Vol. 24 No. 128 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TODAY, MAY 29, 1925■■Price 5 Cent*FRIENDS BID PRESIDFACULTY WIFE TOADVISE WOMEN INVOCATIONAL CHOICE A BUILDER GOES TO HIS RESTMrs. J. W. Thompson HoldsRegular Office HoursTo Serve Women. A vocational adviser for Universitywomen has been secured by Federa¬tion in the person of Mrs. JaniesWestfall Thompson, ’03, wife of Prof.Thompson of the history department.She will haye office hours in thealumnae room of Ida Noyes hall onMonday, Wednesday, and Friday from10:30 to 1 for the remainder of thequarter.Mrs. Thompson has been interestedin vocational guidance for severalyears and has done active work alongthese lines since her graduation. Shehas been connected with the ChicagoCollegiate Bureau of Occupationsand is chairman of the scholastic com¬mittee of the Vocational SuspensionLeague.Sponsor Vocational Talk*Federation has maintained as partof its regular council a vocationalchairman, who, with a committee ofsponsors has offered what assistanceshe could through consultation withauthorities and through pamphlets toany women who desired advice or in¬formation as to a fitting vocation.Under its auspices, several lectureshave been given yearly by profe\sors.and vocational workers.Through the efforts of the commit¬tee. which is headed by KatherineBoettcher this year, a regular workeralong these lines has been secured.FRATERNITIES ANDCLUBS TO SUSPENDSOCIAL ACTIVITIES FAREWELLUNIVERSITY BOWS HEADIN FLOWER-LADEN HALLCortege Marches From Midway To MandelBetween Reverent Files of Students,As Chimes TollAt two services of impressive simplicity, yesterday, last tributewas paid Ernest DeWitt Burton, by scholars, by professional men,by students of the University, by the whole city of Chicago.Long files of faculty members in cap and gown. Expressions oftender memory of the late President by University officials. Vastbundles of roses.At noon, the chimes ring andstudents walk toward Mandel.The 1,200 seats are occupiedrapidly. When they are filledthe guards are instructed to breakthe fire rules and people areseated on the stairways and onthe speaker’s platform. Whenthe limit is reached the doors areclosed and some have to standoutside.Fraternities and clubs on campushave suspended social activities whichhad been planned for the quarter, inaccordance with the general action ofthe University in thus showing respectfor their late chief. Ten fraternitiesand five clubs have either cancelled orpostponed dances and parties.The following clubs have cancelledactivities: Mortar Board, the Springparty which was to have been givenduring June: Wyvern, a banquetplanned for May 26; Delta Sigma, aformal dance which was to have beenheld May 29; Deltho, the Alumnaedinner, for June 12. Phi Beta Deltapostponed an informal fiance, whichwas to have been held June 12. ChiRho Sigma. Phi Delta Upsilon, andEsoteric have not yet decided on theinformal dances which were to havebeen held on June 4, 5, and 13, re¬spectively.Fraternities Cut PartiesOf eleven fraternities which had ar¬ranged for some social activity duringthe remainder of the quarter, five havedefinitely decided to continue, fibe havecancelled their programs and one re¬mains undecided. Alpha Sigma Phihas planned a Spring Formal at theOlympia field country club; AlphaTau Omega will have a house partyand week end party at I.ake Beulah.Wis.; Delta Sigma Phi and KappaSigma house parties on June 17; andPhi Kappa Psi is to hold its formal onthe same night.Alpha Delta Phi. Beta Theta Pi,Sigma Nu, Sigma Chi, and Phi Gam¬ma Delta are five fraternities whichhave, in deference to the deceasedpresident, cancelled social functionsplanned for the rest of the quarter,while Delta Tau Delta has not decidedwhether it will carry through its ar¬rangements for a house dance pnJune 17. Eight of President Burton’s mostntiisate friends and colleagues, car¬rying the casket that bore theirleader to the ceremony.Three members of the Divinityschool, a preacher, the President'ssecretary, the Director of Athletics,the Dean of the Graduate School ofScience and the late President’sAssociate in the directorship of thelibraries, served as pall bearers.University students and facultymembers in the march from the Pres¬ident’s house at the corner of 59thStreet and University Avenue to theflower laden platform in Mandel hall.As a last token of respect to theirdeparted friend the student bodyformed a line on each side of Uni¬versity Avenue for the duration ofthe procession.BREASTED WRITESOF LATE FINDINGS INSTRUCT WOMENIN RUSH TACTICSFOR TRACK MEETRecounts Adventures AmongPharaohs, Planets,PachydermsDuring his recent stay at Cornell uni¬versity, Prof. James H. Breasted ivrotethe follozving article for The CornellDaily Sun. Prof. Breasted delivered aseries of lectures there on the historyof civilisation.By James H. BreastedThe greatest difficulty which besetsthe American Orientalist is probablythe long distance which separates himfrom the countries which he studiesand from the monuments which formthe subject matter of his investiga¬tions. The Oriental Institute of theUniversity of Chicago meets this dif- jficulty by permitting the Orientalists |of the Chicago faculty to make peri¬odic journeys in the East, and indeed, jto carry on continuous work there.These journeys furnish the Orien¬talist with constant surprises. When iI was on the Nile in the autumn of i1923 I had no means of forseeing the )surprising experiences of the comingiwinter. As I was returning fromNubia and the cataract region of the'Nile I received a hurried note fromLord Carnarvon announcing his ex¬traordinary discovery of the tomb of(Continued on page 2) By Eunice Hiil(This is the first of a series of edu¬cational articles on the Stagg Inter-scholastic, by prominent campus wo¬men, addressed to the women of theUniversity.)The purpose of the Stagg Inter-scholastic is to interest prep trackstars in the University by giving thema convenient opportunity to visit it.Each year there are numbers of highschool stars who take part in the meetand win high honors. These menmust