VOL. X. NO. 12. armntUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911. Price Five CentsNEW TRICKS MAY BEATVETERANS OF ILLINOIS STEVENS MAKES CHOIR PLANS I VINCENT INAUGURATEDNew Director of Music Wants to En- AT MINNESOTA TODAYStaal Works Out Elaborate F ormatioDlWith Hope for Gains WithForward Pus.riO SCRIMMAGE HELD YESTERDAYPage Talko of Strength of Down­State Team-Gives Chicago Chanceto Win.Xew plays may beat Illinois Satur­day. Coach Stagg has developed sev,eral new tricky formations that aresaid t o he.: great ground gainers. Theteam worked on them �Ionday andye .. tcr day and is fast learning thecombination.The success of the forward pass inlast Saturday's game has led the Ma­roon rooters to hope that Chicagoy.il1 more than hold the down-stateteam even, It is certain that the gamew il] he a thrilling exhibition of re­vi-ed football. full of spectacularplay:', and of absorbing interest. The'prospects are that there will be notless than ten thousand Chicago root­ers on the sidelines. l llinois willbring 2.000.No Scrimmage Yesterday.There was no scrimmage yesterday.The men were put through a fast sig­nal practice and every formation wasgon e through time and again. .-\11 ofthe new plays were carefully workedout. Several of these are built aboutthe forward pass. Wdnd sprints als otook up a share of attention. CoachStagg is taking no chances of. havingthe team em· the best possiblephysiealshape and if condition decides thegame, the Maroons will not be onthe under side of the score.Tackling, blocking and charging,and falling on the ball were gonethrough with in quick but thoroughfashion. The practice lasted two hoursand a half and when. Stagg sent themen in they were glad to leave thefield.The students place considerable re­liance in Scruby's kicking. His placekicks will help offset Seiler's dropkicking and the punting dual betweenthe two players should be a prettyone. Scruby has a powerful leg drivethat makes him a dangerous factoranywhere within the forty-yard line.Page Talks of IUinola.Pat Page and Wallie Steffen re­turned from Champaign impressedwith the work of the Illinois againstSt. Louis university. They watchedthe formations carefully but did notgain much knowledge, as Illinois de­pended chiefly on simple plays. Pagesaid yesterday:"Illinois has a strong line, heavierthan ours, and two sets of backs.either of, which seems to work equal­ly well. St. Louis is underestimatedfor they put up a most creditableshowing. Seiler was not in the bestof shape and was not used in thewhole game. He tried three drop.kicks, only odt being successful."The game Saturday may be de-cid­ed on some sort of a fluke play, oran accident. Saturday Illinois wontheir touchdown on a fumble and thedrop kick Seiler put over was fromthe twenty-yard line. But the Illinoiscoaches kept several of the playersout. s:\Ving them for· Chicago. Onenoticeable thing about Iltinois' styleof play was the way they follow thebatt. The men are veterans, ten be­ing "I" men, and they have behindthem the backing of one, two andthree years of Varsity {ootban. Ilook for an awfully close, hard foughtgame and consider Chicago's chancesto win dependent largely upon theteam's ability to play the game as ithas been taught to play in practice." large Scope of University Choirs-Formerly Was Teacher at Sher­wood School of Music. Preliminary CeleltratioDl Last NichtOa Campa and NorthropField.PRESIDENT JUDSON ON PROGRAMSpeaks This Morning on Research­Many Noted Educators at In­stallation.l nauuur at ion ceremonies attendingthe instal'lation of George Edgar Vin­cent a:' pr es ide nt of the Universityof �linne:,ota will he carried out todayin the armory at �{innesota. Presi­dent Judson witt speak this morn­ing on "The Idea of Research." Ed­ucators from forty states and Canadaare expected to be present, and ad­dresses witt he delivered by universityand state officials and visitors.Preliminary celebrations of the in­augurnl were held on the campus andathletic field last night. The alumniand student torchlight processionmarched through the campus toX orthrop field, where a display offirework!" completed the program.The Program.The program f�r today follows:9:15 p. m.-Formation of academicprocession. two sections. Delegates,guest:" regents and speakers. Librarybuilding,9:40 a. m.-Procession from the Li­bra ry to the Armory.10:00 a. m.-Exercises in the Ar-mory. Admission by ticket. _Presiding' offieer, ·Preside�t' GeorgeEdgar Vincent.Invocation, Reverend L. A. John­son. D. D.. President of the Angus­tana Synod, St. Paul.Symposium on "Leading Ideas ofHigher Education"- ."The I dea of Culture." PresidentA lhert H oss H itt. PhD.. LL. D .• theUrriver sity of �Iissouri."The Idea of Vocation," PresidentJohn Houston Finley. A. M .• LL. D .•College of the Ci�y of New York.President Judson on Research."The Idea of Research," PresidentHarry Pratt Judson, A. �I.. LL. D.,the University of Chicago."The Idea of Sen-ice," PresidentCharles Richard Van Hise. PhD., LL.D .. the University of Wisconsin.Benediction. Reverend Harry Pin­neo Dewey. D. D .. Plymouth Congre­gational Church. Minneapolis.12:30 p. m.-Luncheon.For delegates and speakers, San­ford Hall.For invited guests. Shevlin Hall.(Tickets required.)12:45 p, m.-Formation of academicprocession (as indicated for 9:15above.)2:15 p, m.-Procession to the Ar­mory. STAGG STARTS MUSTACHE RACEAnnual Senior Competition Com­menee« Today at 10:3O-Davenportand Rademacher Favorites in Strug­gle for Daily Maroon Prize. FRATERNITIES MAKEPUBUC 134 PLEDGESN ... lter of MeD Pledged to Under­cradute Greek Letter SocietiesLarlest to Date.LARGE CONTINGENTS FREQUENTDeke Leads in Numbus With 16-PaiU. D. U. and S. A. E. EachTake 12.The official list of pledges of theseventeen undergraduate fraternitiesrepresented at the University of Chi­cago was made public yesterday. Thetotal number of men pledged is 134,which is twenty-eight more than lastyear. and is probably the largest num­ber ever recorded at the University.Delta Kappa Epsilon leads in num­hers with twelve new pledges, andfour left ove r from last spring. PsiL'ps'ilon, Delta epsilon. and SigmaAlpha Epsilon follow with twelveapiece. The list fo11ows:Dela Kappa Epsilon.Edward Hurly, Chicago, 111.Ralph Gardner. Chicago. Itt.Lewis Fixen, Chicago. Ill.Dan Iugwerson, Chicago. Ill.John :\lcXally. Pueblo, Colo.Kilbourn Brown, Chicago, Ill.John Breathed, Chicago. Ill.Joseph Hyatt, Chicago. 