, .., ,.''",.,.'..'.J..,'.' .j,.' ..'t&'._'J.A 1". ",),.. >,....)t' • . ..,.,e· at aroon ....,.VOL. XVI. No. 79 PRICE FIVE CENTSUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WED�ESDA Y, FEBRUARY 6, 1915JACKIE TEAM DEFEATSMAROON SQUAD 38-18ON GREAT LAKES FLOORPage Sends Substitutes IntoGame Regardless of Re- IsuIt to ScorePLAY PURDUE AT LAFAYETTE,WILFRED REYNOLDS SPEAKSTODAY' ON CHILD WELFAREMr. Wilfred S. Reynolds, superin­tendent of the Dlinois Children'sHome and Aid societY, will speak to­day at 4:35 in Harper assembly on"Child Welfare in War Time." Thelecture is the eighth in the series,'Types of Social Work," given underthe auspices, of the Philanthropic Ser­VIce division of the school of Com­merce and Administration. Mr. Rey­nolds is particularly suited to-talk onthis subject, because of .his position inthe Children's Home.League Dinner TonightUnder the auspices of the Intercol­legiate comimttee of the League, adinner will be given tonight for allwomen who have entered the Univer­sity from other colleges. Miss Elea­nor Richardson, a secretary, from theNational Board of the Y.W.C.A., willspeak on 'War and World Wide Re­ligion."Dr. Willett Leads Bible ClassDr. Herbert L. Willett will lead theSenior college Bible class this after­noon in the Alumnae room of IdaNoyes hall. The discussion will be­gm promptly at 4:30. "Every student in the Universityshould be there," was the statementmade yesterday by Dean ShailerA UTHOR OF SEVERAL VOLUl\I�S Mathews, regarding the big war mass PUBLISH ACTIVITY LISTS TODAYmeeting to be held tomorrow at 4':30in Mandel hall. The meeting has beenThe first of the public lectures pro- planned by the committee on Univer- Freshman and Sophomores candi-vided for under the William Vaughn 'sity War Service, of which Dean dates for the Undergraduate councilMoody endowment will be given to- Mathews is chairman, and is for the will speak to their respective classesnight at 8:15 in Mandel by William purpose of securing the co-operation today at 10:15 in Kent. FreshmenLyon Phelps, professor of English at of the entire student body in the sale will meet in Kent Theater, and Sopho­Yale. The subject, "A Contemporary of Government Thrift stamps and mores in Kent East .English Realist Novelist," wiII deal certificates on the campus. - The elections for the Undergrad-with general literary standards and Lieut. John Naismith, who just re- uate council and for the Honor com-cr-iticism as exemplified in the work of misaion will be held Friday in Ellisturned from the front after two yearsthe novelist the speaker will choose. in the trenches, will give his impres- Assembly, from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M:Dean Lovett said yesterday: "Prof. sions of the war. He is said to be All class tickets sold must be report­Phelps is especially well 'known as aa brilliant and engaging speaker, who ed sto Florence Lamb, election 'chair-critic of the novel. His books on the will say something worth while. man, today at 4 O'clock; and since nonovel are quoted as authority and are student may vote without 'a classoften used as text books. I can only Served in A viatioil Section ticket, the election committee has re-guess as to which of the contemporary "N aismith has had a varied experi- quested that all students who expectEnglish authors of the novel Prof.' ence during. his years of service," said to vote get their tickets today befor ..Phelps wiII choose to speak on." Dean Mathews, "and has served in the noon. Ticket sales reported tb MissProf. Phelps is the author of nu- artillery, the aviation section, and has Lamb will be checked with the officialmerous books. His first book, "Be- ad the unique honor; of driving a class lists of the Bureau of Records.ginning of the English Romantic British 'tank.''' Students should satisfy themselves'Movement," appeared in 1893. "The Dean Mathews will speak on the that these official class lists are cor­Pure Gold of the Nineteenth 'Century meaning of the War Savings cam- recto The latest time for reclassifica­Literature" appeared in 1907 and "A paign, and will tell the University tion is 4 o'clock today. Lists willDash at the Pole" in 1909. Among what it must do as its part, and how remain posted in front of the Bureauhis more' recent works are "Essays it can do it. The sale of Thrift of Records until then.on Books," published in 1914, and stamps, which started out with an The elections of Friday will be con­"Browning," in 1915. Prof. Phelps encouraging flourish, has dwindled in ducted in accordance with the rulesis also a contributor to numerous the last week the interest in the sale 'used in the fall class elections. Uni­periodicals and )s well known as a having seemingly been lessen-ed. To versity aides and marshals will act as.public ����''::-:.