,at aroonVoL XV. No.3.-----_ .....-��--�-_�----�-�������_�����-�-- ���-�--�--��--��-��-�--�---�---:-- �- �-�---�--������--------- -- - - ----Price Five Cents.UNIVERSlry OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 4, 1916.VAR'ITY DEFEATSYEARLING ELEVENIN EASY FASHION.» \V ork Of Norgren And ParkerAssures Them Places AtEnds Saturday.. .INJURIES HANDICAP )IAIWO�SKnipschild And Jackson Out Of Game-Freshman Backfield Plays InSensational Style.�'. Yesterday's scrimmage with thefreshman squad afforded followers ofthe Maroon team an opporturrity toget some inkling as to Coach Stagg'sinitial choice for the Carleton collegegame Saturday. The Varsity had noa'l trouble scoring two touchdowns onthe yearlings.Norgren and Parker worked on theends yesterday and it is the generalopinion that the whistle Saturdayafternoon will brintr these men to theends of the line. Both players are ex­perienced basketball men with theability to handle any forward pass.Parker is the smashing type of play-\I.-�er, weighs close to 190 pounds andis fast enough to get down underpunts. After the Minnesota gamelast fall. Norgren needs no introduc-I ..I­Igame...: Fisher In Shape.Higgins and Fleurral are the prob­able choices for the tackles, and Bond­zinski lik('�y will be given a chance atone of the guard positions. The firstchange in the lineup will bring Gor­gas and Gentles into the fray. F'isheris in the best of shape and shouldstand head and shoulders above theother Conference centers this year.Pershing is first choice for quarterback and Cahn, Agar and Hanisch orMarum will line up behind him. Gor­don is still on the hosptta! 1tgt andunless his services are needed badlySaturday he will he g-iven anotherweek to round' into shane. Whye.Setzer and Graham are hound to r!$._ta trial arrainst Carleton.Knip�child Is Out.It was announced yesterday atthe hospital that Roy Knipschild, whowas injured in the scrimmace Mondayafternoon. would ho out of the j!ame�11 season. Tho X-ray picture showedthat one hone was broken in hI?ankle ann another di�illl:C\tt:,L 11c ,,·mbe pormitted to leave the hospitalwithin a day or two.Coach Pace was more enthusiasticthan ever over his freshman nroteg-e�yesteroay afternoon. The gquad pos­�esscs se,-eral sensational hackfieldmen but as yet few heavy lin('smenhave appeared for duty. Fumhles af­forded the Varsity their opportunity.1(.of -_- ---------- ---- ---- -- ------ --------w. A. A. OFFERS UNIQUEPROGRAM AT RECEPTIONAffair For Women To Be Held TodayIn Ida N oyes-l\lembers Of Phys-i­cal Culture Department Will Attend!\feeting.The W. A. A. will hold its annual re­ception in honor of freshmen womentoday at 4 on the second and thirdfloors of Ida Noyes hall. A programof musical comedy, dancing and ath­letic events is promised by the enter­tainment committee. 'Members 'of thedepartment of Physical Culture willbe present to aid in welcoming thenew women.The list of attractions planned forthe entertainment of the freshmenincludes the presentation of "Mis«'Mabel. or The Tortoise and the Hare"by Mildred 'Morgan, Marion Glaserand Dorothy Fay; ukelele music by\Villiene Baker, Dorothy Fay and'Margaret Bowers; a series of relayraces in which the freshman clubsfng- admission to membership. and uni-vcrslty songs and cheers will he dis­tributed.Committees In Charge.Committees in charge of the recep­tion are: Entertainment-Harriet Cur-rv. chairman; Margaret Meyer. Wini-fred Franz, Esther Carr, FlorenceHaviland. Orissa Knight. Marion Gla­ser. Dorothy Fay. Publicity-s-Dor­othey Houj!h. chairman; FlorenceFake, Violet Fairchild, Margaret Al-Ion. Beatrice Gilbert, Evelyn Carr,Helen Harris. Constance Bruce. Re-Ireshments-c-Helen Driver. chairman:Alice Holden. Pauline Davis, ElizabethHart. Mary Allen.Hold Glee Club Tryouts.Tryouts for the Women's Glee. club win be held tomorrow at 4 in theIda Noyes assembly room. JohnBeach Cragun. director of music. an­nounces that the positions of pianisttor the Glee club and for the orches­tra have not yet.. been filled. Appli­cants for these positions should re­port at the Women's Glee club try­outs. The proposed organization of aukelele club will be discussed at t'heFame time.WEATHER FORECAST.Partly cloudy and cooler today:moderate westerly winds. Thursdayfair; little change in temperature.THE D.ULYBULLETIN.Today.Chapel, the Senior colleges. the col­l�ge of Commerce and Admini'strationand the college of Education. 10:15.