he rushed for Chicago.There is no reason why the womenshould not take an active part in therushing as well as the men. The bestway in which we can do this is as fol¬lows: Attend the meet both days;come around to all the entertainmentsgiven for the hoys and talk Chicagoto them; watch the Maroon for an¬nouncements of rushing events to hescheduled and he on hand to take partThis is the first time the womenhave attempted anything Hike this.Let’s all work together and put itover! ‘WGT BROADCASTSSTAGG MEET NEWSREFUND HOP MONEYMoney received for tickets to theInterclass hop will be refunded Wed¬nesday, June 3, between 1 and 2, ..the office of The Daily Maroon. Interscholastic Bulletin IsTrack News BureauUp-to-the-minute news on everyphase of the Stagg InterscholasticTrack meet which begins June 5 willhe posted daily on the new bulletinI board across the road from Cobb hall.This board has been named station“WGI” (World’s Greatest Interschol-; astic), and anything that the Campuswants to know about the meet canbe found there.It is under the supervision of thePublicity committee of the meet, andby means of pep articles, news storiesand educational features on the In¬terscholastic, the committee is tryingto keep the meet constantly in theminds of the students.• This is the first time in the twen¬ty-one years of the Interscholastiethat anything of this kind has beenattempted. Current news and photo¬graphs will be posted daily. Therewill be a constantly corrected listof entries received from high schoolsand academies, pictures of, and in¬formation about, individual stars en¬tered, and cartoons relative to themeet. The Dean Speaks"We have gathered here to be¬gin remembering together.”Dean Wilkins has been calledupon, after a hymn and after aprayer by Rev. Charles W. Gil-key, to address the chapel.“That it must be a remembering isa tragedy for us,” he says, “a tragedyof overshadowing darkness. * * *We shall remember what he did.Where will you find a life more richin action and in action that was al¬ways serviceable, ever seeking andever creating a greater fulness of lifefor his fellow men? * * *”‘‘We shall remember what he was—his simplicity, his dignity, his uttergenuineness; his trust, his loyalty; hisvision, his courage, his faith. * * *Oh, for a throng of men, for a collegeof men, for a city of men, for a worldof men, in whom that spirit shall pre¬vail.“What He Was”“We shall remember what he was,and what he said, and what he didAnd when that triple memory mayshine through grief it shall he lumin¬ous in its beauty and joyous in itspower.”Prof. John M. Coulter steps to thepulpit. He speaks in a faltering voice.“In my long contact with PresidentBurton I recognized that he mighthave been likened to a power house,ready to connect up with any worthyenterprise and suffuse it with his dy¬namic spirit. * * * 1 remember anillustration he once used to me as abotanist.“He said: ‘Our departments aresowing the seed and cultivating thesoil, but a good crop needs also aproper atmosphere.’ In other words,he was intensely interested in the Uni¬versity atmosphere in which studentsmust live and work.”First Service EndsSoares leads in prayer, and after thechoir has sung a hymn, the studentsfile out, to reassemble later in a longline' along University avenue.At 2, they begin to appear alongthe curb of University, and in thirtyminutes the whole street from the j work wit]l ],jm was a privilege.” Mr.President’s house to Mandel is lined Swift’s voice for the first time weak-with students, and people who aren t J ens And then brokenly, he says againto he in the procession. I |ias ])een a glorious two years.”among the faculty.The Eight FriendsOn the left of the casket are Prof.James H. Breasted', Nathaniel Butler,Dean Ernest R. Irons, and Prof.Charles H. Judd. On the right sideare Director Alonzo A. Stagg, Prof.Edgar Goodspeed, Librarian J. C. M.Hanson, and Dean Henry G. Gale.President Emeritus Harry PrattJudson, Harold H. Swift, Rev. CharlesW. Gilkey, Dean Shailer Mathews.Trevor Arnett, and Dr. T. G. Soaresfollow the body. The University Sen¬ate and faculties, dressed in gownsconferred by many universities andcolleges, slowly proceed.A man nudges another at the curband remarks something about an un¬rivaled procession of intellect. Science,history, English, administration, andevery department of the Universityhas lent its men for the afternoon.Flowers Perfume MandelThe front part of Mandel is a con¬servatory of roses, sweet peas, chrys¬anthemums, and ferns. They fill thehall with perfume. The organistplays hymns. The seats are all filledlong before the procession arrives.Everyone stands. Slowly the mem¬bers of the procession enter and taketheir places on the platform and in asection of seats that have been re¬served.President Emeritus Harry PrattJudson presiding. "It is difficult—im¬possible—to put into words adequatelythe sudden and overwhelming sorrowwhich comes to the University com¬munity at this time. We shall tryonly to express in some measure ourappreciation of our lost leader in afew7 phases of his many-sided char¬acter. * * *Swift Falters"* * * As a scholar, as a thinker,as an educational leader, he was sim¬ply and wholly a true man.”Rev Soares leads a prayer.“Eight the Good Eight,” the latepresidents favorite hymn is sung, atthe request of the family. Harold H.Swift, president of the board of trus¬tees, is asked to speak.“It has been a glorious two years,this period of President Burton’s ad¬ministration. He acepted the task withunflinching courage. He brought tothe presidency an open, clear mind,open to the truth . . .“At early conferences he spoke ofi a return sometime to literary efforts,but in later conferences he never! spoke of this. Though a frail man hisj strength was prodigious ... He was! one of the kindest men I ever knewj . . . He dreamed dreams and saw theUniversity as it should be, in the forefront ....Colleague Praises Him“To know him was to love him. ToAt 2:30, the procession, headed bythe University marshal and the collegemarshals and aides, begins its marchtowards Mandel. They precede thePresident’s body, which is borne byeight of the President’s closest friends Dean Shailer Mathews is calledupon. . . “It would be hard to namea man in America who has had alarger and healthier interest and in¬fluence in biblical study. But theTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. MAY 29, 1925 V.;.