111.Osbourn X orcott, .C�icag.o,· Ill.Phillip :\IatIen, Chicago, 111.Frank Selfridge. Chicago, 'Tll,'Paul Des Jardins. Chicago, Ill.Me F_!C,c1f1.cick-_·Griffith�. ·Clij�ago;-·lll: -.,.t Wil1i;tm Forrest," Chicago, Ill.Edward Rodenbeck, Phoenix, ·Ariz. \Duerson Knight, Chicago, ..Ill. .Phi Kappa Psi. .Raymond Berry, Oak Park. 111.H arold �Ioore. Chicago, 111_Harry Gorgas, Chicago. Ill.Lowell Sudduth, Springfield, Ill.Kenwood Sudduth, Springfield, 111.Halger Lallesgard, Joliet.. Ill.Beta Theta Pi.Ewald Pietsch, Chic�go,. IiI..George Lyman. Chicago, 111.Merle Coulter, Chicago, Ill.X orman . C. Paine, Chicago, Ill.John C. Baker, Sioux City, Ia.W�11iam Bowes, Denver. Colo.Albert Bellerue, La Crosse, Wis.Rayner 'Vebber, Chicago. IlLOrville Miller, Poa, 111. .Alpha Delta Phi.Fritz Borman, Sioux City, Ia.Frederick M. Byerly, Freeport, 111.Frederick W. Croll, Chicago, Itt.Alfred K. Eddy, Chicago, IlLElliott Fisher, Macomb, 111.Carlos T. Hall, Oak Park, 111.Harrison �[. Howard. Sioux City,Iowa.William B. Owen, Jr .• Chicago, 111.Sicma Chi.Paul Bennett, Waterloo, Iowa.Emil Bickley, Waterloo, Iowa.Edgar Lundgren, Aurora, ilLLandon Boyd, La Porte, IneLN orman �{cCready. Snohomish,\Vash. '.'>Robert \Vaterman Stevens, the neworganist and director of tile Univer­<ity choirs, who was appointed to lillthe vacancies caused by the resigna­tion:' of Mr s, Holt. former organist,and De Witt D. Lash, former choirdirector. announces the membershipof t;lt: mens choir and the candidatesfor the womens choir and chorus. iorthe autumn quarter. After a competi­tive tryout, thirty men were chosenfrom a total list of sixty candidates.With a few further minor revisionsthe membership of the men's choirstands as follows:First tenor: Raymond Cahall.Walter H. Chambers, David L. Lib­errnan, Albert Lindquest, Leonidas P.Payne. :\Iark �1. Savidge, DentonLedford. and :\[orris �1. 'Veils.Second tenor: Frank A. Gilbert.W. P. Harms. Lander MacClintock,Orville D. �1i11er, Charles H. Smith.Floyd P. Willett, and Chester L.Zechiel.Baritone: Sayrs A. Garlick, DavidS. �lerriam, Howard P. Roe, \Vi11iamE. Stanley, Jr .. Henry R. Stapp. and�Ialcolm E. Wyckoff.Bass: Adolph H. Hruda, ForrestRundell, Leslie Lowery. Charles H.Soutter. Kent Sykes. Roscoe Vander­vort and Robert Vi oosley.The work demanded of the men'schoir will be on rehearsal and one ortwo. chapel exercises weekly, a Sundaymorning rehearsal and the SundayInstallation at 2:30.2:30 p, m.-Tnstaltation Exercises,Admission by ticket for guests.Presiding officer, Honorable JohnLind. President (,r the Board of Reg­ents.Song. "America."Invocation, Reverend James Hum­phrey �'onyihan. Rector of SaintThomas college.Gr-eetings.Tn behalf of the State. Honorable:\dolph Olson Eherhart. governor ofthe state of Minnesota.In behalf of the Public School�,Honorable Charles G. Schulz, statesuperintendent of public instruction.In behalf of the Normal Schools.Honorable Ell Torrance. president ofthe Normal School Board.Tn behalf of the Cotleges of theStatt'. Reverend John N. Kildahl, D.(Continued on page 3) At 10:30 this morning �Ir. Staggwill raise the �littering steel above hishead and lire the star ting pis tol inthe anuual mustache race for -en ior s.I f arrangement!' completed at an earlyhour this morning go through themen of the class will he lined uparound the "C" bench.If anyone is caught stealing. thestarter will fire a second time and isauthorized to set the offender hackone millimeter. The contest thus he­gun will continue until November 11.at the senior dance. At this timeprizes wilt he awarded to the winnersin the different events.Daily Maroon Olfers Prize.The Daily �I aroon is offering aprize of such value that the hoardhas considered it advisable to keepits nature secret. lest the desire towin cause unfair work. This prizeis to he offered to the all aroundchampion. Other prizes are to hegiven for the longest hair. and theheaviest growth. These, however,will be announced this morning by thestarter.The penalty for failure to competeor finish is to be immersion in thetank at Bartlett. Anyone detectedgrowing a heard will he tarred andfeathered. A committee has been ap­pointed to investigate the conditionof the contestants and to report any. ·infraction ·�-th('''nI��. "flfe�·pel'sohelleof this committee has been purposelykept secret.Odds were offered yesterday onRademacher and Davenport. but therearc few takers. Hutton was heavilyplayed and there is considerable spec­ulation as to whose money is beingwagered. On the whole, however.betting has been remarkably light.Phi Delta Theta.Robert Zuber, Murphysboro, 111.Robert E. Steele, Kansas City, Mo.George Parkinson, Preston, Idaho.Robert Stewart, Chicago, Ill,Psi Upsilon.Reginald Robinson, Chicago, 11I..<\ Ibert C. Lindquest. Chicago, III.Francis T. Ward. Chicago, 111.Beauchamp A. White, Chicago, 111.Perry E. Gregory, Chicago, Ill.Albert Cummins, Chicago, 111.Searle E. Lanyon, Pittsburg, Kan.Robert C. White, Chicago, Ill.R. Bourke Corcoran, Chicago, Ill.Kenneth G. Coutchie, Muskegon,�fich.Ralph S. Bar�r. Joliet, 111.(Continued on page 3)services.Large Women's Chorus.Out of the Jist of forty-eight candi­dates for the women's choir andchorus twelve sopranos and eight al­tos will he chosen for the women'schoir and if the· mixed chorus willhe limited to fifty voices there willhe twenty-five women selected, tenof whom will he altos and fifteen so­pranos. The chorus rehearses everyday at 1 and 5 o'clock. I n memoryof the Liszt Centennial the mixedchorus will render the ThirteenthPsalm oi Liszt on the afternoon ofOctober 29. The rendition witt prob­ah�y be preceded by a recital of thePiccally German quartet of Omaha,Xeb. The women's choir will holdno rehearsals except for special workun tit the membership is definitely set­tled.The contestants for places in thewomen's 'choir and the mixed chorusare as follows:Sopranos: Katherine Lee, RuthWhitfield, Helen Hannan, MarieGoodenough, Dorothy Kahn. EstherVesey. Roberta Cooke, Anna Ford,Ruth Gartland. Frances Richardson,Xe llie 'lleyer, Hazel Morse .. Shirley'Keyes. �{aud� Linkenhoker, DorothyWhitfield. Dorothy Fox. MargueriteSwawite. Katherine