,aroonVOL. XVI. No. 100 PRICE FIVE CENTS.1I-. The tag day of the Madras cam­paign was very successful, over twohundred dollars being collected be­sides the pledges. Last night the to­tal reached $1,047.67 and manypledges were still to be turned in.There were two hundred women atthe Friendship dinner, and the newofficers of the League were announced.They are: Katherine Prosser, presi­dent; Agnes Prentice, vice-president;Lillian Richards, secretary, and Kath­eleen Grant, treasurer. The chairmenof the committees are:Meetings-Katherine Greene.Membership-Arline Falkenau.SoCial:_:Helen Thompson.World service-Anne Hepburn.Financ�Marjorie Hale.Upper class counsellors-MarthaSimond.Intercollegiate-Gladys Gordon.Social service-Rachel Sheldon.Halls-Emily Hartman.Publicity-Frances HendersonCollege exchange-Pauline Boisot.Bible study-Charity Budinger.Geneva-Mildred Powlison.Graduate-Katharine Blodgett.The members of the old cabinet willmeet the members of the new oneMonday at 2 :45 in the League room.Pundita Davie, an Indian Princessfrom Calcutta, was a guest of honor- at the eli.er .. She was dressed in na­tive costee and spoke on the womenof India. She also sang native songs. in Sanskrit. The different depart­ments of the League and the sub-com­mittees Of the committee of one hun­dred sat at separate tables and eachgroup sung an orieinal song. Afterdinner Miss Harriet Taylor spoke.."U"'"('t •t� :, .II,\ i·,., 1�"':;.....JJ._" �···I\�. .,., ,. ,atUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1918Rehearsals Mean WorkMondayChapel, Junior colleges, men, 10:10,Mandel, Concert-lecture on the concert pro­gram for March 12,· Mr. SteveD8, 4 :15,l'landel.Public lecture, "Types of SocialWork xvn," Prof. Thomas E. Oliverof the Belgian Relief· Com mis.Clion,4:35, Harper· assembly.Botany club, 4 :35, Botany 13.New Testament club, James group,7, residence of Prof. VotaW', 6441 Kim­bark avenue. You who read this (and we'll be arriv­ing at the review section of this man­uscript in a second) may be unac­quainted with the trials to which thisclub has been subjected every timea production was meditated. Youmay be ignorant of the amount oflabor-nerve-racking labor it is, too-that goes into these illy-patronizedproductions. Of these things I canspeak, for I've been among those pres­ent on the stage when their playswere given. For web before the per­formance this band of actor-idealistsrehearse, seriously, ever with thethought of doing the best that is inthem. And if, from experience withthe W.A.A. gambols, with Friars even1918 MADRAS CAMPAIGN SELECT 9 JUDGES FOR DRAMATIC CLUB COMES CAPTAIN HENRI HANAUT MAROONS VISIT CAMP,WILL ,LECTURE �N WAR OF WISCONSIN TO tRYNETS $1,047 FOR, FUND WOMEN'S GYM CONTEST INTO ITS OWN AT LAST _Preliminary Feats to Be Performed WITH PLAY, "F'.�HION" Speaks on "France at War" at 4:35 FOR SECOND VICTORYOF CHRISTIAN LEAGUE Aa.'} Thursday in Mandel-To Show •--- March 14-Meet March IS-Plan:Moving Pictures Taken on Western _Tag Day Closing Secures Over Exciting Obstacle Race for. Con- Winter Prod��iion Delights Au- Battle Front . May Climb in Conference Per$200-Better Than, . testants dience With Its Story, Set- __ eentage Column, Bot Can-Last Year --tings and Cast Captain Henri Hanaut, of the not .Reach TopThe judges have been .announced forthe gymnasium and preliminary meet ---STAR French General staff, will give a lee- FENCERS SHOW SKILL IN WINNAME 14 OFFICERS FOR �EAR which will take place March 14 and SCHOLLE AND ETTLESON ture on "France at War," March 14, -,_16 in the gymnasium of Ida Noyes ---at 4:35, in Mande...l_h. all. The lecture "Win or bust" is the spirit withBy Bartlett Cormackhall. As has been stated, those sur-will be illustrated with stereoptican which the Maroons will tackle theviving the preliminary match on the Departing from the limeade line for and moving pictures �f the war, taken Badgers tonight on the Madison floor.fourteenth will participate in the con- the time being, this review, then, is h ha dIcktest on the sixteenth. The two sets under the supervision of the Frenc Chicago has been running in r ufriendly and for reasons that are, or d d b 't h f dof judges are as follows: For the government an owne y 1 • for the last tree or our games, anpreliminary meet--Mrs. Helen S. Gor- should be, obvious. The Dramatic Captain Hanaut came to the United Pat Page will send in the five to breakdon, Miss Mary Filbrick, Miss Crete club of this University, for the past States with the group of French field the jinx, even though it is too late toHamilton and Mrs. Maysack. few years the object of jibes and sneers officers who were sent by the French finish at the top. Wisconsin basFor the real contest the judges will from uncomprehending undergrad- government to teach special subjects clinched the Big Ten title. by defeat­be Mrs. Pendledon, Miss Katherine uates who revel gloriously in the to the commissioned and non-commis- ing Northwestern, 26-18, and is inPowers, Miss Lillian Klein, Miss Crete drama of sh�t-'em-full-o'-blanks sioned officers in the army camps. He good shape to close �e season with­Hamilton and Mrs. Jessie E. Ander- Hart and the sensuous swayings of was detailed as the assistant to Ma- out further losses. :son. The meets will begin at 3:30 Bara, has during these years worked jor Eckenfelder, who has been given The . Maroons' brilliant work