r,'r" .', ..1 'J,r.IIII,\\to·, I.f., I", ._ .. I ,'.'a, Ij II".W l�''_14I1,r!�JIJJ.��.���IIj.�:'t.",.:'����r'�r.��.���J������,��f:';�', � ,�<:." ::!':'�:�i�··'''·'.'·-·· (' ': ':1�,. -.. Mf,R R 1JzD' ,, '. .... . .PROM ,EXTRAaroonVol. 18. No. 75 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1920 Price Five CentsI Tonight's Washington Prom is thetwenty-fifth to be held by the Uni­I versity of Chicago, so that as an in­i stitution it is one of the oldest. Thei first prom was held in 1894, when theI University was still in its infancy.The first prom was held at theBarry Hotel!-situated on the Midwaywhere the Del Prado now stands. Itwas known as the "Washington Ball."Thirty couples were present for thegrand march. Johnny Hand's or­chestra furnished the music for thetwelve dances, most of which werewaltzes, the rest being polkas, quad-rilles and schottisches. After theI �tenth dance a supper was served. ,',Among the dancers were Dr. and �Mrs. Judson, Thomas C. Chamber- ��lain, William D. McClintock, Eliakin ��-IH. Moore, William Owen, and Mrs. .�William Rainey Harper.' 11.1..,.J'Chicago Beach Used in 1895. �So sueessful was the affair that it ,.�t:!was decided to repeat it in 1895.The Chicago Beach Hotel was chosen ..for the affair. President Harper .;;�made a speech at the ball in which �he expressed the desire that it might . �become an annual event. His wishes .;:1have been carried out, and the �r�m_ -J��'T ��h�s been held c�ntinuously ever s:.hce, .. �WIth the exception of the years 1904, :.:and 1905, when President Harper was _' .:�very ill, and when he died. -��From 1895 to 1901 the Chicago �r�Be�ch Hotel was used for the Prom. i ':I�In 1902 and 1903 the ballroom of � }�Bournique's Dancing academy was .�,Fox Trot-"Karavan." used. In the meanwhile Bartlett , .!One Step-UIn Your Arms." WHO THE LEADERS ARE gymnasium had been completed, and '1IFox Trot-"Peggy." it was decided to use the large main, ;�One Step-leThe Vamp." EDITH WEST, leader of the right 1 ta Kappa Epsilon. He was on the women's cheerleader. Last year" she floor for the Prom. From 1906 until '�Fox Trot-"Venetian Moon." wing, is a member of Nu Pi Sigmal Freshman swimming team, and swam played on the Senior college baseball 1918 the scene of the affair was in j.�,:Waltz-UIsle of Golden Dreams." and the Quadranglers. She was a with the Varsity team last year. team, and was vice-president and I Bartlett. �Fox Trot-"Dardenella." member of the Undergraduate Coun-I When a junior'he was on the first cab- chairman of the entertainment com- 1918 Prom War-Time Atfair. 'tOne Step-" Lea v e s 0 f My cil her Freshman year. As a sopho- inet of the Y. M. C. A. This year he mittee of the W. A. A. She was also .... �',:.J:•. ;'Heart." more she was a member of the Sign is chairman of the social committee secretary of the Interclub council. For The affairs during these years were�Th t "S t K' "f h S· kl db· f h S· I th h t d I th P rtf I· marked by an elaborate setting and .e ex ras were: wee isses, 0 t e IC e, an US10ess manager 0 t e emor c ass. ree years s e ac e 10 e 0 010"All the Quakers Are Shoulder Shak- of the Portfolio. She acted last year and Freshman Frolic, and last year I program, the most lavish being that_PHYLLIS PALMER, leader of the hId rt· tw Y M C A of 1917, just previous to the Amer- ,!ers," and UThe Blues My Naughty as chairman of the W. A. A. spring I s e p aye a pa In 0 -Ileft wing, is a University aide, and Y W CAd '11 ·Thi:··' ican declaration of war. In 1918, 1Sweety Gave to Me." banquet, and was president of the In- .. ...