.....vOl. XIV. No. 121. ,at- araonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26. 1916. Price Five Cents.country will center on Philadelphia�this week where" the Pennsylvania . ., ,relay games will be held Fri<l:aY and DOROTHY DAVIS A CHAIRMAN'.saturday. Last year over eightyFORCED TO' CORNER MARKET f.0�l�ges and �50 high schools were Classes to Compete at Sing a Week.represented in the meet and this mark ,From Tomorrow-May Issue'War Causes Scarcity of Hand-l\lade pas b�en eclipsed this year. The spe- University, Song-Book.�ial events will include the .100-yardWish, 120-yard high hurdles, the high Edward Cole, Bernard" Newman,Jump; pole vault, weight events aDd lack Guerin and James Hemphill were�he pentathlon. selected by the Undergraduate coun-" Chicago win probably be represent- cil at a meeting last night to act asTwenty thousand invitations and 'j ed by the mile relay. team, and Whit- leaders at the Interclass Hop, sched­.advance programs for the Quarter- ring and. Fisher In the high jump. uled for Thursday night, June 1, inCentenial will be mailed from the Coach Stagg was disSatisfied with the B rtl tt D 4ntb D .a e. ,o.,� y avis was 3IJH.President's office within the next ten showing made by 'the quartet at pointed as chairman of the receptiondays. Invitations will be sent' to Drake but going at their best they committee.I� ohn D Rockefeller, Jr., Governor have a bright chance at, Penn. The Cole, as senior representative, will;nunne, Mayor Thompson and other ,ieain will consist of the same men be the general chairman and chair­�en eminent in national, state and �t competed last Saturday witJh man of the, Finance committee New-'.municipal affairs. Five thousand rershing running first, Clark second, man, as junior delegate,' will be inptizens of Chicago· and as many ,Cornwell, third, and Diamond, fourth. charge of the arrangements. Guerin,alumni of the University will be ',The last lap ��ll. bring' Meredith of of the sophomore class, will supervise'among the recipients. 'pe�nsylvania, Bingham of Harvard, the decorations. Hemphill, the fresh­�The invitations .are printedjn Old 'arid Dismond together, and.if they get man leader, will manage the public­,�Caslon type on Italian hand-made pa- .off anything like even it should prove itY and program. These chairmen.per. David Allan Robertson" secre- t-o be, one of the fastest quarter miles will announce their, committees thistary to the President, stated yester- run this season. 'weelc.day that the authorities were com- The four-mile relay will be fought 'The Council has planned for an In-pelled to corner the market in hand-' out between Wisconsin and Cemell, terelass Sing to be held a week from.made papers in older to ,secure ,the :rJ1e anchor men on theTthaea team tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 in Hutch-�ecessary stock for: printing. .are Potter �nd Windnagle and they "inson court. Eacb class will group-. The programs to be mailed with the ��� nearly �n�bl,e�,' �ichiga,n�,i�'� on one side of the quadrangle and will,jnVi�tions will be of .the .·�e Size ,�� inthi� �e c�ut the sho�g., -compete With .the 'other delegations,'.'. "and will,s0�tain._8��n''pages. The .. :'puide, �r-the':'W�_e-��::at- -fOrnl1Dlbers. -The'Univei-sity�baDd. -c:oat of arms of the UniverSity will �Drake .and .the fact that they �w and a saxophone quartet will ·offer. be 'lithograph� in color on ,the cover. �the pole i,n .the' two-mile �y persuade nUJDbers. '� ,-The co�t of mrus'wiii be embossed on, poach Farrell. � start .his men � The Council considered the advisa­�e 'Coy_er of the invitations.,,' �tb �is event. Princeton, Yale and Penn bility of issui};g:, a' University, song­, JnVitati9ns, and programs in�,. '1 6'11 have good tw�mile qUartetS. The book for the Quarter-centennial in, 1-2 by' to 1-2 incli� .. �igers bold the' title for, the . �ce June. Bids have .been seCured andWill Contain Details. • while Yale ,will present a team fas- the "suggeStio� Will jirob8:bly be re-, Tli"e exeCutive committee of, alamiu'- ttened. to Ov�n, _ considered to be alized. . . .lWill diStribute �� thouSand printed ,as good as Meredith. in tJ:ie haf.I' .-,'I" 'progi-ams' about' the. CampUs within_ nlinois W'ill Not Send .Team.I '.the next few" days. The programs Illlnoiswill not- send a relay team. :will contain details of the eventS for put instead Coach Gill is taking sev-"" �e abc days of ihe celebration' and, feral .of his point, winners to com­other ,materiill eeneerning' the alumni 'pete in the special ,events. 'He basand undergradu.ate activities ,that will �ntered Culp in the' pole vault, Hoh--. '�1c� p�aee. man and Gildner in the dash, Carter.and Pogue in the broad jump, HustedI �n. .the 'discus, Webster and Bush in;the high jump ana Ames in the hUrd­les. Captain Smith and O'Brien of. Michigan will compete in the dash ·room. 'and cross will put the shot. Mucks,is the only member of the Wisconsin';Squad who will be entered in the spe- WOMEN PETIT�ON FOR,.cial events and he will seek' honors RELEASE - OF PRISONER, wiii sEND TWENtyTHOUSAND PROGRAMsAND INVITATIONSNational and State Figures AreAmong Recipients of Quar­, ter-Centennial Cards.Paper-Alumni Executive COm-mittee AlsO to Distiibute.III!WEATHER :fORECAST.Partly doudy. aDd cool, today; mOd­'erate 'easterly winds. Thuraday fair, -� wanner. ' .TBE DAILY, MAROONBULLETIN.