Hattendorf, Mil­dred Peabody. Ruth Hough. HelenePollack. Dorothy \Villisten. HelenHibbard. �Iadeleine Hosack. MabelGibson. Harriet Jones, Helen Walker,Florence Sharp. Rita Thomas. MabelSamuelson. Vena Stahl. and LillianLove,Altos: Yarguerite Lauder. NellieHenry. Harrit't Sheets. Sarah Rein­wald. Annette Hampsher. MaryWlhiteley. Jesse Lester. MargueriteFord. Marguerite Reggs, Lulu Coy,�Iabel Wiltiard. Edith Gordon, Eliza­beth Ayres. Marion Logsdon, MurielBent. Ruth Matthews, GwendolinPerry. Ella Welts, and Lois Kennedy.Steven. WeD Recommended.Dire-ctor Stevens was formerly in­structor and director of the ChicagoConservatory of Music or the Sher-(Continued on page 4) GLEE CLUB HOLDS TRYOUTSMrs. Koblsaat WiD Meet Candidatesin Foster on Friday.The Women's Glee club will holdthe first open try-outs of the year at1 :30. Friday. in Foster hall. At thattime �lrs. Philemon Kohlsaat, whodirected the club with great successlast year. will test the voices of alldesiring to enter the organization.According to the practice which wasinstituted last year. even the oldmembers who desire to remain inthe Glee club as active members thisyear will have to appear at the try- .outs on Friday and have their voicestested with the new women.The Glee club desires a member­ship of from. twenty-five to thirty. andsince many of last year's membershave not returned to the University.there are a number of vacancies tohe filled. All University women whoare interested in chorus singing havebeen invited to come to Foster Fri­day afternoon.Among the old members who havereported this year are. Ruth Whit­field. president; Ruth Hough, vice­president; Helene Pollak. treasurer;'llisscs Sterling. Eleanor Byrne, Dor­othy Fo:"C. Ruth Mathews. Isabel'Kendrick. Helen Street. Effie Hewitt.and �farguerite Swawite.CHEER LEADERS WILLBE CHOSEN .SOON BYSTUDENT COUNCILCheer leaders witl be chosen thelatter pan of this week by the Stu­dent council. Bell, Stanlty, }l\arvin,and 'llathews made theft leadershiptryouts last Saturday at 'the Purdue1'!ame.Social ColumnselectionsTHE DAILY M'AROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18. 1911.R. JaysTHE DAILY MAROONThe 0Iidal Student Newapaper ofthe UDivenity of Chicqo.Founded October 1. 1902.Formerly'!'be Univenity of Chicago Weekl,.r vunde'; October I, 1892.Published daily except Sundays. Mon­days and Holidays during threequartet's of the University year.Entered as Second-class mail at theChicago Post Office. Chicago, Illi­nois, March 18, 1908, under Act ofMarch 3, 1873.-- The StaffW. J. Foute Managing EditorH. L. Kennicott News EditorM. W. Reese Athletic EditorBusiness ManagersE. R. Hutton R. J. RosenthalA�soc:iate EditorsD. L. Breed Drama and 'MusicM. D. Stevers City PapersC. F. Dunham Public SpeakingW. H. Lyman .....•......... CampusLeon Stolz .. Periodicals and LecturesB. \V. Vinissky Minor SportsWomen's EditorMargaret Campbell.ReporterMarguerite Swawite.SubsCription RatesBy Carrier, $2.50 per year; $1.00 perquarter. City Mail, $1.25 per quar­ter; $3.00 per year in advance.News contributions may be left inEllis Hall or Faculty Exchange, ad­dressed to The Daily Maroon.EDITORIAL�- �A'..S�. �tart Senior Mustache, :'::' .:'� at .. C " bench today at 10:30. �'"Watdl'em sproat!Anyone reading the Purdue Expo­nent for last Sunday would supposthat Purdue had won the footbalgame Saturday. It must certainlbe pleasing to the Boilermakers thave.held Chicago to such close scorefor two years. and they can hardlbe blamed for viewing -these successein the light of victory.Great credit is due to the team fothe 'game which they played Satuday. but we hardly consider it a casof luck that Chicago came out withe greater score.The following is taken from ThPurdue Exponent's story of the gam"Out-chargiflg. out-tackling anout-playing the Maroons in every dpartment of the game, Purdue wnevertheless forced to acknowledthe small end of an 11 to 3 sco'Tough Luck,' slang though it is, epresses admirably the contingent setiment with the score."Luck was there, but it didn't peron the Old Gold and Black standarN ever did a Purdue earn go onto tfield that played so splendidly o.r pup such classy ban, to see theirforts unavailing."Barring such factors as workagainst Purdue-the score would hbeen a tie at the very least. 3 .toOne place kick of Scruby, the Chicatoe artist. hit the cross bar, balanfor a moment and then droppeover."The Lees of Defeat."Again it has been the fate ofBoilermakers to suffer defeat athands of the Maroons. For fourtyears the loyal rooters for theGold and Black have journeyedthe "Windy City" to cheer televen on to victory, only to seechaplet invariably given to theposing team. Up to the 1910 gamelast eight of th'ese pilgrimages.been to see the Purdue team "white­washed," but last year the run ofblanks was broken by a 5 to 14 score.The �1isses Grant, Philbrick, Ahern,'�fitchell. and Rudd entertained themembers of Kelly hall informally witha chafing-dish party Wednesday even­ing, October 11, from 9 until 10. Theroom:' we re decorated with yellowchrysanthemums. A two-course chaf ,ing-dish supper was served.About a hundred women were en­terraiued at the first Kalailu party ofthe year, on Friday, October 13, atthe home of Miss Ruth Agar.The members of Spelman house en­ter tained about 200 women at a spreadin th .. .ir club room at 1 o'clock Wed­ne .. day, October 11.A bout forty women from Green­wood and Foster halls are planningto have a picnic this week-end atLake .. ide. A trunk iult of lunch willhe taken.TlwoomenCsch10:-�Iy.. 0da�Le:\. ".\cae ro1y0sy Tsprr- feth see: tde-asge creox-n-chds.heutef-edave3.gocedd-thetheeenOldtoheirtheop-thehad ie old hou .. e members of Green­II hall will entertain their newThursday evening wheniber s (NOT BY HERBERT KAUFMAN) GRADE; the Man on SLOWSPEED. who reaches the HIGHESTGR.\DE. - SUCCESS. Rockefellerstarred VP GRADE as an office hoy;Roosevelt was once a cowboy; Lin­coln was once a backwoodsman;Franklin was once a printer's devil;and they all climbed STEADILY toas great a height of GLORY as theAmerican Eagle ever has attained.The engineer GRADES the rail­road track; the PROF GRADESynt·R TRACK. Look BACK andsee if YOP are going UP GRADE.Sl'CCESS is on a mountain; if YOUare l,!oing UP GRADE you areGR.\Dl" .