanceJ ones, George Jinji Kasai, HiramLangdon Kennicott, Edna Hildegard"ron, Clifford Littell La Duk, PaulEdward Lavery, Joseph Brown Law­ler, Mildred Sylvia Loeb, Roger Da­vid Long, J. Coke Mathes, CarolineDrury Mehring. Marjorie McLeod�fillcr, Anna Elizabeth Moffet,George Spencer Monk, Kenneth Pot·!l'r Monroe. Raymond Da\'id Mulli·nix Harry Arthur McCauley, Jane�Icbonald; Pearl Ro�e Mc Gimsie.1If)\\-ard Baird McLane, MargaretEliza Mc Mullen, loraine Robbins,�\Ilrtlrrup. James Snyder Orr, Myra.\dc1ilh.· Paine. Norman Carr Paine,J-:.liih Putnam Parker, Charlotte Ot·tilic P:mli. Ina �Iaud Perego, Monar·'l:lde Charles Martin Rademacher,.\<)oiph· R:lflnitzer, Russcll Matthiasnccdy, Ruth Margaret Renwick. My­r;t IJarri('tt Reynolds, Harry OfshiHo:-clthcr!!. Sarah Grcenehaum Sand­K:lthlccn Shannon, Haney Birta. :\lil·c �larion Schi11ing� \VilIiam:\illert Schncider, Otto YoungSclmering. Thomas Erskine Scofield,�hick. Sclma Shiffman. George Ste­I,h('n Skinner, Jr. Frederic Chamber­lin Smith \Val;er Henry Smith.,Hir�ch Soble, Ella Laura Sorenson,Kenath Tyl�r Sponsel, Edward Hen" SELL YOURSecond Hand. BooksNew. coDtrlbutioD. ma7 be left at JIll.J.la Hall or l!'acult7 lslxchanp. addreaaedh Th. Dall1 lIarooD.-AT-Book ShopWoodworth'sThe close -of the college year andthe appearance of the last editionbring with themRecapitulation and that saddest mo­Swan Song 57TH STREET AND KTMBARK AVE.ment in a coUegeeditor's ca-reer­when he sits down in the dead. lone­ly silence of one o'clock in the morn­ing after graduation for the last timeto give his message to the studentbody and to say farewell, Althoughthe excitement and emotional stressof last class exercises, Convocationceremonies and farewell reunions arehardly conducive to calm, logicalthinking and writing, the editor mustyet accept the sad duty of examiningthe year's books and clearing the ac­counts. And it is with apologies forpast mistakes, appreciation for pastassistance and hopes for the futurethat the present editor herewith' laysdown his pen-if the anachronism ispermitted in the prosaic days of re­built typewriters-and turns TheDaily Maroon over to his more com.potent successors.The Daily Maroon has in the yearpnst taken an unusual and no doubtunpopular attitude. It has attackedthings most dear to the heart of thecollege studenj. It has denied the:;;1<;tification for institutions that havecome to be thought inviolable. Ithas questioned the sacrosanct But ithas done so only b, ,'a use it has hada sincere conviction that it was in:.he right, It has done so becau�eit ha� felt that as bctween iconoclasm:-anrl �m\1g se1fsath:faction, the formeri!' the le�5er of the two c,·ils. It hasG(Ine �o beca\\�e it h:-as belivcd thatthe functi(ln of a college papcr isto treat nothing as static; totake n�"'ing' for granted, to accept1i0thing- as right only because it ex­i�ts. but on the other hand to go be­neath thc surface and to submit every·thing to :l rigid. unimpa�sioned inves­tigation, supporting nothing that couldnot �tand the test of logic, precedentto the contrary nothwithstanding.The Daily Maroon has expressedits antagonism to the complex, over­f'rg:lniTctrion of. lIIrndent activities, be. WE BUY ALL KIImS OF BOOKS;TEXT & MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS.·HONORS AND DEGREESGIVEN AT CONVOCATION(Continued from Page 1.)Latin; Vivian Ouray Tansey, Ger­man; John Elmer Thomas, Jr., Geol·ogy.The Bachelor's degree was con­ferred with honors on LeRoy Edward'Isaumann, Nettie Grace Beam, AgnesMarguerite Beeson, Margaret LouiseCampbell. Millington Farwell Car­penter, Mollie Ray Carroll, JamesCunningham Clarke, George HowellColeman, Pearl Margaret Daniels,Karl Kelchner Darrow, Edith OliveGalvin Donnelly, G. HaroldEarle, Mary Cornelia Gouw-ens Earl Quincy Gray, Donald Till­inghast Grey, Olive Louise Hagley,Hoy. Milton Harmon, Adele AuroraCharlotta Hedeen, Marx Ernest Holt.Ethel Kawin, Frances Parnell Keat­ing, William Henry Kuh, Alice Fer­guson Lee, Moses Levitan. MaudIllanch Linkenhoker. Esmond RayLong'. Melitta Anna Margaret, Aman­(ia Martha Manske, Mary Ethel May­all. Maurice Goldsmith Mehl, Nona':\facQuilkin, Helen Mary Parker.Eflith Prindcyille. Julia Elton Rimes,Ella �f. Rus .. ell, Eva SC\uthworth,Hazel Leigh Stillman, George Suth­erl:md. �I.ug\lerite Swawite, Florence�Ia:r Sweat, Esther Lucile Tarking­If�n. Mary Elizaheth Titze), Carl \Vil­helm Toepfer. Garnet Emma Trott.ntanchc Nell Watkins, FlorenceMarion White. Edith Marie Z:thring_ 474 E •• " ..-:.111�".We print The Daily MarooDITelepbone Hyde Park 931CHENEY ART-�'STUDIOCLYDE E. CHENEY. Proprietor.Picturea and�. 0hlDa ad 0blDa PirlIII, DeveJ.OpiDg and �.TWOSTORES. llU E. 6Srd Street and 6220 Cottace GrOft Aft..,fry Stein. Robert Stenson, Edna'J "onise Sterling, Frances ReginaStern, Martin Delaway Stevers.Charles Conger Stewart, Regina�tr;\\15. Vivian Ouray Tansey, ArdisEthelyn Thomas, John Elmer Thom­;1"'. Jr .. Oliv� Jackman Thomas, Flor·ence MYMle Tisdale. Car<,line IreneTownsend, Cecile Van Stcenberg,M:Jrgaret Louise Watson, Lawrence1Ianley Whiting, Adele Whitney, AI-.;:fl Da\'id \Vitkowsky, Florence MarieW 01£, Katherine Denise Wollaston.The College of Education twoyc.-ar's certificates were awarded to:7:..v Marie Allen, Osea Len:t Crowd­f'r: Mary Elizabeth Da,-is. MargaretMcPherson Gordon, Florence Green, Edith Annie Gregson, Mary EllenH arri�on. Olive Adelaide Krausz, Ed·na Mahon. Theresa Dorothy Marks,Mildred Martin, Ruth Merrill, Harriet1M \trllhy. T rene G. McBride, Gr�tch�nHl1ssell Nash. BeMha Elizabeth Nor­(!('nhnl�. Marguerite Palmer, Bessl� ('cd Peacock, Theodora Goldsunl·ottle. Sarah Frances Ross, LucileShaw. Florence Helen Silverman, Ag­n('� Graeme Smith, Ruth LouiseSohl. Leah Williams. Elsa Wolf Dor­.,thy Mary Yeisley.The de�ree of Bachelor or Philos·ophy (in Education) was award�d on:Sarah Emily Ausemus, Frances Maudnerry Olive Forman BIckell,(Con tiD oed OD pqe })cr.11 onor� for exceltence in p:trticularocpartments of the Senior collegeswere awarded to Margaret LouiseCampbell, Geology; James Cunning­ham, Anatomy and Physiclogy;("-reorge Howell Coleman, Anatomy;George Howell Coleman, Physiologyand Pathology; Horaee Kilton CUD·�HE DAILY MAROON•. WEDNESDAY, JUNE J.4, 1911IIr'WOODna_OODBASSWOODOBAYWOODftBl(WOOD'DtAKWooDILU'LEWOODETo.YOU WILL FIND WHATYOU ARE HUNTING FOR�.".COLLARS2 FOR 25 CENTSTHEY AilE IN GREEN BOXESMade by EARL & WILSON•F_. for � Collar.