• vau evi es. s year 'jla member of the Honor commission, I h h . f th d t' ,the war-time spirit of conservationAnnounce Committees. terclub council. This year she was . s e was. c airman 0 e ecora Ions I' Ih f h f h Nu Pi Sigma, and the SIgma club. Initt f S ttl t ni ht left its stamp upon the preparations IThe committees which managed c airman 0 t e re res ment commit- comnu ee 0 e emen rug .her first year she was a member of for the revels, which were described ,!this year'!:: Prom follow: tee for Settlement night. She has 1.., the Freshman commission. During FRANK THEIS, leader of the left, as "sober." . IReception committee: Elizabeth played on the college teams in wom- "Jher Freshman and Sophomore years, wing, is a member of Sigma Chi and,' Last year the Undergraduate coun- ,.Walker, chairman; Moffat Elton, Har- en's athletics and has served on a � fshe was a member of the second cabi-] vice-president of the Interfraternity cil made a break with the University .jold Walker, Gladys Nyman, Suzanne number of committees. I '1net of the Y. W. C. A., and played on council, of which he was treasurer. tradition by deciding to hold the }'IDavis, John Sproeh�l�, Buol :S�rke, I CHANCELLOR DOUGALL, leader the women's baseball and hockey! last year. He was a member of Score I' Prom at the South Shore CountryGrant Mears, and WIlham Gemmill, f th • ht' . -be f Del t ASh h 1 bP itt EI At I 0 e ng WIng ,IS a mem r 0 - earns. s a op omore s e was i cu. club. For thirteen years the Promsrogram comrm ee: eanor -I t I had been held in Bartlett gymnasium. . jk����rmM; A��C��, khl'================�=============================== ICombs, Josephine Gamble, Carlin. It was thought that the cost of dec- 1Crandall, Katherine 1\Ielhope, Brook TH OSE ATTEND IN G \ THE PROM I orating the �nasium for. the �ffair, '4Ballard, and Elizabeth Brown. '\ together with the resulting lDCOD-. ih t", Ch 1 w B k d 1\1' P I venience to gymnasium classes and ·t..Announce Publicity Committee. Robert Adler and :Miss Violet i Albert Bates and Miss Anna S eve ar es ". ec er an • ISS au-. to the basketball team made a selec- )Publicity committee: John Joseph ;·Eddlestone. I, Charles Bates and Miss Florence line Hayward, I fI ., tion 0 some other place desirable. ·and Jasper King, joint chairmen; Edwin W. Ahern and Miss Marion PIice. Wade Bender and �hss Helen WII-1 The South Shore Country club wasHarold Stansbury, John Ashenhurst.j Jaynes. I James S. Bartle and Miss Florence Iiams." I chosen as being suitable and con-William Morgenstern, Eugene King, I Van Meter Ames and Miss Helen Juam. Alston L. Bennett and Miss Sylvia venient.Mauritz Halgren, Theresa Wilson and I: Condren. I Wallace E. Bates and Miss Virginia Taylor. Tonight Is Twenty-Fifth Prom.Helen Thompson. Julien Anderson and Miss Irene: Strain. Harold J. Best and Miss DorothyTi k . F k L d If .l , I - Tonight's Prom will be the secondc ct committee: ran· ong an t ammonn, Emmett B. Bay and Miss Virginia Gavin.June King', joint chairmen; Frank I Samuel Andrews and Miss Violet Itr'bh I ,'.'11' P B .l 'I' R th F I to be held at the country club, and.• r I en. ,,'I tam . est an" !' ISS U cr- t th t t fifth f't ki d ThPriebe, Warren Mulroy, Glenn Hard- :!\Jathles.... e wen y- 0 Ism. e. Ch t G H K dv.I G Atk' .l 1\{' H I Rau Howard K. Beale and MISS Florence guson. I erand march formine of the ccC " andmz, es er uy, enry enne y'l eorge InS an" ISS e en ·1 e' , � ,Paul Moyer, Eugene King, Paul Bir- John Baker and Miss Helen New. Cook. I Chester W. Billings and Miss :Marie the sin�ng of the Alma Mater, havemingham, Crandall Rogers, Roland, Clyde Baker and Miss Lenore Hel-I Gilbert A. Beatty and Miss Marion Keene.. . . been traditional features.Holloway, Frank Hardesty, David I her. Daly. I Harry L. BIrd and 1\IISS Marguentc Leaders of the grand march haveGoodrich, Donald Gray, George serck'i Brook Ballard and Miss Marjorie i. Harold .H. Beck and 1\Iiss Ruth Bev-I Davy. been seniors who were prominentlyHans Hoeppner, and Grant Mears. Wells. Ilngton. (Continued on page 2) (Continued on page 2)SIX HUNDRED AREPRESENT AT 25THWASHINGTON PROMLike3.