r... "atVoL xv. 'No. 122. '7' ",�,-.... r"" ��� ��;�:"'I :-:'��.'.,' ..... ������� ::(•aroonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1917.A CAPPELLA CHOIR TOGIVE CONCERT TONIGHT Price '5 CeaU1� ).OUTUNES PLANS FORWORK OF UNIVERSITYWOMEN IN WORLD W AI Singers From Northwestern Will Pre­sen,t Program Under Direction ofPeter C. Lutkin....,.Is Second ofSpring Concert Series.. . Dean Talbot Presents ProposalsOf National Defense AndPreservation .A!t Meeting. The A Capella choir of Northwest­ern university directed by Peter C.Lutkin, will give its annual concertof part-songs today at 4:15 in Mandelhall. This is the second of the seriesof three Spring concerts given underthe auspices of the Musical club ofthe University choirs.The first concert was given lastTuesday night by the Musical Art so­ciety of Chicago, and the final onewill be presented by the combinedchoirs of the University, assisted bythe Chicago Lyric club, April 24 at8:15 in Mandel.Sell Tickets in Cobb.Reserved seats are priced at fiftycents. Tickets are now on sale atthe Infonnation office in Cobb, andafter today may 'be obtained in Mr.Robert Stevens' studio in Mitehelltower.The first part of the program fortoday will be made up of sacred mu­sic and the second part will be pure­ly secular. Mr. Miles Dreskell willotTer two violin solos. The music ofthe choir is unaccompanied. Thecomplete program follows:Part I. Sacred MusicUniversity Hymn, Quaecumque suntVera 'Born Today SWeelinck'(1562-16!1)Gloria Patri _ _ Pa:lestrmaAdoramus : - Pa1estrina(1524-1594)Gloria in Exce1sis ._ ...•...... .PalestrinaSanctus __ _ .PaiestrinaViolin Solo, Romanza,. Opus 42................... _ .• _ .... _ .. _ ... _ .. _ ..• 'BrudlMr. Miles DreskellCherubim Song ..... _ .. _ ... TscbaikowskyQuando Corpus, from Stabat.Mater _ _ Rossini.Part IT. Secular MusieOn . Himalay ..... _ ... _ _ .. _ ... ...BantoekEarly One �ming _ .. _ .. _._................ � Engli� Folk-SongThe Blue Bird _ _ ..8tanfordThe De'i1s Awa' _ _ DeI8marterThere Was a Pig Went out toDig Laneashire Folk-SongArranged by Percy GraingerDalekarlean Dance _ .. _ .. _ ._ .•...... _ ... _ •......... SWedish· Folk-SongViolin Solo, Fantasia Capriee,Opus 11 : __ _ Vieuxt.empsMr. Miles' DreskeU -Negro .SpiritualsEvery Time I Feel the Spirit ... _.... _._.Arranged by Oarl R. DittonListeD to the Lambs ... __ .. _ ..... .Arranged by R. Nathaniel DettFORM A WAR RELIEF LEAGUECourses to Be offered to UniversityWomen in Connection with Gen-,. _." era! Movement for Preparation.Plans by which the women of theUniversity may aid in the defenseand preservation of the nation wereoutlined yesterday by Dean Talbot ata. meeting in Mandel. The proposaltinclude the improvement of physicaleondition, conservation of children andof food, assistance in promoting ¥i.temational sympathy leading to peaceand knowledge of first aid."There has been for some .time anintense feeling on the part of thewomen of the University to do some­thing for the country in this greatcrisis," said Dean Talbot. "We haveseen how women in foreign countriesrushed into things for which theywere not fitted nor .trained. Wishingto avoid such situations these planshave been carefo1ly worked out."Orpalze Relief Leape..At a· meeting held Sat1m)ay, the'WODIeIl of �e faculty, wiveS and melD­bel'8 Of the faculty, and neighbors of:the Uniftmty organized. a. War Be- -lief League, under the presidency ofJrfl'S.. Jadson. � League � openeda registration office of the Red Crossin its. otrice in ,Lexfngton. In orderto avoid da.p1featlcm, no Bed Crosswork tis iDc1uded in the proposalsmade by Dean Talbot, which are print­ed in the form of the foHowing pledge:llealizing that my country needs the)0J8} service of aD its women, both�I now aDd in times of peace, I pledge\.myself to· tile tu1aI I have mdicatedon tbfs .... ad I will UDdertake tojp'erlorm these duties as conscientious­ly 88 if I were formally � formilitary sarne..1.' I agree to make an effort to in-(Continad Oft JlGge 3).,_.,•••,�\.., WEATHER FOREC�.Raia or BIlOW with inereuiDg north­weal -wbMIa..MACLAC� TO GIVEADDRESS IN HAS�LLTHE DAILY MAROONBULLETIN.Rev. H. D. C. Maclachlan will de­liver the first of a series of addresseswomea. in the Disciples' Lectureship today� 4:35 in Ha.skell. The subject ofthe speech will be' �The Value ofPhilosophy to the ,Ministry." Mr.Maclachlan will give two more talksin the series on "The Value of Reo­Baa- , search to the ,�lirristTy" and "TheValue of Literature to the Ministry"tomorrow and Thursday at the sametime and place.Today.0IapeI, Janior eoll�10:10, Maad�DlTinity chapel, 10:10, HaskellUDiyersity of Chicago Settle.eDtLeague, 3, Quadrangle clab.Disciples' Lectureship, .& :35,kellBotanical club, 4 :35, Botany.Oaristian Sdence society, 7:45, Lex·ington 14.ROIIUUlce club, 8, Classics 20.Women's Classical club, 8, �C8.Tomorrow.Qlapel, Senior roDeges, 10:10, Man·del.Dmnity . chapel, 10 :10, HaskellMathetRatical club, 3:30, Ryel'8Oll 37.­Public·1ectIaft, A. L. Bowen, .&:SS,Harper.Disdples' Ledareship, '&:35, Has-kell." German Club to Meet.' .. The German Conversation clubwill meet Friday at 4:30 in the T'e­ception room ·of Ida Noyes. Prof.Stan Cutting, of the Gffman d�­pattment, win add·ress the club.Scientists to Meet.,�The Christian Science society willmeet today at 7 :45 in Lexington 14.I, A mass meeting at the "C" benchat 10:10 ,today will begin the activecampaign of the Y. 