-..:-...SILVERMANDUCK PANTS$1.50 to $2.00OUTING SHIRTS$1.00, 51.50, $2.00PHOENIXSILK HOSE'50SILVERMAN1125 fast 63rd StreetNear LezinctoD. HONORS AND DEGREESGIVEN AT CONVOCATION(Continued from page 2)Allys Boyle, Dorothy SaveryBuckley, Elizabeth Campbell,JC�\Ilt:tte Eleanor Ely, Joy Elizabethl-ranklin, Lena Elizabeth Johnson,Antoinette P:.Imer. Ora Rutherford,Carlotta Dyer Sagar, Margaret VanHoesen,. The degree of Bachelor of Arts wasconferred on: LeRoy Edward Bau­mann, Agnes Marguerite Beeson, Zin;nil Bragg, Millington Farwell Car:"penter, Louie Reynolds Cummins, 01-ive Louise Hagley, Frances ParnellKeating. Margaret 'Alice King, MaudBlanch Linkenhoker, Esmond RayLong. Melitta Anna Magaret, AlthaEdwarda Montague, Merrill IsaacSchnebly. Florence May Sweat, MaryElizabeth T'itzel, Carl Wilhelm Toep­Ier; Mary Hays Townsend, A. B .•Southwestern Baptist University,f()Oi: Benjamin \Vilk, James RobertWork_The degree of Bachelor of Philoso­phy wa� conferred on:Arthur Lam­bert Adam s, Marks Alexander, Val­lee Orville Appel, Grant Cozzens.Armstrong, Anita Marie Bailey, Cy­rus Le Roy Baldridge Hilmar RobertBaukhage Groven K�rl Baumgartner, ,Xeltie Grace Beam, Elmer WadeBeatty, Robert Reinhard Berens, Ed­ward Henry Earle BowJby, WilliamRay Bowlin, Helen MacKay Brown,May Josephine Carey, Mollie RayCarroll, Florence May Catlin, Mar­guerite Christenson, Frank John Col­lings, Mary Sila Colt, Edith GertrudeCoonley, Leonard Ward Coulson,Horace Milton Cunningham, PearlMargaret Daniels, Edith Olive Da­vis, Paul Hazlitt Davis, MitchellDawson, John Cecile Dinsmore,George Harold Earle, Samuel EdwinEarle, Edna Marie Ericson, MaryLouise Etten, Florence GenevieveFanning, Elizabeth Farwell, RobertWilliam FI&lck, Margaret Jane Fogle­song, Jacob Logan Foz, Harvey Ber­nard" Fran�lift; -FarGeorge- Fulkerson,Harold Cushman Gifford, Mary Cor­nelia Gouwens, Ada MacDonaldGreenfield, Charles Frederick Grey,l\f argaret Ellen Haass, Donald Till­inghast Grey, Grace Ellerton Hann­an, Roy Milton Harmon, ElizabethChannen Harris, Mary Irene Hast­ings, Adele Aurora Charlotte He-deen, Edith lone Hemingway, Fran­ces Herrick. Paul Albert Hildebrandt,Robert Benjamin Holmes HerbertGroff Hopkins, John Maso� Hough­land. Jessie Florence Hutchinson,Helen Aurelia Ingham, Elizabethmaine Jenkins, Ethel Kawin, Her­mann Root Kern, Martha FannyLaiblin, Bernice LeClaire, Alice Fer­guson Lee, Samuel Nathaniel Levin­son, Moses Levitan, Viola CosbyLewis. Margaret Loweth, Mary Mor­rison Maginness, Amanda MarthaManske, Harry Markheim, Mary Eth­cl Mayall, James Francis Meagher,Donna May Messenger, DorothyChristiana Milfer, Ella Evelyn Mix,X arline Moore, Ali Benjamin Mos­trom, Ellen Isabel MacNeish, JohnWilson MacNeish, Ruth Newberry,M ary Marjorie Ogden, Emily Rox­�nna