,<;,." aroon,atVOL XVII. No 119 UNIVERSITY 01" CHICAGO, THURSDAY APRIL 18, 1918 PRICE Jo'lVE CESTSCHICAGO SQUADS FORANNUAL DRAKE RELAYCARNIVAL ARE CHOSEN SIXTEEN FRATERNITIES'ENTER IN TOURNAMENT NAME UNDERGRADUATECOMMITTEES TO HELPSCHOOLS' CONFERENCE START LIBERTY LOAN CAMPAIGNWITH MASS MEETING IN MANDELFirst Round to be Played Off by MayII-Finals Come Afternoon of May13-Prizes for Singles and Doubles. Will Serve as Guides to HighSchoo. Students TakingPlans for the annual interfraternity Examinations.Three and Possible Four MaroonTeams Will Compete inSaturday's Races. Rev, Dr. Cornelius Woelfkin Addresses Crowd on Need of Sup­porting New Bond Issue-Jackie Band PlaysPatriotic Musictennis tournament have at last beencompleted. In all, sixteen fraternitieshave entered. Each fraternity is toplay 'both doubles and singlesThe Interfraternity council hasgiven out the rules governing thetournament. The determination ofthe victor will be by eliminati�n.AUE FAVORED IS TWO EVE�TS. CHARLES GREENE IS CHAIRMANThe undergraduate committee which ORGANIZE CAMPUS SUBSCRIPTION COMMITTEESmile re-lay team, but quartets will becertainly entered in the mile, twomile. and four mile races. Selectionsfor the teams are practically com­plete, with the exception of the halfThree and possibly four teams willbe entered by Chicago in the Drakerelay to be held at Des ::\loines Satur­day. The doubtful entrant is the hal! will assist- in the entertainment ofhigh school seniors at the Secondary The drive is on! To an audience that applauded timeSchool Conference, May 10, have been From today on, for the next three and again, the Rev. Dr. Woelfkinselected. The general chairman of weeks, the University will gather all declared 'last night at the LibertyWith sixteen fraternities in the con- the meeting is Charles Greene, and its forces to make the Loan drive on Loan meeting in Mandel 'hall, "If wetest, four rounds will be necessary. the assistant chairmen are George the campus the swiftest and most don't mist this loan and every loan,The first 'One is to be played off some- Martin, Marion Hicks, and Florence successful in .the city. The first skir- we deserve to be whipped."time before May 11. The whole of Lamb. mish will be the meeting of the medi- Despite the rain and the mud, athe week followinz will be allowed for Th . . hid di 1� e reception committee as been ca an pre-me rca students today large audience greeted the speaker.If the Maroons are entered in the the second round, which must be fin- increased from twelve to eighteen, the at 12:45 in Room 25 of the Physiol- The Jacky band, which marched intoshort race Feuerstein, Annan and ished by ?Iay 18. Then the semi- membership of men and women 'being ogy building. Associate Prof. Lyman Mandel after parading about the cam-·Kennedy are certain, while the fourth finals must be out of the way by May equal. The women who are serving of the College of Education will give pus, playing patriotic airs, was metman will be either Buchman or Henry. 25. The day set for the finals is the on the committee are Arline Faulke- a talk on the need of bond subscrip- by wild bursts of enthusiasm. Dr.In the mile there will probably be afternoon of May 31. nau, Marion Hicks, Florence Kilvary, tions, and a number of 'Liberty Loan Woelfkin, who followed, immediatelyFeuerstein, Annan, Kennedy, and To Appoint Official Referee. Florence Lamb, Ruth Faulkenau, salesmen will 'be present to allow the won the support of the audience withGreene. With the exception of An official referee will be appointed Barbara :\1 ill er, Madeline McManus, "impulse" to turn in the proper di- his keen, emphatic statements. "ThisGreene, this is the team which has by the Interfraternity council, to pre- Marion Palmer, Helena Stevens. The rection. war is a conflict of ideals," he de­been winning consistently in the in- side over all matches. He must re- nine men are Charles Greene, George The faculty has already subscrlbed ' clared, "If America falters in herdoor meets. port the results of each round to Martin, Goodell Crawford, Arthur I $13,500 during two days of campaign- Iideals, she will be utterly routed."Good '!\len for Two Mile Run. Charles Cottingham or Frank Priebe Baer, Clarence Brown, Frank Breck- inz, One hundred and eight subscrlp- Of German Extraetion.There arc two runners of better on the last day of the round. enridge, Va.n Meter Ames, Benjamin tions have been taken. This includes Dr. Woelfkin is qualified to comparethan average ability available in the From each fraternity, a team of Engel, DaVId Annan. only those subscriptions which 'are be- the attitude of the. American and thetwo mile event. McCosh has been one three men will compete. One man is Hold Social Hour in Reynolds. ing taken on the installment plan. German peoples. His German birth_of the most consistent men on the to play singles and the 'other two will The duty of the reception commit- T.he others are bein� made dir�ct1y. to I ena:bles him to understand the motives::\Iaroon squad this year, and is a cer- play doubles. The question is not yet tee is to assist at the social hour in different banks, WIthout notification of the German nation, and the greattain starter. Greene, Speer and Lewis decided as to whether a man on the the Reynolds club at noon, May 10. to the University of the amount sub- gulf which lies between the Germanyha ve all been doing good work at this I doubles team may als� pl�y si�gles, There will be dancing and other en- scribed. "A satisfactory start," was of today and the rest of the world.distance, and in view of the lack ·of but probably such duplication will ,be tertainment, and Iuncheon later in the comment made yesterday by Mr. He was in Switzerland at the open­material in other universities, this