�::,c...;-:::_.>''��_-�. :.':' -_.- -date- $175 'worth '·of War, - Savings' -tellers,' and -class-tickets and official'Prof. Phelps received lUS- A.B. de- stamps and $327.16 of 'War Certifl- Iists will be checked very carefully atgree �t Yale in 1887 and his �h.D. at' cates have been sold. ,Most of the the polls.. .Yale' and A.M. at Harvard m 1891. stamps have been sold in the branch The {lctivity lists of the VariousIn the following. year' he became in- book store in the School of Education, 'candidates are printed elsewhere ins�ctor in English at' Yale, in 1896 as the students in the grammar and this issue.assistant professor and in 1901 Lamp- nigh school ar� holding contests withson professor, each other.H. Hinkovitch, L.L.D., will speakSaturday at 4:35 in Harper assemblyroom on .. "The Jungo-Slavs in FutureEurope." Mr. Hinkovitch is a mem­ber of the ex-Croatian Parliament andnow a member of the Jungo-Slavcommission of! London, England. Hecame to Chicago with the Servianmission and will remain here for sometime.The Jungo-Slav party is a combina­STANDING AND 'ACTIVITIES OF CANDIDATES tion of some of the various peoples of, the Balkan states for the purpose otcombating the Pan-German state planfostered by the German and Austrian-imperial governments. '(Continued on page 4)The Maroons lost their exhibitiongame with the Jackies at the GreatLakes, Station last night, the finalscore standing 38-1S. Halas, formerIllinois captain, led the brilliant Navyattack, working with Johnson, another up... _ former conference star. The Jackie Being in the ordnance departmentaggregation was composed almost en- is purported to be synonymous withtirely of men once well-known for working hard.their intercollegiate work. This time Being invited to a Senior party isthe combination was working as a compensation enough for anything.team, and the previous Jackie-Maroon (Axiom.) "equasion was reversed. Every man THEREFORE: The irksomeness ofwas in shape. growing up and working hard has itsP compensations. Q.E.D.at Page held to his purpose of The entertainment will be givenworking his second string men, 're- Friday frvm S to--yes, 11:30, in thegardless of results. Curtis was the Ida No,Yes theater. All members ofmost prominent figure in the defense, the class of 1918 and members of theand Jackson also got in some effectWe ordnance department have been urgedwork. The Navy had great difficulty to attend. For those who desire toin 'working into the reelon of the bas-e.. dance, music will be furnished; forket, and nearly all the victor's basketa those who do not, there will be awere made on long shots. No 'com- "party"; and for one and all the uni­bination of defense was effective versal medium of entertainment willagains� _the long range sniping of the be provided-s-food,�'�:,', sailors. No Senior woman will be excusedThe skirmish with the Jackies at for absence from the party on the-I. ';' r, least, indicated that Pat Page has grounds that she may not in all pro­._.. - ': . .pI�nty of men in' shape to go/against priety return .home alone after. night­:�'!t:. -.-�··.Pu:due Saturday night. The game fall, because a careful selection of es­- ...... ,� �at- Lafayette �the...first iniport- corts will be 1>rovided .. _. --,.W � ant game for the Maroons on a hostile'floor, and the result will go· a longt:'�. way toward indicating the conferencestrength' of the Chicago five. The The Yellow Jacket club will meetBig Ten ·five that does the best work today at 10:10 in Lexington 14.away from its own floor may be theone to forge ahead in the race for theflag. Most games this -season, .as in.. all seasons, have been won on home _floors, as the wear of travel and the Partly cloudy today; much warmer;hostile atmosphere almost invariably southwest winds. -, . proves a strong factor.Four of the five Purdue men whoplayed against the Maroons last yearwill work in the coming game. Ineomparfson of experience the outlookis gloomy, but the Boilermaker's pre­VIOUS humiliations and the strong Ma­roon record point toward an edge forChicago. With Bryan back in thegame and a strong second line to drawupon the 'Maroons should make aformidable stand. Novelist" Driver of British "Tanks" to Tell Ex­perience of Two Years on FiringLine at Pep Session for ThriftWeekSENIORS TO ENTERTAINORDNANCE COURSE MENLIEUT. NAISMITH TALKSAT WAR MASS MEETING PROF. W. L. PHELPSOF YALE. TO SPEAKTONIGHT IN MANDELWill Give Party Dance Friday