Orcutt, Cola George Parker.Helen Mary Parker, Frank AllanPaul, Martha Peiser. Gertrude Per­ry, Nathaniel Abraham Pfeffer, Eve­line Maud" Phillips. Mary CorneliaPhister, Edith Prindeville, Myra Ger­trude Reed. Elizabeth Rider. JuliaElton Rimes. Marie Genevieve Rog­crs, Ella M. Rus�ell. Albert Sabath,:\farion S('haffner. E11<-n Schmidt, Ed­ward August Seegers, Catherine Dor­othy Slater. Calvin Otis Smith. DoraEdith Stabcnau. Mary Hele-n Staley.H;a7.c1 Leigh Stillman, A1fr�d Heck­m:tn Str:mhe. \Vittinm Jo��ph Sun­cierlan(l. Paul FreMrick Swnin. Min'nie M:lh�l Swan�on, Marguerite Swa­wife, Esther l.ucile Tarkington, Eliz­;ah('th Arnelia Timm�. Harriette Tay·lor Tre;adwell, Perry Dakin Trimble,G;arnef Emrna Trott. l..aura Margar­et • Truscott. Artbur CavanaughTouhy, Suzanne Gibson Van Ar�­dale. A(la Ethel 'Valker, Florence:Marion White, Mabel Frances White.INDIANAPOLISCINCINNATILOUISVILLElteaohecl Qaick17 aD. Co __fortab17 VIADearbom StatioD, '7th It..... Eaalew004 (Urd St.)a ...... rt WDq, OeD. Ap.Paa. Dept.1U So. Clark St. Chic:qoTeL IIardsoa Il0l. Report of the c.ondition ofWoodlawn Tnat & SaYiDpbanklocated at Chicago. in the State ofIllinois before the commencement ofbusiness, June 8th. 1911.RESOURCES.Loans on real estate ...•...••.............•....•.•••••••. 314, 000.00Lonas on collateral security •..•..••......••....••.... 336,674·45Other lonas and discounts .•........•...... 463,80147 1,114.475·92Overdrafts ...•.....•••....••.•• 70.24Public Sen-ice Corporation bonds............•..••••..••. 57,302·50Other bonds and securities ..•.... .. .. .. . .. . .. .• •• . . .. .•. 50,000.00Stocks of coporation 6,000.00113,302.50Banking House 50,000.00Other resources 50,000.00Due fer State Banks •....... 70,000.00[Jut" from National Banks ....• '" - ••..•............ 230,726.65Cash on handCurrency 30,789.00Gold coin .......•...... ,; .. 2,570.00Silver coin . _ 6.881.00Minor .coin 2.710:7J42.950·71Checks and other cash items ....•••...••...•••.•.. · .•.•••• 1,104·53Collections in transit 6,037.01Total Resources 1,628,667.56LIABILITIES.Capital stock paid in .- ••••.•• -............. 200,000.00Surplus fund . _.' _ 50,000.00Undivided profits 25,106.04Less current interest, expensesand taxes paid ••... 5,944-59L 19,161-45Time certificates • __ .. .. . . . 7,131.00Savings, subect to. notice .•. 537,638.31Demand subject to check .. 759,927.89Certified checks ... _ .....•.•. 2 157.53Cashier's checks . •.•. 30,579�021.341,283.25Due to State Banks, includingcertificates of deposit •...••• - •• - • - • - _ •. - - - - - - _ •• - • 12,396.97Dividends unpaid .•....•.• _ 25.00Reserved for taxes and interest- _. _. ·5,800.89 5,825.89Totol Liabilities •••••• 1.628,667.:,6I, John W. Watson, cashier ofWoodlawn Trust and Savings Bankdo solemnly swear that the abovestatement is true to the best of myknowledge and belief.John W. Watson, Cashier.State of Illinois, County of Cook,ss, Subscribed and sworn to beforeme this Thirteenth day of June, 1911.Francis J. Johnson.Notary Public.THE511\ith-Goodvearshoe Reoairine Co.OppoGte Po.t 0IIice111& East 8Srd StreetThe 0IIl7 Campa117 ...oat­Iawa opaatiDc tile ,.