The major se-quence nowstands alone incurriculum. tip jlaroon Beginning nextweek chapel ser¬vices convene inBond.Vol. 27. No. 121. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1927WHAT of IT?ly/feoupe MOftpENSTERftIt is important business with theboys at almost every university tostand up every so often and staunch¬ly declare themselves for studentliberty. Synonymous with this “lib¬erty” in the minds of the boys isfreedom from attendance at compul¬sory chapel. It’s a convenient issueto wage the battle for the largerprinciple over—always a convenientissue. Somehow the idea of sitting ina seat once a week and hearing aprayer, a hymn, or whatever theghostly fellows up on the platformhave doped out for the ameliorationof the student body’s soul, has al¬ways signified the rule of faculty ty¬ranny to the collegiate mind. Chapelhas become a symbol of autocracy—the yoke beneath, which the facultyforces the student to pass once aweek, just to show him who’s, run¬ning things. Actually, we all know,it’s nothing of this. And yet, as Isay, the chapel issue has been raisedat nearly every college in the coun¬tryside at regular intervals—at Har¬vard and at Wyoming, at Otterbeinand at Snowflake Normal. LIFT COMPULSORY CHAPEL REGULATIONSFRATERNITY SINGSET FOR JUNE 11;DYGERTMANAGER ABOLISH MINOR SEQUENCEForty Men Required ofOrganiaztions toQualifySometimes the students have beensuccessful in the battle to throwdown the clay figure of compulsoryattendance, to which they have been“forced” to bow down that one daya week. Other times they have stageda valiant but losing fight. And whenthey’ve been sent back to their placesagain for the time being, the NewRepublic and the New Student, andother journals of “freedom,” comeout with indignant editorials aboutthe autocratic /acuity heel grindingthe poor students under again. Butthe students themselves don’t bothermuch about their defeat. Indeed,they resent outsiders intruding theiropinion into the matter, as in thecase of the Yale Daily News, whichfrowned and called the support giv¬en the Yale anti-chapel calise by theHarvard Crimson, “ill-advistd”(which, for the Yale Daily News, isa very strong term). So things goalong, blissfully enough, after thedefeat, and the boys go to chapelas usual, and think little of it. Buttime passes and dull times comes, andnaturally and inevitably the boysstart looking around for somethingto kill the tedium, for some “vital”issue to raise. And once more thecry goes up: “Down with compul¬sory chapel!” Whereupon the colle¬gians all take up the shout, scurrydown the streets \yakening their fel¬lows to the alarm, and go out tobowl over the yoke again. As usual, quantity will determinethe awards for the annual Inter¬fraternity Sing to be held June 11of which George Dygert has beenappointed manager.Forty men at the least are to berequired from each fraternity if itis to qualify. George Reed is to as¬sist Dygert as manager of the af- !fair. Drawings for places are to bemade the evening of the Sing, withDygert ^nd Reed acting as officials. !The Interfraternity Sing is a part ofthe celebration in connection withthe thirty-sixth anniversary of theUniversity, the 1927 University '| Alumni Reunion. It is scheduled for ,eight o’clock in Hutchinson court, i, Alumni Day June 11Saturday, June 11, the day of theSing, is Alumni Day, and the most |important events of the six day re- •union come that day. The Sing it¬self is to be followed by A. A. Stagg’saward of athletic emblems.Earlier in the day are to be massmeetings, athletics contests, a par¬ade to Stagg Field, and initiationinto the Shanty. The Shanty is amysterious alumni organization towhich only members of classes twen¬ty years out of the University areeligible. An Alumni Conference isto be held early in the afternoon. Soares Honored byIllini AppointmentRev. Theodore Gerald Soares,former chaplain at the University,has been honored by anotherschool. The University of Illinoishas selected Dr. Soares to preachthe Baccalaureate sermon for thestudents who are graduating thisspring. This service, coming onthe Sunday preceeding convoca¬tion each year, will be held onJune 12. Authorities at Urbanaannounced the selection of Dr.Soares yesterday morning. Hismany years of service as Univer¬sity chaplain ended at the begin¬ning of the Winter quarter thisyear .GROWTH EVIDENTIN STAGG MEET University BoardApproves ActionOf Faculty MenSeven New States EnterListsNew M. S. ClubMeets TomorrowThe Basic club, a new organiza¬tion formed by Military Science stu¬dents, will meet Wednesday at 7:30in Lexington hall. Walter Burgesswas elected president; Clifford Al¬ger, vice-president; George Keyser,secretary; and James addock, treas¬urer, at the first meeting of theclub held last week.Around here it’s been rather cus¬tomary to refer to the dear old col¬lege as “a wise and provident moth¬er,” or by some such kindred ap¬pellation. The odd part of it all isthat alma mater DOESN’T make sovery many slips, after you thinkthings over, at that. The University’smost recent move—the abolishing ofcompulsory chapel—is one of itssmartest pieces of legislation. Forthe chapel service that the studentbody has been accustomed to hasn’tbeen particularly conducive to thedevelopment, or the maintenance ofpreviously developed religious senti¬ment. It has, rather, been a placewhere the frat boys sit in rows andexchange jokes, and the club girlssit in rows and impress upon every¬body the fact that they are clubgirls, and the rest of the mob sitsaround and isn’t bothered much bythe proceedings. Sometimes, even.,chapel is amusing—when Dr. Pat¬ton gets telling one of his whoppersabout Jonah, for instance. But most¬ly, it’s just been a drag. And so theUniversity has not only