-•... I ".TERSto_"G....�.to •�. EX­l�. BY­InditionIe ·We�:.6035n of themembersthe threefollow: •cDonald,1, David ,�ph Cole­Ha�mon,King, Ju-md Cran­I; AustinV't Leach,Eleanor 4ith West.:hairman;'offett EI­ltchinson, , !. ," I l'I' .IIJ VoL XV. No. 35.TWELVE DEBATORS MEETAS TEAMS IN TRYOUTS HARPER MAINTAINSPRISONERS ARE INNEED OF LUXURIESSTAGG PUTS SQUADTHROUGH HARDESTDRILL OF SEASONCoach Page Says Chances of De­feating Dlini BattlersAre Good.TICKET SALE CLOSES TODAYHanisch Is Given Preference OverFullback Knopp And ACar Com­pares Favorably With Stememan.Frigid weather and a frozen fielddid not prevent Coach Stagg fromputting his men through one' of thehardest driils of the season yesterdayafternoon. Today the team will begiven a final session in tackling prac­tice, and tomorrow Will be devotedto a rehearsal of the formations whichwill be used against the Lllinl Sat-\ \ nrday,I The ticket sale for the contest will'l . .: close this afternoon at 4:30 in Mr.Merriain's office in B3rtl�tt. Studentadmission tickets are eon sale at SOcents and the Illinois Central rail.,Toad is offering a speciai rate of $2.50for the round trip. These ticketswill be honored on trains leaving the12th stteet station at 6 P. M. tomor­TOW and 9:20 Saturday morning. Spe­cial trains will leave Champaign Sat­urday afternoon at 6, and Sunday at5:50 P. M.Maroona And Dlini To Fi,bt.As for the chances of beating the,mni? Accordinc to Coach ,'Pagethey are good. it ij true that the 11-iini upset the dope when they' de;'rea ted Minn�sota and that the Buck­-eyes ,iii"e been guilty of the same-deed iit least twice this seasOn, andfor th� um'e _ reason, some ca1c:utaiethat Oli:ago 'has an equal chance to_ -do the same thing. But the battle\' -will never resolve itself into a sur­prise part)" because contests in whichboth ti�ens are iia-hting never do.,-It is sUperfluous to state that Chl-, j ago and minois are both going toS.,.·' fight, Chicago aad ntinois always doJ when they meet in anything.':. There is little to choose betweenthe rival backfields although the Or­ange and Blue quartet wi111ikely drawthe consideration because of BartMacomber's presence in it. The .. 11-lini leader is not especially brilliant., a defehsive player, but his general-8bip and kicking abiUty must be re­spected. Hanisch ia given preference.over Knopp, the Illinois fullbaclct andAgar co�pares favorably with Ster­neman and al�hough he does not bootthe ban further than Macomber, heshould be considered more reliablethan his opponent.Zappke Has Stonewall Defel18e.It appears as if the lines wili be the'deciding factors in the final outcome.Zuppke has developed a green lineinto a stonewall forward clefcii:se iftheir performance against the Go­phers can he taken as the latest indi-cCition of their present development.They are fighters and each man play�the part assigned to him. On theother hand, the Chicago line is alsogreen but considerably heavier. Todate they have not demonstrated theirfullest possibilities mainly becauseeach man does not do his own individ-ual work.WIth Higgins and Parker on theends, chicago is not apt to be notice-(Continued on Page 4) aroon,atUNIVD81'l'Y 01' CHICAGO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1916.Sherman Cooper, '18, was appoint­ed manager of Blackfriars for the-corning year at a meeting of the Su­periors of the order yesterday. Theother appointments are as follows:Costumes, Carleton Adams, '18; Prop­erties. Stanley Black, '18; Publicity,Frank Breckenridge, '19; Chorus Mas­ter, Goodell Crawford, '19; Score"George Martin, '19; Assistant Cos­tumes, Norman Duehring, '19; Assist- 'ant Properties, Paul Willett, '19; As­sistant Publicity, Harry McCosh, '19.Shennan Cooper was a member ofthe chorus of the "Knight ofKnights," and property man f�r lastyeat;s production, "A Rhenish Ro­mat.c�." Adams *as scbre managerlast year, and a member of the- cho­rus in the "Knight of Knights". Theremaining newly elected officers weremembers of the chorus in "A Rhenish'Romance," with. the exception ofDuehring, wno was in the cast of that In this investigation he acted as theproduction. representative of the Journal of Ge-Give Theater Party Soon. ology; end worked with four other'Junior men have been chosen in investigators, three of whom wereplace of sophomores, as has been the 'from Washington ... n.d the fottrth fromcustom, . t'o have charge of costumes Yale univeraity� Each, f?( these five"and properties. Dec..6 hal. been cho- is now prepanng' a�' -itidci,lendent re­sen as a tentative date .Ior the annual p'ort on the sk�letons� These reportsBlack.t:riar. dinner' and theater party. will' appear in the January. 'issue ofThe selection of the play to be given the Job-rnal �f Geology, a, niaPzinenext spring will be made itrobably by printed by .th� tiniver��tY Press. 