onsharp. A -squad captain has been hard, honestly and faithfully for rec- charge of the instruction in six can- Bartlett floor when the Badgers werechosen for each class. All squad cap- ognition by doing those worth-while tonments in the northwest, and is sta- visitors, handed the. Wisconsin outfittains have been requested to meet things it thought would best be liked. tioned with him in Chicago. one of the two defeats they have.Monday at 1 in Ida Noyes hall. Whether in all these previous per- Both officers travel from camp to taken during their nine games. If"The obstacle race is going to be formances the club has been thor- camp, where they superintend the Captain Gorgas and his teammatesone of the features of the meet," said oughly successful or not is, it seems teaching of automatic rifle shooting, still have the Badgers' number theyMiss Louise Patterson.' "We haven't to me, beside the point. Whatever bombing and grenade-throwing. They may, have at least the honor of �um­decided yet what it is going to be, else its productions have been they have charge of the schools for the bling the Big Ten champs, and willbut we are going to make. it exciting have been honest, distinct achieve- practice in the making of gas attacks, climb over DIinos, Purdue and Indianaso that we can standardize it. An- ments, for with each production the and "trench-wipers" class, which gives in the percentage column. However,other feature will be that all classes club has gone onward and upward, training to a special group of soldiers. if they down the Cardinals :this timewill be on the floor at once. This has thus tending to bring nearer the day These .soldfers are secelted to clear· they will have to do' it Without Bryan, .never 'been done before and we think when it may look the campus in the the trenches of the enemy who have who will not make the trip.that it will prove effective. Everyone face without meeting the inquiring survived the onslaught of the first at­is invited to come out, for the meet eye. And it has done these things, tacking wave.will be good, judging 'from the results things which the campus, by and Captain Hanaut has been lecturingat practice periods," large, has pleased to fatuously ig- in Chicago in the last "feew weeks, andnore, with' an ardor and enthusiasm has been achieving much success. TheNEW ORJ)NANCE MEN �EING born of love for the thing itself, pictures which will be shown have notOUTFITTED WITH UNIFORMS never-failing, tluLt can at best be yet been given before a Chica� audi-FOR ·SEVENTH WAR COURSE equaled·in campus organizations _only ence and are said to be a faithful rec---- by this .year's Maroon -which has ord of the present-day methods ofThe uniformed members of the ·achieved, under its boss, Arthur Baer, warfare on the Western front.Ordnance department are arriving ln, deserved 'renown, ,Mr. Baer has longsmall numbers'daily from the gov- been a member of the Dramatic club.] _ernment barracks. The next group of if you see what I mean..ordnance men will all have to be in And now, this winter, our club hasuniform and before coming to the uni- won' its spurs, And as in large meas­versity the men are ..sent to a bar- ure the achievements of what the see­racks, where they are �utfitted in the above undergrads call the "Goboon"IMPROVEMENT IN R.O.T.C. regular army uniform and allotted have been made possible by a -steadyEXPECTED BY. EDITORS OF knives, forks and pork and beans. skipper at the helm, so this belatedALUMNI MONTHLY JOURNAL Next week there will be a meeting recognition of the Dramtic club hasof the men registered for the course been made possible by the capableArticle on Military Unit and mutra- in Rosenwald hall, where they will be interest of one man, Mr. Glen Millard,tions of. Hospital Corps No. 14 informed of the rudiments of the than whom in campus dramatic thereComprise February Issue courses and other information that the is none than whomer. But of himdepartment thinks necessary for the more anon. • • • Last night, be-The latest issue of the Alumni Mag- new men. fore a shamefully small-though mostazine, which came out yesterday, has appreciative-audience, this sni1red atfor its leading article, a biography ---�------------ organization, with its revival ofof Captain lIeAndrew, the new Com- WEATHER FORECAST "Fashion," an early Alperican playmandant arid head of the Military de- Unsettled today; moderate tem- by Anna Cora Mowatt, passed thepartment of the University, and a perature; variable winds. buck, as the saying is, to these jazz­disc:ussion of the military training --------------- band under�ds who have' neversituatio� here. The article declares THE DAILY MAROON given it support. Last night the dubthat the previous poor morale of the • BULLETIN stood upon its own feet without socorps and the Jack of faith of the �- much, as a self-conscious tremor ofdents in the efficacy.. of the training Today dismay (Dorothy, even when yourhere to provide intensive military Meetings of University Ruling Bod- hoop refused to succumb to the chairwork, was due to the fact that So ies: you were superb!);.stood upon feet,many different Commandants were as- Fac:ulty aad Conference of the Di- too, that were---and are-firmly root­signed here, none of whom remained vinity· ac:hool, 8, Dean's 08iee, llaakelL ed in the path that will lead them tolong enough to bring a semblance of Board of the Christian Unio� 9, the ultimate achievement, which isorder into affairs. But, says the ar- Harper EU., good production of interesting, worth­ticle, the coming of Captain MeAn- Fac:ulty of the colleges of Art, Lit- while plays. And last night thosedrews, an experienced army officer, erature and Science, 10, Harper'EU. who have borne with the club in itscoupled with the efficient aid of Cadet- Fac:ulties of the Graduate sc:hools many discouragements were inclinedMajor Eugene Carlson, will allow for of Arts, Literature and Sc:ienc:e, 11, to be a bit cocky themselves-hadn'tmore intensive and practical work in- Harper EU. 