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.� 15.Sing Alma Mater and Form"C" at Conclusion ofGrand March. IIANNOUNCE ALL COMMITTEES IThe twenty-fifth Washington Prom Ibegan tonight at'9 in the ball room Iof the South Shore Country Club, Iwith three hundred couples dancing.]The grand march was led by Chan-!cellor Dougan and Edith West at the Ihead of the right wing, and Frank ITheis and Phyllis Palmer at the headof the left. The two lines formed a I"C" at the conclusion of the grandmarch, and the Alma Mater wassung.The patrons and patronesses for theoccasion were:President and Mrs. Harry PrattJudson, Dean and Mrs. James Row­land Angell, Dean and Mrs. HoratioHackett Newman, Dean and Mrs .•James Weber Linn, Mrs. Edith Fos-IIter Flint, Miss Elizabeth Wallace,Miss Marion Talbot, Mr. and Mrs.]F. E. Palmer, Dr. and Mrs. William IWest, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Dougan"Dr. and Mrs. Victor Theis. IFifteen Dances Scheduled.Fifteen dances and three extras Iwere scheduled for the event. Among,these ' .... ere seven one-steps, seven Ifox trots, and one waltz. The prO-Igram was played by Phil Goldberg'ssix-piece orchestra. The complete iprogram follows: I1. One Step-"Give Me the GoodOld Days."2. Fox Trot-" A Pretty Girl IsA Melody."One Step-USwanee."Fox Trot--upatches."One Step-"Peter Gink."One Step-"Bo-La-Bo.",\ WASHINGTON PROM'SHISTORY BOUND WITHTHAT OF UNIVERSITYFirst Held in 1894-1920 BallI Is Twenty-Fifth ofKind.GIVE FULL ACCOUNT OF AFFAIR2 THE DAILY MAROON. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1920mitt Baily !laroonThe Student :'\e"'spaper .f theUniversity of Chicago'Published mornings, except Saturday,Sunday and Monday during the Au­tumn, Winter and Spring quartersby the Daily Maroon company.1° EDITORIAL DEPARTMENTThe St."John Ashenhurst News EditorRose Fischkin News EditorHelen Ra itch News EditorHoward Beale Asst. News EditorWilliam Morgenstern, Athletic EditorHarold Stansbury Feature EditorHarry Bird Night EditorErnest Fribourg Night EditorHerbert Rubel Day EditorBUSI�ESS DEPARTMENTThe StaffGRANT :\IEAP.S-Business ManageHenry Prinzle .. Advert ising Manage)Keith Kindred .. Circulation ManagerLaurence Tibbits Asst. Cir.MgrEntered as second class mail at theChicago postoffice, Chicago, IllinoisMarch 13, 1906, under the act ofMarch 3, 1873..f&�i!�t�.fr:t::1."l�.:'4�'til��� For the second time we are having� a Washington Promenade at ,the=r->: - . Bouth Shore Country Club, and inm�y respects we are having ourmost successful Prom. Certain­ly in numbers the twenty-fifth out­shines all its predecessors. And thesecond testing of a more desirablesetting than Bartlett gymnasiumonly proves the more that some suchplace as the South Shore is easier onall concerned and much more satis­factory.In truth, there is not much to besaid about the Washington Prom ex­cept that it is the' Affair of the year.To try and set down in cold print theglamour and enjoyment of younggentlemen's and young women's play­time js an impossible task. At times,.in Prom editions, editors of The DailyMaroon have tried to find some signi-ficance in the fact of the WashingtonPromenade.But why bother? The Prom is oneof the few things in college that isnot dependent upon significance, andfor that reason it comes as a welcomerelief. One either has or has not theinclination plus the dollars and the'war tax necessary for attendance ata Prom. There are no notes to take,words to consider-nothing exceptno h' hthe observation of conventions w ICunder ordinary circumstances we term"formal."Oh Lord, let the editor cease. Foronce The Daily Maroon will let a �am­pas affair be, just