( 0 Vol. 18. No. 36CLOSE COUNCIL PETITIONFOR 10 :15 CHAPEL TODAY SETTLEMENT NIGHTWORKERS MEET ATMRS. WALTONS AT 4SHOW HEAL C()�FER";�CE FORM ries the Beginning Winners and the CO�TESTBeginning Runners-Up, and the Ad-vanced Winner!" and the AdvancedRunners-Up, according to plans an­nounced Wednesday. The games areto be played in three different sec­t ions, The schedule for contests is:",: DEKES WIN FROMALPHA DEL TS BYLONE FIELD GOAL�IGame Isn't Such a Walkawayfor Stegeman's SquadAfter All.,. The lust conference game wasplayed Wednesday with the final-core (strangely enough) only :l to 0in favor of the Delta Kaps. All thedopesters are baffled at the reversal(If form shown by the A. D. Phis.The game was featured as a battlebetween the opposing' coaches. Grena­cline Elton and Stegeman.t· UNIVERSITY OFANNOUNCE SCHEDULE OFCAPTAIN BALL CONTESTSWomen'g Teams Will Play in FourSeries in Competition for Trophies-�ineh't'n Squads Are Represented.The Women's Captain Ball contestswill be played off in four different se-Beginning Winners.Division 1.Lightning' Streaks vs. KelloggsFlukes, Sparklers Vi'. Tigers, TigersSteggie sent in several subs, but vs, T. N. T.'s, Lightning Streaks vs.they could not turn the tide of battle. Tigers.Bob Birkhoff probably made the AII-Amer-ican by his remarkable and earn­.. st protest of D. K. E.'� being giv�nfive downs to make ten yards. Al­though the ref refused to give in, itfu rnished the losers a good alibi, sothey're satisfied.()t·kt·s Pull Good Trick Play.A trick play worked by the DeltaKaps which was alway!' successful Division 1.was to fumble the ball when theywere neal' the Alpha Delt goal line. Burn 'Em Ups vs. Stingm-les, LittleThis play worked perfectly, and the Fish v s, Wild Cats.losers had come to expect it, but when Division 2.Witzleben got the wrong signal' and Burn 'Em Ups vs, Little Fish,kicked a field goal instead of fumbling Stingaries vs, Wild Cats,they were taken by surprise, A rec- Division 3.ord for completed forward passes is Burn 'Em Ups vs. \ViM Cat .. ,believed to have been broken, as eacn Sting-aries vs. Little Fish.side was successful in getting one. Winners,The rooters for the Dekes out- In the Advanced section, gamesnumbered the A. D.'s almost 2 tolJ� have been set, First game: Marinesthe Alpha Delts had only ten men to vs. Cayennes, Johnnies, O. S. vs. Tipcheer for them. Pike, the Delta Tau Tops, Second game: Cayennes vs.Delta cheerleader, came over to cheer the Johnnies, O. S.; Tip Tops vs. thefor the team that had the letter Delta Dreadnaughts, Third game: Ma­in its symbol, and when he discovered rines vs. the Dreadnaughts ; Tip Topsthat both teams had a Delta in their vs. the Cayennes. Fourth game;names, he was speechless. .J ohnnies, O. S. vs. the Dreadnaughts;Racks Last Through Game. Marines vs. Tip Tops. Fifth game::Many a punt that would have been Marines vs. the Johnnies, O. S., anda record breaker went offside. A the Cayennes vs, the Dreadnaughts,bevy of young ladies was present to Advanced Runners-Up.act as nurses to the injured, as neither First game: Emanons vs. Kedbackfield was expected to last more Hots: H2S04's vs. Zu Zu Snappers,than a quarter, but none of the op- Second game: Red Hots ys, H2S04's;posing teams pulled a "Carpenter" Zu Zu Snappers vs. P. D. Q.'s. Thirdon each, so the backs managed to stay game: Emanons vs. P. D. Q.'s; Zuin the game. Zu Snappers vs. Red Hots. FourthCaptain D'Annunzio Janotta starred J:,'ame: Emanons vs. H2S04's; Redfor the losers, while Slim Meacham's Hots vs, P. D. Q.'s.tackling was sufficient to make him a(.,�• •, ..star for the winners. Rouse, as ref­eree, made some startling decisions.but just as promptly reversed them.Perhaps he was puzzled by the clevern. K. E. back, who wore an AlphaDelt sweater,Sugge�t Alibi� For Losers.As alibis for the Alpha Del ts , thefollowing have been suggested: (1 )Art White was late in arriving; (2)the field was too slow; (:1) ice creamwas served at noon in the Brown Pal­ace, and "Wee Willie" Gleason broketraining. Overconfidence preventedthe Dekes from piling up a higher:-:core, according to the experts.Be(ol'e the game, President Wilso!l,Governor Lowden and Mayor Thomp­son harl sent their regrets at not be­ing able to att('nd. No money waslost. af' no one was founrl who wouldwager on the Alpha Delts. The game('nded peculiarly enough at the end ofthe fourth quarter, but no one pn­tested it.The lineup:A Ipha Delta Delta KappaPhi (0) Ep!Ulon (3)Clark ..... ,., ... ,', ..... , GemmillC.McGuire ,.... S1cinner(Ccmtillu�d Oft page 2)I A Emil Vacin, who was a member ofthe Maroon swimming team a coupleof years ago, is establishing someaouutic records in England, and haswon his letter at Cambridge in thissport. In a meet against Oxford hewon the club 440-yard free style eventfor Trinity college, Cambridge, swim­ming breast stroke for the whole dis­tance. His time was 6:42 2-5.In a letter to "Doc" White, swim­ming coach, Vacin said that this wasthe first time in 250 years that the4.tO-yard free style race has been wonby a man using the breast stroke en­Dinner and Dance Held for l\It'mbeJ"!ol tirely, Vacin expects to be back inand Invited Guests-s-Tw« Lee- the University next October, andtures Planned. should strengthen the ::\Ia)'oon con-Division 2.Kelloggs Flakes vs, Sparklers, Tig­ers vs. T. N. T.'s, Lightning Streaksvs. Sparklers, and Kelloggs Flakes vs,T. N. T.'s.Division �.Lightning Streaks vs. T. N.and Tigers vs. Kelloggs Flakes.Beginning Runners-Up.QIT ADRANGLE CLUB GIVESTHANKSGIVING PROGRAMAT CLUB HOUSE TONIGHTThe Quadrangle club will give aThanksgiving dinner tonight at 7, attheir club hou ... e. Dancing will fur­nish t he entertainment for the remain­,ifT :-.!' the eve'ling.Next Friday thf" club will be ad­cli·«::-;�Ld hy a formel' memher ofthe British Parliament, the presentc,litol' of "The New Europe," �Ir. H.F, White, "Europe After the War"will he the suhject of his address.A week later Mrs. Alice Lloyd. di­rector of Caney Crcek County center,in Knott County, Kentucky, will speak.She has carried out many experiment�in social work among the mountaineersof Casten, Ky" and will speak on the.. Redemption of a Backward Race."The annual Christmas revels will beheld on Dec. 0023, the last day of theAutumn quarter. Details of this af­fair are being held until a later date.All of these events are for the mem­'WI'S and invited guests. ,at aroonCHICAGO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1919 Price 5 CentsThis will be considered the sameas a signature to the regular pe­tition. �o those who ha,'e already!'iJ:ned the petition should not signthis notict'. Today is the last dayfor signing the petition. Hand inth.. slip to the Undergraduatt'council, Box 61. Faculty Exchange.COMPETITION OPENTO ALL STUDENTSFOR POETRY PRIZE Undergraduate Body Requests Inter­ested Students to Sign Appeal atOnce-Xo Signatures to Be Per­mitted After 6. Mearts New Plan for TeamCompetition in Ticket SaleDivulged at Tea.Prof. Manly, Henry B. Fullerand Edgar Lee MastersAre Judges. The Undergradute council petitionfor the renewal of the 10:15 chapel:') hour will be closed today, accordingto an announcement made Wednesday.CLOSES JANlJAUY TICKETS DISTRIBUTED AT TEAAll Settlement Night workers willbe guc:;ts at a tea gi\Ocn by �Irs. Lv­man A. Walton today at 4 at her ho�e,5737 Woodlawn avenue. The detailsof a new scheme for team competi­tion in the sale of tickets will be an­nounced at the tea,H is necessary that every memberof a ticket team be at the tea, as thisnew plan will be divulged there andthe tickets ginn out to the membersof the teams. Any member of a teamwho is not at the tea will not get histickets when the others do and as aresult will be handicapped from thefirst in the sales competition.Grant )It'ars Presents Plan.At the meet.ing of the ticket com­mittee Tuesday in Cobb this schemefor increasing the competition waspresented by Grant Mears, chairman,who thought out the plan. The com­mittee approved it and expects it toresult in an increase over the numberof tickets sold in previous years.At the tea each of the standingcommittees-finance, music, enter­tainment, publicity, decorations, re­ception and rcfresbroents=-will meetand discuss its plans. A worker fromthe University settlement will speakon the work there. Miss McDowellwill come if she can, but in case thisis impossible some one else will takeher place.Committee Are Guests at Tea.Members of the entertainment com­mittee were guests at a tea given byMrs. E. V. Macfronald at her home,560·1 Dorchester Ave. Plans were dis­cussed and tentative arrangementso made for a performance which will begiven in Mandel hall in connectionwith Settlement night.Bernard MacDonald and FrancesHenderson, joint chairmen of the en­tertainment committee, wish anyonewho has suggestions for the programto offer to communicate with them,care of Box 279.T.'s, Competition is open to any studentrcg-istereu in any school or college hthe University for the John BillingsFiske Poetry Pr-ize which will beawarded early in 1920.Directions for the preparation ofthe manuscripts were announced ves­t«I,'day through the President's offic�.No student may submit more thanthree poems, and all manuscripts mustbe typewritten and signed