!�·:.:-�.��.�:':."��lIf.;':1 : '_ -�: ·�r' "":'�-;.�y: \ >_4. .; � .. �:::�7.,�.:1·� "", i.:.,t:·� " ., :. �;"""""." -�_ .. ;... ... ..... \. v ',VoL XIV. No. 144. ,at .... " 3. .. ,. � . ,'� _" \'aroonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1916. Price Five Cesata.PURpUESQUAD, INS-.UMP, WILL PLAY�HICAGO TOMORROWPagerS' Nine to Attempt Return; to High ConferenceStanding.PREPARE TO RECEIVE JAPS'Waseda Players Arive in San Fran­cisco-Will Play Three Games,June 3, 9 and 17.Coach Page's men will make anoth­er attempt to get back into the Con­Ierence race when they meet Purdue'tomorrow at I :30 on Stagg field.Early in the season the Boilermakersforced Illinois to go ten innings tobeat them but since then they haveslumped badly, and Wednesday weredefeated by Ohio State, 10 to 1. In'Kaufman, Loy and Shrode, Coach�Panison has a trio of pitchers whorival the Illini staff.Icaptain Weber on short, Finn at'second, and Kistler at third are vet­eran infielders, and Benson is the. 'only outfielder who has seen service'in a Big Nine contest before thisseason. Walter is playing his third._;7eai-;.behind-t�t-a.d bis .,utest. 'asset is his ability to hit. Croy is·covering 'the'initial sack and; Stone­cipher, of basketball fame, and Thom­·as' are teaming with Benson in theoutfield. 'To date the Maroons have particl-1»ated in twenty-two contests, fifteen.having been. victories. A«ording to·.statistics compiled by Coach Pagethe fielding of the team has been goodand the hitting above the average ofthe -past few years. Griffin, a utilityOUtfielder, is leading the squad witha total of seven hits in sixteen tripato the plate,· with a percentage of.437. George tops the regulars wnban average of .392.- Griff"m Leads.. The averages 'Of the �eading hittersup to Tuesday follows:oPlayer A.B. R. H. B.B. Pet.Griffin ..... 16 ,2 7 1 .437George ••... 28 10 11 6 .392Rudolph ... 43 11 14 13 • 325Hart ••..... 27 6 7 13 .296McConnell' .42 1'1 12 5 .285Cahn ..... :36 10 10 13 .277Cavin ...... 45 13 11 8 • 244lPlans for the reception of the Wa-(Continued on page 3)WEATHER FORECASTPartly cloudy and warmer today;moderate westerly winds. Saturdayfair with little change-in temperature.THE DAILY IIAROONBULLETIN.Today.W. A. A., 10:15, Lezlngton yard.Mock convention, 3 :30, Kent the­ater.Graduate club dance, 8, Lexington14.Dramatic club plays, 8:15, Reynoldsdub theater.Departmental conclave, 8:15, Rosen­wald.Tomonow.Pardue pm� 1 :30, Stagg field.Three Quarter's club dance, 8:30,Reynolds club. SIXTEEN TO APPEAR INDRAMATIC CLUB PLAYSOrganization Will Present Four Orig­inal Plays Tonight in Reynolds ClubTheater-Salisbury, Kaplan and Dy-renforth Are Authors. 'Sixteen undergraduates will appearin the four original plays to be pre­sented by the Dramatic club tonight,at 8:15 in the Reynolds club theater.Five of the members of the club whowill appear tonight will be graduatedin June. Laurence Salisbury, '16, theauthor of two of the plays, wiJl take.part in the performance.The two sketches by Salisbury arecalled "Vagaries"; They will be pre­sented as "The Trumpets" and "As aMan Thinks". The Hurd play to begiven will be "Cornelia", by SamuelKaplan, 14.· It is a comedy built onthe trials of an unexperienced womanattorney with her first case. The pro­gram will be completed by "CrossedWires", a sketch by James Dyren­forth, -16. It presents a 'farcical tele-, phone situation.Casts are Revised.The revised casts of the plays inorder of presentation follows:"The Trumpets".The Girl Dorothy DorseyThe Boy .....•.. Laurence Salisbury.The Tl1lJD.Peters ..•.................... Cedric Strohm, Cyrus Collins, _�·,A-IIaa-'ThiDb.� .The Author ..... Lehman -EttelsonThe Young ·Man ••••• Arthur .BaerODe ....••••....•.•.••. Esther JaffeTwo ...........•...... Dorothy FayThree ......• : ••.....•• Jean Barker--eomeJia. ..Cornelia Wood •.. Ka'thleen CoJpitts .Frank EUiot ...•... � Leon GendronEmily Rhett ..... J.... Elizabeth BellJohn Rhet ....•..• � ..•• Jam�s Evans"Crossed Wires."Bill .........•...• James Dyrenforth­Grace ••..••.••.•...••••• Sally FordGeorge Charles BreastedHold D� Rw'anaI.-Dress rehearsals fo� the four playswere held last niKht in the Reynoldsclub theater. Dean Wallace has as-·sisted in the coaching of "As A M'anThinks" anc:P Mrs. Strohm in the.coaching of the other 'sketch .by Sal­isbury. -Phoebe Bell Terry coachedKaplan's comedy, while Dyrenforthcoached his own play •Two hundred and fifty invitations, for the presentation tonight have beenissued. Each invitation admits two. and will be required 'for admission .President Salisbury announced yester- .day that no one would be allowed toenter the theater during the perfor­mance of each play. Interesting setsof scenery have been secured for thesketches.WILL PRESENT PLAYAT WALKER CONCLAVEAn original play, "An Old CountrySchool-house Twenty Years Ago,"will be staged and presented by stu­dents in the departments of Geology,Geography and Paleontology at theannual Walker conclave tonight at 8in Rosenwald. Dean Newcomb willsing. Dancing will follow the pro­gram.Freabman Dance May 29.Tho- next event on the Freshman so·cial calendar wilt be a dance Mon­day afternoon, May 29, at 3:30, in theReynolds culb. NOMINATE