...... �Vol XIV. No. 111. Price Five Cellta! .,. TWELVE CONTESTS ONBASEBALL SCHEDULE--WILL OPEN APRIL 22; ,I,�Play Wisconsin, Iowa, North­western, Ohio State, Illinois,Purdue And Waseda.ISSUE CALL FOR TWIRLERSInfield Well Taken Care of-Wealthof Material For Outfield Positions,With Shifts Possible.Baseball Schedule../i_ April 22-Chicago at Wisconsin.April 29-Chicago at Iowa.May 2-Chicago at Northwestern.May 6-Ohio State at Chicago.May 12-Chicago at 'Illinois.May 13--Northwestern at Chicago.May IS-Iowa at Chicago.May 20-Purdue at Chicago.May 24--Wisconsin at Chicago.May 27-Illinois at Chicago.May 31-Chicago at Purdue.June 3-Waseda at Chicago.Twelve games are included o_n thebaseball schedule as announced byCoach Page yesterday. The squad willopen its season Saturday April 22with the Wisconsin game at Madisonand will close it with the Waseda,\game on Stagg field, Saturday, June� \ ' ',3. The' first three Conference games• t • 't �ll'be .played away from home. The:annual two-�me series with Illinoisis scheduled with the contest. at Ur­bana on May 12 and the home' game'carded for May 27.Coach 'Page yesterday sent out acall for more candidates for pitchers.At present Captain Shull is the onlyexperienced man on the squad andunless several more men are developedto relieve him of part.' of the burdenof the work, the chances for a cham­pionship wilt be dimmed considerably.The schedule calls for the three games__ to be played in five days and Page� .' must have at least two first classtwirlers to carry out this strenuousprogram.Shift Cabn or Cavin.,� .., -- ThOe infield with Bill McConnell at,". first, Rudolph, second base, Doc Mc­Connell at short, and Cavin or Cahnat third base seems to be fairly welltaken care of. Candidates for thethree outfield berths have never been",so numerous. Marum, Willard, Chang,,, __ ... Houghton, Gerdes and McGaughy areamong the men who will probablyfigure in the Conference games. EitherCahn or Cavin will be shifted to theI- outfield after Coach Page has madehis choice between them for the jobat third base.GOLDIE THAYER, 'U,.SUCCUMBS TO LENGTHYTUBERCULOSIS ATTACKGoldie Thayer, '14, died Monday af­ternoon at her home, 1337 East 71stplace. Miss Thayer had been ill sinceafter her graduation ,with tubercu-losis. Interment will take place to­\ day in Waukesha, Wisconsin.JWEATHER FORECAST.Rain or snoW' today and eolder; briskwesterly winds. Thursday fair alldwarmer. aroon,at'UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1916.JUDD TO GIVE ADDRESSAT ANNUAli CONFERENCEConvention of Administrative OfficersFriday l\loming, April 14, Will OpenTwenty-seventh Meeting With Ac­credited InStitutions-Hold Examin­ations.Charles Hubbard Judd, director ofthe school of Education" will speak on"The Qualitative Definition of SchoolCourses" at the general session ofthe twenty-seventh educational con­ference of academies and high schoolsFriday night, April 14, at 8 in Man­del. The annual conference will openFriday morning at 11 with a converi­tion of the administrative officers inthe Reynolds club theater ...The visiting teachers and principlesand the student competitors will be'entertained at 12:30 in the Reynoldsclub, under the direction of the Or­der of the Iron Mask. The Men'sGlee club will offer several selections.At 1 :15 the visitors will be invited toluncheon in Hutchinson commons.The - preliminaries of the publicspeaking contests will be heIdi at2:15 in Kent theater. At the sametime prize scholarship, examinationswill be held, open to seniors recom­mended by the principles of co-oper­ating _ high schools. The examinationwill be given in American History,Botany, Chemistry, English, French,German, Latin, Mathematics andPhysics.Hold Conference.Departmental, c�nferences will �a� 3. The general topic for discussienwill be "Qualitative Standards inHigh Schools and Colleges". An In­formal reception to the high .schoolwomen will be given by the Neighbor-,hood club at 5 in Lexington. Themen will be entertained at the sametime in the Reynolds club. The men\ViII have dinner at 6 in Hutchinsonand the women will be entertained atdinner in Emmons Blaine.The conference will conclude