with apseudonym. Each must be accompa­nied by a sealed envelope bearing onthe outside the pseudonym of thewriter and enclosing the name andaddress of the writer, together withthe title of his poem. AU manuscriptsmust be received at the office of thePresident of th' class meetings without interfering" e U DIversity beforenoon on -Ian, 5. with their regular schedule.All students who are in favor of hav­ing the changed schedule, shouldeither sign one of the petitions to­day, 01' else hand in a slip with theirname to the Undergraduate council,Box 61, Faculty Exchange, councilleaders request.The Undergraduate council hasbeen trying for some time to effecta change in the chapel hour. It hasteen felt that because of the presentchapel arrangements, the various or­ganizations of the campus are beinghindered through being denied a timefor their meetings. With the 10 :15chapel hour, however, the studentswill be able to hold their clubs andPrize Valued at Fifty Dollars.The prize, which is valued at ap­proximately fifty dollars, has been do­nated by 1\1 r, John Billings Fiske ofthe University Press,The judges will be Prof. .J ohn M.Manly, head of the department ofEnglish; Mr. Henry B. Fuller, critic,novelist and poet, author of "The"Cliff Dwellers," "Chevalier of Pen­sier-i- Vani," and "Lines Long andShort"; and Edgar Lee Masters, poet,author of "'i'he Spoon 0 River Antholo­gy," "Towards the Gulf," and "TheGreat Valley." Lunch Hour Problem Raised."Other objections have been raisedby the fraternity men and other cam­pus students," 'said Allan Holloway,yesterday. "The fraternities arebothered with the lunch problem onchapel days, and many of the menare forced to do without lunches forthis reason. Some fraternities areforced to run two lunches on thesedays, because of the present schedule.The council desires to emphasizethat the schedule will not be changedthis quarter. All students who havenot signed these petitions must signtoday if they desire to have theirnames counted .VACIN MAKES AQUATIC RECORDFormer Maroon Swimmer Wins Let­ter at Cambridgt.,--Will Return. PICK SIX REGULARS ANDTHREE ALTERNATES FORVARSITY DEBATING TEAl'lTo Hold Triangular Meet Here andat Ann Arbor in January.The University Debating team waspicked last Tuesday by a number ofselected judges at a trial debate inHarper Assembly room. The follow­ing people were chosen: Thomas Mc­lough, George Mills, Mrs. Rabe, FelixSanders, Henry Ponitz and HaroldLowen. There are three alternates,Royal Montgomery, Alexander Hill­man and Henry Rabe.This year's team is above the aver­age, and the prospects for a highlysuccessful year are favorable, accord­ing to Mr. Atkins, the debating coach.The annual Central Debating Leaguetriangular debate will take place thesecond Friday in January. Chicagowill meet N orthwestem in Mandelhan, and Michigan, at Ann Arbor.According to William Morgenstern,Business Manager of the DebatingtNlm, it is probable that the ehallengeof the University of Southern Cali­fornia, offered before the war, will beaccepted this year, If this is deciderlupon, the team will make the trip latein the Winter. The team and thealternates .have been asked by 1\11'.A tkins to attend a meeting in Cobb12A today, in order to rletermine thecase and pick the sides. �L\ROOX RECEIVES REQUESTHyde Park Center Sends Communica­tion Asking for Velocipede.The Daily :\Iaroon received the fol­lowing communication from the HydePark Center:Wanted-A velocipede for a littlehoy. nine years old, just home aftertwo years of treatment for infantileparalysis, It is only with this meansof t ranportation that he can go toschool. Fo)' further details in()uire ofD, H. Eaton, at 57,U Kimbark Ave.,Telephonc, �Iidway 122.I-LA Y FInST HOCKEY :\IATCHESFour 'Vomen's Teams 'Vin and TwoHa,'t' Tit' Gamt'.The fin.;t roun,1=-- of til(' \Vomen'sintercla:;s match games in hockey haveheen played off with the following l'e­sulb: Rlue DCYils again.st the Buf­faloes, :!-O in (a\'ol' of the former.lkat 'Ern Alb won f!'Om the Hit It .... ,1-0, Ambulance Corps v:;. the Whip­peb, 1-0 in favor of the AmhulancecOI'P�. T. N, T:.s v�, the Get 'Ems, �-Oin favor of the T. N. T.'s.A tie game with no �corc wasplayed hetween the Gl'ound Sticks andthc Bullies, Thi� game will haveto he replayed befo"e places in thetournament can be decided.The rliyisions will play on �Ionday,We«lnesciay and Friday of next week.Teams competing on Monday are: COFXCIL PETITIOX.Tht' l'ndt'rgrariuate council re­quest� that those in fa,oor of re­�torjng thl' lO:l:l chapel hour,�ign tht'ir nam(' on the followingline:Glarliators vs. the Fairbangers. Brown­Bys \'S, the Black and Blues. l\licaw­hers vs. the Grass Eate�.The first of the women's class gameswill be played Wednesday when thefreshmen play the junio�, and theSophomores the Seniors. On Friday,the Senior college win play the Juniorcollege. _�_ - - - - - - - -1- __2 THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27. 1919sin.m � r 111 a t 111 _ ar n D u Probably the majority of· undergrad- preaching? Preaching or not, isn't it"�:J uates wish the old system to be used true. F. J. GURNEY,again. If they do, they should sign Assistant Recorder.the petitions or tum in the slipsprinted in The Daily Maroon. And ----- ...----- ._.I'ubl ished mornings, except Saturday, the undergraduates are not the only SOC I A L NOT E SSunday and )londay, during the Au-ones wishing' the former system-antuum, Winter. and Spring quarters,hy the Daily Maroon company. influential and large group or alumniThe Student Newspaper of theUniversity of ChicagoEDITORIAL DEPARTMENTThe Staff.10 n x E. JOSEPH .. Managing EditorJohn Ashenhurst . News EditorRose F'ischkin , News EditorHelen Ravitch News EditorHoward Beale Asst. News EditorWilliam )lorgenstern.Athletic EditorHarry Bird Night EditorErncst Fribourg Night EditorRichard Flint Day EditorHerbert Rubel Day EditorEdward Waful. Day EditorJWSI�ESS DEPARnIE�T have prepared a list of name-s fromtheir own section!'.Let's have the 10:15 period again!COMMUNICA nONS(In view of the fact that the com­munication column of The Daily Ma­roon is maintained as a eleartnghouse for student and faculty opinion,The )laroon accepts no responsibilityfor the sentiments therein expressed.Communications are welcomed by theThe Staff editor, and should be signed as an evi-(;RA�T .JIEARS .. Business Manager deuce of good faith, although theHenry Pringle .. Advertising Manager name will not be published withoutKeith Kindred ... Circulation Manager the wrlter's eonsent.)Laurence Tibbits Asst. Cir. Mgr.Robert Birkhoff Asst. Cir. l\Igr.Entered as second class mail at theChicago postoff'ice, Chicago, Illinois,�larch l:�, 1906, under the act ofMarch ::, 18n. of students' records in the .Universityalmost from the beginning of its his­torr. First and last I have made agreat many. entries. There is one$1.00 a kind of entry which it is always pain-ful to make; that is the entry in redink recpr.ding a penalty for. dishonestyor. other wrongdoing. Such entriesare comparatively few, of course, butthere are some every year, generallyevery quarter, and it hurts to writethem. Sometimes a student wishes toThursday, November 27, 1919 transfer to another college and thatcollege in inquiring �bout him asks,LITERARY ENDEAVOR. "Has he· ever been-under discipline?"The Daily Maroon is somewhat dis- Sometimes he is seeking employmentsatisfied with this issue as a literary and the· guaranty company having hispropoxition or perhaps as a unit. What case in. �an"��nds .r�o:. his record andhas been printed is considered worth .asks among other things, "Do youwhile but The Daily Maroon is vexed know of any dishonest action on hisat the amount of unprinted material. part ?'� It is hard. to ha�e to reply toToo much ordinary writing was con- such quesfions "i�. there. is a red inktributed, �ntt-y o��at.ieea��..ao.&�-'-�h -,Certainly there are more students of I wonder whether students '�izetrue ability in residence than those what this .means to - themselves, To HITCHCOCK HALL TO- HOLDwho�����a���������ry�. �A��M�ro��,==============================ha!' been made in not sending out eating a moral delinquency is a very .staff members to force contribution, bad thil)g. P�r .scholarahip is bad,hut The Daily Maroon is 3 journalistic that j� if the student could have donepublication. In the first place it has better, but this is unspeakably worse.not the time to employ the strong-ann Entries which go on record stay there.l11ethod�. In the second place, why The fact that a student was dishonest;-;hould it be necessary to employ such on a certain occasion remains a fact,and it sometimes means more thanmethuds?Perhaps there has not been enough that one occasion. If he cheated once3dvcttising, enough campaign work he may cheat again,-unless, indeed,for � literary supplement. Of course, he has learned a lesson from the ex­'I'M Daily Maroon can not judge as to perienee: but how very much bette!"that matter; advertising was stopped not to need that kind of lesson. How",.hEm the staff thought that there had much better to go through college antithrough life with a clear conscience.been enough.In the mattet of makeup and fonn It is low ideals that injure a man, theI· desire for advantage more than fo ....... he Daily Maroon is somewhat rm­ltd honest achievement, the failure to seeited. A small paper must be prin eI· h t that an honest F .is not so had as aiJ'l 3 relatively small estab IS men .Of tleces$ity advertising is printed, on dishonest A.t}1c whole. in a block, and news and Your Honor Commission? Do notIW'l'�ry material in a block. That suppose for a moment that they en-I bl but J- oy sitting· in judgment on a case ofJ'oblem is considered unSO va e,P I ...r dishonesiy. That is a disagreeablet}1e other problem, that of iteJ'3'.1ontribution, is that unsolv�ble? Is duty .incidental to the -work for whichtC}1C campus uninterested? The Daily you, their fellow students, electedthem. The main purpose is to pro-,f!1l-0on wm tnt again.