'As­December i. "The Kuinlng of Kala," sistant Prof. Chamberlin said yester­"Garcons," "A Myth in Mandei:' and day:"The Hoodoo Hindu," ate the plays. Kay Decide Mooted Qvestion.which have been submitted. The judg- "I t has long been a questiOn wheth":ing committee is -composed of Dean er man lived' on this continent at theRobert Mo�s Lovett, Dean _Percy, time of -the Pleistocene 'or' Glacial per­Holmes Boynton, Hamilton Coleman, tria. Evidence exists' which provesRichard HenrY Little and Howell that he did inhaoit Europe at this'time, but no c�riC1iiS1ve proof has ever.shown his presence here 'at tha� time.From time. to time, various finctsthroughout the country 'have attract­ed, the attention of geologists and an­thropologists. Upon investigation,the skeletons have always been foundto belong to a later period, ·however.""The fact that these skeletons werefound in the same strain with bones ofanimals, definitely known to be ofthe Giaciai' period, makes their dis­covery worthy of serious investiga­tion. The skeletons were fairly well. preserved and with them were arrow­heads, carved elephant tusks and oth­er trinkets. Nea'rby were the remainsof elephants, tigers and other animalsknown to have existed on this conti­neilt at the time of the Glacial period.'·NAME SHERMAN COOPERBLACKFRIAR MANAGERSuperiors Select Adams For Cos­tume Manager-Other Appoint-,ments Are Black, Breckenridge,Crawford, Duehring, Willett and. McCosh.Murray, '14., Senior Committee Meets.Senior social committee will meettoday at 10:15 in Cobb 12A.WEATHER FORECAST.Fair, with 81owl7 rising tempera­ture; gentle to IIlOdente westerlywiDds.THE D��Y MAROONBULLETIN.TODAY.Ouapel, the eoUege of Commerceand AdmiDistratioD aDd the collegeof EdaeatioD. 1':15, MuddDeyotional aerrice, the Divinityschool, 10:15, HaskeD.LiDdsay ticket eGIaDlittee, 10:15,Cobb 12A.Y. M. C. A. prayer service, 10:15,Ellis assembly.Green Cap committee, 1:30, Ellis..:;;CiiIUI7·Frenclt club, 4, Ida Noyes library.Physics club, 4 :30, Ryerson 32.Prison Fund committee' meeting,4 :30, Lexington.Menorah society, 4 :30, Harper as­sembly.Sociology club, 7:45, Classics 21TOMORROW.Chapel, the Divinity school, 10 :15,Haskell.y.' M. C. A. prayer seniee, 10:15,Ellis auembl1 room.German COIlYers&tiOll club, 4, Lex­Ington « iftd 5.Sophomore cIa. committees, 10:15,Cobb 12A. CHAMBERLIN STUDIESSKELETONS HUNDREDTHOUSAND YEARS OLDOne of Five to Investigate Hu­man Skeletons Foundin Florida.MAY END GEOLOGICAL QUERYEach' Investigator To Publish Inde­pendent Report On Discovery InJournal Of Geology.Assistant Prof. Rollin Chamberlin,of the department of Geology, hasjust returned from Vero, Florida;where he went to examine some very. �id human skeletons found near thatcitroThe state geologist of Florida, whofound the skeletons, believes them to'be the remains of men who inhabi�- ,ed this continent ohe hundred thous-. and years ago at the time of the Gla­cia! Age. it was to confirm the stategeologist's conclusions that AssistantProf. Chamberlin examined the bones.PRESIDENT HOLDS RECEPTIONTo Entertain University Conege Stu­dents Tomorrow in Noyes.President and Mrs. Harry PrattJudson will hold a reception for allmembers of the University college to­morrow night in Ida Noyes hall. Thepurpose of the reception is to bringthe students of the University collegeinti closer contact with the Univer­sity as a whole."We want eve�oone in the Univer­sity college to realize that they are animportant part of the University ofChicago," stated Dean Butler in theinvitatio nextended to all Universitycollege students. "I hope that every­one, including members of the fac­ulty, will attend." Price Fi.,.. c..ta.An exhibition of the work of the in­dustrial department of the nationalY. M. C. A. is on display in the Ellisassembly room this week. The dis­play consists of a number of picturesand charts showing the way in whichthe association aids the immigrantfrom the time he arrives until he be­comes a citizen. The exhibition is op­en to the public.Will Select Six Speakers TomorrowNight To Represent University­Candidates Are Pick Of U ndergrad­uate And Professiorial Students. Captives in Europe Want Books,Musical Instruments, Tobac-Two formal debates will be held in ....the final tryouts for the Varsity de­bating teams tomorrow night at 7:30in the Harper assembly room. CoachMoulton will announce t�e list ofjudges tomorrow.Twelve men will compete in thefinals. They represent the pick of theundergraduate and professional stu­dents who participated in .the pre­liminaries three weeks ago. Six can­didates were selected from each loton the basis of individua-l ability todevelop and detiv'er a point .The successful speakers Were di­vided . by lot into groups for the fin­als. In the first debate, Hoyt Hud­son, Edwin '\Veisl .bid Gaylord Ram­say will maintain the affirmativeagainst JC:hn Seerley, B�njatrlin Jaffeand Howard HUt. Morton Weiss, Ar­thur Peterson and Joseph Hirsch wilt'hoe the affirmatives against Harry, Cohn, Rufus Spinkerman and SidneyPedott in the second contest.Change Time Lluiits.The qi1estion at issue in the try-­outs is "Resolved, That the FederalGo�ernme!lt 'Shoulct-L-evy 'a Progres..;'sive Inheritance Tax, Granted T·hatSuch a Tax Would Be Constitution­at"' Eight minutes- will be ailottedfor construction and four for rebut­.tal, as opposed to five and three min­ute speeches In the initial trYouts.Six �rators will be chosen tomor­.row night on the basis of teamwork'as members of the Varsity debatingsquad. They will represent the Uni­Iversity in its 1916-17 contests. co and Chocolate.COMMITTEES :MEET TODAYPatterson Is Made Chairman Of TheFraternity Committee-Dr. Good­speed Speaks On Movement.The greatest need of the prisonersis luxuries, was the statement made byAssistant Prof. Samuel N. Harper, atthe women's mass meeting held yes­terday in Leagu� room in Ida Noyesfor the purpose of raising money forthe Y. M. <:. A. prisoner-of-war fund."They want books, musical instru­ments, tobacco, chocolate, anything tobreak the monotony of the lUe they·lead," declared Mr. Harper, Thereare five and one-half million of thesemen. The governments in whose ter­rItory they are interned, provide' onlywhat is required by international iaw.