permitted. However, any man who �utchin�n .han. Ir�n Mask will fur- Arnett, the University Auditor. ing of the war as a member of ateam should win. plays on the Varsity. team will be I nish mus-e m Hutchinson, l'h�J'ecep- ",Mo�t. .sales do not develop im� world peace conference. The. nextbarred from competition. In- this way tion in Ida Noyes hall, which is ·usu- until the closing days, but the start f ks hiew wee , w ich he spent in Ger-the tournament will be made fairer ally held after the afternoon exami-and more interesting for contestants. nations, has not been decided on yet.A prize. is offered to the winner of the Fifty guides have been appointed tosingles and another to the victor in assist in the direction and entertain-the doubles. ment of the Secondary School �n-Schedule for First Round. ference guests. The women who willThe schedule for the first �ound has act as guides will be chosen from thebeen drawn up. It is: Alpha Delta auxiliary 'Of the W. A. c., and will bePhi vs. Phi Gamma Delta; Beta Theta named later. The men are BradleyPi vs, Phi Kappa 'Psi ; Chi Psi vs. Hall, Stanton Spears, Robert Con­Delta Unsilon; Delta Tau Delta vs. nelly, Frank Madden, Jasper King,Phi Kappa Sigma; Delta Kappa Epsi- Roland Holloway, John Joseph, JamesIon V'S. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Delta Nicely, David Bradley, Harold Walker,Sigma Phi vs. tDelta Chi; Psi Upsi- Henry Kennedy, Brook Ballard, AustinIon vs. Kappa Sigma; Sigma Chi vs, Clark, Chancellor Dougall, lloffat EI­.ton, Paul Birmingham, Gerald Westby,Emmett Bay, Joseph Eaton, WilliamLEAGUE WILL I�ITIATE NEW Ellis, George 'Serck, John Coombs,CABIXET :\IE'!\IBERS TODAY Frank Long, and Buel Hutchinson.Marshals and Aides Help.Two 'Of the marshals and aides willmile men.McCosh, Lewis, Moore, and Speerare the probable men for the fourmile distance. 'Speer will be run be- made has rbeen in this case distinctly many, were sufficient to convince him.good." of the long-planned designs of theThe organization of University men Teuton militarists .:under the supervision of Walter Earle, ."Germany declared 'Russia was thehas proceeded rapidly. Each of theThe League will initiate new cabi­net members at a public installationservice today at 10:10 in Cobb 12A.This is the first time a public initia­tion service has ever ,been held and against our moral force. And if ourspirit has heart failure at this criticalmoment, then I say we \\;11 lose thiscause no one else is available, unlessGreene is used. McCosh will certain­ly compete, as will Lewis. Moore isat his 'best in the mile, and is an­other sure starter. aggressor in this war, declared wardormitories will have a representative on her-and then invaded France," heto oversee the sale of Bonds in Ihiss .. ated,"" "The whole German nationhouse. Stewart Cochrane. has been ap- has been founded on the rotten plankspointed the Divinity, Harold Fishbein of forgery, the forgery of the Emsthe Snell, and Clarence Brown the tIt F hi h f dI e egrams 0 ranee, w IC orceHitchcock representative. It has also F t t th hall dranee 0 accep e c . enge, anbeen planned 1:0 reach the fraternities b d . d f Al d Lo -e eprive o sace an rrame,through a group of five speakers, each G ed t . k d teri 1ermany us rIC ery an rna fa'Of whom will speak to the members of force then, and she is using �t now.three fraternities. The first appeal to She is putting her material forcethe fraternities will take place Mon-day night, between 6:30 and 7:30.There will also be a Liberty Bondsalesman stationed in 'Cobb hall to war."Feuerstein is Traveling Fast.The best chances for Chicago vic­tories are in the mile and two milecontests. Feursteln recently set anew record in the C. A. U� raeesheld two weeks ago at Great Lakes,and should make equally g-ood -tlmein Iowa. One record breaker on a Sigma Nu.team is a big advantage, and withGreene, Kennedy and Annan travelingat a fast clip, the Maroon hopes arehigh. take subscriptions on any plan.A large number of Liberty Loan Germany Has 'Xinth Loan.assist at the meeting Friday night, posters have been ordered and will He declared that the only way forllay 10, at 7:30, in Mandel hall. soon decorate the campus at all those who remained behind the linesstrategic points. The Committee on could keep up the morale was by put-,"'RESHMAX DEBATERS ARE Liberty Loans has plans on foot to ting every resource behind the Loan.READY TO OPPOSE TEAMprepare a number of novel methods "Germany has asked her people toFRO:\I XORTHSIDE CA)IPUS in advertising the progress of the mortgage her savings for the nextcampaign. A part of the plan will ten years," he said. ."Germany hasconsist of rounding up all the artistic I had her ninth loan already. Surelytalent of the campus t� co-operate lour morale is strong enough to standon a number of posters which have only a third Liberty Loan.""The boys are in fine trim," said been planned Iby the committee. As The last emphatic statement thatCoach Atkins of the freshmen orators a part 'Of the plan, the following have set his auditors in uproar was, "WinYellow .Iacket will gi\·e a movie who meet the Northwestern freshmen been asked by the Committee to meet the war, prevent Germany from col­party tonight. All members are asked Friday eveninjr. The Chicago debat- today at 11 :50, for a few minutes, in lecting' any indemnities, and when sheSeniors! Hark to the social pro- to meet in the foyer of Ida Noyes crs were heard by ::\Ir. Bramhall of Cobb 1 �A: Inez Astber-c, llargaret sees the immense war debt she hasgramme for the quarter! It's com- h:ll1 at 7:1;'. the Political Science department last Allen, Elizabeth Brown, Ruth Gcnz- piled up she will think the Frenchpletcd at last and it's the peppiest night. He stated that he liked the hf'rg. Doris )Iartin, Irene Okebcrz. revolution only a )Icthodist Sundayever had. First, there are to he TilE DAILY .!