withthe finals of the public speaking con­test at 8 in the Harper assemblyroom. ECONOMIC- LIBERTYWILL RESULT FROMMAN'S BETTERMENTLaughlin Addresses 160 Candi­dates For Degrees At Con­vocation Exercises.SOCIAL SYSTEl\1 NOT AT FAULTIndustrial Evils Due to Manifestationsof Sinful Human Nature-Disci­plined Initiative Necessary.Economic liberty will only find itsrealization in the gradually evolvingbetterment of man, as expressed byProf. James Laurence Laughlin, head,9f the department of Political Econ­omy, in the Convocation address deliv­ered yesterday afternoon -at the ex­ercises in Mandel. Degrees, titles andcertificates, were conferred upon onehundred and sixty candidats."It is not going too far to say thatmost of, the industrial evils complain­ed of today are not to be attributed toa vicious social and economic system,but to the bad manifestations of' a DEBATING TEAMS PREPARECASES DURING VACATIONBalsam And Weisl To Support Liter­acy Test Against Colorado Speak­ers April IS-Jaffe, Lowitz AndSeerl6y Oppose Northwestern April21.Varsity and freshmen debaters willremain in Chicago next week and pre­pare for their debates scheduled fornext month. Louis Balsam and EdwinWeisl are the Varsity and BenjaminJaffe, _ Leo Lowitz and John Seerleythe first-year representatives.The Varsity speakers will contestagainst the University of ColoradoThursday night, April 13, in Mandelhall, on the affirmative of the ques­tion: "Resolved, That Congress ShouldAdopt a Literacy Test For All Eu-, -ropean Immigration." Twenty minuteswill be allotted for constructive argu­ment and eight for rebuttal. TheMaroon orators held their first meet­ing with Coach _ Moulton last night.The literacy test question is thesame as that discussed in the threecontests scheduled by the Central De­bating league in January, in whichChicago won the championship for theyear. Moulton's affirmative team,composed of Thomas McCullough, Wil­liam Haynes and Joseph Augustus,defeated the University of Michiganin Mandel: Chicago negat�ves-Gay­lord Ramsay,_ Clifford Browder andHomer' Hoyt, won from Northwesternat Evanston; and Wolverine affirma­tives were. awarded the decision overdenying economic dtstributlcn, Even the Methodists at Ann Arbor._ �. Y?U .�?_:�_tp���, .���J!_�o�_!L -, ------ Mdb�tLQQ. ·Top.stln liive tlie -same old nature at Th f h d I' ·11e res man ec armers WI par-work, certain to be the source of most ticipate in the ninth annual clash withof the evils we now endure. The Northwestern Friday night, April 21,only thing that counts permanently is in Mandel, on the negative of thethe slow, gradual, steady uplifting ot question: "Resolved, That the Fed-eral Government' Should Own AndOperate All Steam Railroads Engag­ed in Interstate Commerce." ThePurple delegates have won five con­tests and lost three.sinful human nature. The inference,then, is obvious. Discriminate be­tween the wrongs assignable to thesocial system and those assignableto human nature."The removing of the shocking evilsin our midst is not to be accomplishedby overturning social institutions, bywiping out private property or byhuman nature.Must Allow Freedom."There is the greatest economlcliberty in the state that offers thegreatest rewards to individual activ­ity, consistent with the rights of oth­ers. Only that governmental interfer­ence is justified of economic libertywhich allows the greatest industrialfreedom to the individual, within thefield of equal rights.,"On the other hand, while individ­ual initiative is.necessary to economichealth, economic liberty is, the result­ant of individualism under the curbof disciplined co-operation in society.While there is the greatest politicalJiberty under law, so there is thegreatest individual economic libertyunder co-operation."EXAMINATION SCHEDULEThe examinations for the Winterquarter will be held this week as fol­lows:8:15 classes, today, 9:15 to 12:15.9:15 classes, tomorrow, 9:15 to12:15.10:45 classes, Friday, 9:15 to 12:15.11 :45 classes, today, 2 to 5.1 :30 classes, tomorrow, 2 to 5.2:30 classes, Friday, 2 to 5.To Discuss Ford ExpCdition. TO HOLD CONCERT APRIL 17M�'s Glee Club Will Rehearse Mon­day