got a minorirritation out of the student’s dailylife, but it has at the same time rid¬ded itself of the stock symbol of of¬ficial faculty despotism. Not, as Isay, that there ever actually wasthat despotism. Faculty ContributeTo Art ExhibitionAmong the faculty members whohave contributed to the Art Exhibi¬tion on display this week on the sec¬ond floor of Ida Noyes hall are: Pro¬fessor Walter Sargent, chairman ofthe Art department, Miss EthelHahn, Miss Laura Van Pappelendam,Miss Emily Wagner, and Mr. Wil¬liam G. Whitford, instructors in thedepartment. The display includeswork by faculty, ’ students andalumni. Eight teams, representing sevenstates and at the same time seventeams who were not entered in lastyear’s interscholastic meet, have re¬turned registration blanks for theTwenty-Third annual InterscholasticTrack and Field meet to be held atStagg field on June 3rd an at Sol¬diers field June 4th.Greencastle, Ind., was the firstschool to enter the meet and also, todate, is the only one of the entrieswho compettd last year. The othersare Havan, III., Russelville, Ark.,Elizabeth Messick high school, Bun-tyn, Tenn., Baton Rouge, La., Ambia,Ind., Milwaukee Country Day school,Milwaukee, Wis., and French CampAcademy, French Camp, Miss.The eight schools have enteredonly eleven men between them.Preparations are being made to re¬ceive almost 1,000 prep stars andinvitations have been sent tQ crackathletes all over the United States.Last year Senn succeeded in lead¬ing the Chicago high schools enteredin the meet, and ranked high in thenational point score. Over 800 ofthe cream of the prep school tracktalent flocked to Chicago for the lasttournament to compete for the high¬est track awards offered o the highschool youths of the country. / Minor sequences have been official¬ly abolished at the University. Byaction of the faculties of the Col¬leges of Arts, Literature and Scienceand Education this requirement hasbeen removed from the Undergrad¬uate curriculum. The action of thesefaculties, taken on May 4 and 5 re¬spectively, was approved by the Uni¬versity senate on May 11.In these schools, all students grad¬uating at the end of the Autumnquarter 1927 will be excused fromthis requirements, but those com¬pleting their Undergraduate work inthe spring or summer quarters mustfinish those sequences which theyhave declared.Boucher States urposeThe purpose of this change, asstated by Dean C. S. Boucher of theCollege of Arts, Literature, and Sci¬ence, is “to give departmental coun¬cillors and students better oppor¬tunity to work out logical programsto the <best advantage of the stu¬dents concerned.”Another important change wasmade in the Undergraduate require¬ments. The Junior college languagedepartment has announced that stu¬dents need not complete the 104courses in order to secure credit for101, 102, and 103, 103 must becompleted with a grade of C.Another change is the abolition, of106, with the provision that the stu¬dent need take only 101, 102, 103,and 105, if his instructor in 103 rec¬ommends promotion to 105, beforebeginning Senior college languagecourses.Wright To AttendHawaiian ConventionOf Pacific NationsJuniors Hold MixerFriday In ReynoldsA Blackfriar’s mixer is to be giv¬en by the Junior class this Fridayfrom 4 to 6, John McDonough, presi¬dent of the class, announced. It willbe held in the Reynolds club lounge,and there will be special entertain¬ment. Professor Quincy Wright of thePolitical Science department will rep¬resent the United State as a memberof the Research committee at theconference of the Institute of Pa¬cific Relations to be held July 15to 25 at Honolulu.This group which is merely advis¬ory will be composed of representa¬tives from the United States, Mex¬ico, Canada, Japan, China, Australiaand the British Empire.Paul Nesbit Joins Beliot-LoganArchaeologists In North AlgeriaUpon the return of Mr. AlonzoPond, a graduate student of the Uni¬versity, from the Beloit-Logan ex¬pedition, Mr. Paul Nesbit, also agraduate student, will join this groupof archaeologists sometime duringthe summer months.The expedition’s recent discover¬ies have been in North Algeria in theSahara desert. Working with four poleothic mounds, tht archaeologistsunearthed cultural remains of eitherthe Mousterian or Achellean epochs.The mounds revealed no animalremains, but gave evidence of flintand bone industry, different fromany found to date in Europe. Thesefindings result in possibilities of an¬other race of peoples as yet un¬known. TWO CHICAGO PROFS.TO TEST RELATIVITYProfessors A. A. Michelson andHenry Gordon Gale of the Univer¬sity are to begin tests this week ofthe Einstein theory of relativity.They will equip themselves withinstruments to be set up in Ryer-son laboratory capable of measur¬ing one one-hundredth of a lightwave, or one five-millionth of aninch.The apparatus is similar to thatused by Professor Michelson in 1883.If these tests succeed in doingwhat Mr. Michelson plans them to,there is little doubt but that they willdefinitely disprove the well knowntheory of relativity of Einstein.Mr. Michelson recently returnedfrom a trip to California, where heconducted the same type of experi¬ment in the vicinity of Mount Wil¬son.“Frank R. Adams,Says the editor 9,of Collette Humor, “is sweetly tirednow, but he still remains a specialistin the intimate comedies of Loveland.”“Logic for Ladies” is the title of thecomedy of Loveland, in short storyform, that Frank R. Adams has writ¬ten especially for the Celebrities’ Jiim-ber.Since the days when he was first Abbotof Blackfriars, Frank R. Adams haswritten better and better short stories.