�'andel.Tomorrow.Chapel, the Divinity school, 10:15,Haskell.Chideb, 4:30, Cobb 12A. HUGHE, DEVOTEESPARALLEL ACTIONOF WILSON CLUBFranklyn Chandler Heads Move­ment For New RepublicanCampus Organizatio�TO HOLD MEETING TmlORROWWill Conduct Local Group Under Aus­pices Of National RepublicanCollege League.X ot to be outdone by campus ad­mirers of Woodrow Wilson, enthusi­astic supporters of Hughes met yes­terday afternoon and made plans fora campus Republican club to be knownas the University of Chicago Republi­can club. The organizatton will beconducted under the auspices of theNational Republican College leazue.Franklyn Chandler, '17, is acting astemporary chairman of the club. Th«first meeting will be held tomorrov:afternoon at 2:30 in' Kent 1 heater.when officers will be elected and com­mittees appointed. Posters will bedistributed about the Unlversity vi­cinity, advertising Hughes. and litera­ture will be passed out to the students.Chandler Has Experience.For the past month Chandler hasbeen touring Illinois as. a representa­tive of the national organization. bisduty being to orzanize Hughes clubsin all of the colleges and universitiesin the state. Cluhs were formed at Il­linois. Knox. Tl1inois Wesleyan. Mon­mouth, Milliken and several smallerschools.The object of the club will be toafford a rallying point for the Repuhli­can students to assis ... in securing localrecognition of the rights of studentvoters in college and home towns; topromote discussion and investigatiorof the problems now before the coun­try; to co-operate with and encouragethe work being done by the Republi­can students of the United Statesthrough the local college clubs, stateleagues and the National RepublicanCollege league in advocating, main­taining and safeguardi�g the prin­ciples and policies of the Republicanparty.Will Select Officers.The officers to be selected tomorrowafternoon are a president, vice-presi­dent, secretary and treasurer. Com­mittees will be named to securespeakers. promote organization. ar­range for advertising and care forthr- financial matters.FOUR NEW RU��ERS REPORTCross Country Team Is Already Sehed­uled For Two Meets.Four new men who reported lastnight brought the list of cross conn­try candidates to fourteen. The lat­est additions to the squad wcrr-: VanKirk, Mather, Clark and Green.Coach Eck declares that he willhave an unusually larrrc number ormen from whom to pick the team. n�the freshmen material 'has not yetbeen on the field. Practice will heheld every afterno(\n at 4:30 untilthe end of November. Two meetshave been scheduled, th(' Conferencerun and a dual meet with Northwest­ern. ----A- _NEW Y. 1\1. C. A. COUNCIL : PLAN SERI;:S OFOPENS PROGRAM OF YEAR ! DEBAlt: RALLlES-IMOULTON TO TALKPresident Xorman Hart Calls )Ieet· !ing Of Upperelass Counsellors ForTomorrow-Other Committees Hus- i Undergraduates Assemble To­tie Plans to Completion.,. .__ morrow In Conjunction WithChideb Gathering.A meeting of upperclass counsellorshas been scheduled for tomorrowmornmg at 10:15 in the Ellis assemb­ly room by Norman Hart, presidentof the new Y. M. C. A. student coun­cil. The purpose of the meeting, ac­cording to Hart, is to talk over thecounsellor system and to adopt plansfor a more efficient continuance of theeffort. President Hart has urged anupperclass counsellors to attend themeeting.The new Y. 1\1. C. A. council, in­augurated last Spring. is composedof se�ral committees which havecharge of the various activities of thestudents interested in Y. M. C. A.work. The chairmen of the commit­tees. together with the four officersof the council, are executive leaders.The men selected last year have allreturned this year. The organizationintends to appoint an undergraduatesecretary hefore the end of the monthKrupke Is Chairman.Walter Krupke, chairmait of thecommittee on relirrious work. is ar­ranging a series of informal gather­inj!s for students to meet some of theinfluential men of the University.Plans for charitable work for theUnited Charities are also under way.This committee will have in chargethe settlement dance this year.The committee on vocational Iec­tures has planned a series of severalimportant talks to be published later.• Vocational training classes win be In­I stituted during the early part of tne·ouarter. Max Miller was appointedchairman of the committee in chargeof the social functions of the Y. M.C. A_ This committee. newly appoint­ed this fall. will make arrangementsfor the weekly luncheons for fresbmensoon to be inaugurated.List or Officers.The officers of the Y. M. C. A. stu­dent council are: Norman Hart, presi­dent; Walter Earle, vice-president:John Nuveen. secretary; and HaroldHuls, treasurer.ELECT SELLS PRESIDE�TWoodiow Will"on Club Holds Organi­zation Meeting In Ellis.Donald Sells was elected presidentof the WOQ_drow Wilson club at thefirst rnectine of the orrranlzafion heldyesterday afternoon in the Ellis as­sembly room. Pauline Levi was elect­ed vice-president. Arthur Hanisch. sec­retary. and Rosalind Keatinz treas­urer.Plans have been made to advertiser('gistration clay hy means of postersand literature. Committees to furtherthe work of the club will b(' appointedthis week.will participate; folk dances by Mar­�aret Coonley and Stella Moticr, annintcrpretivo dancing by Beulah andCatherine Chamberlain. Pauline Levi,"president of the W. A. A. will speak.welcoming the freshmen. Followingthe prom-am, refreshments will beserved in the sun parlor on the thirdfloor. The women will dance in theI assembly room. The W. A. A. hand­tion as a defensive player. It is just I books, containing information concern­a question of whether he can adapthimself to a new position.It is )WW almost certain that Cap-• tain .Jackson and Andy )icI'ilersonwill not appear in the first �ame. Redis still troubled with an injured armand he will not he in shape by theend of the week. 