Afternoon, April 3.Members of the Men's Glee clubwill hold a concert Monday, April 17,at the Oak. Park Congregationalchurch. Participation in the recital isnecessary before the new membersof the organization can be eligible forattendance at the annual banquet.The club will rehearse Monday af­ternoon Ap'ril 3, in Director Stevensstudio in Mitchell tower.DUPLICATE PLAN OF FORUl\1Nonbwestem University FraternitiesTo Hold Mock Convention.Who started it first? At the secondmeeting of the Winter quarter,. theUniversity Forum appointed a com­mittee for a mock Republican nation­al convention for the selection of apresidential nominee. The affair willbe held the latter part of April.Announcement comes now from therival camp at Northwestern univer­sity that a similar convention will beheld the first week of April there.Each fraternity will represent atleast one state, and will appoint thechairman of that state delegation. Wo­men from the Liberal Arts college willbe represented also. .S L_MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY.,NOW HAS 450 MEMBERSEnrollment Expected To Reach 800By April 1, When Charter Mem­bership List, Closes.The Mathematical Association ofAmerica, an organization of profes­sors of mathematics, started about ayear ago by 'University -instructors,has already an enrollment of 450members, according to Herbert E.Slaught, professor of mathematics,and over eight hundred are expectedto join by April 1, when the chartermembership list closes. The facul­ties of Chicago,' Illinois and four­teen other schools i� the middle westare included.The society W;\S started to providean organization to fill the gap be­tween the American Mathematical so­ciety, which is mainly interested inresearch work, and numerous clubswhich have been established for sec­ondary school teachers. A magazinepublished under the direction of Prof.Slaught, '''lile American Mathemati·cal Monthly," has increased its sub­scription list from 125 to over 500during the organization of the �sociation. The Rev. Mr. J. L Jones will speakon the experiences of the Ford Peaceparty Satut:day at the Quadrangleclub A dinner, followed by an il­lustrated talk by John T. McCutcheon,will be given a week from tomorrownight at 1. TO HOLD A MOCKCONVENTION 'INSPRING QUARTERPolitical Science Department ToSupport All-University Af­fair April 27-8.SELECT REPUBLICAN NOMINEEWill Elect Three Hundred Delegates,Entitled to' Three Votes Each, toRepresent Home States.A mock national Republican con­vention for the selection of a presi­dential nominee will be held Thurs­day and Friday, April 27 and 28, inMandel hall, under the support of thePolitical Science department. The as­sembly will be a' replica of the meet­ing to be' held this June in Chicago.TIle convention, which came as asuggestion from the Forum, will be anall-university affair. l'hree hundreddelegates will be chosen from the stu­dent body, each to have three votes.Attempt will be 'made to select dele­gates to represent home states. Com­plete details will be announced .next'quarter.Sixteen On Committee.Among the national committeemenalready appointed are: Louis Balsam,Herman Beyle, Paul Blazer, Earl Bon-_dy" Carl' Brelos, Robert,' Dunlap, Ax;.thl1l' ���., Mauric�_ �y�_: Hecke,William Jordan, Fr8n� KBtzin:- Bmee."Martin, Joseph Levin, Donald Sells,'Harry Swanson and Morton Weiss. _ELECT GORGAS �A�AINOF FRESHMAN QUINTETHyde Parker Is' Football And TrackStar Also-Practically Certain ofPlace On 1917 Varsit,-.William S. Gorgas w�s elected. captain of the freshman basketballsquad at the annual meeting heldyesterday afternoon. The picture ofthe freshman squad was taken at the.same time. Gorgas, who was � starbasktball man at Hyde Park Highschool, has held down a regular po­sition on the �eshman-varsitythroughout the season. He is practi­cally certain of a position on theYarsity team next year.Gorgas is a member of the ThreeQuarter's club and Phi Kappa Psifraternity. In addition to his abilityas a basketball man, he was a mem­ber of the freshman football team;and is a strong track man in theweight events. Orr, Setzer, Evans,Bumann, Gentles and Fleugel wereother members of the squad to re­ceive their numerals.BLACK FRIARS CASTCANDIDATES TO MEETCandidates for parts in the 1916Blackfriars play meet today at 12:30in the Reynolds club. They will alsomeet tomorrow at 12:30. About eigh­teen men tried out in the music com­petition Sunday night, averaging al­most four selections for each chorus.The music has been taken by EdwardC. Moore for further examination be­fore the award of prizes.