SIX ATMOCK CONVENTION­ROOSEVELT LEADSExcitement Intense as ThreeHundred Republican DelegatesHold First Vote.FINAL BALLOTING TODAYRace Between Colonel and Hughes,With Sherman Possibility- Jo­seph Levin is Chairman. MEREDITH INVITED TORACE AGAINST DISMONDHope for Special Quarter· Mile Eventat Interscholastic-Receive Entries-Will Send Second Letters toCountry Newspapers.Ted Meredith of Pennsylvania,holder of the world's record in thebali mile, was ,inyited yesterday byMr. Stagg to compete in a specialquarter-mile race against Binga Dis­mond. If the eastern intercollegiatechampion accepts, the race will berun as a special feature of the Inter­scholastic on Stagg field, Saturday,June 10. It witt be the second meet­ing of these two flyers; the first race,held last winter in Brooklyn, resulting�n a victory for Disrnond, .The' honor of carrying numbers 1and 2 in the Interscholastic went toParker and Nordyke of Colfax, Wash.Their entries were received Tuesdayby telegraph. Parker will compete inthe Quarter and half and Nordyke inthe 100, 220 and 220 low hurdles.Yesterday entries were received fromSioux City, Iowa, and Nebraska City,Neb.To Distribute Tags.The publicity work on the meet hasbeen started by Chairman Lesch'scommittee. Signs have been placedaround Stagg field and posters- andtags �ill be �istribnted in a -f��days.·The second j;ress letters to countrynewspapers will be mailed out by thePress committee tomorrow morning.A complete file of point winners inthe county and interscholastic meetsof the middle. west- bas been kept byChairman Newman's committee andspecial letters will 'hoe sent to thesemen urging them to enter the meet.AWARD GIBBS :MEDALAT ANNUAL DINNERDr. W�ey Receives Award forBrilliant Work in Theoreticaland Applied Chemistry.The annual banquet of the Chicagosection of the American Chemical so­ciety wiIJ be held tonight at 6 at theHotel Sheridan. The dinner will bethe occasion of the award of the Wil­liam Gibbs medal. This medal wasfounded by, William Converse and therecipient is selected for brilliancy intheoretical and applied chemistry.The recipient this year: wiH be Dr.W. R. Whi'tney, chief chemist of theGeneral Electric company, connectedin New York. Dr. Whitney has doneconsiderable investigation alongchemical and physical lines for the,General Electric company. He wasrecently appointed by President 'Wil­son as a member of the Naval Advis­ory board.The prize was awarded in 1911 toSvante August Arrhenius of Stock­.holm, Sweden. In 1912, 191.3, 1914,1915, the recipients were respectivelyWilliam Richards of Harvard, .Leo H.. Backcland, Ira Remsen, president ofJohns Hopkins University and Ar­thur Amos Noyes, of the Massachu­setts Institute of Technology.Speaks at Quadrangle Club. CONFER· 739 DEGREESANI;) , TITLES AT 99THCONVOCATION JUNE 6�ill Hold Exercises in Connec­tion With Quarter-Centen­nial Celebration.NO TICKETS OF ADMISSIONMacGregor in Charge of Parade--Uni­versity Dinner to Follow inIda Noyes HallSeven hundred and thinty-nine de­grees, titles and certificates will be� conferred at the Ninety-ninth Con­vocation of ,the University to be heldTuesday, June 6, in connection withthe commemoration of the Quarter­Centennial anniversary. The Con­-vocation exercises will be held Tues­day afternoon at 4 in' Hutchinson<court,The title of associate will be con­ferred on two hundred and eighteenstudents in the Junior colleges and'the 1wo-year certificate on thirty­e.ght students of the school of Edu­cation. . In the Senior colleges of:. �rt.s�_-- �tcrature:' : 'and' 'Science-an'dCommerce and Administration therewill be two hundred and sixty-fivecandidates for the bachelor's degree.In the school of Education there willbe- forty-four candidates for the de­gree of bachelor in Education.Thirty-seven students of the Law'school will receive degrees at theConvocation exercises. Some of them.will receive blank diplomas, inasmuchas the work for graduation cannot beaccomplished in time for the earlyConvocation this year.· There will besix candidates for the degree of bache­lor of Law and thirty-one for the de­gree of doctor o( Law. .''43 Get D�s.In the Divinity school, forty-threestudents will receive degrees. Thereare tbirty..four candidates for the de­gree of master of Acts, eight for thatof bachelor of Divinity and one forthat of doctor of ·Philosophy. Nine­ty-four students in-all will receive de­. grees for work in the Graduateschools. Fifty-five degrees of mas­ter of Arts or of Science and thirty­nine of the degree of doctor of Phil­osophy.will 'be conferred.The totCiI number of degrees to beconferred, not. including titles andcertificates, is four hundred and eigh­ty-three. In addition the Universitywill also confer fourteen honorary,degrees upon a notable group of men.distinguished in various fields of work. �nd achievement. A list of those re­�eiving honorary degrees will he an­nounced next week.Classes to Assemble.Lawrence MacGregor, head mar-shal of the University, will be incharge of the Convocation proces­sion. Candidates for degrees will re­port to him in Bartlett gymnasium.The alumni by classes and schoolswiJI assemble for the procession at 3on Stagg field. Tickets of admissionwill