be, and find neithergood, had nor indifferent facts aboutit. On with the dance!SUBSCRIPTION RATESCalled for, $2.50 a year; $1.00 aquarter.By Carrier, $2.50 a year; $1.00 aquarter.By Mail (city), $3.50 a year; $1.50a quarter.Editorial Rooms Ellis 14Telephone Midway 800Business Office Ellis 14Telephone Midway 800Saturday, February 21, 1920THE TWENTY FIFTHDelts Announce Plcdcinz-Delta Tau Delta announce� thepledging' of Hans Hoeppner of Ke-wanee, Ill.Too had the basketball and trackstars couldn't attend the Prom. Rutin the first place tate hours are"against the training rules, in the sec­ond and third places dancing andmidnight suppers arc taboo. PROLOGUECIVI LIZATION 15LIKE UNTO ARUBBER BALL,IT TRAVELS INLEAPS ANDBOUNDS - Chester Guy and Miss Florence AI­rock.Irving Gilbert and Miss Ruth Roe.Ctarence Gill and Miss Louise Lan-here. IMortimer Goodwin and Miss Doro­thy Brady.Robert Gordon and Miss GladysHawley.John Granthan and Miss PhilomenaDuggan.Maurice Grimm and Miss HelenLesh.Hoy Grinker and Miss Bernice Da­vis.Harold Crosland.Xicholas Grossman and Miss MarciaDrill.Paul Grundman and Miss Mona Rob­inson.William Gubbins and !'.Iiss Gwen­de!lyn Llewellyn,Blaire Gutwillig and Miss AliceChurchill.Ellsworth Haas and Miss Mary JaneGrubbs,Bradley Hall and )li�s Beatrice Lu­cus.Juke Hamon ann Miss MargaretXower.Arthur Hanisch and Miss RuthDunlap Clark and .Miss ElizabethIlrown. Smith.George Efferding and Miss GertrudeAllairs. Frank Hardesty and )lbs DorothyA. Smith.Bower.Loomis.Norman Elmstrom and Miss Ruth Eendheim.Norman Harte and Miss KathleenWASHINGTON PRo)l'SHISTORY BOUND WITH THATOF UNIVERSITY Elvin Clark and Miss Edna Clark. Edmund Eichcngreen and Miss Mar-N. Bayard Clinch and Miss Aby g-an·t Strauss. Louis Hardin and :\liss CatherineStrawn.Garland Ellis and Miss Sylvia Lay. Henry Hardy and Miss FlorenceWilliam S. Ellis and Miss Louise Cameron.Amsden. Harold Hardt and Miss Ruth Sharer.Edwin Englehart and Miss Romona Grant.Carter Hazzard and Miss CharlotteDyas •Charles J. Eulind and Miss Lillian .Ross.Louis Head and Miss Ruth Weiland.(Continued from page 1)Walter Elmore and Miss Harrietid tifi d ith . I ... f h Stewart Cochran and Miss Jean1 en 1 e WI SOCIa nctivities 0 t e iPi kUniversitv. In 1908 Charles Jordan ic cett.d L· ·K f I d th . h I Theodore Cochran and Miss Gladysan OIS au man e e marc. n N1909, Renslow Sherer and Helen .I. yman.Hurd; 1910, Josiah Pegues and Jessie I Sander Cohen and Miss Lucille Eich-Heckman. : engreen.Chose Two Couples After 1911. I Albert CoIn an and Miss Helen Col-Beginning with 1911, two couples nlan.were chosen, each leading one wing. Roger M. Combs and Miss Jane Per-Edwin Earle and Geraldine Brown I kins. Richards.led the right wing and LeRoy Bald- John F. Combs and Miss Ruth Frank E. Fenner and Miss Ruthridge and Molly Carroll the left wing. Bowra, Metcalfe.The 1912 leaders were Ira Davenport Maurice Cope and Miss Juiia Lang. Vories Fisher and Miss Ruth Lovett.with Margaret Sullivan, and Ray- J. Milton Coulter and Mrs. Coulter. Harry Flemming and Miss Virginiamond Daly with Frances Meigs; 1913, J. Carlin Crandall and Miss Eliza- Kendell.Hiram Kennicott with Mary Anne beth Williford. Richard Flint and Miss Eunice Em- Lawrence A. Henning and Miss Mar-Whitely and Donald Breed with Effie Goodell Crawford and Miss Marion ory. garet Orne.Hewett; 1914, Howell Murray with Amy. Lyman Forbes and Miss ,vera Ed- Paul Hielman and Miss Ruth De-Elizabeth Sherer and Earle Shilton Warren L. Crawford, wardson. Witt.with Miriam Baldwin. .Frank B. Crothers and Miss Jean Donald C. Franklin and Miss Mar-The 1915 leaders were Cowan ste-I Harris.. jorie Boyden.phenson with Irene Tufts and Frank Robert Dailey and Miss Marguerite Arthur O. Frazer.Seefridge with Helen Brooks; 1916, I Noss. Harry