\LL Y approaching SUC­CESS. If SU'CCESS is SOUGHTIor, it �[CST be FOUGHT for;Sl'CCESS is the GIFT of THRIFT,not the PUCK of LUCK.�[iss \\-'".aBace will readfrom Chanticleer.The Phi Gamma Delta fraternitygave a small theater party Fridaynight, October 13.Beecher hall wilt have a baby partytonight. one of the house membersbeing dressed to impersonate the oldwoman who lived in a shoe. whilethe others impersonate children indress and manners. The children wiltbe regaled with stick candy and ani­mal crackers. :-\fter dinner they willdance until 8. GRADESGR.\DES are the SHORT HANDCODE used to tell STUDE�TS whatthe PROFS think of their cerrebralmachinery. GRADES are FREE,­but there are all GRADES ofGR.-\DES. It doesn't take muchWORK to go DOW;:\ GRADE,­the PROFS will PUSH YOV. It'sthe UP GRADE that DE�[AXDS theE;:\ERGY. Every PIX�ACLE musthe reached by an UP GRADE fight,and the A's are on the PI!\�ACLE ofthe Academic Mountain. The manwho tries to SPEED UP HILL.. peedily LOSES his wind,-and sel­dom gets to the top. It's theSTE.\DY worker who can go 17P anyThe Psi U fraternity entertained in­Formally at tea Sunday afternoon.The Y. W. C. L. gave a tea at 4yesterday afternoon for the womenof the school of education.The Beta Theta Pi fraternity willg-h'e an alumni smoker at the frater­t�ity house this evening.Bulletin and Announcementshapel Assembly for the Divinity001 in Haskell assembly room at30.Young Women's Christian LeagueAddress by Miss Coulter. "Ye AreFriends." at Lexington hall, 10:30.Meeting of the Three-Quarters Clubphornores at the Reynolds club to­. at 10:30.Graduate Hockey Players report inxington gymnasium at 5 today.Public Lecture by Doctor Luthernder son- today and tomorrow on thewakening of China."Le Cercle De Conversation Fran­ise, Spelman house, 4 to 6 tomor-w. MEN, CARRY THIS GUNMeeting of Off-Campus Womenwitt he held in Kent at 10:30 tomor­row. A new Watch Fob idea, and the catchiest that hu ever been offered ill this line.Makes a bit everywhere, attracb attention, and carries an air of Western rollWlce.MADE WITHIN GUNSHOT OF THE ALAMO, CRADLE OF TEXAS LIBERTYExad miniature of the gunfighter's equipment, reminiscent of the wooD, up ofthe Southwest. Holster of rood leather, with metal gun slipped inside, read,tobepuDed.Divinity Association will elect itsofficers tomorrow at 10:30 in Haskell20.German Club in Lexington at 4 onFriday.Junior Mathematical Club. Room3. Ryerson. at 4:30 Friday.Graduate Women's Club, Room 15,Lexington. 5 to 6. Friday. TRUE WESTERN STYLE HAT-BANDS TO FIT ANY STYLE HATLike the drawing of heavy leather, richly embossed--a dashing finish to an, attireGUN FOBS, 25 CENTS EACH HAT BANDS, 75 CENTS EACHSend One Dollar and WI will mail 0 .. Hat Band and ane Gun Fob POSUI8 paidALAMO LEATHER 6. NOVELTY COMPANYOpen Lecture by Professor AlbrectKessel of Heidelberg, Friday night •Room 13. Botany building. at 8.Dept. 12 425 A"enue D, SAN ANTONIO, TEXASBig Illinois Mass Meeting in Man­del hall. Friday night, at 7:30.Patronize Maroon AdvertisersNews of the Colleges\Vomen have declined the offer ofhe Michigan Daily to enter the com­etition for the staff of that paper.A prize of five dollars for the bestootball song is being offered by amember of the faculty of the Univer­tty of Kansas.Hundreds were turned away fromhe football smoker at Cornell lastFriday night.freshmenForty-six enteredompetrnon for positions onboard of the Cornell Daily Sun.Plowing records were broken atPurdue recently. An average of anIn yesterday's game the team againjustified the confidence of the root­ers by holding the heavier Chicagoteam, playing' on their own field, to astill lower score than that of lastyear. Team work was more in evi­dence, and the Purdue fighting spirit,so manifest along other athletic tines,began to put in an appearance on theg-ridiron. The climb up from defeatto victory has been slow and hard. andthe -difficultics many; slowly we areg-etting back to our old-time form inthe most important branch of collegeathletics."With the improvement over lastyear's showing, the student body willThe M.t Complete U ...01 TALURG .ACH11fES01 QaalityOD tIa. Soath SideCAIlIl • SOW 148 E. GI Street acre in four minutes and fifteen sec­onds was maintained.Over 100 men reported for the Gleeclub at Northwestern university. MAROON PRESS AMERICA'SNATIONALGAMEJOB PRINTERSPublication PrintingA chemistry auditorium to seat 500is to be built at the University of Cali­fornia. Prlc •• Low •• tPhon. H. P. 3691 Work the Be.t1 105 E. 515th St. B� A. G. SPALDINGMr. SpaIdi!IJ � t;,-a plaYft. dab__ aDd NaIit.aI LacaedUedar.aDd hu beea 0. CIIIIIad with theuIiaaal PIlle f.- eftIl. -.Ie.His daly J the eady dan elf 1Jda- .,sioaaI bae ball aDd the atnaaIe to_ it f.- the iDsidioas 0.8_that -.hi to _ .. lex their ).owa _ish __ . is .beodJi ...O-100�aDd16faII�� bythe CIdeIaIed anist.H_Da....-t.:::.. Size. S%zPrice, $2.00NETF« .ale by aD book­telIen ell' IeDl pcJatpaidOIl � J price ."A. G. Spalding & Bros.28-30 So. WahulaAn., CHICAGOthethe The fact that sweaters and emblemsa re too expensive has moved the ath­letic committees of the University ofWashington to recommend reducingthe number of emblems awarded. AT YOUR SERVICECARL COFFMAN, Stenographer13 SNELL HALL� aDd .� wvft. 10e pel pqe; cart­t'OPies. 2c ema. Woft called lex aad ddiwftd hoa 7.00to 8.00 a.m.; ".30 106.00 p.m. Neat- ud ��.A new hockey rink is to be con­structed at Yale. The building willaccommodate about four thousandspectators. The Smith-Goodyear Co.SHOEMAKERSAND REPAIRERSfind it less difficult to accept the defeatof yesterday; feeling sure that themen are giving of their best, and thatthe Boilermakers are fairly on theirway toward regaining the supremacywhich was once theirs on the grid­iron, It will take time yet. but withthe whole-hearted support of everyloyal student behind them. the Varsitysquad will exert every effort to hastenthe longed-for day." 1134 East Sixty-Third Street.......... Otnce"A Bank for Everybody"Operator'S of the largest and best equip­ped shoe repairing plant outside theloop. IS A MOrro WE TRY TOREAUZEThe Com Exchange National BankOF CHICAGO We have an equipment complete inevery detail; our financial strengthis unquestioued.To have and to hold the confidenceof our regular patrons and to securenew ones by efficient service is oureamest endeavor.Capital . .Sarph. • .U.ctmded Profib Sl.OOO.OOO.OOS.OOO.OOO.OO6';0.000.00Church Hist:»ry Club MeetsThe Church History club held itsfirst meeting of the quarter last night,and selected :\Ir. Morgan president tosucceed Dr. Walker. Dr. Luther An­derson ga\'e an entertaining talk onthe conditions of mis�ions in Chinaa5 viewed b)' a foreign layman. Aboutthirty people were present at themeeting. OFFICERSERNEST A. HAMILL. PlftidealCHARLES L HUTCHlNSON.t Vicoe·PIftidenICHAUNCEY J. BLAIR. Vice·r-.mdeatD. A. MOULTON, Vice.PlftidealB. C. SAMMONS. Vice.PlftidentJOHN C. NEELY. 