'the club come through? It had.the Spring quarter. Uriiversity Dames, 3, Ida Noyes" The magazine also discusses the hall.question of giving aegrees to thoseSeniors who are called into service in Tomorrowtheir 1ast quarter. It arrives at the University Religious service, 11,conclusion that Chicago will have to Mandeldiscontinue its present· methodlessway of deciding, and base its decisionon the quality of the work done by thestudents in residence.A number of photographs wereprinted, among them a picture of asection of the Mural paintings in theIda Noyes theater; a photograph ofProf. Coulter, head of the departmentof Botany; a group of "C" men in thebase hospital unit at Fort McPherson,Georgia, and a reproduction of thecover, "Tbe Polus," painted for Les­lie's Weekly by Leroy Baldridge, .Ill. you imagine rehearsals to be onegrand good time, you are mistaken.The dramatic club works 'hard. Butso is Friars work?· Tommyrot!Friars is a great good time for every­one concerned. N o� so- with this, ourDramatic club. Often this cast of"Fashion"-and its predecessors-­worked late into the night, arguing,rehearsing, striving for shades of in­tonation, infinitesimal gestures, andbits of histrionic technique that areconspicuous only when absent. Sun­day is no day of rest for the casts ofthe Dramatic club plays. And so itgoes, has gone, will go. They do thework themselves, too, with perhapsthe now-and-then assistance of someinterested member of the faculty whorealizes what is being attempted inthe name of Art. .I want to say to you who read thisthat this dramatic club of ours is in afair way to become the organizationof this campus. I believe that, some 1 _day, it will lead. There is no reasonwhy such should not be the ease.Other colleges and universities havedramatic clubs that have been andwill continue to be notable. Our club,with its talents, its ardor, should bein their class. This club can step outand do big things; things that willbring credit to itself, 'its Universityand-I mean it-to our town, Chi­cago. And let me say here that thereare organizations in this town holdingforth in school buildings and studioswith not half the talent or means ourclub may count as assets. Theseabout-town groups are producingoriginal plays by Chicago authors andgetting away with it. And some ofthe things they perpetrate in thename of Art would make BeerbohmTree heave dirt from off his grave.Campus Support Is Necessary ,But the club cannot do all thisalone. It needs you-and you behindit. The oportunity for endeavor ispractically unlimited. But it needssupport. And if the undergrads will(Continued on page 3.) .-Michigan Plays Ohi�The Wolverines meet the Buckeyestonight on the latter's floor. Ohio isthird from the bottom in the percent­age sheet, but it is nevertheless prob­able that Michigan will receive hertenth defeat and fiuon .bv� <.'t',nferenc:edebut with a clean record. Iowameets Purdue, and has a good chanceof pulling the Boilermakers into thefifty-fifty division. -_ :.;�'"Fencers Defeat TurnersMaroon fencers showed up thenorthside Turners last night in sev­eral informal bouts in the latter'sgym. Gerard, Gaston,· and Barrywere the best men on the floor. Thefencing team is short of meets thisyear, and welcomes every opportunityto meet outside talent. In previousyears the fencing meets have beennumerous, and the Chic:ago swords­have had pl2nty of chances to trytheir foils. , rLast year's fencers were not onlythe c:onference 'champions, but de­feated the cleverest men in the clty.Captain Gerard was conference cham­pion, and made a clean sweep in everymeet. Gerard is not only fast andclever with the foils, � has a lefthanded style of attaek that is exceed­ingly baftling to men ac:c:uatomed toworking against right-handed swords-men.TODAY IN HARPER W 31PERSONAL NARRA� BYAMERICANSThe Edith Cavell Nune fromM assachusettB.Call No. D629 F8F5.�lcClintoc:k, Alexander: Best 0'Luck; a Kentuckian's Experi­ence.Call No. D640 M17.McDougall, Grace: A N1II'8e atthe War.Call No. D640 M2.Palmer, Frederic:k:Year of the War.Call No. D640 P22. My SecondHuard, Frances: M:; Some inthe Field of Honor.Call No. D640 H85.�.� ,t, \. '...:' ILI'I.. ...! ,• I1" ,�': 'I' '': J" i� !,,i.'J'IiI·,II,"I .-I'i'I'I'Il!�.,.,':-\. ..--. - , .\- .,'( .... ,"- : :.. .. ",' " .... , '. ; ".._ '\ _- .. : .. ' ... if' ... '" �".'.. ,ITHE DAILY MAROON; ·SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1918� .. %I -1" 'ized training in any branc� of mili- WOO d I •• n T r a 8.