FromS to 11:30 in Ida Noyes Theater- ---To Provide Carefully Selected Es- Lecture Under Endowment oneorts"A Contemporary English(To be) given: An evening's en­tertainment by the Senior class forthe -men in the Ordnance department.To prove: That the irksomness ofgrowing up and working hard has itscompensations.To prove: That the irksomeness ofand to work at all (Axiom).Being a senior is generally concededto imply a chronic' state of growing'Yellow Jacket MeetsJackie Band to PlayThe celebrated Jackie band of fiftypieces will play at the mass meeting.This band is the one that has traveledover the . whole country, playing topacked houses, and turning: awaythousands of people at each perform­ance. It will playa' number of pa­triotic pieces and will furnish themeeting with the proper war-like at­mosphere.WEATHER FORECAST CASE GIVES ADDRESS• AT MENORAH TONIGHTProf. S. J. Case will address mem­bers of the Menorah society at an in­formal gathering tonight at 7;30 inIda Noyes. The session will be opento the public.THE DAILY MAROONBULLETINTodayChapel, Senior colleges, 10:15, Man­del.Divinity chapel, 10 :15, HaskelJ.Mathematical club, Ryerson 37."Kummer's Quartic Surface," Mr.Cornelius Gouwens.Public lecture, under the auspicesof the Philanthropic Service Divisionof the sthool of Commerce and Ad­ministration. "Types of Social Work;Child Welfare· in War Time."Social Science club, 7 :30, Ida N"oyeshall, "Problems in the Introductionof Internationalism." Discussion bymembers of the departments of His­tory, .PhiJosophy/ aDd SocIology.William Vaughn Moody lecture, "AContemporary English Realist Novel­ist," Mr. William Lyon Phelps, Ph.D.,Lampson Professor of English. Yaleunlversitr, S:15, Mandel.TomorrowChapel, college of Commerce andAdministration and college of 'Edu.cation, 10:15, Mandel.Divinity chapel, Haskel assembly,10:15.Y.W.C.L. c�apel hour meeting, Cobb12A., Prof. Allen Hoben.The Episcopal club, 4 :15, Leagueroom. Ida Noyes hall. Father Young.The Physics club, 4 :30, Ryerson 32-Prof. ATherl A. Michelson.University Patriotic Meeting, 4:35,Mandel. Addresses, Lieutenant An­drew M. Naismith, M. C., CanadianField Artillery; Dean Shailer Mat­thews. Music, the Great Lakes NavalTraining Station BandAn Dh·jnity Supper, 6, Hutchinsoncafe.Le Cercle Francais; Soiree �loUere,S, Mandel. Announce PledgesWyvern announces the pledging ofEleanor Byrnes and Jane Delaney ofChicago. Patronize our advertisers.LOWER SENIORUndergraduateCouncil :t\lajors GradePts. , Activities •News Editor, Daily Maroon; VarsityTrack; Iron Mask; Honor Commis­sion; �cial .Chairman JuniorClass; Associate Editor, Cap andGown; . First Cabinet, Y.M.C.A.;Blackfriars; Skull and Crescent;Entrance Scholarship; HonorableMention.Blackfriars; Dramatic' club; Cap andGown; Undergraduate Editor ofAlumni Magazine .W .A.A.; Chairman EntertainmentCommittee W.A.A. Conference.Three Quarters club; Score club; IronMask; Blackfriars; Score Manager.Sign of the Sickle; First Cabinet ofLeague; Women's AdministrativeCouncil.Charles Greene 27 119James Hemphill 26¥.z 96:Marion Llewellyn 21 56George Martin. 21 53Lil1ian Richards 21 71Honor CommissionFrank Breckenridge 25 97 Undergraduate Council; Iron l\Iask;Score Club; Manager of Black­'friars; Vice-President Y.M.C.A.General Chairman of Ath. Conferencefor Amer. College Women; Chair­man Meetings Com. League; Vice­President, Sophomore class; Chair­man Social Com., Sophomore andJunior classes; Women's Chairmanof Student Y.M.C.A. War Fund.Arline Falkenau 21 74¥.z CLASS OF '20 AND '21COUNCil NOMINEES TO�PEAK TODAY IN KENT. Close Ticket Sale at 4 Prepara­tory to Checking Off onOfficial ListWILL SPEAK ON JUNGO-SLAVSH. Hinkovich, of Ex-Croation Parlia­ment, to Talk Saturday in HarperDRAMATIC CLUB MEETSTO READ "FASHION," ITSWINTER QUARTER PLAYThe Dramatic club will meet todayat 3 :30 in Cobb SB. At this meetingthe play, "Fashion," which the clubwill give at its winter performance,will be read before the members' otthe club. Tryouts for the parts willbe held tomorrow afternoon at thesame time and place. Every memberof the club is requested to be presenttoday and tomorrow. There are thir­teen parts in the play, eight of themfor men.1\IISS HELEN 1\1. BENNETTTO CONFER WITH WO�IENMn;s Helen Bennett, hea(l of theCollegiate bureau of Occupations, willhold conferences with all women whoso desire tomorrow from 9 :30 to 12 :30in the Alumnae room of Ida Noyeshall. Miss Bennett will confer withcollege-trained women who do notwish to teach after leaving co1Jege.Women who were_ unab1e to see MissBennett when she was here last Wed­nesday, may do so tomorrow.�t ,' •. . .'.·THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDaY, FEBRUARY 6, 1918..m he mat 1" tH a r n n n t.old us about the solidarity of stu-4� � dent life at his institution, about the RHYl\IE, RHYTHM, OR REASONPubl ished mornlnzs, except Sunda,. and Mon-day. durin!: the Autumn. Winter and Sprln� t f I h '1' t d h th tnux rt e rw by the Daily Maroon company. 0 ee urm ia e ; nor ave e s u- Tea and the fire, low laughter,----- --- .. ------ ---- --- _-- -- dents of today. At Chicago we miss And faces, lightly kind:Arthur Baer .. _ President nothing that is really valuable in col- Their cheer of .old, hereafter,�!::r�es Be�:::e ==:=::::=:�-=::..--= f:!:�� lege life, and we should recognize that Shall I, returning find?fact. We have such elements of theForget. Through white thorn alleysolder conceptions as are good for any- Or lanes, thin-veiled with snow,thing-successful athletic teams, a These red, befouled, French valleys, Shall I go back to know?college paper and a magazine, dra­matic clubs. and other societies usefulin developing the student. But wehave besides much greater facilitiesfor building our personalities, in thelaboratory ()f the city and the cosmo­politanism of the student body.. Infacing the alumnus of the older typeof college, we need not be vainglori- W.A.C. TO GIVE INFORMALDANCE TODAY IN NOYES HALLous or boastful, and we need not apol-ogize. We can reply mildly and cher­ish within ourselves the consciousnessthat we have had a wider, freer, moreindividual growth +;han the studentsof the older colleges could have, thatwe have been trained not for senti­mental retrospect, but for life.The Student Ne .... paper of The Unh'enlt7of CbieacoElHTORlAL DEPARTHENT .THE STAFFArthur Baer _ ... _._. __ ;_ .. ..Managing EditorChar les Greene . News EditorRoland Hollowll)' _.____ Night EditorJohn Joseph _ .. _ .•.... ._ Day Editor�t:lnley Roth _._._.... _._ .......•. Athletics EditorWilliam Morgenatern._.Asat. Athletics EditorRuth Falkenau . __ .•. _ .... _ .... Women's EditorRuth Gen7.ber):er .. __ Aaaistant Women'lI EditorLeona Bachrach ....AUociate EditorHelen Ravitch. .. .. _ ..•....... ..Asaociate Editor-------�------- --�REPORTERSJohn Ashcnhunt Merle IrwinLyssa· Chalkley Alan \ LeMayLouis Dooley Forest ScottRose Fischkin Kathryn StevenaMargaret Haggott Luey SturgesBeulah Herrick Harry ShulmanFrederick WinterhofTnUSINESS DEPARTMENTWade Bender Clarence NetTEntered as second class mail at the ChicagoPostofliee, Chicago .. Illinois. March 13. 1906.under the Ret of March 3. 1873.By Carrier. $3.00 a ,.ear: $1.25 a quarterny l'tInil. $3.50 a ,.ear; $1.50 a quarterEditorial Rooms __ . Ellis 12Telephone Midway 800. Local 162.Hours: 10 :15-10 :45: 1 :30-6: 7-9 :30Ausiness Office' __ . ._;._ ,Ellis 14Telephone Midway 800. Local 162.Rours: 10:15-10:45: 1 :30-6....... 472WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1918HARKING BACKOccasionally, like every other mor­tal who ever was a boy or a girl, weindulge in a reminiscent spree andwallow through old paiTers, old books,old pictures, old souvenirs that aregrowtng musty and dusty in insignifi­cant closet corners and secluded bu­reau . drawers. And once in a greatwhile we find articles like "New Col­lege Life for Old" by James Root Hul­bert in the Chicago Literary .Monthlythat should be "harked back to" everyonce and so often-to help maintainequilibrium. We are taking the liberty,in our harking Back, of reprinting twoparagraphs from that article .here­with:"The natural effect of that oldercollege life was to mold every studentas nearly as possible according to aparticular pattern. It took a group.of youths of similar age and ante­cedents, put them into a given atmos-, phere, made them pursue the samesequence of studies and turned outfinished products of a given kind. Onewas supposed to be able to detect aman's college after a few minutes'conversation with him. Contrast Withthis result the effect of the individual­istic life at Chicago. The veryfact that it is individualisticmeans that our college atmos­separately. The student here does notfind an established type which he isto approximate as best he can; hefinds no regular lines of developmentmarked out for him,-he must deter:mine his own course for himself. Sub­jected to a wide variety of influences,wider than he will encounter in anygTOUP in which he will live after helea v es Chicazo, he must select the ele­mcnts that appeal to him, and buildhis own personality. He is not inleading strings, but must walk by him­self. As in the life he finds after heleaves college, so here, he must decidefor himself, must exe. cise initiative.Surely such an exper!cnce for fourycars is a better preparation for aworld of action and .