O. Frazer and Miss KrulienDan Brown with Marion Mortimer Herford Davidson and Miss Dorothy Smoke.and George Benson with Dorothy Rough. Ernest J. Fribourg and Miss Doro-VanderpO"eI; 1917, Lyndon Lesch with Stewart Dawson and Miss Helen thy Brown.Margaret MacDonald and Percy Dake I Goirer. Roger L. Fribourg and, Miss Jose-with Nadine Hall; 1918, Carleton I Joseph Day and Miss Edna Groman. phine Singer. John Holmes and Miss Eleanor Mills.Adams with Rosemary Carr and Elmer Donahue and Miss Esther Me- Herbert Friend and Miss MildredHarry Hoskins and Miss GraceCharles Cottingham with Florence I Laughlin. . lIirsh.Kilvary. Last year's Prom leaders James Doorley and Miss Marcella Frederick Frost and Miss Devereux Weatherhead.were George Martin with Arline I Graham. Jarrett. Robert Howard and Miss FrancesFaulkenau and William Henry with Harold Dryden. Henry Fulton and Miss Lucile Crozier.Gladys Gordon. William H. Ducker. Histed. Warren Howard and Miss AnnaEdwin A. Dygert and Miss Gwendo- John Garner and Miss Katherine Mary Little.THOSE ATTENDING THE PROM lyn A. Kolsrud. Icogers. Sam Isaly and Miss Dorothy VanI Sigmund Edelstone and Miss Doro- Lester Garrison and Miss Elizabeth Pelt.thy Heyman. Parker. Colville Jackson and Miss CatherineThomas Edwards. Walter Gatzert and Miss Josephine Nelliger.Warren H. Edwards. Becker. Theodore Janovsky and l\Iiss Marga-ret Janovsky.Harold Jay and Miss Mary Hale.Carl G. Johnson and Miss LaurettaNichols.J. Oliver Johnson and Miss EloiseJeffrey.Leonard Johnson and Miss Ellen Mc­Nair.William Johnston and Miss Cather-:\Ionroe.(Continued from page 1)HOTEL' CUMBERLANDFranklin W. Blye and Miss AgnesRobinson.Mliton Bowen and Miss Louisel\'ammen.Frank Boyer and Miss Dorothy Tay­ler.William Bradford and Miss Julia IHarwood,David Bradley and Miss Marion ICreyts.Charles Breasted and l\Iiss Ruth IHuev,Burton T. Brink and Miss Ruth Ed-Iwards.Pier-ro Brosseau and :\tiss Margaret I,Kiernan. IWilliam C. Buchbinder and Marion IRosenwald. ,William P. Burleigh and Miss ner-Inice Peters. "Ingalls D. Burnett and Miss Jessica.T :\1 illard. !Orwood Campbell and Miss Helen iPalmer. IWarren Cavins and Miss Margaret IDelaney,James Clare and Miss Damaris IAmes... --------------------�--��--------�----�------�--.-�--�NEW YORK CITYBroadway at Fifty-fourth Street."Broadway" cars from Grand CentralDepot.Kept by a college man.Ten minutes walk from theatres.Rooms with bath, $2.00 and up.Special rates for college teams andstudents.HARRY P. STIMPSONManager.The Cumberland does more school and college busi­ness than any other hotel in New York. Headquartersfor Chicago. Peter Harris and Mrs. Harris.J oseph 1'1. Harris and Miss EstherCai Heideman and Miss HarrietThomson.George P. Heilman and Miss EdithPowell.James C. Hemphill.Paul N. Hill and Miss Ruth Vos-burgh.Paul Hitchcock and Miss CarolineCooper.Hans Hoeppner and Miss FlorenceSullivan.Roland Holloway and Miss Dorothyl\liller.inc Clark.)tal'medukeJanes and Miss GeorginaReinhardt,and Miss Lorene.J ohn E. J osephWinn.Louis Kay ton and Miss Louise Mac­Xeal.William Keith and Miss Mary Mor­timer.Frederick Keefe and Miss CarolynLounsberry.J. Kenneth Kemp and :Miss La RetaWolfe.Hayes Kennedy and Miss Helen For­tune.William Kennedy and Miss EnenSeyfarthClark Kessler and Miss Mary Hayes ., iI I (JECIi=I'Hli:{i�I.,�\,���I'H,1i 1, \':{ iI� ", ..t'I, \',\ �.. r� � \.��, ...,",I�:'.\r1, _J''I�L'�l�), Robert 'Kewley and Miss Mary Wag- Paul McMett and Miss Elizabeth Mark Pennick and Miss Pauline Walter Reckless and Miss Helen Lewis Ruby and Miss Dorothy Riv-nero Nye. Tenk. Reckless. 