�'IJ THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1916.m�r iaily !laronnOfficial Student Newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago.Publtsbed urorutncs, t>n"t'llt Sunday uudMonllay. durlnc tot' Autumn. Wlutt'r audSprlu;: quarters t,y The Dally �Iarooll starr.F. R. Kuh l'lanaging EditorH. R. Swanson News EditorB. E. Newman Athletics EditorA. A. Baer Day EditorH. Cohn. Night EditorRosalind Keating Women's EditorAssociate Editors:Wade Bender Vera EdwardsenBusiness l'lanagers:C. A. Birdsall R. P. MatthewsEutered as secoud-class wail at the ChI·ca;;o Postotlke. Chtcaxo. IIl1uol:,. llilrdl13, 1��. 1I11(1l'r Act of llarcb 3, 18i3..Subscription Rates:By Curr-Ier, $:':.50 a year ; �l u quarter.By llall. $:� a ,Yf'ar, $l.� a quarter.Editorial It oorus .•.••.••••••••••.•• Ellls I!!{II nle I'nrk :':Il.'lTelephone. �I;d\\,:l�' 1'(10Business Of!lce •..••.•••..••....... Ellls 14Telephone, Blackstone 2:i!l1W'EDNESDA Y, l\IARCH 22, 1916.This is the last issue of The Maroonuntil the beginning of the Springquarter. Our next number will ap­pear Tuesday, April 4."l\IAIZIE SAYS YOU GOTTA COMEACROSS".A vacation intervenes between ouslast issue of the Winter Quarter andthe Aldermanic elections on April 4.There are one or two phases of thepolitical situation in the Sixth andSeventh. wards to which the Maroonwould like to draw attention, but dur­ing the interregnum there will be noMaroon. Considering the comfortablemargin which Alderman Willis O.Nance was nominated on .the Repub­lican ticket in the primaries, thereseems to be little doubt, fortunately,but that he will be returned to theseat in the Council Chamber which hehas held for several terms with cred­it to himself and the ward he repre­sets.The situation is different in the sev­enth ward, where Alderman John N.Kimball was nominated by a verynarrow margin, whose validity is evennow being tested in the courts. Al­derman Kimball is the subject of theadministration's bitterest attacks, forthe reason that he is the associate of. Alderman Charles E. Merriam, andwith reference to Professor Merriam,our Mayor has delivered himself ofthis classic: "There can be no peacebetween Merriam and myself." Nat­urally one wonders what will happenwhen Alderman Merriam proposes leg­islation which it is to the best inter­ests of the people to adopt, but thatis beside the point.The point is that the Thompson ad­ministration which has graven into theminds of the people a classic- whichwill always stand out in Chicago po­litical history, namely: "Maizie saysyou've gotta come across." The meth­ods of the administration are well il­lustrated in a recent occurrence atthe City Han:Since William Hale Thompson wentinto office, Major :\1. L. C. Funkhouser,second deputy superintendent of policeand head of the morals division hasbeen under fire. Repeated attemptshave been made to abolish the divisionwhich keeps immoral exhibitions outof our theaters, licentious films outof our moving picture houses, andacts as a general check on the depart­ment of police. As a last resort May­or Thompson proposed to abolish thisdivision of the police department byleaving it out of the budget. Strenu- ous opposition was made by th � May­or against any attempts to standard­ize the spoils jobs in the law depart­ment of the city, which is not undercivil service. Any attempt to investi­gate the positions of the "special in­vestigators of the law department,who are receiving $110 a month foraddressing post cards was vetoed bythe administration. Reduction of thisspoils salary roll by $50,000 as pro­posed by the Efficiency Division andthe Council Finance Committee wasblocked. But we can do very wellwithout the Morals Division-oh yes,let us abolish the Morals Division.At once