'McPherson is stillunder the han of the faculty and willnot be _removed unless his instructorreturns to the city and allows him totake an examination in a correspond­ence course before Saturday. Bothmen will be available for the IndianaEsther Thayer 'Entertains.The second cabinet of the Y. 'V. C.L. will spend the week-end at thehome of 'Esther Thayer at GrandBeach. )Iich. )temhers who intendto �o have been requested to meet1\liriam Libby. presioent of the sec­ond cabinet� today .. t 3:30 in thecommittee room. GRADUATES CO�FER FRIDAYWill Hold Preliminary Tryouts ForVarsity Teams October 27-Post Bibliography.Forensic enthusiasm will receiveopportunities to flood forth at a se­ries of debating rallies scheduled fortomorrow afternoon at 4 :30 in Cobb12A and Friday morning at 10:15 inthe Law building. The meetings havebeen listed as the initial movementsin the campaign for Varsity debatetryouts.Tomorrow's gathering, to be heldin conjunction with the opening as­sembly of Chideb, v .... ill lay specialemphasis on undergraduate competi­tion. The club management has is­sued a welcome to everyone interestedin forensic activities on the campus.Friday's conference will deal pri­marily with constructing the founda­tion for graduate candidacies. oCachMoulton will address both meetings.He will explain the Chicago systemof debate tryouts and offer sugges­tions as to methods of preparatton.Schedule Two Debates.The 1916-17 Maroon plans includetwo debates under the schedule ofthe Central Debating league. N orth­western university will send a groupof representatives to Mandel andCoach Moulton win delegate a groupto oppose the University of MichiganJanuary 19 at Ann Arbor. The ques­tion is: "Resolved, That the Fed­eral Government Should Levy a Pro­gressive Inheritance Tax, GrantedThat Such a Tax Would Be Consti­tutional."Chicago won the league champion­ship last year by defeating Michiganin Mandel and Northwestern at Evan­ston. The topic discussed was: "Re­solved, That Congress Should Adopta Literary Test For the Restrictionof European Immigration." At thetime of these contests, the scheme ofgraduate competition prevailed.Start New Plan.Succeeding debates will inaugur­ate a semi-graduate system. Threegraduates will be aUoted places onthe Varsity squads. providing theysurvive the compet itive tests. Atleast three places are assured. how­ever, to undergraduates. A prelim­inary trial was extended underzard­uatc declaiming in the contest withthe University of Colorado in theSpring- quarter.Candidates for the "two Varsityteams will compete for the first timeFriday nicht, October 27. The finals\\;11 he held two weeks later. A bibli­og-rnphy of boob involvinjr the in­heritanco tax situation has been po!'t­ed on the third floor of Harper.nr. Nathaniel Rutler '\\;11 performthe duties of his former position a�dir('ctor of the work with secondaryschools in addition to his new dutt('"a� dean of the University Colleg-e.-- . .' /.l·'f."11tTHE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, ocroasa 4,1916.All subscription agents of The DailyMaroon have been requested by thecirculation manager to turn in theirI books and money today without failSubscribers have been requestedto give the number and floor of theirPRESIDENT SUDSON SPEAKSDeclares Loyalty Of Students Great­est Asset Of University.mhr 13atl� iBarnnltThe Official Student Newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago.Published mornings, except Sundayand Monday, durin}! the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters, by TheDaily Maroon staff.EDITORIAL STAFF.H. R. Swanson l\lanaging EditorA. A. Baer Xews EditorB. E. Newman Athletics EditorBUSINESS STAFFSubscription Rates.Ry (':1 rr-lor $:!.:iO a yl'!1 r : $1 n 'I uarter.By Mall. $3 a year; $1.25 a quarter,WEDNESDAY, OCTO.JJER 4, 1916.THE PROBLEM OF SELECTION.Within a few days student affatrsouteide of the class room wIll be onin full swing. To many students therewill come 80 many calls for partlcr­pation in the various forms of activitythat they win nnd themselves con­fronted with a very serious problem,that of selection; if they do not reaUzethe problem they will find them­selves in deep water before they areaware