5ec:ftta�FRANK W. SMITH. CathiftJ. EDWARD MAASS. An'1 �A.... £,S �. W AKEFlEl.D. AII'I c.IIierDIRECTORSCham H. Weelln Madia A. Rpa'IR2:r{t!H� 8!::!�';Bm;amia Ca� Clyde M. CaIrW....,. F. Blair E.dwita C. F_Chades L � Ectwud A. SMddF.-nck W. c-b, Enst A. H.-n WOODLAWN TRUST ANDSAVINGS BANK1204 East Sixty-third StreetTHE DAILY MAROON. WEDXESDAY, OCTOBER 18.1911.Korten HatsL.. CARR & SON'iIii' w. reDt�'" aDd848 E. 63d St. Plaoae H. P. 3990 FRATERNITIES MAKEPUBLIC 134 PLEDGES(Continued from page 1)Delta Tau Delta.Carleton Miesse. Rogers Park. 111.Merrit G. Rhodes. La Grange, 111.Orville R. Smith, Cincinnati, O.Lawriston \V. Gray, Whitewater,Wis.Ray G. Chapman, Chicago, Ill.Lee G. Harper, Le Mars, Iowa.Harry Bogg, Jr., Chicago, Ill.Chi Psi.Willett Potter, Chicago, 111.David Murray. Chicago, 111.Stanley Pierce, Chicago, Itt.Harold Me Mullen, Chicago, 111.Leslie Brown, Mount Vernon, Ill. Team May Meet Illinois Saturday Asa Curtain Raiser to VarsityGame. Due to the lateness of the season we aremaking SPECIAL RAT� toCoUege Women909-910 KESNER BLDG. Madiaon St. and Wabcula Ave.F_erlJ willa ANCELE MIUER, 6 Bo.1" ..... de la .&dUM, PariaGold Fountain Pen-Special-SScA. A. WATERMAN'SSELF-FILLING FOUNTAIN PENS 52.00 UPHalloween DecorationsMEET YOUR FRIENDS in theMEN'S COMMONSThe Best Food, Cooked RightAt the Lowest PricesHOLMES'AIOUT THE JEIIDIS WAY Of T�U OYEICGATPeople usually turn for another lookwhen they see an overcoat made byus.Bannockburn and Campbell Tweedsare the real sporting fabrics this sea­son. N early two hundred of thesegenuine imported tweeds are now ondisplay."Warmth without weight" fabries,feathery woolens, warm but notheavy; genuine Carr Meltons and thecelebrated Roberts Cheviots are al­ways in good taste. These and hun­dreds of other rich novelty woolensawait your choice. .Might as well have your overce-atready for the first cold days. .Overcoats $35 and upwards.Tailor For Young MenREVISE WATER POLO RULESWhite Calls Meeting of ConferenceCoaches for Saturday.Coach Joseph H. . White of theswimming and water polo teams hastaken the initiative in revising thewater polo rules. He has issued acall for a meeting of the conferencecoaches to be held on Saturday at12:30 in Barrlett. The coaches whowill be present are: T. Robinson ofNorthwestern, C. W. Hyatt of \Vis­consin, and F. Norris of Illinois.The conference committee on aquat­ics have decided to give water poloanother trial. At first it was attempt­ed to abolish the game on account ofthe roughness, but later the decisionto give the game another trial wasadopted. The changes will make thegame more open and spectacular, andwill also lengthen the time of thegame.Mr. \Vhite has discussed the pro­posed changes with the Amateur Ath­letic federation officials, and they havemet wth their approval. If the chang;es are adopted by the conference offi­cials. they will. probably be adoptedby the A. A. F.COMMERCIAL CLUB'S PLANS SOCCER TEAM HAS SQUADGAME ON THIS AFTERNOONDelta Upsilon.Hugo B. Anderson. Salt Lake City,L·tah. The University Soccer team maymeet Illinois Saturday as a curtainraiser to the football game. Thiswas announced yesterday 'by CaptainStein, who has called a special squadgame for this afternoon. The menwill meet in the gym at 4 with suitson and go direct to the soccer fieldin Washington park.Two teams have been picked tocontest against each other as a goodtryout. Coach Brady is anxious toget the best line possible on the can­didates in order that the team hesends against lllinois, if the game isheld, may be truly representative ofChicago's strength. Last year Illi­nois defeated the Maroons by closescores, but with the new hope thatthe" new players have brought intothe team, there is a good chance fora winning season.Today's game will see lined upagainst each other all of the men onthe squad. There were 21 out foryesterday's practice, but this doesnot represent the full membership.Every man will be given a chance toshow what he can do and for thisreason Coach Brady is especiallyanxious that every candidate reportat the time given above.The Line-up.The line-up of the two teams hasbeen announced as follows:Parker. Goal. Pearlman.Lindsay Left back ArbogastChang Right back LothGrossman Left half TatgeStein Center half DuncanDuck Right half DuckFinn Outside left CatronUnger Inside left MillerKopald 'Center UllmanC. Ullman Inside right UllmanCohn Outside righ t Storrs.Baldwin. The game scheduled with Engle­wood High School that was to havetaken place yesterday was postponeduntil next week. The Englewoodplayers were unable to report becauseof two of their men being on the sicklist. There is Something ClassyBakery & DelicatessenWe wiD deliyer Lmach to aa,Club or FntenaityHip CrUe Gooda o.IJ. P"_ ar.en SelicitedExecutive Committee Announces theNames of Speakers for Year.The executive committee of theCommercial club will meet this aft­ernoon and plan reorganization forthis year, :\11 summer the club offi­cers have heen busy correspondingwith influencial men. The results arethat Attorney General Bonaparte,Woodrow Wilson, Senator La Folletteand }fro Brandies of Boston will ad-;dress the club during the winter.One of the main things that willbe discussed today will be whether ornot the club members wish to jointhe league that the Harvard club hasstarted.Chicago is a good place for this clubas the city furnishes a good labora­tory. The club will keep in touchwith all the election activities thiswinter and united charities.FORMER FOOTBALL 'STARSWILL ADDRESS ·MEETINGEckersall, Steffen, and Page Speakersat Mass Meeting Friday Nightin MandelWalter H. Eckersall, Walter Stef­fen. and Pat Page will be speakersat the mass meeting for the Illinoisgame to be held Friday, in Mandel.In addition