'M. C. A. for$15,000 for an association building tobe erected: at the mobilization campof the Chicago troops. The U nivee­sity band will play patriotic airs, thecheerleaders will lead yells, and agiant campaign clock will be set upin front of Cobb. This dial will. record, hour by hour and day byday, .!lhe progress of the workers intheir efforts to reach their goal. Any Student May Submit Play.Pesident Jud:son will speak to the Any 'member of the University isstudents, giving his verbal approba- eligible to submit a play, or .moretion for the step that the Y. M. C. A. ·than one play. The action of the playis taking. He will then Introduce must take rplace in one act and, pref­Captain Irving McCann, of the Unit- -ed States Army, who will tell of the erably, in one scene� The play mustvalue of the Y. M. C. A.'s work for not take more than forty-five minutessoldiers. Director Stagg will also in presentation. At the last meetingspeak. . of the club it was decided to electinto active membership anyone whose.play was_accepted far Spring pre­sentation.The play competition will close. May'5, and the decision will be made with­in three days. All manuscripts mustbe submitted to members of the playcommittee before May 5. They eanbe plaeed in �?C 236, Faculty ex­change. .The members of, ,the playcommittee are Jeanette Regent, DOT'­othy Fay, Sigmund Coben;-and JamesEv3ns..TO START ACTIVEY. M. C. A. CAMPAIGNAT- MASS MEETINGMusic, Cheers And Speeches In­cluded .In Session ProgramAt 10 :10 At uC" Bench.PRESIDENT JUDSON TO SPEAKCaptain Irving McCann to ExplainValue of Association's Work forAmerican Soldiers.Committee Men Meet Today •.Tthe �ittee members' of ,theJunior college division will. meet to­'day at 10 in Ellis :; to report onthe progress that they have made.This division is divided into ,two sec­tions, a Sophomore and a Freshmancommittee, The Sophomore mem­bers are: Clarence Browu, chairman;Frank. Breckinridge, Harold HaniSi:h,Alfrd MacGregor, George Otis, VanMeter Aiies, James Mason, JohnMoorman and Edgar Ross. TheF-resbman committee are: NormanMeier, chairman; Uames Nicely, Ro-'.land . Holloway, Harold Stansbury,E-dgar Reading, Grant Timmons,Warren Wilson, Royal IM'Ontgomery.and Barrett Spach,The University workers met last. night with eommitteemen from allover Chicago at a banquet at theSherman Hotel. Pesident Judson,Colonel Milton Foreman, and Dr.Funk Gunsaulus spoke to the din­ers. The first regiment band fur­Di�d the music. Beginning todaytwo members of each of tJlre Uni­versity committees witl meet with theloop workers at • daily luncheon at12:15 at the Hotel Sherman.Prof. Wilkins to Speak.The Romance club will meet to­day at 8 in Classics 20. Prof. Ernest\Vilkins, of the Romance department,will add1"ess ·the club on "A Manu­script of Boccaccio." Assistant Prof.Rudolph Altrocchi of the RomancedClpartment. will 'Speak on "Maupas­sant's Stories in College Texts."Botanical Club to Meet.The Botanical club will mee<t to­day at 4:35 in Botany 20. Associate&of. William C1"ocker, 'Of the Botany .department wilt speak on "Work ofthe Department of Agriculture."Prof. Laing to Speak.T.he Women's ·Clas.sical -club Willmeet today at 8 in.·the. Women's com­mon room of Classics. GoT'don Laingwill discuss "Lears Homer and His­tory." DRAMATIC CLUB'TO GIVEPOPULAR PLAYS MAY 25Seeks to Innovate Program For Pleas­ing Student Body-Will Hold Try­outs . For Associate MembershipNext Week.Endeavoring to change from its tra­ditional ways of production, ,the Dra­matic club has decided to ·give a shortpopular program of three one-actplays May 25 in Mandel hall in placeof the customary invitation perform­ance in the Reynolds club theater. Theplays win be original, the work ofmembers of the University. A nom­inal fee of twenty-five cents will becharged :for admission.!By this popular performance theclub will try to get in closer .touchwith the student body of the Univer­sity, and so begin a plan of pepular­ization which it has been consider­ing for a long time. In order to makethe Spring production appea Ito thestuden:ts as much as possible, themanagement has requested that onlycomedies he submitted in the playcompetition.Will Hold Tryouts.The cll1h will conduct. tryouts forassociate memOOrshlp Tuesday andWednesday, April '24 and 25, in tbeHuper assembly room. Two facultymembers will be the judges at the pm­liminary tryouts Tuesday. Contest­ants suocessfal in :the first tests win81ppe8.1" .before the member of the clubin the final tryouts Wednesday after­.noon. Those intAmding to try outha'Vle been :requested to write theirnames and the plays from which theywill give selections, on a slip of pa­per, and place it in Box 236, Facultyexchange.WILL GIVE ENGLISHSCHOLARSHIPS ,MAY 5Applicants for' the Senior collegeand Graduate scholarships in Eng­g!ish have been requested to maketheir candidacy known by saturday,April 21. Detailed information con­cerning the examination to be givenon Ma1 5, may be obtained at anytime .by applying ,to 'M1". David ·H.Stevens, departmental examiner.Club Officers Meet Today.