� �p t 'J:I at 11 � a r D n n tary service. He comes to the furtht:r .conclusiou that if he enlists at once" • a y I. g • B • n II:TIM Sladeat New�paper of The UDi.en1t7of Cbicaco in some special branch he may be an 120 .... EAST SIXTY -THIRD STIlEBTofficer by the time that he would have E:IPubliahed mornings. except SandQ and MOD- been graduated if he had remained incia,.. durinc the AutumD. Winter and Sprincquarters b,. the Dan,. Maroon compan,.. college; and that, if he remains incollege, he will be fitted for- nothing NEAREST BANK.toArthur Baer -.- .... -.---.-.----- President but a private's berth when he is grad-Charl_ Greene ---.---- .. - Seeretal'J' The University of ChicadoWade Bender --- - Treasurer uated. Then he thinks that President •EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Wilson is asking a sacrifice of him, I5JResources $3.000.000An Old. Strong Banka sacrifie which is not wise. He thinksTHE STAFFArthur Bur ·_..Kanaci� Editor that President Wilson and SecretaryCharles Greene News EditorRolaud HollowllJ' Nlcbt Editor Baker and Herbert Hoover and theJohD Josepb ·D.,. Editcr f h . 1 ffi· ls hWDllam Mo�eDlltern....Aut. Athletics Eclltor score 0 ot er natrona 0 em w 0Ruth Falkeuau Women·. Editor Ii bo h .Ruth Genzbercer--AaaiataDt Women·. Editor mora ized a ut t e service a youngLeona Bachracb,_ ._._.Aaaociate Editorman renders his country by remain-Helen RAvitc:b. .. -Asaociate Editor _ ==============nus�� DEPAR�7Wade Bender Clarenc� Neff ing in college were, after all, notright!If the universities expect the youngEutered as second class mail at the Chi� men to remain they must inducePostomc:e. Chicago. IlUDola. March 13. 1906. them with special _courses that· willunder the act of March :. 1873.train them to such an extent that theywill be able to receive commissionsor at any rate decent positions upongraduation. Why cannot they haveEditorial Rooma E1lla 12Telephone MidwllJ' 800. Local 162-Hours: 10:15-10:45: 1:30-6: 7-9:30Business Office E1lla 14Telephone !lidw..,.. 800. Local 162-Hours: 10 :16-10 :45: 1 :30-0B,. Carrier. $3.00 a ,.ear: $1.25 a quarterB7 MalL n.so a ,.ear: $1.50 a quarter.e 472SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1918ARE THEY RIGHT!President Wilson and SecretaryBaker and Herbert Hoover and ascore of other national officials havemade statements to the effect that thecollege man under military age canreDder his best service to hiIS coun-try by remaining in his unive 'tyII rsl orco ege. Whether the __, ��- contU!or stops, is the argwnen� th �escontinues to 'PAftn;..... e nation--"S __ � educatedThey seem to Wright. b , lDen..out ate thThe fact is that the . ey'1tolerates b' ' College n-. .. _18 course llntU -ucomes for him to be dJ........ _ the tilllIist, and then he drop·��� 01' to.. edrafted It· ... n,as a Private 0 e1the!' toprivate. He can do t' to � beget a Private's berth Ilo hef.t.- as a, �Ilci 1.. "'-et' H._oPPOrtunity to use bl_ qO�e.. �n• '<:i h.._ "-ot'tIn order to seeure p� -"�ill hemen who are Urged to 1Il0t:iOtt� lttindcollege courses' realiz� �Oll� 'l'heselater they will ba t�t lie 101..•ve 10 � "{lell-tary service. But th� �o i tt�t'Cbi�� and a great � tJ-lli�:1o ltt;'t'verslties and Colleges �ll� �i� 1 ...to train those men for ��lt:e �Ol'� C)twoI'k. As far as the ��. t\C) �i ...they hal'dly rec - S � ��ell'ON..ogn�e tl. b..� l .. S·.. II;war. � ...... b"'". t t\. "'QTake the sit1qtjon . (t�,._ � •f Ch' at,� -'�to leago. If the � tlte ..... .� �the ad�ce of Presid �� '-fll'ta.' � e" 1\)- ...s :va III coUe�, he l-qt '(t --=�i. some Courses wbich ���i"b �better able to get a � �ll �� 't\ ,�the anny or 1Ul�. 't ��lt �t t �find! Of ".ftI1__ tb �"� � \. C)l'--�, e�' , �it. qical sehool anct the � � t � lC)'t\ �Corps, but Dot e���i, t�� � ,�be a doctor. DhJea��) l \L \t� ��school, then, as' an C)� t� ���i,him for specialized �i� � �,��covers, at once, the � l\il\��i �i �courses. But theY Wil ili�' � �lcommission for him. 1l'a� � � �,C)�him the sehool of the � 'l\�) \>�� �iet\�'b. C)l�, \\>,�, ��t tng8, but credit fo� le't- 111 l�get hhn anything mC)l' tlt�� ��� ����vate's berth 'When h� � tlt� �l�tlt��drafted. Then he d�� �l'ali l'a� �C)tC)\> �� bnance course, and j� • �l'� C) l'i ..lllf tlt l' •only college gradua� C)� � (J l�After that, he bits lt��l'� � �� t�«l,course, but he must ha�ll tlt:(!ebte�tthree advanced cours� i � ��� �«li .. II �\. \.lit �fore he can regtster. .\lld G��i� tOl'He comes to the conelh_. that. � ..�10 l�University of Chicago baa II that �ll.ed .: to ft h llOt.l.� thean UC8won 0 er il'rl �� b, no h- .• lit-�lal_-�--- '9Acoounts of Faculty andStudents Invited Hotel Cumberland. NEW YORK CITYBroadway at Pifty-fourth Street""Broadway·· Cars from GrandCentral DepotKept by a Colle,e ManIHeadquarters for StudentsTen \finuta° Walk from. 40 TheatresRooau. with Bath. t2.00 and upSpecial Rates for CollegeTeams and Students1,647 Teachers Needed in Twenty-. Four DaysDuring twenty-four consecutiveworking days last season, employersasked us to recommend 1,647 teacb�rsfor positions in thirty-two states. Noenrollment fee necessary. Depart-ment of Education, Western Refer-ence & Bond Association, 759 Scarritt 1============================Bldg, Kansas City Missouri.