• • oJ mote and help you to maintain soundsentiment.c; and .principles of honor inthe University_ Co-operate with themby your example and influence. Theycan not accomplish the result alone,but yOU and they together can do so.Sotyle students enter college withvery hazy ideas about honesty anddishonesty; they need enlightenment.Some are weak-kneed in their prinei­ples ; their moral fiber needs to bestrengthened. A few, perhaps, arereally unprincipled and would cheator steal if the opportunity offered.They need to be converted. The idealfor 311, and it is not unattainable, istc, see that character is not one sideof education or of life, but is the ba­si� of both, and that no price of effort,01' self-control, .of self-denial, is toohigh a price to pay for an honorablemnnhood or womanhood. I� thisSUBSCRIPTION HATESCalled for, $2.50 a year; $1.00 aquarter.By. Carrier, $2.50 a year}quarter.By l\lail (city), $3.50 a year; $1.50a quarter.Editorial Rooms Ellis 14Telephone Midway 800Business Office Ellis 14Telephone Midway 800Pf.;fITJON.Today is the last day {or the peti"tiO" cjrctJl:Jh�d by the Undergraduatecotll1eil (or the rc:;;toration of thecll:lp('ol p('rioff. It seems 3� if this pe­titil)O were quite to thc point; th�c3J'l)PuS has 5uffc!'Pd fr'.:lm the 10�g 0tll i � ll�riod.\V(' noerl a time, a con ... ·enient time,:r non·fe('din� time. so to speak. in\d1ich (1)(,(·tin�s may be held. The so­cial "id� of the former chapel period\,.:&..'\, of courso, pleasant but notahsolutdy ossential. Those Who ob­jrct to thf' petiOli on the grounds ofinconvenience �e('m Somewhat self­i:;h. Thf'Y mu�t not f('el thc nece!'c:;ityof � mf'eting time; they must live onthe camru!' where onr may attend amceti"g at 5 o'clock and still "gethome for �upper." RED em.It has been my lot to have charge ------------An informal house dance will beheld by Chi Psi tonight at the ChiPsi lodge.The Wyvern Alumnae dance will beheld at the Hyde Park hotel tonight.It is a subscription dance to raisemoney for a scholarship fund.Hitchcock hall will entertain thisevening at an informal dance in thepar-lors.Tau Kappa Epsilon is holding :ldunce tonight at the Sisson hotel.Delta Sigma will give a party inIda Noyes hall tomorrow night from8 to 11 :30.The Quadrangle club will give .lThanksgiving dinner tonight at 7, ��tthe club house, for members and in­vited guests.DEKES WI� FRO:\(.·\LPHA DELTS BYLONE FIELD GOALt Continued [rom. TlGge 1)R. T.Strong RubinkamR. G.Birkhoff GrahamR. E.Hardin SpoehrL. T.Gleason MeachamL. G.Cornell ,....... DougallL. E.J anotta WitzlebenQ.Keefe HalesL. H.Miller .. , . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. MillsR. H.Borders ,........ TimmeF.:' ,·-Dropkieks-WitslelMm..:The' Quarterly· House Dance ofHitchcock hall will be held tonight at8:30 in Hitchcock library. The host­esses associated are Prof. and Mrs.David A. Robertson, Miss FlorenceRichardson, and Mr. William Spen­cer. A student orchestra has beensecured, consisting of Herbert Ver­rall. Arthur Colwell. and WilliamMurphy. According to Hans O.Hoeppner, in charge of the arrange­ments, the affair is expected to be agreat success.. _1- I- - - - -.-.. I.. _.- - - - --SPORT SHORTS"Red" Graham is about ready tobe up and around. For a while Sat­urday night Graham was in danger,but he pulled through safely,A bruised lung and a disorganizednervous system were just a few ofthe things that he got when Carpen­ter jumped on him.Carpenter's act was one of the dirti­est pieces of football that has everbeen seen on Stagg field.Graham was clearly off the field atthe time, and there is no possible ex­cuse for the unsportsmanlike work ofthe Wisconsin captain.When Graham left Germany behind,doubtless he did not expect to meetagain such tactics as he had knownover the battle front.On the other hand, the Maroon fanscould not but have respect for Westonand Meye�, the Badger ends. Theygave an exhibition of real ability.It's consoling anyway to rememberthat Il1jnoi� tumbled almost the same ,way in the last quarter with Wiscon-! They did everything' but clog.i--- i McQuaig for Captain of the Tumb-At the Reynolds club smoker Tues- I ling team!day they called them boxing matches. 'I s;::==========�========���=======Many were struck but only a fewlighted. ! Subscribe to the Daily MarooniThe footwork was marvelous.It's A Mark of DistinctionTo Wear OurCollege Floor ClothesYour AppearanceTHE problem of every youngman nowadays is to dressand look his best at all times.This, however, doesn't meanhaving a lot 0 f expensiveClothes. It simply means hav­ing good Clothes such as weoffer on our College Floor.* * *'Exceptional ValuesFabrics, tailoring and stylesuch as our College FloorClothes e m bod yare of thehighest qualities obtainable.We invite you to inspect ourshowing, the greatest in allChicago. Priced$3.5 to $75College Floor-The SecondTHE�II-�HUB. ��nry'.�.�ytton li SonsState and Jackson-On the N. E. ComerIo _._. __ 1_.-iI _r_o ..-... -�� ........do thisboystheir SocksWashingtonShirt Co.-not ahole in any of them.Nothing toweek-theboughtat theA corking goodpair for SOcOthers 30c to $2.50.FOUR LOOP STORESJackson and DearbornMadison and La Salle Washington and DearbornS8 East Monroe Street :Z.E!2L2f[�j.(�-j"',."�(�t7 £.- '," '-:�Bri••:..Tnuof (lf' ..Ou. , .'h'j"101II(, ,Sc:)01'.Strengthens, InvigoratesAthletesRestful and RefreshingAfter Study"Horlick's"TheOriginalMalted MilkDrink it at the fountain.Keep a jar in your room.A satisfying quick-lunch.Grateful whenever tired,hungry or up late at night.Get the Genuine"Horlick' a-costs no more than in­ferior imitations.ROSALIEMUSIC HALL5700 Harper AvenueFOR RENT FOR DANCESENTERT AINMENTSETC.H. C. EDMONDS203 Dearborn StreetHarrison 8183Brief Cases, M u a i c Foliose Studen:,d CasesDemand the originalfor you r protectionLEATHER GOODSTrade Mark Guaranteed To Giveof Qnallt� Sati8fact�ry ��,�At All Stores WhereQuality RulesLifton Mfg. Co. -:- New York..Work for Students aSpecialty.MAX BROOKTailor and CleanerOur Work Always First Classand GuaranteedWork caned for and delivered .• • ""·Rulng. Prf'8Rlllg, Dyelna: and RepalrlngWf: lUKE 0\. SPECIALTY OF NEW:S.:W SI'ITS AND �ODELtNG1007 E. 61st St., N�r E�is Av�.FIS� CAFE1309 E. 57th St.LET US SHOW YO�Open 7 Days a W�I • MEN'S FURNISHINGSHats, Cape and NeckwearCOVVHEY'SSTORE FOR MENSoutheast Corner 55th-Ellis Ave.BILLIARDSCigars-Cigarettea-Pipes\ lHarve, Orch�190 North State StreetPhone Randolph One... or J. Beach Cragun, Repres'tative'. 3There are other cigarettes­but no "others" like Murad.It is true that "ordinary",.,cigarettes cost a trifle less.DANCING VISTA GARDENSUNIVERSITY PHARMACY61st Street and Ellis Avenue "THE ONE SPOT TO DANCE"47th and Cottage Grove Ave.Every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Even­ing and Sunday Afternoons.This ad will be accepted for one FREE admission on anyTuesday evening or Sunday afternoon dur-ing November. LETS GO! .II 24-HOUR FILM DEVELOPING SERVICE, Blackstone 1446 Prompt Delivery0·--·-·------·-·-·---· ,-.-.--------y��������������������DRUGS: : : STATIONERYCIGARETTESTHAT old ... fashio�ed T urki�htaste in Murad IS one of ItSchief charms.That old - fashioned Turkish tasteis the result of 1 00% pure Turkishtobacco - and w-hen a cigarette ismade of Turkish tobacco it is madeof the world's· most famous tobacco._ _ _. 4 ... _.. _ .... _- -4 THE. DAlLY MAROON, THURSDAY, NoVEMBER 27, 1919"'h'P"THA�KSGIVD;G.Xous semmes vrairnent enchantes] i'uvoir un jour de conge;\\' e are not thankful, though, that we:\[u:-;t come to school le vendedi.\vITH the help of Jacques Grassinof Pari:" we put together the above T�-E �el;a K�ps-- a�d Page's Yale-, 6 �n the Quadrangle club to gi�'e theare the only undefeated teams of the I students and members of the chemis-year. try department a chance to get ac--- ! quainted with the doctor. A fee ofWHAT use is there for Blue Bottle I seventy-five cents a plate will benow-a-days? charged for the dinner.Garron. 1=============================IOfficial Notices!