\L\ROOS stand taken and thought the short Helena Stevens and Elizabeth School picnic."sewing parties for the women on BliLI..ETI�. hallot would ultimately be accepted. Wheeler. After the moctinz a' �roup of menand women f'rorn the different organ-alternate Fridays, 'heJ!inning thi!; The final touches will he put to thcw('ek. The idea of �ewing isn't \'ery Today. team this c\·cninJ! when they will ."tRE)IEOICAL STeOE�TS ARE izations of the campu� met the peopleb Cha 1 C 11 of C d . f' F .\SKEO TO FILL OUT BI..A�KS at the doorg and secured their sub-peppy, to . e sure, but the conversa- P{', 0 {'ge omm{'r("e an meet a practIce team rom tne orumtion will he. Each Senior woman Administration and School of Educa- dehating society. scriptions to thc third loan. Large. . 10 1- 'I d 1 All pre-medical students who will numherg of people paid their initialmu�.t �how her patriotism and college tlon, : ;l. ;., an e. The (]uestion for discus!;ion is "Rc-Divinit, .. ChanAI •. 10:1;), Haskell. .�ol'-""l'. That the Short Ballot Be enter the ::\Jcdical school at the open- clepo�it and r('cei\"ed the Liherty Bellspirit by coming to every single one J 11"" , .... , in� of t.he Autumn quarter have been button as a s:rmbol of their share inof these p.arties. Tomorrow. Adopted in State, County and l\{u-. 1 El . "Th Ch· d rc-quested to call at once at the office the Loan.On the twenty sixth there's to be a Divinity Chapel. 10:15. :"Iandel niclpa ectlOns. e lcago e- of thc ::\ledica1 Dean for blank appli-"aude·ville and dance at 8:30 in Ida haters are Isadore Friedman, Ells-German Con,-ersation club, .. :30,Xoyes hall. Those who know say that worth Hass, and Ben Herzberg. TheIda �oy� hall. I fi d h·the vaudeville will be more than worth atter was con ne to IS room yester-University Debate, Chicago VB._Xorth .. -estem. 8:15, Harper as..qembly.The two mile squad is also a classyaggregation, with :McCosh and Greeneequal to the 'best in the meet. Speeris a new man, while Lewis has hadsome experience. Both are promisingrunners, and should ,he able to hold uptheir end of the race. the League officers arc anxious tohave as many women as possible pres-ent Second cabinet members haveMAKE A�XOUXCEME:ST OF' Will Speak Friday on Short Ballot)Iary Lois Brown, retiring president,SE�IORS' SOCIAl .. EVENTS Question-Tryout Beforewill speak at the meeting.DURING CURRE:ST QUARTER Mr. Bramhall.Xumerous Adiviti{'s of DifferentSorts, Including Vaudeville andBeach Party, on Schedule. Yellow Jacket Gives Party.cations. These applications must hecarefully filled out and returned tothe office of the l'fedica1 Dean, C()bb Rlue Hottle will meet today at10:10 in LexingWn 14.Rlue Bottle Hold� �I�ting.(Continued on page 2.) (Continued on paJ!e 4.) 10 A, on or before llay 1a.2 THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY APRIL,18. 1918Iis an assurance of the success of the I LIBRARY REQUESTS AID INthird Liberty Loan for the nation. SECURING W �R LITERATUREWar Committee A�ks" Contribu-tions to Collection of Books. Pamph­lets. Maps and Posters.A THOUGHT.Thf' l'Otudf'Dt Sf'WMpa,N"r of Th� l"Dh'f'r .. lt,.uf ('hlt'NOJ'uhlishl'tl 1IIIIrnllll:!I, (,�CI'l't �attlrllay, �1I11' The Whistler finds this headline in'I:I�' a nd .\IIIIIIIII�·. uurtue t In- A Itt 1111111,Wllltt'r :11111 �llrlll;: cluartt'rtl hy t he Dally the Minnesota Daily: Prezy to Ap­!'laru(l1I corupuny.pear Witn All Titles On Frosh But-Ar t hur lhwr Presldent t Th Who tl rks that heCharlt'N (:rt"'III' '., �'-l'rt>t:lry on. e IS er remaWadc' H.-Illlt·r ,.............. 'l·r .. :u;urer didn't know they taught Russian atI :\linnesota too.THE �T.\I:·FAr-t hur B:wr .: �l:lll:l:.:lll:: EcHtor APRIL ISSUE OF ALUMNICharlc's (;rt-'·Il.· , :St'ws Edltur ,MAGAZI�E HAS ARTICLEHolallcl Ho lloway ...•••.•••• .:sl::ht l-:llltorJohn .1o" e ph Day Editor BY FREDERICK BRA!\IHALL\\"111. lIorl:t'lhHerD Asst . At hlet ivs J-:III!orIt ut h Fu lkeuau \\'UIIII'II s E,lItllrHutJl (;t'nz.ht'rJ:t·r Asst. W011It'OI'S ,,:,lltor I �umber Also Contains Discussions of1.1'01111 Bachrnch <\s,",o.·I:lt e E.lltor11t'It'D Ha"lt('b ••...•..• _ • .\SSlId:ltl' Editor University Volunteer Unit andCondition of Fraternities.lU'�I:SE�8 :ml'.\I:T�lE:\-r"·;tllt· n"'III!t'r L'lar"lIee �I'rrEllh'rl'tI as "''''''1111 ,·Ia .. s llIall nt t he ChI· I The April number of The Univer­c.:�;.:'.. I:ostorrit-". 1·�I�.::I;':O. �llI.lIu!:o:. �.arch i sitv of Chicago Magazine contains for1 ••• 1.1(11 •• ullcl"r th ... h. nf �(.Il" IJ .1. lS •• t .its feature the third in the series ofthe University war papers, "Democ­racy the Basis for World-Order." byFrederick D. Bramhall, '02. The key­note of the paper is struck In the firstparagraph. "1 want,"says Mr. Bram­hall, "to try to indicate in what senseit is true that Germany stands as thechief enemy of democracy: how it isimpossible for her, so long as thatenmity lasts, to be a good neighbor.in the world, �nd how that is the chiefobstacle to our American hope forpeace and world-order."Other articles are on the UniversityB�' Cur rter. �:.O(J :. YI'ar: �I.:!;; :l quarterBy �Iall. �.t.o a Yl"lr: $1.;.0 n 'lllllrterEditorl:.1 Rooms Eills I:!'1".-1.·,,1)(1111' .\IIt1wll,\· �tl(l_ Locn l -.6!!.nours: 10:15·1(1:-1.-,: 1:::0,.i: 'i.�I:::OHII:o:Ir ... �s OtTil'l' ••••••..•..••..•••• Ellis 14'fclt'(Ib(llll' �lIllw:t v �1I11, 1.11".11 Iti:!Hour .. : W:l;;·l'.:-n: 1 ::14,·;,THURSDA Y. APRIL 18. 1918.THE �ATIO�AL CALL.Last night Mandel hall saw the suc­cessful opening of the campus LibertyLoan campaign. That campaign willsee a successful culmination onlythrough the active support of everymember of the University of Chicagocommunity, 'Does the average person quite rea­lize the tremendous amount of la:borwhich goes into the floating of govern­ment loans? 