“Logic for Ladies” is one of the verymuch better.The Daily Maroon Innocence and PurityDecreed at ButlerCoty’s, Richard Hudnut, and allthe other cosmetic establishments,might just as well not exist as faras the sweet girl graduates at But¬ler university are concerned.Miss Evelyn Butltr, dean ofwomen at the Hoosier school haspromulgated the following decreesfor the benefit of the senior wom¬en ot commencement:Skirts no mere than twelveinches from the floor.Black shoes with low heels.White hosiery (may be silk).No cosmetics.“It is assumed,” says the dean,“that our young ladies will co¬operate with my desires.”CHOIR PRESENTSRECITALLMAY 31Mrs. Clara M. SchevillWill Be SoloistThe University choir, under thedirection of Mack Evans and accom¬panied by Alan Irwin, will give aconcert of sacred and, secular musicTuesday, May 31, in Kimball Hall.Mrs. Clara M. Schevill, mezzo so¬prano, will assist as soloist on theprogram.Mrs. Schevill, who is well knownto Chicago music lovers, is especiallyknown for her lecture-recitals, givenin conjunction with her husband, Dr.Ferdinand Schevill, professor of Mod¬ern European History at the Uni¬versity.Tht concert will be opened with agroup of sacred songs given by thechoir, followed by two songs by Mrs.Schevill, who will be accompaniedby John Brown. Another group ofsongs will conclude the sacred partof the program, and Mrs. Schevillwill render seven Spanish folksongsarranged by de Falla.The Old English secular section ofthe concert will present three num¬bers by the choir and a group of foursongs by the soloist. Two semi-secu¬lar songs by Mrs. Schevill and “Jeru¬salem” sung by the choir will com¬plete the program.Draft Plans ForFreshmen Week atFederation TonightTentative plans for Freshmanweek will be read before membersof Federation at the open councilmeeting tonight at 7 in the libraryof Ida Noyes hall. The subject un¬der discussion will be “Jhe Fate ofthe Freshmen.”In recognition of Miss ElizabethWallace’s services to the organiza¬tion since its foundation in 1918,the council and sponsors are plan¬ning a farewell dinner to be heldMay 25 at 6 in Ida Noyes hall. ATTENDANCE OFENTERING FROSHSTILL REQUIREDThis Week Marks LastAssembly of ThreeUpper ClassesCompulsory attendance ofchapel, except for freshmen dur¬ing their first quarter of residence,will be abolished at the end ofthis week, President Max Masonannounced at freshman chapelservices yesterday. The last reg¬ular chapel services will be heldthis week, after which, pendingthe completion of the new Uni¬versity chapel, the services con¬ducted from Tuesday to Friday inthe Bond chapel by the Divinityschool will be open to under¬graduates.The chapel assemblies have hadthe double purpose of offering an op¬portunity for religious observanceand bringing the student body to¬gether in order to make announce¬ments and explanations of policy. Inthe belief that this combination re¬sulted in a loss of the religious char¬acter of the assemblies, the Boardof Trustees, acting an recommenda¬tions of the faculty, adopted the newpolicy.Mason Explains Policy“This policy was decided upon withthe feeling that far from weakeningthe opportunity for religious thoughtin the University, voluntary attend¬ance will mean a greater apprecia¬tion of such opportunity,” PresidentMason said.The required meetings for thefreshman class in the autumn will befor the purpose of bringing the stu¬dents together and orienting themwith the University. For the classesmeetings will be held from time totime, for the purposes of class ad¬ministration and participation in ac¬tivities of social, literary, and ath¬letic nature among the classes.Request DonationsOf Candy for FeteDonations of home made candyhave been requested for the Quad¬rangle Fete, to be given under theauspices of the Y. W. C. A., in con¬nection with the Blackfriars show.Candy may be turned in Thursdayafternoon or Friday morning at theY. W. C. A. office. Volunteers willbe also needed to pack the candy.Laud Luckhardt forEthylene DiscoveryIn recognition of his discovery ofethylene, the anaesthetic which haslargely supplanted ether and chloro¬form in operating rooms, Dr. ArnoB. Luckhardt of the Physiology de¬partment last night was awardedan honorary scroll from the Societyof Anaesthetists, in Washington, D.C.Chinese Commentator First onWeeks Liberal Club ProgramJu-Ao Mei, author of “Sun YatSenism,” is to address the Univer¬sity of Chicago students on “Chin¬ese Culture and the Revolution,” ina lecture in Harper assembly at4:30, given under the auspices ofthe Liberal Club. At 8:00 tonight,Hung Lai Shen, chairman of theChicago branch of the Sun Yat Sen society, will speak on “Labor andthe Revolution.”Chao-Ting Chi, member of theChinese delegation to the Anti-im¬perialistic Congress at Brussels, willtalk on “Imperialism and the ChineseRevolution” on Wednesday night at8:00, while on Thursday at the sametime, J. W. Nipps will discuss theAmerican policy in China.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1927t JBatlp jWaroonFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO IN BRIEF other course in every other field sci¬entifically, which is as it should be.Publisher mornings, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn, Winterand Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription rates $3.00 per year; bymail, $1.00 per year extra. Single copies, five cents each.Entered as second-class mail at the Chicago Postoffice, Chicago, Illinois. March 13, 1906,Minder the act of March 3, 1873.