========1The Publicity committee of the Y.!w. c. A. will hold a meeting in the IY. )1. C. A. rooms today at 5.The Discussion Groups committee1 f the printer hasn't found it will meet Monday from 12 to 1. in thepo . ..;:-iiJk to do so, you can put anh 1 Y. W. C. A. rooms, !.u-uto accent on the He" in t east\\"lIl'd uf tlu- first anti the second lines.'h '11 I -t' f th I'1 ere WI )C a mee mg 0 e---I )It'l·tings committee of the Y. W. C. A.:\ �,E and :\1a\�TU�S were slowly de- )Ionday at ,I :30 in the South parlors i-cencung the stairs In Cobb. of Ida Noyes hall. I,"D'you know, )Iawruss, I ain't usedany 0' my three chapel cuts yet?" There will be a meeting of the en-I-v-n, why don't you? What do you tire Social committee of the Y. W. C.,think they gi\"e 'em to you for?" A. next )londay at :1 in the Alumnaeroom in Ida Noyes hall. i.ITHE Y. W. C. L. has posted a no- --- Irice reading something like this: Students wishing tickets for the 1"Pay your pledges now. Pledges must Hugh Walpol e • lecture to be given Dec. ,Ibe paid. The sooner, the better." -1. at 8, in Mandel hall, should apply atthe President's office at once before!the supply is exhausted. !IThe Senior Law class will hold a Idance tonight at 8 in the theater of!Ida Noyes hall. !The Black lion net dub will meet to-Iday at 4 in the north reception room ISETTLEMENT NIGHT - When of Ida Noyes hall. IIThe Delta Sigma dub will hold a Idance tomorrow night at 8 in the the-ater of Ida Noyes hall. IIThere will be a meeting of the Ex­ecutive committe� of the non-frate:-Inity organization Tuesday at 4 In IEllis 3. All members, have been urgedto be present.That's a new way to get them. Canit be possible that bribery was usedin the case of '. . . . But no,perish the thought.CAMPUS COMPENDIUM OFKNOWLEDGE.Artide 7.undergraduates feel charitable, theybegin to figure out some way to helpthe poor and needy with the least in­convenience and the greatest pleasureto themselves. Settlement night is theannual expi .. ession of this intent. Ifthey must do good, they think theymay as well have a good time whilethey are doing it. They start by hav­ing a tea for themselves. This is heldat Mrs. Walton's, where plans for thebig night are made within reach ofpyramids of sandwiches. Next comesthe event itself. There, for fiftycents to get in and them some to getout, students aid the poor ldds backof the yards without suffering the in­convenience of going to the vulgahdistricts. =�;=There will be a meeting of the Re­ception committee of the Sophomoreclass Tuesday .�,� in Cobb 12A.The Campus -Community committee Iof the.Y. W. C. A. will meet Mondayat 4 in the League rooms.NOTED CHEMIST TO LECTUREIN the Deke-Alpha Delt game, TedClarke looked ungroomed for the first Dr. Langmuir Speaks on Structuretime in his college career when his of the Atom Today.sock lost its moorings. Co-eds pres-cnt hid their faces in their hands. DI. I vring Langmuir, one of themost noted chemists in the UnitedOUR OWN LITRY SUPPLEMENT. States, will address the Kent Chem-1. Short Story.Gyp the Gyp sat in his cell, ponder­ing. He was to hang on the morrow.Ordinarily, in those days, men werehanged on the limb of a tree. NotGyp. He was to be hanged on themo r r ow. Only one thing could savehim. If he could answer a certainquestion, he was to be spared. If not,he was to be drawn and quartered.He found it difficult to discover the.. nswer, The main reason for thiswas that he had not yet been toldthe question. Presently. the wardenstuck his head through the door andtold it to him:"Why docs green soap make whitelather?"2. Poem.If 1 were Maurice Leseman,1'<1 write a verse,Rut since I'm such a lazy man,I'd do it \\"01'.;;(>.:l. Review.After readirur Mr . .Tames WeberLinn's latest publication, "Essentialsof Composition," I have come to theconclusion that as a novel it is a com­plete failure. There is practically noplot. Characterization is either alto­goether lacking or so poor that thereader is unimpressed. It seems im­mature-just the book, say, for col­lege freshmen. We can't say any­thing worse than t\&t. Being weI 1 dressednot 0 n I y increasesself-relianceyourand efficiency to ameasurable ext en t-but creates the con­fidence of others inyou.Clothes tailored theJerrems' way have a"quiet refinemenf'­an "individual goodstyle" that inspiresconfidensce 0 f themost critical.Goo d clothes havebeen the foundationo f many successfulcareers.�uits and Overcoats,$55, $65, $70,and upwardsTailor for Young .MenF North LaSalle St.THREE 314 S.Michigan Ave.STORES: (71 Ea.�t Monroe St.ical society on "The Structure of theAtom" at 8 in Kent 20. IDr. Langmuir is on the staff' of the IIresearch laboratory of the General ===========================Electric company and has his head-quarters in New York. He has worked ion the theory of the structure of the Iatom, and has developed the Lewis 1theory with great detail. IA complimentary dinner will be igiven to Dr. Langmuir tomorrow at i Get Your Sandwiches andCoffee across the streetMAROON LUNCH5650 Ellis Ave.Not Sometimeshut AlwaysPERFECTin every degreeAmrrirnn Lead Pencf] Co.215-011 ,..... An. New York Candy that will win evenYOUR card a betterreception!Send her-Bound with the colors !Stamped with the seal !- FOR SALE AT -McANANY & FINIGAN.1201 East 55th St. Phone Midway 708 ! ,H. J. SCHULTE,1501 East 55th St. Phone Hyde Park 206DREXEL PHARMACY.901 East 55th St. Phone Midway 1410VAN De BOGERT & ROSS1000 East 63rd St. Phone Hyde Park 2541518 Hyde Park Blv. Phone Oakland 68001465 E. 63rd St. Phone Blackstone 3272800 East 63rd St. Phone Midway 32005c a Plckaeebefore the war5c a packaeedurin!! the war5C a P8ckaeeNOWTHE fLAUOR LASTSSO DOES THE PRICEI,III • i-.:...,4 ,I.: ..-....I,. III· I,." •••(- LI.(�.I 0\\t C(J�h(IJ·1-nu4 i"ltell.a• Or, ilil�, in:•,. taW("I .. t ic:I.arp:lex.. , ..isl- exII aI·be, . in:• �� its·r ofhe;. �a"' ifI �lestiEWIpe,"'C, .. sh: of• ,J'" st:. ,1" gehi('u;, .. ofl,;.,� pI·1 spnEI :-;eofth,,. WI) I fir.. .�} : e"�arlatube:I prLiCCtar� :nI� hE�raI, h:) �1 mn,4 it:s1', ; mII W�I ail t1'Ane.Acc01THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY.f\:IOV�ER27, 1919 5. , l�]T'ERARY, ADDITIO N:S',.'Y i,/·i-r'-� ... -::: � ... -:- -,- 7 - - -. - - - -, - .. - � - - -r -:- - -I II':' - - - - - _._.- - _.- - _.- - -,- - - - - - - - - ·I BOOKS AND PLAYS �riting in a University II FOREIGN SKETCHES 1.;. --- - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -- -'-'-0- By ROBERT AI. LOVETrc iY• - - --- - _._._. _._._.;-._.- - --- - - - -'-'-'-�='i " Colored Mists " ! Conventional Comedy . The modem teaching. of English! I Pierro Goes To Rome 1,1'j --_ composition began at Harvard in the I ---A Review of Linda Condon A Review of "39 East" at yearly years or President Eliot's ad-I By Giovanni della Trombetta. !I (Alfred A. Knopf) by the Shubert-Princess ministration. Some twenty years lat- - I a.----- -J!., . I jI Joseph Hergesheimer • II 1 Theater er I 1 em ember hearmg. P�of: Barrett To every good Catholic Rome is I Ivan was walking down the long• • Wendell comment pessimistically on I 1 1\1 df th .t .1 I road home when the ba---I :,' --- 1\ ecca y gran a er IS no a goou ron apl' I' I'OSL' 'I .... ·ISCHI ' 8 JOHlIt.· ...... JOSEPH the fact that all the' critical effort ex-I". . . preached from behind I-n his car'• •• •'Y•• �•• ' .r ... " • .r "" Y�'" .r... • Catholic but he IS a peasant wme-I rrage ... .... " pended on thousands of themes had '.. . I The carriage stopped, and the baronresulted in no great contribution to dealer, which IS much th�same thing, I called out "Ivan d 't t"They seemed no more than had ; ---'. . " on you wan toS -II Miss Rachel Crothers' latest comedy American Iiteratuee. Indeed, it may a� it would never enter hIS mind not ride part of the way with me 1"ows 01' colored mists." ibl be d h hi d Wh ther It I I. . .., I at the Princess ought to be success- plausi y argue t at t IS pe a- to pretend to be one. e er I was van was shocked and flattered.This IS the manner m which Linda j ful; the audiences are eating up the gogic activity is really hostile to the to improve his chances of going to "Ride with you, Your Higness?" heCondon, heroine of Mr .. Joseph Herge··1 conventions with relish. From the production of work of distinction. Anheaven. or to give his wine a halo that. said, "�h, no. I couldn't think of it.shcimer's latest novel, sees her chil-'] very time that the curtain went up on English department in a college must k it 11 b tter or merel'\!'1 Your HIghness does me too much. ., . . would rna else e, oJ 1 0 "dren, It might also be said to be the! the conventional - and strangely have as Its chief object the raismg of I nor.I h .. b di h whole classes to a high level of intel- uccause he liked to travel, at any I "Not at all," replied the baro. hi h th d f thi enoug convmcmg - oar mg ouse n.manner m w IC e rea er 0 rs k hi d ffici rate, he decided to go to Rome. "Are we not equal, you and I? Fo. . I dining-room to the very time that the ligence, wor mans IP, an e ciency � rinteresting book sees all the charac- tai hi ld 1ft' in writing, not the invitation and stim- It was close to Easter, when Catho- we are both children of the great. . I cur am s re ee rom our roman IC •tors and events the rem-as thing-s I eyes the final embrace of Mr. Henry ulation of genius, and genius, should it lies are, if not busiest, at le�st most Batyushka, our Little Father, thehalf unreal, beautiful but mysterious. 