---'chapel, the Se.dor colleges, the coI- .Ieee of Commerce and-Administration,and the college of Education: 10:15,Mandel.Devotional service, the Chicago,}rheologieal . seminarY, 10:15, Has­kelL'Mathematial club, .. :15, Ryencm37. 'University Public lecture, Prof. Ros­anOlr, 4:30, Kent" 20.University Public lecture, "WilliamShakespeare"; Dr. Charles Gayley,":36, Mandel.Graduate Women's club, 8, Beecher.1'·omon'Ow.Chapel, the Divinity school, 10.15,Haskell.Y. w. c. L., '10:15, Lexington 14.University PubUc ledure,"'Prof. HoII­anOlr, -1:30, Kent 20. -uDlv�i8Ii;- PGbue lecture, -Shakes­pWe iad ReI ..... ", Dr. wtw ••Nen.on, 4:30, M�.�ples dub, 8, BukeR 26.M""'" 88det;., 8, �askeD. MILE RELAY TEAM WILLRACE IN' PHILADELPHIA�hiting and Fisher May Take Partin High Jump-Wisconsin and COr­nell Favorites in Four Mile Run.Interest of track fans all over the,in �he hamm�r, shot and discus.'! Co.mmtiteemen Meet TomorrOw.National '!ommitteemen for the. mock Republic;an Convention to beheld' next month will meet tomorrow''afternoon at 3:30 in the Harper as­semhly room.Aehoth Club Holds Party.All University members of the Eas­tern Star have been invited to attenda tea given by the Achoth club todayat 4:30 in Green hall.Junior Women Bold Party.Junior women will hold a partytomorrow at 3:80 in Foster. An elab­orate progr.m is being planned bytJie committee in charge. BamaraSells is in charge of the party, and. Alice Taggart is in charge of the re­, fresbments. A limited number of tickets will besold 'for the Sophomore class lun�h­eon to be beld tomorrow at 12:45in H�tchinson cafe. William DarnallMacC1intock, professor of En.J�sh.Literature, will speak.�.COUNCIL 'SELECTSFOUR LEADERS FORINTERCLASs HOP PANCHO VILLA DOOMEDTO CAPTURE ON JUNE 3Dekes Will, Startle World at Univer­sity Circus-Three German Bandsto Head Monster Parade AroundCampus and Down Midway.Name Edward Cole, , BernardNewman, Jack Guerin andJames Hemphill The situation in :Mexico- will assumea more peaceful, aspect on and afterSaturday, June 3. For on that dayPancho Villa will be captured andplaced in irons, according to state­ments given out by the Circus com­mittee after its meeting yesterdayafternoon. The thrilling spectaclewill take place on Stagg field, and thevillains and soldiers will be membersof Delta Kappa Epsilon.The first annual circus will openwith a monster parade around thecampus and down the Midway, withno less than three German bandsproviding the music. A human cal­liope will offer, the latest song hitsand the Delta Upsilon elephant, themost intelligent �nimal in the worldwill thrill the crowds on the sidelineswith his wonderful tricks.Will Captu� "Poni�"., The' ::gymnastic" team will give anacrobatic act and" Alpha Tau Omegawill present the unique - spectacle ofthe Honor commission capturing stu­dents "ponies". Kappa Sigma will. bury several useless campus organi-zations, the title of the sketch being"We come to bury, not to praise". PhiKappa Sigma will give an all-star re­view.Thirty howling Fijis will boil Prof.'-Starr-iJi-'the" J�gIe of AfriCa. Anaviator �th th� latest assortment ofsomersaults and double turns Will be�'the feature on the program.ANNOUNCE, SCHEDULEFOR INTERFRATERNITY'TENNIS TOURNAMENT. - ...UNIVERSITY FORUMTO DIScUsS' MEXICO,AT' MEETING- TODAY Preliminary and First Rounds to be·Played in Next Week­Plume in Charge.Drawiings for the Interfraternitytennis tournament were made at themeeting of' the Interfratermty �oun­cil yesterday. The same schedule willbe used for bgth singles and doubles.Tbe drawings for the preliminaryand first rounds follow.Preliminary round, Phi·, GammaDelta vs. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Sig­ma Alpha Epsilon vs. Sigma Nu.First round, Delta" Chi vs. the win­ner of' the Phi Gamma Delta-DeltaKappa Epsilon match, Phi Delta The­'ta vs. Delta Tau Delta, Psi Upsilonvs. Delta Upsilon, Alpha Delta Phivs. Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Chi VB. Del­ta Sigma Phi, Kappa Sigma vs. PhiKappa Sigma, Alp}la Tau Omega VB.Chi 'Psi, Phi Kappa Psi vs. the win­ner of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon-Sig­ma Nu match .The ,preliminary and first roundsmust be played off by Monday, allmatches unplayed by that date to beforfeited. Men who are out for theVarsity tennis team or Who havewon a major or a minor "C'P areineligible. Scores must he turned into Gifford Plume.Will Vllia be, hung or electrocutedif cau�t? is President WilsOn's pol­-icy toward Mexico justifiable? Whatwill be the future' of M�ico? All of. theSe questions' will be di�ussed atthe meeting,'of the University Forumtoday at 3 :30 in the Harper assembly. -t\lice Masaryk, Former_ Utrlversity_Settlement Resident, Aceaaed ofHigh Treason by Austria.Residents of the women's dormi­��es and, members of the faculty.are signing a petition to be sent topte State department asking. for therelease by the Austrian governmentpf Alice Masaryk, fonner resident at)he University Settlement. The pe­�ition reads:,"We, the undrsigned American,friends of Alice