of the situation.The most persistent curse of al­most every student enterprise is theutter irresponsibility of the greaternumber of its alleged supporters. Thedead weights in student affairs mayvery easily be classified. There arethe honor grabbers, whose sole am­bition is to possess a number of offi�ees, known as "college honors," i�order that the paragraphs oppositetheir names in The Cap and Gownmay be longer than those of somebodyelse. Then there is a class thatthoughtlessly and good-naturedly goesin for everything that comes along.And a- third set are always startingsomething new, dropping the enter­prise when it is only half-way towardcompletion.The honor grabber could be elimin­ated if accomplishment and not themere holding of an office were thehonored thing. Dead weights should 'consider the merits of speculation.If each of them should look over the ' IALL MAROON AGENTS t HOLD ANNUAL FRESHMAN STAGREQUESTED TO REPORT ----- Coach Stagg And Captain JacksonCirculation Manager Wishes Solid- WiD Address New Men.tors To Submit SubscriptionBooks At Office Today.President Judson spoke at the an­nual commemorative chapel serviceyesterday moming in Mandel hall.The president summarized the growthof the Universi'ty in wealth and innumbers of students, buildings, acresand fsculty members. By readingcomparative figures, he showed thatthe assets of the University had great­ly increased since its foundation in1892.He spoke enthusiastically of anoth­er asset, which he called more valu­able than lands and money and whichcould not be measured by dollars andcents."I hope it may remain for anotherquarter of a century the asset it hal'been in the past quarter of a cen­tury." he said. "That asset is this:the feeling among the students of try­ing to see not what they can get outof the University, but what they cangive to it-that's loyalty."list and select one. or at least somelimited number of activities, and Plans for a course in Milit.'lry Sci-then start out to really accomplish I ence w:II be worked out in full withinsomething in that particular line, the the next few weeks. The work wasnot ready for October because of spe-cial regulations of che War depart­ment under a recent act of Conzressproviding for a reserve officers' train­ing camp.In accordance with these regula­tions and acting under the instruc­tions of the War departmentPresident Judson win confer with thegeneral commanding this department.After the conference an officer fromthe army will probably he Jriven aprofessorship in Milit.'lTY Science annTactics at the University.C. C. Greene Night Editor apartment when they reside in apart-S. S. BushneIL Day Editor ment buildings. Members of the Fac-V. K. Edwardsen Women·s Editor ulty who signed for a paper and failedH. Cohn Asst. News Editor Ito zive the number of their boxes inW. S. Bender Asst. Athletics Editor the Faculty exchange, have been ask-M. A. Mahurin .. Asst. Women's Editor ed to communicate with the circu-lation manager giving him the neces-F. C. MaxweIL Business �Ianager sary information.D. D. BeIL Asst. Bus. ::\lanager Subscribers living within the deliv-ery territory. bounded by Sixty-thirdE:Jtt'rl'{l as second-class matt at tLe Chl-eaeo Po!'totrlce. Chlcn eo, Itltnots. :\I:trch 1:;. I street. Cottage Grove vneue, Fifty-l"�. 1II111t'r At·t t.r :\Ian'h ::. 11'.::. i fith street and Blackstone avenue, haveIbeen asked to have their papers de-livered at their homes rather than callfor them on the campus.Editorial Rooms Ellis 1� Delivery WI'11 start tomorrow morn-Telephone �l1dway 800. Local IG:!ing. Papers may be called for atBusiness O:flce Ellis 1-1Telephone Blackstone :!:i:ll. Ellis and Lexington halls only. No�28'7 papers will be distributed from Cobbor Ida Noyes hall. Stuoeni:s whoarranged to have papers delivered atthe latter places have been asked tosee the circulation manager and have' Idifferent arrangements mademembership in the various organiza­tions would be reduced, but t�.e in­creased efficiency would more thanmake up for it. There would be few­er low grades ann less intellectuallanguor.The danger is no less great on theother extreme. Koman should cothrough colleze without some Inter­est!' outside of the class room. Theinfluence of f'riend ship. experience andability to take responsibil'ity are in­valuable. But it should i,c l'enH:J""�'("'­ed that nll activities should be enteredinto enthusiastically and conscicn­flously, not greenily and superncial1Y.Hold Chapel Today.Chapel assemblies for the �('nioreollcccs, the colleges of Commerceand Adminiatrat ion. and the C'ol1��!'of Education will he held this morn­in� at-l0:1!) ir. Mandel hall COMPLETE l\nLITARY COURSEMay Give Federal Om�er Professor­ship At University.:\fISS HALl. TO SPE.-\KAT VESPER SERVICF.