-The officers of the Freshman wo­rmen's clubs will meet today at 1 :15in the Ida Noyes assembly hall.Delta Chi Announces Pledges.,Delta Chi announces the pledgingof Charles Overholt, of Brinkley,Ark., and Clarence Vollmer, of Alma,Wis. HUMORIST LEACOCKTO DELIVER SECONDOF MOODY LECTURESCelebrated Canadian ProfessorAnd Writer Will SpeakThursday In MandelRECEIVES TITLE AT CHICAGOIs Given Doctor's Degree at Univer­sity in 1903-;-Has Written ManyHumorous Books.stephen Leacock, who rwill deliverthe second of the William VaughnMoody lectures Thursday afternoonat 4:35 in Mandel hall, received hisdegree of doctor of Philosophy fromthe University of Chicago in 1903.Prof. Leacock will talk on "The Mu­tability of the Fonns of Literature.In ...Leacock's "What He Thinks ofHimself," he tells that he was bam.at Sannoor, Hants, England, Decem­her 30, 1889. In 1876 Leacock's par­ents migrated, to Canada and his fa­. ther took up a farm near Lake Simcoin Ontario. Mr. Leacock received hiseducation at the Upper Canada col­lege of Toronto.Is Graduate of Toronto.From :the u'pper Canada college,Leacock went to the University ofToronto and was graduated in 1891.. Mr. Leacock had spent most . of his·time on languages, ''living, dead andhalf-deadj" and found out that be was"intellectually bankrupt." He took.up sehool :teaching, and served onthe faculty of the Urpper Canada cot.lege from 1891 to 1899.In 1899 Leacock came to the Um­versity of Chicago. He had bQrrowedthe money to come, but soon afterhe- receiwd a fellowship in politi.ealeconomy. W"rlh tills fellowship andtemporary employment at ·MeGill mrl- ,versity, Toronto, he stayed at theU.nivel'Sity until tlle had received hisdegree in 1903. Since that time, Lea.­cock has belonged to the staft' of Me­Gill University, first as lecturer inpolitical science and now aa head ofthe department of Political EeoDODlJ'.Is ReDowned Writer.In addition to his reputation as aprofessor, Mr. Leacock:is noted as aaauthor, not only on- political ac:ieDcesubjects, but 88 a very clever hu­morist. Some of his best-knownbooks are: '-rhe Elements of PoliticalScience," �Essays and Literary Stu­dies," "Literary Lapses," ''NonseDSeNovels," Behind the Beyond' and cc Ar­cadian Adventures of the Idle Rich."BOWEN TO SPEAK TOMORROWWill Delinr Lecture on State Cbari­ties in Harper Assembly.Mr. A. L 'Bowen, Executive Secre­tary of the State Charities commis­sion of Illinois, will deliver a le-c­�ure on "The State in Relation toPublic and Private Oharity," ,befoTe a.public meeting to be held undu theauspices of the Philanthropic Sc�division of the college of Com�and AdministT'ation tomorrow at 4:35in Harper assembly.Mr. Bowen is an a-cknowledged qU­thority on the 'Subject of sta.te chari­ties. He has studied the problemsof ;puhlic and private charities f01" anumbe-r of years and is one of thebest infonn�d men in .the country inhis particular field. The lecture willbe the twentieth of a series of lec­tures on "Types of Social WOTk,"which are given weekly under theauspices of the Philanthropic Senieedivision of the c:ollea-e of Commerceand Administration....... ".::' .. ;,f•THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY,. APRIL 1'1, 1917.milr lailg _arnnnor .... Stad�Dt Nt'W.paper of The 111llTft'elt)"of Cbll'1lCo.Publ1sbetl morntues, except Sunday andMonday, Iturin,: tbe Aut uuru, Winter andSpring Quarters by Tbe Daily liarooncompany.Harry IR. Swanson. ·17 PresidentArtbur �o\. Baer, '18 SecretaryF. Claire llaxwell. '19 ....•..••• TreasurerEDITORIAL DEPARTlIKSTHarry R. Swanson, '17 1Ianlu:lnJ: EditorArthur .\. Baer, '18 News EditorCharles C. Greene, '19 ....••• �h:bt EditorSterling S. Bushnell, '19 Day EditorTera K. Ed,,·ard!\cu. '17 .• Woweu's EditorBUSINESS DEPAUTlIE!\"IT.F. Claire liaxwell. '19 .• Business :\lanaJ:f'r. Associate EditorsGeorge Barclay. '19. Wn(le Bender, '18Reporters.lAona Bachrneh, 'W Ruth G('nzh('r�f'r, '!!ORobert Cameron. '20 Roland Hollowa,., '20Dorothy Dorsett, m John Joseph, '20�llth F.lkenau. '18 Helen RaTltch, '20�tI Fisber, N_)(} Harold Stansbury, '2()Entered as second class man at tbe Chi·�o Postofflce, Chicago. l111nols. Mareh 13,1SKMJ, under Act of :March 3, 1873. •B,. Carrier. �.:IO a year: $1 a quarter.By Mall, $3 a year: $1.,25 a quarter.!idltortal Rooms ..••..•... " ••••••• E1lla 12Telepbone lfldway 800. Local 182Burdness Offlce ..••..... , ••••...... EllIs 14Telephone Blackstone 2:S91� •• 'PTUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1917.\ ..�( ATHLETICS SHOULD BE CON­TINUED.(From the Daily Illini.)Why all this talk of abolishing in­tercollegiate athletics? We have notheard that either West Point or An­napolis has cancelled its schedule forthe spring, although 'We do know .thatin those institutions where there is aJDinimum of military training, inter­est in athletics has been found incom­patible with interest in drill. Sinceno such condition exists at Illinois, wecan see no logical reason for cancell­ing our athl-etic arrangements.Of course we -are running the ebanceof getti�g terribly "in 'bad" with ourfriends of the East who will doubtlesscome forward with the accusation thatWe Middle West is indifferent to the.tu3tion, smug, and, as one writers� it, "like fat grubs in an apple,�jnJc they need no other prowctio�t]Jan their distance from the dan�r.1)1; to anyone who knows of the �c­�l work in military training -whIch, being done at Illinois, this accusa-, ,s '11 ..... 1'"1"'V no weight. If drill forti01l '\VJ ...__. A ��'ol'S and seniors is adopted, -we can. hat'Jlil with even greater pride to wpt'l ate doing here in the way of ac-�ll' fitting ourselves for serric�.'fh�re will be no appreciable dlffer-ce in our interest in military if ath­el'tic� are continued, We feel stJI'e. oflets :England was forced to abobsh*. t�]lletiCS because it was found th9-�f; �. i1'ta� was seriously, te�" In m 1 A� •fJJ dics.pped because of the groe9-t m-":'�t jn the inter�ity football �m�s.te 9llch condition exists at nlino1S;'So � aeenstomed to doing bot]1; we�n to on leading as nearly a normal:;jc ib this respect as we are at :pres­IV 1� still reader the max-�m of service to the govemm�t.