Masaryk' of Prague,'pave learned with deep concern of herimprisonmen� in Austria on a chargepf high treason. Knowing as we doller nobility of. character, her fine;sense of honor, �er humanitarian in­terests. her distinguished scholarship,.:we urgently request the State depart­lIlent to use all possible influence withf-he Austrian government to insureflgainst any suumiary military action�ing taken in ht!r ease." Number of Tickets Limited.... - ANNOUNCE LIST OFPATRONESSES FORBLACKFRIARS' PLAYMesdames Judson, Harper, Boyn­ton, Lovett and RobertsonHead Forty-Eight.ACT BEFORE CAMERA TODAYj Four Cinematograph Companies toTake Pictures-Wi! Nam.e·Groupof Ushers Friday.Forty-eight patronesses for the1916 Blackfriars' production, "A,Rhenish Rhomance", were announced:yesterday ,by Manager Dunlap Clark.I ' .,,The list is headed by Mrs. Harry,Pratt Judson, Mrs. William Rainey,Harper, Mrs. Percy Holmes Boyn­ton, Mrs. Robert M. Lovett, and �._----=..,....David Allan Robertson--,·------'. The list of patronesses' follows:,MeSdames William 'C. Adams, Trevor'�ett, ·A. C. Bartlett, Frederick �Brown, Mollie H. Brown, Chester C.Broomell, W •. E. Burcky, Ernest D: ',Burton, Russell'S. Clark, ShermanIT. Cooper, John A. Carpenter, Edith,Foster Flint, David R. Forgan, S. J.ruiks, Henry G. Gale, Edgar J. �od­,speed, James P. Hall, -Charles L.'IHutchin�n, E. Fletcher -Ingals,,Franklin W. Johnson.•. Charles H. Judd, Henry LeSch,James Weber Linn, William D. Mac��I .,.clin�k, Andrew MacLeish, William' .,Mason, Shailer Matthews, Charles E.:Merriam� Frank Justus Miller, JameS ',H. Moore,- E. C. Plume, Julius Ro­,senwald, Bertram W. Sippy, Robert "W. Stevens, Bert Leston Taylor, Av­.erill' Tilden; 'J. S: Tyley, Lyman A..Walton. Herbert L. Willett, Frank G.',W!ight, and the Misses Mary Wood,Hinman and Elizabeth Wallace.AB'ur in Costume.Sections of the play will be pre­sented before moving picture men this,afternoon at 3 :30 in Hutchinson court.Tne Mutual, Hears� Vitagraph, Tri­pone-Selig and Rothacker companies�ud .all of the do�town newspapers;will be represented. Members of the.cast and choroses will, appear· in cos- I'tume.Ushers and sellers of scores for thefour performances of the play will beannounced Friday. The produciion�ll be given May 6, 6, 12 and 13 inMandel hall. The scenery and elec­trical appliances. for the play willbe installed early next we(!k. TiCbt3are on sale daily at the box-offiee inHutchinson corridor.Christian Union Elects Olficers.Prof. Edgar Goodspeed, of the de-, partment of New Testament andEarly Christian Literature, was elect­ed president of the Christian UnionSaturday. Fred Merrifield, instructorin the department of New Testamentand Early Christian Literature, waschosen vice-president and Max Miller,'18, was elected secretary and treas­urer. .�., .. ;;"Speaks to Y. M. C. A. Class.Dr. J. J. Monahan will talk on"Hemorrhage and 'Its Treatment" atthe meeting of the First Aid e1Usunder the auspices of the Y. II. C.A. today at 4:30 in EDIa 8., '_ Otrieial Student Newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago.Publlsb� morD1DJ:S. except Sunda,. and"ooday. durlDJ: toe Autumn. Winter and'prln� quarters by Tbe Dally lIaroon staff.F •. R. Kuh ....•..•. Managinc EditorH. R. Swanson ....•..•. News EditorB. E. Newman Athletics EditorA. A. Baer · Day Editor'H. Cohn .........•.•... Night EditorAasociate Editors:Wade Bender Vera EdwardaenEntered as seeond-elass mall at tbe Cbl·ea� Po8tofflce. CbleaJ:o. Illinois. Mareb13. 1�. under At't of Mareb 3, 1813.Subscription Rates:B,. Carrier. $2.50 a yeer; $1 a quarter.B, Mall. $3 a ,.ear, $1.25 a quarter,Editorial Rooms ......• :. Ellls .12T I h {HYde Park 5391e ep on_ llit)\Tay SOOBDMDess Offlce EUls 14Telephone, Blackstone 2:W1Yet, in the' face of - this situation,our government officials fail even toattempt to perfect the eXPeriment asfar as possible. Rather, &.hey spendtheir time building up municipal spoilsmachines, electing speakers to statelegislatures and passing nationalpork barrel legislation. They neg­lect the tremendous opportunities ofeo-operating with the private social'service organizations, which have ne­�sarily arisen .because the state hasfanen down on its job. They neglectthe state's responsibility for situa­tions in which one person's oppor­tunity for living is not equal to that-._ of some of his fellows. They neglectthe tremendous field undertaken bysocial workers.: r1':·( r-� �i�I �.l�. � � "The poor you will always have� t with you." Perhaps; perhaps not. Ift· , r . �is saying be -true, evidence of thef· r - need of scientific and far-sighted deal-��: t':' ing with the poverty problem seemst ·fl: ,co. nclusive. � it. is not true, quick and'i' . ..:-.J -' - 'adequate means for the eradication� �f:·�.2: <' of poverty seem necessary. In eith-, <; - er ease, effective and ultimately suc­\ <: cessful attacks on this warped con­: f': " ,dition of society must be made by;.. persons trained in the best way pos-..� SIDle for the work. They must not.: � �erely be individuals with a humani-- i tarian feeling about society's malad-(: justments, not merely individuals, t, whose socieU\1 conscience is aroused. ", only by the appeals of a war orphan, �. fund crusade, not merely individuals: I- aroused to open tbeir pocket-books.