'kin.Keith Kindred and Miss Janet Child. Ralph McPherson and Miss Helen Donald Petty and Miss Olive Law. Frank J. Rhodes and Miss Hazel George Rutter and Miss Ruth Miller.Eugene King and Miss Lillian Bor- Adams. William Pheeney and Miss Eliza- Marmon. Phillip Salzman and Miss Minetteden. Grant S. Mears and Miss Ellen Glea- beth Walker. Kenneth Richardson and Miss Helen Salzman.Jasper King and Miss Isabelle Wat- gone Ruthven Pike and Miss Sarah Lind- Thompson. Luther Sandwick and Miss Maudson. John Mesick and Miss Lucy Sturges. say. Gerald Roberts and :Miss Marie Cameron.John King and Miss Addie Thomp- Carl Meyers and Miss Dorothy Mar- Charles H. Piper and Miss Jean Prew Savoy and Miss Florenceson. tin. Knight. Niergarth. Hooker.Rudolph Knepper and Miss Kather- Charles Michel and Miss Ruth Beyer. Gifford Plume and Miss Eva Steitz. Bruce Robinson and Miss Helen Richard Scharf and Miss Dorothyine Kane. Robert Miesler and Miss Frances Henry Pomper. Strong. McKay.Lloyd Koch and Miss Alice Gunder- Shermeyer, Richard Prendergast and Miss Ma- Crandall Rogers and Miss Gertrude I Charles Schaller and Miss EleanorSOD. Everett l\lier and Miss Caroline rion Weiland.I Elmore. I Strauss.Paul Kaufman and Miss Dorothy Tjcfenbrowner. Frank Priebe and Miss Josephine i Thomas Rogers and Miss Dorothy James Scherbau and Miss HazelImmerom. Glenn Millard and Miss Faye Mil- Parker. Lyons. Bryerton,Kenneth Koach and Miss Katherine lard. Walter B. Price and Mrs. Price. Horatio Rogers and Miss Marion Paul Schroeder and Miss Mary Neill.Connelly. Victor Millikan and Miss Helen Mc- Henry Pringle and Miss Lucile Dick. Dawes. George Scheyler and Miss ElizabethGus Krakauer and Miss Adeline Mullen. John Prosser and Miss Gladys Fitz- Paul Romey and Miss Adelaide I Haggert.WeB. Victor Mingers and l\1iss Helen williams. I'scanlon. I John Schmaltz and Miss HortenseWalter Kramer and Miss Helen Clark. Earl E. Randall and Miss Marion William Rothermel and !\1iss The-I' p. ollack.New. William Moffett and Miss Murgaret Harvey. rosa Wilson. Paul Schwartz and Miss Helen Rob-Arthur Kraus and Miss Helen Ro- Long. Herbert Rycraft. I InS.gan. Hudson Moore and Ernest Rycraft. Arthur P. Scott and Miss ConstanceRay LaSalle and and Miss Edna Mcl.aughlin.Schering.Allen Lel\Iay and Miss" I t'lItl','.'THE DAlLY MAROON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1920Loeb and Miss Josephine e �ypewrltersBauer.Richard Loeb.Frank Long and Miss Marion Nicol.Bernard Nath and Miss Leona Bach­Arvid C. Lunde and Miss Evelyn rach.Anda. Norman Nelson and Miss LeonaCarl Lundgren and Miss Helena :\1 urray.Olander. James Nicely and Miss CharlotteJohn R. Lyman and Miss Harriet l\Iontgomery.Weber. Harold Nicely and Miss Dorothy Da-Paul MacClintock and Miss Mildred vies.Johnson. Norman Nicol and Miss ElizabethWilliam Maloney and Miss Gladys Shutter.Webber. Walter Niemayer.Frank Mayer and Miss Janie Joy. Max Noble and Miss BeatricePaul H. Moyer and Miss Eleanor Marks.Bymes. Bernard M. Norton and Miss EdithE. Sigsby M,-Cready and Miss Sarah Hinman.Kemp. E. J. O'Connor.William D. McFarland. Paul Oles and Miss Claire Smith.Alfred McGregor and Miss MargaretClark.Willard McGuire and Miss GretchenHarbeck.Joseph McGinnis and Miss MarieCarns.Alfred McCartney and Miss Mabelhutchinson. 5802 ELLIS AVENUEFOR SALETO RENTSee tbem atThe University of Chicago BeekstoreKenneth Oliver and Miss EvelynKessling.Harry Olmsted.Walter Olson and Miss Ruth Healey.LeRoy Owen and Miss Buol Burke.Walter L. Palmer and Miss MarionAbbott.Buel Patte rson and Mrs. Patterson.THIS is a new-fashionedworld, but Murads are the"old-fashioned" tasting Turkishcigarette. 1 00% pure Turkishtobacco makes them taste that way.That's why thousands and thousandsof men demand them.They gratify your pride and satisfyyour taste-and when you take themout of your pocket in any company you have noapologies to make. You know w hat we mean!It istrue that "ordinary" cigarettes cost a trifle less.Judge for yourself-!