every reputable civic forcein Chicago rose up in arms. Wo­men's clubs held special meetings,urging that the Morals Division beretained. The newspapers, as a unitcondemned any' plan for curtailingthe powers of that Division, becausethey realized what the lack of it meantfor the City. Therefore the budgetfor that department was kept in thegeneral appropriation bill.Then what happened? Well theMorals Division had to be done awaywith, somehow or another. Therefore,Francis Hanna, morals inspector ofthe City, was suspended under chargesand fired. The reason given was thathe had actually dared to give evi­dence-under a subpoena duces tecum-of law violations on the part of thecity's cabarets, without first obtainingthe consent of the administration. Yes,Mr. Hanna had stated that he hadreported several cabarets wheredrinks were illegally sold, and where,well, other things went on, to theCity Law Department, and that thesereports had been shelved. Mr. Han­na was therefore incompetent and hadto be discharged.And now-the last step-well, noth­ing only Major Funkhouser has beenguilty of showing to educational bod­ies and civic welfare organizations inChicago some of the film "cut-outs"during lectures on censorship. Thinkof the baseness of it! Major Funk­houser is a stain- and a blot on thefair name of the city. There are so many such examplesof the present administration's methodof "boosting" Chicago ,that it is un­fortunate that more of them cannotbe given. They make interestingreading. However, since this ad-ministration is the one that is oppos­ing most bitterly the re-election ofAldermen Nance and Kimball, thereis nothing to say but"RE - ELECT KIMBALL ANDNANCE. Remember, Maiaie says yougorta come across!"COMI\HJNICATIONS(In view of the fact that the com­munication column of The Daily)laroon is maintained as a clearing­house for student opinion, The�laroon accepts no responsibility forthe sentiments therein expressed. Com­munications must be signed as an evi­dence of good faith, although thename will not be published withoutthe writer's consent.)Thanks From Utah.Editor Daily Maroon:The student body of the Universityof Utah wishes to express its thanksthrough your paper for the courteousreception and valuable support givento our basketball squad in this weekstournament by students and alumniof the University of Chicago.Herman Wells,President of the University of UtahStudent Body.Seniors To Entertain Juniors.Seniors will entertain members ofthe Junior class at a beach party Fri­day, May 19, at the Jackson parkbeach. The remainder of the seniorSpring program will be announced bythe Social committee next quarter.l\liIler Wants SuggestionsAll suggestions for the 1916-17 "C"book are to be given to Max Miller inthe Y. M. C. A. office Ellis 2 University of Michigan UnionAnnual Comic OperauTres Rouge"All male student cast and chorus. One hundredmen. Special orchestra.AUDITORIUM THEATRE--MARCH 25SPECIAL STUDENT HALF-RATE COUPONSMay be had in the Reynolds Club, Maroon Office, In­formation Desk in Cobb Hall, and in Dormitories.FOl{ lIEAL"rl-1 i�N) �"rl�)��Ci'I'HStudents ask forh 0 R LIe K' 5, the Original Malted MilkA nourishing and digestible food drink, sustaining and iuvigorat ing,maintains health, strength and fitness. A complete food composed of cleanmilk, combined with the e xtract s oi wheat and malted barley. Splendidior upbuilding the system.Also in Lunch Tablet form. plain or with cocoa flavor, ready to eat. Atall dealers and fountains. Specify "11:) R L1 CK 'S" and avoid subst itutes,for free sample address HORLICK. (Dept. 18,) RACINE, WIS. ,Will YOU try asensible cigarette?-Fatimas have a tastethat wins most men onthe first trial. That. must be true. Other­wise, Fatimas wouldnot be outselling everyother cigarette costingover Sc. never leave a "sandpaper tickle" or any"mean feeling" oftercontinued smoking .Farimas are truly asensible cigarettebecause-th�)' nrenlwnyscoo/andccmfor't able to the throatnnd ton.:ue nnd-tht'Y' lenve one reclinetip·t<'p even after 11 10nKsmokmK day.