� for the poor and destitute Queen Mary�, �" . or the Czarena. Such philanthropic:: �entiments may_be necessary traits• !';' _. for the trained social worker, but�,t:- '_'',.. �� -l�;��::';'.-.r .� i! __ .. there is much more.Consideration of the actual, prac­tical needs of the situation by KateHolladay Claghom, of the New York THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 26. .191�.school of Philanthropy, shows thatthere is room and .need "for the �08tvaried qualities and talents. In tb�,social worker, sympathy must be. combined with good judgment; a softheart, we. may say, with a hard head.A talent for organization, abilit_y in.writing and speaking, the mathemati­�l mind which can deal with statis­tical and financial problems, all havetheir place.""Again,. the effective social workermust have sufficient educational ac­quirement to understand the gener­�l bearing of the individual phenom­ena under immediate observation. .'One ease of distress is_ likely to offerproblems in economics, psychology,biology, physiology, hygiene and etb­.ics, which the social' worker must atleast recognize even though it be on­ly to turn over the case to the properexpert, And no social worker is ade­quately equipped until he is in pos­session of the results of past experi­ence in social work in its variousforms." . vice in our college of Commerce,. andAdministration are not adequate.Theory is necessary. But pracScalI -' •.application of that theory is equallyimportan�. Until the college of Com­pierce and Administration or someother department of our U Diversity'does meet this need, the training ofthe college graduate muSt be sup.plemented either by a course at suminstitutions as the schools of Civicsand Philanthropy or by aetual work­ing in the preliminary, _ yet funda­mental, methods of some social ser­vice organization. A sUitable cor­relation of work between the Univer­sity and {he school of Ci�eS andPhilanthropy could undoubtedly bemade; duplication of work could beavoided; and a.dequa�ely trained work­ers could be furnished for the neees-.sary work of properly adjusting thefreakish and monstrous conditions ofsociety.GAYLEY WILL- LECTUREON SHAKESPEARE TODAYProfessor of English at' Californi& isMember of Elizabethan Clu�Neilson Talks Tomorrow.PayJie. Repr� Uidversity,,:,.. -EDm�er ·�alter. A. Payne_ ��,. seated the University' at, the'· Seventh 'annu� co�vention of 'the American,��soci&ii6n - �f' '_Collegiate �rs'held' kst "'week . at Coluiub�' 'Dr:Nicholas .)Iurray -Butler, president- of �Columbia; pomtecl out the, increas­ing "impOrtance .of the 'i-egiStrar d�eto his close - tOuch: With -students, in�the_'pri�cipal-addreSs before·the sev­enty delegates.. 'Give Dance On Friday.The Reynolds cl� will give an· in­fo�al dance 'Friday night at:S.The ·foregoing statement seems toestablish beyond equivocation the�eed of trained workers. - A survey! �f social service organizations in New! WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1916. York City recently made by the New'� York school of Philanthropy and the;l THE UNIVERSITY AND SOCIAL Charles Gayley, professor of the. � Intercollegiate bureau of Occupations '� SERVICE. EngliSh Language _and Literature atf furthermore, points out that already. the University of California, will lee-� Coincident with the failure Of the the need of trained workers is appre- ture on "William Shakespeare" todayF- government to make appropriate pro- . dated. Among those workers repo� at 4:30 in Mandel. Prof. Gayley bas�"'I��',' "'. ···nDwn .for. the protection of the life, ing to the queries made, college gradu- been professor of ·English at theb'berty and proPertY'tlf the individu- ates numbered 99 among 165 men or University of California sinee 1889.al is the inevitable rise of pr1v�to 60 -per cent, and 202 among 596 wo- Previous to that time he was an in-agencies to act where the state has men or 34 -pereont.. -_ Others attended structor at the University of Michl-. failed. This process seems almost college without graduating; It may1 gan for nine years.'fundamental, espeeia lly in a demoe- be stated, incidentally, that the' Ga., -, Dr, yley is an honorary 'memberracy like ours: And it is invariably groups of college graduates ,received of the' Elizabethan club of Yale' andl Il _the militant, ml'non'ty who are in the higher salaries than those who had ..- a member of the Author's club. of. Lon-front rank In all such efforts for so- not attended college. -.don. He has received bonori.ry de-cial progress. This minority is the But, merely a college diploma doesgrees from Kenyon universitY, Glas-element that must do the experiment- not suffice. Actual contact with so- gow university; the University' ofing, bear the brunt of partisan criti- cial problems must be had; methods Michigan. "Classical Myths in Eng­cism and usuaUy stand the financial must be studied,. practically as well lish Literature"; �Plays of Our Fore­and individual burdens. All of this as theoretically;' al1d . the really sel-, f�thers''. and "Id�ls of Education" are'occurs in spite of the fact that our - entifie method of investigation and el-among his' �orks: .,. -; ' ',.government and even our own dem- imination of social 'diseases must be . Dr •. wiliia� -Nei1so�" professor �of_" �:.