-ait? Satin JflarmmPOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished mornings, except Saturday. Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription rates:$3.00 per year; by mail, $1.00 per year extra. Single copies, five cents each.Entered as second class mail at the Chicago Postoffice, Chicago, Illinois, Marek18, 1900, under the act of March 3, 1S73.The Dally Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.OFFICE—ROOM ONE, ELLIS HALL5804 Ellis AvenueTelephones: Editorial Office, Midway 0800, Local 245; Business Office,Fairfax 5522; Sports Office, Local 80, 2 RingsThe Daily Maroon solicits the expression of student opinion in its columns on allsubjects of student interest. Contributors must sign their full names to communica¬tions. but publication will, upon request, be anonymous.Member of the Western Conferenee Press AssociationThe StaffKenneth Laird Managing EditorHerbert C. DeYoung Business ManagerEl>lTOKIAI. I)EPARTMEXTClifton M. Utley Sports EditorWeir Mallory Women’s EditorAllen Heald News EditorMilton Kauffman News EditorVictor Wisner News EditorLeo L. Stone Feature EditorDeemer Lee Day EditorReese Price Day EditorWalter Williamson Day EditorGertrude Bromberg Assistant EditorLois Gillanders Assistant EditorMarjorie Cooper Sophomore EditorRuth Daniel Sophomore EditorJeanette Stout Assistant Sports Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTThomas R. Mulroy. .Advertising ManagerLeland Neff Circulation ManagerEthan Granquist AuditorEdward Bezazian, Mgr. Classified Ad. Dept.Philip Kaus Subscription ManagerDudley Emerson... Distribution ManagerThomas Field Local Copy ManagerElliott Fulton Promotion ManagerMilton Kreines. Downtown Copy ManagerJack Pincns Service ManagerJerome Zigmond Adv. Sales Mgr.“FOR CHICAGO—WE WILL’May 29, 1925BWTHE FINAL STUDENT TRIBUTEWe have paid our last respects to President Burton. Yesterday,in chapel, there was assembled the largest representative group ofundergraduates that has ever met in Mandel hall for any occasion.We came because we wanted to; we came because in every studentheart there was an unspoken desire to show a little of the great ap¬preciation that was felt for the services of our departed leader. Oursilent sympathy was extended to the bereaved wife and daughter;our utmost reverence was offered to the memory of the husband andfather. Our offerings, spiritual rather than tangible, were placednext to the beautiful floral display that represented the nation’sgrief, and we know that our late president will understand, andgratefully accept them in the spirit in which they were given.Not many of us have personally known President Burton. Weknew that he was a great scholar and leader, and the impelling forcebehind the University, but few were actually cognizant of ErnestDeWitt Burton, as the man and the friend. Now, we know that wehave lost the best friend of the students. We have been told thatforemost in the mind of the president were plans for the improve¬ment of undergraduate life, the personal as well as the scholastic.We have been shown a portrait of Dr. Burton which discloses theidealist, the practical man, and the humanitarian. Our regret isthat all of us could not have known the original.We have but one course ahead of us—to make the dream ofour late president a reality. The guiding hand has helped us alongso far that we should have no difficulty in continuing our way alone.Let us help make the “University of 1940 as President Burtonvisioned it.A COMMEMORATIVE SINGThe Interfraternity Sing has been cancelled, as well as othersocial events of the year, in deference to the memory of our latepresident. The spirit which was behind this action was fine andgenerous. But was it not a misdirected step? The Sing is notmerely a “social event.” It is a University tradition, one of few, andthe only one which effects a tie between the University and its alumni.Such a tie is especially important this year. To bring theAlumni back to the University for a reunion, such as the Sing, isessential to the work of the Development Campaign. And the workof the Development Campaign was the work to which PresidentBurton was devoting himself most actively before his last illness.The intensive carrying out of the work of the Development Cam¬paign is absolutely necessary to the fulfillment of Dr. Burton s plans,to the realization of his vision of a greater University.The spirit which motivates and dominates the InterfraternitySing is a spirit of dignity and beauty. There is nothing about itwhich would not be appropriate at this time; indeed it can becomeespecially appropriate. The Daily Maroon believes that the motivewhich prompted the cancellation was excellent, and that the greatestrespect and reverence was behind the act. We believe also that inview of the character of the Sing itself, and in view of all that theSing can do toward the accomplishment of the task in which Dr.Burton was vitally interested, that the cancellation of this year sInterfraternity Sing was a step hasty and misdirected. We believethat the Sing should be held this year, the greatest sing that we haveever seen, commemorative of our late president. BREASTED WRITESOF LATE FINDINGS(Continued from page 1)Tutenkhamon. Hastening down toLuxor I was privileged to stand in theantechamber of the tomb a few daysafter the discovery and before anything, whatsoever had been movedIt is not the purpose of this storyto narrate the extraordinary experi¬ences which I enjoyed in the tomb,especially in view of the fact thatmine were the first human eyes toread the records on the sealed door¬way of the burial chamber in 32^0years, and to find in them quite ob¬vious evidence that the undisturbedburial of a Pharaoh in all his Orientalmagnificence lay just behind