Vol '8 No 9 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927 Price Five CentsPRES. MASON NAMES BOARD OF RELIGIONCelebrate Fathers Day After the Penn Game‘AL’ WIDDIFIELD, HADLEY KERR, ARE ELECTED TO COUNCILHEAD UNDERGRAD:PUBLICATION ANDDRAMA BOARDSMaroon Editor, Dram¬atic Leader RepresentActivities,\1 H. Widdificld. editor ot tlu- Ma irun, and Hadley Kerr, president of the |University Hramatie Association, Iwere cliosn presidents ot the Board ofPublications and the Joint Hoard ot jMusical and Dramatic < Irgani/atioiis.respectively, at the election-' ot the-e jbodies last night. These men will rep- ;resent publication^ and dramatics on Ithe yimlerJjt ailnate council.Tin* others who were chosen with JWiddificld to manage the board this |year are George Reed, editor of theCap and Gown, who will he secre- {tary, and John Crowell, business jmanager of the yearbook, the newlyjelected treasurer. The four otherswho with Reed, Crowell and Wid- jdifield comprise the Hoard of Hub- ,lieations art* George Morgensternand Andrew Johnson, editor andbusiness manager of tin* Phoenix;Charles Harris, business manager of jthe Maroon, and Sterling North, ed¬itor of tin* Forge.Heads DramatistsHadley Kerr has worked for threeyears in the Dramatic Association asunderstudy and actor. Hast year he Iwas elected president ot TowerPlayers, the men’s experimental or- jganization, and this year, productionmanager, as well as president of theentire association.Those who took part in the elec¬tion were Frances Kendall and Hel¬en King, from the Mirror; Fred von jAmmon and Hadley Kerr from Tow¬er Players, Arthur Frnstein andRussell Whitney, Gargoyle represen- itatives; and Ted Lockard, Kn ~eneMcCoy and Charles Warner fromBlackfriars. jTearns Compete inSale of BalloonsW. A. A. Board will meet thisafternoon at 3 :00 o’clock to select a jwoman as assistant to Annette Al- ilen, president of W. A. A., with thesale of balloons for the bootballgame Saturday.The balloons will be sold for ten |cents each and will be sent up after ieach touchdown. Women wishing toact as saleswomen have been re- Iquested to see Annette Allen duringW. A. A. office hours from 12 to1 at the desk in the trophy galleryon the second floor of Ida Noyeshall, or should sign up on the bul¬letin board at the foot of the stairs.RHODES SCHOLAR TOBE SELECTED SOON PUBLICATIONS HEADFIRST‘PHOENIX’OUT TOMORROWWomen Compete inSales; Prizes OfferedA new tone, combining sobrietywith wit, features the first issue ofthe 1927-1928 Phoenix, appearingtomorrow.All women interested in sellingthe magazine are asked to report toCora May Ellsworth in the Phoenix ioffice in Ellis hall from 2 to a to¬day. A prize of five dollars will he |given to the woman selling the most |copies.George Morgenstern, former con¬ductor of the “What Of It" columnin the Daily Maroon, and editor otthe Phoenix has done some of the DADS WILL SITIN “C” SECTIONWITH STUDENTSVon Ammon and Carrto Manage AnnualDad’s DayBy James BaileyThe second annual Father’s Day,sponsored by the UndergraduateCouncil, has been set for Saturday,October 22, tin* day of the Chicago-Pennsylvania football game, Fredvon Ammon and Margaret Carr headthe committee in charge.All Dads InvitedFathers of all students, graduateand undergraduates, men and wom¬en, are invited to visit the Univer¬sity on that day. Hast year therewas some misunderstanding regard¬ing Father’s Day, many students be¬lieving that the event was for fa¬thers of undergraduate men only.The Undergraduate Council wishesto make it clear that fathers of allstudents in the University are in¬vited.Tickets On SaleTickets for fathers may In* pur¬chased by students upon presenta¬tion of tuition receipts at the Foot¬ball Tickets Committee office on thesecond floor of the west stand. Tic¬kets will he on sale from October11 to IP at the regular office hoursof 'PPM) to 1 Special arrange¬ments have been made to allow thefathers to sit with their sons anddaughters at the game. They areto enter the field at a special gate,but will join the students in-ddeand will sit in the "C” section withI them.editorial work, including a “WhatOf It” column. Other undergradu¬ate contributors include Al E. Wid¬dificld and Milt Mayer.