-they are pncked in 0 com­men-sense, inexpensiverockliKe. The value iainthe cj'lJ�ttes.Their Turkish blendof all-pure tobaccos iscombined in such away as to make themalways comiortablJlmild, yet rich in goodtobacco-c haracter.Try them you....u:.�� .. �, GdIcOFF for a hike in the woods- or just en­joying a loaf in your room-anywhereyou'll find your Bradley sweater the best kindof company. But what r: ep!': menso loyal to 1-" ... urr.as isthat Fatimae play fairin every way. Theynever taste "hot" and ••e.·� t·�It-'�lr�tt�\.. ,The Ionzer and harder you wear your Bradley, the moreyou appreciate its fine making, sturdy shape and style,and warm, companionable comfort. It's the sweateryou'll cherish through college and thereafter as yourfondest possession. All styles, all weights, all prices.See them at 'Your local dealerBRADLEY KNITTING CO., Delavan,Wis. F",ti",,, _. ,A, �Jf 0""'"__ 1''',,1,10, GRAND PRIZE.tI" lIirk,., •• ''''1''' �iv"H /01 .. ""1'11"'1'1111 .,,11, P"'''''''''''P''€I/k1""I'H4�"41 Ex�s'Ii.".Here'. the upper class­man'. favorite pipe­bowl of genuine Frenchbriar, mounted with'sterling silver ring andsolid vulcanite mouth­piece. All dealers; SOc.W.D.C."ILmcI Made­Pipes, $1.00WJLUAM DEMtmI A CO., New YGI'k,••e.'� r�Il""�IL�tt... \.. THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1916.REVIEVVS OF RECENT BOOKSDockstader and SandbergWE have the pleasure to announcethat our complete stock of thenew productions in clothes for earlySpring is now ready.In fourBASE BALL"Within the Tides," by Joseph Con­rad. Doubleday, Page and company,$1.35 net.By Dorothy Weil, '14.With due meekness and humility Iconfess, in this day and age, that Iam not a Conrad "fan". I find thecharacteristic Conrad indirectness inthe tale-telling rather an annoyancethan a joy. The tale becomes at timesso vivid in its telling that I lose theconviction of a third or fourth partyrecounting it, and the teller becomesso unreal that I wish he were notthere. Perhaps I am too liberal mind­ed about that teller. I oug-ht to swal­low him whole along with a breath­less tale, but I have never been ableto, because I never could see that anydistinct advantage accrued to theConrad tale because of the indirectmethod of its telling.Moreover, the advent ure story is notmy favorite type of narrative. Peopleplaced in unusual or extraordinarycircumstances do not so quickly se­cure my sympathy z s those whoselives have more in common with thetife I know. Conrad, of course, writesnot merely a novel of adventure. Hehas taken an additional step and inmuch of his work gives a realisticpsychological situation in a romanticsetting of adventure. "Chance", "Vic­tory," "Lord Jim," arc all examplesof the Conrad difference. Neverthe­less the Conrad story is not the com­pletely satisfying -thing to me that itis to most constant readers.And if not a "fan," I am at leasta constant reader, because '1 havenever found a Conrad story that didnot challenge attention, hold inter­es1a, and contain some remarkablygood writing. Its local color meansless to me, though every Conrad storyis a beautiful example of thc elusive1. c. No writer of ordinary experi­ence has half a chance with JosephConrad in the 'field, so altogether fas- in our respectable channel in full viewso to speak, of the luxurious conti­nental traffic to Switzerland and Mon­te Carlo.""The Inn of the Two Witches,"which take place somewhere along� he Spanish coast; at the beginningof the last century, reminds onestrongly of the adventure story of Poeand Stevenson. A mysterious deathwith no marks of violence; the horrorcf the discoverer developed at lengthbecause he feels the same fate over­taking him without knowing how tomeet it, the accidental placing of thedead body onto an old-fashioned can­opied bed; whereupon the canopyslowly and relentlessly descends uponthe helpless victim. The materialsare familiar and their method of pre­sentation,-a fragmentary manuscriptis equally so."Because of the Dollars," a guest inand near the harbor of a great easternport for control of a shipload of golddollars has in parts the true "TreasureIsland flavor. The Frenchman with­cut hands, who is chief instigator ofthe villainous contingent is the onlyequal of John Silver I have ever met.He had "a big white face