'Some of the facts arethese. There are fifteen million people are two departments, Over Here andin the Seventh Federal 'Reserve Dis- Over There. The fonner contains atrict, and the national aim is that each list of former students now in Franceand the latter has several pages ofone of these men, women or childrenshould be reminded at ev�rY turn that alumni notes. This number containsthe government is askin� for a loan: a photograph of Hawley Bro�elluntil he or she is convinced that the Olmstead, who was the first Umver-common duty is to buy Ib<)nds. sity student to die' in France.In the distribution heaclqu3l"ters for FIVE PASS PRELlMLVARYthe seventh district there are at work DRAMATIC CLUB TESTStwo hundred clerks, stenographers,and mailers. Seven tons of mail areshipped out daily, inclu4ing Sunday,from these otrices. It ts estimatedthat three hundred tons of mail willbe shipJ>ed out before �e work ofbilling the district will have been colJ'l­pJeted. More than a h�ndred thou­sand CircUlar letters contA.iIling adviceand iJlStruction for the �hOu�ands ofworkel's in the distl"ict are beingmailed out each week. ��gl1t ,hundredthoustlnd stickers for automobilewindshields will be distri\wted.One Doster for eVery tw�nty_tive�el"son� in the district has beCl} placed Publishes Text on Mathematics andIn �tt�et cars, office ba.ndings, and New Theological Treatise.other 'lJuhlic places. In addition tothis, �n nuIlion poster stl\wl>S are be- The University Press yesterday is­in� di�tributed to all ti�s altd busi- sued two new books, "Scientificness hOUSes in the distr'�t that send Method in the 'Reconstruction of Ninthout at least a tboUsanq let.ters or Grade Mathematics" and 4'Matthew'spa�kages a day. Sayings of Jesus." The fonner is the-And more than thil'tY"si" hundred work of Associate Prof. Rugg of thene"-5papel's, magazines, �n<l trade School of Education and John R.�ublications in the distri� are print- Clark, chairman of the department ofmg- tb� news material !utni�hed bY mathematics in the tParker highthe Pt�ss bureau of the Vlberty wtl. school, Chicago. The book discussesThey are furthering the �aus� of the in detail the problem of the recon-Libert� Loan. structi-on of mathematics in the highl'he Da'l ,� on .�. school and suggests remedies for the. ) Y .tlaro prl�e' I�lf as . 'being Ilne of that thirty ... !1..· ..... h d·.J failure of the present system.• ">I_' un rev· . f J "In its OWn humble Way, it tries to ·�Matthew's Saymgs 0 esus wascatTY 4n the work of the �wo hundred wrItten by the late George D. Castor,clerks, the tons of mail "he t '1 formerly professor of New Testament,\. en In) - I• Sch 1 flion J)ostCT stamps. 11) its own: Literature in the. PaCific 00 0 IhUmble Way, it tries to influence pco-I Religion. The writer makes a de-'pIe to r-�ognize the Warth of this i t.-'liled study of the non-Markan m.�­thir-d Rovernment loan tG the extent; terial and Ma.tt�ew an� Luke. ThIsof :p�rSonal subscription. I is a problem whIch has. mterested andAnd just as the Daily �bl'Oon does i baffled many theologmns, and. �heits _. th d rt" I book is considered a valuable additIonpa." In eave 151n�, so the .membcl'S of the University of Chicago 1.0 the literature on the subJect.community should do t}1eir part Inper-sonal subscription, as they findthey can aft'ord it. An tbe little de- BaptiM; women of the Universitytails piled to�ether make the sum' have been asked to meet today attotal. And every subscl'"iption that \10:4:> in Cobb 12A instead of yester­comes in during the campus campaign I day, as previous.ly announced.. l Eliza:beth Brown, Dorothy Esta­brook, Glen Harding, Howard Beale,and Joseph Bogynska passed the pre­liminary trials for associate member­ship to the Dramatic club and areeligible to appear at the finals whichwill be held tomorrow at 3 in HarperM 11. The active members of the clubhave been requested to attend also,since they, with the help of the of­fleers, are to act as judges.PRESS ISSUES TWO VOLU:MESBaptist Women Meet Today. Volumes-Committee Will ContinueCollection for Several Weeks. CAMPUS WOMEN MAKE ANDSE� D 954 GARMENTS FORAMERICAN FUND TO FRANCENine hundred and fifty-four art­icles, made by the women of the Uni­versity, have been sent to the Ameri­can Fund for French wounded by theThe war library committee of theUniversity libraries is making a col­lection of all available war literaturepublished in this country and abroad.Realizing that such a collection willbe invaluable in future years, the com­mittee is anxious to make it as largeand. complete as possible. While agreat many posters, books and pamph­lets have been collected already, thecommittee is making undiminished ef­fort to increase the colleCtion by ap­plying to every possi'ble source forcontributions. number of books which the committee"There are doubtless many people I hopes to collect within the next :ewon the campus, 'both students and fac- weeks. The need for mathematicalulty, who could help us,'" said Mrs. books-arithmetics. geometries. andH. l\{. Beardsley, secretary of the trhronometries continues. In fact, all 1 while. As for the music, it will becommittee. "Several departments in text books published since 1910 will sublime-as usual. The luncheon willthe University have co-operated with be welcomed by librarians and soldiers be on .May 3. The fare will be theus in getting material, and it must be II alike. exact opposite of dormitory and com­true that many individuals have odd Members of the library staff have mons fare and so. as the saying goes,pie-ces that they will be willing to do- I been co-operating in .the drive for a large crowd is expected.nate. books. Alice Potter, Abby Allen, Wini- As a young senior's fancy turns toEven duplicates will be welcomed. fred Ver Nooy and about a dozen beach parties in the spring, there willThe committee is very anxious to other young women have been plating be a beach party !