__ GooI­,ear 1D"Chine17· •TURKISHe BLEND' �CIGARE.TTES�mMOLOGYWilla eoc1a � 0/FlIIinuI flOG lei CI pm- .ncrnI COfIIJOft. 25 0/�ItlJa JeCIU'e " ItClnJ­aomc /ell c:oIk,e pm.ncrnl ( 12xJ2)-alec­liMIo/loo. Words, Words, Words. tak "b ch It f-It es un es 0words to describe Fati..mas. They're so indi..vidual, so different. Justsmoke one, and get thatindescribable satisfactionthat comes from a perfectblend of rare tobaccos.My word - hut theY·Iefine. 20 for 15c-aninexpensive package -and you get ten additional.WBYB'rAY AT HOMB ?Yo. CaD Go toEUROPE.. o. ••• Jar .. twl,,·8C1'eW on.-d ..._'III .� .... of tbeI'JUUfCB LINB:For $45 to $62.50(Keele aD4 bertIa Inclu4ed)It ,.u "ant to pa, more. all about tb.al.ANTIO 'l'WlN-SCIlEW FLYEU.-..-a7'. otI .... X. Dftarben .LAleck Goraon Whitfield. Clara WightLaura Wilder. Ruby Carolyn Will­iams. Myra I .. izette Zacharias, EdithMarie Zahringer.The degree of Bachelor of Sciencewas conferred on: Vestal Raul Abra­ham. Norman Lee Baldwin RobertGraham Bett. lone Elizab�th Bell'amy, Edward Buckman, EdmundJoseph Burke. \Valter C. Burket.my the Jack�on C:t11antine. �f:trgaretLOlli� Campbell. Charles AaronCary. James Cunningham Clarke.(;eorge Ho"-el1 Coleman, WalterPhillips Comstock. Hugh EdwinCooper, Earl Crafts. Karl KelchnerDarrow, Orley A .. drew DeGraw.Leonard Galvin Donnelly, George­Wend�lI Dunlap, Junia Emry, JohnEdwin F ox. Earl Quincy Gray, PaulCarl Haeseler. Harold Crawford Hill.,CoDtiDued on pap t.) THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO.MALT MARROW"The Tonic that Strengthens."Malt Marrow is a great brain builder-it is recommended by physicians.All Drua&ilt. .ell It.Produced by the manufacturera of"ALMA MATER"McAvoy Malt Marrow Department,2340-8 South Park Ave.Phone Calumet 5401.:-�ODt .. lntl ..... de.nlllon. of lepl terma._bnll.. l)J eerreer anel t'Oucbecl In .lmp1elugu.�.'l'WO DOLLAU PEa COpyBandy Publishing Company(Snt IDC.)SoU 80. n.arbora St •• ChlC"aCo.L. MARABSB OpticianFAtabU.bed 1888.Ne. No. W. S3 �1l .t.Olcl No. 18 KatUaoD at.T"ibu.l" Blli1diDII.Pa&.ronue Maroon Advertisers. Tbe1 SOUVENIRSA fine assortment of Chicago Pennants, Pins, Fobs,and Spoons, at reasonable prices. Views, Songs andScrap-Books in neat and attractive bindings.Step in and IQk over the "Books at ReducedPrices." Every one a bargain.. The University 01 tblaago Press5710-58 V,I.IS Ava UBDevelopiq, Printinc Tel. 596S Centra1. Cameras and Kodaband EnJar&inc Rented and ExchancedCENTRAL CAMERA CO.Cameras, Kodaki andPhotographic luppU •.Albert Flesch. Preaident. 12' So. Wabash Ave., Cbic:acoWOODLAWN TRUST '& SAVINGS BANK1208 East Sixty-Third 51.