“The Phoenix is an entirely newmagazine, both in form and in con¬tent,” declared Morgenstern. “Wehope to attain a slightly serious andeasy tone, interspersed with the oldstuff, but the college joke book isdead.”Frosh Try Out forPlay Today * DramaPresident to CoachTryouts for the annual Freshmanplay will be held in the Reynoldsclub theater this afternoon at 2:20.All first quarter freshman who areinterested in acting, producing, orthe business end of the Dramaticassociation are urged to be presentat this meeting. Arthur Ernstein. jpresident of Gargoyles, will act ascoach and director, and has chosena one act play with which to startthe Freshman activities along thisline. Name Speakers of iIndustry ConclaveKent Cooper, general manager of jthe Associated Press, Rudolph Spree-kies, president of the Federal Sugar !Refining Company and Frederick H. jEcker, vice president of the Metro¬politan Life Insurance Company jwill speak at the Fourth PublicConference on Education and In- jdustry to be held at the University !October 20.The conference will be sponsored jby the American Meat Packers andi the University. The general topicfor discussion will be “The Indus-| trial Situation: The Outlook for j| 1!>28.” Mr. Cooper will speak on theprinting and publishing industries,Mr. Spreekles, the sugar industry,and Mr. Ecker, on the relation of |risk bearing institutions to modern |industry. Vice-president Charles G. ^Dawes has addresesd the conferencein recent years.GINSBERG TO HEADCHEMICAL SOCIETYAnnouncement of the impendingelection of a Rhodes scholar fromIllinois was made by Robert V. Mer¬rill of the Romance department to¬day. Eligible candidates must be be¬tween nineteen and twenty-five yearsold on October 1, 11)28, and havecompleted their sophomore year.Scholarship, leadership, and pro¬ficiency in athletic sports are thebases of selection. All applicationsmust be made to Mr. Merrill by Oc¬tober 1. Cole Keeps OfficeIn Arts AssociationDr. Fay Cooper Cole, professorof Anthropology, has been re-electedvice president of the Allied Art as¬sociation, it was made known yes- Iterday. The association gives an an- inual series of performances devotedto symphonic productions, ballet, jand vocal music. Bernard Ginsberg was elected pres¬ident at the first meeting of KentChemical Society to serve for theautumn and winter quarters. Theofficers to serve with him arc: ('. M.Marberg. vice-president: J. Chittum,secretary: Dorothy Gaston, Treasurer;C. Fuller, senior councillor; B. Maizel.junior councillor. Undergraduate aswell as graduate students are cordially {invited to enjoy the regular meetingsof the society as announced. Take C. & G. PicturesEarly, Urges ReedAll seniors, fraternity men. andclub women should have their pic¬tures taken immediately for the1928 Cap and Gown, according to astatement issued last night byGeorge Reed. Editor in Chief.Reed asks that all these picturesbe taken immediately, in order thatany rush and haste in the publica¬tion. of the year book may beavoided. Last year the printingwas greatly delayed by the failureof several organizations to get theirpictures in at the appointed time.Reed requests that the students co¬operate with the staff by gettingtheir pictures taken as soon as pos¬sible. The Gibson studios, photog¬raphers, will take all pictures forthe 1928 publication.EIGHT THOUSAND;ATTEND U. OF C.|Most Registered ForArts and LitsFit*'trees show that 5,620 students jare now in residence on the campusand 2,261 are registered at the Uni- |versity College downtown. A tot a 1 jof 7,781 students are attending theUniversity of Chicago classes.The student body in residence on 1the campus seems to be divided jevenly, 2,945 being undergraduate jand 2,908 in the graduate and pro- jfessional schools. Of this group of jstudents in residence, the collegesof Arts, Literature and Science claim jthe greatest portion with a registra¬tion of 1,385. Next in order are:the Medical Schools with 525; Law |School, 397; School of Commerce |and