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any material appearingin this paper.OFFICE—ROOM ONE, ELLIS HALL5804 Ellis AvenueTelephones: Editorial Office, Midway 0800, Local 245; Business Office,Hyde Park 4292; Sports Office, Local 80, 2 ringsMember of the Western 'Conference Press AssociationWALTER G. WILLIAMSON MANAGING EDITORMILTON H. KREINES BUSINESS MANAGERJOHN P. HOWE CHAIRMAN OF THE EDITORIAL BOARDRUTH G. DANIEL WOMEN’S EDITORTOM STEPHENSON SPORT EDITOREDITORIAL DEPARTMENTNews EditorNews EditorA1 Widdifield News EditorWhistle EditorAssistantFeature EditorJunior EditorJunior EditorBetty McGeeVictor Roterus ...Assistant Sports Editor...Assistant Sports Editor...Assistant Sports EditorDay EditorDay EditorMargaret DeanHarriet Harris Sophomore EditorSophomore EditorSoDhomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTCharles J. Harris Advertising ManagerFred Kretschmer Circulation ManagerRobert Massey - —AuditorHubard Lovewell. - Office ManagerRalph Stitt Classified Adv. ManagerJoseph Klitzer National Adv. ManagerRobert Fisher Sophomore AssistantRobert Klein Sophomore AssistantMyron Fulrath Sophomore AssistantJack Me Brady Sophomore AssistantWallace Nelson— SoDhomore Assistant By Dexter MastersOur neighbor, the House of Dav¬id colony, is nearing an impasse. Justwhat the state of Michigan intendsto bring to bear on the colony ,isnot yet fully determined but the com¬mon idea seems to be that BenjaminPurnell and Mary Purnell are sus¬pected of slight misconception of theconventions.That colony at Benton Harbor haslong been “the cynosure of neighbor¬ing eye,” there’s something interest¬ing about it and the long haired in¬mates which makes it and them avery popular institution, and thestories, which have sprung up aboutthe sly workings of old “King Ben”have helped along the cause. Howthe practically inclined prosecutorscan conceive of the aged “KingBen” as the voluptuary which theysay he is, seems to be a misfit, buthe may be. •ERNST-ROfflUV•5309' UflRPER-flVE-■ FtlONC • MyC£-PflRtV6262'•fl^-morOGIWICKTHE DAILY MAROON’S PROGRAM FOR AMORE EFFECTIVE UNIVERSITYin undergraduate activityEncouragement of student initiativeand scholarship.Extension of the Intramural principle.An augmented Department of Art.Black friars on the Road.An Inter club sing.Abolition of Convocation Ceremonies.A Post-Office on the Campus. ii i.ii* V: ♦ * *A committee of eight sophomoresand seniors at Northwestern have putforth an expose of what is wrongwith the modern university and howit may be remedied. They offer twosuggestions, one, to raise the entrancerequirements and keep out those ap¬plicants who desire a degree merelyfor social prestige; the other to teacha comparative religion course, thatapproaches the subject scientifically.The first suggestion is, obviously amere rehash of what educators have Iconsidered the fault of the collegesfor many years. The second, strikesanother fault of the college squarely Iby implication. The fault is that the [colleges, by the very method in ;which they treat the subject of re- jligion, make the study of it undesir¬able to the neutral individual. In¬variably, the college treats religionin anything but a scientific manner,when they treat practically every Follow the mighty water boule¬vard to Europe through romanticFrench Canada, land of waysideobble-shrines and handlooms,of corstone streets and spinning wheels.The Old World spell is upon youfrom the day you sail! MagnificentCanadian Pacific Empresses andCabin Class ships leave fromMontreal and Quebec—2 days onthe St. Lawrence — then only 4days open sea to Europe.Full information and sailing date*from local steamship agents, orREQUIESCATIN. ACCORDANCE with a nation-wide sentiment, and as a re¬sult of a year of investigation into the effectiveness of thepresent plan, compulsory chapel has been abolished by the ad¬ministration. The news will be received by many as a long over¬due recognition of the principle that the ctyipel idea shouldstand on its own metaphorical feet, that it will live if it has adeep-seated appeal and that it will and should die if it has nointerest or satisfaction for the student body.The Board of Trustees has recommended that the noon ser¬vices in Bond chapel be thrown open to any members of thestudent body who desire to attend. Such voluntary attendancewill probably be slight. For class purposes, Mandel hall willbe available throughout the week. If attendance at class councilmeetings is any index such open class meetings will probablydraw only a small and constantly dwindling proportion of theconstituency of each class. Unless each class feels some “spirit¬ual” need for the community feeling that the present chapel ser¬vice at least suggests, or unless the class officers can actuallymake the meetings interesting, which is doubtful, or unless oneof those unpredictable effusions of felow feeling which sometimesstartle the campus takes place, the voluntary class meetings willcome to a quick death.' And death it probably will be. R. S. Elworthy, steamship gen¬eral agent, 71 E. Jackson, TelephoneWabash 1904, Chicago, Ill. ForFreight, apply to W. A. Kittermas-ter, General Western FreightAgent. 940, The Rookery, Chi¬cago, Ill.CanadianPacificWorld**GreatestTravelSystemAT AIL FOURJ-HOR/THE MINOR SEQUENCE GOES THE COUNTRY CLUBONE OE RUBYy NEWPLA-MO,R /PORTJWtf FORWOMEN ^o*-oAMART<'> TRIM,ANDCOMFORTABLE.J 14.50 THE PAIR'***/,<*/. v * ■ :.Qty, a id<rt\V: T”l?65 nAST53*ST.i . < T7UN llOTtL,L , rv.sNbTON 1*31 lABOLITION of the minor sequence supports the indication thatthe University’s educational program is broadening in pacewith the extensive building program that has been developed onthis campus within the last few years.The decision helps to effect a liberal educational plan, thathas been in the minds of the educators at this University forseveral years and which is being fathered by President Max Ma¬son and his remarkable committee on education. The general ideabehind this particular move seems to be that the minor sequence,,instead of being worked out as a separate and