thissealed doorway.Used First TelescopeOn my return from that extra ordin¬ary winter in Egypt I stopped in Italyfor a short vacation at Florence, liv¬ing in the Villa Palmieri, the homeof James W. Ellsworth. While theremv friend. Dr. George E. Hale, thegreat American astronomer, was car¬rying on some work in the history ofastronomical instruments. In thecourse of this work we enjoyed {he junique privilege of taking out front !their resting place in the “Tribuna" at IFlorence the two original telescopes 1of Galileo and setting them up for ac- ■tual use. So far as I know we werethe first modern men to turn theseinstruments upon the skies again andto see with them the moons of Jupiter,the rings of Saturn, the mountains onthe moon, and a group of sun spots,just as Galileo himself had done withthese very instruments for the firsttime in the history of the universe, iIt w’as a thrilling experience, renderedthe more so by the reading of Galileo'soriginal journal recording his discov¬ery of the moons of Jupiter, which wesaw sparkling very faintly throughthese crude little telescopes about 40inches long, with an objective gla>'not much larger than a half-dollar.A week later I was passing a shopin Londoh where a well known private !collection of Egyptian antiquities hadbeen sold at auction a short time pre¬viously. I stepped in to see if therewas anything left from the sale. Afew fragments of inscribed stone, ofodds and ends of woodwork, and stuffthat we would commonly call junk. jwere shown to me. Among these jthings, however, was a beautifully in- |scribed piece of ebony wood, lookingnot unlike a ruler, and to my surprise 1I found that the inscription oil it con- jtaitied the name of Tutenkhamon. Acloser examination disclosed the fact •that the piece was a part of an a^tron- !omical instrument used once for mak- jing transit observations. It not onlybore the name of Tutenkhamon but jthat king recorded on the piece, also,the fact that lie had made the instri- jment with his own hands. Could anycoincidence be more extraordinary? |Coming from this study of his his¬torical records in the tomb of Tutenk¬hamon and the observation of theskies with astronomical instruments ithree centuries old at Florence, 1 came 1upon an astronomical instrument made by Tutenkhamon himself lyingoverlooked and unsold in the first shopI entered in London. It had been putup at auction with the other pieces ofthe well known MacGregor collectionbut had not been sold, no one amongthe purchasers present having recog¬nized what it was, and as the auctionwas taking place just before the dis¬covery of Tutenkhamon’s tomb no onewas particularly interested in hisname. It had, therefore, lain in theshop all winter long from the autumnof 1922 until June of 1923. when itcame under my notice. Together withanother similar instrument which hadbelonged to Tutenkhamon's grand-father-in-law. Amenhotep III, it is theoldest astronomical instrument in ex¬istence.Pharaoh’s Transit InstrumentCuriously enough, Tutenkhamonstates in his inscription on the instrument that he made it in restoring thetomb of one of his ancestors. Itwould seem, therefore, that such atransit instrument was part of thetomb furniture of a Pharaoh, and itmay be that in the two still unclearedchambers of Tutenkhamon’s owntomb there may yet be found his owntransit instrument, a discovery de¬voutly to be hoped for because itwould undoubtedly be complete and inperfect condition, whereas, the ex¬amples we now have are imperfect.The instruments were used for deter¬mining the instant when a star crossedthe observer's meridian, just as timeis determined for Great Britain at theGreenwich Observatory by the obser¬vation of the sun's crossing of thaimeridian. Whether it had any further astronomical purpose in theking’s tomb we cannot determine.Every winter in Egypt, every jour¬ney in the Near East, thus turns up itssurprises and its coincidences. Outmust endeavor to keep in mind u greatdirectory of kings and important of¬ficials, and a considerable catalogue ofcities and historical events of the re¬mote Oriental past, for one neverknows when chance may throw intoone’s hands some document havingnew and detailed bearing on personsor matters already known to us. 1was passing a shop in Luxor only afew .weeks ago w hen the owner, standing in the doorway, reproached me be¬cause I had not entered his place fortwo years. I went in and amongmyriads of worthless riff-raff I saw abeautiful engraved black granite slababout two feet high, bearing an auto¬biographic inscription of a man whohad evidently campaigned with someconquering Pharaoh, both in Asia onthe north and Xubin on the south.His name was broken out, but follow¬ing the place where it had stood was3Ftra! Unitarian(Elntrrh57th and Wood lawn Ave.Von Ogden Vogt, MinisterMemorial Sunday, May 31II A, M. — Estimates ofMemory the statement that lie bore the nick¬name of Mahu.Now there was an Egyptian gen¬eral, one of the great commandersunder Thutmos III, who led the arm¬ies of that conqueror in Asiax on morethan one Far Eastern campaign. Thename of this general was Amenemhab,but he likewise bore the nicknameMahu, which I recalled was, mention¬ed in his tomb in the Luxor cemetery.In that tomb he tells, with great prideof his many campaigns with his sov¬ereign, and with great satisfaction herecounts how, on the occasion of agreat elephant hunt when the Pharoahhotly pursued by an enraged elephantwas in seriolis danger. Amenemhab.otherwise called Mahu, had leaped be¬fore the furious elephant ami slashedoff his trunk with his sword. I wondered if this inscribed granite slabcould possibly have belonged to thegreat general, and sure enough, read¬ing on to the bottom line I found bisname near tlfe end clearly preserved,and unmistakably the great generalAmenemhab. And so, out of the dustand rubbish of a little antiquity shopof Luxor came forth a new documentbearing on the life of one of the greatleaders of the early East.It is the constant possibility of suchsurprises as these which add inex¬pressible zest to our pursuit of