not be required. Reservationswill be made only for those alumniwho assemble at .3 and for trusteesand official guests.Following the Convocation exer­cises the Quarter-Centennial celebra­tion will conclude with the University(Con tinued OD Pace 3)Ringing huzzas, clanging cymbalsand tooting horns united to create aconventional convention atmosphereat the first day's session of the mockRepublican gathering to select a .presi­dential nominee yesterday afternoonin Mandel halt. Mandel was crowdedwith excited delegates, three hundredstrong, and frenzied spectators whoapplauded anything and everything.Excitement rose to such a pitchthat the sargeant at. arms,. StellanWindrow ,and his aide-de-camps wereforced to rem.ove several too-franticindividuals. Placards scattered aboutMandel indicated the seats of the vari­ous state delegations. Banners roseinto the air at intervals, bearing suchnotices as 'Toot! Toot! for Ford!"and "We Want Teddy.".. M,ost of the session was taken 'up·'with perfecting the organization ofthe convention and the nominationof . candidates, Six names were offer-. ed, On the only ballot taken, Roose­velr led with 185 votes, followed byHughes with 175, Ford 164, Sherman162, Penrose 147 and Root 146.Ford to Decline (1)Balloting will continue 'at the finalmeeting this afternoon at, 3:30 in Kenttheater until a candidate receives C!majority of the 979 votes cast. Headsput together after yesterday's gath­ering prophesy QD . elimination ofPenrose and . Root on the second orthird ballot coupled with a decline inthe Ford strength. Jndications pointto.a final struggle between Rooseveltand Hughes, with Shennan as a pos­sibility •The meeting yesterday was .openedby Joseph Levin. Arthur Hanischwas selected as temporary chairman.Chauncey Scott, of Oklahoma, offeredthe report of the committee on Cre­dentials, which gave Louis Mantyn­band's seaJ in the District of Colum­bia delegation to Wrisely Oleson onthe ground that the former is not anaturalized citizen. I t also removedHoward Center from the Alaskagroup in favor df Orrin Zoline,Presents Platform.Paul Heilman, of North Carolina,reported for the Rules committee.Donald SeJJs, of Alabama, gave the(Continued on Page 2)SOPHOMORES PLAN ASERIES OF PARTIESThe Sophomores will finish up theSpring quarter with a series of threeparties next week which has been des­ignated "Sophomore Week." Thefirst event will be Sunday when a teawill be held at 4 at the Phi KappaPsi house, Tuesday afternoon at 4an athletic carnival will be held inconnection wtih a beach party andthe class' will finish up the week'sactivities with a dance in the Rey­nolds club Saturday afternoon, May27, at 3:30. Mr. Carl Buck who has just re­turned from Serbia as a member ofthe Red Cross Delegation will tell <Ifhis experiences in the war zone to­night at 8 'at the Quadrangle club.The club will hold a dance nextThursday night.r­'rTHE DAILY' MAROON, FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1916.FOR HEAL"rH AND STRENGTHStudents uk for .hORLICK'S, the Original Malted Milk'A nourishing and digestible food drink, sustairiinc and invigorating,maintains health, strength and fitness. A complete food composed of cleanmilk, combined with the extracts of wheat and malted barley. Splendidfor upbuilding the system.Also in Lundt Tablet form, plain or with cocoa flavor, ready to eat. Atall dealers and fountains. Specify "HORLICK'S" and avoid substitute ••for free sample address HORLICK. (Dept. 18.) RACINE. WIS •. =Whew, It's Hot!Let's 80 and get some good oldWhen you're hot and thirsty,or just for fun. there's noth ..ing comes up to it for delicious­ness and real refreshment.mlJr lIaily SlarDOnOfficial Student Newspaper of· theUniversity of Chicago.PubUshed mornlOJ:8, except Sunda, and"ODda" durIng toe Autumn, Whller andSpring Quarters by The Dan,. Maroon stair.P. R. Kuh .•.•••••. JIaDqinc EditorH. R. Swanson ....••••• News �tor';B. E. Newman •••... Athletics EcUtor'A. A. Baer ..••..••.••.••. Day Ec1itorH. Cohn Night EditorAssociate Editors:Wade Bender Vera EdwardsenEntered as secoad-elass mall at the Cbl·eq'O POMOIrlce. Chicago, Illlnois. Mareb11. 1908. under Act or Marcb 3, 1813.Subscription Rates:B,. Carrter, $2.50 a year; $1 a quarter.B, 11all, $3 a ,.par, $1.23 a quarter.IIIdltorlal Rooms ...••...•.......... EIlts 12T 1 b {HYde Park r.:J1)le ep 0" llidway BOOBa.ness Offlce Ellis 14Telepbone, Blackstone 2591----.... :z87FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1916.WHERE A COLLEGE EDUCA­TION RUNS AMUCK.,,If one of the primary raisonsd'etre of a university is to correctthe crass materialism of the age­and this is genera 1Iy conceded to betrue,-the following editorial is diffi-. cult to explain. With an evidentsigh of relief, the writer contem­plates the close of his undergradu­ate career, and, in the same breath'.he anticipates with a too marked�eagerness his entrance into the busi­ness wor-ld, which appears to himmerely as a chance to join in thescramble for accumulating wealth,We wonder if such so-to-speak pro­ducts are to be finished results ofour higher educational institutions.Are four years of contact with i�­spiring personalities to arouse theshallowest human