\Iay 10.. That is, ifstimulate interest in this important and shelf-listing the books. After it doesn't rain; for then the partyundertaking." the books have 'been properly labelled will have to be transposed to. a fra­they are sent to the Public Library, ternity house. The picnic is to be thewhere they are packed in wooden twenty-fifth, and they S'dY it is to becases and sent to France. These cases a rare and wonderful affair. Andare so constructed that they may he after the picnic, nothing is scheduledused as book shelves after they are until the day of all days--Class Day-opened "Over there." on the tenth of June.ABOUT I"OUR THOUSANDBOOKS NOW COLLECTED.FOR SOLDIER LIBRARIESSchool of Education Contributes 200Up to date the number of books Women's War Aid. These garmentscollected on the campus for the sol- were made last quarter and were justdiers' libraries is estimated at about shipped. Very little sewing has been4000. Of these about 200 have been done in Ida Noyes hall this quarter,collected by the school of Education. and Mrs. Goodspeed has said that sheMr. Lescher, an instructor in the Uni- hopes many more women 'will takeversity high school, collected 417 advantage of the opportunity offeredbooks from the students in three of in Ida Noyes hall to do work for thehis English classes. Allies.There is still a big demand for newbooks. No limit has been set on the !\UKE A:S:SOU�CE:\IE..�T OFSE�IORS' SOCIAL EVE�TSDURING CURRENT QUARTER(Continued from page 1)Hold Faculty Party April 20.bllt this IJady Sealpax ISVolunteer unit 'and on condition of Miss Talbot and the members ofthe fraternities. Lee Ettelson, '18, Green hall have issued invitations forgives a full account of the various the annual faculty party, to be givenquadrangle events. In the Letter Box Saturday, April 20.are, among others, letters from Law-rence MacGregor, '16, who is in BaseHospital Unit 13 in Atlanta, and fromMargaret Laing, '09, who is in France.Just before the athletic summary, a blessing! ""THOSE adver-tisements of themen in that coolat hl er ic underwearha ve al ways made meenvious, and at lastthey have made someof it for us.""\:Vell, Lady S'ealpaxcertainly fills the bill.It's every bit as niceas the men's athleticunderwear-loose-cutand cool and free.It hasn't any frillseither.""That's just what I -like about it-it hasall the advantages of the men's athleticunderwear, besides being so well-made andof such soft material, Come on, I'mThis Lady Sea/pax puts the real Spring feeling into me. It givesh freedom I feel as if I could play better than ever before."mue .rested.me soady RS�(llpaX7he]\feW :Ilthlelic Vnderwear fOr )(omen"lUST LIKE BROTHER WEARS"Lar/;' Sealpax comes crisp and freshfrom the laundry in a sealed, sanitarySealp�x envelope, ready to wear.If your dealer hasn't Lady Stalpax,write to us for further facts.The Seal pax Company, Dept. 13 Ba!timore, Md. "ncscisVESEitthttlOlst01it:SJ:mespra •rut:t.evt.tloisiJvwwa,wwIsir81h,'gl0:U]tl1>4ICncb:werIIIR=]j,THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY APRIL 18. 1918course of conversation he suddenly Knowledge of the Duchess' love for I sion, are all like a wonderful sym­finds that the Duchess is his Mimsey him. And as he dies, he returns in. phony of movement and sound. If Iof old! After a reminiscence, a ,bring-I spirit to the old garden, there meet- am mad, in. writing thus, John Barry­,ing back of all that life had held dear I ing his mother and l\fimsey. more's aetrng has made me so. Ifto him, she leaves 'him, reminding him I The bare story is absurd. But the you can come from the Princess with­to dream true as she had told him to, I faul� is mine. A reviewer cannot do o�t "" inexplicable feeling of eleva­years before. justice to the sweep of the thing, tion 10 your heart, you cannot be hu-Lonely in Paris, he returns suddenly the imagination, the poetry, the J..'Tan� man.to his uncle's quarters to find waiting deur, the stage effects, the acting. Constance Collier is no less deserv­there the colonel for Mrs. Dean and You see here Ibbetson going about in ing. Pitifully short and far 'betweenFrom the tenor of most of these the highest level of dramatic art. her mother, who have come to get his dreams, and 'by the most perfect as her scenes are, she neverthelessreviews of current plays readers may When Ibbetson, before your very eyes, back from the old villain some foolish I acting you see the pathos of it all. makes an ineffaceable impression.unhappily come to the conclusion that kills his uncle with a cane, why-it is letters she had 'written him. As a He is seeing himself in the past, hear- She is stately and handsome, everythe reviewer is .too easily pleased; nothing. It is as essential, as log�cal price she has brought the letter he I ing his mother and yet cannot talk to hit of the benevolent duchess, and shefor I must admit that with but a few as the death of Hamlet or Lear, WIth-I wrote to her telling her of Peter's her, cannot touch her. The illusions is an actress of the first water.exceptions my reviews have been fa- out losing for a second the intensity ofparentage. The old lady, with better are irreproachably effective. Cynical Of the others in the cast, which isvorable. It is perhaps my privilege one of those supreme moments which I motives than methods, tells Peter of though you may be, prosaisally as on the whole excellent as are theto explain that the favorableness of live forever in the .mi�ds of the Wit-I the Colonel's lies. Peter, temporarily your mind may react to the facts of stars, Miss