�Miss Agn('s Hall, secretary of theY. \V. C. L.. will speak Sunday a�4 in the Ida Xoye!' assembly room,HeT subject w111 he. "The Kaleidr-s­cope of College Life." All womenarc invited to come and to stay totr-a following. With the purpose of promoting afeeling of good friendship betweenincoming freshmen and the upper.elassmen, the annual Freshman Staewill be held Friday night at 7:30 inthe Ellis. assembly room. CoachStagg, Philbrick Jackson, captain o�the foot.ball team; Associate Prof.David A. Robertson, of the depart­ment of English; and Norman Hart.president of the Y. M. C. A. stu­dent council, will be the speakers atthe dinner.Max B. Miller, chairman of the Y.M. C. A. social committee, is makingarrangements for the affair. Besidesthe regular talks, Chicago songs andyells will be introduced into the pro­gram. Refreshments will be servedALUMNI NOTES.Laurens Shull, '16, is vice-presidentof a bank in Woodward, Indiana.George Benson, '16, is working forthe advertising department of Collier'sWeekly..Norman Hitchcock, ex. '19 bas en­tered Annapolis.Fowler McConnell, '16, is on theborder with the National Guard.Berry Allen, '16, is in the officeof the Ralston-Purina Food companyin St. Louis.Harold Catron, '15, is a county at­torney in Santa Fe, N. M.Thomas Schofield, '16, is an attorneyfor the American Steel and Wirecompany with headquarters in De­troit.Ralph Johansen, '16, is assistanttraffic manager of the Wichita-Hutch­inson Trolley company.Robert McConnell, '16, is with theHennessey Lumber company in Mem­phis, Tenn.Lauriston Grat. '14, is traveling inWisconsin selling bonds for a Chi­cago concem.Craig Redmon, '16, is working forthe Portland Atlas Cement companyin Indiana.Oliver Murdock, '16, is selling bondsin the office of Bullard, Hetherir.gtonand Company in Chicago.Frank Whiting, '16, is touring theWest mapping roads for the Auto-.mobile Blue Book company. GiffordPlume, of the same class, is in theChicago office of the company.Percy Wagner, '16, is in the realestate business with his brother inChicago.James Dyrenforth. '16, is in NewYork preparing to go before the foot­lights in a new musical comedy.Denton Sparks, '16. is selling scloolbooks for the MacMillan company fnthe central west.McDONALD STARTSNEW SCOUT CLAS�A training class for Boy Scout Mas­ters will be organized October 11, byMr. L. L. McDonald, executive secre­tary of the Chicago council of Bo .. ·Scouts of America. The class willmeet regularly 'under the leadership of'Mr. McDonald on Wednesday after­noons at 4 :30 in Ellis 3. The pur­pose of the class is to interest younuI lllcri ill GiC princlples of 3�out�7:;:: �:-,�to procure for them positions as vol­nntcer leaners of scout troops.Brent Is Sunday Preacher.Bishop Charles Harvey Brent, or thoPhilippine Islands, will be the Uni­versity preacher at the religious serv­ices Sunday morning. at n. tn Man­of'l hall. Men and WomenAre You 21?,-your duty'register atOctober 7Then it ISas a citizen tothe polls onThe Woodrow Wilsoll Club of the U. oj C., ,OJ' ...· "••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Law University Books Medical(New and Second Hand>andStudents' SuppliesJ,--«�.WOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE \"Between Kimbark & Kenwood1311 E. 57th St.Phone Hyde Park 1690We BUY, SELL and EXCHANGE TEXT BOOKS••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-c:uTHE best things in life are the ncommonest. Thar's plenty of U[] friendships - plenty of sunshine - []� plenty of landscape-an' yo' can get �VELVET at any tffle.tobacco store. �i1.'l!:JP,-----------.,[].,-----------.I[]P'-----------.,t:!]INow forFoot Ball�1!• f.�, ;· ).-i�QUARTER-CENTENNIALFILM IS PRESENTEDAT FACULTY DINNERThe Quarter-Centennial fllm wasshown last night at the annual Facul­ty dinner at 7 in Hutchinson han.Th� film, one thousand. eight hundredand seventy-five feet in length, wastaken during the anniversary cele­bration last year. It will be releasedthrough the President's office to theAlumni clubs throughout the country. Why Not PI.y with theSPAULDINGIqtercollegiateFoot Ball No. J-S?This is the ball used in every bigcollege game, because it is the bestball viewed from every standpoint.Our foot ball line is complete tneverything needed for the player.Write For A CatalogueA. G. Spaulding & Bros.28 S. Wabash Ave. Chicago, III.INTERNATIONAl CLUBHOLDS FIR81' MEETINGThe International club will hold apreliminary meeting tomorrow a ftcr-noon at 4 to discuss plans for theyear. The newly elected officers ofthe club arc: president, Helen Walker:secretary, Sophia Klebans; and treas­urer, Belle Finkelstine. ---.---PliEa g lIE' CATER· PARTICULRRL y. .=- m· THE· PfI'IIDRI' [f. fllffil'E IHm·SOROOES· tll). FPJITS' �.. .::. cTHE oltJlRVEYo DRD1E5mJlS • .:Ea-smo LY1i[l�· BHiLOING· CHICAGOo ILLtUi·-iCPHONE:· HARRISON ·1141· ••• '1• .. 