ambitions? I� t,hefollowing editorial, taken from a re­cent issue 9£ The Michigan· Daily,were to be regarded as a repre�en-.. tative utterance, then it would beimpossible to adjudge the 'moderncollege aught but a tragic failure.We personally, however, prefer toassume that the writer casuallyfloundered into the university, toemerge unconscious of the stimulat­ing currents of thought which sur­rounded him. With apologies to TheEvening Post's "Worst Editorial ofthe Day" section, we take theIibertyof reprinting the ,following:"Today is dedicated to theseniors. Lt offidally opens thepre-Commencement season asfar as Michigan is concerned,From now on we may pick upany comic magazine or turnto the joke column in any pa­per and read of the trials of thenewJy graduated. The cap andgown takes its place with themothers-in-law and Irishmen asthe butt of many quips. Perhaps-we deserve it. Generalizationsdrawn from many specific in­stances well: justi(y such con­clusions."But even handicapped as weare there is some solace in thef.act that we are nearly through.For the eager, impatient mancomes the opportunity to mix inthe turmoil. For the timid thefact that the time is most aus­picious for the beginner is 6fmuch comfort. Prosperity offersmany opportunities. Money wrungfrom Europe as the price of sore­Iy needed munitions has perrneat- ."ed every business, trade and ,pro­fession. All that is needed is·:the· .will to reach out and take: it.There is no talk these day"" of 'filthy lucre' and dirty money.The grab-bag is gaping open, andthere is plenty of room for thesenior fledglings. What do jokesmatter? The opportunity is hereto become one of the pack, andrun with the grey wolves of busi­ness. At last the doors are open.\Ve have our chance to make ourmoney."PERSHING OUT OFPURDUE MEET WITHA PULLED TENDONDismond and Brinkman to Bear Bur­den in Dashes Tomorrow-Ex_pect Slam in Pole Vault.The . .Maroon chances for a victorySaturday in the dual track meet withPurdue were considerably dimmedyesterday w hen it was learned that. Frank Pershing will not be able tocompete. Pershing pulled a tendonin practice before the Illinois meetand he increased the seriousness ofthe injury . by competing at Urbana.In his absence, the burden in the dash­es will fall on Dismond and Brink­man.This will mean that Dismond willprobably be used in the 100, 220 andquarter. He ran the 220 at' Illinoisin 22 2-5 seconds and came back witha mark of 49 2-5 in the furlong. Theadditional event would not be a greathandicap to him since there will heno preliminary heats in the hundred,Purdue is notably weak in the dashes'and Brinkman should easily take oneof the two remaining places.In the indoor meet with the Boil­ermakers, a slam was scored by theMaroons in the pole vault and .theylost all three places to. Purdue in theshot. The performance in the polevault will be repeated but Sparks hasimproved so much in-the shot that heshould score one point at least in thisevent. Captain Stout -and Clark willhave things their own way in thehalf" and ,Stout will take first in themile .. The- two-mile will be a Strongevent for Purdue and they will takethe majority, of points in the hammerand discus although Brelos shouldtake first in the former event. Bro­die' has loomed up as a strong con­tender in the javelin since his per­formance' at : Illinois.ISSUE CAP AND 'GOWNON TUESDAY MORNINGOwing to a delay at the printersthe Cap and Gown will not be outpnti! Tuesday morning instead . ofMonday. The book will be placed onsale at 8:15 in the office in Ellis 17.and the first person in line will beawarded a volume free of charge. Tenfountain pens will be given away tothe holders of the lucky numbers onthe subscription receipts. The Iea-. ture of this year's book is the greatnumber of illustrations among which'are two four color plates of irrrpres­·�ionistic. paintings of the Universityland twenty other Univeraity viewsI.in charcoal and pen and ink. The?-hook will be issued only in the fullmorocco binding this year.TICKETS ON SALE FORBENEFIT PERFORMANCETickets are on sale at one dollar forThursday night's performance of "AMid-summer Night's Dream" at theChicago Little theate.r to be a bene­fit for the University branch of theWomen's Peace party. Members ofthe University who will. attend areDeans Talbot and Breckenridge, Miss:Mary Manierre, :\Iiss Josephine Dud­,let,· 'Prof, Myra Reynolds, Mrs.George E Mead, Mr. and Mrs. �mesTufts:, Mr. and Ml's. Witliam I. Thom-'a!l, ·Mr. and :\frs. Robert M. Lovettand Miss Elinor Karsten. CHICAGO NET MEN WILLMEET WISCONSIN TODAYBadg�r Squad Contains Several NewStars-Maroon Players Defeat.Illini Decisively. .Ma.roon net men will meet Wis­consin this afternoon -on the U ni­versity courts. The Badger team,although weakened by the loss ofW.yatt and Holden, last year's stars,have secured Nielsen, Reeves andBeatty. Nielsen, who defeated Cur­ran, Conference singles' champion,bids fair to take the title. Beatty wasat one time champion of West Vir­ginia.Chicago defeated the Illinois teamWednesday at Urbana in decisivefashion. winning three out of fourmatches in the singles and taking thedoubles. Leland Stanford will meetthe Varsity here Tuesday and theConference meet will be held on theUniversity courts, Thursday, Fridavand Saturday. Chicago has wo�every match this season and appearsthe favorite for the Conference hon­ors. Leland Stanford' will not com-. pete in the Conference.Results of the IIlini match.Sing'les : Clark defeated Moses, ofIllinois, 7-5, s-i. Lindauer defeatedBecker, of Illinois, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 .. 