Alice John as Mrs. Deanthese columns has 'been a direct result ness. And then, In Its softer mo-I crazed at the defamation of his existence, you cannot escape the is without reproach in her art. Herof selection, not of low standards. It �ents, yo� cannot be sure whether the! mother's name, kills his uncle. beauty, the art of this play, in which part, though hardly more than a lit­is simply because I, being allowed the lines are 10 prose or blank verse-all I Peter, six months later, is to be the spiritual is set before you in the tIe, is certainly made the most 00.use of this space hut once a week, re- you can hear is t�e poetry of the jlianged for the murder, having of bodily. rso also with the colonel, Mr. Edmundview not what I think the sophomores word� and the music Of. J�hn �arry-I course absolutely refused to tell the As to the acting, there is little to Elton. But of all the others none iswill, be most interested in- (for. they more s or 'Constance Collier s voice. reason for his action. At the fatal be said. John Barrymore was never I comparable to Mr. Wallis Clark aswill go to the "Passing Show" without Let me sketch the story briefly: In moment a reprieve comes, commuting so fine, even in "Justice," and though �ajor Duq�esn�s. He has undoub�­advice), but what I think is the most the first act C-01. Ibbetson, a detest- his sentence to life imprisonment. I have seen all the stars since Richard I edly done 10 this play the finest bltworth while play or reVlle of the able old roue, is paying unwelcome at- The duchess herself has secured the Mansfield, I have seen none with the ---------------k All hi f h . ?tf D fi bl (Continued on page 4.)wee c. t IS as a pre ace to w at tentions to .. rs. ean, a ne, no e commutation, and that fact alone imagination, the power, the art of thisis coming ; for though I have praised I woman who befriends the colonel's T h hmakes it bearable to Peter-who young man. 0 me, t ere as neverin the past, I must find newer and nephew Peter. Peter is bashful be-I wanted death. He is given a mes- been anything like it. After the thirdstronger adjectives for today. If r fore strangers, living his life in thesage from the duchess telling him act, the audience was so enthralledhave said that this or that play was memories of the past in Paris when l that his life has just begun, and that that for fully a minute there was no. good or a little better than the run with his mother and father, with he must dream true. So for forty applause; and then there was thunder.of plays, you must understand that Madame Seraskier and her daugh- . ch h.years he dreams "true" every night, His melodious, slow spee , 1S eyes"Peter Ibbetson" is entirely without ter �imsey and their friend Major living in his fantasms with the with soul in them, his grace, his pas­the capacity � all pbys which have Duquesn�� he had been supe�� =������������������������������been on the Chicago boards for some happy. By chance, Peter shows upyears. How many seasons, I cannot his uncle's lie about a song, to the,say. All I know is that in some few authorship of which he had Iaid claim,years of constant theater going I have and the two are estranged. The colo­never been moved as I was the night nel intimates to Mrs. Dean that PeterI saw John Barrymore and Constance is really his own natural son, and heCollier in "Peter Ibbetson." goes so far as to write a letter con-Perhaps fortunately for me, I have taining this information to the lady,never read the novel of the same name sending it 'by 'Peter. Peter mean­by George du Maurier-a novel, while has seen the Duchess of Tower,which, so I have been informed, start- a. kind, benevolent, stately lady; anded magnificently and petered out he falls lin love with her.miserably. But the play by' John N. Two years later he returns to Paris�pha� � n�an�e�p�� It has a���efin�h��dfri�d,�em� �����������_��_������������� �none of the transfonnatory self-con- jor, a decrepit old man who fails tosciousness of a dramatized novel. It recognize Peter. The young 'manis 11 play of itself. It is not a con- finds that his Par.is·is dead and '8. newventional play, what with its seven Paris in its piace. He lies down onsettings, its sweep through the years, the couch and dreams as little Mimseyits use of the spiritual. But for all had told him to dream-true. Andthat, it is solidly built, vividly pic- he is back in his childhood again...turesque, and it succeeds by marvel- But the Duchess strangely enough isous construction, expert direction, and there also. When 'he awakens, hesuperb acting in making the fantasies finds the Duchess at 'his inn. In theof an imaginative soul as real as lifeitself. It is a play. which like Shake­sperean tragedy, might so easily bemade rank melodrama by the slight­est indiscretion in acting or in inter­pretation; but you never suspect fora moment that it is on anything butA Review of "Peter Ibbetson" at the Princess TheaterBy LEE ETTELSONThe Old ReliableTickets to HarperANNOUNCEMENT OF AN OPPORTUNITY1 would like .to communicate with a few University of Chiaag omen who are taking courses that will fit them for a banking career orfor bond salr smen or other work in financial iristitutions. I will arrangeto be ,:n Chicago within a couple 0 f weeks and can offer to men whoare considering going into financial institutions after leaving collegesome profitable work for this sum mer. This applies to freshmen andsophomores especially. By profita hle is meant both a money consider'at ion this summer and an oppportu nity to form connections which mayhe of considerable value after grad uation. Please write me at once.w. I�. HOOPER. Financial Editor. Railway Age.Woolworth Building. New York City.Why.YOU CAN BUY A SUIT FROM US THAT ISMOSERMADE FOR