�a��(1M.i..:rs iftll:.·U_ufJdCiGJl!i;,··L:;�.J E.f:JpU.;r.dprtksmtik'\lZ,;J 3,l"t'�'!�kr,,,�" ".,�.�. ,,-:'! � \ d� . I:,�.. : '. --f· ... ·.j ..,� .e-;. �:(rt,i'I-r-t,'lj, � 4 THE DAILY MAROON. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1920PROMoters of this PROMenade "STACK 'em up!" MiltoJ;l Weiskof and Miss Cecilia Leonard Weil and Miss Miriam Page said, "In the three games awayBomash. Goodman. from home the men demonstratedHarold Stansbury and Miss Anna Gerald Westby and Miss June King. that they were fighters of the firstUnzicker. Albert Welsh and Miss Margaret 'older" for to take those contests, theyFloyd Stansberry and Miss Elsie Laughlin. I were all forced to go the limit."Doebereiner. I Francis Wilson and Miss EleanorJohn Stapler. O'Connor.Ralph Steffen and Miss Suzanne Harold Wood and Miss Helen Hood.Davis Donald Wilson and Miss BerniceRockwell Stephens and Miss Mar- Grantham.Charles T. Scott and Miss Florence garet Lillie. Warren Wilson and Miss Florence IBushnell. Wilson Stegeman and Miss Elsie I MacNeal.Perry Segal and Miss Ethylene Co- Jonson. I Larry Willett and Miss Miriamhen. James Stoll and Miss Ruby Worn- Ormsby.PROMulgate its virtues abroad John Selfridge and Miss Constance er, Sidney Wolf and Miss Viola Hirsch.And PROMise much pleasure, b'gawd Abigail. George Stout and Miss Agnesi Arthur Wolf and Miss BeatriceAt the PRO�I. George Setzer and Miss Lita Run- Lloyd. Pfaelzer.yan. Richard Strauss and Miss Eleanor Fred Weick and Miss KatherineWITH over three hundred tickets Henry Shaffer and Miss Polly' Hirsh. Hall.sold and only six pieces in the orches- Lerch. George D. Sullivan and Miss Harold Yegge and Miss Gladys I ================tra, a neat sum should be realized Walter Shamil. Jeanne Farley. Rainer. Ifrom this function. What will the Henry J. Shapin and Miss Eleanor William Swanson. James Yost and �liss :-'larie Brad-',committee do? It's against the rules Block. William Tabor. ford.to make the dance pay. James V. Sheean and Miss Elinor Mark Tapley and Miss Jean -. �eor�e ZoBel'S and Miss Ellen IHinton. coner. QUIgg. iPEOPLE sometimes wonder why William M. Shirley, Jr. Roscoe Taylor and Miss Julia"-Goe. Earl Zaus and Miss Florence Sha-IThe Daily Maroon publishes this Prom Wilson Shorey and Miss Eleanor Wilson Terwilliger and Miss Hazel piro. I! ./ Extra each year. \Ve know what the Wood. Robinson. Gerald Zavertnick.t) reason is this year. You see, the Donald Skinner and Miss Ruth Joseph Thomas and Miss Gladys I Fr-ancis Zimmerman and Miss AI- iI : Wyverns are going to give a dance to Ginsberg. :\lc\Vhorter. ta Larsen. Ili-li;' H jwhich admission will be by invitation arold Sippy and Miss Natlin I Robert Tiffany and Miss Martha:II andnotbysomanysmickiesacouple; Gates. I Smart. ,-'- __ ._._._._. _ ._.! t that is, a dance which is not a sub- Wendel Slayton and Miss Katherine 1 Louis T'imins and Miss Charlotte I 5 P 0 R T 5 H 0 R T 5,� scription affair, We know this sounds Llewellyn. Johnson. I- · _. __ ._._._._._.- _ 61I� revolutionary, but it's a fact. No Howard Sloan and Miss Eames. Kenneth Tobey and :Miss Emily While we sit eating our . midnightII.I�. wonder this journal gets out an extra. Henry Smith and :Miss Elsie Neil. Talbot. I supper the Maroons are specding ], William Smith and Miss Isabel Hugh Todd. Michigan-ward. Here's luck to our I!! THIS is International Night on the Kra�tz. I Ger?ld Toepelman and l\Iis� Rita I coming champs. II P quadrangles. Out here at South I l!-lchard Snyder and ?riss Emily Quam. ! --- III Shore we are putting on the great Vonalbodc, William Traver and Miss Eleanor, . . I" American act. Barret Spach and Miss Margaret!, Lyric. I ) l:t."c�d J�c\·Oep�ol.nl·l.tz �(\·lanbt"ollorn�cl'1Pe\�ennl·finlgr�st:, H.f\ggott. R b un d 'M' K th' ) .... e u cuze .l ;�.' ' I na man an r ISS a erme danci g and at' g i; Victor Spoehr and MI' ss Gladvs Grossman. I m em. ISOCIETY AND ENTERTAINMENTS u - �. I ....