1\1 i­chel 'defeated Carter, of Illinois 6-36-2. Buhai, of Illinois, defeated Gross'o£ Chicago, 6-4, 6-4. 'Doubles: Gross and Lindauer de­feated Moses and Becker, 6-4, 6-4.Clark and, Michel. defeated Buhai andCarter, 6-3, 6-2.ILLINI WIN GOLF MAT�HESMaroon Will Play Purple NextWeek'lThe- Varsity ·gol£ 'team lost to Il­linois yesterday afternoon at the Rav­isloe links by a score of 6 to ·1.Grimes, Donahoe and Loeb made, upthe Maroon, ,team. which opposed, Simpson, Weems and White of IUin­>�is. The Illini team' will meat Norrth­western ate Evanston tomorrow. Chi­cago will play Northwestern nextweek, no date having been set as yet.Hold Y. M. _C. A. Field Tri�.The Y. M. C. A. will conduct afield 'trip to the Jewish EducationAlliance, 1243 N. Wood street, to­morrow mornine. The party willleave Cobb _. 1, This district isthe stor •• ,; center of the gannentworker's strike at present. HarryBigglestone and Isaac Rubensteinwill be in charge of the party. Demand the genuine by full name­nidtnamea encourasc substitution.THE COCA-COLA CO.ATLANTA. 01\,BONWIT TELLEK &'CO.Vlte cSpccIO{& cSlzop g/�IQ�FIFTH AVENUE AT 38TH STREETNEW YORKCAMARADERIESports apparel for every college event.Originations that reflect the new"Spirit of Play." Specialised typesfor the jeune fille-:-in coats and suitsfor sports wear-in silk sweaters->gay little blouses-frocks of La Jerz,Georgette crepe, crepe de chine,serge and linen.Quaint Tams, broad Canotiers, EI Sombrero-Hats for Spo�Wear with a special appeal to the jeune fiUe. 'qose little tur­bans to defy campus winds-always with that distinctive es­prit de jeunesse. "Boutell" Originations in sports footwear­hosiery-s-necklets and handbags for sports wear.Jeunes Filles Fashions for apres midi and dansant occasions.Intimate wear for leisure hours. Every type of apparel forthe needs of the girl in college. L0u:a1mC.... wu:0:-,g.cc.a:Icc •. VIVIttad,isa:gAhitcSS(Ia:pwCCICAt.wdqlSIisA\\ItlF.t(h\\C4\\alaCIira:Ss:tlaBd=FSenior Smoker Postponed.lihe Senior smoker scheduled forWednesday, .May 24, has b.een post­poned indefinitely,Princeton Crew Wins.The Princeton crew won the racefor the Ohild's cup in the annualAmerican Henley boat races. TheSyracuse Junior varsity won the jun­ior race by defeating' the Harvardcrew by a length and a half., Limit Price of Houses.The committee on student affairs at ,the University of Washington has seta price limit of $25,000 for fraternityand sorority houses. The amount hasreference to the price of the buildingalone.Tercentenary at Princeton.Princeton university celebrated thethree hundredth anniversary ofShakespeare's death, with a lecture byProf. Alfred Noyes and with recit1-tions by Miss Editi, Matthieson. thepoted actress. NOMINATE SIX ATMOCK CONVENTION­ROOSEVELT . LEADS(Continued from Page 1)announcements of the group on Per­manent Organization. Joseph Levinwas elected chairman, Earl Bondysecretary, and Robert Dunlap andVernon Bowers assistant secretaries.Frank Katzin, of Ohio, .presented theparty platform drawn up by the ReS-Iolutions committee. The party pledg­ed itself to a protective tariff, con­demned the Dmocratic managementof the �fexican situation, censured theHay-Chamberlin, Clarke and Joneshills. denounced the extravagance ofthe past adminis tration and advocatedwoman suffrage. As an appendix tothe resolutions, it was suggested thatthe good ship Oscar I I he purchasedto provide a training ship for peaceadvocates; 'that the me of the WhiteHouse as a matrimonial bureau becensured and that a law should bepassed providing free tuition for allstudents, free books and lower ratesin the matter of board and room.Students who did not attend yes­terday's ga'thering are welrome at themeeting this afternoon in K(nt the­ater. EASY TO' SAVEAND WORTH SAVING.GET ONE OF OUR POCKET BANKSAND SAVE A DIME A· DAV.Start .. _vlnp account with thla oldestablished naUonal bank. The BaT­lnp department oeeupl.. convenientQuarters on the .treet leyel of ourbul14lnc. The baDJdDl' bours dallyare from 10 a. m. to S p. m., Saturday.from t a. m. to 8 p. m.CORN EXCHANGENATIONAL BANKCapital, 8urplu. and Profit.,'0.000,000N. W. Cor. La Sane aft4 Adams 8ta..Consolation Tournament Drawings. bncilWFpiCguJo11SJ;nDrawings for the consolation tour­nament arranged by Miss Agnes Way·man for the players who met defeatin the first round of the women's ten-.nis tournament are as follows: AnnaGrey and Mary Taylor; Laura Laur­enhoft and :Marion Eisendrath; AnneGardner and Dorothy Moffet; AliceJohnstone and Ethel ltichards: Rut!l. Pearson and Katherine Frost. Thefirst round most be played off be·fore Wednesday. Officials and rulesdi the regular toornament will be em·.ployed.