YOU, FROM A SELECTION OFOVER 500 PATTERNS, NO TWO ALIKE, FORABOUT THE SAME PRICE THAT YOU MUSTPAY FOR READY-MADE CLOTHES?Shorthand CollegeEnrolls high school and acad­emy graduates exelusively inday school. Secretarial andstenographic courses are there­fore ur.usually thorough; sur­roundings refined and congenial.Thefinestpencilfor allwork' Moser Shorthand College.116 S. _idai,an Ave. Central 5158C. CORMANY'SHOME LUNCH ROOM ASK THE BOYS; THEY WILL TELL YOUWHAT KIND OF CLOTHES WE MAKE.Headquarters for University StudentsWe serve the best of every­thing. Prompt Service.Try Our Speeial Sunday ChickenDinner Correct Dresser of MenFOSTER & ODWARDIt writeseasierIt lastslonger 1313 E. 57th Street7th Floor Republic Building State and Adams StreetsWoodlawn Trust&: Savings Bank1204 East Sixty-Third Street CHICAGO17degreesat allstationers NEAREST BANKto. The University of ChicagoResources $3,000,000An Old, Strong Bank $1.50 tickets to the Harper Dances are on sale atTHE DAILY MAROON Business Office for $1.00Save 50c on each ticket and call for your tickets.THE place. to dance on the South SideAccounts of Faculty andStudents Invited Classified Ads.Five cents per line. No advertise­ments for less than 25 cents. Allclasslfied advertisements must be paid(or in advance.hJU SALE-At a bargain, a 5x10ol&:!ard table: English oak finish.Cost $500. Practically new now.Comprcte with dozen cut-s, cue rack.and set oi wry balls. '!'able and equip­ment cost $GOO. Y'v-;!1 sell for $150cash. Enquire box 15f.·, Faculty 2x-change.·MEN�S MADE..JTO.JMEASURE SUITS$22.50 and up. Reliably tailored.Anderson & Reetzke. 19 S. Wells St.WANTED-A used leather brief bag.Must be good quality and have twoor three pockets. Phone Lakeview5985 after seven o'clock.AMUSEMENTSLEON ERROLIRENE BORDONIMatinees-Wednesday and· SaturdayGARRICKTONITEDOS ALD BRIA�With Audrey Maple, Frank Moulanand 60 others"Her Regiment"vrCTOR HERBERT will direct toniteFirst Matinee Wednesday $1.00PRINCESSCommencing Tonight: Mats. Thursdayand SaturdayJOHN BARRYMORE andCONSTANCE COLLIERin the Sensationally Popular Success"Peter Ibbetson"From the Famous Novel by DuMaurier, author of "Trilby"TONITE--Matinee Wednesday $1.00:Most beautiful of all. Musical Plays"MA YTIME"With JOHN CHARLES THOllAS,JOHN T. llURRA Y andCAROLYN THO�ISONSTUDEBAKERTIIURSO:\ Y. APRIL 18Harper Theatre"THE SHUTTLE"Featuring Constance TalmadgeA Trip With Burton HolmesHarold Lloyd Comedy."Here Come the Girls"" TH� DAILY MAROON. 1'HURSDAY APRIL 18. 1918Examples. A I:'LAY-AT LAST-(Continud from page 3.)Y. !\1. C. A. Aids Students in HearingYisitin� Evangelist on Friday. :\liss Amelia Sears Lectures Under of senile acting I have ever seen, HisBranch of School of Commerce and creaking bones, his nervousness, hisAdministration-Work Out Specific voice, his wavering mind, are put sorealistically before the audience thatwe could hardly believe anyone but:'tliss Amelia Sears, who is well the major himself could have done dt,In the dream. Mme. Ruano Bog'islavas Madame Ceraskier, alWl Miss Mer-the "woims."WE have discovered the secret of in a body.TICKETS FOR SUNDAY SOCIAL WORKER SPEAKSIN HALL ON TYPE CASETickets for the students' night atBULLETIN: 2B:37 P; l\�o'u��e���:-. the Billy Sunday tabernacle may beday: Clarence rown 5 obtained at the Y. M. C. A. offices be-Doing- well. Score: 27. GIVEtween 10:45 and 12, and from :!:30 onin the afternoon. Tickets are also known as a case worker, spoke yester-WE thought the g'irls had taken up day at 4:35 in Harper assembly on abeing' g'i\'en out at the Informationfa WTlCY dawnsing and were practicing type case for social workers. The lee-desk in Cobb hall, and at the League cedes Desmore as Mme. Pasquier wereon the walks yesterday but we found ture was the nineteenth in the serlesoJ offices. These tickets will not admit' � WI ""'. all that could be asked for, the latterout later that they were just avoiding "Types of Social Work," and wasanyone after 7:15. It has been de- especially 'being beautiful and mother-cided that the students will not attend given under the Philanthropic Service 1y, adding verity to the dream. Thedivision of the School of Commerce whole production is wonderful andand Administration. beautiful. If lss jt Ithe locked doors in front of Rosen- The tickets are going rapidly, and you miss 1 • you a oneUnder the supervision of the 1ectur-wald. On Mondavs, Wednesdays and the Y. )1. C. A. has requested stu- are ,the loser. Poor Mirnsey, sayingH. .l.U oJ n er, the audience worked out a solu-. h h d _J • 1 ked dents to obtain theirs as soon as pos- to Peter us a boy:Fridays the rIg' t an uoor IS OC" tion for a typical case which comes_J Th _..t d S t sible "Oh. now you ar.e dreamirur true!and on Tuesdays, ursaays, an a -'- . to the notice of social workers. Miss It's quite easy-my father taught me.urdays the left hand. Remember this Sears asked leading questions, as tok Home Economics Club Entertains. You have only to go to sleep withand you won't break your arm any what should be done in certain situa- your feet crossed and your hands be-The Home Economics club will give tions. These questions the audience, hind your head. You must nevera party today at 4 .in the sun-parlor answered, in most cases suggesting leave off thinking where you want to Ithe same solution as that used by I!:i_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii_ii:ii; __ iiiiiiii�of Ida Noyes hall. All members of be in your dream, and when you fullthe club have been invited. the worker herself. asleep you get there.""We are inclined to think that themore.PEGGY Haggott wishes it an­nounced that she has just learned thata standard dictionary is not an ordi­nary dictionary on a stand.WALT Earle is the ideal man to sellliberty bonds. One feels as helplessas