distinct part of ja four year college course, should bear a close relationship to themajor sequence. Instead of being separate the minor sequencenow is not to exist as a minor sequence, but will be a number ofsubjects selected with the advice of the departmental adviser,2orollary to the major sequence.The plan eliminates the necessity of selecting two wholly un¬related sequences as an emergency measure in order to utilize afew credits already gleaned in earlier years. Coming as it does,upon the heels of the change in registration and the abolition ofcompulsory chapel, it makes clear the policy of the University andis encouraging to those undergraduates who prefer an intelligentplan of education to a factory made catalogue of courses. MAY POWERS MILLERTeacher of Piano1352 E. 55th Street STUDIOS 1810 W. 103rd StHyde Park 0950 Beverly 6009UNIVERSITY STUDENTSFountain Service and Light Lunches are beet atWILLIAM’S CANDY SHOPSFresh Home Made CandiesCorner Fifty-fifth at University Avenue50c WAVESLICENSED OPERATORSKENNEDY SHOPS1455 E. 63rd St.Dorchester 3755 6351 Cottage Grove Ave.Plaza 1060-10615226 Harper Ave.Hyde Park 2408Always carry Canadian Pacific Express Company'sTravellers' Cheques, negotiable everywhere Want to taste something GOOD?Try our Fresh Doughnutsmade every hourat theDownyflake DOUGHNUT Shop1367 East 63rd St.Special orders for Parties Tel. Hyde Park 2325^courtesy;^fficientXservicT^:always:43srt£>Health and the RailroadsJust as every railroad requires specialists in main¬tenance to repair and keep in good order its tracks,locomotives and cars, so it requires also a staff of ex¬perts in medicine and surgery to maintain in good orderthe men and women who carry on its work. Becauseof, rather than despite, the increasing complexity of themachinery used by the railroads, the need for railwayemployes generally to keep both mentally and physi¬cally active and alert was never greater than it is to¬day. For that reason, an increasingly important partof every large railway organization is its hospital orhealth department.The work of such a department is carried on underthe executive direction of a chief surgeon. He is as¬sisted by well organized groups of physicians and sur¬geons, including consulting specialists, at various points,who have available working facilities at first-class,modern hospitals. These hospitals are in many casesdevoted entirely to the care of railway empolyes. Inaddition to the full-time services of such centralizedgroups, there are retained the part-time services ofdistrict and local surgeons on all parts of the railroad.The complete staff of such a department on a largerailroad may therefore include several hundred persons.Since the production of efficient transportation is di¬rectly dependent upon the physical efficiency of the in¬dividual employe, it is important that all railway em¬ployes should be selected with a view to their physicalfitness for the performance of their duties. Coincidentwith efficiency comes safety. It is essential that thoseemployed in engine, train and signal service shouldnot only be in good health but also be normal in vision,hearing and color perception. One of the primaryduties of the hospital or health department is thereforethat of physical examination of candidates for employ¬ment and frequent re-examination of those employed.In injury or sickness%e railway employe avails him¬self of the services of this department and of the dis¬pensaries and hospitals which the department maintains.Passengers and trepassers likewise are often taken careof by members of the department’s staff.The hospital or health department of a railroad alsoworks in the field of sanitation and disease prevention,often doing what amounts to public health work in theterritory the railroad serves. By active co-operationw’ith federal, state, county and municipal health author¬ities, the railway surgeon frequently plays an addition¬ally important part—aside from his regular work—inpublic service.Constructive criticism and suggestions are invited.L. A. DOWNS,President, Illinois Central System.CHICAGO, May 16, 1927..(Copies of this and preceding advertisements in this seriesare now available in booklet form upon request addressedto President Downs.)downstaters swamp local netTEAM; MINNESOTA PLAYS TODAYO’Connel Show* Old Form To Beat Place; GophersConquerors of Illinois, PlayThis AfternoonFor the first time this season, theChicago tennis team failed to takea match from a Conference outfit.The smooth-stroking Illinois teamturned the trick, not even allowingtheir less experienced opponents tocapture a set. This defeat shovesthe Maroon sextette down a notch,as they have one win and three de¬feats. The strong Minnesota squadwhich disposed of the Illini are duetoday, and the locals are not con¬ceded much chance to win, as theGophers seem to be the class of theBig Ten.Place, No. 1 on the home team,and who had previously lost onlyone match, fell a victim to O’Connel,Conference singles champion, whosefine change of pace and brilliant net-play were too much for his youthfulrival. Capt. Hudlin lost a chancematch to Capt. Bard of Illinois, 6-4,6-4.In the other two singles matchesthat were played, the Illini also madea clean sweep when Travis disposedof Abbot, and Clarke defeatedRoque. The scores of these matcheswere 6-1, 6-1, and 6-3, 6-4 respective¬ly. With the exception of Roque and Hudlin none of the Maroons cameclose to copping a set.