(Near Woodlawn AVellue.)IOLICITS ACCOUNTS WITH UNIVERSITY STUD&NTI• ,. IDterat OD Savinp ACCOUDt&THE 'DAILY ,WAl{OON;�\yEDN£Sl>AY,]ONE' � :1911'AMuSEMENTS J'Swan, Freda Weitzel Taylor, WalterH cnry Theobald, William StanleyTimblin, Harry Alexander Twining,Ralph Emerson Vandervort, Blanchex-u Watkins. Walter Henry Weid­ling, Allen Newton Wiseley, Jr.The reenacted degree of Bachelorof Philosophy was given to CharlesSellers Brown.The certificate of the Dano- Nor­wegian Theological Seminary wasa\",arded to: Oluf Meyer Jorgensen,Terkel Knudson. Sonnich ChristianSonnichsen, Thorleif Wathne.The certificate of the Swedish The­ological Seminary was awarded to:Joseph Alfred Carlson, David Gus­t:.f!"on. Carl Gustaf Johnson, LarsEmil Johnson, Per Johnson. CarlHjalrner Larson, Nicklas SeverinMiller. Benjamin Nelson, GustafRobert N chon. Teofil Gideon Sjc:.l_andcr.The (�egree of Master of Arts wasI..·nnf(.·r�ed on: John Frederick Catlin.Herman Girvin Cuthbert. Heiii Hish­inurna , Clarence Worthington Kern­ncr, Clarence Columbus Long. AlbertZachnrinn Mann. Lena Boyce Mathes,Henry Burke Robins. Anna Be11eTourner.The degree of Bachelor of Divinitywac; conferred on: Herbert WaldoHines, Katsuji Kato, John HectorPalmer.The degree of Doctor of Philoso­phy was given 'to: Arthur JacksonHall.The degree of Batchelor of LawsiLL, 8.) wac; given to: Fred Eph­raim Lindley, cum laude, SidneyLoewenstein. Albert Eugene Mahon.Robert Sidney' Milner. Edgar JohnPlrillips .. Ortha Logan Plunkett, Pres­ton Doremus Richards. cum laude.William Bridges Thayer.The degree of 'Doctor of LawCashier's checks outstanding (J. D') was given to: Grant Cozzens.....................• 2,645.44 Armstrong. Oscar Blumenthal, Sam-Reserved for taxes 634-46 uel Gray Carney, Howard AustinCoulson. George Thrasher Crosland.Total $902,517.56 R b R H'1 Ch 1 F dS f Ill' . C f C k \.0. ert . arm ton, ar es . re -tate 0 mOls, ounty 0 o�, erick Lauer, Ellis Peter Legler,5S: I, Augustus E. Olson, Cashier . Ch 1 Levit PH' L Har es eVI on, an UI 0, 01'-of the above-named bank, do solmen- ''IT'] M D 'd AI] P k_ . ace ,'vi son C aVI, en ar erly swear that the above statement IS M F 1 d A th C M G'llc ar an. r ur ooper C I ,true to the best of my knowledge and HId Clai 'R bbi R' h d. . ar an atr'e 0 IDS, IC arbehef. Augustus E. Olson, Cashier, CI S I Ch I R 1 h St f. arence arnse ar es a p a .Subscnbed and sworn to before f d H HI' Wh tcor, arry y as ea on.me this 12th day of June, 1911. '�-vester Fisher, Notary Public. Cor- The degree of Master of Arts wasrect-Attest: Issac N. Powell, H. W. �iven to: Onias Barber Baldwin,Mahan, H. J. Kavanaugh, Directors. Wilfred George Binneweis, Joseph-'ne Horton Bowden, Grace LydiaHONORARY DEGREES TO Rushee, Ralph Emerson Carter,CONVOCATION GUESTS Frank Lorenzo Cumt';.,�s, RachelCaroline Eaton, Walter .... osby Eells,Katherine Elizabeth Forster, Clar­ence Truman Gray, Wilmer Lee Hall,Herbert French Hancox, Eric WestHardy, Martha Fr ... nces Hargis.Helen Sard Hughes, Elizabeth Camp­hell Hullihen, Clarence DurwardJohns, Sophie Georgia Kodjbanoff,Pan Hui Lo. Arthur Lyman Marsh,A va Bertha Milam, Martha PierceMcGavock. Rena May oe-u Will·iarn Abbott Owens. Harry HoustonPeckham. \Villiam Alexander Rae,John Henry Shantz. Clarence Mitch­ell Smith, Kazuyosh] Tajirna, ChungH suan Tang. Albert Vol1W11er.The degree of Master of S��ewas gh'en to: Winfred McKenzie At­wood. Emma Christianson, NarendraXath Dutt, Sidney Harrts EastonCharles William Finley, LymanKeith Gould, Joseph Antonius Ny­ll('rg. Loren Clifford Petry. EstellaRhinehart, Mildred Lenora Sander­:o'1.n. Lemuel Fish Smith, Charles Cal­vin Steck. Haner A. Webb, MaryEmily Woodbridge,Thc degree of Doctor of Philoso·phy W:lS g-h'cn to: Jasper ConverseP.:trnc!'