=BLACKSTONE THEAT£R�fAUDE ADAMS THE DAILY �ROONt 'FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1916. ',OPINIONS ON PLAYS OF THE WEEK-.. . �In_THE LITTLE MINiSTER,By Howard .,Mumford Jones.The first noticeable element in "TheLittle ?dinister" is the beauty of theoutdoor. sets. a beauty gained by theuse of a skydome instead of the usu­al back-drop. Against the mellowmoonlight loveliness thus obtained,Caddarn Wood seemed realty like awood; moreover, like a glorified andunusual wood in ..... hieh, as a matterof course, lord's daughters turn into�,gypsies. a Scotch minister 'u·.a-ils hiscongregation through the underbrush,.and British soldiers in story-book uni­forms march stiffly in single file. Thecare in setting the fir st act is a. vivid lesson in unobtrusive atrnos­phere which at once sets the tone ofIthe play, and blends the whimsy intoa believable whole.· The Manse Gar­den is well done, too, but its positionis not so important nor so grippingas the stage on which the curtaingoes up for the first time.I was not one of those who saw"The Little 'Minister' as MaudeAdams first produced it. I doubt,however, whether the Scotch charac­ters could be better done by anybody.. �necky Hobart. Andrew IMealmaker.Silva Tosh, and Thomas Whammond(0 delectable name l), as they moveagainst the fairy sky, are immortal­personages who shake hands dailywith my Uncle Toby and HumphreyClinker. And Nannie -Webster, I amconvinced, was born and "ra.ised" inCaddarn, and her real name is notAda Boshell at all. If they will only.talk., .one does not care- particularly ..whether 'the play' go.es on or not; in-'deed-s-and this is heresy-they 'arequite .as amusing' as Lady Babl�je her- man re,miniscen'ces now appearing' insrJl�, and do, .not ·have her manner-' magazine form., Custom Can not stale'isms. her, though the critjc b�s the disa--For, the Gavin "Dishart of Dallas greeable .task of saying that age hasAnd('��on 'it 'may be said that if 'he - withered "The Littl� Mio'fster" .some­were not playing with Maude Adams, ,what in the fourth' act-s-the . pla� isthe part would be more strongly done.· 'really, �ver with the third, and onlyHe is made altogether too colorless, the heroic exertions of the Scotchtoo wooden, too much of a peg to contingent and the indefatigable starbang the Adamsian chuckle on. A keep it up to pitch in the fourth. Yetwoman as spirited as Lady Babble this, too" js . immaterial, I suppose,. could no more fall in love with-a man since we go to see Maude Adams. Iwho does nothing but let her skip am old-fashioned enough to be grate-around ��m, physically and intellcctu- ful to .the 'gods that �e,��_ is ��:e ,�alent-ally,' than I could. As a result, the ed woman wJ:to� e�tertainments arecontest which ougbt� to be' exhilarat- never questionable, whose plays areing, is a mere .parade of the feminine never sex-plays, whose audience isarsenal of conquest. It is "Man and never bored.Superman" with John left out, The" P. S.-This is the only- dramatic.same may be 'said !n some degree' for criticism on record' which mentionsthe other men of -the play who have neither the "charm" of Maude Adamsanything direttly to do with Lady nor the "fantasy" of Sir James Bar-Babbie. Lord Rintoul (Mahin Sands) rie. The editor intends to raise ourdoes all that he' 'can' do to portrayilk�ing.leanttdidAt:1...seda players Sunday afternoon havebeen completed by Page and Chair­man Martin of the Undergraduatecouncil committee. The Japs arrivedin San Francisco two weeks ago andwere greeted by Clark Sauer, '13, aFred Steinbrecher, '11. On their tr ipwest they have played a number ofpractice games in preparation for theircampaign in the Middle West. Theywill meet the Maroons in a three­game series, the games being sched­uled for Saturday, June 3; :Friday,June 9, and Saturday, June 17.Tab Auto Trip.According to the plans a delegation�f University men and women willmeet the visitors at the LaSalle streetstation when they arrive over theRock Island at 3:30. Coach Kono'smen witl be taken on an automobilet.wz,e,�r-:;--IENKSI oldsaT­alent� ourdallyday. the indulgent father; Captain Halli­'well (.,Morton Selten) is palely disa­greeable, but has no' chance to go fur­ther. -, T�e truth of that matter is that onedoesn't 'go to see "The Little M'in�ister", one goes to see Maude Adams.Now one went to Forbes-Robertson,too, but one went to see Forbes-Rob-. ertson as Caesar or Hamlet, not asForbes-Robertson. Even David War­field has moments in which he is notDavid Warfield, but the 'Music Mas­ter or The Flying Dutchman. But,Maude Adams is perpetually MaudeAdams. You may regret the fact,you may admire the fact, but the factremains., I have, never seen her in.anything in which she did not domin­ate the actors. the. play, and the au­thor.Of course, it is delightful. Neverwere such sallies of chuckles, suchsprightliness, such adorable and pro­.voking flashes of humor. Necessarilythe male, not only in the play but: everywhere else, is helpless and ad­�.jring. Nevertheless. it must be re­'grettfuIJy admitted that when Maude;Adams chuckles she chuckles awayall the ups-and-downs, the struggleth� conflict that the slender plot givesher; and "The Little Minister", oncea .play of incident, becomes a paradeof Scotch character and Maude Ad­ams. For the most part, it would bechurlish to complain, and yet I can. not but feel that at times personalitypasses into mannerism, and I do wishshe wouldn't laugh at everything thatis said!To which the proper reply is thatthere arc manY-'actresses, and onlyone Maude Adams.Custom can .not stale' her, and ·itseems impossible that she is the samellaude Adams described, in the Fro1t-_salaries, in consequence.PURDUE SQUAD, INSLUMP, WILL PLAYCHICAGO TOMORROW(Continued �m pap 1) ,EI<sta.