and longblack hair, brushed back off a highforehead like a bard's. He was al­ways t rying to roll cigarettes on hisI'nee with his stumps, telling endlessyarns of Polynesia and whining andcursing in turn about "mon malheure,"He had compelled the woman who be­trayed his schemes to tie iron weightsto his stumps, and when he discoveredher treachery, beat out her brains withthem. A truly picturesque gentleman!"The Planter of Malaba"lS thefirst and finest of this book of tales.Rennard, the planter, a man of ac­tion and extraordinary achievement,is one of the distinctive characterswhom only Conrad draws. Throughhis accidental meeting with MissMoorsom who has left London societycinating and extraordinary is- the and traveled across half the world towealth of material upon which.)le make the sacrifice of marriage with Spring and Fall seasons, we"have never offered so many beautifulmodels with new style and comfortfeatures.There is a distinctive style of garmentfor all occasions. Our showing is brim­ful of handsome patterns. Sizes foryou. W e cordially invite you to In­spect them.Republic Bldg.Corner State and Adams Sts.That snappy, spirited taste of "Bull" Durham in acigarette gives y i.u the quick-stepping, head-up-and­chest-out fee1:ng of the live, virile Man in Khaki.He smokes "L.:.T' Durham for tl:c sparkle that's init and the crisp, youthful vigor he gets out of it.GENUINE:"BULL DURHAMSMOKING TOBACCO"Ron your own" with "Bull" Durham and you havea distinctive, satisfying smoke that can't be equalledby any other tobacco in the world.In its perfect mildness, its smooth, rich mellow­sweetness and its aromatic fragrance, "Bull"Durham is unique.For the last word in whole­some, hea1thful smoking enjoy­ment "roll your own" with "Bull"Durham.draws.These four stories in "Within theTides", at which I am so slow in ar­riving arc no exception to what theConnn! 'public expects, although ofone, "The Partner", Conrad says,"This story to be acceptable shouldhave been transposed to somewherein the South seas. But It would havebeen too much trouble to cook it forthe consumption of magazine readers."Hence here it is,-a story of murder, Iblackmail and shipwreck-"happening . her former betrothed (a young manunjustly accused of dishonorable deal­ing. and subsequently cleared), he fallsso deeply in love wtih, her that he isunable to tell her of the death of herbetrothed lest she go away. One sub­terfuge_ f�l1ows another until at lastquite simply, he tells all and ofcourse, angers hopelessly because ofhis deception. The whole situation isquite perfectly, masterfully handled,if one could only believe in it. But(Continued on Page 4)GordonThe college man·s shirt. Well made offine white Oxford. Cut in patterns thatassure perfectly comfortable fit. It is an SHOESTo play well you must bewell shod."CLUB SPECIAL"SPRINTINGNo. OS - - THE PAIR - - $5.00LoD8 time favorites OD �l ball fields.CataJocue Mailed oa Requa"A. G. SPALDING &: BROS.28 So. Wabash Ave. CHICAGOARROW SHIRTCLUETT. PEABODY & CO .• hcc;', M .... TROY. N. Y. WOODLAWN TRUST& SAVINGS BANK1204 E. SIXTY-THIRD STREETTHENEARESTBANKtoThe University of Chicaso-0-An Old, Strong BankResources $2,000,000.-0-It will be a pleasure to US; aconvenience to you; if you doyour BankiDg here.PRINCESS I Now PlayingWinthrop Ames P...eDt. the Three·ActComedy _A Pair of Silk Stockings..... c.. ............... ., SAllI01BIUirA TlNEES THURSDAY aDd SATURDAY,REVIEW OF RECENT BOOKS TBB .DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1916.,(Continued from Page 3)one feels as he did in ·'Chance",' thatit would have been so much easierand. more natural to speak a simpletruth simply, that he cannot sub­scribe wholly to a fabric founded onsuch a coincidence. As for MissMoorsom, she is disappointingly'eno� the usual Conrad woman.They are always either petty, small­souled, mean or brainless, these wo­men of Conrad's, One wonders if hedoes not know many women or if hereally thinks them all like those hedescribes. The opinion of a man whowrites as good stories as Conrad'swould at least be interesting,-per­haps worse.ACTIVITIES AID STUDENTSDean ',"hite, Of Ohio State, DiscussesScholastic