. Ch:tr1e� Read na�ken·i1I. Ed­win 511('rwood Bishop, Emory Steph-(11 nog-af(lll�. H:lzel Louise Brown.Dallicl R11Chan:ln. George Miller C:lI­)lo11n, \Vi11iam Skinner Cooper. Hal"\ <'Y Fletcher, Thomas Br11ce Freas.Hcrhert Wynford Hill. F.lij:lh Jordan.:\rmin Hajrnan Ko11er. Paul Stilwell�fcKihhen. Rohert Kirkl:lnd �:lhOl1rS,J:tme!" Garfield Rand:lll, Fr:lnk EJlels't .. n Hohhin:,-, \Vatter Kay Smart.j! ILl..l�OISitO .. ITAHLIaA COMEDY Ol" DEPARTII.NTarou LDKIlAGOIK PEPPERj !pRINCESSTHE HEART BREAKERSa l comic opera hit byHough. ancr- Adams.-OLY�PIC0.0. II. CobauHT-RlCH-QUICKWALUNCFORDIf you arenot in linewith a dress�suit, get inlineT. C. SCHAFFNER78 State Street" Room 27TBB CORN EXOllABGJ:NATIONAL BABJ[OPOBmAGO.Oapital, $3,000,000Surplus, $5,000,000OFFICERS:El'Jlu' .L BamW. Pred4eaLCharI .. L. RaklalD .... Vice-Pre.Cbaa.ceT J. BlaIr. Vlce-PneI4_LD. A. .oaUOD, VIee-Pr.I4_LB. C. SammOD" VIee-Pl'HI4eDLJoh. C. N�I7', 8eeretarT.FraDk w. 8mlth, Caahler.J. E4.-4 II ..... AMI.bPlt C er." ..... o. WakeAel4. APt. ea. .CLASSIFIEDADVERDSEMtMSRat.s-Three linea for 25 ea_iix worcla to the liD ..Piy., iaaertiona fer the pric. of feur.N. a4vertiaement tak .. fer '­tkan ss c.nta.C... muat accompany e*r.Lodge in Woods-for rent cottagencar Lakeside on Lake bluff, fur­nished for seven, grocery delivery,cxcelent bathing. $100 for season:J. E. Black, School of EducatjQn,U. of C. pj 8-9-10To Rent-Suite of rooms for summerQuart�r. 3rd floor, 5804 JacksonAve. Keys with Mrs. Day, ,S802Jackson Ave. pj 9-13-14For Sale-Furniture of a 5 room flat.Flat rcnts for only $17. 1304 E.E. 57th St., 2nd '--'-Report of the condition ofW15IIIII6TON ?AUNATIONAL BANKat Chicago,. in the State ,of Illinois,at the close of business, June 7th,1911,RESOURCESLoans and Discounts ..... $555,551.05Overdrafts, secured and unsecured..•.........•...••. ,.... 412.75U.S. Bonds to secure circulation•••••••.••••••••••••.•• 100,000.00Premiums on U. S. bonds... 468.75Bonds, Securities, etc. . 67,500Banking house, Furniture andFixtures 49,363.71Due from National Banks (notDue reserve agents) 7,193.25from State and PrivateBanks, Trust Companies, andSa vings Banks 1 1,399.68Due Irou approved Reserve agents..•............. .. ..... 53.057·15Checks and other Cash Items .•••••••••••••••••.•••.•• ;. 974-66)If otes from other National Banks•............ ......•... 1,780.00Fractional Paper Currency. Nick-els, and Cents 1,708.86Lawful money reserve in bank, viz:Specie : 45,007.70Legal-tender notes 3.100.00Total S902,517.S6LIABILITIES. .Capital stock paid in $100,000.00Surplus fund.............. 6,000.00Undivided Profits, less Expensesand Taxes paid 3,680.65Xational Bank Notes outstanding•.•••.....•.-•• a...:.:. . • .