-" ' IThe men are fed, i� is true but theyare barely fed. Most of t'hem arehungty all the time.Ai21erican8 MUst Do Work.. "Philanthropic ��cieties of the bel­Iigerent nations proffered -re�ef. buttheir governments did not want anyof the countrY's wealth �nt in thisway. If aid was to be given at aUthe neutral countries must IPve it. It'is .Hle�efore, aln\ost' purety an Ameri­can work.dIn making an appeal 'for funds in.America, the Y. M� C. A., concludedto go first to the students. Y. M. c..' , ...A. workers are in so many Americancolleges that they felt sore of a quickresponse, Many of the prisoners arestudents, Books are among the thingsthey need. These facts, it was thoughtwould induce contributions from col­Ieg;ans.nIDr. Edgar ]. Goodspeed, chairmanof the general University committee,aiso spoke on the prisoner-of-Warmovement yesterday morning at Sen­ior coilege chapel assembly. He de­scribed, as Mr. Harper did, the dutiesof the secretaries who represent theY. :M. C. A. in the prison camps.Committees Report Today.All University committees engage�in the campaign will meet to reporton what ther have accomplished to­day at 4:30 in Ellis. The fraternitycommittee, which was announced yes�terday, inc:ludes Buell Patterson,c'hairman; John Nuveen, TheodoreCurtis, Van Me�r Alnes, Raymer Tif­fany, Charles Borden, Thomas Gen­tles, Milton Frank, Kurt Schamau,Wrisley Oleson, Milton Coulter, Ar­nold Uhlhorn, Charles Breasted,Goodell Crawford. Barry Cooper,Samuel Bass and Leo Giles.Ukalele elcb to Perform.The Ukalela e 'ub will give twcbenefit performances for the HydePark center today' at 2 :30 and 4 atHarper theater, Fifty-third and Har­per.COACJi WHfi'F.;S SQUADTO MEEi' ALUMNI TEAM1-Coach White's aqUatic sqaad willhave their firSt 'taste of competitionNov. 22, when they meet an, alumniteam composed of .l6rmer 'Maroonstars. Pavlicek, captain of last'Jeai'steam, and holder of the intereollegiaterecord for the 150-yard back' stroke, .wiil represent the alumni ii1 thisevent. Redmon, who holds the inter':'collegiate record in the plunge, aswell as the Conference·title, will wonin this event for the graduates.Shirley, captain' of last year's wa­ter basketball squad, and member ofthe Chicago Athletic association, willbe entered in the 200-yard breaststroke against Bowers and Vacin, ofthe present Maroon squad. RayWhite and Millen will swim thedashes for the alumni.The Varsity will be represented byCaptain Meine, Clark, Earle, Bower�Collins, Crawford, Carlson, and Har­per. Captain Meine, Clark, Earle andCrawford will fo'Otn the relay team.Earle and Crawford will compete inthe 40-yard dash and the IOO-yardswim, with Bowers and Vac:in, thefonner Illinois Athletic: star, in the200-yard breast stroke. CoIlins andEarle will negotiate the 220-yardswim for the Varsity. The meet willnot be open to the public. SHOW WORK OF Y. M. C. A.IN AIDING IMMIGRANTS1'1[8 DAILY IIABOOM, THURSD,AY, NOVEMBER 16, 1916.litt DaUy _arDon lege."Who will put the arsenic in the cof­fee of the "purposeful organization"of Its!.. Official Student Ntnnpaper of theUninraitJ of CUcaco.'I°1IPubliahed morninga, except Sundayud Konday, during the Autuinn,Winter and Spring quarten, by TheDaily Maroon staff. QUARTET AND UKALELENUMBERS TO BE GIVENSpecial Features Promised �or Con­cert Nov. 2�To Be FollowedBy A Dance.EDITORIAL STAFF... R. 8WUMD M ... cbtC Editor£. A.. Ba .. _.New. Editor.. .. Me.... ...Athletica EditorC. C. Greea.__. Nipt Editor.. 8. BgeJaDell __nay EdIto�'Y. L EdwardMa.._.Woll1en'. Editor.. OM- Aaat. Newa Editorw. S. BeDder ... .Allst. Athletica Editor.. A. Mahuria..Aaet. Women'a EditorBUSINESS· STAFF1'. C. Maxwell Bnainea llauCet'D. D. Bell. .._ .. _ . ..AMt. Bus. Maacet" A quartet of singers, regular gleeclub numbers, and a special ukalelenumber will be included in the pro­gram 'presented by the men's gleeclub at the joint concert with theUniversity of Minnesota glee club tobe held Friday, Nov. 24 at 8 in Bart­lett Gymnasium. The concert willbe followed by a dance, tickets forwhich can be obtained from membersof the glee club now for fifty cents.The University of Minnesota sing­ers have promised several special at­tractions in addition to their regularnumbers. All arrangements are beinghandled by the Chicago organizationand support by the students has beenurged by Berry Cooper, manager ofthe glee club, who said yesterday:"We ought to give this' concert anddance nearly as much support as wegive the Minnesota game, because ofthe expense and the trouble to whichthe members of the visiting club have,.. t8n4 .. MeO.4�1 .. mall at tbe Chl­... PMtotnee. Cl*aco. 1l11nola. llareb 11.110ft under Art of llareb I. unl.81lhKriptl_ Bat.