to these, Coach Stagg,Captain Rademacher and other mem­bers of the football team will talk.The meeting' will start at 7:30 andwill be over by 9:00. Everything willbe run off in quick order, and specialfeatures arc being arranged to fill inthe program. After the meeting,there will be a bon-fire on Vincentfield. Songs and yens will be re­hearsed here. and the cheering willbe organized so that the Chicagorooters will not be out-cheered byIllinois. The Three-Quarters clubwill gather the wood for the fire, andwill guard it during the mass meet­ing.Mandolin Club Organizes.The Mandolin club held its firstmeeting yesterday afternoon at 4 inthe Reynolds club theater. About tenmen were present to discuss the se­lection of a leader for the club. Themajority were in favor of getting aman from -the University to lead.There are about twenty-five men outfor the club, and if the club is a suc­cess, a trip to the Pacific coast maybe taken with the Glee club. WilliamH. Lyman was elected as temporary-rnanager, .Stanwood111. Baumgartner, Chicago,1317 E. SIXTY-THIRD STREETH. r.llaFrederick \V. Dickinson, DownersGrove, 111.Edson M. Finney, Fort Worth, Tex.Leon R. Gurley, Chicago, Ill.Lawrence S. Harpole, Chicago, Ill.Thomas HeUingsworth, Chicago, 111.Gerald C. Hunt, Des Moines, Iowa.Lloyd Le Dus, Duluth, Minn.Harwood Otto, Peoria, 111.Harold E. Titus, Chicago. 111.J. Stevens Tolman, Chicago, Ill.Phi Gamma Delta.Carl Fisher, Great Falls, Mont.Connor B. Shaw, Nashville, Tenn.Joshua Stevenson, Chicago, Ill.Frank H. O'Hara, Chicago, Ill.Edwin H. Miller. Aurora, Ill.Frank Sherwin, Waukegan. 111.Sigma Alpha Epsilon.:Clyde Watkins, Chicago. IIICharles Hobbs, Chicago, 111.Charles F. :\lcCumber, Chicago, Ill.J. Robert Allais, Chicago, 111.Donald D. Delaney, Colona, Ill.Gorten W. Taylor, Arthur, Ill.Edward Kixmiller, Vincennes, Ind.Leon B. Walker, Lincoln, Neb.William M. Gray, Norfolk, Va.Clyde W. Gebhart, Erie, Penn.George A. Gray, Chicago, 111.Clare Sexsmith, Tacoma, Wash. Very Important for Ladies! IIAlE YOU CONSIDERING YOURFAll SUITSigma Nu.Herbert Heiss, Aurora, Ill.Roscoe Vanderverte, Chicago, Ill.Donald Stanton, Dixon, Ill.Willard Goodwin, South Bend, Ind.Count La Vallette, Chicago, Ill.Kappa Sigma.Marston Smith, Chicago, Ill.Marion L. Skinner, Princeton, 111.E. Willard Fassitt, Lameile, Ill.Ira A. Russ, Boston, Mass.Verni Blackett, Davenport, Iowa.Edward Thomas, Chicago, Ill.Webb Henry, Eau Claire, Wis.Alpha Tau Omega.Orville Droege, La Porte, Ind.C. \Vendell Dearing, Taylor, Mo.Gale Cheney, Jamestown, N. Y.Shelby M. Oscenton, Springfield,I11.Earl Jordan, Sioux City, Iowa.Donald Hickey, Chicago, Ill.Edward M. Welsh, Chicago, Ill.J. Austin Burt, Oklahoma City,Okla. VINCENT INAUGURATEDAT MINNESOTA TODAY(Continued from page 1) We guuaaIee eYery prmeat that leaya ouratablisbmeut. The fit mUlt be perfect. Ourpric:ea ItaIt from $35.00 up for suib. We make10 .. com. We _ do remodeliag. ����. AD w_am doae ." skilI-M. CHIMBEROFFUniversity � Tailor5853 ICDIBARIC AVE.. N_r F"� __tb 51.Two.bad bIocb fR.D the TowerUte PIM.e H,de Park 3283 A. L JIIIIIIS. ......Two Stores:I 7 N. La Salle St. 25 E. Jackson St.2 FOIl 25 CENTS....... EARL. WILSOND., president of St. Olaf's College,Northfield.In behalf of the students, Mr. Stan­ley Gillam, Class of 1912. Windom.I n behalf of the Alumni, ReverendJohn Walker Powell. D. D., Class of1893, Duluth.In behalf of the Faculties, Profes­sor Emeritus Wittiam Watts Folwell,A. M.., LL. D.Presentation of President EmeritusCyrus Northrop, LL. D.Address, President George EdgarVincent, PhD., LL. D.Song, "Minnesota."Benediction by Bishop Vmcent.Benediction. Bishop John HoylVincent. D. D .. ChanceItor of Chau­tauqua Institution.4:00 p. m.-Recessional to the Li­brary building.6:30 p. m.-Guests, faculties and sixhundred alumni assemble in the Mainbuilding, College of Agriculture, SaintAnthony Park. .7:00 p. m.-Dinner in the DiningHall. Schol of Agriculture.Invocation, Reverend A. J. Rine­hart. President of the Lutheran Synodof the Northwest, Red Wing.8:00 p. m.-Assembly in the Chapelof the :\lain building.Program for Tomorrow.From 8 to II tomorrow morningthere will be a reception to guests,faculties. alumni. and students.The receiving line will include thepresident of the university and Mrs.Vincent, the president of the Boardof Regents and Mrs. Lind, the chair­man of the executive committee ofthe Regents and Mrs. Nelson, theDeans and their wives and the Deanof women. Heat RegulationPhi Kappa Sigma.Clarence Ireland.J. Q. Racklinn.Harry Steins.H. L. Jordon.Stanley Sevier.Delta Sigma PIlLBennett Putnam, Sioux City, Iowa.Guy C. Phitlip, Lansing, Mich.David E. Ellington, Boise City, Ida.Joseph Fishman, Grand Rapids,Mich.John H. Glass, Louisville, Ky.John K. Mcintosh, Nashville, Tenn.Glenn D. Thompson, Chicago, Ilt.Ellsworth Bryce, Ashland, Ohio. THE JOHNSONPNEUMAnC SYSTEM• '-IB I R D WOO DFadory orpaizatiOD ud tniDed open­ton are eueatial m tile ..1Ifadue of��-���..::cODditiou ad are pod eolian.. Sold"� Leedlng H .The Recognized StandardHarvard Glee Club Recordsfl No. 1049 -SparktinlJ Piper Hridsiec:kM�IQ' of Footban SoapSanlJ by Doable QuartetteCAli I: SOl 148 E..,. SInet Installed in the University ofChlcalO BuildingsComplete Systemsfor all .ethodsof Heatinl WEYDELLI. making a .pecial bid for Uni­venity tradeTRY HIMSTEAM CONTROL OF HUMIDITY.REDUCING VALVES FOR AIR,WATER, HOT WATERTANK REGULATORS A e .. plete liM of On,., Cican, Ci,.etta,C._in, Statioaery. Prncriptio .. carehllJfill".6Z00 con AGE GROVE AVE.Johnson ServiceCo. Odinr, nee. N.,..ISt4'YOU SURELY NEEDAXILLARY DEODORIZERIt poIiIimy daboya the odor of PElSPlUlDIia armpits aDd OD the fed. is peddy hanDaYour fellow ttudeab ale .. wiD- yOlO) I="or sale byL. G. SLOAT,83 T M.NII FIeld ald ••22 ..... Ingt St.•.