«In the first of the doubles matchesPlace and Hudlin were defeated byO’Connel and Bard, 6-1, 6-4. Aftera bad start the locals got going andnearly took the second set. O’Connelplayed rather poorly in the doubles,evidently being tired after a series offine shots in his singles match. Tra¬vis and Rodequiez took the last matchfrom Marumoto and Abbot, 6-2, 6-3.The Gopher outfit is headed byCaptain Tatham and Armstrong, ex¬captain. Several sophomores areplaying grqat games in their firstyear of conference tennis and theteam is, on the whole, remarkablywell balanced; there not being muchto choose from between the firstranking player and the sixth. Theyhave defeated Wisconsin and Illi-I-M Derby ResultsIn the inauguration of the new in¬tramural games on horseback Psi Uibeat the 3rd platoon, with Haberlinand G. Watrous winning the bendingand the rescue contests. The Betasand Sigma Nu’s failed to show up. Old Reliable,Burg, Golf TeamAgain TriumphOhio State put up a surprise at¬tack last Saturday at the fourth an¬nual quadrangular track and fieldgames at Evanston and by dint ofthree firsts and a flock of secondswon the event. Chicago’s team-menbally-hood so highly before the meet,cracked rather badly and finished upin fourth place. In between the twoWisconsin and Northwestern rolledup points for second and third re-pectively.The best Chicago performance ofthe day and quite the worthiest wasBuck Olwin’s surprise win in thehammer throw. Olwin who in previ¬ous meets had tough luck and badperformances camethrough splendid¬ly in his trial Saturday and took thehammer with a toss of 135 ft. 1 1-2inch. Burg, old reliable, per usualbeat out McGinnis in the high jumpwith a 6’2 1-16” first.Five records Were broken in themeet despite adverse weather condi¬tions. The most outstanding recordset up was the mark of 50 4-10 madeby Dougan of Ohio State. Burke ofChicago, who inprevious meets hadrun the event in 50 3-10 ran in badform and finished fourth. Williamsdid no better in his event and fin¬ished fourth in a 4:29 mile, a timewhich he has often bettered. Gist,Cody and Gleason also contributed athird and two fourths respectively.The Maroon golf team got off toits usual fighting start and submergedPurdue, 18 1-2 to 5 1-2. MACS, KAPPA NU,T. S. O. APPROACH I-MBASEBALL FINALS* lint ii a Grand and Glorious heelin'? By BRIGGSWHEN YOUR THROATTICKWES WHEN YOUGET UP IN THEWOP-NiMG AMD ACIGARETTE TAST&5TEftRlBLEj -AND YOU HAVE WORECOUGHb THAN ASECOND-HAND CAP.HAS teATTf-ES -AND You're BEGIN¬NING TO FEEL THATYOU OUGHT TO CUTDOWN ON YOUR.cigarettes-and then a friendtells YOU thatyou're smoking theWRONG BLEND “AND YOU SWITCH TOOLD GOLDS AND FINDthere isn’t A coughIN A CARLOAD -oh-h-h-boy!AIN’T IT AGR-K*R*RAVOAND GLOR R'R'RIOUSrEEv>)jg?!,?OlIt'S the Smoothest Cigarette. . . not a cough in a carload20a 15 centsProduci of P. LorilUrd Co.. F.it 1760 Yesterday’s playground ball gameseliminated Delta Upsilon, Phi Psi,and A. T. O. from the roles of titlecontenders. The honors of the semi¬final round were captured by KappaNu, the Macs and Tau Sigmh Omi-cron. Despite the fact that most ofthe scores were large, the games wasrather interesting. Winning pitcherslooked very good and, from the re¬sults it looks as if either the Macsor Kappa Nu will win the cup thisyear.The Macs downed the Phi Psi out¬fit 15 to 1 in a walkaway tilt. Theresult of the game was never indoubt, for the losers could not holddown the Macs and were unable toget a hit off Goodman, the winninghurler. The lone Phi Psi talley wasscored on an error by McKenzie ofthe non-fraternity group. Goodman,beside pitching a well-nigh perfectgame, made four runs and four hits.Yeager was the Phi Psi star, catch¬ing a good game and scoring theironly run.In the best ame of the day, theKappa Nu aggregation, playing per¬fect ball, bested the D. U.’s 11 to 2.The game was decided in the thifdinning when the victors clouted out5 runs and; and then followed uptheir advantage by scoring fourmore in the next frame. Keaff pitch¬ed very well, for the first six inn¬ings only 19 men faced him. He letup a little in the last inning andthe last inning and the losers thenproceeded to score two runs.T seven man A. T. O. outfit man¬aged to keep the Tau Sig’s fromwalking away with the game untilthe sixth inning when six runs weremarked up. Murphy hurled fairlywell but his lack support accountedfor the 13 to 4 victory made by TauSig’s. Getzoff hurled well for thewinners. 1LL0IS, BIG TEN LEADERS, PLAYMAROONS ON GREENWOOD LOT TODAYRain, Ohio State DampenBall Nine’s WeekEndCall For WomenWomen who are interested in play¬ing in the W. A. A. golf and tennistournaments have been requested tosign up before Wednesday in any ofthe dormitories or on the bulletinsin the basement of, Ida Noyes hall. Rain and the Ohio State nine putthe dampers on what was advertisedto be a gala week end for the Ma¬roon baseball team. Friday’s big at¬traction with the Waseda Japan teamwas attended by other things thanrecord-breaking crowds, mainly, aheart breaking thundershower andthe game was called off.Saturday the ' Crislermen playedseventh Conference game at Colum¬bus dropping the tilt 5 to 0, the sec¬ond loss to Ohio State and the sixthloss this year. Kaplan pitched thewhole affair for the locals who wereheld to three hits by the Buckeyemoundman.The Waseda Team will be back onJune 1st to open the internationalseries which was scheduled to getunder way last Friday. The visitingJapanese continued their sight seeingtour of the city Saturday and visitedthe Consul Sunday, leaving Sundayevening for Toronto, Canada, wherethey have a game scheduled for to¬day. They took in the sights at Niag¬ara Falls yesterday.WOMEN’S INTERCLASSBALL SERIES ONJuniors meet seniors and freshmenplay sophomores in the second gamesof the women’s interclass baseballgames today at 3:40. The seniorswon their first game by one run, de¬feating the frosh with a score of19 to 18. The juniors were victori¬ous over the sophs by one point also,the final score being 18 to 17. Thejuniors