�ccomp1ishmentthan the sentimental .iolleze life re­flected in stories."In my undergraduate days. whena member of one of the older colleges immense volume of cheering at thefootball games, or about the strongclass spirit, we used to mumble anapology. But we had no real causeA THOUGHTAt least, running for the council orthe Honor commission is one way ofshowing the campus what a personhas done. �. For most peoplethe Cap and' Gown activity lists oughtto be enough, or too much.ro HOLD DRESS REHEARSALOF MOLIERE PLAYS TODAYThe first dress rehearsal for the1I0liere plays will be held today froml to 4 in Mandel hall. Sisters from;t. Xavier's Academy will be present,t the rehearsal, as they are unableo attend the regular performance on�hursday.The CorsetIs the Foundation. IYour college' outfit startswith aYour figure wiD be graceful,and you will have distinctstyle, irrespective of simplicityin dress, and your health as-. sured.Moreover, a RedfernModel is so ideally com ..fortable, fitting so natur ..ally that its wearer maydo any athletic stunt as("I easily as she dances.rides or walks, in hercorset.Be sure to have your RedfernCorset properly fined beforeyou choose your suits andfrocks-then their correctappearance is assured.$3.50 upA t all high class stores THE ENGLISHMAN'S CUPBy Inez TempleLight laughter, toast and fireside,And eyes half-kind;' half-cold?Homeward across the shire rideAt tea time as of old?Reprinted from The Varsity ofthe Universlty of Toronto.The Woman's Administrative coun­cil will give an informal dance forall University women today from 3:30to. 5:30 in Ida Noyes theater. JamesHemphill will furnish the music. Ad­mission will be ten cents.AMUSEMENTSSTUDEBAKER MATINEE-BEST SEATS $1.00-Chicago's Greatest Mus.ical HitMAYTIMEWith JOHN CHARLES THOMASPRINCESS l' CLOSEDTONITE:rhe Big Laugh Hit of the Year Whyi{raby-tlabr <trlntqrsWhenI •you can buy a suit from us thatis made for YOU .. from a selec­tion of over 500 -patterns. no'two alike .. for about the SAMEprice that you MUST PAYfor ready-made clothes?Ask the boys: they will tell you� /what kind of clothes we make.FOSTER &'ODWARDCorrect Dresser of Men7th Floor, Republic'Building . State and Adams StreetCHICAGO"MARY'S ANKLE" Walt:TjonesBox Office Closed Today-ReserveSeats by Phone-Central 8240. A Confectionery for StudentsGARRICK EVES. AT' 8:30. MATS' AI' 2:30BEST SEATS S 1.00, "/L bUzzard of Iaqbttt. "-0. L. HaD. Joamal. 1133THE 'VERY 'IDEA �i:r�:�ERNEST- :rR\1EX RICHARDBENNETI'C Jones. LiDic:k Ie Sebad�r·s l.Best Seats. S1.SeOLON I"AL Next Mat. Sat.POp. Mat. Today $'1.00A� H. Woods offers after 400times in New York"CheatingCh.eaters"A,. dramatic farce by Max MarcinWoodlawn Trust.. Savings Bank.1204 EAST SIXTY-THIRD STREET. lEINEAREST BANKI 1toThe University of . ChicagoResources $3.000.000An Old. Strong Ba�klEIAccounts of Faculty and 'Students Invited• MARCUSRUBEN625 S. State StreetChicago,_._-_ .. _.Headquarters forLaboratoryCoats"Khaki & ClothUniformsI Mabr80fConfectionsand "Ice Cream.Telephone Hyde Park 2433A· Plant that Growswith . the Times'Bevo grew out of our big idea.of giving America a soft drink,the like of which no one evertasted-a true cereal soft drink·-nutritioUs as well .as deli­cious in an entirely new way­and pure.' - .'Scientifically cult ivated andfinally perfected, Bevo spranginto popularity such as over­taxed' .even our tremendousfacilities. ..-The result is our new eight·million-,dollar Bevo plant-built by publicdcmand-capacity 2,000,000 bottles .a ci2y. .... - You will Rnd Bcvo. ""The all.:year.·round.oft drink:' lit allpla<:ea where refresh­i:1C bever.lltea areaold. Families sup­pied by srocer·Anheuser-BuschS1. Loub ... .. [,'" .. �abro,sentpresi.Fren·'Abc:saysnot 1say,phoncialt;stayoughfromsimpwoulEverstrorableimbufor lforence,ItIi I.111II.t.1 Inhastion:surprondWitsfromminilumlcilo,veyuatiebelltiol.!Jof t}.,;'...'.i.> solicmiss" �� diffic"ideatheton'pricegOVEizedconttheatte:the I•0,.isteJCowat 1Thislectl. of ttogemenM,theR_on'cialcovely vmedof tAtheinCODof (A.. .,., '-.1J.......A1.1' _• '.'''',, ,Il • :.- .'THE DAILY MARoO� WEDNESDAY_ FEBRUARY 6, 1918,# ". ".... _ .. � j • , ",t "No American woman should goabroad to do war work unless �he issent for," says Mrs. George Lathrop,president of the American Fund for.French Wounded, in Washington.','Above all, the American woman whosays she is will to do 'anything' shouldnot be permitted to go. If she cannotsay, 'I am a nurse, a typist, a tele­phone operator,' or that she has a spe­cialty which is bady needed, let her'stay here. The woman who does go'ought to be willing to work every dayfrom 9 to 6. If she does not, she issimply consuming the food whichwould go to sustain a real worker.Every woman who goes should bestrong, nervously and physically, beable to speak Fren�h, and should beImbued with the idea that she is goingfor work, needed work, and not simplyfor wonderful, soul-stirring expert-ence."' �II'..'',', ,.,'1 '.L(.