-ocracy is merely a huge experiment. practised. Five professional t;t,;lil!ing :EI!gllsh·-at. �_':-unive�ity,�:will; ."It may be the n'ght experiment,· bnt: schools for· social workers have -been I -"Sha' k -.- _. '�and' Reli·· , - ecture·.on·, espeare' .. �.we do not know. established :within the past ten yearS,'" gion" tomorrow at'. 4:30 i�� _ MedeLIn which a thorougbgoin�, ·scien�c· B�th .'leCtures will "be" open '-�to �tbe'.training is given.· . Foremost among - , ._... '.'- -'these are 'the N �w York school .; of public,'P�anthropy and the Chicago schoolof Civics and 'PhilanthrOpy�But ri�t here is found a case' !l�­�logous to· governm�nt inactivity 'insocial service organiiation.· work.. Ouruniversities have been torpid, inactive.Needless duplication of e_quipmerit andphysical administrative work � re­,sUIted. The university has not func:­tioned in this pbase of education. . Ithas· rather been busy �deriding the�'uplifters", -when the�e -same . "up­lifters" were. anxious for universityco-operation.-, It has_be�n buSy creat­ing theoretical concepts - of a �oCialUtopia while society, has been left tosu1fer under its abnormalitieS.' ." The' divisions for -training in Pub­lic, Philanthropic and Religious Ser-Yau tried it because 117" told�u hoW' sood and deliciousit 'W88."But �OUT frirma8'�drinJtinS it becauae l10u told tlinnhow Aoodit 'WaS. This is the end­less Chain of enthusia:nn that has.1Mde Coco-Cola the beverase ofthe nation. .,THE COCA-<:OLA. CO ..AnANTA.GA.Demand the� name. Nicknames�'��:.J •• ' substitutes. . ... -GIVE OUT CONCERT TICKETS western. univ�rsity � -Thirty men an�boys under the direction of'Mr. I vanT. Gorokoff will 'sing in the choir at .the concert next Tuesday. The cpf?irhas- appeared recently in' B.oston and�New York in public performances.RuSsian Choir to-Appear in Recital.Tuesday.Tickets for the concert to be given'". by the Choir of the Russian cathedralof St. .Nicholas, New York City, aweek from today in Mandel hall are'now ready for distribution at thePresident's office. The choir' �il1present a program of ancient' andmodem Russia� music._The choir, which comes to Chica­go and other western cities throughthe kindness of Mr. Charles R. Crane,will give a concert May 3 at North- , .Quadrangle .Club Dance Tommorrow.The Quadrangle club will hold adinner dance tomorrow night. 'at '1.MemberS have been resuested to sendreservations to the secretary, Mr.Arthur P. Scott.MAROON ADS.BRING RESULTS««Glimpse" .OurNEW WOOLENSTHEY'RE pleasingly different fromthe commonplace-and you'll havethe' fun of knowing the pattern of -yourchoice is practically confined to you, forwe Carry but one length of each. 'Prien range #rom$35Foster .& OdwardTaUo'" lor Yocm .. M.,.':7th Floor Republic. Bldg.� State :and Adam�TeleplaeD. Harri80D 8216,__.'. That snappy, spirited taste of "BuD" Du�� 'in a '':cigarette gives you the quick-stepping, head-up.:and�chest-out feeHng of the live, virile Man in Khaki •. >-. He "smokes "B�r Durham for the sparkle that's' init and the crisp, youthful vigor he gets out·of,it.� -GENUINE"BULL DURHAM \-- .SMOKlN� TOBACCO, "RoD your own'· with "Bull" Durham and you have ..a distinctive, satisfying smoke that can'f be equalledby any other tobacco in the world.In its perfect mildness, its. smooth. rich mellow­-. sweetness and its aromatic fragrance, "Bull"·Durham is unique.For the last word in whole­some, healthful smoking enjoy­ment "roll ybur own·· with ·'Bull"Durham. ."._ :IIII�II,IIIIIIIII.'. .; A�::: '.'�:.p''--�'�. 'Tb4... - ':>.?: '. :o·s��-: .·Coriqe:,";' .Hut1tC:� :;:_:.-Siiirc.'.-�, '�'CH]t���·Coi.. .. ·�-<'It-....,.,� ..'Thi}cEvcs.. '-..r-•. __-; ___'.. �-�..," - ·Fiv.m4mb.... All' 01,:,paid I,---FORmelVioapel-: pricPar:IGParPRIV.Mis154;ClaltorSUM!NeaRatLakHutseRe·andFal'llinoYoUl-,-. 'I :II,-IIIII;I ,.IIIIIIII -I THE DAiLy MAROON,' WEDNEsDAY, APRIL 26,'1916.,, " ,'. "'nIe pubBe8.tioD of,this great' eOIIeetion biiagS reiilforeem�t to ,the frieDda of·the humanities at a time when it is sorely needed-afine aehievemeat,' a notable addition to the higher iDteDecttial.i'esources of the English-speaking peoples, and a credit to our own country."-The Nation." � ITHE LOEB CLASSICAL" LIBRARYA NEW.' COMPREHENSiVE, AND UNIFORM SERIES OF 'CLASSICAL'.Greek an"d Latin"Texts with Parallel English TranslationsIt is the idea of Mr.' James Loeb, who, has· entered upon the undertaking with commendable enthusiasm, to bring the ancient world closer to themodem; to make, the literary treasures ot the past more accessible to the reader of today. .The Editors:F. CAPPS, Ph.D., LL.D., T. E. PAGE, M.A., Litt.D., and W. H. D. ROUSE, Litt.D.Assisted by an Advisory BOard of Eminent Scholars-"1JThe latest and best critical texts are used and the translations, whichcombine accuracy with sound English idiom, are, with rare exceptions,in prose. 