-(Adv.)Ordnance courses for undergrad- FOR THE BEST PHOTOS COME TOuates? Why canot they have Radio VANDYKE STUDIOcourses for undergraduates? Why 1225 E 55th St., near Kimbarkcannot they have other courses which We do Kodak finishings. The charmwill train them for definite specialized of your personality perfectly por­trayed.military service?A THOUGHTOnce, when we we�e working up a:heme for English 3 on the subject of?olynesian mythology, we discovered.hat the Hawaiian word for yellowlog was puapnalenalena, and we've>een wondering ever since what name;hey would give to a French poodle.The CorsetIs the,FoundationYour college outfit SIaI1Swith. aYOW'figwe wi be �and � M have disbnctstyle, .i�C# silnp&cityin dress. &pel your hedh as.­sured.Moreover. a RedfernModel is SO itluJIg com ...fortable. fitting so natur ...aDy that its wearer maydo any athIeric: stUnt aseasily as she dances.rides or waDes. in hercorset.Be sure to have your RedfernCorset properly fitted beforeyou choose your suits andfrocks-then their correctappearance is assured.$3.50 upAt all high elms $loraAd�ertise in the DaD)' Maroon. C.CORMANrS"JUMP JIM CROW" HOME LUNCH ROOMMONARCH J1lUNK ANDLEATHER WORKSBAGSTRUNKS SUIT CASESBRIEF CASES(Special Rates to U. of C. Students)149 N. Dearborn St. Central 831AMUSEMENTS�PRINCESS TomteArthur 1Iamn1erstein· PresentsTHE MYSTERY DRAMADe- Luxe AnnieWith Violet Heming & Vmcent SeraDo.."Will outstay 'The Man Who Came&Ck."'-Amy Leslie, News.'�op. Mats. Today, Fri., Sat. & Sun.Learn It-Dauce It"MAYTIME"With John Charles Thomas bdJohn T. MurrayWhistling-Humming. Laughing Hit!Pop. Mat. WeQeadIY-Best Seat. $1With Plenty Good Ones for '1Oc and 60e� S'TUD'EBAKERG�CKJrIessrs. Shubert PresentClifton Crawfordin an Utt:erl)' Uni� Musical .Play"FANCY 'FREE"With Marilyma Miller and RaJ'Raymond•� )." •r ..-• ;1HARRY P. STIMPSONThe Cumberland does more School and CoUeAe business than any otherhotel in New York. HEADQUARTERS FOR CHICAGOWe pride ourselves in having collected an unusualJy fuse tlUlJ4o!bef of novelties for our Spring Opening. 'Conservatism is the keynote=-the predominating features beingquiet. rich tones.Blue and Military Grey Serge and Flannel will have a decidedcall-probably because m'ost men look their 'best in these colors.Scotch Tweeds and Shetlandso Irish and Canadian Homespuns.Unfinished Worsteds. Saxonys-in combinations of. new coloringsand weaves-s-will also be in demand.The season will soon be at itS height. .Why not drop in at any of our three stores. if only to postyourself on the styles that will be worn by men of good taste thisseason} Patterns will be laid aside for future cuttings. if desired. :Our Spring Overcoatings are especially fine.omcERS' UNIFORMS A SPECIALTY�de in48 hours if �quired.�.\Tm10r for Young Men{'I H. LA. SALLE STREETThree Stora :J I .... S. MICHIGAN A VBNUB'II E. MONROE � .We lCI'Ve the bat of evay­�f. ProlDpc Savicc.ISIS' E. 57th StreetPhoae Midway 2830COHAN &: HARRIS preantCH�UNCEYOLCOTTOLYMPIC � .• ��J.tt. EnAravera • Printers • Linot,peraBinders. Die StampersIn "ONCE UPON A TIME"MR. OLCOTT WILL SING FOURNEW SONGS.C Joan. Liaic:k It Schtefer·'I8est Seats. $1.58OLONJ AL EYe" NiPtA. H. Woods Continues"CheatingCheaters" • •The In�eside PressProduces printins thatconveys a p1easinS im­pression and impelsclose consideration of HAS THE NEWLAPEL FRONTits contents. .... .... . ...6233 Cottaie Grove Avenue TROY'S a£ST PRODUCT• •Holiday :Matinee'�)' eou.p azul Soc:iet7[Work a �Popular Mat. Sun., Wed., a Sat., $1 Prbatfta of The DmIy M.rooa.} Advertise in the Da� KuooD. lX.';" �.... '.�. ". ,I-of",.,I \• I.If'... ":� I ,_ •.\l"�;":""::�'::� '<>: .� ,!". ,. '�'1:"". -: ¥l ':,:',': . .:' ". � -:: .., ' • " .- .'",',' .r ,," "�.' �::-" '...... �':....THE DAILY' MAROON, SATURDAY, MABCJI 9, U18DRAMATIC CLUB COMES his atudy of the farmer from Catt- THE DAILY MAROON Men', PW'nuhini" Ratl. Cap, and r:'I- INTO ITS OWN .AT LAST something county, New York. I think Heartily recommends Neckwear 1,;1WITH PLAY, "FASHION" it may be said that this was the best fIlE HARVEY ORCHESTRA JAMES E COWHEY Th:���e�;�o:o::sa:=ym?egn:,·�:ha�: SERVICE lOOl-loori..t 55th Street e(Continued from page 1) For Your Alumni Dances, Corner Elli8 Avenueacterization clean-cut; the general F' . II deC'stop looking at the club's endeavors study eminently laudable. . He domi- "Clubs and ratemities Bi iar s igars l«arettesas through a glas da kl b t will '-or ---naremntB inquire of.s r y, u nated his scenes (though Dorothy --_.view their efforts with vision, under- tried hard to hold the center herself) rHE HARVEY ORCHESTRASsta di th d . t· GEORGE W. KONCHAR, Managern mg sympa y, an apprec18 ion, and the audience liked him, as did I.h th th I b ·11 f Lo Phone Harrison 1147w y en e c u WI go are ng Miss Scholle, I understand, gave -lasthas it labored. Now is the time for night her first performance for the ====9=O=O=L=yt=to=n=B=ld=,=.====these 1vorries to materialize. So- Dramatic club. AP. was the case withlet's go! • . • All this above is Mr. Ettleson, her acting was good­rather hectic (the Maroon claims it though not as good M his-and if it... has a dead-line); I think Mr. Linn lacked at all times a cameo-profile itwould' say it to lack the trinity of was potential, and should, when back­Eng 3; but, it seems to me, it is true; ed up by some experience, gain init had to come out. I hope it has firmness and poise. All I can saysome influence. against her is that she certainly hadNow then! As to "Fashion"- her eyes on the audience. But thenTh���a�tireooAm��n� h�ey�aren����to�ertl===�==========�=================�=�======�ciety of the early nineteenth century, Miss Haggett was next; she was verywas first presented at the Park