11; VoL XV. No. 31.,"j'lITO TAKE COLLEC.nONJ ••• FOR PRISON CAMPS iB,'�f Will �Tc:��e:i::::�_�:'�l' oller-Of-War Fund Campaign1 At University...•..•D WANT YOLUNTEERS.FOR WORKPatristic Club Meets.'\\ The Patristic club will meet Mon·t t day at 7 at the home of Prof. EdgarI Goodspeed, 6706 Woodlawn avenue.The subjeCt for discussion will be"Clement of Rome."WEATHER FORECAST.Rain 01' snow and much colder.Strong no�west winds.THE DAILY MA�OONBULLETIN.Today.Meetings of the University rulingbodies, Harper M28.- l"'aculty of the college of Arts, Lit­erature. and Science, 10.Faculties of the Graduate schoolsof Arts, Literature, and Science, 11.University Dames, 3, Noyes.Tomorrow.University religious services, 11,Mandel. 'Monday.Faculty and Conference of the Div­inity school. 10, Haskell oriental mu­seum, Dean's office.Chapel, men, Junior colleges, 10:15.MandelPrayer service, 10:15, Ellis.. Sophomore cl8.88 of Medical- school.10 :15, Physiology 25.Public lecture, ":30, Harper.Patristic club, 7, home of Prof.Goodspeed. 6706 Woodlawn avenue.Student Volunteer Band, 7, Lexing­ton 14. aroon,attJNIVD8lTy OF CHICAGO. SATURDAY NOVEMBER 11. 1916., .0, WATSON! THE NEEDLE!AND CALL SCOTLAND YARDMysterious Visitor Ransacks DeskSAnd Filches Valuable Volumes . Inl\lidnight Attack On Private RoomsOn Ellis A venue.ager.No definite conclusion was reached.The fountain pen filler .will· be sus­pended by a thread from the ceilingof Cobb corridor and a close watchwill be kept on all persons who castlonging glances at the solitary clueto the mystery.The 1917 Cap a:nd Gown will comeout anyway.TIGER'S - HEAD TO LAYPLANS FOR YEAR ATANNUAL CLUB DINNERTiger's Head will hold its first ban­quet of the year Thursday night inHutchinson. The purpose of the meet­ing is to fonnulate plans for the com­ipg year in the effort to make theclub influential in all musical eventson the campus.President Milton Herzog hopes tomake this a banner year and to es­tablish a solid reputation for theclub. Following the banquet the din­ers will serenade the donnitories. Allmembers have been requested to at­tend the infonnal dances which will beheld each month to stimulate the "gettogether" spirit. -ECONOMIC STUDENTSDO NOT STUDY LAW,IS GILMORE THEORYiWisconsin Representatitve Dis­cusses Economics And LawAt Conference Of Society.MARSHALL TO OPEN MEETINGWill Entertain Visiting Instructors AtComplimentary Luncheon TodayIn The Quadrangle Club.PROF. WILLISTQN WILLADDRESS BIOLOGISTSThe Biological club will meet at7 :45 Tuesday in the Botany lectureroom. All who wish to attend a din­ner at 6 in Hutchinson commons havebeen requested to send word to thesecretary not later than Monday noon.Prof. S. W. Williston will give anillustrated talk on "Newly Discov­ered Paleozoic Reptiles." Prof. Stu­art Weller will speak on "GeologicalBiology."Spanish Club Meets Monday.The Spanish club will hold its week­ly meeting Monday at " in the sec­ond floor parlors of Ida Noyes. Mem­bers have been requested to bringbrief Spanish quotations. All per­sons interested in Spanish have beeninvited to attend. Price Five Cent..ANNOUNCE FIVE MILLION DOLLARMEDICAL SCHOOL FOR UNIVERSITY,Will Render Valuable Service to Cause of MedicalTeaching and Investigation ThroughoutCountry, Says President JudsonHAVE RAISED $2,700,000 TOWARD ENDOWMENTThe papers are'missing!Robbers 'in the University commun­ity make oft' with important docu­ments! Here •. copy boy! Send thiscall to police headquarters and theBurns agency.Bondy, Earle And Nuveen Placed On Twelve precious volumes, De Luxe!' Senior College Committee By edition, and valuable 'Papers wereI Chairman Norman Hart. the booty of midnight burglars whorifled private rooms on Ellis avenue G d te t d t . E . dA II ra ua s u en s m conOIDlCS 0 'President Judson gave out a state- The Board of Trustees of the Uni-co ection taken at the Chicago- early yesterday morning. The books. t lIlt IM. ta f ball ·11 no genera y e ec aw courses, ac- ment late last night to The Daily versity of Chicago has adopted a plan'" mneso oot game WI mark extremely valuable. say the former· rdi tEA Gil f htb I· f the nri f f d co mg 0 ugene . 