1TEach volume, is prefaced by a brief biography and contains bibli­ography and index., "1TTbe series is to contain all that is best in Greek and Latin literaturefrom the time of Homer to the fall of Constantinople." ., . �,� 'Y 00 'wa'rit-'-', �,': cigarette comfort, ' l., The :volumes are uniform in size, 6%nlh .inches, and contain fro ni 400 to 600 pages. Flexible cloth, $1.5.0 net per. vol. Flexible leath-.er, $2.00 net per vol. Postage on single vols., 10 cents ...... ORDERS RECEIVED FOR SINGLE VOLUMES.-FOR GROUPS OF TITLES.-OR FOR,THE WHOLE SERIES.LIST OF VOLUMES A LREADY PUBLISHEDLATIN "AUTHORS(Bound in Red)GREEK- AUTHORS(Bound in Green), ApoUMJu -Rhodia ••. Translated b� R. C. Seaton. 1 Vol._ _. 'DIe AltNteilc FaUaen. TraDSlated b.7 Klnopp Lake. 2 'Vols.,App 80 ..... 1118&'17. Translated by Horace Wblte. 4 Vom.010 C la.: Roman Hlstol'7. TraDalated by E. Cary. Vola. I. 'II and III. .The Greek Baeollc Poet. ('l'heoerIta.. Blea. H"eha.). Translated by J. H. Ed-monda. 1 Vol. ' '_&_Iod _d &be Homme BJ'Duaa. Translated b� H. G. Evel)'n- White. 1 Vol..JallaD. Translated b7 Wilmer Cave Wrlgbt. Vols. I and II.'-Lac ..... , Translated by A. H. Harmon. Vole. I and II. ' 'lIIaftU A1U'el1a. Aatoalu. TraD8lated b,. C. R. HaInes. . .PhDo.trata.: The Life ot Apollonius of Tyan.. Translated by F. C. Conybeare.2 Vola. . _, .Pbada... Translated by Sir J. E. SandJ8. I-Vol. _Plato: EDtlantllro. Apoloay. Cno. Pbaedo. Pbaeclru.. Translated by H. H. Fowler:1 VoL "",. ', ' . _: Platarell: Tile Parallel LlYN. Translated by B. Perrin. Vols.-f. II and III. _Procopl.... Tranelated by H. B. Dewing. Vol. I. '.' .Qalata. 8aa7na11eu. Tranalated by A. S. Way. 1 Vol. ,- .80pbocl .. Translated by F. Storr. 2 Vols.., '8t. .JoIua DluaaMeae:<B.daam aDd louapb. Translated by the Rev� G� R. Wood-. ward and Harold Hattlngly. .. . , .. .XeeOpbOD: C7ro....... Translatet!. by, Walter Mnler. '2 Vola. '., Apulelu.: The GoIdeD A.... (Metamorpboses.) 'V. Addington. (1566.) Revised byS. Gaselee. 1 Vol •. St •. Aup.tlDe·. Confesaloas. Tr:lD�lated by W. Watts (16a1). :! Vols.Cae_r: Civil 'Wars. Translated by A. G. Peskett. 1 Vol. •Catallaa. Translated by F. W.' Cornish. -TlbaUaa. Translated by J. P. Postgate, -'PenlcWum Veuer18. Translated by J. W. Mackall. 1 Vol.Cicero: De FIDlbaa. Translated by H. Raekbnm. 1 Vol.Cicero: De O"lells •. Translated by Waler MlUer. 1 Vol.Clc:ero: Letters to Attleae. Translated by E. O. Wlnstedt. Vois. I and II ..Horace: Odee aad Epodee. Translated by C. Et Bennett. 1 Vol.' -O"ld: Herolde. aDd Amom. Translated by .Grnnt suowerman. 1 Vol.O"ld: lIIetamorpb.... In 2 - Vola. Translated by Frank J"ustus MUler, Ph.D ... LL.D., Professor In the UniverSity ot Chlcago. 'PetroDl_.!, Translated by'M. Heseltlne., ,8eDeea: ApoeolOC)'DtoSIA. Translated by W. H. D. Rouse. 1 Vol.PlaatulJ. ' -In 4 Vots. , Vot. I. Translate(} by' Paul Nixon, Professor ot Latin, Bow­doln College. Maine. -Plla,-: Letters. ldeJmoth's Translation revised by W. M. L. Hutchinson. 2 V�s._ Propertlas. Translated by H. E. Butler.8aetoDlae. Translated by J. C. Rolte.__ , Taeltu.: Dlalop •• Translated by Sli·· Wm. Peterson, Apirola aDd GermaD"._ 'l'ranslated by Maurice Hotton. ,I Vol._ TereDce. Transalted by' J"ohn Snrgel1unt. 2 Vols.To Be Published During 1916GREEK AUTHORS LATIN �UTHORS .. SeDMoa, Tra.:ecJl_, ("0'; I).-s .. nel"n. El,IHtlH.-"lrJ:lI.. AcbUlea Tatlu .. -DaphDI. aDd Chloe.-Dio o...lu. Bo� lIbtol7 (Vola.' IV._d V)., aalea.--Gnek Aatbol0C7_Homer. The C)cIy�,-_Plutareb (VoL IV) • ...;..._ ���la •• --8&rabo.-Tbeep� .... tu.-XeDoPboD; H�leDIea aad A_bul.. Z Vol ••-SEND FOR IS-PAGE'DESCIUPTIVE'P AM PIlLET , ,�. 'P. �UTNAM'S SONS, .Publishers 2 West 45th StreetNew YOl'k City, ,. _� _� . .t'.' _;, . Your :ste8dy',dga­fette'must suit yourown taste, of �Fatima may or may"n.ot 'do ,t�at�youtan't' tell. Until youtrvthem. Butintdditiontothe "righ� tast�ou want,fCCOMFORT". toO-comfort for thethroat and tongue'and no ,CCmean"feeling after smok-­iog. You want a"SENSI BLE ciga­rette.Test any other ciga­rette in the worldalongside of F atirnasarid you' II find thatFatimasarethe most"�omfortableJJ 'and. "sensible" cigarettethat you eversmoked. ', eI-,.�k.ccs..:-,",_':.:Classilted Ads�- .. . �. . .... . , . -. � ..-' , ·FiY.'cerrta�pe·r' ,lin •. No adyertise­menta. received, ,for, I ... than 25· centa. 'All . c'auified advertisementa must· be� paidlri advance. " , �e _8 to. .tUdeata ea, eUy 'payment&., , -� .ad eataJoi' i 79.,. \ -,- .- .. ."TYPEWRITER,·' EMPORIUM .',N. �. C.niet··Lak� aJlciJj�; '·st.'���SecoDd Floor,'. Telepho_ 'Raudol�"16,�114���650 ',...... It t, t ,It ._ •• It •• : ••••• It , It , , • i , It ••• +++. . '-FoR. DANDRUFF, SCALP TREAT­.'m'enu and Facial Massage, ',try our"Viole� Ray High· FreqiienCy." We·specialize" in shampooing. Reduced. ,-: . prices flo students. '''Lockwood IParlors,'� Miss Florence Lockwood.��������I---------------------------Park 6772. , age. Terms $80 for six 'weeks. For DONALD PEATTIE WINS"further information, � apply, Miss,': ENGLISH EXAMINATIONPRIVATE' LESSOtiS IN DANCING Margaret' Spence" care, Mrs. F. R.Miss' Lucia, Hendershot, studio Lillie, 5801 Kenwood Ave.,'Chicago.1541 F;. 57th St. H. 