newdocuments, new sources, and newfacts, revealing to us the career of theearliest civilized people in the ancientEast. There is no field of research inthe whole range of humanistic studyso promising, and* no field in whichnew recruits are more seriously need¬ed than this. Young men, ami youngwomen too. who are interested in thestudy of the human career could notenter a more promising field, and it is jgreatly to he hoped that the vast op- |portunities now unfolding before in- jvestigators in the Near East may he 1realized by the rising generation ofyoung American scholars. knew him, he will abide an undyingforce.”Rev. Gilkey speaks of PresidentBurton’s last days, when he lay in hisbed, planning for the University, andwishing that he might live to expressat the June convocation some newthoughts which he penciled off at thehospital. “The best commentary onhis religion was his living.”Close With Pilgrim’* ChorusAs the minister finishes, the chimesare heard faintly, and Rev. Soaresrises to offer prayer and benediction.The organist plays the Pilgrims Chor¬us from Tannfiauser.The gowned figures move downfrom the platform and lead the wayto the back of the hall and into thecloister. The funeral cortege porceedsto Oakwoods cemetery, where, in ac¬cordance with the Presidents wishes,the body is to be cremated.BOHASSECK-LAVARONSTUDIOSWeddinu AdministrationGowns- Instruction in Dress MakingSuite *02 110 K. Wabash Ave.PHONE CENTRAL 2177CHICAGO KTlilCAI. SOCIETYA non-sectarian religious society to fosterthe knowledge, love and practice of theright.THE PLAYHOUSE410 S, Michigan Ave.Services Sunday, May 3 I stI I A. M. *All seats free, Visitors cordially invitedREVERE LATE LEADERMAKING PROGRESS IN SCHOOLCalls for a sturdy well nourished body. Students need thefull advantage of a quart a day of Borden’s Selected Milk.It is the most in pure food for the least money.BORDEN’SFARM PRODUCTS CO. of ILL. Franklin 3110 (Continued from page 1)man was greater than the scholar . . .No teacher ever possessed a greatercapacity to institutionalize himself.His scholarship exhausted only a frac¬tion of his indomitable activity.“In the church, in the University,in the wide world of education, butmost of all in the hearts of those who Special SaleFor Thi«MonthAt TheHYDE PARK TRUNKSTORE1117 E. 55th St.. Near University.B. Hartman Tel. Hyde Park 0980All Kinds of Traveling Goods:Trunks, Suit Cases, Traveling Bags.Hand Bags, Laundry Cases, BriefCases. Umbrellas, Hat Boxes anda Full Line of Leather Novelties.We Do All Kinds of RepairingROGERS — KENNEDY SHOPPHONE MIDWAY 3081 1120 Ea.t 55th StreetMarcelling ManicuringShampooingGOOD USED CARSMIDWAY MOTOR SALES6056 Cottage Grove Ave. Phone Fairfax 1426COLLEGE MENYou can easily earn your tuition by working during thesummer months for the YELLOW CAB CO. Healthyoutside work for men over 21 who can drive a cab.Openings on the north, west and south sides. SIGN UPNOW. See Mr. McLean, 57 East 21st St.How did yourCartersLook thisMorning ? W1DEWEBBostonGaj*teiyjpMcAnany & FinniganPRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTSCor. 55th and Woodlaum Ave.Drugs, Cigars, and Cigarettes; Perfumes. Toilet Articles andParker, Waterman and Conklin Pens Worn the world over by welldressed men -ydung or old—because of thesesuperior points: C——►All-Rubber Oblong Button, boldsstockings taut — for trim ankles.►Hook and eye cast-off — for Quality hFirstconvenience.► Slide Adjustment —fo: fit andService.► No metal parts on face of pad —no wrinkles.►The pad without a puckerMAKS**Gcorgi Frost Company•ORTON WHITSUNDAY, MAY 31stSERVICES IN THEEPISCOPAL CHURCHESCHURCH OF THE REDEEMER—56th and Blackstone Ave.REV. JOHN HENRY HOPKINS, RectorHoly Communion 8 A. M.Choral Eucharist and Sermon | 1 A. M.Evensong and Sermon 7:30 P. M.ST. PAUL’S CHURCH — 50th and Dorchester Ave.REV. GEORGE H. THOMAS, RectorHoly Communion 8:00 A. M.Morning Prayer and Sermon 11 ;00 A. M.CHRIST CHURCH — 65th and Woodlawn Ave.REV. H. C. BUCKINGHAM. RectorHoly Communion 7:30 A. M.Choral Eucharist and Sermon | | A.Young People’ Club Y 5:30 P. M.Evensong 7.45 pCedar Rapids hasentered its track teamin the National Inter¬scholastic again. The DailyFriday Morning SPORTS MaroonMay 29, 1925 The Iowa team willhave a chance to winthe three time Delttrophey this season.DECIDE INDOOR CHAMP TODAYCedar Rapidi Enters Eighteen Men in Prep MeetHAWK TEAM TOFIGHT FOR THIRDWIN IN CLASSICVictory This Year Will GiveIowans Possession ofDelt CupFollowers of the Interscholastic forthe past three or four years will heinterested to learn that WashingtonHigh of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, twicehigh point winner and"once runner-uphas entered again this year anotherfull team to he represented in all theevents.Washington High’s record for thelast three years is second to none. In1922 the Cedar Rapids school first ap¬peared in the limelight when its teamwas returned high point winner. Thefollowing year it was only able to tie. for second place hut again last spring,with a full team, entered in all 21events, was successful in repeating itsconquest of 1922.Three Stars MissingThe 1925 aggregation, minus threeof its star runners of last year, hascome through another highly success¬ful season. Among the high lights ofthe year are the winning of the IowaState meet at Iowa City, the North¬western meet, and the Wisconsin re¬lays.Cuhel, Healy and Loftus, sensa¬tional runners of last year’s squad,have graduated. However, a numberof men on the 1924 team have level-’oped into worthy successors, it honorsin the earlier meets are to he consid¬ered. Two new men, Svacek andHarper have also shown considerableability.From last year’s squad are Stamats.quarter mile and dash star; Redel, 100and 200 yard dash entry; Komb, an¬other dash man; Schulte, middle dis- |tance runner; McClung and Harper Jhurdlers, and Hanna, weight thrower.None of these men placed last year, jOne of the new men took second place jin both the Northwestern and Wis¬consin meets. Stamats lias been win- •ning a number of 440 races. Svacek ianother new man, placed in threeevents at