1 more. 0 t e Maroon concerning the establishment for medical education which it is ex-e c imax 0 e pnsoner-o -war un owners, were extravagantly illustrated U· it f W· . La h I �campaign, Dunlap Clar .... '17. I··S head mversi y 0 isconsm w sc 00 of the new Medical school at the Uni- pected wi!! be put into operation inI ... c oe- Af and contained some of the best litera-· dd be f h WE-·1 ') of the committee which will make ar- ture of the century. "Absolutely not In an.a ress ore t e estern co- versity. The President announced the near future. The plan provides, ts f th Ilecti d nomic Society, at.the Quadrangle club that the remainder of the five million, for an undergraduate medical school.+ rangemen or e co ion, an to be replaced" was the heart-broken last night Three sessions of the 'f -R I Ad '17 will _..4- hi - three hundred thousand dollars would a graduate medical school and medi-, � e en ams, � .. as s as- comment. -, �_ sistant. The collection wm be made eleventh conference of the society certainly be secured. The announce- cal research..• between the halves by one hundred Force Cosmopolitan Door. were held- yesterday. ment of the plans marks the eulmin- The undergraduate medical school; and twenty-five men and women, who The room leading from the Cosmo- "An examination of the catalogues ation of the desire of the President, will be on the Midway. in close COD-.\ . will canvass all four sides of the politan �iub into the elaborately fur- of a number of the universities in this who has been advocating the Medicai nection with the science departmentsI .• field. each individual carrying a bas- nished offices of the Cap and Gown country discloses, little or no reeog- school and has been working toward it of the University. 'The standards ofket suspended on the end of a long was forced some time during Thurs- nition of law as constituting an es- for more than ten years. - admission and of graduation will be.. pole, which will be passed down the day night or Friday morning. When sential or even desirable part of the President Judson's statement fol· as high as those of any medical schoolrows of seats. Tony the janitor . came in to sweep training for the economist," was the lows:' in the country. The number of stu-M. bed out, he found papers strewn Qver the'" statement made by Mr. Gilmore at "The Medical plans which were an- dents will be limited to such as can...all ;:::-� ho:=::lld!:m7��: floor and all the desks rifled. He im- - the session last. night. in his lecture nounced this day represent many receive the best possible training withMonday asking for volunteers to as- mediately call the capable assistance entitled "The Relation of Law and years of hoping and working and - the facilities available.c,. 8iat in the work of collection. In ad- of the news staff'" of The Daily Ma-. Economics." President Judson pre- dreaming. These plans. we think, Will Have Teaching HospitaL.. ' dition to the work between the halves roon to solve the mystery. sided at the banquet at which-the sub- will not merely be, when carried out, A teaching hospital, duly equippedThe plot follows: jeCt ."Economics and Allied Fields" a great addition to the resources and\ men will be-stattcned at the exits with Was discussed." �ith necessary laboratories and lec-IJ baskets as the.crowd passes out. 'The. ,. - One qofuatbrter ..1�. a dollar overlooked. POd wer.of the UI nibvlersity, �ut willCbix:en- ture rooms, will provide for clinicaleoUeetion. plan -followed will be simi- In one -. r e u.&"awer&._ . .- Discuss Undergraduate Courses. er a very va ua e service to ea- instruction. Suitable endowments willJar to that emplojeci" at the Yale-Bar-'- -. One �ietUre of.taat_ l�a ·business .'lJnd"� . �. in.' Eco- _ . go,_and to the cause of medical teaCh- free the hospital from the necessityvan! game last year when contn"bu- manager missiDg. noDlics"-�d "G�w.:te Workiir Eco- ing, and investigation-··m :tbe-� entire of-:-.<lepending, on-payhg patients, 'and", tions were received for the Belgian A dozen Cap Bud Gowns �. nomics"- were the. tOpics discussed at country." _ the faculty from tb� ��cesSitY o{pmc- -; orphans' fund. 'l'1lree prize fcnmtain peDS-missing. the ·morning and afternoon 1neetinp, HARRY PRATr J:UDSON. tice for a Iivelihood,I Thfte men have been appointed by Important documents of mysterious respectively. _ James A. Field, Of the : The- Graduate Medical school will beNorman Hart,·. '17, chairman of the contents missing.