1': . ..I:". �JHold Chapel Services.Chapel assembly for ��e Divinityschool will be held comor rov- .... "ll!n�at 10:1)') in Haskell assembly room.� DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, ocrOBER 4,1916.. . i.• , .?,OJ.'"\".. }\A. ... .';..i!• t.�· ;· ) ..'i�i,....I�"1II Books, StationeryAthletic Goods & SuppliesI SEASON OF 1916-17I Five Dickens Readings By FrankSpeaight Will Be Feature OfIlOne of the features of the programannounced for 1916-17 by the Uni­I versity Lecture association in co-op­I eration with the University, is a seriesI of five Dickens readings by FrankSpeaight, of London. Dr Stanton Coit,also of London, will give a series ofsix lectures on "The New Freedom ofthe Individual." Some of the subjects Ithat will be presented by members ofthe University faculties are "Aspects Iof Modern Science," "Contemporary iDrama." and "Present InternationalRelations." all members of the association canThe association has already begunits annual series t)f h'l'tl1rf'� :'Inn T(,:ln- take advantage of the full programI ings throughout its various centers of lectures, readings and recitals. Cir-in the city. I&ctures for the remain- ' culars of the association can be se­der of this week will be as follows: cured at th,e Information desk In-- A litde over a year agoMrs. Vernon Castle feltthat she needed corsets.The vogue of the corset ...less figure had passed. PinsFobsShields PennantsPillowsEmblems•5% Discount for Cash·Take advantage of the DiscountCoupons given atThe University' Bookstores5758 ELLIS A VENUE,- andROOM 106 EMMONS BLAINE HALLDiscount Coupons will be givenon Cash Purchases (postage stamps,law and medical books excepted).And m lots of $10.00 or overthese Discount Coupons are re­deemable at 5 % in cash or mer­chandise, if presented on or beforeJune 15, 1917.The University of Chicago PressThe Smoke of the Active!There- s one fashion that never changes-the re­freshing, wholeso,�e, YO';!thful, spirited fashion of"rolling your own for a lively smoke WIth good old"Boll" Durham.In no other way can you get a cigarette so fresh and fra­grant, so full of vigor, e-nergy and action. The man wh� "rolls,his own" with "Bull" Durham has the taste of a connoisseur.GENUINE"Bu LL DU'RHAMSMOKING TOBACCOThe wonderful mildness of "Bun" Durham sets it apartfrom all other tobaccos, and its unique mellow-aweetRavor gives distinctive enjoyment to a cigarette."Bun" Durham is madeoi "brig�t" Virginia-NorthCarolina leaf-the choicest that grows. It is smooth.rich, most satisfying - and mild.Start "rollinc your own" with.. Bell" Durh"r: 0010, ",nd you·Uput yourself on th.e one T.ight T?adto genuine smokmg satisfaction. _­---...._----�-----=-------�� She selected a Redfern,at the Redfern CorsetShop on Fifth Avenue,New York, and was kindenough to write as follows: ----__ .�::;;:�::=is----;3-:t:'r:.-,.�..1-��:�.:-.:�_---='::!:.. Though not formerly in'he habil of wearing eor3eb,I find 'hat 'he Red/til; (or­ro I am wearing is reallymore comfortable than none01 all. II gives me theneeded support and still 01.10103 me trrJrct frerdom.This is e3pecially valuable'0 me in dancing; and ilform3 a p, rfeet bcuis for 'hefi' 0/ my gown. II is anideal corset.Verg lruly yours,Mrs. Vernon Castle."-----��- You too, will find a Red ...fern "an ideal corset."=-==:--=== From Three Dollars Up== , -w-' _._UNIVERSITY LECTUREASSOCIATION OPENSPlanned Program."Associate Prof. Solomon H. Clark.of the department of Public Speakinc,will give a reading of Balzac's "Eu­genie Grnndet" tomorrow night atI the Rogers Park center; ana Associ­ate Prof. Fredcrick Starr. C'f 1 he de­I partment of Anthropology, will lee­I Established 1897Official"Gym"OutfitsComplete$2.45Full Line of Athletic GoodsLadies' "Gym" Bloomers,Blouses and ShoesTheW.C.KERNCO.57th1331 East StreetTwo Blocks· East of' Tower.,Makes his ice creams and candies a little betterthan most, as good as any.You'll see people you know-you'U enjoy what Williams serves you55TH AND UNIVERSITY AVENUE"Red Wing" Grape Juice Genuine, Old-Fashioned Candyture on "Indian Mexico" Saturdaynight at the Warren Avenue Congre­gational church, the West Side center.The courses of the association areconducted at five points in and nearChicago on dates which do not con­flict. By means of this arrangement .Ashby-�18iJ\"Lexicon��i,,"ARROWlCOLLARSGO wrr.t. WITII now OP. FOl'R­l:-';-l1:\:-.;n 1.; ct s, cuc h, 6 fo:.cJJct�.CLUETT. PEAOOOV & co. INc.MAKeRS- -Cobb.P :\ T nON' Z E 0 U R..\ DVERTISERS MAROON ADSHRING RESULTSTHE DAILY ,MAROON. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1916.Yearly Subscription$2.00VARSITY DEFEATS I EASYYEARLING ELEVENIN EASY FASHION TOAND WORTH SAVING.