�( The most important event of the Gordon. .W. Bruce Vaughn and Miss Goldie Michigan next. Tonight's game I���:... ".' U" .J ohn Sproehnle and Miss Mary I' Brierton. should bc a corker as far as fight is Ie niversrty social calendar is taking 1================place tonight at the South Shore Louise Biederbeck. Carrol Veazie and Miss Nona concerned. The chances are that the� Country club. The affair does not re- \Villiam Stafford and Miss Kathryn I Walker. Wolverines won't run out of SUbsti-, Private DANCING Lessons��' semble a funeral so much as fonnerly Stevens. Don Volini and Miss Vir�ina', tutes at home as they did when they In a course .of five lessons ($5.00)�. Russell Stafford and Miss Victoria Poehlman. played here, ,one can acquire the steps of t�ebecause floral offerings are "barred I" I Waltz. One-step, and Fox-trot. Soelalif from the floor," where they would Goodsell. John Yolk and MISS Helen McNaIr. dancing class Monday Eve at 8 P. 1\1.II doubtless interfere with th labvri Ralph Stansburg and Miss Elsiel Wendall Walker and Miss Edythe But then, the :\Iaroons are some I' LUCIA HENDERSHOT STUDIOI' e a yrm- Stevens. Flack. little fighters themselves. As Pat 1541 E. 57th St. Hyde Park 2314I! thine peregrinations of the guests' I� -----.i"-fi-�t. Among the members of the�'� yopnger set present is Miss Ruth::.. Huey, Someone has just remarked; how chawming she looks and another,of Cheshire extraction, is telling her�II',"; companion that she could lookehawming too if she had been able tocome to the Prom in an elevator in-� �j stead of an old Yellow. Miss Phyllis�.' .-Potter Palmer, who led one of the�.' wings and helped sing the Alma Ma-�,t ter, is seated near Miss Edith West,:i the other leader, who is busy drawingll: valentines on the table cloth. Mr.j Roland Holloway,' the well-knownl.... manager, is seeing to it that the wait-ers perform their duties with dis­patch. Miss Suzanne Davis looksabout the room with a discerning eye;that is, with two discerning eyes(she never winks, of course). She issuspected �f telling herself that thisparty doesn't compare with hers ofJan. 19. As a matter of fact, shefeels a bit uncomfortable without herusual florist's display. Fat Reber issurveying his plate, in one corner ofwhich lies a lone salad. He inquiresif this is the supper he has heardabout. He forgets that the salad sea-'tbe C �""pu'V-·l1jr:�� BREAKFAST, of course, at Pow­ers'.Garcon.1'HOSE ATTENDING THE PRO.UPROMISCUOUS POETRY.The PROM's no imPROMtu affair, (Continued from page 3)AU PROMinent persons are there,The leaders are chosen 'With care,For the PROM.602 North Ai11ericanBuilding Phone Central706 DORIS HAT SHOP1151 E. 55th StreetNear UniversitySnappy. Spring StylesNow Ready ForYour InspectionCOLLEGE CLOTHESA Specialty.;_ .HARRY G. SMUCKERson is almost up. Reasonable PricesFRO:\l the 1912 Prom Extra:''What is your decision now? Is sheworth it?"AS usual, this department is dis­satisfied with the musical program forthe evening. In the first place, it isquite inappropriate to have "SweetKisses" as an extra. The committeeforgot it was charging $6.60 a couple.Then, for the last dance, we shouldsuggest some good old tune like"Good-by, Boys, I'm Through," or"You Can Have It, I Don't Want It,"or "You Made Me What I Am Today,I Hope You're Satisfied." The firstnumber on the program, furthermore,should be transferred to the supperextra: "Give �fe The Good Old Days." jJ:1/ , ..I. \E(i]t; •. fIlII, bt- ...... -0I., i1!' f1ClUSl'Wg.1\Jcial1\101tc"to"'1toIt I "I.�d n(;:t ht\ ll-t,� h('th(r ."'('t ... paJ' t,'1014f is, '4 he•"I' .. 1- .,(',: � ""(','.J ."1(1, ,<.;: :-- "'c