- department of EcOnomics, read, a pa- on the west side in connection WithOn I • CROSS COUNTRY SQUADSenior college committee, to. assist in e .a.ountam pen filler dropped by -per on "The Place ,of Economic The- the work now done _by the Rush Medi-.- TO .MEET MYSTIC CLUBthe S�nior college campaip. They the burglar into �-� .-' ,the drawers. ory in Graduate Work." Walton H. cal �ollege and the Presbyterian- 00 s-are: Earl Bondy, Walter Earle. and OJfer Several Solut;ioas. Hamilton, of Amherst college; and F. Hatch And Miller Are Two Of The pital. It will provide for medical-John Nuveen. Each of the three ,nil Theories as to the unknown visitor S. Deibler. from Northwestem-uinver- Invading Stani-Schedule graduates who wish further training!ater select individuals to help in the were numerous among the excited sity, delivered lectures on "The Am- Northwestern Meet. and for practitioners who wish towork... _ : �1. hosts of the Cap and Gown sta1t yes- herst Program in Economics" and keep in touch with progress in medicalterday morning. Some suggested that "Courses in Economics and Methods Coach Eck's cross country squad science. Research will be carried ORthe burglar was looking for apietare of Instruction at Northwestem'Uni- in both places under arrangem�nts·towill get its first test of the year to-of a girl This the�ry was discarded versity." Discussions were held at day at 3:30 when the men meet with be announced later..because of the fact that. the business each of the three sessions. the distanceteam of the Mystic Ath- .t\dd To Resources.manager's portrait was missing. A Earl Dean Howard, of Northwest- letie club. Mr. Eck has laid out a mile The plan involves an addition to themore plausible theory was that an am- ern university, and Leon C. Marshall, and one-fifth track in Washington resources of the University of the sumateur Sherlock Holmes was seeking dean of the college "Of Co, mmerce and k d he suneri of five million three hundred thous-.par an t e supenntendent of parksinf9rJDation on the politics of the Administration, will open the meet- has promised to have police pr.tection and 'tlollars, one million for the hos-.Senior class presidential race in the ing this morning. with - papers on ,for the runners. pital on the Midway. three hundredprivate papers of the campaign man- "Economics and Allied - Fields." Sidney Hatch, star marathon runner. thousand for a laboratory on the westA complimentary luncheon to the and Miller. ex-Danish American A. C. side, and four millions for endowment.visiting instructors will be given today runner, will be two of the best men Towards the endowment fund theat ,I in the Quadrangle club, after Rockefeller Foundation offers one mU-on the invading team. Despite thewhich will be held "Round Table" dis- strength of the Mystic squad, Mr. lion dollars and the General Educationeussions in the Reynolds club. This_ Eck is confident that his team will board one million dollars, provided themeeting will close the conference. earry off the meet, as the showing 80 entire sum of five million three bun­far has been much better than the dred thousand dollars shall be raised.Further pledges of individuals havebeen made to the amount of sevenhundred thousand dollars. Thus twomillion seven hundred thousand dollarshave already been secured. Two mil­lion 'six hundred thousand dollars re­main to be secured and in the nearfuture a campaign will be initiated tocomplete the fund. /School To Be Great Addition To I Million Dollar Hospital On Mid-Resources And Power Of way Is Feature-RockefellerThe University. Foundation Donates Sum.--,J- :.;average.Northwestern will be met nextTuesday on the same course. Nothingis known of the North Side team butit • is not believed to be as good asChicago.Goodspeed To Speak.The New Testament club will hold ameeting Tuesday at 8 in Harper M27.Prof. Edgar Goodspeed of the Divin­ity school will address the club on"The Earliest Collections of New Tes­tament Books." Seventy-five Hear Stagg.Coach Stagg addressed seventy-fivemen on "The Traditions and Standardsof the University Man in Athletics",at the Freshman luncheon yesterdayin Hutchinson. The Rev. Mr. CharlesW. Gilkey will speak at the class.luncheon next Friday.Announce Pledges.Chi Rho Sigma announces the pledg- .ing of Helen Close and Evelyn Boyer,of Chicago.Bishop Williams To Preach.Bishop Williams will preach at theUniversity' religious services. tomor­� row at 11 in Mandel. Mr. RobertStevens will·give an organ recital at10:45. .THE CHEERLEADlNG PROBLEM., rBB DAILY IIAKOON. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1916.Iqr lIailg ilarllnn!'be Ofrieial Student Ne�-'paper 0; theUniTenity of qlUCaKO. ,Published mornings. exeept Sunda,.and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters, by TheDaily Maroon statl.EDITORIAL STAFF.&. R. SwaMOlL-.ManagiDg Editor� A. Baer __ •• _ .. _ ••••••• _.News Editor.. Eo N ewlll&D.._ .. ..Athletica EditorC. C. Greesae. .. _ .. _ .. _ .. _ .. .Night Editor8. S. Bulmell .• _ .. _ .. _ Day EditorT. K. Edwardaen .. _ .. Women's EditorH. COIm. .• _ .. •• .Asst. N ewe EditorW. S. Bender .... A88t. Athletics EcHtorII. A. Mahurin..Asst. Women's EditorBUSINESS STAFFW. Co lIaxwell __ .. _Business ManagerD. D. Bell.i.; .. _ .. .Asst. Bus. Manager•• tend .. eeeGad·clus mall at the Chi·.... Pa.tolrtee. CblNco. IlUnol .. March Ill.1108. under Act 0( Marc" 3. 1873.Subaeription Rates.By CftrrJer..... $2.� a YNr: $1 a quarter.11,. lIall • .., & year; flZ a quarter._ltortal Room •.•.••••••••...•.. ' •• :aU. 1%or.�phoa. lI1ba,. 800. Loeal 1�.... _ Olrtee ••.....••••.•••...•• EllIs 14Tel.phoae Blackstone Sl....... 2 • .,SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1916., iFRATERNITY SCHOLARSHIP..,t, At the present time fraternitiesare very lax in their attention toscholarship. According to historiansof Greek letter societies, these organ­izations were formed for the purposeof bringi�g kindred spirits together,for strengthening bonds of friendship,but most of all for the best thingsfor which the college stands andamong these primarily for the de­velopment of character and of schol­arship. And the latter purpose hasbeen neglected.TJle scholarship of a fraternity manis seldom raised above what it wouldhave been had he not joined a soci­ety; as a matter of fact. it is oftenlower. Fraternities are interested inmen for other qualities than those of ascholastic nature, and this is wherethe trouble lies. Tradition and exam­ple in a chapter .could work wondersfor a fraternity's scholastic record.We �ften hear fraternity men ex­cuse t;heir poor scholarship standingby stating that they have more out­side interests, interests which are asworth while as studies, and conge.quentIy have Iess time to devote toseholastic endeavor. They point tothe fact that fraternity men hold themajority of the campus "honors", andcompose the so-called "live men" ofthe university.This is not true, generally. Recordsshow that men engaged in activities.whether they are fraternity men ornot, maintain a scholastic standing ashigh and higher than the average. Itis those who have little energy in anyworthy direction who show indifferenceto excellence in scholarship. The fra­ternity man who is the "live man" ofthe chapter, is not the man who pulls.!own the· record of the chapter.' Itis the chapter house loafer, the manwho sits before the grate fire andwastes his time in petty discourse,who is responsible for the poor show­ing.These are the men who need seri­ious attention from their more ear­nest brothers. And it is only by theapplication of this attention that thescholarship of the fraternities willever reach the place it should hold.Unless the fraterntiy can de".c!op aninterest in good students and a highgrade of scholarship. an interest asgreat or greater than that displayedfor other activities. the fraternity willsome day hear the count of the ref­erep.. "Cheerleading is or should be one ofthe important responsibilities of theCollege, as it is partly through theresponse which the leaders can obtainfrom an undergraduate assembly thatdiE> spirit, and loyalty of Dartmouthmen is judged. But under the presentcor.ditions, cheerleading is the one act­ivity of its kind which is not dignifiedand made more effective by a compet­itive choice of its head. There arecompetitions for managerships bothathletic and non-athletic, for all col­lege publications, for dramatics. debat­ing, musical clubs and various otherundergraduate organizations. But theleading of cheers at all undergraduatefunctions falls to the lot of the manwho passed his class after an inade­quate half hearted competition duringthe fall of his freshman year, and whohas kept it since because there is nomethod in existence to dislodge him ifa better man presents himself." " . I WIL� FOSTER ALUMNU�.;Class cheerlea�ers,.chose� by popu- SENiOR RELATIONSHIPSlar vote are al� l"!g�t In their places- 'AT FOOTBALL DINNERat hums or at interclass contests. But 'there should be an election of thesemen oftener than once during a col­lege course, and tl�.