- .- .., ",,'1.1' -'''''''',. '.17 Mac', degrees6 B softest fa 9 I r horde. ,tand hard atul nu-diuni copying, Look for the VENUSjini,\/i',"E:NUS,TPENCILSav,.' These famous pen­cils are the standardby wb ich all otherpencils are judged.• ,If IPlCft!OO encro.e 6c in fltamP!' ror 'packinrlind pMt.."lge..' ,[,1 ••• _. ' .... '_ American JAcad 'Pencil Co.ltS Fifth A,'cnuc. N. Y.IkpL DIO " , \. _' --TODAY IN HARPER W31 FEBRUARY SALE OF SHO'ESVerhaeren, Emile: Belgium-sAgony. Boston, � HQughton,1915.Call No. D626 G3V5�Sarolea, Charles: How BelgiumSaved Europe. \ Phil., Lippin­cott, 1915.Call No. D541 S5:Wax weller, E '.: Belgium, Neu­tral and Lc:i 1. N. Y., Put­nams, 1915.Call No. D615 W31.In vertical file.The Crimes of Germany.Illustrations with text.Memorandum of the Belgian-Go,·ernment on the Depor­tations. 29 pp.[ .WHAT COLLEGE EDITORS THINK �t C�'llege Men andTake Advantage Women Shouldof These SavingsLeathers cost more, workmanship is higher, yet you'n findthe same hiSh quality leathers, the same fine workman­ship in these Shoe� offered during February as at anyother time. - The only difference is the reduction in priceof every pair.room and business; for dancing and dress wear.There are Shoes for skating and hiking, for class ..There areno exceptions-every Shoe in our stocks and all that arriveduring this, month are sold at reduced rates.� 'Now is the time to anticipate, your needs for well,'into the future.' . ./WOME.N'S ANDCHILDREN'S SHOESFourth Floor andBa3ement-Main Store.MEN'S AND BOYS'SHOESSecond Floor and '�a3emmt­The'Store for Men.El .� . EI",.. --'(The HarvardA, .Ho�'�,� like Hot!1' for'�,ri.ive�'sit� People: .BEAUTIFUL NEW, P'U�'LlC ROOMS{Stenography,Expert Copying. MimeographingPrices Normal 'Widway 800 Box 269.. oeal 2U Fac. Exch.Classified Ads. TYPE:WRITING OFFICERoom' 2, Lexington HallMISS LUCIA HENDERSHOTpaid in advance • specializes inPRIVATE DANCING LESSONSIn a course of six lessons one canFOR RENT-':"Large furnished. front acquire the steps of, the Waltz, One­step, and Fox trot.room-piano, phone and large closet Studio 1541 E, 57th St. H. P. 2314 --for one or two persons, \ 5707 Kim-bark Ave. Midway 2842.UDA HOUSER 'w ARNE�VIOLINIST.Musicales, Recitals, Etc.Will Accept Pupils.5456 University Ave. Engravers . Printers • LinotypersBinders. Die Stampers• •The Ingleside PressProduces printins thatconveys a pleasins im ..pression a nd impelsclose considerati�n ofWALDORF CATERING CO.The best Home Cooking and our ownBakery Goods.Catering for Parties, Wed-,dings, Fraternal and SocietyA'ffairs, .)ur Manager, Mr. Engel; has been 6233 Cottai\e Grove Avenueconnected with the best Hotel here bas steward.Phone Wentworth 3834.233 East Garfield Boulevard, its contents.• •ColleAe and Society Work a SpecialtyPrinters of The Daily Maroon JThe­Walk·Over -,Stores _'."', In ,'Chicago,-,Specialize' i� styles of -."Walk·Over . Shoes 'That\appe�l to'�ollege Man and Woman-.. S�e our ,windo,vs _' . _' ", ' ., •, ",,( cO<C¢ co Or, ': C\\lCAGOUUJaLk.;. {(JtJep JJwe Sl'or�-. TO·t� - .... �& ...... � - .).3 MEN"S AND WOMEN'S 'SHOES ;\'.WOMEN'S SHOES EXCLUSIVELY 1 • S • STAT£'· 5 t.c�N'S SHOES EXCLUSIVELV4700 SHERIDAN no. 14 SOUTH DEARBORNIn Washington a serious problemhas been commanding 'people's atten­tion: namely, that of the housing thesurplus female population that warconditions have caused. I President THE COMING 'DRAFTWilson htls set aside $1,000 a month (Reprinted from the Colgate Maroon)from: the Emergency Fund, to be ad- Some men who have attained toministered through the District of Co- .their twenty-first birthday-since JuneIumbia branch of the National Coun- 5, 1917, are greatly alarmed over theci1 of Defense,·which will make a sur- proposed draft of those who have.vey of tbe rooming and bousing sit- come of age since the fOrmer registra­uation. 'fhis centralized bureau will tion. To such men we would point'be under the supervision of the Na- out the improbability of anything.' ttonal Council of Defense, The action happening before May which would.. of the President was dueto the urgent necesnitate any such, extreme measure,�--- •. solicitatjon of the Civil Service com- as 'leaving college. .