-.-7 Carrf.r .. f2.:w. a year: S1 • quarter._ JIalI. • y-.r; fUI5 • qllartM'.8JterfaI Room ••••••••••••••••••.•• _lttI 12Telepboae )(1"87 IDO. Loeal lCIIZ....._ Otrlee •••••••••••••••••••• 1I:Ut. 14'1'WepbH. Blaekftooe 2M1.�2.7THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1916.MARGAREl' STILWELL, '19.The unexpected death of MargaretStilwell brings a note of keenest sor­row to her fellow students, and espe­eially to her classmates, who havebeen shocked by the sudden loss of oneof their most likable, and at the sametime, most prominent women. Forone who had spent but one year atthe University, Margaret Stilwell haddone much for her Alma Mater. Shehad countless friends, and countlessachievements to her credit. Her lov­able ·nature and open-heartedness willlong remain in the memories of thosewho knew her. put themselves."300 ATTEND DINNERGIVEN TO FOOTBALLTEAM BY ALUMNICoach Stagg, Dean Linn, DonaldRichberg, '01, Ralph Hamill, 99, and'Pat Page spoke at the football din­ner given by the Alumni club lastnight at the University club. 300 werepresent. Coach Stagg was elected anhonorary life member of. the club.Moving pictures of the Quarter-Cen­tennial celebration were exhibited.THAT ''PURPOSEFUL" ORGANI­ZATION.We quote from the Freshman sheet,"The Green Cap," which appearedyesterday: "The Three QuartersClub is an organization with a pur­pose." That at its founding it hada well-defined and justifiable purposewe know. And we are equally cer­tain that now the "purpose" forwhich the club was founded has ceasedto exist, and that in performing as itdoes the club is only-to speak some­what bluntly, making a fool of itself, without achieving any end.'Webster tells us that purpose is"that which one sets before himselfas an object to be attained; the endor aim to be kept in view in a plan,measure, exertion, or operation; de­sign or intention." Now if the pur­pose of the club-they do hedge andstutter when asked what their pur­pose is-is to make court fools outof the Frosh and to furnish amuse­ment for the campus, why then, per­haps, they attain their end. And thatis all their "end" seems to be, thoughthey do argue that it is somethinghigher, something nobler than that.There's the point! If there is ahigher, nobler purnoM "., +he ThreeQuarteTS Club why in heavens namedon't they publish it so as to furnisbsome sort of an excuse for the gym­nastics the Chaplinized Frosh are putthrough on the campus?One may only judge by what hesees, and judgments are certain toc�ome swiftly and wit ha punch and asting behind them after a vrewmg ofsuch an asinine exhibition as that pre­sented by the capers of the ThreeQuarters Club.The purposeful organization of"Its" (a good word that "Its") hasno justifiable purpose. It has no placeon the campus. It should be relegat­ed to the junk pile, where lie theskeletons of. "Tie-him-to-a-railroad­trestle," "Slam-him-until-he-has-no­Freshman-egotism," and "Otherwise­initiate - him - until-he - hates-his-col- GALE AND BLACKWOODADDRESS PHYSICS CLUBProf. H. G. Gale and Oswald Black- ,wood, of the Physics department, willspeak at a meeting of the Physics.club today at 4:30 in Ryerson 32.Prof. Gale's subject will be "TheStructure of Broadened SpectralLines". Mr. Blackwood will speak on"Modifications of Nitrogen Produc­ed by the Electric Discharge."Phi Sigma Gives Party.Phi Sigma, the undergraduate Clas­sical club, will give a party tomorrowat 8 in Classics 21, to which all stu­dents in the Latin and Greek depart­ments have been invited.NEWS OF THE COLLEGES.A �tudent at the University of�Kansas was elected county attorneyin the' recent elections.#. t. The faculty of the University ofMinnesota has adopted the practice' ofinviting students to lunch at the Cam­pus club, an orpanization of the pro­fessors,t'·�1..iI!iIA collection taken at the Dart­mouth-Pennsylvania game Saturdaytotalled $900, which will be dividedbetween the two schools fOT the Pris­on Camp fund.rh, Purdue university will have to do-vithout movies if the students do notrefrain from carrying off the litho­graphs for room decorations, accord­ing to the manager of the only five­cent show in town.Women's Council Meets.The Women's Administrative coun­cil will meet toc)ly at 4:30 in IdaNoyes hall. Rather Hard on Jim."James Nicdy made his 'first ap­pearance after his eleetion at a din­ner. Mr. Nicely refused to speak, soa good time was had by all.-TheG. C .Boy! Page Me a Ticket to Hist E4bMr .. Scott (speakmg of ancestraltraits)-"I cim see good stock in thisroom." Bunker's neck immediatelysprang out of joint.Visitor (upon viewing the impendingPhi U castle )-"Gracious! A newbuilding for the taXidermy depart­ment."We Bid-'-' _"Sale of modern works of art. Ap­ply 6127 Elliss Ave."We quote from and comment on theFrosh literashoor which reached ourdesk yesterday:"-and, in binding together thecandidates in a new friendship--"With dis'ipnns and ropes, may./Weask?The write-up of the Reception atIda Noyes was, oh, so unified, eoherentand emphatic! Only the caustic B.a H. P. H. S. please read the G. C.