�re should be cre­ated � system whereby varsity cheer­leaders would be trained men. who hadproved by hard practice and stiff com­petition that they were better fittedfor the positions than anyone elsein college.The cheerleading problem is notconfined to the Midway. Other in­stitutions are having difficultiea withcheer leading systems similar to thosewe are now facing. The trouble lies,without a doubt, in the systems, notin the men who are trying with theirbest efforts to achieve success in mak­ing a crowd respond to their calls. Thefollowing editorial, from The Dart­mouth. brings home some very usefulsuggestions in regard to this prob-lem: '"To any undergraduate who waspresent at the Princeton and Syracusegames and who listened to the Dart­mouth cheering in anything like a crit­ical attitude. the improveme+t of theefforts of undergrnduate cheerleadersat Springfield .suturday over those ofthe \"pek ljcfore was highly c;)mJ11e�·1-able and i�dicati\'� of greater sincerityand co-operation. And the zact thatSaturday's results were obtainedthrough a single evening's practice by·:lP lenders th«: .selves, brin ,'� out1�1(/r� clearly than (. VH the po ;sibiliti;.:): ttendant 'up.:>n the institutlc-i of '!thorough competitive system forcheerleading."There are numerous ways in whichsuch a plan could be put into execu­ti�m. For every cheer there should bea set of notions which are permanentrather than varYing each year with theindividual whims of the leaders. Thesesame motions should be used by everyman who attempts to lead cheers atany time, thus standardizing the lead­ing to a certain extent. A competi­tion could be started among all juniorsdesiring the position at the beginningof the year, and conducted throughoutthe season by the varsity cheerlead­ers. At the end of the year whatevernumber were required could be recom­mended from the junior competitors bythe varsity men and the recommenda­tions ratified by the athletic council. Inthis way competent cheerleaders wouldbe chosen each year, the position wouldrise from one of philanthropy to oneof distinct honor, and the enthusiasmof the undergraduates could yearly becapitalized into unifonn, organizedcheering."The poposi.tion is by no means �ut­side the scope of the athletitc council.Although cheers are given on variousoccasions. the bulk of the cheering isat athletic contests. The plan suggest­ed with possible modifications shouldbe put in practice by the council, and adistinctive insignia awarded to the ,\ I.UMNI AQUATIC STARSCOMPETE WITH MAROONSChampions PaTlicek And,Redmon wmAppear In Practice Meet InBartlett Tank.Former stars of the Maroon swim­ming team will compete with the pres­ent Chicago squad in a practice meet,Nov. 22. Two intercollegiate recordholders will be represented in theranks of the alumni team. PavlicekNational intercollegiate back strokechampion, and Redmon- champion inthe plunge, have promised to com­pete.Coach White is planning to enterCapt. Meine. Collins, Crawford, Earleand Clark in the relay; Crawford andl\�eine in the 40 yd. dash; Bowers andVacin for the 200 yd. breast stroke;Collins and Earle in the 220 yd. swim;and Carlson and Harper in the plunge .Meine and Collins will be the Varsityentries in the '150 yd. back stroke withEarle and Crawford in the 100 yd.swim.Ray White Will Swim.Ray White. a former dash m8l\.will swim in the short distances forthe alumni team along with Maller.Shirley will be the only brea�t strokeman, while Gard�e;· has entered theplunge. All of the men have repre­sen ted , Chicago in former years andwill give the Varsity team' a hardfigh� .The Chicago team has been prac­ticing for the last month and all themembers are in. good shape. Most ofthe veterans from last year's teamare outj-and the Sophomore class hasturned out some good swimmers.Coach White believes his team willbe able to win from the alumni with-out much trouble.The business department