� {Jet 115 go ahead with athletiCS un-- � for their abolition is more(t Dee"A�t than now. But let us always.-eeP in mind that duty to our co1JDtr1.ust outweigh duty to any other:u¢, and when it becomes apparent"at athletics should be abolished, let�J1.em be done away with in the kflo�l­eJge and belief that it will further mll­'tl:lrY' training and make the studentsIf Illinois hcttcr fittcr! to takc uP thc��dous tasks which must surelybe tbeirs.===================..Brownson Club to Meet.Tbe Brownson club will meet to­dlty from .. to 6 in the Ida Noyc�sllO parlors. Garrett Larkin will givea number of solo.s; Jean Gillespie willgive s�eral piano selections, and aUJcelele quartet will peTform. Re­frC9hments will he served. An Catho­lic students and their friends ;have,been invited to attend. MANY TEAMS ENTER IN�RAKE RELAY CARNIVALCoach Stagg to Take ,Mile, Two Mileand Four Mile Teams. All WithFair Chances of Victory-HoldTryouts Today.Despite war conditions, a record­breaking enery li.st for the Drake re­lay carnival is in the hands of theofficials of the Iowa institution. \Vis­cousin and Michigan are the onlymiddle western schools not entered,but their loss will be ,par,tially madeup by a great increase in the' entriesfor the college relays.In the university group, Chicago,Lllinois. Purdue, Minnesota, Kansas,Missouri, Nebraska, Notre Dame,Northwestern and several other uni­versities will ·be represented by quar­tets in either the mile, two-mile, four­mile events, or the sprint relay events.The college group will include \Va­bash, .Monmoutb, Yankton, Simpson,Coe, Corne-ll; Grinnell. So�h Da­kota State, Morningside, Penn, High­land Park, Hamline and Drake. The. Grinnell .squad with Hoyt, winnerof the I nterscholastic dashes severalyears ago, will likely repeat theirvictory in the short relay again thisyear, while Morningside appears tobe the favorite in the two-mile relay.To Take Three Teams.Coach IStagg will probably take. themile, two and four mile teams, andjudging from their performances in.the Illinois relay games, they have afair chance to take all three events.Disrnond's loss in the mile event willseriously handicap that quartet, butGreene. Feuerstein, Brinkman, Bent,and Clark have 'been making fastertime in each tryout and they shouldrun the distance under 3 :25. Thet wo-rnilg team. with Clark, Otis,Jones. Greene, Swett and ::McCosh aspossibilities make this team the bestbet for a first place. The four-mile.team will include Tenney as the an­chor man .. · Swett, Powers, Otis, Sny­der or Jones.Tryouts will be conducted todayand tomorrow and the final selec­tions probably will not be made un­til Friday. The showing of theseteams at Drake will determine theentries for the Penn garnes, A;pril 28,and it is 'likely that Coach Stagg willrun the candidates in several combin­ations before making the final selec­tions for the races at Drake.ALUMNI APPROVE OFMILITARY TRAININGMajor Bell Addresses One Hundredand Fifty-four Enthusiasts atHotel LaSalle Luncheon.One hundred and fifty-four enthus­iastic alumni met for luncheon' yes­terday noon at the Hotel LaSalle toelaborate plans for alumni training.·Wa lter Gregory, '05, presided, andMajor Ola Be'll, U. S. A., spoke tothe men.It was decided that 'Bardett gym­na:,ium and the University of Chicagowould be the anter of the alwnnitraining and not some place. in theloop, ;).s had been suggested. If Bart­lett becomes too small, the men willtrain "til in Stagg field.Major Bell told the men that .theys;lOulri get ready and organize thor­oughly. He said that it would, behctter to organize a University ofChicago battalion and preserve itsioentity as such, instead of dividingtiP 31l1')Og different organizations ofthe city.Tl:(' Chicago Alumni club, unler\\'h�)"c :ls'.1p-ices the meetin� yester­d<lY was hc'Id. will seno out a letterto every Clrlcago man living in thecity, explaining the training work.<It)(i \lr�ing cach one to enroll for it.So far there have been three nightsof training. Sixteen men were outtIl.:! hro;t night; fifty men the second,<lno (lnt' hundred men the ,third night.If the number keeps on increa.s1ng,a la rgcr place than Bartlett gym­nasium will have to be obtained, ac­corcHng to the ·men in charge of dietraining../ 1920 DEBATERS TO MEET \EV ANSTON TEAM FRIDAYNorthwestern to Have AIl'irmative ofQuestion on Junior College Move­JDeDt-Principals of' Chicago HighSchools Will be Judges.Chicaso :freshmen debaters willmeet No ,rthwestern Friday in SwiItball, Ewnston. The subject of thedebate w1ll be: "Resolved; That thehigh school course of study be ex­tended eo as to :furnish the work nowgiven in the freshman and sopho­more �ars of college." Northwest­ern will have the affirmative of thequestion.Judges for 1h� contest have not yetbeen announced. Principals of sever­al Chicago high schools have beenasked to act, but all the replies havenot been received.Team is Well Prepared.Despite various di1ficulties, theChicago teean, coached. by HomerHoyt, is well prepared. The construc­tive speeches have been earefullyworked over, and the rebuttal has al­so been prepared for some time. Thelast week has .been spent on betteringthe delivery of the three men. Coach­ing has 'been productive of good re­sults.The three members of the team are:(!eorge Mills, Ralph Goldberg andJohn Wirth. Mills was a member ofthe Waller high school team whichwon the city championship last year.Wirth and Goldberg were membersof the Omaha debating .team, whichwon the state championship. Gold­be1g participated in twenty-four de­bates, while Ibis teammate was inhalf that