­add that the writer omitted- to . endwith: "And a good time was bad byall?" .But they threw that g. t. w. h. b. a.stuff in many another article.Anyone who doubts the existenee of'a H. P. H. S. please read the.G. C.­Adv.Again may we ask: Who read proofon the G. C.? "The same name, butspelled as we see fit whenever we useit" seems to be the editorial policy ofthe sheet.And, with pencil sharpened to awaitthe next outburst of the liter'y Frosh,we Will herewith layoff the G. a­But read the editorial in the columnto your left!. The Erudite Faculty.Mr. Robertson in Eng. 41: "Howmany here have ever been in an in­sane asylum?" My dear, you should-have seen the hands go up IWe Ap�LBe genercus to the Whistle writer,Giggle when he wheezes;He only does it to annoy.Because he knows it teases."By thy rivers gently flowing, mi­nois, TIlinois.". Rivers of blood next Saturdayeve­ning, perhaps.Let's give 't a go to Urbana.You can study on the train.Don't be a piker.Famous Last-Lines 2."And a good time was had by all."Bart.French Club �Ieets Today.Mlle. Berthe des Combes Favardwill speak at the meeting of theFrench club today at 4 in the libraryof Ida Noyes hall. Miss DorothyHackett will sing French songs.Hold Chapel Today.Chapel for the college ·of Com­merce and Administration and thecollege of. Education will be held to­day at 10:15 in Mandel.Freshman Committee Meets.The Freshman social committeewill meet Friday morning at 10:15in Cobb 12A. KEEP1N' cool under fireC shows a good soldier-an'good tobacco. �� VELVET'S smoothness � . � ',(I'-and coolness-is large- .Iy the result of its two 'years· Natural Ageing.[be, - - u .u. u,rr-- _,_��..'!,=,t_ . _ _:::jc!]• .,-1I• I ==i 'I.\, .II belrecPeBI:T.Jo1lrflDaShESJ.{IT�theGrlIyac1altth.ea'atiex:ofsil:th�tiv'H4You Young Men-You want the newest and best infootwear. You insist on shoes that fit,because you realize that shoes that fit look agreat deal better and wear a-great deal longer.We know that you'll like, WALK-OVERSHOES, because they have that get-there stylein addition to their old-fashioned qualitv-«they make good that come-in-again idea,The "Ashmont" ModelThe latest effect in an English"Type" last having a long vampand slight outside swing and lowflat heel. A high grade shoethat will appeal to you who aremost particular about correctand refined foot $ 8 0 0wear fashions. • wrnoatehawrlyTIlwith:th4gr:linuteonmehi!.. ·th�I •meevirra I leII) er"See Our Windows"Walk-Over Shoe Store.' it Walk - Over Shoes for the 4,'\College "Lad " and "Lassie"131 South State Street �ij :�J m:11 by�, � (hean••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Will . Hold Open House.... , ... , ..... , , , , , , ... , , . , .•Every_thing. OptIcal10% Discount to StudentsS. FEINSTEIN, Opt. D.'RIllstered Optometrist, 918 E. 55th St.liar IlII1eside A.e. " Hrde Palll 8372.. , ,.Hitchcock hall will hold an inform ..al dance and open house after theMlnnesota football game, Nov. 25, at8:30. • ��. rnrER· FmI1llJRy.I- ro·Tl£· mTIDfH:.[f.R.lffiI-r �mJmJ·fN)· Fm'r.j. .;r :fIE .1tJIRVEY.1IRDE!iTRJI5.-iE.g]]·l. Y'Iirn. BHlLDINl· OBCAGO·lwm­tTElEPHONE:· HmRI� ·1141· • •• -5••••••••• I I_' I I •• I' .m , ea· ·5anorFeI ,hiSociology Club Meets Today .Assistant Prof. E. W. Burgess, ofthe Sociology department, will_ speakat a meeting of the Sociology clubtoday at 7 :45 in Classics 21. His sub­ject will be "The First Steps in Com­munity Restoration."International Club Meets.Wily Not Play with t ••SPALDINGIntercollegiateFoot Ball No. J -5 ?Tbia Is the baD UAd In nery bl�eol1ep game., becauae it ia the be.tball newed Il'Om eTV1 atandpoiDt.Oar �oot baD line fa complete III�ng needed for the p1aye1".�Write 1'01' .A CataJoneA. G. Spalding & Bros.• L Wabuh Aft. Odcal'm.Now forF�otBallMiss Chi Chi Wana will speak on"The Position of Women in China" ata meeting of the International club to Ibe held today at 4 :30 in Parlor A ofIda Noyes hall.Advertise in The Daily MaroonChess Club Meets Today.The Chess club will hold a meetingtoday at 3 :30 on the third floor of theReynolds club, at which plans for atournament will be discussed and thesecretary's report of challenges fromother chess clubs will be read.Spanish Club To Meet.The Spanish club will hold itsweekly meeting Monday at 4 in IdaNoyes. Members have been asked tobring two simple sentences in Span­ish or a vocabulary of ten worde.- JI'BlI DAILY IIAItOON, THURSDAY, NOVE�ER 16, 1916.A Drama For Matinee PatronsBy CHARLES STERNlacks polish. "T. J ." has managed tosecure control of the railway of whichShirley's father is the nominal head.So that her father may not go downin humiliation and defeat, Shirley at­tempts the arduous task of r��ningcontrol of the road. This she doesby cleverly inveigling "T. J." intogiving her the title of a book on rail­way problems, and also-although itsounds too ingenious, too Machiavel­lian to obtain full credence--the defin­ition of the word "proxy." Armedwith her book and her definition, Shir-.Tey, in the course of nine days, (seethe program: Act II. Egerton Kaye'sLibrary-Nine days pass) scrapes to­gether the 700,000 shares needed. 