a sixteen year old Boche before aBritish tank when he looms in theoffing.CULTURE LESSON. (No.2.)The way to feel at home under allcircumstances is to he always readyto make some remark, original andstriking, which will Iead your audi­ence to believe that you are clever.Audiences always look up to cleverpeople, no matter what kind of neck­ties or hats they wear(If one waits long enough 'beforespringing the second part he winsurely get by with it.)See tomorrow's paper for next les­son.Has the sun just gone behind acloud?Oh no, Beale just went out with hisoxfords.Anon. judges are always right," said MissSears. "They harangue the mothers,though, instead or suggesting methodsof �emedying the case. Nor do theyhelp to 'clean up.'"The case used for illustration wasday hy illness, but it is 'hoped he will that of the Finnigan family, ofbe able to get into the debate. The mother, father and four children. Thedebate will be held in Harper as- father, having got drunk and quar­semb1y and admission is free. reled with the mother, deserted theThe question of the short ballot is family and sailed for England as aa burning question 'Of the day. The member of the British army, By thesubject is to come before the Illinois help of the charity worker, the caseLeglslature and is causing much dis- was fully investigated and the familycussion in this state. The freshman was tided over until Mrs. Filligan re­debaters have been able to collect a ceived her pension.FRESH)fA ..x DEBATERS AREREADY TO OPPOSE TEAMFROl\1 XORTHSIDE CAllPUS ADVERTISE IX THE :\L\uOO�.(Continued from page 1.)large amount of information on thesubject and, it is stated, are present- I.1. On a day like yesterday we sue-ing the matter in a very sound man- �IARO()X ADS BIU::"\G RESULTS.,ceeded in bowling over about twenty •��eMd��I��gag���M� ======.=��"�+=�=.=��.. ��.=��.�.=�=����������.=.=<=�=.•=�=��.=.=.=<=.�=�=�=�=.=.=.=.=�=.. =�.=�=v=�=<=�=.,=�.=�+tati@byjust�e�mpklittk�i�. ===============================1 ¥I -- :You can- do the same ·by using some- ESTABLISHED 1818, \VE INVITE ALL UNIVER- :�thing just as original. Here is the � :tate t (/...___/ / , � / SITY STUDENTS TO INSPECT �s "T:�S: fine weather-for ducks." � mt/� OUR COMPLETE LINE OF i�-!£l!� �!��!���! I.;-SUITS, COA TS �+I AND DRESSES :III Also offering a lOfj;) i+··discount in the entire! store to get acquainted iI with you. :t.c •I Come early while our :I stock is complete. :�:II The Royal I1 1220-22-2-1 E. 63rd St. :�:! Ncar Kimbark :�-----------------------------------! �� b���+++�+�+�+�+++++++�+++++++++++++++�+.+++;••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •i Spread Your i• We pride ourselves in having collected an unusuallyi Bread With II large number of novelties for our Spring Opening.• • Conservatism is the keynote----the predominating fea-•• ... tures being quiet, rich tones.;: SWl·ft'S II Blue and Military Grey Serge and Flannel will have• • a decided call-probably because most men look their best= Premi II in these colors.II remlUm = . Scotch Tweeds and Shetlands, Irish and Canadian• • Homespuns. Unfinished Worsteds, Saxonys-in combin-E Oleomargarine: ations of new colorings and weaves-will also bein de-• • rnand.= II The season will soon be at its height.II and appreciate the econ- II Why not drop in at any of our three stores, if only• . ff d • to post yourself on the styles that wiII be worn by men ofII omy It a or s. II good taste this season ? Patterns will he laid aside forII Swift's Premium is so II fdlTP. cuttings, if desired,• • OuZr Spring Overcoatings are especially fine.• delicious your family will •I ;uyk�I��:;��n�g�:::�:: I Officers' U.iforms a j;;; 48 Loun if required• • TAILOR FOR YOUNG MEN• •II Swift & Company II {i N. LA SA LLE STREET• : I Three Stores :�11 S. MJ('flUi:\N .-\ E:"� L-E5 u. S. A.: '''1 E. �W�nf)E �TH?'f T�===!........................•. ----------------------------------------------------------- �.ADISON AVa:.UE COR. FORTY.FOURTH STREETNEW YORKTelephone /" _Murray Hill 88()()Our Representative will be at the- Hotel La SalleTomorrow and Saturday, April 19th and 20thwith Samples of Ready-made ClothingFurnishings, Hats and ShoesSend for Illustrated Cataloqucand Centenary HookletUniforms for Officers in the Sen-iceof the United StatesBOSTON SALES-OAnCEST_.ONTCOR. BoYLSTON STRE£T NEWPORT SALE5-0mCES220 Be LLevuc Ave"ue�-- CASCO - 21/8 In.CLYDE - '21/8 In.N�OWCOLLARSFOR. SPRINGCluett.Pe.body U Co. Inc . .A-Ialcerli:1 -.:r/J \1:.1-... �-'}.:�;��. 'TENUSTPENCIIACI'These famous pen­cils are. the �tal1dardby which all otherpencils are judged.17 black degrees6 B softest 10 9/1 hurde .. ;tand hard and medium ('opyi"gLook for the VENUSjinishr L<lPI It 1 Era""r , ...... lfn ....1'1_ pndc_ 6c in slam,,. ror , •• clLinaaud poetu",,_American Lend Pt�ncil Co.115 Fifth An·nue._N.l"..)e,pt. Dl�The GraberLadies' Tailoringand Blouse Shop rUIaftnirfielJOIre�strbe1beshethE",;1ferpolan:whgalrnasheoldqU4sUIhalbea ltio;We carry a complete lineof Silk and 'Cotton Blouses1336 East 63rd StreetShampooing, Facial Massage, ScalpTreatment. Hair Goods Madeto Order.:\ianicuring 35cUniversity Hairdressing Parlor1309 East 57tJt StreetSPECIAL-$G worth of work for $5to StudentsFrances Simmons Tel. H. P. 7904aftwoaDiOU!fortinthEhacJolSp'lea� 1,""• I • an4an4SIrpui'-. hal0']wawhatha.!thiHiltir,il\iSe1lin,CANeA 'Real P.ipe •for .&'Uege -;Men pr.p�Theseare two-of the Til24 popular shapes ill melwhich you can get the allSfTatford in�cia:$1.00 and up otfWD C"Hanel Maele$1.50 and up tol-Each a-fine pipe, Cawith sterling silver ring sh�and .vulcanite bit. tm'Leading'dealers in the�o�.pny' a full ... a.. tioGenume IIOrtmeDt.�·' Select your atFrench favorite style. -beB r i. r WM:DEMUTH & CO. b.'New York � -co,Norltl'. L�u·.�" Pi". Matta/oet",.,. pal