(Continued from page 1)GREATEST BARGAINS IN HISTOR\ OF TYPEWRITERSUnderwoods _ .. _ .. _ _ $30.00Olive-s 25.00L. C. Smith _ _ 21.00Remingtvns 15.50Smith-Premiers _ 16.50and other makes $10 and up. Ex­pert repairing and rebuilding. Ev­ery machine in perfect conditionand guaranteed two years. Wesell to students on easy payments.Write for our liberal free trial of­fer and cut-rate prices.All Makes Typewriter Co., 162 N. Dearborn St., Phone Cent. 6035Classified Ads. �EWS OF THE COLLEGESFive cents per line. Xo adver-tisements for less than 25 cents. AUelas .... if'ied advert isements must bepaid inadvance.FOR RENT-VERY DESIRABLE,stone front house, (near university)5804 Blackstone Ave., 10 rooms and2 baths, steam heat, 3 extra lava­tories, suitable for fraternities orrooms for students, $70.00 permonth. Address, Rowland & Ives,225 Fifth Ave., New York. N. Y.WANTED - SELF-SUPPORTINGstudents who can turn their sparetime into money. Apply PUPU­LIDY BROTHERS, 90 Nassau St.,New York.FOR RENT - COZY KITCHEN,bedroom. Light house-keeping. 2dollars a week. 5704 Maryland Ave.Phone, Mid. 5816.FOR RENT-LARGE FRONT ROOMbeautifully furnished, with bath ad­joining, in a most attractive home.5609 Kenwood Ave. Phone Mid­way 7842.WANTED - MEN FOR HOMEclub; nine rooms, all newly furnish­ed. Light, with porches, lavator­ies and desks An the privileges ofa club. 6217 Kimbark, 2nd Apt.Telephone Midway 7457.FOR RE�TT-A THREE AND FOURroom flat, steam heat, hot water andall modern convenienees. $20.00and $23.00. E. W. NYE, 5726 Drex­el Ave. 1st flat. Tel. H. P. 2043.WANTED - DEVELOPING ANDprinting by a professional photog­rapher. Twelve hour service. Workleft at 9:30 a. m. ready at 7:30 p.m. same day. No tank work. Eachfilm receives individual and properattention. University Studio, 121355th Street.TO RENT - BUSINESS WOMANwill rent room to 1 or 2 ladies.Housekeeping privileges if desired.or will share apartment. Call even­ings, 3rd, 836 E. 56. Midway 8764.LOCKWOOD PARLORS - HAIR­dressing, shampooing, manicuring,scalp treatments to prevent fa1lin�of hair and to remove dandruff. Weoffer special prices and attention toUniversity students. We know ourwork will please you. 1438 E. 57Street. Phone Hyde Park 6772.\v ANTED-COLLEGE REPRESEN·tatives or business houses in everylocality to handle our complete lineof party proz rarns and noveltiesWrite at once lor details and in­formation. Sample sets arc not free.so sample �rahbcrs need not apply.THE PRI�T SHOP, Madison, WisEXPERT STENOGRAPHIC SERV­ice. Typing and dictation. Veryreasonable �rms. KING & �tASON.30 Hitchcock Hall.DANCING CLASS-MOXDAY. OCT.ninth, eight o'clock, ten lessons $;').Private lessons by appointment.Miss Lucia Henderslot. Studio, 1541E. 57th St, Hyde Park 2:l14. Fall practice in baseball has beeninaugurated at Purdue university forthe first time. A fair sized squadappeared at the initial tryout, but ow­ing to the chilly weather Coach Patti- Ison did not put them through a stiffpractice. ISeveral additions have been madeto the military organizations at the IUniversity of Illinios. Two machine ig..;.n companies, two supply companies iand the headquarters company are Ithe newcomers.When administrative efforts failed Ito raise $275,000 with which to build' I3 Physics-Engineerine building atNew York university, students de- Icided to offer their services. In a,petition to the council 700 undergrad-' Iuates asked permission to berrin dig- Iging the foundation and to begin the ,job with student contributions. IFirst-year �irls at the University Iof Montana must appear on the cam-, I,pus wearing green hair ribbons. 'In­der penalty of a punishment, the na- Iture of which is unknown. IDue to the lack of financi� supportI!on the part of underrrraduates, theAthletic association of the Untvcr­sity of Nevada may abolish all ath-letics for one year.The University of I1linois has pro­duced a moving- picture showing thestudent life from every angle. Thescenes are laid in the university dis­trict and the parts are taken by stu­dents,Freshman students at the Univer­sity of Washington are turnmg outon Saturday morning-s to help clearthe new athletic field of rocits and toroll the new track and level thegridiron.UNIVERSITY COLLEGEADOPTS AGRICULTURE---'Four Illini Professors Will InstructIn �ew Course Of GeneralAgriculture.The "back to the land" idea ha"worked its way into the UniversityCollege, the downtown collejre of thoUniversity. There is to he offeree!there this quarter a course in GeneralAgriculture. The lectures will beconducted on Thursday evening-s byfour members of the faculty of thoUniversity of Illinois College of Ag-ri­culture. Professors Hepburn. Bauer,Colhy and Eherso1.The quarter's work is expected tocover soils and soil treatment. �arden­In�. farm crops. and dairylng. Person"en�ag-ed in practical fanning. g-arden­in� and dairyin�, and those who, be­cause they hold teaching, commercialor professional positions related toIarrninz, need a knowledge of aericul.turo, are catered to in these lectures.FOR-RENT-FRONT ROO::\I :\�none