'P. 2314. University High School Student isClass on Mondays at 8 p. m. Open Awarded Scholarship-Honor-to new members at any time. To Speak in Beec:her. able Mention to Five.The Graduate Women's club willmeet tonight at 8 in Beecher. Asso­ciate Prof. Cross wm speak on "Cel_tic Poetry a�d Folk-Lore." - 'ation was givcn to Francis Langwor­thy, Stewart Ha.wes and Janct Lewisof the Oak Park and River Forest'high school, Pearl, Andelson of' JohnMarshall, and Ruth Huey oi theFaulkner school. Dr. Soares Holds Bible Class.Dr. Theodore Gerald. Soares will. hold a series of Bible study classeson Wednesdays at 3:80 in the League _committee room. The first of the 'se-ries will be held today. " ,SUMMER COTTAGES FOR RENT.Near golf links and club house.Rates reasonable. Lots-for sale withLake' . Michigan privileges. L: F.Hutehison, L8keside, Michigan.. - �.... Donald Peattie� of. the University'high scho�l, was the· winner in the�amination in English for the fresh­man priz4:: scholarship held last weekin connection with the annual sec­ondary school conference. He is theson !)f :£Iia W. Peattie, literary edi­tor of The Chicago Tribune, and abrother of Roderick 'Ppttie,' '13.Honorable mention. in this examin-SCHooL FOR HOME-MAKING"and :Country Life.. Buffalo, CreekFa� ,Wheeling, Cook County, II-'linois. T�ere wiU ,be ro� for eightyoiang girls over �ixte�n years of MatHmatical Club to Meet.The 1tIa�ematical club will .meetihis afternoon at 4:15, in Ryerson 37.A t.alk on "Outlines of a Projec:tiveTheory of Fanetions" will be' givenby Prof. WDezyDski. PATRON.JZE OUR ADVERTISERS..• ,.., 4-" -. 'THE DAILY.MAROON, WEDNESQAY, APRIL 26, 1916. •-,REVIEWS OF RECENT 'BOOl<·SSporting ClothesSeparate J ackets, orwith Knickers orLong TrousersFlannels, Tweeds, or Soft.. . ...Knitte-d Mat e ria I s inStriking Solid or MixtureColors,Dockstader' and/' Sandberg,WOODLAWN TRUST& SAVINGS �ANK12M E. SIXTY·THUlD STREETTHENEARESTBANKtoThe University of ChicalO-0-AD Old, StroDg &DRes00ree8 $2,000,000.-0-It will be a pleuare to Ui aconvenience to you; if you do �your BankiDg here. :.�:-!���?fMODES OF APPROACH"RUSSlA OF TO-DAY", BY JOHNFOSTER FRASER. (FUNK &�AGNALLS, N. Y.) "RUSSIA ANDDEMOCRACY", BY G. DE WES­SELITZKY. (DUFF1ELD, N. Y.),By Alexander S. Kaun.Mr. Fraser has written many booksof travel, and in most of them he has.shown himself as a keen observer pos- •sessing the tolerance and understand­ing of a polyglot_ and a cosmopolite.,As a typical Englishmen he. tingespis touristic reflections with a utili­,tarian hue, and offers practical sug­,gestions to Anglo-Saxon business­,men. From this point of view hisbook on Russia will interest primari­ly those who look upon the land ofthe Czar as a virgin soil that invitesexploitation and capitalistic develop­ment, Mr. Fraser will appeal also to,a Burton Holmes audience, offeringas he does cinematographic descrip­t.ions of Russian idiosyncrasies in cityand village life.A totally different mode of approachis that employed by Mr. Wesselitzky,_,a professional publicist and diplomat.In a brief sketch he outlines the his­tory of Russia for the last eleven cen­turies, clearly, definitely, and one­sidedly. So onesided, in fact, is hispoint of view that it borders on rude­ness in it_s absolute lack of subtlety,and instead of serving as a helpfultext-book in the hands of the studentof Russian history the book becomes� political pamphlet of the war-liter­ature category. This is the more piti­�ul since the author is excellentlyequipped for the subject, and 'offersinstructive information, true factsthat pale unfortunately in the light ofhis narrow interpretation. We all,admit that Russia has been historical­ly and intrinsically a democracy, andthat her absolute form of government�nd bureaucracy are foreign grafts. borrowed from Mongols and Teutons.But Mr. 'wesselitzky employs a too,inflexible apparatus in the process of.: his analyzation: He casts Russia into - ,TROUNCE STEGEMAN'SBELOIT NINE, 12 TO 1Rudolph Hits Home Run With BasesFull as Larkin and Shull Allow SixBlows-Leave Tonight. for JauntThrough Iowa.SEVERAL PARTS OPENIN WOMEN'S MASQUE. University women who wish to par­ticipate in the women's masque, "TheGift", which is to be given in connec­,tion with the dedication of Ida Noyesban, will consult with Miss Lucine.Finch from 8:15 to 5 in Lexington, ,15 ." Several partS are still open. Re­'heanals will be held today at 8:15,�.15, 10:45, 11:45 and from 1:30 to�:30 in Lexington. �hat· automaton, and presses respec­.tive buttons for her good and bad.traits; all the first are labeled "angel­ic .Russian", while all the last, "dia­bolic German". This is too simple.�nd hardly patriotic. To ascribe toGerman influence all Russian flawsand misfortunes since the day of Pe­ter the Great; to credit the Germanswith the omnipotent power of dictat­ing Russia's internal and externalpolicies in the last two hundred yearsand of controlling her commerce andindustry; to insist on such views isto belittle Russia, to reduce her to therole of a submissive satellite of hergreat neighbor. Mr. Wesselitzkygrows still more unconvincing whenhe describes the personalities of theCzars. Only an obsequious - courtiercould endow with such adoring epi­thets Nicolas I, Alexander III, andNicolas II, the- obstinate" obscuran­�ntist trio whose fame, or Ill-fame,Fonsists largely in their ruthless per­secution of free thought and free will.',' Mr. Wesselitzky's book is addressed�o a non-Russian audience