'But wait; you do not by any meansknow all: Shirley's position has beenmade very trying all along, becauseof the Jact', that in the first act sheconceived a wondrous passion forJohn Rawson, "T. J.:s" right handman. In the last, act, Shirley, having'subdued the. wild spirjt of Mr. Raw­son. lures him to "an untenanted cot­tage." Here, following another of theconventions of contemporary Amen­can drama, which is that two peoplein love are as obtuse as dummies, theauthor has Shirley and Mr. Rawsondiscourse amorously with one anoth­er in the third person. As half-pasteleven draws near, the discourse iscouched.In the sec�nd person, and thecurtain is rung down.To Miss Ferguson falls the ungrate­ful task of vivifying Mr; Footner'sheroine: She has chosen to do this ,byadopting a hard, metallic method, aneternally smiling face, and a strainedand thrQaty diction which is a hy­brid composed of the mannerisms ofMaude Adams and Ethel Barrymore.The role' defeats Miss Ferguson. Itwould defeat anyone. N evertheless,the young star is extremely good tolook at, and if it is Dot worth payingtwo dollars to see "Shirley Kaye", itis to see Elsie Ferguson.The rest of the, cast struggle man:­fully to reailze :Mr. Bootner's cari­catures: Mr, Lee Baker plays an un­tamed westerner with a fondness forMEN and WOl'.fEN. Like "T. J:','Mr. Baker admits that be is "rough","common," "ordinary," and "imper­fect,"---all this to the tune of $40,000-per ann':lm as railway head. Mr. Ba­ker is, I think, a little like Mr. Bush­man, whom I have never seen.William Holden plays "T. L" withmuch effectiveness, although he is in­clined to lay it on somew'hat thicklyand Mrs. Jacques Martin mave muchof a tiny comedy bit. The others areadequate. The settings which werepaid for out of the capacious purseof Messrs. Klaw and Erlanger, areelaborate and expensive.We are doing the Settlement daqce programs andcan do yours. Try us. 'Shirley Kaye-A comedy by Hul­bert Footner, presented under the di­rection of Klaw and Erlanger, by ElsieFerguson and her company at theBlackstone theater. The cast:T. J. Magen William HoldenJohn Rawson Lee BakerMrs. Magen Mrs. Jacques MartinDaisy Magen •.......... Kitty BrownShirley Kaye Elsie FergusonEgerton Kaye George Backuslire. Bayliss .....•... Eleanor GordonThe Earl of Rosselvin : .................... Ronald ByramThat Mr. Hulbert Footner, the au­thor of Elsie Ferguson's new play, is adramaturgic tyro becomes most sharp­ly evident in the second of the fouracts which compose "Shirley Kaye;"although, in fairness, it must be addedthat the remaining acts afford amplecata to the same effect. Mr. Footnerwrites with an almost enviable ig­norance of what constitutes "the­ater." In his second act, which Ihave little doubt is the longest everwritten, he discovers that he has hard­ly got his story started in the first.This defect he proceeds to remedywith 50 excessive a zeal that whenthat second act is over, the rest ofthe play becomes superfluous; that is,granting you have not already out­lined the course of action twenty min­utes after the curtain rises-in whichcase you will probably find the sec­,- ond act superfluous, too.Mr. Footner's choice of the dram­atic form' to embody his material Isexplicable, I think, only on the ground_, of fame, not of fortune. It is pos­;:. sible, of course, that I am wrong, and,that "Shirley Kaye" will have as lucra-tive a career as "Peg 0' My Heart".)0 'However. had Mr. Footner come tome for counsel.: I should have urgedhim to turn his talents ttl novels ofl ,the best-seller brand, �nd also tomoving picture scenarios such, a,everybody writes. His leisurely andirritatingly discursive method wouldlend itself admirably to the best-sell-nt,ar,Rle�IIhlPw)erect i() f'I• III er genre. His eye for character Is" '.. strikingly similar to that of the seen­.i arlo writers, and his ear for dialogue1 may be described somewhat indirectlyl-l by these speeches culled-literally: I� ( nope-from the play: "So it seems Iam ruined," and "You mustn't be an­'; .' gry with him, father; he has had no. early advantages."Like so many of our native dramas,, ·Shirley Kaye" is based on the pleas-ant convention that a young and pam­! pered society girl can, when properlyI 'I aroused, become a match for all the,, railway magnates in the country. Inorder to, "arouse" his heroine, Mr.Footner postulates one ''T. J.", an. �"iDlPerfect" man as the author basI . him confess-meaning by this that he�IeI,l.....( ,•UIS·i �:J.NE--... .-•......:......IlogIents• D.5th St.rl8312•••••for�allwith till.liNG�giateD. J-S?ary bf�ile beIrtdpolDt..1ete III11ayeJ'.�Ierose�1Ot Ia. Colonial' PressPrinters; Publishers, Engravers1510 East 56th StreetNeal' Harpel' AyenueTen minutes walk from CampusWE PRiNT iN FOREIGN LANGUAGES Phone Midway 864MEN'S FURNISHINGSHate, Caps and NeckwearJAS. E. COWHEY1001-1003 E. 55th St.S. E. Cor. Ellis ATe.BILLIARD HALLCigarettes and CigarsMaroon Advertise in the Daily Maroon Junior CommiUee Meets.The Junior Social committee win.meet tomorrow at 10:15 in Cobb 12A.AHERN BEAUTY SHOP._'1425 E. 60th St. Phone Mid. 1182Scalp Treatment a SpecialtyShampooing. 