the Northwestern meet when jhe won the pole vault and took minorhonors in the broad and high jumps.In winning last year’s classic Cuheltook firsts in the high and low hur¬dles and the 440 run. Loftus third inanother of the quarter mile events andHealy ran third in one of the 880races. The team won the three-quar¬ter mile relay and finished with 259 points, 7 ahead of Wilson, Kansas, towin the meet. Interscholastic BoardHolds MeetingTonightFinal plans for the reception of1,500 high school and academytrack men will be made tonightwhen the entire Interscholasticboard of committees meet at 7 inthe Reynolds club theatre. Over150 are expected to be at this meet¬ing to hear talks from Stagg, Cris-ler. and Tom Mulroy, the studentchairman of the meet.The new organization of the In¬terscholastic committees is com¬prised ot one student chairman,three student managers, and tencommittees, with a man at the headof each. The rushing and housingcommittees are asking the aid ofprominent men on campus to helpin the rushing of place winners inthe meet,-and under this depart¬ment there are fifty men outside ofthe actual committee personnel.The meeting tonight is for thepurpose of instructing the commit¬tee members and the rushing per¬sonnel in their duties and in thepurpose of each committee. EIHBROY’S TRACKATHELETES RUN INI-M MEET TODAYThree Fraternities Have FiveMen Oualified inFinalsMAROONS THIRD INBIG TEN TEAMBATTINGCoach Nels Norgren’s Maroons arelodged well in both the Conferencepennant race, holding down a jointclaim on second place, and being inthird' place in the team batting aver¬age. The local pennant chasers areclouting the pill to the tune of .290.The Buckeyes have the lead in bothteam batting and the flag race, wherethey are also in the first position.Chicago has four hitters in the se¬lect few who are clouting the spherefor an average better than three hun¬dred. J. Howell, Cunningham, Web¬ster and Marks lead the Maroon slug¬gers and all bat well over the covetedindex of sluggers.Following is the team batting aver¬ages up to Saturday’s games:Team G AH R H Thirty seven trackmen will com¬pete in the finals of the Spring Fes¬tival held at Stagg Field this after¬noon at 3:30. Of these, only three arenon-fraternity men.The events are to be the 100-yarddash, 220, 440, 120 low hurdles, highnimp, broad jump, pole vault, andshot put. In the shot put, 440, and880, there were no preliminary eventslast Wednesday. These will be runoff today as finals, as the entries aresmall enough.The leading teams, each having fivemen left in the finals, are Delta SigmaPhi, Phi Kappa Sigma, and Sigma Chi.As the winner of this meet not onlygets much honor for its efforts butalso makes a number of points towardwinning the Spring Participation Cup. [which goes to the organization having jthe most points at the end of thequarter, the men composing theseteams will be up on their toes anddoing their best.DeWitt Is Favorite in 100The most probable winners in the100-yard dash are DeWitt, Sigma Xu;Wain, of Kappa Nu, and Johnson, ofDelta Chi. In the low hurdles. Mor¬rison. unattached, and Faris, DeltaSigma Phi. seem to have the bestchance of copping. In the 220, againDeWitt, and Meskimmon of A. T. O.The pole vault and high jump prelim¬inaries showed no outstanding men.and all other events except the broqdjump are still in the dark as to pos¬sible winners. Blankenstein of PhiReta Delta, and Gerhart of AlphaDelta Phi, are the men picked to leadin the broad jump. They both showedup very well in the preliminaries andare expected to fight it out today inthe finals. Maroons Resume Drillfor HoosierGameMaroon ballmen will resumepractice today and tomorrow inpreparation for one of their two re¬maining crucial contests, to beplayed Monday at Bloomingtonwhere they will meet the Hoosiernine. At present the locals are tiedwitli the Indiana team with sixvictories and two defeats and Mon¬day’s contest will give one of thetwo teams undisputed possessionof sectiond position, and, shouldOhio State lose tomorrow, thegame would put the winner in firstplace.Maroon chances in the game areabout even. The Varsity lost thefirst Hoosier encounter earlier inthe season 1>y the narrow marginof a single run, and since that timethey have improved markedly. TEKES AND SIGMA NUS MEET ATTHREE-THIRTY ON STAGG FIELD TODETERMINE ALL-UNIVERSITY TITLESigma Nu Hopes for Victory Through Stevens’ Pitching;Heavy Hitting and Good Fielding MarksTekes PlayTHE LINEUPTau Kap Epsilon Sigma NuA. Petrolekitz, li. Widman, ss.Ray, ss. Stevens, p.Westland, 3b. Baker, c.Braud, lb. Koerber, rf.P. Petrolewitz, c. Coy, 2b.Tate, 2b. Ecklund, ss.Magnasson, rf. Wiemer, cf.Jelinek, eg.I Hamilton, p. Pollard, If.Benedict, 3b.Young, lb.OFFICIAL NOTICEhave been held this afternoon.Ohio State 5 169 36 51Indiana 7 261 53 78Chicago 6 173 25 59Illinois 8 273 51 72Minnesota 7 234 32 55Wisconsin 7 258 44 59Purdue 8 256 37 58Michigan 6 198 22 43Iowa 7 189 30 35 AY.310.298.290.256.235.228.226.212 MEET TONIGHT AT 7 INREYNOLDSGowdy, Noyes, Elwood, Abbot, Mc-Farlane, Barnes, Demarel, Merriam,Baker, James Cusack, Hobscheid,Marks. Carr, McGinnis, Pokrass,Goodman, Rouse, Robert Howell, JohnHowell, Olwin, Harison, Weddell, Cul"lorn, Cunningham, Young, Gubbins,.188 Gordon, Boone and Bennett.Play Two Rounds of DeferedPrep Net Tournament TodayFORDS USEDFORDS,All models, all typesfrom $50 up with orwithout s t a r te r s.These cars ars in goodrunning c o n d i t i.o nCash or terms.GLENN E. HOLMES,Inc.30 E. Lake St.Open Evenings and Sunday■■ Following a three day postpone¬ment, due to the death of PresidentBurton, the Annual Cook County In¬terscholastic Tennis Tournament, or¬iginally scheduled to start last Tues¬day, will get under way this afternoon.All of the players arrived today al¬though few of them who drew byes tothe second round of the doubles pair¬ings will not see action until tomor¬row when that frame is played off. Several favorites swell the chancesfor a number of these schools, whichmakes the incentive for upset all thestronger on the part of other repre¬sentatives. George Holloway, NewTrier, is