with theview of securing its good will and ad­miration for the abused land. In hisgood intention, however, the authorshares the error 'of many Russophil,writers: he oversugars and overpep-. lJers. Excessive wholesale eulogy isf1S little convincing as unrelieved�holesale depreciation. The unpre­�udiced reader of Mr. Wesselitzky'sbook, is apt to doubt both the purewhiteness of the angelic Rus;ia�s andthe gruesome darkness of the diabolic­'permans. Russia is on the eve of ap-eat rebirth, and it needs most of allfl thorough cleansing of its Augeanstables, a radical revaluation of its,otten, superimposed values, a breezyFriticism of its antiquated institutions,rather than a coquettish self-aggran­pizement. To erect an imaginary�carecrow out of Germany and to layat its door all the blame 'for domes­tic troubles remi��s one of the' Kir­ghiz heathen who spanks his little·god whenever something goes wrong.- 'Republic BuildingChicagoSirietlyAmerieanM a II eFor a trae·�doD .pe pipe,. fitted with a,erliDg ailver ring_ solid vulcanite mouth-piece; get the -Stratfo�SOc, at air dealer ••w. D. C.. "Hand Made"pipes are with.out _peer for_'1.00NewY.kMARGOLIS SPEAKS TOMORROW Hold Social Gathering. C. J. BIERMANDruggistCor. Univer .. i'ty Ave. A 55th 'Street1132 E. 55th St. ,Phone H. P; 429DIDECK BROS.FiDe Merchut Tail ..Suits and Top Coats $25.00 UpSuits Pressed 35c. Phone Midw8y 9696Two Doors East of University Ave..On 55th Street.FOR MEN'S STYLISH HABER­DASHERY SEEE. H� WEAST1454 EAST FIFI'Y-TRIRD ST.Shirts Made to Order $2.00 to ,18.00Dr. Hale Addresses Club Toda,.William Gardner Hale, professorof Latin, win,-speak at the meetingof the Undergraduate Classical clubtoday at 4:30 in Classics 21. -nIThiST(TntThe Maroon baseball team won aneasy victory yesterday afternoon from versity, is still engaged in his studythe Beloit nine by a score of 12 toof the financial conditions of the col­I. Larkin, who started in the boxfor Chicago pitched effective ball for leges and universities for the General_ the first six innings allowing Coach Education board. The board of Trua­Stegeman's squad but five hits. Cap- tees has granted him, an extended_tain Shull was touched for only one -leave' of absence for th� purpose ofhit during the last three innings. Ru-dolph starred for the Varsity with a completing his investigation._single, double and home-run; in add i- . Mr. ,Arnett is investigat_!ng bothtion to six put-outs and three .as- I by means of personal examination ofsists. the institutions and by study of theirThe Maroon team will leave tonight official reports. The result of thisfor a two-day jaunt through Iowa. investigation which will extend 'overThe first game will be played againstmore than .a year's time bids fairthe Cornell college nine tomorrow af-ternoon at Mt. Vernon. Immediately to produce a mass of collated materi�after the game the squad will leavefor Iowa City where they meet Iowain a Conference game Friday. Agame with Rose Poly tech is scheduledfor Saturday afternoon on Stagg field. ARNETT GETS EXTENDEDLEAVE OF ABSENCE TO·CONTINUE HIS SURVEYUniversity Auditor WiD Make Ex­teilsi;e Report to Education BoardWhen _Inves_!igatinn is (" -1Dpleted.Trevor Arnett, auditor of the Uni-Philologist, Translator of Bible, toAddress Menorah Society. A social gathering for students andfriends of �e Divinity school and the'Chicago Theological seminary will beheld tomorrow from 4 to 6 in Haskellassembly,Freshman Clubs RoW Pan,.Yellow Jacket, Blue Bottle, and.Blaek Bonnet will gi..-e a joint partytOOay -at 3:30 in Foster hall.J.,-l.: "::t' ' ..... � ._):,��f.�. ;, ;:.�,�.:-.: k 1"roadleav-wheninerela:• ConC1arCap1, .. odopJ:GeO].aeeoM:. teaning.stanttookpondinstrmon'be 11MenWi9Ues1:> ,.will�nouD'ehan:laysthat�orminbehoicof Stean• fiat 4�. 7:1ton}jIn'\ OnlYlCorn.,.ondgoodz:=Fai,�te�do--=al on the subject, such as never be­fore has been collected in the United -States. The material concerns notonly the financial investment in thephysical plant of institutions of high­er learning, but as well their en­dowments, securities, income, and allother ascertainable economic facts.Upon the basis of all this investi­gation Mr. Arnett will write for theEducation board a report which willset.' forth the general financial condi­tions of American colleges and uni­versities. He will also propose - cen­eral plan for the management. of theirfinaneial affairs of every sort. It ishoped that this will go far towaidsstandardizing their accounting andtheir methods. Max L .. Mar,olis, professor of Bib­lical Philology at the Dropsie collegefor Hebrew and Cognate Learning,Philadelphia, Pa., wil discuss "Trans­lating the Bible" before members ofthe Menorah society tomorrow nightat 8 in the Harper assembly room. Ayear's tour of inspection of European'libraries prepared Mr. Margolis towork out a translation of th� Bible forthe Jewish Publlcation society of Am­eriee, 1908-09. ' Give Geneva Gathering.Mrs. F. W. Edwards will give aGeneva party tomorrow at 8:30 at herhome, 5601 Woodlawn Avenue for allwomen interested in Geneva. Womendesiring to attend will sign up theposter in the League room. a..RuteY. 'J_ter.Uni'RosanURi'peareNeilaoDiscMem. .....t' .•• . � ,-,( ., . . - .