50 and 75c; Manicur·ing; 35c; Facial llassage, 50 & 7Sc• DISTRUST EDUCATORSSA:VS MISS McDOWELLSuccess Of Settlement Movement De­pends Upon The Residents-SocialCenter Should Never Be Used AsA Mission.Philanthropists, social workers andeducators who go into industrial com­munities for the first time to engagein social work are regarded with asort of distrust by the people withwhom they are going to live, accord­ing to Miss Mary E. McDowell, HeadResident of the University of Chi­cago settlement, who spoke on "TheSocial Settlement" before a publicmeeting held under the auspices ofthe Philanthropic Service division ofthe school of Commerce and Admin­istration, yesterday at 4:30 in the Har­per assembly room,"When people of culture, education,and high social standing go tolive in poor industrial neighborhoodsthey are thought to be faddists. Theymust prove by the hardest kind otendeavors that they are truly in earn­es-t. When they finally establishthemselves in the hearts of the people. of the community, then they may besure that they are no longer regardedas experimenters in social service.Must Live In Settlements."The success of the movement de­pends absolutely upon the residents.or the people who go to live in tliesettlement, and consecrate their livesto the work. The people who reallyare heart and soul in the settlementwork are those who go there with nointention of getting notoriety or largefinancial' remuneration. Some inex­plicable force seems to attract socialsettlement enthusiasts. The resi­dents come to the settlement throughan impulse. They must be interest-­ed in human problems, and then theyare ready to become real social work:'ers,"The SOCial settlement is not a mis­sion, and should not be under anycircumstances used as one. When.­ever attempts have been made to usethe settlement as a revival center, ora center for conversions. bad effe�tson the whole scope of the settlementwork have resulted. Catholics, Jews,Protestants and Agnostics are all inthe settlement work for a great pur­pose, and that purpose is the generaluplift of the community in which theywork.. Is A Democratic Effort."The social center is an effort to­wards democracy. It is the common,meeting ground for all classes. Richand poor have something in commonat the social settlement and wheneverpeople have anything in common, itusually is a stronger bond betweenthem than the things on which theydiffer. When the social settlementworker and the pf>or can meet oncommon ground, they, are both' en­abled better to solve the problemsconfronting their community. Merefunds and endowments do little goodto the poor themselves. It, is onlyby actual sympathetic contact with the'people who are to be helped that theproblems of our great cities can bein any way solved."Robertson to Speak.Prof. C. H. Robertson, who has re­cently returned from China, will ad­dress a class on Missionary Apolo­getics today at 7 in Ellis assemblyroom.German Club to Meet.All students of German have beeninvited to the meeting of the Germanclub tomorrow at 4:45 in Lexington14. Prof. Martin Schutze, of the Ger­man department, will speak. Conver­sation classes will meet at 4 in Lex­ington 4 and 5. A Sensible Cigarette delivers COMFORT. If you. think of Fatimas asbeing in a class by them­selves, it must be due to oneand only one reason-Fatima! actually deliver aseroice that no other ciga­rette can give. 'If you are smoking Fatimas,you have discovered this. Youhave found that their delicatelybalanced Turkish blend is com­fortable. That is why Fatimasleave you feeling fine and fit even after an unusually long-smokingday. Surely- a comfortable smokemust he a sensible smoke.�.�a.'FATI� Sensible Qiqaret:te_ ';., ,.' J• 1 .... • • •., • '.� � •GREATEST BARGAINS IN HISTORY OF TYPEWRITERSUDdenrooda .. to .,OBTen ,. to •L. C. a_til ft tD 40�ctc- 11.10 to IISmlth-PreJDl .. -11.10.. 41and othu mH. ttl aDd up. ..pert �c and nbllildiq.- BY­fIr7_ maehiD. In perfect cozMtltioaand paranteed, two �, w...u to Kadata -,eY7 pa�ta.Write for our liberal flee frial af­fer and cut-rate pziceLAll Makes Typewriter Co., 162 R. Dearborn St., Phone Cent. 8035What You Give for Any Present Shows Your TasteWhy not give a box of. Genuine Old Fashioned Candy, Pure, Practieal and PleasingNow Exclusively on sale at 55th and University AvenueDeliveries made in all parts of the city. If its William's, its pure ! ! !PATRONIZE' OURADVERTISERSClassified Ads.EXCHANGE - INVITATION TODINNER DANCE FOR ONE TOSCORE CLUB OR REYNOLDSINFORMAL. ANSWER WI1'HINWEEK. MISS LOTTIE HAW ..KINS, GREEN HALL, U. OF C. Watch My AdvertisemeDt tNut Week TuesdayFree Pressingto SomeoneAn Absolute Se"ice- TRY ITSPECIALIST IN PLAIN SEWING.Mrs. Reynolds, 6203 BlackstoneAve. Midway 3529.WANTED-TWO YOUNG LADIESfor part time outside work. Nocanvavssing. Mrs. Freeman. 80E. Madison. Franco-Ameriean By­genic Co. FOR RENT-LARGE LIGHT DOU ..ble room, nicely forniabed, nitablefor tWo students. Moderate �6015 Kimbtrk, 1st flat.ANDPORTRAITSPRIVATE DANCING LESSONS BYappointment. Cl.... 1I0nda,. ... n­ings. 10 lessons for $5.00. LuciaHendershot, Studio 1541 E. 5'1tJaSt. Tel. H. P. 231" • menta. Best work at modemte �eea. Color work in oil our �J..t7. Lanum alid .. for aU p�Univenlt7 Studio, 1211 116 at.: .. :I'� "·1lJiIr --II�I·I' II:jli=I'ls,- T2S sTAGG pUTs SquADTHROUGH, HARDESTDRILL OF SEASONzc;- ¥: -;_ ---=�§§EEtr .. �._� -r1 -- ... �. �;'"=!