• • 99·000.00Individual deposits-( subject to. check 662,389.29Dem�nd certificates of deposit•.....••............... 188.05Time certificates of deposit. 27,060.00Certified checks 919.67(Co�tin.ued �rom Page I.)that the Germans, from the begin­ning, have always had a sovereign ashead of their state. No revolutionever changed this system of govern­ment ,bl!t no German prince or kingof the early ages was an absolute rul­er in his land.This leads me to the third fact.which I will state in the words of anAmerican writer:' The germs of par­liamentry institutions are to be foundin the forests of ancient Germany.The Roman lawmakers found in Ger­many a new theory of the state. TheT euton does not derive law directlyfrom the will of the nation; he clair Sfor himself an inborn right, whichthe state must protect, but which itdoes not create, and for which he isready to fight against the world."HONORS AND DEGREESGIVEN AT CONVOCATION(Contlnued from page 3)Marx Erncs! Holt, Earl Henry Huen;kemcier. George Verc Jamieson,William Henry Kuh, Ralph HenryKl1hn�. \Vehster J:ly Lewis. EdithRaum LO\·c, George Shrader Math­('r!", Mildr('d Rose Meents MauriceGoldsmith Mehl, Golder Louis Mc'\Vhorter, Marion Louise Pierce, Lau­r:t Susanna Plummer, Rufus BoyntonRogers. Nicholas Alexander Sank­owsky. Harry Edmund Schweitzer,J(·hn George Sinclair, Eva :,outii­worth. Yorke Breckenridge Sutch,George Sutherland, AlfRd Hjalmar MO.S-SLER 'C'O.19 .JackSOB . Boulevard East(Old No. 50)A '25. Sac.Special offer this week of' uMosseler, Sui."Come today!Weare showing this week a moatastonishing value at the price-$2S'"Blue serges, plain gray cheviOts,worsted and all the prevailing' style.of material and design-at S:as.The new English models areexceedingly attractive at this price.Stout. lean. short and tall.-Our new creations are worthy of immediate investigation.Every size to 50.Prices range. 120. 125, $30, $35 an_d up to $50.Flannels, coats and trousers for out- ing, $20, $25.Flannel trousers, $5, $6, $7.Don't miss this!Come today!',M-OSSLER co.Athletics and "Fun" areI the the primeval instinctsof the student. These andmany more designs typi­cal of school life attrac, @ tively executed by hanelon Pennants, Pillows,Skins and Banners,In school, class and fra'ternity colors.CHICAGO PENNANT COEmblems and Arm Banda1224 East Sizty- Third StreetNear Kimbark Avenue.YOU CANNOT BATOur Special Sunday Dinners at the Commons withoutwondering why you never tried them before.PATRONIZE MAROON ADVERTISERSTHEStudenfs FloristA. McADAMST.ln.o. na YOUlfG ....or.. .X.wlif •• ' .....•• wN .....5lrd St. and Kimbark Ave.Plio •• II. 1' .... T'VO-PIECESUITSfor Golf orouting, $25.00and up.'\Ve carry acomplete stockof Ho.meSpuns, Flannels- - and Outingcloths.�. UTILE ART CORNER1528 £.Slat ST.�s tl Crafts GoodsThe Place to Buy Your GiftaTeL G4a H. P. an. TeL 8ZM B. P.DB. BIIOBY JI. LOftSDmf'I'Il'l'Olllce. N. W. Cor. arc! It. .DeI�nnoUDcinc a Complete Chanpof UanqementF����!t�!!e!ityC�!!"6650 Elli. AvenueSolicita your PatronceHorne Coo1cine. First-classService. Satisfactioll[.!¥�Il