•. nus .......ChicIID OffIce, 93 LAKE ST.THE DAILY MAROON. WEDXESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911.WHERE EVERYBODY GOESTHE EMPRESSa. ..... CIaIIe .... ,... Th. Cult of the ....The worsblp tit the Seal appears to bepretty general throughout :Melanesia.In some of the 1·'Ui islands. for exam­pie, the natlves attempt to propltlatethe sea by bulldiu� a small house In aretired spot near it. In which they getout a table with reudy cooked yam�and painted cocoanuts, They thendruw with short bamboos morning andevenlng tor several sueeesslve weeksin order to summon the 100'e nl wat.or chlldren ot the waters, to the feasttbuR prodded. rfbey build u jetty tofacllltate the ascent ot the Ken spiritsfrom the water to the house and plantftags at certain points to prevent tbemtrom wandering Iuland. Finally. theworshipers call and whlstle to thedeities to encourage them to enter.and, when they Imagtne this has beendone. they eat the feast themselves .'l'he Inhabltants of the Banks Islandsalso I)ruy to a belng named Qat, whoeither controls or represents the sea, ashe Invoked thus: "Smooth the seathat I may go �lfe)y. Bent down thecrests ot the tlderip. ' Bent down the,levet that I m:1�' come to n quiet lmid·Ing place!"Sullivan and Co dl_ Vaudeville.lAS. f. LEE. 1IIr.WEEK STan. SUllDAY IIAT •• OCT. 15tbMR, AND MRS. MARK MURPHYLEW HAWKINS3-DIXON8-3PAUL STEPHENSS-MALVERN TROUPE-5Matinee Every Day at 2:452 Shows Nightly-7:30 and 9:15PRICES MATINEE-tO and 20EVENINGS-IO-20-30t•pRINCESSMort Singer PresentsOVER NIGHTMetric System Suggestions.'lipon the theory that the metric sys­tem can only be mnde popular in thiscountry by adopting its decimal plan.while changing the present names otfamUlar weights and measures as littleas possible. the follnwtng changes havebeen suggested: Let the yard be madeequal to the meter; let the foot bemade the fourth instead ot the thirdpart ot a yard and let It have ten In­stead ot twelve Inches: let the poundbe made equal to halt a kilogram; letthe quart equal the liter: let the tonbe 1.000 kllo�ams: let the pint, gallon,peck and bushel he defined In terms oftbe quart. In this W1Y, It Is pointedout. the inch would be shortened lessthan 2 per cent. but It is ndmitted thateven this slight change would tncon­venlence mecbnnlcn I engineers nndmachine manufneturers.e- Exchange.GRANDGERTRUDE ELLIOTTin the lil-ew Play About Divorce... REBELLION toBy joseph Medill PattersonMAJESTICROBERT HAINES &: CO.In a Play by Geo. Broadhurst, MONTGOMERY &: MOOREThe Renowned Sketch ArtistsAXP OTHER GOOD �UMBERSSALLELOUISIANALOU Rostand the Boy.Edmond Rostand, academician, thecreator of Cvrnno and the barnyarddrama. says' his one time classmate.Jean PaY()Dd. in "Le::; Archives," wasnot among the bright pupils In theschool at Marseilles when they weretogether. "When we had a dru win;;lesson he would read a novel, andwhen problems In mathematics werebeing explalned he would mnke earl­catures on the mar�n of his book.In composltlon only did he ever get agood report. At one time the headmaster said to him. 'You set such abad example for others that youshould be expcU('(). but your compost­tions are 80 good that yuu may go tothe bead of the class,' ,. While atschool he edited am) fonnded a montn­ly school jOQrDAI. which died after itsfirst issue.LYRICWM. FAVERSHAMinTHE FAUNCORT"HE FELL IN LOVE WITHHISWIPrSTUDEBAKEREDDIE FOY Panama Canal Pageant.What vessel sbnl] lead the grandpageant of rhe navies of tbe worldthrough the Panama eanal wben It Isformally opened � The event 19 somedistance In thp future. but the ques­tion Is aln-ady twlnJr dl�nAAed. Someu� the Oregon. in reroJmition of Itsfamous trip round the vontlnent at tbeoutbreak of the war with �paln Oth­ers suggest the old f;:1i1lnJr man-of-warPomtr.o"3tb, whl<,'h was the defenderof rhe Pacific- coast durln� the �Ie�t­can war and which ran up the Ameri­can flaJr at Verba RUE'nn. now SanFrancisco. Th� Pon�mouth I� now ntNorfolk as a quamntinE' Mhip.- Youtb'!'Companion."OVER THE RIVER"GARRICK"SPEED"Auto ComedyWITHORRIN JOHNSON AND OZAWALDROPOLYMPlCCohan and Harris Production ofTHE FoRTUNE HulfTBRWith WaD Deming. Didn't Hit Him.John Wesley bud u r"IIIn;lUon forcheerfulness. In bls Journnl b .. writes:"1 preacbed In Hallrnx 10 n civil.senseless ('onJ.."reJ..�tlun. Thr .... or fourpntlemen put me In mind Clf tbe bon­est mali at Loudon wbn wn� so gayaDd unconc.-erned wblle Or. Sherlockwas preacblng concernIng tbe day ofjndgment. One asked. 'l>o you nothear what tbe doctor 88yS?" He an­swered. ·Ves. l'Ot 1 am not of hi.parlsb.' "sKlaw a Erlanger's Production,REBECCAOF SUNNYBROOK FARMWITH EDITH TALIAFFERO A Curious Illusion.People de<'lare that tbey bave Beena field of grass gradually cbange colO!'dUring a sbol\'er of rain. tbousands ofmushrooms springing up before tbelreyes. This Is nn optical illusion caused by tbe raIn beating down the grass.The musbrooms do not really springup during a single sbn\\"ft of rain .TheY are there alreadY. but hidden h.pOWERSJAMES K. HACKETTIN• , THE GRAIN OF DUST"rCHICAGO O�� HOUSEDustin and � Fanaum Harvard Glee Club Recordsl' No. 1048H�e's a Health to Kina CharlesJohnny Harvard aad Au�tnliaSun« by Doabl� Qartett�CAli I: SON .... E. a. Slreet.:�.su,'THE LlTTi.ltsT REBEL CARR & SONColumbia. GrafoDOlaa aDdReconla848 E. 63d SL PhoDe H. P. 3990SLAUGHT TO SPEAKTO MATHEMATICALCLUB NEXT FRIDAYThe Junior Mnthemarical club,which is composed of the less-ad­vanced graduate students, will meetin 36 Rverson at 4:30 Friday after­noon. Dr. Slaught, of the depart­ment of Mathematics. will give anaddress, introductory to the year'swork, in which he will give reasonsfor the desirahility of doing researchwork in mathematics, and will ex­plain the manner of looking up refer­ences.LARGE DEMAND FORTICKETS TO NEXTSATURDAY'S GAMEDemand for tickets to the Illinois­Chicago football game insure a largecrowd at :\larshall Field next Satur­dav. The advance sale up to dateis -larger than that of the previousgames this season. Twenty-five hun­dred tickets were sent to Champagnefor the Illinois men and the Illinoisdub of Chicago has filed an orderfor 1.iOO more. According to .Mr.Dinsmore it is too early for any defi­nite statement as to the probablenumber that will attend.Governor Wilson of New Jersey,ex-president of Princeton university,addressed the students and towns­people of Princeton in a Democraticmass meeting Thursday.Tickets for the game are sellingwith a rush, and indications are for arecord-breaking Chicago crowd onSaturday. Xevertbeless. no effortswill be spared to arouse all the en­thusiasm possible. The band mayplay at the mass meeting, althoughthis is not certain.A Tribute to the MosqUito.Representative Hughes of Xew Jer·sey is proud of his nnttve state andneglects no opportunity to votce hispride. One day a friend met blm