'I' Hull and Miss Constance Binney we enter our class rooms, would speedily devout The little North-Itahan town Tsar. Jump on to the box beside theOne has the feeling that one is look- of the audience failed to find anything be put to flight. In twenty-five years �r Resai, that fits snugly in the cup coachman."Ith'" I hi f t hi I have had many pupils formed by three pointed Alps, by So Ivan scraped with his feetili� at an exquisite painting, a painL-1 new,. any mg orrgma , anyt ng sug- 0 eac mg '\. h t "" ,f t di talent .1 I h hi h it I'S protected from t e s orm, bowed three times, very respectfulling that is shadowed by a thin cur-, gesting very much mental effort, and 0 ex raor mary a en, anu ave w IC I h' gen • y,. .. ., we of the audience had a perfectly always prayed to that tenth muse who the world, news and c ange in - and climbed rather fearfully to thetum which hides the details of the I' I ) t' WId d h '1 knoweth not Apollo that I might not i. « in the midst of its celebra- box. It was a glorious ride for him.. ove y ime. e app au e t e fragl e e� , waThs ere were flowers to be brot, W .\.vol'k but leaves the rmpression of del- ',ami beautiful Miss Binney when she hurt them. tions. d f. as It realty. he, Ivan, the mujik,. I I boys to be prepare 01 who was ridi thI{,HCY and mystery.. I screamed "How dare you?" at the The teaching of composition in the glr 5 anr �th I mg on e same carriage,. decorations for e with a baron? And the baron hadOnce in a blue moon an author amorous Mr. Hull because we felt modern world where everyone must communIonb' ade the bishop's visit ida rises who performs the miracle: that she was a great actress. I admit write and where the demand for read- church to em,. h M sal that they were equals. Whenthat she is a very zraceful dancer. I k h I I f I to cxpect� processions WIth tfe tha-.. they had arrived at the gate of thepaints life truthfully and paints it . P,&'" ing matter is i e t e uemanr or coa ood cropS or C baron's tate I .donna to insure g taki es, van Jumped downSomehow or other I a t ·te or wheat must have as its aim the (l d" ne b 'exquisitely. Mr. Frank Swinnerton" c n no qUI coming year. Everyone w� ka, owed again. three times, and tooki;-; perhaps the most notable recent bring myself to the point of saying production, not of masterpieces, butart confessing, doing good wor �, his leave with many thanks. Thethat "39 East" is a waste of time. It of, practicable pieces. It is important, p '.. d working himself up walk th t .dexample of thl·s. HI' "Nocturne" I·S \\'orshlpplng, an. worthy of un- a remame was indeed a longs ' . certainl'" has l'tS good .ts d I however, that the distinction should b� pom ,an a -to the point of beIng one" ut Ivan's lightness of hearta gem from the standpoint of sheer though you will shake your head more be always recognized. It was ad- d. the mysteries that were made it seem as nothing.be<lUty of expression, and it is also th t th hI· . bl '11 trated the other after derstan mg two un• an once a e ope egs over-actmg, mira y I us -h· Even the one or -Now it happened, a short time lateindubitably a sincere picture of life still you will catch yourself laughing noon in Miss Beattys' expositio� of upon 1m.looked upon with a th t. r,believers, always onsible for a a certam tract of waste wooditself. But such a happy combination I at some of the comic folk who inhabit ,the attitude of the editor of a great feeling that they were respk' th land belonging to the Tsar was beingof faculties is very rare. On the one �I�. De Mailley's boarding house. And Am�rican magazine and Mr. Her-11 the misfortune that �c. e apportioned .t:o .._ neig!tbo��g. J8!ldm particular you will enoy what Mr. rick's comments thereon!. Charac- a� It ... tbat. they" were , "mIssing 'holders 'for culti t· Andhand you have----such an--8uthor '88, Hen..y"Hulr=" d�s .and s*y�-:"He is teristically, �r. Herrick-beli�yes-·that ... town, h.e and dared not scoff. By baron was gra te�a 10�. .the�ay, Theodore Dreiser, who paints life; quite human, quite non-theatri('al all there is no. truce between black and som�\ I��nsation the pope had de- while Ivan rece�ed a t�rge ��?,if you will, but who is utterly care- of the time. white, good . and evil, artist and pub- s�eCdlato Irant a full plenary indul- land touched upon IDO , ngt:ttl � IS. clde g R 0 van s I e �arm,less or inc�pable of any artistic nice- It is not in the love story, or the lic. Yet most college work IS at bestto 11 who would go to om�. he was very anxious t t f ... 1 1 f gence a bee 0 ge some 0 It .ties. On the other hand you have a juvenile, or the ingenue that Miss capable of bemg raised to a eve 0 f om Resai bad ever n Then Ivan was stru k b t ·dCrothers makes "39 East" at all men·- workmanship which will make it ac- No one dr I·t created no little talk He went over to se cth Yba grea I ea.writer like Hergesheimer (and he is I I h ft there, an . Co te e e aron.tOl'ious, but in the characterizations of ceptable and usefu. ave 0 en,"hen I·t W"" heard that Pierro n "Your Highness," he sal·d, "Are wperhaps the happiest example) who n c;o.o eworships so whole-heartedly at the the boarders. Although Miss Croth- had to suggest the changes that .would had decided to go. not equals in the eyes of the Littleshrine of aestheticism that the march e.rs has kept to type she has kept to make, an article or story pubhcable. My grandfather, Pierro Conte, had Father?"of event.c; goes by unheeded. I hfe, because a boarding house is a col- Sometimes I have devoutly hoped that. to a position of respect amon� "Why, of course, Ivan," said theIn fact, in their attitudes I find a I lection of types. And although she the writer would reject them. Of ��:e�witsmen through the exercise of baron, smiling. "Didn't I myself telI h h d course, the' business of college teach- d h dness When n hstriking similarity between Mr. Her- as over-emp asize the events she parsimony an s rew· you so t e other day?"I hru t h . ed h ing with the craftmanship,_ the recog- ted as rather stu- "Th Y .gesheimer and the beautiful lady of s no over-emp aslZ t e charac-.. . boy he was accoun en, our Highness," continuedhi'", book L· d wI'th her cold clear! terization. mtlOn of values which are fundamental 'd b t the fact was that he was Ivan "He has giv Y H· h.. . m a, , I • 11 od 't' Th d bl PI, u 0 d h· en our 19 nes�('ult of beauty, her inability to "shake I Luckily the actors and actresses em- I� a g� wrl mg.. e unpar �na, e merely slow to devel?p. ne ay, e I s�me of the woo�land, and, as ·we areIf th ., th t 't l'k ployed in "39·East" are on the whole sm agamst youth IS the substitutionh d fund a purse WIth five-thousand just as one another be� h· Yo e conVIctIon a I was I e a: ., .'. a �. lore 1m, our1 . h' h h h d th I efficient enough to conteract the sen for them of the tncks of the trade, f I·n it on the mam road, and Highness and I I a h·1p ay m w IC sea no more an a. . - ranes. ,. ' m sure e "',tato ' rt " h '11· I f I timental tendencies of both author and the current formulae, the standard th had run after the mall coach to mve me some too Btl d tspec r s pa, er unwI mg a 00 -•• . . I en . 0& " u as 0 no. l·k h to H too· direction. Some of the characters are I speCifications, accordmg to which the. 'f some passenger bad not lost It. know the Tsar and I t·teness, IS very leer crea r. e, , I .• .• '11' k f h d .. �ee I .. d . ' as canno wnt bee I st· h· .. I even SignIficant. In the flirtatious ml \vor 0 t e mo ern magazme IS Th mailman claImed It an gave to him not kno'''I·ng h to ·te I�ecms 0 orne so 0 In IS PUrsUIt • '. e .'''' ow wn,of beauty that his characters take on I southern Mrs. Smith, well-played by mechamcally turned out. Scores of Pierro a fra:Qce for his honesty,.wblch have come to ask a favor, if Yourthe garb of ghosts, "colored mists." I � .. ucja .Moore, and the sad:eyed young- lette� c��e to my desk "every sum- he took home wit? great pnde.� Highness will condescend. Will YourThe book is, of course, tremendously! Ish Misses Clarence-,Iadles who had mer m�uInng about our short story I show his father. HIS father beat hIm Highness ask the Little Father forwell written. There is in it much I all seen better days-there is a certain course. I am glad to answer that soundly for his folly-five thousand some land. for me "finesse and �ubtlety of conception and I pathetic imputation. Mrs. De Mailley, we have no .s�ort story c.ourse, that f�,·anes was more than he had ever The baron became vecy angry.exprc.c;sion. Such phrases as, for ex- ,thc iron-souled woman who runs the we teach wntmg, not fictIon. seen at once in his life; it would have "What!" he cried. "I am to ask theample, "his face eager like a dUsty! boan.ling house, stands for the city; Wi�h the b�st writing in college, been m01:"e than eno�gh to cove� the Tl'ar for land in the name of a mislamp in which the light had been I she IS portrayed by that always-ex- teachmg has lIttle to do. I tell stU-I debt on the new vIneyard. Pierro crable mujik He would tear u mvturned sharply up" illumine the whole! cellent actress, Alison Skipworth. But den� freque�tlY that .the mos� ef- learned his lesson; from that day on petition and laugh in my face!" p .book. By far the most convincing I I shall leave you to find out for your- fectJve teac.hmg they will get will be he com;idered. well before he pa� Ivan was greatly embarrassed uponpart of the book is the beginning. I sclves. I from themselves, and the greatest with money; It became a proverb m seeing the baron