���-�_�'i��r-��f �(�==s= .. _��! � ('� Ai::: .' '-( op-- c-:;::;-- - - =-_ � i!£ -::n::-;' -72���:; f.�Fj:������ :__'(.��V f I��-When you buy a �shoe you have it fitted �and you take it because �it looks wen and feelscomfortable.����I:;.!e�I�.....i:. But a careful selec ...tion of your corset ismuch more importantYou must feel corn­fortable - and yourcorset must fonn afashionable smoothbase for your gown.Jee�Back Lace Front Laceare designed with in­finite care for everytype of figure, and nat ...uralIy the best of fa":brics, boning' and othermaterials_is used in their�, for they arehigh class corsets,BUt a Redfern is notan indulgence. It is ahealthful safeguard.You wiD find it all youexpect the best corset tobe--:-comfortable, f��ano serviceable.From Three boHan UpAt' High ClassStdre.CHICAGo MAT. SAT.THE BLUE PARADISEWith Cecil Lean & Company of 100Branch Box Office in Lobby GarrickTheater Bldg. Seats also Oilsale at Lyon & Healy'sPRINCESS $1 Mat. TodayOLIvE.R. MOROSCO PerseatsEMILY STEVENSin L K. Anspacher's BrilliantComedy DramaTHE UNCHASTENEJ> WOMANWith a Typical Morosco east.RUTH HARDY STUDIODancingCLASS THURSDAY EVEWGSPrivate Lessons by A1)Point­ment.Studio: 1464 E. Fifty-fifth StreetTel. H de Park 2725...Ashby�iK..Lexicon�Ut.ARRowCOLLAR.SGO WELL wrrn BOW OR FOUR­IN-nA..''"D 15 ers, each. 6 for 90 cta.ClUETT, PEABODY {lea. INC-AClfKlItS iBiI DAD.y .'R()()l(, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1916.r lIJI1111Tl111" FIFTEEN CENTS1111I1H1l1l()!t S1, f"('\ S':C1:1:Cin Itt1111 \ 1. '\ ..THE Will you put aside your PRtCE�REJUPICE ? �Lwm you forget you've always thoughta good cigarette must cost 25 cents?Then we promise it will be a case of "love atfirst sight " when you light your first Murad-andwhen the box is finished you will buy Murads anengagement ring,We promise you a much be!ler cigarette thanmany of the 25 Cent brands you haye been smoking.We promise you one of the world's perfectpleasures-; th� taste bf puRE 'Turkish tobaccos, 17varieties of which are used 41 making MURADS.ITURKISHCIGARETTEI t� , tI 1I,I,-, ;, ",_', .' .Murau ,shoUld be Judg�bOt by � price but bytheir reaI worlli. i \•.brs o{the HiS""!!!!!!!!Tarle; ah and, �pti .. -;C;prette. ;12 the W_M..1"_I, ��FfmSHMEN TO SELEcTdtmEN cAP dFPicERsTOnXy iN ELLIS 15Fifteen Out of Forty-Five Candidate=­will Be Cbosen-Start WorkImmediatd)'. �tIfI'llI; \!'I �, II'ably outPlayed in this department andMr. Stagg has Norgren and Brelos,two men as good as any Zuppke canPQt in the field, to fall back upon. If'Captain Ja�kson will put up the gamehe is capable of, there is little reasonto fear an Illini attack on his Side.McPherson, the other tackle, has beena whale on defense, arid with properco-operation from hiS ,guard and end,things should be pretty even on the'left side of the line. Bolidzinski wiltlikely start at one guard and indica­tions point to Fleugal's appearance inthe other position. Man for man, theMaroon line is equal, and in the casesof Captain Jackson, Fisher and Hig­gins, better than their downstate ri­vals. It will not be a case oi indi­vidual fighting winning the game, buta contest in which team play and ag­gressiveness will bring home a vic­tory. A pen to write smoothlyand legibly must suit thepeculiarities of yourhand.There is such a ConiU,.point. And it's readyto write without any"breaking in"-unlike a steel pen. And a ConJdlnpoint never wears out.It lasts for all time.Fills in 4 seconds-can'tblot or leak. At aU sta­tioners, druggists andjewelers from $2.50 up.Students everywhere useand recommend them.Fifteen of the forty-five freshmenti'ying out wiil be chosen today forpositions on the staff of the GreenCap, ihe first copy of which appearedyesterday. The franchise will be ex­tended to aD nitmbers of Green CapcoU;mlttees. They wiD cast theirballot. at 1 :30 in th� offices of thepaper iii Ellis.Election of the following of-ficers Win be made at the meet­mg: gerierai manager, Editor- in-­chief; managers of the business, ad­verfising, circulation, and collectiondepartments; associate editors, andeditors of the women's, sporting, per­sonal, and art departments.Candidates for. the staff positionsare: May Andrews, Constance Bross,Irwin May, Eleanor BUTge�, J3.Y1Chappell, Frank Madden. JosephineGamble, Francis Henderson, Geral­dine Herzog, Ruth Huey, June King,Doris Marlin, Estelle Mayer, NormanMeir, R. D. Montgomery, LawrenceMoorman, James Nicely, EugeneRouse, Elizabeth Shutter,' HaroldStansbury, Frank Priebe, Ralph Ep­stein, Jasper King, Albert Stowe, CarlSchutz, Floyd Efferding, KennethKemp, Vlarren Wilson and HenryB!!5h.NEIGHBORHOOD CLUBTO DANCE TOMORROW E'Oef"J . Contlln U llUQr'antftd 10 awl. and IIU e�1y tufOCI ".".1 a � .tPtould-lt clth6 aoe» thl.t or )'OU wItI be,.".,.,..Md a MCD IHm orJOUrmon�refunde4 wlthoutque�don. 'llNnr arw no "U .. ·�about It-YOU are tIN iudllft.THE CONKLIN PEN MFG. CO., TOLEDO, O.The Neighborhood club will give adance for new members tomorrow at3:30 in the Ida Noyes assembly room.Ruth Dietrich and Irene Schrickerwill furnish the music. Refreshmentswill be served in the sun parlor. Theaffair will be for members and pros­pective members only.•