-tgs.ou:'­Vay­:ieatlen-�nna.aur­vnnc\lice�Ut:lThebe·'ulc�COl- trip around the South .Parks and thento the Chicago Beach hotel, wherean informal reception will be held.On Monday, the gUests will be shownaround the University. Tuesday -theywill go to Urbana to meet the lI1iniand before they return to Chicago'Ior the first international game theywill play the: Indiana State Normalcollege and' the' Rose Poly nines atTerre Haute, Ind.Besides the students of the Uni­versity, officials of the Japanese club,Consul Kurusu, Mr. Merrifield, As­sociate Prof. Starr and Dean Linn willbe in the party. Mr. Stagg as therepresentative of the Athletic depart­ment will officially greet the invadingteam.CHORUS APPEARS ATTHE INTERCLASS SINGA Blackfriar chorus, led by Stell anWindrow, sang "The Melting Pol"and :'The Campus Strut" at the in- B. �. Snyder & Co.GOLF ACCESSORIESLESSONS LOCKERS REPAIRS1558 EAST SIXTY-THIRD ,STREETTel. 4800 Hyde Park,End of S. S. '·L" SPORTING G'OODSPark Gate Hotel BuildingCHICAGOFOR MEN'S STYLISH HABER­DASHERY SEEE. H. WEAST1454 EAST FIFTY -THIRD ST.Shirts �ade to Order $2.00 to $18.00 I,C. J. BIERMANDruggistCor. Univer .. =ty Ave. & 55th Street1132 E. 55th st. Phone H. P. 429DIDECK BROS.Fine M�chant TailorsSuits and Top Coats $25.00 UpSuits Pressed 35c. Phone Mi�way 9596Two Doors East or University Ave.,On 55th Street.qlassifjed Ads.,Five cents per line No advertise­ments received for leas than 25 cents.All 'cla.sified· advertisements must bepaid'in advance.PRIVATE LE�SONS IN DANCING.Miss Lucia "lIendershot, studio1641 'E. 57th . st. He P. 2314.Class on Monda)'s at 8 p. m. Opento Dew membets at any time.SUM��£R WORK FOR STUDENTS-Make enough money to pay-yourexpenses for next year. Not aworn out canvassing article, but anew proposition with REAL mer-it. Write .at once to arrange forterritory. Dept. 56. J. E. GILSONCO., PORT WASHINGTON,WIS.terclass sing' yesterday afternoon inHutchinson court. The four under­graduate classes, grouped in the fourcorners of the court, gave their classsongs. Selections were offered by theUniversity band, and the Men's andWomen's Glee clubs. Director Ste-. yens and Lewis Fuiks accompanied• 0 nthe piano, and Milton Herzog onthe violin.ELMER L. CORTHELL DIESQricinal Trustee Connected WithEngineering Projects. • ··GO HOMEVia the railroad that can offer you the most in scenery andservice. The line of superb trains, convenient schedules, cour­teous employees is theC. & E.' I� - FRISCOto all pointsSoutheast, South and SouthwestSwift, comfortable trains to the south and southeast throughthe Evansville gateway.Fast time to the southwest via S. Louis.Let, us' quote you fares and give you complete infonnation.,- J. F. GOVAN,General Agent Passenger DeRartment108 W_ Adams St. ' 'Phone Harrison 5100Dearborn Station Phone Harrison 3690• All trains stop at 47th S�t and Engle-,ttCwood (63rd and ,Wallace Streets),� Madame· Hegg·Jmpnrtt�aillintryMARSHALL FIELD AN":NEX BUILDING26 E� Washington StreetSuite 931Phone Central 1820I MT. Elmer L. Corthell, one of theoriginal trustees of the University,died Tuesday. Mr. Corthel! who wasJn college when the Civil war brokeout, joined the army and rose to therank of major. He afterwards, fin­Jshed college at Brown. He was one'of the engineers under Eads in the.deepening of the Mississippi chan­nel.I -Mr. Corthell was connected withmany engineering projects, such asthe construction of the Merchants'bridge at St. Louis. He was at onetime president of the Western societyof Engineers and was a member of 10 per eeat reda� apGIlpresentatioa of UDiteaslt,matriealatloa card.many foreign engineering organiza­tions. He was deeply interested ina unique engineering project acrossthe' Isthmus of Tehauntepec,Coe Delivers Lectures.Prof. George Albert Coe, of theUnion Theological seminary spokeon "Sunday School Curriculum of To­morrow" at the dinner of the Reli­gious Educational dub held last nightin Lexington Cafe. This afternoonat 3:30 Dr. Cae Will lecture in theHaskell as.sembly room on "The The­ory of Indirect Methods in MoralEducation." CONFER 739 DEGREESAND TITLES AT 99THCONVOCATION JUNE 6(Continued from page 1)dinner at 8 in the newly dedicatedIda Noyes hall. Mr. and Mrs. JohnD. Rockefeller, Jr., �Ir. La VerneNoyes and the honorary alumni of theUniversity will he the principal guests.Several thousand people will be ae­commodated at the dinner.Club Dance Next Week.The Reynolds cljub will hold. adance for mf':mbers next Fr.iday night......� ...... - ... ..: .�. ''''::; -, � 1Ir>..t • -, ,/.... - ....... r• • .. �. �' .. ,... " .....'THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, M�Y 19, 1916..................................... -... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bound VolumesA few bound volumesofTHE DMLY_MAROONwill be available at thellcloseof the school year.Cost to student organizationscovers only cost of binding and sub­scriptions.•••••••••••••••••••••• r •••••••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••• , •• � •••• , •••••••••••••• III ••• II. 11 ••••••••• II •• II •••• It ••••• It •••• II ••• It. II ItTYPEWRITERS! I,! --� ANY MAKERENTED OR SOLD� to � MANUFACTURERS' PRICESYou may !'eDt a "'pewtlter f.aa Icmg as you dealre aDdwe wiD apply • _oath'.rata) OD the pardaue priee.hoald .you dedde to b.,..If you do Dot fbut it COIlTeIl­lent to caD at oar __roGDI8, telephOlie or writeMr. Gei8Rr oar CIty SaIeaMaaalft', who wiD be ....to aeleet ad ... a In-­writer to you proaptiT.lWe.eD to aladata _ � ,.yments.ad eata loa' 179.TYPEWRITER EMPORIUMN. E. Cerner Lake ud Dearborn, St., Seco.d FloorTelepbon� Randolph 1648-1649-1650.......... 11 ••••••• 11 •• 11 .....Invite Alumni to Dance.SUBSCRIBE FOR THE MAROONthe Reynolds club. Mesdames F. R.. Crawford and F. S. Fake will act achaperones. Lewis Fuiks will fur­nish the mulic.The Three Quarters club will give.a dance to its members and alumnitomorrow night from 8:30 to 12 in MUSICAL CLUBS GIVECONCERT AT EV ANSTONChicago Choirs, Under Direction ofMr. Stevens, to Offer Fifteen Selec­tions Tonight-To be Guests ofN orthwestern at Dinner.GL@I2U� QOfI1&!·I@MA ... • ..s" ".uJ�� F. �.I'.Supponed by HENRY KOLKERTHE best motion picture Dovel RUPERT HUGHESbaa ever written, with ICeDeS laid at Palm Beach,Florida, and OD Riverside Drive, New York. SeeMia Barke in her woaderful Henri Bendel, Lucile IDdBabm : aowns. QluecI at more thaD $40.000.. Monday . and Tues,day, May 22 & 23N9 ADVANCE IN PR.ICtAdults. '10 Cents. Children. 5 Cent.IIIbodGBBPs�'E.,The University of Chicago ,Musicalclubs under the direction of Robert\V. Stevens will give a concert to­night at 8:15 at Eisk hall, the North­western university school of music,Evanston. The club will be guests ofNorthwestern at dinner.The following will take part: Ar­thur C. Lunn, organist; Raymond A.Smith, pianist; sopranos,-MargarctAiken, Gladys Ball, Alva Ballantine,Myrtle Barker, Mir.iciin Davis, Dor­othy Dorsett, Fern Gilderslee\'e, Mar­jorie 'Wale, Mirriam Libby, MarionMcSurely, Dean Newcomb, CarolinePeck, Ethel Richards, Louise \Vag­goner and Ruth Wilcox ..Altos-Gertrude Berkhoff, HeleneCadmus, Esther Carr, Vera Donecker.Hazel Hadden, Helen Houghteling:Anna Kontecky, Irene Okeberg, Dor­othy Reeve, Bessie Smith, Gwendo­lyn Perry. Tenors-Albert Lindauer,Harry H. Smith, Paul Marchant,George Martin, Lander ,MacClintock.Louis Rechstein, A. C. Ivy, H. A:Dixon, F. L. Graybill, I. Sietsema;basses-A. F. Anglemeyer, W. A.Bowers, S. R. Burnham, Bruce Dick­son, Leigh Ringdon, E. F. Kipp, E. E.Mahannah, A.' W. Manuel, J. S. Ty­ley, .Maurice Von Heeke, F. S. New-. comb, P. L. Willett, C. G. Manshardt,Fred Hubenthal,Give Fifiteen Numbers.. The program follows:High Towers ..•........•. StevensLovely Appear (from "The Re­demption") ..• � : . . . . . . . . .. Gounod.Obligato by Miss IDean Newcomb.Chorus.On the Sea ...............•..• BuckAnnie Laurie ........•.....•• BuckMen's Choir.Violin Concerto .......•. -VieuxtempsMiss Helene HoughtJing.Autumn •...••.••...•• '. GrechaninoffChorus.Irish' Folk-Song ..........••• FooteSpanish Waltz Song .....••• Hadley(Obligato by Mr. Dickerson)Women's Choir.Serenade: Thy Dear Sweet Voice. •. : GounodHow Sweet the Moonlight Sleeps. (words by Shakespeare) ... CalcottChorus.FrubJingsnacht . � . . . . . . .. SchumannL'Heure E:icquise ...........• HahnFloods of Spring ...•..• RadtminoffMiss 'Margaret Aiken.o Lovely May -•..•• GermanChorus.The "Alma Mater".CANDIDATES CAN GETTICKETS TO EXERCISESPresident's Office Will Mail Two ID­vitations- for Quarter-Centen-,nial Meetinc Free.Candidates for degrees and titlescan apply for invitations to the Quar­ter .. Centennial exercises, according tothe statement issued yesterday by thePresident's office. Each candidatewill be allowed two invitations. Theywill be mailed by the University with­out cost. No tickets of admission tothe Convocation exercises will be is­sued.The candidates will meet Tuesday,June 6, at 2:30 p. m. in Bartlett gym­nasium to form for the Convocationprocession. They will report to Law­rence MacGregor, head marshal of theUniversity. Seats will be reservedfor those in the procession. Althol1gheach candidate is allowed but two in­vitations additional invitations maybe secured at the actual cost of manu­facture and mailing, fifteen centseach. Ascher's FROIJC TheatreFifty-fifth Street and Em. Avenue CHlMar'DISWillPIStagMarlon t.ballthepastChicare;PIweigreprPrillshotdie'placpush'rem •meeMarleas!cUrethetity,hosl�.s a=r -.,- .IIIpraefirstand.and. 'lik�]tainthe. PurlhuregOOI-in tner,diet:51Spalbucl'H.. Whp;cold�00lSan-GordonThe college man's shirL Well made offine wbite Oxford. Cut in patterns thatassure perf'ectly comfortable fit. It is anARROW SHIRTCLUETr. PEABODY & CO .• hc(.., ...... TROY. N. Y.To Hold Dance Tonight. will be furnished by Delgers, Sev­eral old-fashioned dances will be in­torduced.The Graduate Social club will givea party dance tonight from 8 to 11:30in Lexington 14 and 15. The music PATRONIZB OURADVERTISBRS