so highl offendedLinda, the quaint, grave child with I As � p�ay: however, "39 East" is I stimulus from �ch .other. The �h.ief the town that anything. that Pierro He bowed thrce times, an/said, "Oh"the black bang straight and severe' decrepit: It IS .to be condoned. Th� I ��c of a �lass m higher co�poslt�on , go� was never see� agam.. No one I beg Your Highness' pardon. Butand dense across her clear pale brow ! themc IS �ntlmental to a marsb- IS to provld� �n a�mosphere m which paId much ,attention to hIm. He as we are cqual before him, how couldand eyes," is an appealing figure, and I (Contmued on page 7) I t�e student IS mS�lrcd to work by the! (Contmued on page 6)- he do that? He didn't tear up Yourher mother, "metallic gold crisply II I:' km�. of �a�eradle �nd ro�gh com-: I I Highness' petition, if I may be so�nd solidly marcelled,'· is no less deft SHE WONDERED p.etJtlon. whIch wc t�mk of m c�nnec-I AESTHETICS bold as to say so, but iranted Youra characterization. But the second I tlon With an ateher. The highest Highness some land"half of the book dealing with Linda's She told you exactly what she service which a department of compo-I And he said, "Isn't it pretty 1" The baron lal h d· "Of, . . .. Ig e . course wemarriage and the unceasing love of I thought of yo.u. . sition c�n ren�er � literature m a I And my soul rebelled at the word. al'c c'lual," he said. "But you do notDodge Pleydon the artist lacks real- She wore silver-nmmed spectacles. college IS thc diffUSIOn of such an at- I' H d understand I· I 1, ,. h' h h h'" e ha ('asually glanced at the . . \ an. pay arge sum�ity and firmness. Perhaps Mr. Berge- Her nose was as reflective as n mosp el e, t roug out t e mstltutlOn'l in taxcs t th L 'ttl F th .sheirner would urge that this did not mirror. As I suggested at the outset, it may western sky year .Yo 0 e tlh. et ah. er eN'e�• be t' I h h . I A d th h h d .' . u pay no mg 0 1m. • owmatter; that to a beautiful piece of She engaged in decp discu�sions q, u�s lonc( w et er, the formal m- n ere e a 8cen somethmg you have the right to pay as muchwriting like "Linda Condon" substance I about the Malthusian theory and Mil- structlon of the class IS not often an "pretty." taxes as T. Just h . h 1t od expedient rather than an inspiration. I C as muc ng t asand realIty are no more necessary oman pros y. I nmson and goldcn "clvet, ! have, Then the Tsar ,\"ill grant th('t. Sh wore sensible shoes The best writing at Harvard when Ithan utility is nece.c;sary to a, sunse • e even . - . And porple' and green and pink., land to you just as readily as he ha"h h i right. At • • • was there was done for The Harvard I'And per aps e s any And now it was opalescent : granted it to me. So you see, we arcrate, the book is worth reading as an And still she wondered why the Monthly. George Sartayana and Wil- . i �qual, after all. How ean you doubt_--.L.AA.l .. __ � d • te- .. -: brute male had never yet succumbed Ham Vaughn Moody never. appeared in I' GI.owing out in the, w,'est .Ir.czJWn:1.1e .I.�" an as an In �1.1ng it, Ivan? Sce, you ean sleep M lon�h reall f eb I to her superior attractions.: English Five. The, most promising ,. Fading, paling-oufi in the west-contraSt to t e soggy SIn 0 rna l as I do, and can stay up just as tat£'.of modern literature. ! Luelle Goldstine. (Continued on page 7) And I left him there-poor fool! (Continued on page 8) ,Equality'.By EDWARD SHERRY"I·��.,-,.. tI., ..I-I.·r! -I....It}., .... � ,':I�Il6 THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY"NOVEMB£R27, 1919Pierro Goes To Rome(Continued from page 5) .1worked hard, spent but little, neverfOI' something he did not need; event he coin he doled out scrupulously tothe tin collection plate every Sundayat church made little noise when hedlopped it. When his father died hi«share was a little larger than that oft he re:-;t' of his brothers, and he de­c.ded to set up an "osteria" on thehijrhway, a small inn, with neither the11I':!wl of our saloon nor the hustle ofour hotel, where tired travelers might<top fOI' a bottle of wine, and peasant-.come with their families in the eve­ninj.! after work to sit and chat overa j.!la'� or to sing. There Pierro hadbeen the rest of his life, talking of theg-o\"('}'nment with newcomers, hagglinrrover the p rice of a barrel of wine 01'a basket of gl'upes, beating anyonew hotu he mig-ht out of a few pennies,buying' a small field here, trudine onethen', OJ' tacking it on to one he al­rr ally had. till he had any number ofacre vineva rds, cornfields, and pas­t u res scattered about, that alwayslept him thick in quarrels abouthoundmics. Then one day he decidedto :-01'11 cvcrythimr but the inn again,::' nd with the returns he bought af'orty-acrc patch of unused huntingpreserve on the side of the mountain,nnd turned it into a vineyard. It wasr. big risk that nearly broke him, forhe hac} gone into debt for part of hispurchase. and there were thsee yearsof skimping, when the ground had toLe cleared, and the costly vines, thathe had bought from "Le Basse" of theSouth, set and given time to grow;years when there were only expensesand no returns. But in the end hisv,ood judgment pulled him through;t he vineyard was the best in town,and once it began bearing his greaterworries were over. Then came thebiggest thing of all. There was inResai, at the foot of the mountain, alittle spring of sweet water that trav­elers carne out of their way to drink.Pierro thought of using it to makehis wine. That had been tried before,but though the wine made from ittasted much better for a few weeksafter it was made, in the end it al­ways soured in the barrel, so that theidea was given up. But Pierrothought of bottling it. He bought thelittle patch of ground that the springwas on, giving as his excuse that hewanted it because it adjoined his vine­yard. Then without saying anythinglest his neighbor should laugh at him,he sent for some bottles from the city:He tried it and it worked. The winekept all year; when he went to openit it blew out the cork with a loud re­port like a pistol shot, and bubbled uplike champagne, a pleasant and re­freshing drink that one could take alot of without being afraid of getting(Irunk, and that needed only Pierro'sold trick of a pinch of sugar in thebottom of the cup to teach travelersto prefer it to water. At first heused the new wine to draw trade, buthe soon found that people would paymore, and he raised the price to afranc the bottle, The result was thathis whole grape crop wac; put away inbottles that brought in a stream ofyellow francs that pleased Pierro'szreediness. He would rub his wrinkledhands together as if they itched, as hemuttered out the price, only half be­li""'ing- it himself-"Un franco, sig­nr-re : un franco." In a short time hefound that Resai counted him rich,GreenRiver- ment he ran off the platform to meet f'What! A franc for a Uttle walk?"it, so that it ran: past him, and he had exclaimed Pierro. "Not from me."to run after it and nearly missed it. "All l'ight father," answered lheHe got on, not without some misgiv- man. "That's your afl'air." And he Iing, for no sooner was he in than he turned over and went_ to sleep again.put his head out of the window as Pierro determined to find the way Ithe train started and shouted to his himself. "It was lucky perhaps, I leldest son Peppi no : "Don't forget the didn't hire him," he thought to him-jgrapes, Peppi; spray them with cop- self. "He might have taken me some- .per sulphate if it gets very warm to- where and robbed me." So he walked!morrow." in the direction he-supposed the Vat- iHe was soon on his way, and left ican to be. He walked for hours it 1alone to reflect, he began to be afraid seemed, under the hot sun, but could :again. He half wished that he might not find it. Once he saw a dome thathave forgotten his ticket, and be put looked like the pictures he had seen,('ff the train at the next station; but but he lost it, and look as he would heno, he found it in his pocket where could not find it again. He became so :Nina had put it, and he gave it to the engrossed in his search that he soon;conductor when he asked for it. He had no idea of his whereabouts, and Itried to sleep, but the noises he was when he stopped to rest from his walk !not used to, the rumble of the cars, and to think a moment, he was certainthe click of the wheels against the he was lost, except that the place hadjoints of the track, the sudden whirr ... strange familirity. He lookedof passing trains allowed him but fit- around carefully to examine his Bur­ful naps. It was not till morning roundings, and in a flash realized that 'when he saw the country around him he was back where he had started. ithat he forgot his fears. He saw the Even the man was still lying on the!fruitful fields of Tuscany, the broad bench. Pierro went over to him and i"Campagne" of Umbria, and looked shook him.at them enviously as he thought of "Well," said the man recognizing;his own vineyard, a rocky little patch him, "what is it now?"of slanting ground on a mountainside "11 Vaticano," answered Pierro.where one was in continual danger of handing him a franc.rolling down to the bottom. He be- The man took it and Pierro was ]carne so lost