of the Uni­versity is considering the addition offive hundred bleacher seats in theswimming room for the coming sea­son. The present accommodations areinsuffiCient and it is believed that theaddition of the seats would promotegreater interest in the sport.Expect �ixty Membe� Of '16 ClassTo Wi� AUen.tance Prize-ShoW'Badger Game Films.Six�y seniors are expected to fos­ter relationships with alumni at theannual football dinner to be givenbY, the Chicago Alumni club Wednes­day night at 7 at the University club.Forty already ha� a�nounced theirintentions by slgneture.Th� hundred will attend the din ..ner- Mr. stagg, �he asalstant. coachesand members o� the football squadwill be guests. Films of the Chicago.Wise�n�i� game �n� the �arter-Cen­tennial celebration wirl be shown.Lawrence Whiting, secretary-treas­urer of the Alumni club has mailed outcards, to members of the class of 1916.A prominent alumnus. bas promisedthe Senior class ,10 if their attend­ance mark at the dinner totals fifty.Medical Students Meet.The Sophomore medical studentswin meet Monday at 10:15 in Physi­ology "25.seniors chosen for each successiveyear."Starting innumerable things andfinishing but comparatively few, is afault of the college and is largelytraceable to unwarranted self compla­cency. The Dartmouth would like tosee some action taken on the matterby the athletic council at once--eithera move toward the adoption of the� proposed or some smBar plan, or astatement of the council's reasons fornot adopting it." �.�:i Wb.A(Oll.J T, · r FatC C� � "JoIl 1"Y(IIe:!] Wa']Wll. j( wi']"I -, He� \An�Ifi• �I[TH' thoughtless talker is like a, blank cartridge. He makes a loudnoise but never hits th' target.When. you stop. t,O think, it's ?;pPlittle wonder that VELVET ia80 ��. Every bit of it has .been nGtruaD,y apd for two years.c�[b .• -------iC .... ----- ...iC.·------ ..ESTABLISHED 1818�cM>��frutttmtmt fiimillltitqJ fotlbS..AD.SOII AVENUE COR. FORTY·FOURTH STREaTNEW YORKT ele pllOn,e Murray Hill 8800Our Representative will be at theHOTEL LA SALLE, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and ThursdayNovember 13th, 14th, 15th and rothwith Samples of Ready-made ClothingFurnishings, Hats and Shoesfor FallA Copy of our New Illustrated CatalogueContaining more than One Hundred Photographic Plateswill be mailed to anyone mentioningThe DAILY MAROONBOSTON BRANCH149 T ... mont Street NEWPORT BRANCHZ!O Bellevue A".,.u.B'OOK SERVICEWe have on our shelves a large and varied supply of UniversityText and Reference Books, both second-hand and new.\Ve attempt to keep in our stock a carefully selected line of themost .recent books of all kinds.We can obtain very quickly books which we have not in stock.We are always willing to take your telephone order for books anddeliver c. O. D. in the University neighborhood.Woodworth's Book Store1311 E. 57th St., near Kimbark Ave.TELEPHONE HYDE PARK I�)()Now forFootBallRUTH BARDY STUDIODancingCLASS THURSDAY EVEN'GSPrivate Lessons by Appoint­ment.Studio: 1464 E. Fifty-fifth StreetTel. Hyde Park 2725. fi, Not Pia, willa tit.SPALDINGIDtercollegiateFoot Ban No. J-S?TIda Ia the ball UMCl ID ft'!II7 hieeoDep pme, beeauae I' ia the �ball �ri'ed from eftI'1 DDdpolDt.0Iu toot baD Une la eoap1ete III8ftIr7thlnc needed tor the pia,..Write W_ A CatalDpeA. G. Spalding & Bros •II L WabuIl.A..,... Cldeap. m.••••••••••••••••••••••••••i .', EverythingOptical10% Discount to StudentsS. fF;INSTEIN, Opt. D.RIlistefd Optometrist, 918 E. 55th St...... 1aIIntdI • .e. ..... Hyd. PI" 8372••••••••••••••••••••••••••Adv�rtise in The Daily MaroonRead Maroon Advertisements ,·11.. ,1(1111no,. COlfidv-Yt,. I ede-, th,•t to�alJ• i .. ' th• �I., 'I..• j'..Etl.�'j P11IF11I• • e05Iid010'• �-(II f•i• .. Ij-II f.. ,I'[n I,.v-".,lt,�• I ...��� IIIitythe ..•• �I, 'I.,.. 