Problem.Student activities have a good effectupon the scholastic standing of stu­dents, according to Dean David S.White, of the college of Veterinary'Medicine, Ohio State university. Mr.White stated in a recent interviewthat the evil which may result in in­dividual cases is more than offset bythe good done the student body as awhole.The interview was published' in aDissue of the Ohio State Lantern asfollows:"In regard to the effect of studentactivities upon the scholastic standingof the students in the college of Vet­erinary Medicine, I am of the opinionion that the evil which may resulttherefrom in individual cases is morethan offset by the good done the stu­dent body as a whole."Our students are professional stu­dents; they expect to use the instruc­tion and training we give them to'''make their bread and butter." The,.therefore, with few exceptions, are"after the goods" and �re never sat­isfied until they get them."For reasons I do not need to gointo, the outside activities of the vet­erinary students are less apt to besocial than with the students of thenon-professional colleges. Of course,there are individual exceptions. Ourstudents seem more interested in in­tramural athletics than they are insociables, pink teas and tango dances."The captain' of the Varsity footballteam is a veterinary student and agood one. Nearly all of the Varsityathletes furnished by this collegehave made good here and hereafter."ILLINI TEAl\1 SPRINGSSURPRISE BY WINNINGBIG NINE TRACK TITLE. tDownstaters Score In All Events Ex­cept Half-Mile-DismondStar In ReIW,Y.Illinois sprung a surprise by win­ning the Conference meet Saturdaynight with comparative ease. The D­lini presented an exceedingly wellbalanced squad and scored in all .events with the exception of the haltmile. The features of the meet wereCaptain Mason's two recording per­formances in the mile and two milesand Dismond's race in the final lap-Dt the relay.Dismond's performance was evengreater than Mason's because hestarted his quarter mrre relay withHohman of Illinois over fifty. yardsahead. The Conference championstarted right out after him and onthe final lap he came out' of tillbackstretch ten yards behind and oV-.ertook his man just two yards' fro� .the tape. From the spectators stand­point it was one of the most l\:onder- ful events ever witnessed - in the an­nals of western track and the timeof fifty seconds fiat makes it oneof the liest performances of the meet.The forecasters were given a set­back' in the first event when Per­shing of Chicago won in a blanketfinish in :5 2-5 seconds, tieing theConference record. Smith of Wi&­consin the favorite, was eliminatedin the semi-finals. Agam they wereupset when the two Illinois runnerstook second and third in the quar­ter mile. Bush of Illinois completedthe surprises by taking' first place inthe high jump. single room in new apartment--­very desirable. 1st apt. 6052 Ingle­side. Call evenings.PAT-RONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSFOR RENT-ROOM AT COR. OFMidway and Kenwood Ave. Largestudy room separate from sleep­ing room. Good light. Terms rea­sonable. R. T. Riel, 6018 Ken­wood Ave. 2nd Apt. 1heTe •• the (nn o( quenchinsthe thirst_nd tho del iciouSf\e"A of the thintquencher to si"oyou double pleasure.But you don·t� h""e to bethiF'lltYto enjoy Coc:a-Cola-iL".ft tT'�t.what­ever your l'euon for drinJ.ine it.Demand the genuine by full name-­nicimemes encourage substitution.THE COCA<OtA CO.Atlanta, Ga.TEACHERS WANTED.We need Superintendents, Princi­pals, High School, Grade, DomesticSeienee, l\lanual Training, Music, andAgrieulture Teachers. The demand farexceeds our supply. Will send you alist of good vacancies as soon as weget '1our Registration. Only 3�%Commission payable Nov. 1. Don't de­lay until the best are taken. Write. today for our literature.TEACHERS' EMPLOYMENTBUREAU.C.edar Rapids IowaRoom 532 C. R. S. Bank Bid,.Classified Ads.Five certta per line No advertise­. menta received for Ie .. than 25 cents.All cia_fled advertisements must bepaid in advance.HOUSEKEEP�G ROOMS AND f-.v." .•,. ::..Ll- .i•It•. 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