in his musings that Rome soon at the Vatican. There he saw !was on him before he knew it. He things he had not looked for. The �ate half his sandwiches, and drank h 11' d th dl 'don't you?" he said, "We'll see." eavy-sme mg gar ens, e en ess,one bottle of wine and stuffed the f 11 f ld t d IAnd though there was yet two weeks' rooms u 0 go ornamen s, guar s :time before Easter, Pierro began to other and the rest of the sandwiches in uniform, and then the Sistine itself:prepare for the trip at once. He dug back into his pocket, and then got off where the ceremony was to be held. Iout his old wedding suit that he had the train. He entered it falteringly. Its big-;used but once in twenty years, and Pierro was surprised at Rome. It ness, its resonance, its darkness, com- 1that for a funeral, had himself a new was not as busy even as Padua where manded silence; the dim and massivewhite canvas shirt made, and bought he had once been. It was a place of pictures on the ceiling which he could:himself a pair of leather shoes to re- lazy-warmth with few people on the I not at all understand filled him with;place his wooden "damie:" He told streets; no one seemed to be doing awe. Even though there were many Ieveryone of the event, as if by doing Dnything or to want to move, but only people in it, it was quiet. He could Iso he could make it more certain. "I'm to lie still and be left to sleep. It hear plainly the chant of the sisters Igoing," he said, "I'm going, all right." looked forlorn. Pierro felt lonely and as they counted their beads beforeHe would not admit to himself that he thought of all the robberies he had the cross on the other side, and thewas a bit afraid, and that he was heard of here. He was afraid and lisping of women whispering theirtalking to make the trip seem a nat- would have given anything � have prayers. �e felt like an int�der as !ural and everyday ;�rreJlee� while .been back on. .board the train. At he made his way -dewn the aisle, and!at the same time he would nearly have length he saw a man with a red hand- fairly slunk into the little open space �been willing to forget all about it if kerchief around his neck lying asleep between the congregation and the al- :he had not committed himself. He on a bench. After some hesitation he tar. He was seized with an intense iwent over, and shaking him, asked religiousness and knelt down to pray. ithe way to the Vatican. The man He wished he had never come.grumbled at being disturbed, and rpb- At length the service began. The lbed his eyes. Pierro repeated his prayers were long, and the sermon,;question, but the man could not speak spoken in the standard Italian which 'only his own dialect and could not Pierro had never heard before, be-:make out what Pierro was saying. cause the one at his own church wac; i"Vaticano, Vaticano," shouted Pier- in dialect and he usualUy fell asleep ining train, Pierro was dressed by be . . telli ibl1'0 almost in despair. fore It was over, wac; unm IgJ e,:noon. He went about the inn giving At last the man understood. "Un- and its monotone gave him a head- t ===============orders, and wanting to know if the franco," he said, holding out his hand. (Continued on page 7) 'Read The Daily Maroonthings he was to take with him were=========::::;::=====:!.:=====::::;::=-.:=;======================:ready. A woman carne in with a small .1- ...; -" ... _ .... ._ .... '"bottle of �ater and asked him to take Y1it with him·, that it might get thePope's blessing and be used for holy PPY C L 01 H E S Iwater. Another asked him not to l'or- S N A . 'get to pray for her dead husbandwhen he got there. His wife re-minded him that he really ought not Ito go, and that vexed him, that he 'should be told of something he felt M�de By Uswas a bit true and yet. did not. careto admit, and he became nervous andfidgety and managed to quarrel witheveryone. About an hour before traintime he and his family went to thestation where a crowd had gatheredto see him off. He asked the agentseveral times whether he had remem- ;bered to stop the train for him. Hi� Iwife gave him her final recommenda­tions and his food. He had thoughtlong as to whether or not he wouldtake anything to eat, and then de­cided he would because he could save ,a little by doing so. So his wife had Iprepared him his sandwiches of "po­lenta" and cheese, which she wrappedup in paper and put into his hands,and two small bottles of wine whichshe placed in his inside coat pocket."I must have some wine," he said,"and there's no sense to my buyingsome while I have a eeller full here."He kissed his children and wife good­bye-he had never kissed her sincethe day of their marriage because hesaid it wac; a sign of weakness. Atlast the train came, and in his excite-Now that he was getting old andrich Pierro found time for leisure.The business once established waseasily kept .going, and h¥, sons. weregetting old enough that with a littlesupervising they could take care of it.So he began to think of other things,of the pleasures he had missed, of allthat had happened while he had beenburied in his work, of the new king­dom that had been established, of hisbrothers gone to America to seek theirfortune, while he was still here. Hethought of something he might do torecompense him, of some trip he mighttake to get even. He thought of goingto America, but that was too much;he was afraid to leave for any lengthof time, for the 'crop had to be watch­ed closelv to be good. He thought ofRome th� �w capital, that was muchcloser. He knew that once the mayorof the nearby town of Arlena hadgone there at such a time as this, andhad seen the Pope and kissed his ring.He thought of the glory it wouldbring him, to do this too and tell hisneighbors, and when at church heheard of the Pope's offer of indul­gences, without being exactly sure ofwhat he was doing, he stood up andsaid that he would go.Nina, his wife, was frightened atthe idea, and tried to dissuade him,but it only made him more deter­mined. ".You think that I'm afraid,knew that people were doubtingwhether he would go and the laughthey would give him if he didn't, Sohe kept on repeating that he'd "goal1 right."The day carne at length, and thoughhe was not to leave till the late eve- The WinterGolf ClubWe have made a place.for you to drop in andgossip golf with oldgolfing friends and tomake new ones; tokeep in touch with thegame as well asto keepin practice; to enjoy acozy, informal countryclub atmosphere in theheart of the city withwinter all around out­side. Three amplepractice nets, a largeputting green, dressingrooms and a shower.Two pros on hand.And places to sitaround. Come and en­joy it. In the SportShop-down stairs inthe Michigan AvenueStore-Michigan atMonroe.LONDONCHI CAGODETROITMILWAUKEEIIINNEAPOLISTWO CHICAGO STORES"Ikhi,::an Avenue at �Ionroe StreetHotel ShermanClothing Is Sold at the1\1 ichigan A ve, Store OnlyA University of Chicago Student once dressed byus always remains our customer. Our pastexperience in serving the UniversityStudents is our criterion.Our garments are made and fitted to you and giveyou individuality and class.FOSTER & PETERSONCorrect Dressers of Young Men7th Floor Republic Building State and Adams StreetsTelephone 8216 Harrison- _. __ ._1 __ _I. _ - _1- 1_, - - - _._._1 __ - - - _.- --- - - - - -4 CJ"ahpbat\1cf.dbf,t 1nfoatiI· ahteutlpt1h(;nuit• .Jgirfla'C]IflclojCISf. !rnrnwh:bltttIt •,! wwh:cittClttwm1"\mgeatS(gehefEtosiIiiiI ., l:yhe10•:tTHE DAILY MAROON, TI-lURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1919Pierro Goes To Rome . 7rabbit to the station, The next train I sition of any sort at close range. Mr. Ifound Pierro on his way home; i ! Linn "was a practicing lyrist, but was,j fully occupied witIJ. other labors. Mr. IConventional Comedy I Howard Jones was nominated, butache. Hc could not bc at case 'here I accepted a call to Texas. Then I,among these strangers, and every- (Continued from page 5) !1i11ggcsted to the students interested Ithing irr-itated him. The heat, to ! that they form a Poetry Club, and the I'�'hich he was not accustomed, made mallow obviousness, and if it were not I 'result was most happy. In three years IIhim sweat under his heavy canvas for the characterizations, as I have the production of the club has passedshirt, his collar chafed him, his shoes; said, it would be impossible. You will beyond any possible "instruction" ipinched; he could feel in his pocket forget it quickly enough, and there which we could have given. I shud-Ithe sandwich melting into a soft mush, arc 'Certain parts of it you will be glad der to think of those bright and dar-]and the bottle of wine bumped against to forget. I do not think that you will ing spirits piously responding to ihis side each time hc knelt or changed forget Mr. Henry Hull, because his academic discipline in the heroic ipoxit.ion, He wished he had drunk it impersonation is clever and sympa- couplet or formulating sonnets. For- i ===============before it had got so warm. He was thetic. On thc whole, though, I would tunately they have known how to train I'afraid it would drop to the floor, and suggest that you try for tickets to themselves and each other in the tech-the thought tcrrified him. some other attraction before you visit nique, the craftsmanship of their art, IThc strain was brought to an end U:J9 East." Gut the audience though: and we can honestly say that the Uni-!when at a sign from thc altar the it was great. versity of Chicago has a school of Iconzrczntion stood up and began to poetry though it has no professor lform in line for communion and in- \Vriting In a University of it. idulgence, the latter ceremony to beconcluded by kissing the seal-ring onthe Pope's right hand. But the relief writing I have seen at the Univer­was hut temporary; the crowd soon sity of Chicago (and some of thebecame settled, and the silence that worst) was in the Literary Magazinefollowed was more head-splitt ing thanthe onc before. Pierro was afraid, of recent memory. Some years agothere was an insistent demand thatIthe English Department should estab-(Continued from page 6)\<,1,- T. C. SCHAFFNERDress Suit SpecialistDress Suits to Rent130 N. State St.