sinzlc room. electric light. steamheat, hot water. reasonable terms.57!l9 Drexel Ave. 1st Apt. Kindliness of spirit, g-encrosity ofimpulse, and the spirit of comrade­ship are ideals toward which womenof the university should continue tostrive, said Dean Talbot in an address:L t the women's mass meeting yester­day at 3:30 in Mandel hall. )liss Tal.Lot gave a brief account of the orig-il'and g-rowth of social life among thewomen of the university. and urg-edthat new women do their part towardsbecominrr acquainted with the upperc1ass women and with each other byattending meeting'S held by the variousstudent organizations,Marjorie Coonley, president of 011'Women's Administrative council, ex­plained its work and organization.Short addresses were made by JuliaRicketts, who outlined the purpose andactivities of the League, Pauline Levi.on membership in the W. A. A.; EvaRicholson on the Neighborhood club;Carroll Mason on freshman clubs, andJeanette Regent on requirements formembership in the Dramatic club andMasquers. :Margaret Lauder describ­ed the musical societies open to wo­men, and Rosalind Keating outlineothe adva ntajrcs to be g-ained by workon the university newspaper, mont'1!ymagazine and year book. )liss Quaes­ita Drake spoke on the Graduate Wo­men's club and Helen Adams on 'classelections.DEAN TALBOT STATESUNIVERSITY IDEAL�All Women's Activities Are Explain­ed To New Women Students AtMass )Ieeting.OFFER NEW BIBLE COURSEAssociate Prof. Nelson Conducts Sun­day Morning Reading Class.A new course in Bible readings un­dP'T the direction of Associate Prof.Bertram Nelson will be given durlnr­the Autumn quarter. The purpose ofthe class will be to gain � better ap­preciation of the dramatic values inBiblical Literature. This course isbeing offered as a direct result of thedemand of the university faculty nndstudents.Class work based largely upon theliterary passages of the Bible, willaccompany these S�'nday lectures hyAssociate Prof. Nelson. One quarterof a major credit will be given for thecourse. The class meets every Sundaymorning at 9 in Haskell 17.Give I .. eague Tea Friday.A tea will be given Friday after­noon at 4 in the League room hy themembership committee for all newwomen and their counsellors. Eachmember of the First Cahinet willspeak on the scope of her committeeand the kind of activity she offers toall women who care to work underher.PRESS ISSUES TWOHISTORICAL BOOKSTwo volumes by Agnes Wcrzcland.late professor of History at the Uni­versity of Wyoming, have been puh­lished by the University Press. Theyare "Slavery in Germanic Society Dur­ing' the Middle Ages," and "Historyof t hr- Working Classes in France,"the latter being a review of Levascur'shistory of the French working classes.n,UtIl..TOX WRITESBOOK OS ECO�OMICSAssistant Prof. Walton Hale Ham­ilton. of the department of PoliticalEconomy, is thr- author of "Exercisesin Current Economics," which hasbeen issued by the University Press. Read theDAILYMAROONEach DayMake the coming year anenjoyable and successfulone for yourself by keep­ing in touch with all cam­pus activities thru itscolumns.If paid before November firstSubscribe for yourparents-e-they'Ilenjoy itto score their touchdowns yesterday.Meyers from Wheaton high school.Grosch, Elton of Oak Park, andRouse of Perry, Iowa, form the bestfreshman backfield �en on Sta�gfield for several years. Grusch andRouse are line plungers of the firstwater while Meyers skirts the endlike Dolly Gray in days past. Eltonis equally effective at both means ofpiercing the opponents defense. Hutch­inson of Hyde Park runs the teamwhen Coach Page is not in the game.When "Pat" has a few ideas he wantsto work out himself, Hutchinson isshifted out to an end.PLACE BUST OF PARKERIN E)l)tONS BLAINE ",\1.1.Preparations arc being made toplace a bust of Col. Francis 'V. Par­ker in che corridor of Emmons Blainehall. Col. Parker was the founder ofthe elementary school which has evolv­ed into the present school of Educa­tion. The bust was modeled by thelate w. F. �Iulli�an, an eminent sculp.tor connected with t'tte Chicago ArtInstitute. SAVEGET ONE OF OUR POCKET BANKSAND SAVE A DIME A DAY.�t:lrt a S;I\'ill�S :ICl'lIl111t w i t n this o ldr·sl:,hlisIH'11 national hank. T'h» say­ill�s dpp:lrllllt'1I1 occupies convenient'1l1:lru·n; Oil Ill" sln'p: levvl (If ouri,lIildillg'. T'h« h;llIking' hours daily:.n' from 10 a. m . to.:: fl. Ill .• Satur·days Irom !I n , Ill. io S I'. Ill.CORN EXCHANGENATIONAL BANKCapital. Surplus and Profits$10,000,000 .x . I�\·. i '''1·. 1';1 �alle :11111 AdarnH �ts.WOODLAWN TRUST& SAVINGS BANK1204 E. SIXTY·THIRD STREETTHENEARESTHANKtoThe Univcrsitv of Chicago--0--An Old. Strong BankResources $2.000.000-0-It will be a ple;t:;urt' I () \1:;. ac o nve n icn c c If) Y()\I. II yilt! (loyour Banking hc rr-. i't'I'$'• (1· i�-,�f,,� ..4' ,�l •