�t'mission, ",inch body was finding it We recall that last year at the time MA' RSHALL' FIELD & CO ... difficult to get employees, owing to the of the fiest draft, aoout five months ,- " "" ,.; ."idea generally accepted throughout elapsed between the passing of the" ,',.the country tbat rooms in Washing- bill in Congress and the callmg ofton were impossible to obtain and that troops, and that onty five per cent, ofprices were practically prohibitive for the total .were called at that time,government employees. The central- and that the last increments had not DISCUSS' BEETHOVEN_ WEBERized rooming agency ,under Federal been taken for. three months after AND SCHUBERT' AT MEETINGcontrol will tend toward' minimizing that. While we may expect that there _the discomfort, difficulty,' and danger will not be the delay, this year that The MacDowell club will meet to-attendant on securing reservations in there was last. it is 'entirely likely night at 7:30 in Ida Noyes hall. Thethe Capital - / that not until the end of March or the program will be on Beethoven; Schu-beginning of April will there be any bert and Weber. ' Marjorie Hale,Over'two hundred women have reg- actual summoning o�men tothe ser- Helen Sheldon and 'A. O."Brumgardt.Istered for the' War Time Training vice. Should the plan followed last are, in 'charge. ' I "Course for Volunteers 'being presented year be pursued thi,s year of calling aat .: the Hotel Biltn{ore� N ew Yor� small percentage of, the men' at, first,This/is the second in a- series of twelve and the others later, it 'only serves: toIeeturea presented under the aus:pi�8 lessen the llrobabilitY - of immediate'of the Committee on' Social Welfare, aerviee.' If there are a hundred men,tOgether' with the EX1;ension' Depart- i�. Colgate -who, come Wi�hin: the newment �ft Columbia', University. age 'requirementa; not .over a �Miss MarY Richmond, director of dozen willbe called at once. . '-the organization· department" of the '" Furthermore, it is by no means im­,RUaaell Sage Foundation, w:lll .leeture possible' that if only' a few' weeks, re­on "The Family as the Center. of So- mained for a man to complete. his col­cial 'Service." ��r discussion will -lege course, the local exemption-coven ,the .following subjects: Friend- boards would entertain favorably a re­ly visiting .in the home; child welfare; quest for permission to e.rler a .later The New Dining Hallmedical social work; the home service quota' of troops.' ' "lor Dances, Banquets and Parties'of the Red Cross. There, IS absolutely no oceasion for •",,At the satisfactory completion of anything that resembles, a panic; an(l 5�Dinners a' Spc;�ia:lty--;SOcthe course, the women will be placed we bespeak a sane, moderate" reason­in active volunteer service by the able attitude and a rational conform- -Committee on Women's War Work ity to the government plan for a se- EI Bof Columbia University, .' lective draft. 'For a man to commit --------------- ::.- .... _Central -Student Committee, on the great mistake this year that many,Women's War ACtivities. did last year of going home and await­ing for weeks or months' ','for 'some-­thing to turn up," meanwhile wasting,his-time in absolute idleness, in prefer­ence to a college training, 'is sufficientto Indict' both his intelligence and hispatriotism.,, ' 'Five cents per line. No advertise­ments for less than 25' cents, �11classified advertiSements must beGenuineFrenchB r i ar A Real Pipelor�nege'MenThese 'are two -of the24 �uIar shapes inwhim you can get theStratlonl$t.OOand upW D C Hand �VaJe$1.50 and upEach a fine pipe,- with sterling silver �and ,vulcanite bit.:Leading dealers in��wn . plITY a full as­sortment,': 'Select yourfavorite style. 'WM. DEMUTH & CO.New YorkSPECIAL FOR STU:DENTSOur !Jue Manicure for 25c. and RCduccdPricc. on Othcr Work: Chiropody IncludedLOCKVVOO:D PA.RLORPhollc Hydc Park 67721438 East 57th Street ", ,I'. -"1"'", '<, • ,_�. \-_ ..J .10• #".THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, FEBR�ARY 6,-1918STANDING AND ACTIVITIES OF CANDIDATESUndergraduate CouncilMarian Amy 11 Freshman Commission; RefreshmentsCom. Settlement Dance; ChairmanFreshman Social Com.; Social Com.League.Three Quarters club; Class PublicityCommittee.THE CAMPUS WHISTLEMotto: You toot the line.SOME days we have no inspirationat all. A Whistle like the followingis the result:Blank is our dome,Cold is our home,Our thoughts do roam­We'll write no poem.HAVING gotten through the firstordeal we have less inspiration thanever. Ah! An Omar may do thework.A W, no. It's silence 'week and wecan't smoke cigarettes. Last nightwe tried it after all the rest of the fel­lows went to sleep, but we set the bedon fire.WE were warm for a while any­way.AH, yes. Didn't we hear that Theo­dora Young fainted in class yesterdayrather than flunk in a recitation.THAT'S a pretty good stunt, butFat Reber could never get by with it.They carried Theodora out.STANDARD JOKES(Good any time of the year.)Prof. (jovially): Hello!Fresh Pupil (wittily): Hello, your-self! '.