the outstanding luminary, dueto his showing at the recent statemeet, in which he ran away with theIllinois Interscholastic title.Closely rivalled in popularity is theSt. Mei artist, Emmet Pare, who holdsAll of the singles entrants, forty-four j both the National Clay Court, and thein number, will have tasted victory or Western Junior Championships. Gor-defeat by tonight, as the second round j non Brandt and his brother George,of play reached in many cases by byes, i Calumet stars, Budd and Thompsonwill also be finished by dusk. The i of Hyde Park, Kennie Nutter of Pro¬hopes of fifteen schools, most of them 1 viso, and Marshall Sherrill of Evan-from Chicago, will have taken formby the time that the thirty-two match¬es of the first day have been settled,but it will take until Tuesday to de¬cide the champs of both events. ston are other well known high schoolplayers with high ratings. Combina¬tions that include these same men arealso favored to go through in thedoubles mftches. Cross-section oi atooth, showing AcidDecay at the DangerLine.Sweet things!WHEN you eatsomething sweet,and you feel thepang of pain in yourteeth, you are beingwarned! AcidDecay has begun.And if neglected,Acid Decay may lead to dangerousabscesses and even seriousinfections of the gums.Squibb’s Dental Cream, madewith Squibb’s Milk of Magnesia,does much more than keep theteeth clean and attractive. It safelyand promptly neutralizes the acidsin the mouth which attack theteeth and gums—especially at thatvital place where gums meet teeth— The Danger Line. It is theonly dentifrice that affords realprotection from Acid Decay —protection* that lasts for hoursafter use. At drug stores.Dental CreamMade with Squihb's Milk ofMagnesiaE. R. SQUIBB & SONS, New York—ManufacturingChemists to the Medical Profession since 1858© 19?s| sity indoor championship. Both teamsI are strong hut the Sigma Nus haveKenwood houses have cancelled its | a slight edge < ver the Tekes becausefaculty garden party which was to j Sigma Nu and Tau Kappa Epsilon of the much harder schedule that they"had to play to reach the finals -Tekes Win Easy Schedule1 an Kappa Epsilon was the winnerof the Beta league. This league wasone of the easiest in the tournamentas both Kappa Sigma and Phi Delta-1 beta dropped out of competition-The Tekes, however, gained first placeby trouncing Phi Beta Delta, Lambda( hi Alpha and Delta Kappa Epsilon.In the semi-finals they downed PhiKappa Sigma, who placed second inthe Gamma league. Phi Gamma Delta(Continued on page 4)will meet this afternoon at 3:30 inStagg field to battle for the Univer-Dance MusicHUSK 0’HAREHarrison 01035^Open Only ToCollege StudentsA special, complete,intensive stenogra¬phic day course, forCollege Graduatesand UndergraduatesONLY, opening thefirst of January,April, July, October.Enrollments for thisSpecial Course mustbe made before theopening day.3092tcoaeseuerswf^Paul Moser.J.O.Ph.R.Prestfcnt116 SMldii^nAre CHICAGOJLL.12**Floor Phone Randolph 4M7 *——r12*F1Page FourTEXT OF ADDRESS BYDEAN OF THECOLLEGESThe address given by Dean ErnestHatch Wilkins at the commemorativechapel yesterday noon is given here inentirely.We have gathered here to begin re¬membering together. That it must bea “remembering” is a tragedy for us—a tragedy of overshadowing dark¬ness. And yet the very cause of ourgathering is this: the man whom wehave lost was such , that we haveturned to him, and shall still turn tohim, for light.We shall remember what he did.Where will you find a life more richin action—and in action that was al¬ways serviceable, ever seeking andever creating a greater fullness of lifefor his fellow men? Action that tookhim as minister into the heights anddepths of human experience; that'senthim a> devoted traveller across thecontinent of human need; that broughthim as discoverer into the fullerknowledge and the fuller revelationof the central life of all history. Andthen, his own work done, and noblydone, an eventide of beneficent tran¬quility before him, there came to hima new day, a day of sunlit, windsweptenergy, a day for the full striving ofreborn, vigorous youth. What heachieved in.that day of two brief yearswe already know in some measure.Yet we shall enter into the fullness ofthat achievement only as the yearsbring the fruition of all that he hadplanned. Did ever life of service haveso dramatic, so splendid, a final phase?It is a challenge to every one of usto believe, with mind and will, thatindeed"The best is yet to be.The last of life for which the first wasmade."We shall remember what he said:words of truth and encouragementspoken in prizedWords of ripe wisdom spoken in council; words of vision spoken in publicaddress and recorded for our con¬tinuing guidance and inspiration. Lis¬ten again to some of these words: The Interclass Hop, the most important socialnight in Ida Noyes hall, was called off by the leadersPresident, Ernest DeWitt Burton. The leadersbasis of participation in activities. Mr. M. T.Spiking? of the Chicago Artificial Decorating Co.,muneration. Harriet KeeneyS0<,*O*'0B sCatherineCampbeLLJ UN lOlV»event of the quarter, scheduled to take place to-that proper respect might be paid to the latewere chosen by the Undergraduate Council on theT hatcher of the Benson Organization and Mr. F. E.canceled their contracts without receiving any re- “Rite — Fine ”STATIONERYfor men andfor womenThe handy boxwith a usefuldrawer”125 Sheets 100 Envelopes"The central business of a collegeis, I believe, to develop * * * per¬sonalities capable of a large participa¬tion in life and of a large contributionto life. * * * to train to the utmost the power ofcompanionship; your needed thought; to use yourleadership, as he used his, for the en¬richment of human life.We shall remember what lie was—his simplicity, his dignity, his uttergenuineness; his trust, his loyalty; hisvision, his courage, his faith. Howmuch he lias given to the thousandswhom he has touched! And how muchof what they in turn shall give toothers, and they to others still,through the generations, is born ofthe noble life of his