number.Overcome Many Obstacles ...Coach Hoyt has experienced. muchtrouble in getting a winning team to­gether. One .... of the enen chosen inthe tryouts was found to be a sopho­more, several weeks after pra.c:ticewas begun. The alternate picked tosucceed him was forced to take aweek's vacation along with Goldbergbecause of illness. By hard work thespeeches were completed in recordtime, and are no� ready for presen­tation.Chicago has defeated Northwesternfor two successive years and is outto win a third time. Members of .theNorthwestern team were present at·the Educational conference held Fri­day to listen to the discussio� by highschool .teachers. From the copious.notes taken by the Evanston men the.'debaters have deduced that the North­western team is Iaeking' in arguments.CHOOSE ELIZABETHWALKER MANAGER OF1918 CAP AND KOWNElizabeth Walker, '19, and ArnoUhlhorn, '19, were elected to the of­fice of Business Managers of the 1918Cap and Gown at a meeting yester­day. Miss Walker is the first womanever chosen for this position. She.is a member of the Mortar Bo�club. Uhlhorn is a member of theAlpha Tau Om� fraternity.Council Will Give Dance.The -W'omen's Administrative coun­c:iJl will give an informal dance nextTuesday from 4 to 6 in Ida Noyesassembly room. All women in theUniver:;ity have been invited to at­tend. James Hemphill will furnishthe ma.sic.Announce Pledge.Phi Beta Delta announces thepledging of Catherine Barrance, ofCold Wate'r, Mich.A. T: O. Announces Pledge.Alpha Tau Omega announces theptNlging of David Wallace, of Chi­cago, Itt.French Club to Meet.-Tlte French club will meet tomoT­row' from 4 to 6 in the library ofIda Noyes hall. -t;]MOUNTAIN tops can't be - nseen in a mist. An' many UC 8 "mountain 0' trouble disap- Dn pears in a cloud 0' tfoe.. nU Velvet smoke.. � s: U�'.-------------'[].i------------�IEJ·,------------·,a:l[IIThe Pictures .for PublicatioD iaCap and GoWD 117Are now finished. There will- be more and better ones' than",' during any previous year.The Special Ratesfor All University StudentsAre Still in Forc; .and the discount of 33 1-3 per 'Cent will be given on all gradesof photographs during this entire college year.DAGUERRE STUDIOThe official photographer for Cap and Gown, '17TOP FLOOR MeCLURG BUILDING218 SOUTH WABASH AVE.Phone Harrison 7684 for appointment.���'vmk\:--����QlG-frutltlUftt)t �mi�trilt!J 6b�..aD.SOII AVEIIUE COli. FOIITY·FOURTH STIIUIYIIEWYOR"Telephofte Murray Hill 8800Our representative, MR.. H. C. WALKER., will be at' theHOTEL LA SALLEonTo-day� Tomorrow and ThursdayApril lith, 18th and 19thWith Samples of Readymade OothingFurnishings; Hats and Shoesfor Spring and SummerA copy of our New Illustrated CatalogueConlaini.rg more than One Hundred Photographic Plateswill be mailed to anyone "untioningThe DAILY MAROON� BOSTON SALES - OFFICES�Tlltc.oNTcollt. BOTLaTON STlltC" NEWPORT SALES-OFFICES220 BEI.I.EYUI: AYCNUEFor the Saturday Night in AprilSHOTWELL INFORMALSUnder the Direction ofMise Emma Abbott ClarkMuSic by Cope Harvey' a Orchertra; . _. � -f w'.l , I• , .. l,� -", ..i,'J'J=o�]GgiElla:Uris1P�J..'4 ,.<4 I.,.I ,".',r:," ! .. ' E'I; : QE.... t-t liltqUIbu1.. '\ an.raJ, I .•N.• "- �",�•T"• ,,:or la.1$1.$1.MeMa•1, ... '..., .. I••• 1 .;,. GORDON-��in.1\RRO�'formfit:COLLARTOPS AND BANDS ARE CURVE CUTTO FIT TUE SHOULDERS. 2/0' 30cctl1ETT.PEABODr&'CaI#CMAKEaSKod_ers, Attention!Discriminating amateurs will a��reciate the beauty which our NEWGRAVURE (warm brown tone)gives to their work. .Send us yourDeXt 1011 aDd we'll develop, printand mail wtthin 24 hours one pho­to ot each good exposure in thisrich color, as a trial, for 20c instamps. Right reserved to finishpoor exposures in black and white.Work guaranteed. Est. 1901.LITCHFIELD KODAK SHOPLitchfield, m1",.I ••I,.:'.'EASY TO SAVEAND WORTH 8AVING.GET ONE OF OUR POCKET BANK.AND SAVE A DIME A DAV..start a aavlnp account with till. 014_tahU.bed Dation .. ' bank. The '_Y­IDp department occuptea cODveDlentquarters on the street level ef ourbutJdtDS'. The" banklnc- bours d&U7..... from 10 a. m. to 1 p. m., Satur­"ay. from' a. m. to I p. m.CORN EXCHANGENATIONAL BANKCaliital, Surplu. an" Profit.,10,000.000 •N. IW. Cor.;La SAlle aDd Adama eta.I .•�p��i�!'; THE MULTIPLEX....T". andltrJ. , • ...._ ............THE HAMMORD TYPEWRITER CO•• F la, W. MacliN_ SL CW�.LAST WEEK at the CHICAGO8th and Wabash"VERY GOOD EDDIE"Musica.l Comedy Hit of the Year$1.00 Matinee Wednesday$1.50 Matinee SaturdayMQves to the GARRICK Sunday Night IPRINCESSMatinee Thursday. $1.00Saturday, best seats, $1.50Tonight-The Parisian Pantomime"PIERROT THE PRODIGAL"The Musical Event of the Season."IlAROOM .&DB .aDf8iiMhJLft THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY,. APRIL 17� 1917.WAR EXTRA.BART JOINS S. P. C. A.SEPARATE PEACE GLIMSBulletin.As we go to press it is announcedthat the Triumphirate is calling forvolunteers. The Gas House Gang hasOl'!g8nized but needs more men.(Special to the Whistle) The per­ennial campus quiet has �een shat­tered again. Bart's declaration of warin Friday's Whistle was followed byan .immediate secret session of theTriumphirate in which. the consensusof opinion was reached that somethingmust he done about it as there hadbeen complain1B.The Personal(Special ,by wireless to Rosenwaldover the Commons) The Half SeasOver News Agency is enable by thekindness of Mr. Hearse to inform. itsreaders of the Personal of the bel­ligerent coalitions. As WIe Send theselines they are drawn up in the fol­lowing formations:THE S. P. C. A. I(Society for the Publicity of the C0-ed Appelation.)The Original Dual Entente for theSuppression of AffectionateDiminutives.Rackety Kuh\PanB. 1.. T.That RiceBart -The U. S. A. (Unique ScarletfeverAntidote) .Triumphirate.RosalindT. E. H.Ricbatd XI.It is rumored that T. E. H. maywithdraw in favor of a policy of ann­� neutrality, and Rosalind is non­committal; but Richard claims them,claims them.' .Richard's Himself Aga!n.'