thea- good, indeed, and clever, too.ter in New York in 1845. Later it Mr. Crandal as the bunko Countfilled an engagement in Philadelphia, seemed afflicted with a mild St. Vitus'and the� appeared at the Olympic but was otherwise entirely what h�theau:r In Lo�don for a two-years' should have been-sneeling, effemi­duratl(�n. Rev�vals have been staged nate, and nonchalant. He is entirelyfr�m tIme to time, the latest attempt at home on the stage and in ease ofbemg that of the New York branch manner' is almost professional. Mr.of the Drama League o� America. Abbot must hav� had a racking timeThose who. are famtl18r WIth the la�t listening to Dorothy's Americanizednamed �Vlval tell me that our club s French, but he never twitched a mus­production far surpassed that of the cle and 'drew laughs with his cleverDrama League. Whereupon, I wished work as the negro servant of the Tif­that Dr. Hammond might have been fany's. Mr. Abbot's work has beenpresent. praised by those who criticise profes-sionally. What more can I say? ToMr. Wills, also, must go some praise.When, in the last act, he began toshow the effects of his intimacy withthe Scotch, he did himself credit andthe audience responded with pro­longed applause, something rare atlike performances. My adjectives arerunning· out, so hear now that MissPalmer, delightful as always, was theprettiest picture on the stage; thatMiss Taft was excellent; that Mr.Brown was appreciably statuesque;that Miss 'Mallory was sourly spin­ster-like, and that Mr. Piper was ahandsome Colonel and deserved whathe got in ,.the end, that being Marion.Now, if I haven't mentioned them all .I'I!l sorry; they a¥ deserve publicity..... J.f".. 'Story Clever, if OldThe story is, to us, banal. RatherRobert-W.-Chambersey in its devel­opments, but, since at that �me'Greenwich village and the Russiannovelists were not, the. outline isclean-cut and free from discussion ofeugenics and like entourage. Amother, Mrs. Tiffany (Dor6t1{yScholle), who, the pro� says, im­agines herself fashionable, is bugsabout society and ruins her husband'sbusiness by'her too-frequent fetes andexcursions into the elite. To this w0-man France and Frenchmen are theepitome of all that is proper and, fol­lowing' out her theories, she brings toher home a gentleman of France, oneCounf Jolimatrie (Carlin Crandal)with whom she desires to marry' herdaughter Seraphine (Peggy Haggott).But SnobsoD (Irving Wills), who isMr. Tiffany's (Frederick Knepper)confidential clerlc;- has caught his em-- ployer forging checks and argues,rather neatly as a la AI WoodS, tliatif Mr. TUrany doesn't get him in «Q.Odwith the beauteous Seraphine-weD,he'll spill the bealfB. TUlany, terrified(his wife is 1'1DlDlDg up bills on himat the Gotham Hoop-Skirt F&ctory at'an alarming rate) promises to ad­vance Snobson's suit, and the clerkgoes .. out to seek entertainment' in abit 0' Scotch. Things mix themselvesup satisfactority. A friend of Tif­fany's, a farmer named Truemanfrom some county or other, (Lee Et­tIeson), blows in, d� to pay the'family a visit. This farmer is frank­ness itself and doesn't hold to Mrs.Ti1rany's ideas on France and faalUonat all, at all. Be catches the, Countin a rendezotous with 1liWnette, lin.,Ti1rany's Parisian maid (Emily 'raft)and learns thereby that the Count­God bless lIS!-is DOne other thaD achef of Paria who has objeota mer­cenary on Seraphin� I anti who baa'- been rather thick with IIillinetteacross the water. Thus the stu1r isoff! In the midst of an elopement theCount decides he may as well haveSeraphine bring along her jewels, 110sends h�r back to the house afterthem. But there, midst the ensemble,Millinette spills some more of the r0-mance and the stuff is indeed off.Whereupon everything turns outbeautifully. The farmer advanees thecash with which Tiffany may save hisbusiness; the .Count takes Millinette toheart; other people 'get married; andMrs. Tiffany decides to try the com­mon life again, disgruntled, of course,but rather repentant., ,. oJ;]'" !',I. '· .i--' :i\.,. .. i• I,.,· . ':� I c ." ..,.. ,-Bouquets for the Cast PraisiDg the Man BehiDd the GunAnd now for something about theman behind the 'scenes, generally dis­re�ded in JIaroon reviews. With­�ut inteat to meager the achievementsof . those members of the cast whosegood work I have briefed above, Ishould like to here ,add a wo� con­cerning the director of the play, thesame being Mr. Millard. Never didone work harder for the suceess ,of adraniatic club play; never did one (noteven the redoubtable lime. Hammer)achieve as much. And I write thisbeca� I believe that achievementshould be recognized and those re­sponsible for succesS given their due,not -,to dabble in adulation misplaeed.Mr. Millard has had long and varim.experience with things theatrical,both professional and amateur. Hisnovitiate was spent on the Coast andhe tells me that the East (whereby, Isuppose, be meaDs Chicago) maylearn things regarding amateur dra­matics frorit the West. I don't doubtit. Mr. Millard eame East and show­ed us how it's done in Loa Angeles.You 1ritneaa his succeSs. His knowl­edge of the technicalities of "backstage" is enormous; he is thoroughlTcapable, utilizing that knowledge to .the advantage of the production, andhe handles his cast with the fist of aVon Bindenbmg, which, believe me,is w.bat a cast of undergrads need.Also he has ideas; good