1:"'orall ·.;1· .,NGateJ·S?7 hieb.tolDt.tellarer.s. ,TQ DA.,ILY MAJtOO!f, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1916., THE BIG FOUR •.. � .I, When John .entrained �o'f college,At the railway carrrage door. (Our Johnnie traveled via, · i F;�; B;;;;�;�!:ym�::=-; "Join a bunch, my son that's one ofIl The Big Four."Your dad's fraternity, boy,In the good old days of yore,Was always counted one ofThe Big Four."When John arrived at college. And was met by full a scoreWho said their gangs belonged toThe BIg Four,He thought about the matter:"Ten fraternities and more.And every one is one ofThe Big Four?"FAMOUS ALS .1. Al Pick, bowling hound.2. Alibi.3. Al Lindauer, CCC" man.4. Allie, Varsity Pool team.5. AI;E! C�t.6. Et a1.NEWS FROM THE FRONT.C. Asa Birdsall-ccThe. result willnot be known until we hear from thecountry distrij:ts in Alaska. I am con­fident that Hughes will carry theYukon."F. K. �andler-ccIt is impossible.I can not believe that Charlie has beendefeated."Doc �ratfish-ccA great victory forthe barbers!'Mr. E;nglish-"Boys, you will haveto be' quiet. I can not be certain·about the election until I hear fromthe executive council"Bob Good,ear-"Four mo� leanyears."John Slifer-"Me and WilsQn.Garrett Larkin-ccMe and Hughes."The Maroon-"Our first edition wason �e street early Tuesday eveningwith complete returns."Dennett Bell-CCMy work for Mor­ton Howard had a telling effect. Heran way ahead of Wilson."FIRST SIGNS OF WINTER.Score Club's Initial Wrestle .The "Cubs" sign another manager.Psi U' mackinaws.Yellow notices .ALL-AMERICAN HANDBALLTEAM.Forward-Handley.Back-Handleman.Substitute9--'Handy, Hanisch andHanna .., FolIo'Wing the lead of our contemp.the esteemed Herald. we exclusivelyprophesy that-Iowa will beat Nortll.western, Purdue win triumph over thePurple and Ohio State and the latterwill be defeated again by Northwest­ern. Chicago will easily cop at Illin­ois and the Gophers will look bad onStagg field. In the meantime Wil­liams' bunch will clean up Camp Ran­dall. Result, Carleton, the Championsof the West. •MARSHALL. RELD G (OMPANY.. AN NEX --The Store fgr Men ..••• .,. ON THE POLITICAL SHELF.T. R.William Jennings Bryan.Kurt.Lorimer.Tom Ryan. 'S UITS and Overcoats,. with exclusivenessassured in every care­fully selected, hand­some pattern. Exclu­sivenessof style as wellas fabric. Models thework of master design­ers. Such Clothing asis worn wherever 'Yellgroomed college mengather.Overcoats, $20 to $75Suits,' $20 to $5577ainl and �oart1a RoonVolunteer Band Meets. the time that her husband studied atthe Divinity school, Mrs. Duncan tookcourses in the University, at the sametime doing secretarial work for Profs.E. D. Burton and E. J. Goodspeed.The Student Volunteer band willmeet Monday from 7 to 8 in Lexing­ton 14. Mr. Martin Bickham willspeak on "Prayer and Missions." two separate cots, $6; solid oakdesk, 3 large drawers, $6. Midway6587. 6434 Ingleside Ave.steam heat; very reasonable. 6434Ingleside Ave. Midway 6587.PORTRAITS AND ENLAllGK-ments. Best work at mocle!ate prl­ees. Color work in oil our .,.a.J­ty. I..antem slid .. for aU PlUll ....Univerait7 Studio, 1211 IItIa St."God by boy�-me too "-Hughes.G. O. P.\I Classifi�d Ads. FOR RENT-FURNISHED ROOMin an attractive home. 5609 Ken­wood. Mid. 7842. FOR RENT-LARGE LIGHT DOU­ble room, nicely furnished, suitablefor two students. Moderate rent.6015 Kimbtrk, 1st fiat.WIFE OF ALUMNUS DIESFOLLO�G OPERATION PRIVATE DANCING LESSONS BYappointment. Class. Konda, enn·ings. 10 lessons tor $5.00. LueiaHendershot. Studio 1541 E. STU.St. Tel. H. P. 2314.FOR SALE-Nearly new sanitarycouch with pads and cover will makeMrs. Duncan, the wife of the Rev.Mr. Egerton Duncan, '11, died recent­ly in Springfield. Mass., following anoperation for appendicitis. �ng, ., . \\TO ��NT-WOMAN �MPLOYEDwill shar'e 7-room furnished flat;,NORTHWESTERN AND lOW ATO BATI'LE AT EV ANSTON TIm DAILY IlAaOON. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11. 1�16.Other Conference Contest ScheduledFor Today Is Indiana-Ohio StateGame-Eastern Games Are WatchedClosel,. By Scouts.Schedule of today's footballgame5.West.Northwestern VS. Iowa at Evanston!:30 p. m.Ohio State vs. Indiana at Colum­bU5.Notre Dame vs. South Dakota atVermillion.East.Harvard vs. Princeton at Cambridge.Yale vs. Brown at New Haven.Cornell vs. Michigan at Ithaca.Pennsylvania vs. Dartmouth at Phil-adelphia.Pittsburgh VS. Washington and Jef­ferson at Pittsburgh.Army vs. Maine at West Point.Navy vs. North Carolina Aggies atARnapolis. -Notwithstanding the fact that thereis only three weeks left before theclose of the 1916 football season, anexceptionally slim program is offer­ed to the western football fans today.The Conference schedule will bringNorthwestern and Iowa together atEvansb,n and Ohio State will meet In­diana at Columbus. It is improbablethat either