(Special Interview from Your Co­Respondent) :-Richard XI· admittedyour co-respondent to a session of theTriumphirate and gave him a Rich­mond and an interview. He depre­cated the opprobious epithet "PoorRichard" but excused his adversary'scolloquialism on the ground that itmay have been the fault of the com­positor. It should at all events read"Pure Richard, " said Pure Richard.Communication.We are also permitted to enclose aI copy of· a communique which readsas follows, in quotation marks:"Your correspondent of the classof 1920 is too young and inexperi­enced to know. that a communication, written in such thoroug:h1y sopho­moric tone and style deprives me ofall ground for further discussion."·ANeW' Development.Just then Hanisch' entered 'the an­techamber and was given a Camel anda safety match after depositing twoLincolns with T. E. H. as evidence ofgood faith. Your correspondent, un­used to such procedure, fainted deadaway and was revived only when PureRichard read him some of the "paleblue" wheezes which Bart objectedto, asserting that tJrere is nothing inparliamentary practice relating to theuse of poison gasses."Have you anything to say?" yourco-respondent prodded.Column Right!"No," replied our hero, "modestlyas befits one who withers amid an­cient, hoary, antiquated things deepdown under the dusty catacombs ofthe -- ,Building" (name deletedby censor for. fear it would give in­formation to the enemy of Richard'swhereabouts). "Bat we have a CoI-1I1DD to right! That alone is sure topeeve our latest opponent, as he wiD be forced to read it. And we couldwish him nothing worse.""But your· a.llies T" I butted.More Publicity."Ou poll' a.lla polu!" he Greekedsmilingly, knowing how that 'Wouldtantalize his foe. "With a Fair Co­ed and the most serious-minded high­brow on the quadrangles 'besides our­self-I .refer to T. Eo H.-we do·right and fear no man, we don'twrite and fear no woman. Also-".Defensive Ammunition.(Here Rosalind blushed charming­ly)-"those onions!"EXTRA SPECIAL. •S. Holmes and the notorious CrazyKennedy have discovered the reasonfor Bart's unparalleled defection tothe S. P. C. A. After .experiment­ing on white rats in ,the PsychologicalLaboratory they have ferreted out thecause. It seems that in Richard'scriticism of "The Late Adventure" heunwittingly gave the list of charac­ters in that playas "Bart Cormackand some others." Bart exploded be­cause the others were mentioned. Thistheory has ,been accepted by Dr. Wat­son and Ring Lardner.The Whistle will endeavor to. keepits readers posted on the movies ofthe War. Now is the time to sub­scribe for tOO Cap & Gown.RICHARD XI._ Tihank you, Richard: T: E. H.French Club to Meet.The French club will meet tomor­row at 4 in Ida Noyes.Menoiah Society to Meet.The Menorah society will meet to­morrow fr�m 7:30 to 10 in the recep­tion rooms of Ida Noyes.Entertain Off-Campus ·Women.The East Neighborhood' club willentertain off-campus women at a par­ty Thursday at 3:30 in Ida Noyes.Announce Pledge.Delta Kappa Epsilon announces thepledging of Roland Campbell of Chi­cago.OUTLINES PLANS FORWORK OF UNIVERSITYWOMEN IN WORLD .WAR(Continued from page 1) WALTER H. ECKERSALL(Fonner AU-American Quarter Back and Uni­versity of Cblicago football and track hero.)Horlick'sThe OriginalMalted MilkHE SAYS "Horlick's" is the ideal, light, sustaining lunch before ath­letic contests, and the refreshing beverage after physical or mentalexercise.He especially considers the cocoa' flavored Malted Milk TABLETSappropriate for the active man in college life and athletics, and as thedependable, convenient s�nanee for the teams when traveling."Wallie" always produced... Results count with him.He's now writing athletic articles for the Tribune.ASK HIMUSES RECOMMENDSUnderwoods $30 to $5'0Olivers •...........•.•. 25 to 4SL. C. Smith 27 to 40Remingtons 15.50 to 65Smith-Premiers 16.50 to 45GREATEST BARGAINS IN HISTORY OF TYPEWRITERSAll Makes Typewriter Co •• 162 N. Dearborn, St •• Phone Cent. 6035, ". What You Give for Ally Present Shows Your Taste:Why not give a box of .. .GenUine Old Fashioned CaDdyPure, Practieal and PleasiagNow Exclusively Oft sale at 55t1l and University AftIl ••Deliveries made In all parts of the City. If Ita WIlllam' .. Ita pure I J Ithe front" in war or ind'QStry.11. I agree, realizing that vice and. alcoholism in increasing measure ac­company war, and believing that, fu­ture generation should be given bybirth the best in health and mind thatethical living among .men can bestow,to urge that' marriage . should takeplace only among those who can show.1 that they are. free from any disease---------------which may be transmitted to futurecrease my physical strength and vigor. .generations.2.