spirit! Ob. fora throng of men, for a class of men,for a world of men, in whom thatspirit shall prevail!We shall remember what lie was,and what be said, and what he dm.And when that triple memory mayshine through grief it shall be lumin¬ous in its beauty, and joyous in itspower.Want Ad s"But if this is the central businessof the college, what are the specificthings that it ought to do for all itsstudents? Three things, as I see it.First, a college ought to enable nilits students to place themselves in theworld, to recognize where they are.It ought to help each student to ac¬quire such a knowledge of the phy¬sical universe, of the history of therace, of the structure of society, andof the nature of the individual, that,taking his stand at the center of hisown being, he may have a sense ofwhere he is. * * *“The second thing that a collegeought to do for its students is to teachthem to think, not to follow precepts,not to practice an art according tofixed methods, or to play a game ac¬cording to the rules of the game, butto observe facts, to set them in relation to one another, to view them dis¬passionately, to draw conclusions fromthem. The impulse to do tllis is, * * *inborn; but it needs encouragement,development, practice, in tensification.The thinker, dispassionate but acute,is one of the world’s great needs.“The third thing that is necessaryto the achievement of the business ofthe college is the development of char¬acter. If once we thought that an } Delightful outside room Nicely fur-education that consisted in the WILL GIVE ROOM AND BATHin exchang for taking care of chil¬dren in the evening. Phone Midway3456. DECIDE INDOOR CHAMP TODAY(Continued from page 3)winner of the Alpha section, and BetaTheta Pi.The Sigma Xus have not as yet 'played off their tie with Beta Theta IPi for first place in the Epsilon league. ITomorrow's game will be a deciding jfactor in predicting the winner of the jleague as the Tekes defeated the JBetas in their game last Monday. In jthe semi-finals. Sigma Nu heat theMacs, winner of the non-fraternitvleague, and Delta Sigma Phi.Sigma Nu Favored in ClashAlthough the Sigma Xus have thebest pitcher in the tournament in BusStevens, the Tekes have a heavy hit¬ting crew who also play a good gamein the field. The game promises keencompetition as Hamilton, pitcher ofthe Tekes, has developed a clever tosswhich netted the Betas only two hitsin their last game.Bus Stevens, however, has the rec¬ord of making the most strikeouts inthe tournament and if lie comes up tohis usual form ought to hurl his team¬mates to their final victory. WEATHER FORECASTFair Friday and Saturday, becomingunsettled by Saturdaj night. WarmerSaturday.accurate, neat and expertof theses, reports,term papers, or whave you ? hat typingsudden service for those over duepapers Leona SinclairTriangle 3316 6921 Vernon Ave.NOW AVAILABLEBeautiful Duck Lake Frontage.Convenient yet secluded. 10miles of wonderful shoreline,wild in its original timbergrowth. Lots 200x1300 feet.Auto road recently cut to thisunfished lake from Land OLakes, Wis. I /i miles south.LAWRENCE HEYWORTHRm. 518 606 S. Michigan Ave.CHICAGO, ILLAttention C. M. C. HolmenTO RENT—2 and 4 rooms, large,light and clean with overstuffed fur¬nishings. From $40 and up. 1127E. 55th, corner of University, Apa. 2FOR RENT—Summer cottage,Lake Michigan near Holland; 4 rms„large screen porch, fine beach, 3minutes walk. Quiet, ideal foryoung. For terms and details tele- Iphone H. P. 1238.WOODLAWN AVENUE, 5418.in tne acquisition of facts was all that wasneeded to make democracy safe foritself and the world, we have surelybeen thoroughly disillusioned. Breadthof knowledge, power to think, are in- nished; desirable location, $5 for 1;$8 for 2. Weaver. Fair. 3332. SPECIAL FISH DINNERTONIGHTTHE SHANTYA full four course dinner with all“the fixin’s” for 75c.Dinner served from 5-7:30 P. M.1 he usual 65c-75c dinners are alsoserved.The Shanty Eat Shop1309 East 57th Street"A Homey Place for Homey Folks”We Will Close Memorial Day at2 P. M. MEN—5 far pleasantoutdoor work duringvacation. . Good payand training with Na¬tional organization.See Mr. Fleming, 1344E. 63rd St. Room 12.June 3-4-5th. .Gordon anArrowshirtWhen you get a Gordon Shut you get a collarfrom the hands of the expert Arrow Collar maken,CLUETT, PEABODY A CO. INC.. MAKERS $ 1 .25PER BOXColonial Press1510 E. 56th StreetMIDWAY 0864TO RENT—Nicely furnished cot¬tage at Millers Beach on Lake Michigan. Three rooms and largedispensable prerequisites to large par- screened_in porch. For particularsticipation in life or large contnbutions phone Gary 2509. Address 736 John.to life. But apart trom h.gh moral | sQn gt ? Gary Indcharacter they are not only inade-1Andquate but positively dangerous, auu jbecause this is so. no institution thatundertakes to give these former thingscan escape the obligation to concernitself for the latter also."And if that is the business of thecollege, of his college, surely it is thebusiness of the college student, andmost of all of you, his students, tomeet him half way in this great en¬deavor: to win this dominant central¬ity, not as a point of rest but as apoint of departure for new conquest; WILL person who appropriatedman’s top coat in men’s commonroom, Classics, please have the de¬cency to return by mail the keysfound in pocket to Information orMaroon office. The intent of this adgoes no further than return of keyswhich are of no use to anyone butowner.FOR SALE—Ford Speedster, allaccessories. Excellent running cond,Heile. A. D. House. Dor. 1832. NATIONAL BANKOF WOODLAWN63rd Street—Just West of KenwoodA Clearing House BankMember Federal Reserve SystemSAVINGS ACCOUNTSCHECKING ACCOUNTSSAFE DEPOSIT VAULTSINVESTMENT SECURITIESAll Departments Open for BusinessSaturday Evenings 6:30 to 8:30 When You Re-furnishyour Home orFraternity Houseconsult specialists who for 50 years havefurnished Homes and Offices with goodquality Floor Coverings. Our FurnitureDept, is equally adaptable to meet theneeds of the modern home. Let us serveyou when you purchase.BWRichardson&Co,125 So. Wabash Ave.