of the leaders will be dis­lodged although an upset at Colum­bus will not be considered a miraclewhen the improvement in the Hoosierteam during the past three weeks isIloted. .Northweste� will not have easysailing with the Hawkeye eleven. Iowais strong this year, despite their over­whelming defeat :at the bands ofMinnesota. and Coach Jones has suc­ceeded in installing a system whichutilizes the strength of the team toita last ounce. The game will featurethe annual Northwestern homecomingand plans have been completed to han­dle a reeord-breaking crowd.Notre Dame To Play.N otl'e Dame meets South Dakotain the only other game of importancein the west. South Dakota held theMichigan Aggies to a 3 to 3 tie laStweek but up to that contest they hadnot shown any strength. Notre Damecounts upon an easy victory.Ia the east the Harvard-Princetongame at Cambridge marks the firstmeeting of the "Big Three" this sea­SOD. Although Harvard has beenbeaten and the Tigers have emergedwith several close contests' won fromminor teams, the game will attractmuch attention because of the historic: I... -..' ....... �r·, '- rivalry between the two schools. Both'i6�-:;- �ms have shown gr�t improvement,�::.' in every game and it is practically im-.possible to pick the favorite althoughthe Crimson will probably enter thecontest as the favorites because oftheir good showing made against Cor­nell last week.Cornell Game Important.Cornell and Michigan will nook upin one of the most important inter­sectional games of the year. TheBig Red eleven has been made thefavorite mainly because of the flukygames Michigan has won this year,and in view of the fact that Cornellbas only had one bad contest, theHarvard game. Late reports indi­cate that Shiverick and Sparks, theopposing quarterbacks have recover­ed from their injuries, and their in­dividual perfonnances will be watchedclosely by the "powers that be" whopick the an-American elevens.Chicago. Wisconsin, nIinois, Min­nesota and Purdue, the Conferene id­ters today, are booked for two prac­tice sessions in preparation for thefirst round of the so-called big gamesnext week, when Chicago meets Tllln-iiI·f FIFTEENCENTS "\', .I IIIt ' jI\ �.! \' � I �s:��l-I ! t,111 I,;•, A-T4 \J demdi., L� Tp4Pi.���"* • I alcrcI at1D1$:d:diti'!'eh:a,.11:I. , <:1•REMEMBER - Turkish tobacco bthe world' s mo�t iamous tobacco forcigarettes.The suresttest of all-dnGr' tl� �I g.. iIeb.'\•11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111.= � == =--= =I Hyde Park Hotel I--= =- -- -- -= Offers the best facilities on the == .== Southside for =- -= =- ------ -- ---1 Students' Banquets I ..� and Parties §----- -------------- . ---iillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil U 11111 III 11111 11111 11111 Iii 0tcbt1e1l ,..I tlf"h()n\1t.ttdt- ild a,I :'We add that personal touch thatmakes for perfect printing ... ,.Colonial Press1510 East 56th StreetNear Harper AvenueTen minutes walk from Campus •Printers, Publishers, EngraoersWE PRINT IN FOREIGN LANGUAGES Phone Midway 864lif''_i4f.iia• �IHOO- ·fN)·mf'r.j·-"1!!!1I!411& ·riMWEY·mm &51 RJ&I·'ffiJ-L�- Bll.ONl-OIlBl-IUJm1a·TEl.EPtfm - � -114'· • • •"."' ' ; t1dCHICAGOTHE BLUEWOODLAWN TRUST& SAVINGS BANK1204 E. SIXTY -THIRD STREETTHENEAREST,BANKtoThe University of Chicago-0-Resources $2,000,000An Old, Strong Bank-0- MAT. SAT.PARADISEWith Cecil Lean & Company of 100Branch Box Office in. Lobby, GarrickTheater Bldg. Seats also onsale at Lyon & Healy'sI GREATEST BARGAINS IN HISTORY OF TYPEWRITERSUDderwooda ---.S30 to SSOODTen 25 to 41L. C. Saltla 21 to 40Remln�OII8 11.10 to 85Smith-Premiers __ 16.10 to 41PRINCESS . $1 Mat. TodayOLIVER MOROSCO PersentsEMIL Y STEVENSin L. K. Anspacher's BrilliantComedy DramaTHE UNCHASTENED WOMANWith a Typical Morosco Cast. and other mak_ '11 and up. Ex­pert rep.trine and nbuiJdine. ET­� machin. in perfect conditionand guaranteed two Jean. W...n to aadata 01l ..., p.1JD8Ilta.Write for our liberal bee trlaJ of­fer and cut-rate PrieeL,;All Makes Typewriter Co., 162 N. Dearborn St., Phone �ent. 8035It 'Will be a pleasure to us, aconvenience to you, if you doyour Banking here.ois at Urbana, Wisconsin plays atMinnesota, and Purdue endeavors toturn the Ohio State eleven out of firstplace in the Conference standing. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIS�:RS"