have to forfeit all games,however, since they are not playing•in actual competition, due to the factthat they are using ineligible play¬ers.Both games were marked by hardhitting.F ar e-and-a-HalfYOUThe Graduating SeniorsAre facing the questionof"WHAT TO DONEXT”Some of you are well fixed; you4iave a family business to workwith. It will be to your interestto think about the new develop¬ment, Group Insurance, which willbe a factor of increasing impor¬tance in the relations of yourbusiness to its employees.Some of you hate a decided bent,and are going to follow it. Oneway of making sure that you willfinish the course of life you havechosen is to take advantage ofAnnuity, Endowment, and StraightLife Insurance.Soine of you hate worked foryour education and must earn asmuch money as you can, as quicklyas possible. The selling of LifeInsurance gives the most andquickest return for hard work; italso offers the greatest freedom fororiginal enterprise. It is not apush-button job. The John Han¬cock is looking for men like youand would like to hear from you.Write to us in regard to any ofthese points. We shall answerirour inquiries without any ob-igation to you. Address theINQUIRY BUREAU,SC INSURANCECOMPAKor Sorrow. Mamachusiiii197 Clarendon St., Boston, Mass.If your policy bears the nameJohn Hancock, it is safe andsecure in every way. Madison, Wis., May 16. — Trackfans who will migrate here on May27 and 28 to witness the WesternConference Track and Field Cham¬pionships will be particularly inter¬ested in the announcement made bythe Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paulrailroad that fare-and-a-half rateswill be granted from Chicago, allpoints in Wisconsin and northernMichigan to Madison for that par¬ticular occasion.-MOSER-"The Business College with aUniversity Atmosphere”Beginning on the first ofApril, July, October, andJanuary, we conduct aSpecial, complete, inten¬sive three-months coursein stenography which isopen to »COLLEGEGRADUATES ANDUNDERGRADUATESEnrollments for thiscourse must be made be¬fore the opening day—preferably some time in>advance, to be sure of aplace in the class.Stenography opens theway to independence, andis a very great help in anyposition in life. The abil¬ity to take shorthand notesof lectures, sermons, con¬versations, and in manyother situations, is a greataqset.Bulletin on RequestNo Solicitors Employednaul Moser. J.D.,Ph.B.Pres.116 S. Michigan Ave.12th Floor Phone Randolph 4347Only Hiirh School Graduatesare ever enrolled at MOSERGirls, only, in the day school(8377) Stewart, Visitor’s Ace, ToFace MaroonsAgainThe line-ups:Chicago IllinoisPrice, lb Finn, ssHoerger, cf Dorn, IfMcConnell, ss Gribble, rfAnderson, 2b Sweeney, cfBrignall, 3b Gundlach, lbWebster, c Paul, 3b •Gordon, If Shaw, 2bPriess, rf Kusinski, cMacklind, p Stewart, pBud Stewart and his Big Ten ban¬ner baseball team from Illinois willplay a return game at the local dia¬mond, Greenwood Field, with thelowly Maroon nine at 3:30 this af¬ternoon.There’s much to be said on oneside and one side only about this bat¬tle—all in favor of Illini. The down¬staters dropped their first game inseven starts last Saturday to thecredit of Michigan while the localswere suffering their sixth Big Tenloss at Ohio State. Included in thelong list of Illini victories is thelusty 15 to 3 massacre administeredto the Crisler team in the Champaigninvasion three weeks ago today. Thisspeaks well for Bud Stewart and hismates in considering their chances fortoday.. Should the Maroon get des¬perate and win another game itwould be a real upset and a greatone. Snapper Macklind will get thecall to the mound today and is due toopen up. There is no team he wouldrather upset than the downstatenine and he has the whole team back¬ing him up in this matter. Dope neverdoes count for as much in a Chicago-Illinois scrap anyways.The Illinois outfit has a busy weekon schedule. Yesterday they journey¬ed to Wisconsin for a hard game andare dropping off here on their wayback to Champaign where they havea double-header scheduled for theweek-end with Ohio State. It is theircritical week in the Conference raceand if successful will put them wellon teh way to the title . Iowa, whoalso had a game yesterday, was a halfgame behind them with four won,one lost, and a 1 to 1 tie with theleaders.Ted Zimmerman, utility pitcher, isnot yet eligible.Brand new, shining white uniformswill be sported by the locals n to¬day’s game. They were purchasedespecially for the Waseda seriesand were worn for the first time atOhio State last Saturday.WIG AND ROBE PLEDGESWig and Robe announces thepledging of Bernard Baruch, MaxBloomstein, Jr., Leon M. Despres,Bernard Epstein, Benjamin I. Green-ebaum, Jr., Maurice Greiman, Jos¬eph Hasterlik, Berthold J. Harris,Leon A. Kotosky, Harold S. Lanski,Jack H. Oppenheim, Louis H. Silverand Irving Zemans.J UST full of creamy flavor!Fresh milk with all its creamgoes into it until Nestle’s isrichest in cream of all! Lookfor the clean, silvery wrapper.5c & 10c—plain and almondHILK CHOCOLATE^ lYMsfleSONNETDo not believe me now if I should lieAnd say I love you; words that areso sweetSlip glibly from my tongue, nor knowI whyI should be given to practice suchdeceit.Absurdly, like a sentimental childI tell you things butrageously untrue,Knowing that in another mood lessmildI shall be most unkindly rude to you.Do not put faith in lips so strangeas mineWhen they say fondly that I love younow.1 am a hypocrite. Some other timeDo not believe me either if I vow1 hate you; dear, a moment afterthis1 shall be humbly begging for yourkiss.—LenoreTHIS Senior Mustache Race isvery discouraging—not to mentionthe insults heaped daily on contest¬ants. Saturday night we were stand¬ing in the lobby of the Shorelandlooking fo* !