(Continued from page 5) ARGONNEP.. irMWCform:fi,tOLLARCluett. Peahody (dCo.Inc. T roy. N. Y"The _ "�De" Is u� l>y court"y 01 theArroDDO ShIrt ('0.. 1't,ih,I .. lphltUNIVERSITYHAIRDRESSINGPARLORWho Does YourLAUNDRY?1ST ARLIGHT ? MARGUERITE GRACE, PropTelephone Hyde Park 7904We will please youSpecial StudentPricesEnglewood 5035and his wor-r-ies �avc way to fears.He was third in line, and the thought lish a course in the writing of verse,of being in front of so many people,all better dressed than he, and of let­ting them see what a frightcned peas­ant he was made him shake like aleaf. He could fecI his knees knocktogether, and his heart beat againstthe bottle of wine, What little noisethere was died down finally, as thePope come forward to the ruil beforethe altar raised his hand to give thehlessing. Had it been the hand ofGod, wiping out the Earth, it couldnot have frightened Pierro more. Hethought he must faint with terror ifit lasted a !-!econd longer.Then the unexpected happened..J ust as thc Pope put out his hand t'lgive the communion wafer to the firstin line, a loud report rang out, a muf­fled report as if a shot had been firedand silenced. It burst into the clearquietness, and echoed and reboundedfrom the walls, till it filled the wholechapel. There was a general tumultof frightened people running about,cries of "Treason," "Murder�" guardsseizing' men and shaking them rough­Iy ; even the Pope, though outwardlycalm, had turned white and stoppedthe ceremonv to find out what was thematter. Pierro knew what was thematter. His good wine, heated by thewarmth of his body, and stirred uphy the continual jostling it got, hadblown out the cork. He could feel thewarm liquid running down his shirtas it bubbled out of the bottle. Hiswits left him entirely, and he mighthave been discovered had not hiscraftv instinct helped him pretendthat he too was searching for thecriminal, and to shout "murder" withthe rest. After a long search nothingwas found, and at length the cere­mony began again. But Pierro hadno more relish for it; his one idea wasto get out. He would have turned andrun away then, hut that it wouldmeant discovery. He remained, and 'got his communion, his indulgence,and kissed the Pope's ring, all withoutso much as an inkling of what wasgoing on or what he was doing. Ashe knelt in front of the rail he couldfeel the wine dripping from the coatto his legs. He followed the proces­sion down the outer aisle mechanical-ly, and when it got close to the doorhe walked out into the court. Helooked around to see that no one waswatching, and then fled like a scared as Princeton and Amherst were do­ing. We looked about us. Mr. Hul­bert was teaching thc technique of l ,-' ---------------'-"-'-'-'-=--'poetry by co�·respondence. but had i 6344 Cottage Grove Ave.been granted immunity from compo- ifIt �,,•:tI . A La Carte Chaps and Steaks, 65c75c Table D'Hote DinnerTA��n��� rg;� �aD©(P)LUNCHEONS11 :00 to 2 :30 O'Clockno �OOTA WABASl-J AVt:NU£SECOND FLOORI ,-- ',- -, �- ...:,If:�:��{......... �,One of the many University Views In theART CALENDAR0/THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOPrice $1.00THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOK STORE5802 Ellis A venue 1309 E. 57th St.C. CORMANY'SHOME LUNCH ROOMThe Old ReliableHeadquarters for UniversityStudentsWe serve the best of every­thing. Prompt ServiceTry Our Special SundayChicken Dinner1313 E. 57th StreetPrendergast & KeefeyDruggistss. E. Cor. 63rd St. and WoodlawnCHICAGOPhones Hyde Park 482-483Service to Students OurSpecialty.We carry complete stocks ofJohnson's, Apollo, LovellCorrell Chocoateso .1. - 1_1_.- - _._I_�.Blackstone TerraceCandy Shop1425 E. 60th StreetDaily Luncheons .Pleasant walk across Mid­way (no waiting.)Private DANCING LessonsIn a course of five lessons ($5.00)one can acquire the steps of theWaltz, One-step, and Fox-trot. Socialdancing class ::\fonday Eve at 8 P. M.LUCIA HENDERSHOT STUDIO1541 E. 57th sr, Hyde Park 2314.. A High Class Op­tical Service a tReasonable PricesS. F E INS TEl N, Opt. D.OPTOMETRIST - OPTICIAN1132 East 55th StreetWe Cut Your Hair To Fit UWILLEMSBARBER SHOP803 E. SIXTY-THIRD STREETN ear Cottage Gr-oveTHE FROUe THEATREDRUG STORE ':M. J. Coner, R. Ph.Courteous Attention Paid ToUniversity Students.Cor. Ellis Ave. and 55th StreetAdjacent to Frolic TheatreTel. Hyde Park 7618 THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1919The 1920 Calendar:t':lt>c)tr.!'_��" :�)lI)t:')t�it�;th:l(),T=�ii���jlr,�2l;�� )t' ii .-Althouirh :l calendur could not b(' 1H'I'y apprcpi-iutely t reuted a� a sub- :j oct for Iiterury review, the Univer­-i t y of Chicago Calendar for 1920,put out hy t lu- Press, certainly de­."t·;'\,('," mvnt ion a� a work of art ist icnu-rit , A pparcnt ly the Press has re­aiiz(·d that practical things can be:lIId should be beautiful.III ,+�(' t he 19:!O Calendar is f'ai rl yIarg'l'. but it is not out of proport ionto the �('pia photouruphs of Unive rsi­ty "'('t'II('" which :ll'('Ompany the act uul ,t:;!lt'IHlal' diaur.nn-. .1t i:-: clone on :(Team l'olul't,tI puper, p rinted-c-wherer.riut im; i� necessary-c-in a rich brownt onv, alit! held tOJ,:('tl1('1' 1Iy a xilk ma­roon cord.TIl(> photog-raphs are unusuallyclear and artistic, Some show merelyhuildirurs, such as Harper, Bartlett,Law and Emmons Blaine Halls; oth­('1':-' ),!ive a more definite impression oft he campus, Interiors of our mostheaut if'ul buildillg'-Ida Noyes Hall­art� also included, The 1�)20 =.i;-; probably de:-;ig'ned as a Christmus�i ft: certainly nothing would be more Iappropriate f'rom members of the Uni- .vcrxity. It would also serve admil'-:ably a:, a memento of University Iyea 1':-:, The Press is �e11ing the calen­dar for one dollar.Equality,(Continued from page ;»;\0 011(' would interfere with you, Youcan buy yourself as good a carriageas mine, and ride in it, if you workhard and earn the money. You candrink as much vodka as you can buy.I can do no more. You can hire asmany servants as you can afford, 1have seven, but I should have seventy,if only 1 had the money to pay them,I eat three meals a day. I am sureyou eat as many, And no one, Ivan,will prevent you from beating yourwife as often as I do mine. Really,you should be happy with all theseprivileges, for they make you equalalmost to the Little Father himself."Ivan bowed again, apologized forhis stupidity, and went out. Hestopped at the gate, and sat down ona stone to think awhile ... Let me see," he said slowly tohimself, touching the little finger oihis left hand with the forefinger ofthe right, "I can't pay as much intaxes as the baron, for I haven't themoney."He moved on to the next finger:­"And I can't afford to sleep long, forthen I shouldn't get my work done,and I should become very poor."Another finger: "or course Ican't buy a carriage." IHe now came to the forefinger ofthe left hand, and he lingered longand lovingly upon it. "Vodka-hm­vodka. No. No-no. No, I can't dothat. I'll only make myself verydrunk, and that will he even worsethan sleeping late,"The thumb: "What should I wantwith a pack of lazy servants to feed 1"Back again to the little finger: "Ialready eat three meals a day."The next finger. Ivan's facelightccl up with a smile, At lastthere was one of the privileges 'Iehall as a child of tho Little Fatherthat he could exercise without fearing-lisastrous cons equences.So han wr-nt home, and br-at hiswi f(',When You Want A High ClassHair Cut go toG E O. F. A IKE N'SBarber Shop1153 EAST FIFTY-FIFTH ST.':\ car Univcrsit y A ve.Get All the Campus NewsRead The Daily Maroon �STOREPMENMore Overcoats forYOung Men -Just ArrivedA great number of Coats have been received thispast week, which gives us a larger assortmentthan at any time since the opening of the season.New models among them-including a numberof ultra-smart Coats with fur collars.Considering quality and present conditions theprices are very moderate. 10!'RTH r1.00RMARSHAll FIElD � OOMPANYTHE STORE FOR �IENeA Separate Store ill a Separate BuildingSOlJTHWEST COR:-';EH WABASH :\\·E�l;E :\\:1) \\',\SHI\:(;T{)\: STHU:,• 1 _III SPECIALTY CLOTIfI�{;, as In everyother .'ito(� of Appurd dud Aco:essoTlesfor men dud �oung men, rillS Storeoffer.� man)' ll�l(! and exclusive ideas I,.{"�J'I''t .. �.:!',f•,_ t:,� .. �"I<,- .....