· I agree to help. some young 12. I apee to .tablish friendly re-nerson to increase his physical I lations with persons whose familiesstrength and vigor. •I came to this country. more recentlyTo Wear Economical Clothes. than mine, and in this and every pos-3. I agree to wear a costume sible way to help promote a feelingadapted to my occupation, avoiding of international sympathy.waste and display, " To Study Peace Societies.4. I agree to promote economy in 13. I agree to study the variousfood supplies by (a) the observance proposals which have been brought,of rational economy in my personal forward for the establishment of ause of food; (b) organizing �ups of. Society of Nations and Organizedwomen for the study of food economy. Common Peace and to do all in -my5. I 19ree to foster the proper use power to build a new social orderof. foods by reaming how to prepare based, not on mutual distruct andthem. selfish com}Wtition, but on confidence6. I agree to aid in increasing the and good-will, upon the spirit of ser-., .food supply by (a) personally culti- vice and co-operation.vating a plot of land; (b) helping to 14. I agree, provided my scholar­organize groups of children to plant ship and health are adequate, to reg-I gardens in unoccupied lots. ister for one of the following courses,Prevent Infant Mortality. I each to count as a half-major, and7. I agree to take an active part.. taken without Icc: Household Ad­in some organized movevment for the ministration, 30; Social Service inpreention of infant mortality. Wartime Home Economics, 50; Food8. I agree to take an active part Conservation,_ and Production Physi-in a child-welfare agency. ology, 5; First Aid..9. I agree to infonn myself � to Register For Courses.the approved methods of school nurs- Registration for these courses maying and to do all in my-power to be made with the several deans and,introduce this means of conserving the will be closed Thursday, T'he pledgehealth of dWdnm into the schools of when signed is to be returned to Deanmy community. Talbot, Box Q, Faculty exchange. Fur-10. I agree to help provide for the ther details concerning these ideasclWdren and dependent members of will be P*ecI em & tpedal balIetinthe famUy of a man or 'Woman "at board in Ida No,. _trazaee ball. and other makes $10 and up. Ex­pert repairing and rebuilding. Ev­�ry machine in perfect conditionand guaranteed two years. Wesell to students od easy payments.Write for our liberal free trial of­fer and cut-Tate ,prices.•MISS LUCIA HENDERSHOThas returned from New York witha new step for spring and summer •Class every Monday evening at8 o'clockPrivate lessons by appointment.1541 East 57th Hyde Park 2304PATRONIZE· OURAD V E R TI S E RSCloasiRed Adl.·Five cents per line. No adver­tisements for Jess than 25 cents. ADclassified advertisements, must bepaid in advance.LIEBLICH'S CAFE, 5706 ELLISATTENTION!SCIENCE STUDENTS:New, Bausch &_Lomb microscope forsale-s-reasonable.C. M. CUMMINS6021 WoodlawnCall between 7:30-9 p. m. TelephoneMidway 5721 .-Ave. Special dinner and supper;club breakfast, 15, 20 and 25 cents.To be a good officer eat at Liebelich's."fiPEWRITING OFFICERoom 2, Lexington Hall( StenographyExpert (Copying(MimeographingPrices NominalMidwa,. 800Loeal 214'''r'�" T'IBB DAILY ,MAROON, ,TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1917.lWOMEN'S COUNCIL SETSDATE OF PARENTS DAYWill Hold Exercises On 1\lay IS-PlanElaborate Program Of InspectionTours. Receptions, Athletic Events,And Speeches.�->"�:�, ...... .....� ,��\,,>�::�.,.�.r�:,'.�7.�,if;�..#.�.";.�.".I�i"�;���.�.j" The Women's Administrative Coun­cil will hold the Parent's Day exer­cises on May 18. Although all Uni­versity activities \\111 continue, theday is set apart for the parents ofUniversity students. An elaborateschedule to include tours of inspection.a reception by the Young Women'sChristian League and the YoungMen's Christian Association, athleticevents, and a program nas been ar­ranged,Special permission has been obtainedto allow the visitors to inspect thepress, the powerhouse and the la.bor­atories. The manuscript and antiquerooms, the bindery and stacks of Har­per 'will be shown. Student guides willbe furni�hed to show the visitors overthe entire campus. Arrangements foraccommodating the parents in bothHutchinson and Ida Noyes have beenmade with Miss Coburn.Hold Joint Reception.The joint reception of the Y. W. c.L. and the Y. M. C. ,A.. will be held inthe afternoon in the women's quad­rangle ·between the Law building andthe women's dormitories, Baseballgames will be played in the maingymnasium of Ida Noyes and on StaggField.Tickets will be given out for theevening entertainment, which is to :Beheld in Mandel hall. The programwill' consist of talks by PresidentJudson and Dean Talbot, a play to be.. presented by the Dramatic club, andseleclions by a quartette from theGlee clDh. After the program, an m-""formal reception will be given in theBeJllOlds club. The affair will be ineharge of Wllllam Henry whose COIIl­mittee bas not .yet been announced.The following committees far the ex­.erci8es baYe been appointed.Committees.General arrangements-Lucy Wil­liams, chaimlan, Mary Lois Brown,Harriet Curry, Arline Falkenau, Flo-1'ene8 Gorton Helen Olson, BarbaraSeDs, Eloise Smith and Dorothy White.Evening entertainment-J eannette:Regent, ehairman, Marian Glaser,Margaret Going, .Margaret Lauder,Pauline Levi, ?tJargaret Mcl>onala,Margaret Monroe, Rose Natb, EstherThayer and Helen Westcott.Publicity-Florence Kilvary, chair­man, Florence Fake, Ruth Falkenau,Luo1e Kannally, Florence Lamb, Mi­riam LilJby, Dorothy Mullen, Irene01reberg, Helen Souther and HelenaStevens.Y. M. C. L. aDd Y. :M. C. A.