>ne of the boys who wassupposed to meet us at nine o'clock.By nine-thirty we had grown im¬patient and thinking that perhaps hehad forgotten the place of our ap¬pointment and was waiting for us inanother part of the hotel, we startedlooking around for him in all of thepossible corridors. One of the bell¬boys noticed us in passing and afterscrutinizing our features carefullyapproached us with a low bow. “Par¬don me, Sir,” he said, “But themen’s washroom is at the other endof the hall!”Do You Suppose Cement It?Dear GeoG:Have you heard about the fellowwho went home and told his room¬mate that he thought a certain girlwas “hard as concrete”—after he hadtaken her for a WALK?!—GertrudeTHE Freshman Picnic was heldlast Saturday afternoon in PalosPark—despite the threatening cloudsthat darkened the sky in the morn¬ing and the subsequent deluge ofrainfall that cluttered up things dur¬ing the rest of the day. One of thepicnickers who we met later on inthe evening told us advisedly that“It was no picnic!”PROFESSOR Downing of the Uni¬versity, in refuting Mencken’s articleon “Eugenics” in Sunday’s Tribune,says, “Mencken is capitalizing onwhat we don’t know, while the Eu-genist is capitalizing on what we doknow.” When we consider the bar¬renness of the average human brainas a storehouse of knowledge, andcouple that with the professor’sstatement, we at once realize whyMencken is so much more wealthyUNIVERSITY LUNCH5706 Ellis Ave.Try Our Minute Service Lunch35cChop Suey & Chow MeinOur SpecialtyOfficial CollegeFRATERNITYJewelryBadges -Pinfs-NoveltiesWARREN PIPER AGO31 V. STATE ST.COWHEY’SBILLIARD ROOM55th St. at Ellis Are.□ □A Place of Recreation, With aComplete Line for theSmoker.□ DPIPES — TOBACCO — CIGARETTESMAGAZINES — ICE CREAM□ □The Best You Can Do Is TryOur Malted Milks. THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1927than are the general run of Eugen-ists!DAILY BULLETIN(Excerpts From Our Diary)May sixteenth.. . Dear Diary, Af¬ter two weeks of separation, I spokewith her alone Saturday evening fora precious fifteen minutes.. . And di¬ary, all the fears that had been eat¬ing at my heart during those longfourteen days while we were apartare now settled.. . They were fool¬ish fears.. .unfounded... .When Isaid goodbye to her that evening twoweeks before, I noticed somethingabout her that made ifie afraid...afraid, diary.. .but last Saturdaynight, happily, I saw my mistake. .Itmust have been a spot of dirt thatI noticed on the top of her nose asshe was closing the door two weeks ago.. .and not a wart like I had orig¬inally thought it to be!—GEO-GCLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT—Two light, frontrooms. Single or double. Single $5.Gent, preferred. M. Wright, 4621Woodlawn, tel. Kenwood 8316. Dunes. Four rooms, fifteen acres.On highway Phone Fairfax 8434.APT. FOR RENT—6 latge rooms,2 baths, sun parlor, shower. Rent$125. 5521 University Ave., CallMidway 7529. Immed. possession.MUSICIANS WANTED—Trip toFrance. One month in Paris. Alto-clarinet, trumpet, piano, drums. ReadLOST—White Gold Wrist Watch.Please call M. Kirtsinger. H. P.7441. REWARD.FOR. RENT—Log cabin at theThe Frolic TheatreDRUG STOREAdjacent to Frolic TheatreCigarettes Fountain ServiceTel. H. Park 0761Corner Ellis Avenue and 55th St FOR BEST MUSIC ONCAMPUSKARL LILLIE’SORCHESTRATel. Hyde Park 8133 and fake. Leave Chicago May 30,leave United States June 1, arriveback in States July 7. RehearsalTOWER Thursday evening May 11 at 8314Oglesby Avenue, S. S. 7617, PaulMedali^63 RD AND BUCKSTONEVAUDEVILLE^ND THE BESTFEATUREPHOTOPLAYSComplete ChaiseOf Prc^ram EvenjSunday & ThursdayBARGAINMATINEES DAILY APULTS30 cJUST THE PUCE TO SPENDAN AFTERNOON OR EVENIN6 MIDWAY FOLLIESTHEATRE63"d Sc Cottage GroveMUSICAL COMEDY40-People on the Stage-40Mostly GirlsMoving Pictures with everyshow.Bargain Matinee Daily.Adults 30cHie Only Stock MusicalComedy Show in Chicago.MARMON8u&e tale ofa simpleana a Addyounaman <V"'nP<y a' fW?Se/>es«nj 7$.I t was one of those cards that read like this—(you know how cardslike that read): *f£r%cd'Za,S Ur'*ycou0t e thatfegr«?<Zith H°! **'*£*?*°*j^ardName. 9u/rethe°n‘ye*nj'nfiSefew ' 1?** 0(jP?bo<l(First name first or last name last, or what have you?)Residences:First year or yearsSecond lap-Third flight.Kourth landing-Summer place (if any)-Names of Parents. uyZm0yfitch‘ntr?!,s’<lr*n;nSo Ve ?f'n'Oe(“Papa” and “Mama” not sufficient even in case of yearlings)Occupation the‘a, . 8 r(‘-«. ca^-*, * We‘n C°Un»_sales? 1 ***** V t9lh th °a</snZ>*i '•"or*1(Reveal only what you hope to be)Method of Locomotion Most Used:□ Walking in rain under same umbrella. □ Jolting or flivveringj(synonymous). □ Buying gas for friends. □ Watching taxi meters.Motor Cars Owned hy Family:Name makes, models, engine and serial numbers, sex, etc.)1. .2. . later.Ov,erOil,ra*cZ^i'a Mereave/,sP*ces tkdad thrc*ars-_ ««****• «*. ,O, J.jj^od /*ii °^ojv ^ **°ardtConfronted hy this last statistic, one young applicant fainted fromembarrassment — J* ac<*/e**W•ndripor'^”8 ^ toon Uyado ey.r*bj,His family owned but one car!Quite disgraceful, these days, to admit even statistically that you be¬long to that sort of family.But this SAD YOUNG MAN was not floored. He bravely workedout plans for a campaign to REFORM his family. . e,Ps. T/be<*°w 4topen.;°*ityex. AfiaHe ingeniously prepared the following letter. Perhaps you too willbe able to make use of it.H • t'Smith, Sauer & Brown Motors Co.2349 So. Michigan Ave.Chicago, IllinoisPermanent SalonRush at Pearson St.One block from the Drive, just north of Chicago Ave. „She littleMARMONI)MM ft- Under the Mormon Credit Plan a very moderate down payment enables you to take delivery of a little Marmon 8azOa I a ii-