Inthe street In Washington and said:"Billy. I know you're proud of NewJersey. I Uke to see such home pride.I want to boost your cause. Use thisin your next speech: 'The hum of Jer­sey's mosquitoes reaches to the Alas­kan hills, roars down the Pacific coast,erasbes through the Rocky mountains.drones across the llisstsslppi valley.cracks like a gun against t he morassesof the Florida E\"erglades and titillatesthe shores of Europe: "-WashlngtonStar_Rembrandt's "Mill."A. new theory concerning the orfgtnof the famous landscape known asRembrandt's "lUll" is put forward inParis. where the authenticity of thepicture contlnues to be discussed. Toput it briefly. tbe suggestion Is that thelandscape was oriJrlnally by the handof Berknles seghe�. the artist whoseRlgnature was disconred when the pic­ture was cleaned. and that Rembrandtbeautified and impro\"ed it with blt1own brusb work before passing it a8his OWD,The Cobbler In the Library.One of the rooms 10 the Xew YorkPublic l1brary is n cobbler shop. Thetrnstt'eS have ordered th:1t all the em­ployees .In the new library mu�t wearrubber heeled sh�. nnd �In(.'e there Isa small army of th�e employees Itwas decided to establl�h a �hoe repnlr·inlt shop In the bnlldlnr:. The pro­prietor of this sho� snys he hns plentyto do, for when there nrc no rubberheels to be renewNl be Is Jrl\"en 00(1jobs, principally on INlth.-r. In the n·brary.A Fragment of Ancient Greek Art.A peasant nt llondrn�une. In thepro,"lnce of Cn�ertn. Itn I�·. ,Usco,"eredrecently In the remnln� of nn ancientRoman buIJdlnr: the frnJmlents of nmarble statue, whl<'h be !-Iolel to a dt'ftl.er, When pIeced the frnJWIents re­.ealed a headl�s nnil arml�� VenuswhIch Is attributed to the chisel ofPraxlteles. It Is saId thnt the statuebelonged to the temple of Siouessft.It Is now In the �nYlI� mll�tlnm. CONTEST ENDS NOVEMBER 1Blackfriar Play for Year AnnouncedNovember 15.I t is believed that at least fourplays will be submitted to the judgesin the Blackfriar play competitionwhich closes November 1.The judges, whose names have notbeen announced, will make their de­cision on Xovember 15. Followingthe selection of this year's play, acompetition for lyrics and music willbe started.There has been some talk amongBlackfriars regarding the advisabil­ity of giving the play in the Winterquarter, since the' Spring calendar isgenerally over-crowded. GLENROYThe New Summet., 'A��� �'.�.�O·�COLLAR154..n.2 15t �Jlaaampte cravat aUpapace,DO�OD in front, snape on iD backCluett. Peabod.,. lit Co .. Troy. N. Y.Englewood Soccer Game Postponed.The Englewood - Chicago soccergame, which was to have been playedyesterday afternoon, was postponedindefinitely by Englewood, In or­der to get practice, the Chicago squadwas divided into two teams and apractice game played.Mathews Writes of New Movement.Professor Shailer Mathews com- C URKISHBATHS75 Cents. Plain Baths 26 Cents. OPEII DAY AIID IIISHTSARATOGA BARBER SHOPl. H. HEPP, Proprietor29 DEARBORN STREETExpnt Manicuritt Scimti6c MaaeunExpert Chiropodistments on the Zionist movement, Ja­pan's revival of Shintoism, the growthof Protestant unity, the men and re­ligion forward movement and the newPapal decision as to feast days, inthe World Today for October. Dr.Mathews edits the" Religious World"department of that magazine.Address Books Out in Two Weeks.Students registering every daymake it impossible for the addressbooks to be out before two weeks.The late registration is mostly in theEducational and Senior colleges.Butler on Spelling Board.The Executive committee of theSimplified Spelling Board has an­nounced the election of seven newmembers, among whom is NathanButler, professor of education and di­rector of the co-operation with sec­ondary schools, at the University.Dr. Clo Goes to Tulane.Dr. j. H. Clo, Assistant in Physicsat the University, has been appointedto the chair of physics at the Tulaneuniversity of Louisiana.C, D. Jones Gets New Position.C. D, Jones, formerly a fellow inhistory at the University, has beenappointed inspector of county andlocal archives at the University oflllinois. His duties will require himto search for historical documentsand data which deserve preservation.STEVENS MAKES CHOIR PLANS(Continued from page 1)wood School for ten years. He wasintimately associated with such menas the late Theodore Thomas. Glea­son, Pratt, Sherwood, and Godowsky.both as student and teacher. At theage of twenty Mr. Ste"ens appearedin a piano recital at the Chicago\V orld's Fair. :\[me. Bloomfield Zeis­ler was Mr. Stevens' teacher for fouryears. After his course of study Di­rector Stev�ns travelled and gave re­citals in Gcrmany and Franc�, gain­ing the praise of such men as Kramerand Gl1ilmant. Director Stevens hopesto organize a department of musicwhich will meet the demands of thestudents at the Unh·ersity. ExperiencedPressmenAre necessary to produce goodPrinting; many a good job of com­position has been spoiled by lack ofskill or attention in the pressroom.That's why we give such care tothe printing of every job; we have anestablished standard of workmanshipthat must be maintained.This makes it a certaint ..- that youcan secure highest quality here allthe time, at no greater cost.the Hyde Park Printing Co.TElEPHOItE HYDE rAll� lSSI1223 East Fifty-fifth StreetClassified Ads.GERMAN TUTORING by experi­enced native teacher. Requirementsfor College a' specialty. Highestreferences. Phone Midway 2872.BOARD-Prh'ate home. References.German conversation. Washingtonavenue, near Fifty-seventh street.llidway 2872.FRENCH-Efficient tutoring by Pa­risian lad)". Ten years' CollegeProfessor and University Exam­iner. lladame lloreau de Bauviere,Colonial Hotel, 6325 Monroe Ave.LOST-Small cameo pin with letters"Phi Eta Sigma." Return to Ma­roon Office_H LIFE" is offering a' novel andmoney-making plan to men andwomen who are working their waythrough Colleges and ProfessionalSchools. You can find out all aboutit by sending your name and ad­dress on a postal to LIFE'S COL­LEGE STUDENT'S LEAGUE, 17West 31st street, New York City.THE TEA HOUSE1328 East Fifty-seventh StreetHAS CHANGED .ANACERITTASTY, HOME-COOKED LUNCHEONS AND DINNERSSERVED IN OUR COZY AND COMFORTABLE SHOPOrden for FUCJ CAlES, REAL ENGUSH PLUM PUDDINGS... JIINCE IlEATDINING ROOMSPRIVATE FOR SPECIAL PARTIES