ideas; andhe puts them in the things be d\M!S­as last night showed. To his energymust go more than a little of thecredit for the success of "Fashion."Someone hand him a croix de guerre.I cannot say more, though morec;ould well be scid, The gentlemanhere is shrieking that the Maroon lan­guishes on the press, so we'll end witha kind word for the set, which wasgood-looking; for Miss Jobson, whohandled the business' end of "Fasb-As to the acting. I found not a ion"; and for Mr. Porter, who, theyfault of major importance. First, let tell me, sold tickets with a naiveteme throw a few lines to Miss Scholle that was extraordinary. Mr. Beanand Mr. Ettleson. I have been for tended the gate. He smiled at thelong one of the few hereabouts who incoming patrons most becominglyhave maintained Lee to be a good and made them feel at home at once;plumber when it came to acting. I and-but I have a reputation forstill maintain that be is rather funny being captious and Pm letting it sUp.as a "typical young-' American,", but ''Fashion has made the worm turn.he had me uhaIing woruieriDglyr Selah I,. [EJ.Har'vardA Home -like Hotel forUniversity PeopleTYPEWRITING OFFICERoom 2, Lexington Hallf StenographyExpert Copyingl\limeographingPrices Normal\fidway 800toeal 214 The Graber BEAUTIFUL NEWPUBLIC ROOMSLadi�s' Tailoring The New Dining Hall& Blouse Shop for Dances. Banquets and Parties.'SOc-Dinners a Specialty-SOcWe carry a complete lineof Silk and Cotton Blouses. 57th St. and Blackstone Ave.Box 269Fac. Exch. 1136 East 63rd Street•E55:� Fairueatment lC-ii-*� 'Fair List Prices �.SOOD&RICH,SILVERTOCORD TIRES •An Object Lesson in litesRES wear out INSIDE-not OU"rSIDE.They are bumed out by internal frictionalheat, rubbed up between the plies of the tire .Every extra plyrneans ex- -tra wearing out of the D tire.Note the tvvo-ply, struc­ture in the rubber saturated,cable-cord body of the Sil­vertown tire here-laid bare.Ten .SilvertownCord '• X�els Could you thus look into ALL -_tires, you would find three types:Cotton fabric, with five to sevenswathes;ThTead-web, a five to seven elybase of strings;Cable-cord, the unique patent-pro­tected, fW()-ply structure, foundONLY in Silvertown, the origi­nal Cord Tires. '1. Increaaed en­IPnepower.2. Smooth er rid-Inc.3. Fuel .. vlnc.... Speedier.5. Coast farther.6. Start quicker..-7. Easler to culdeIt stands to reason that Silver­town tires, trade-marked with theRED - DOUBLE- DIAMOND,with but two ·plies will outlastmany-ply tires with their multi­plied heat./You cannot afford to be ,without theirsmart appearance, smoother-riding ele­gance, and their gasoline-saving economy,THE B.F� GO'ODRICH COMPANYAKRON, OHIO..Abo makers of the famous fab.-ic me.Goodrich Black SafetY Treads1111 I�i ..i, :J ;" l'Ii" f�'r.:'. . l.p, l·. - � \. .,' " . �T - + -,' _-• - �._ -�'��'-, i: '-·w�ty .... ---:�:-�·,�-�::-� .�.,_.;I"THE' DAILY MAROON. SATURDAY, MARCIl 9, 1918THE CAMPUS WHISTLEMotto: You toot the line.A �EW CO,STRIB =FUSESCaesar reigned in the days of old,And conquered many lands,On the Ides of March he was stabbedin the back,Dishwater is hard on the hands.The Goldfish.Dear' Goldfish: Wonderful, etc.We'd love to have some more if theyare good as this one. Some of theothers weren't.Whistler.SPRI�G HAS CAME!The w.k. * club threatens to havea dance for the whole bunch of us inRosalie sometime in the near future.The "C" bench is being used forother purposes than decoration.We sign up for the deadly grind oftennis.Two Beta freshmen are believed tobe madly in love.The Phi Gams washed their win­dows the other day.The whole lIayroon staff is compos-ing poems.AIN'T IT.It happened just the other dayThat I received an awful shock;I heard a foolish freshman say,He didn't know our barber Doc.Larry.All of which signifying that Larryneeds a haircut. .SAD BUT TRUE!We were all set and ready to writean "Ode to the Gardens" when wehappened to mention it to Jack. Heasked us, "How much do you owe!"and knocked all the poetry out of us.Columbus, bring me the glue pot.The gods are athirst.DRAMAS.A Color "Scheme""Act�. (Ten minutes earlier.)Waitier, bring me something pink.Act 2. (Ten minutes later.)Waiter, bring me something violet.Act 3. (Ten minutes .later.)Waiter, bring me something green.Act 4. (Ten minutes later.)Waiter, bring me something yellow.Act 5. (Ten minutes later.)Waiter, bring me something-ah­Oh, bring on the borealis!She: You must pronounce"Madrahs. "He: I would call it a "Mad race."Y'gods, the driver just drove ourtaxi-cab service down the street. Wehope nobody had the audacity to usethe thing and wear it out.Dear printer: Don't set this up,but listen. I heard some nice compli­ments on your little note to me yes­terday. Keep up the good work. Haveyou nearly got the Whistle ready thatyou and the bunch are going to write?Whistler. (Be sure and don't set thisup.)All right, Whithler, I won't tbet itup. Whatever you thay goeth withuth. Printer.Sally ::\Iulroy: Have you pledgedto :Madras?Carl Brelos: What club is that?We know this is punk, but it's Sat­urday.Anon.BLACKS xxn SOPHOMORE A'8WIN IN BASKETBALL GAMESTwo of the most closely matchedbasketball �ameg of the season wereplayed yesterday when the light greenteam played the blacks and the Sopho­more A's fought the Sophomore B's.The first score was 14 to 13 in favorof the blacks and the second was 12 to11 for the A's. All four teams playedwen, the J,.'Tcens and blacks keepinga tied score until the last quarter.The sophomores gave a good displayof rapid pass work throughout thegame, especially toward the end. V.ENUSPENCILS,These famoue pen­cilS are the standardby which all otherpegcila are judged.17 black degrees6 B softest to 91I hardestand hard and medium copyingLookJol'IM VENUSfmishCOLLEGIATE BRIEFSIllinois-The Women's War Reliefcommittee at Illinois is planning togive a vaudeville performance in Aprilto raise money to help the men inFrance.