-Fran­ees Roberts and 9}arenee Brown, jointc:bairmeD; Dorothy Hough, DorothyDOTSett, Mildred Gordon, Ruth Mount,Julia Kritzer, Dorothy Mullen, Ger­:trude Burkhoff, June King, MargaretCook, Eleanor Cutle, ConstanceBruc:e, Florenc:e Falkenau, MarionRobinson, Priscilla Bradshaw, RuthGinsberg, Norman Hart, John Nuveen,Walter Krnpke, Artnur Hanisch, VanMeter Ames, JjOhn Qerley, FrankBreckenridge, Hobart Edmonds, Wal­ter Bowers, lohn Neff, Earl Millerand Raymond Tiffany.Papiermeister to Talk.Atfonse Papiermeister will talk on"The Various Phases of College Lifein Palestine" at the meeting of theMenorah society tomorrow night at7:30 in Ida Noyes hall. 'Miss FriedaKrause will give a piano solo.Issue English J o1l1'ftaLTh'e April number of th�' EnglishJournal was issued by the UniversityPress yesterday. SLAB WEAKNESS ISREASON FOR DEFEATOF CHICAGO BY IOWALarkin and Marum Fail to StopHeavy Hitting of Hawkeyes­Few Errors in Game.Coach Page's baseball squad gota way to a bad start in the initial game •oi the sea-on last Saturday when theyII)�t to the Hawkeyes 011 Stagg fieldby a score of 9 to 7. I t was a gameIeaturcd bv heavy hit ting by bothteams and ·poor pitching on the partof the �laroons, especially during thefirst ;).lrt of the game. Larkin. whostarted on the mound for Chicago.managed to hold on for iour inningsduring which time the Hawkeye spuundcj his var icd offer ings for atotal of eigh t runs, enough to winthe contest.Marum, after holding down a coldjob in rig ht field during Larkin'spitching debut, was called to the res­cue and succeeded in holding theIowans in fine style during the re­mainder of rhe game. As far as thefield ins went, the Maroons performedin .good shape, the only error beingcommitted by Wiedemann when hethrew low to first. Giles, at short­stop. accepted six chances without aslip in addition to meeting one ofGillis' fast ones for a sinsrle.Coach Page Needs Pitchers.•Although the Maroon machine- isfar from perfect in the field and athitting, the chief worry for CoachPage at the present tifne seems tobe in the pitching staff. Larkin, whopitched superb ball in the last game,in which ·he worked before the open­ing of the season, was clearly offform. Marum looked good while heworked out but neither of these, menare experienced twirlers and reliableto go the full route. Mulligan, a'!SOphomore, is practieally the onlyother man on the squad who has beendoing any .pitching, 'but his showingto date does not warrant Ihis use.The contest scheduled with Wis­consin next Saturday at Madison willnot be pJayedj· owing to the &ct trlratthe Cardinals have called off all ath­letics on account of the war. Thiswill give Coach Page over a week inwhich to prepare for the Purple, whoare scheduled to meet Chicago April'as on Stagg field.Methodists Are St,rong.According' to the results of theirpre-season schedule which they fin­ished without losing a game, theMethodists must be considered amongthe foremost contenders for thisyear's title. Ohio State and l11iuoisare reported as having strong teams,say nothing of the hard hittingIowans. Ohio State will meet Chi­cago here April 28.SAYS CONSCRIPTION CERTAINNaval Officer Addresses Men at Jun­ior College ChapeLOonscription for the Navy is boundto come, according to LieutenantMeade, who SPOke at the Junior col­lege chapel exercises yesterday at10:10 in Mandel. He said:"T.he Navy is 35,000 men short ofthe 86,000 it requires in order to beat full fighting strength. At presentrate of enlistment, the 'wortage willnot be made up for .four or fivemonths. 'We must ,have the mensooner than that, and conscription issure to come sooner OT' later."A man with a college education,can, after one year's service, takean examination for the rank of mid- 1.-..bipman, which carries a salary of.$1800 a year."The Navy offers an opportunityfor immediate service for your coun­try. T·here is no question as to whatyou will do after en1iMin�. as isnow the case with the army. Themen who enlist will see active ser­vice at once."Christian Scientists to Meet.The C2uistian Seienee aoeiet.,. wiDhold a meeting Tae!day at 7:46 inLexington ,1.t. ·2.5CiMtHUNDRED SOLICITORSCONTINUE CAMPAIGN Corbett.�Ii'SS Taylor told of the �enC1"al il­literacy of the people of India, par ..ticularly of nhe women. Only 7 outof 1000 women can read and oniy5 out of 1000 are Christians. Theschool at �{adras has at present 309girls. She based her final plea on theiact that Europe is unable to helpIndia and that now is the time forthe students of this country to secbeyond the limits of this continentand help students wherever they arein need. The motto of 'the campaignis "Let us give OUT .money whichbrings education; education whichbrings <l1rbtianity; Ohrlstianity which brings democracy."Two of the committee ·have beenchanged since the list of chairmenwas published in ,the Maroon. Flo­renee Fake ,is acting in the ;place ofKatherine Frost and Ruby Teas inthe place of Esther Harper.The League will hold a tea todayfor Faculty members and the Advi­sory boa-rd of the League, as wellas the committee of 100. Miss Tay­tor and Dr. Shailer Mathews are tbespeakers. The contest between the'teams will be concluded Friday noonand the winning team will be en­tertained at dianer Friday night bythe members of lite other teams.League Members to Work This Weekfor Madras Fund-Dean Ma­thews to Speak Today:The campaign to raise money tosupport .Miss Margery �fel.cher inMadras, I ndia, was started yesterdayby the committee of 100 under theleadersh ip of 10 chairmen. A tea inthe League room was addressed byMiss Helen Taylor and Miss Mary ",-r,\&•81CoIPOltilt, atterabc•," TeemethEtheiD.I!paiCUldelSit;iseda3• � .,., COilUu�----gw• \ .i.:. din':."t4(f vet., 'r.. E'�� 1} &--,",:-.,_ Y.KofDgto�•· ' " c.,.Fdenthetedprefav1IIIfCal8CT'.iB1i�'\(wmE11ileettheMe�rantenftel•. I,'1'thaithetibtlftgl