(Class explodes with laugllter.)THE young lady at the desk acrossthe aisle has passed judgment on theIda Noyes Murals. "The best job- ofpaper-hanging I ever saw done," saysshe.THE' Sigma Nus have a piece ofcoal on their mantle. They are usingit in their post season rushing cam­paign.YOU/ would think that when wehave run out of inspiration the HoneyBunch should be good for a paragraphat least.BUT we're afraid to rave' about"Honey Bunches" et al with so manymodern women about.WE never were much good on thatbaby talk' anyway.B. W writes to tell us that whenheorher writes "the" very fast on hertypewriter, sheorhim makes it ''teh.''Itorit must have belonged to the GasHouse gang.'----CRAN Rogers is the campus weath­er bureau.Nose purple-awful cold.Nose violet-pretty, but not quiteso cold.Nose red--cold.Nose delicate pink-spring is com­ing.TODAY IN HISTORYFeb. 6, 1802: Jeremiah White dies.,Jeremiah was the last man living whocould remember when men called atgirls' halls and sat Jn the parlor aUevening.Feb. 6, 1892: Maroon publishesstatement that Quad pledge speaks tofreshman to whom she had only beenintroduced three times. Faculty stopspublication till Maroon proves state­ment is correct.Feb. /6, 1916: Gas House Ganganounces the pledging of Lee Ettel­son.NEARLY a whole column on anempty head.LET'S quit.Anon.League Committee MeetsThe Membership committee of theLeague will meet today at 3 :45 atElizabeth Walker's home, 6037 Har­per avenue.Bible Class Meets TodayThe Senior College Bible class winmeet today at 4:30 in Nitrth parlorC in Ida Noyes. Prof. Herbert L.Willett will continue the discussionof his book. (Continued from page 1.)3 LOWERJUNO�3UndergraduateCouncilRuth Genzberger GradePts.97 8MajorsActivitiesAss't Woman's Editor, Daily Maroon;Vice-President, University Musicalclub; Publicity Com. W.A.A. Port­folio; Chorus W.A.A. Portfolio;W.A.A. Frank Hardesty 326Bess McFalls 4 f14% Freshman Commission; Inter-hallLeague Com.10 Three Quarters club; Chairman Fresh­, man Reception Committee.John ProsserLester Garrison 23% 65% Speaker for Associates, Spring, 1917;Medical school. Elizabeth WillifoiL44 Second Cabinet, League; W.A.A. Ad- Honor Commissio.visory board; Vice-President, Home Robert Cole,Economics club. 10 Freshman football; President, ThreeQuarters club; Athletic committee.Chairman, Freshman Social Com­mittee.President, Freshman Dramatic club;Freshman Commission; Bus. Mgr.Junior College Hockey.3 8Gladys Gordon 213Josephine MooreGeorge Otis 2221 89%54 William Ducker 3 5Three Quarters club; Skull and Cres­cent; Iron Mask; Cross Country,Captain, '18; Varsity track. 18'Edythe Flack 5UPPER JUNIORUndergraduate CouncilEleanor Atkins Mortimer HarrisMargaret Robinson Freshman Commission; President.Black Bonnet; Membership Com.League; Meetings Com. League;,Ukulele club.1255311 ,30 Pres. Yellow Jacket; Pres. FreshmanCommission; Hockey;'. Sign ofSickle. ISect. Freshman Class; Chairman, Re­freshments committee; SettlementDance.Skull and Crescentj Cross Country.Editor, Green Cap; Chorus Master,Blackfziars, '18. \ 'Chairman Freshman and SophomoreSocial committees; Sect. Y.M.C.A.;Settlement Dance EntertainmentCommittee.Freshman Track Squad.May Cornwell 12 32Edith StoneGeneva Watson ,Junior College Hockey.33 117Frank LongFrank Madden 11%14 2739 Read the Daily Maroon for campusnews.Crandall Rogers 12 47Adve'rtise in the Daily Maroon.Harold Walk�rHonor CommissionLeona Bachrach 12 3670 Maroon staff; Women's War Activity. Committee.Freshma� Swimming team; -Fresh­man water-basketball; Freshman l­basketball.Night Editor, Daily Maroon; Black­friars; Undergraduate Council;Score club.Cap and Gown; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet.Social Committe, Sophomore class.Gym. team; Chicagoan staff; ThreeQuarters club; University Guide.14Chancellor Dougall,. 24 CLARIDGE11wNmvRlllARR�O"W"--COLLAR11Roland Holloway 12 49Jasper KingGladys NymanGerald Westby 12 .1212 493626 THE INK WITHOUTTHE INKY SMELL.:PackagesofTens andTwentie.REMEMBER- Turkish to­hacco is' the world's mostfamous tobacco for cigarettes. ',. ,-,1 t •, ..• I ,":ft,r•. '\.. \ .r " (ItIstcJ1es1:nt11tfth'IF1]n]a.. " .. ".. ,... -_,:-1bEVihTIIfeahiojpmdtg:-deea-'_!I.,... I .. "-:,"1\1qtof1�Q'bEingicoWtwlbe..�- m:inha( .\• I� I Sabl�be\