---IWashington-Five women studentsof the University of Washington arepreparing to leave shortly for Francein the capacity of telephone operatorsin the United States Signal corps. Itis thought that the women will un­dergo training in telephone work forthirty days and then leave for France,where they will be stationed aboutthirty miles behind the front trenches. V E x u S Pencil..and F..nllM!I' sentfree.Pleuo eodoee 6c in .lampe for paulo.aud VOIl�C.Missouri-Columbia is to have aschool of aviation covering practicallythe same work as the United Statesground schools, according to an an- I:i:;;;:;;;;:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iliiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiii:.lnouncement made by Prof. E. R. Hed-rick of the department of mathemat­ics. In addition to the theoreticalwork, models will be built in whichit will be attempted to incorporatethe fundamental principles of aircraft For Golf. Temail aDd Sport Wearconstruction. Thirtv. -six students IN ATTRACTIVE DESIGNS FOR..MEN AND WOMENhave already signified their intention, �of taking the course, ten of whom ( ��� \h, IIare waiting for their calls to the " '�:�S:�2:�:,,:d p��=�S O';'�h�; ��Zf.{;1 �}? .Here and There-In order to get an 'l;�I,.�l�idea of what effect the war has had on h (' hI.the eastern colleges and universities '0'':);"1 . •� �during the winter, the Daily Prince- Q . "'/�� ..... _ �" Ntonian, the Princeton University Q Ro.15 �- • •• ,. 0.., N 10FtnestSeotehWooITnmia8oekalDwhite.newspaper, wrote to seven college Q o. �:",. f:1'� black. heather aDd 1.50ki f inf ti white. lriLh colored cloc&.. & pair ••••••newspapers as mg or orma on on N 15 )lm'aFIDm9cot�hWoo10olfUoae.th· b' t S I h f 0. tn gTffIlo ttl'llY. browu loUd 3.50 IIS SU jec • evera p ases 0 nn- he.tbcr(wUhout fee' f3),. pair ••••••dergraduate activity were covered, No. 20 :-hl':!..m::���i���:;'�kJD� IDranging from sports to theatricals c1uc!ta.OxfordgrecnlUl4heaLher,mpW •• 3.00f bl" In _ ... C.U.T ......... _�rom pu Ications to proms. near- )lail Orden -"en ."...,t attatia&.ly every case each one of these had Stewart Sporting Salea Co.been somewhat curtailed, the one no- 4!s FIFTH AVE., at 38th S ... N. Y.table exception being the newspapers If eteOfthemselves, all of which are runningon a pre-war basis. In every instance,also, some form of military traininghad been instituted. American Lead Pencil Co.215 Fifth Avenue. N. Y.Dept.�Dl�IMPORTED HOSIERY WhyitrabY,-_abr <tHnt4t!lWhen /you can buy a suit from us that'is made for YOU .. from a selec­tion of over 500 patterns .. notwo alike .. for about the SAMEprice that yo� MUST PAYfor ready-made clothes?Ask the boys: they will tell youwhat kind of clothes we make., 'I:J FOSTEROhio Stat&.-A slump of 1,274 in en­rollment as compared with the open­ing of the semester last February atOhio State is a�buted largely to thewar. CLARIDGE'l1re New-lallARito-w­-COLLAR'Cornell-Fifty chapters of frater-nities in Cornell University' have con­it tributed one-half their active mem­bership of last spring to the army andnavy. The average chapter member­ship a year ago was thirty-four, andthe average contribution of 'activemembers t othe service is seventeen.OberIin-Students of Oberlin col­lege will be allowed to give dancesas a result of a decision made by acommittee which was appointed toconsider the result of a recent studentballot on the college rulesSyracuse--In accordance with astate law recntly· passed, every manin Syracuse University between theages of 16 and 19 is required to reportfor miiItary ·drill one day each week.The University has' applied to theSecretary of War for the establish­ment of a Reserve Officers' TrainingCorps there. The women of this uni­versity have been advised, in a specialmessage from Food AdministratorHoover, to "pursue studies dealing es­pecially with food, . • . reinforcedby courses in Physiology, Chemistryand Economics. Swift'$PremiumOleomargarineI Classified Ads. Delicious on bread,excellent for cookingand baking. Packedin sanitary, one poundcartons.Five cents per line. No advertise­ments for less than 25 cents. • Allclassified advertisements must bepaid in advance.CONNOISEUR in Violins has collec-tion of instruments, all of which arein fine condition. For sale or ex­change at moderate prices. CallRoom 55, M. D. Hall. SWift & Companyu. s, A.. / ODWARDCorrect Dresser of Men•7th Floor, Republic Buildin� State and Adams StreetCHICAGOSardinesSausageOysters spaghettiSWiss CheeseGoulash RavioJa, Chile-Con-carnelSLSubscribe for MaroonThe Daily . ..til.. .G(W:1\IiPuNeIIIIn!ChOIl1ml\Ii�Wirocsto.\ toethe.�. loca 1CaSPl,tovbyChPalval'whda3(' L ']am!ofOWEthegetedclosgettha2theof 'dimbas.GOICh�wasWOIratlmis" 1.I"OF]Tceiv"CorectposiStu!coreanydentposienV4(fOllccc.gractelel, Not:booluswmailIS ]«A1heldI, sochdepaof tlyearora�Phil!T}meetMr.:call