Administration, 254; DivinitySchool 176; School of Social Serv¬ice Administration, 101 ; and Collegeof Education, 70. Rigorous selection jof freshmen has kept the total reg¬istration down to but fifty-six morein registration than last year.Clayton Hamilton,Critic, Speaks toGroup at Reynoldsl layton Hamilton, New York criticand dramatist, explained the pollutedcondition or’ drama today as comparedwith that of former times in the Rey¬nolds Club yesterday afternoon, lietraced it from the times of Shake- jspe; re to its present day.Because the public wants sensation¬al, obscene, vulgar plays, and will notcome to see the better type, is the onlyreason the theatre managers producethem, he showed. New York is thecentre of theatrical productions and atthe same time of tourists, so as longas these people will pack the housesand will not come to see real drama,it will last. ORGANIZATION TO HAVE CHARGEOF ADMINISTRATION OF CHAPELSAND ALL RELIGIOUS ACTIVITIESOfficial Statement GivenAs Adopted atMeeting Eight Faculty Membersand Eight Studentsin Group" I he abolition of compulsory chapel :last spring was only a first step in thedevelopment ot a constructive pro- !gram for the teligious interests of the jl Diversity. I his development should ikeep pace with the construction of tin-new University chapel, and he. as faras possible, completed at the dedica- Ition ol the great edifice. By vote ofthe Senate and Trustees, the formula- ition of this program has been entrus- !ted to the newly organized Board of j1 Diversity Social Service and Re- jligion. Members of this hoard are ap- [pointed by the President, from the fac- Itil ties and student body.Basal Body Emphasized"In making tins first statement of!its policy to the University commu-jnity, the hoard wishes to emphasize iit^ basal policy; it does not plan tomaintain any single dogmatic forniu- Ilation of religion, to establish a Uni¬versity church, or to organize tlieh re¬ligious life of the University upon ex- Iclusively ecclesiastical models. It IIt wil seek to co-operate, as far aspracticable, with the churches of theneighborhood, hut it conceives its ifunction to he the discovery and the jexpression of the religious life of the!University itself. Recognizing thatreligious motives have played a large Ipart in the development of the Uni- jversity. and that the education the IUniversity would impart is not com-;plete until it- sons and daughters have jtbeirr own convictions as to the high- i(Continued on page 2) By Leon BaerAppointed by President .MaxMason, the new hoard of Social Ser¬vice and Religion has already madeplans tor its work in the religious as¬pect of University life. ibis organi¬zation. consisting of »-ight facultymembers and a like number of stu¬dents will ha\ e complete charge ofreligious .activities of the Universityincluding the administration of thechapels.President Mason will give tonightat 7 o clock in the new Joseph Bondchapel tin- first of a scries of lectures,sponsored by the hoard. He willspeak on "Religion and Education."Harold Swift. President of the Boardof I'rustees. willl preside at the all-University religious service, of whichPresident Mason’s address is a part.A number ot lectures on religionand education will he given weekly,continuing the scries started tonight.Men and women of the faculty anddistinguished visitors will tell theirphilosophies of lilt- and religion. DeanSpencer of the School of Commerceand Administration. Professor Lymanof the School of Education, and Pro¬fessor B. (i. Nelson are on the pro¬gram for succeeding weeks.I he hoard held its 11r-■ t meeting yes¬terday. A statement of aims and pol¬icy was adopted and plans for its re¬ligious activities were made.Morley To LectureThursday In MandelThe first lecture of the William IVaughn Moody series will be given [tomorrow night at 8:15 in Mandelassembly hall. Dr. Sylvanus Morley, jleading authority on ancient civili¬zation in America, will speak on j“Maya Civilization of Ancient jAmerica.”The discoveries of Dr. Morley anda description of civilization about !1000 A. D. will be included in this Jlecture. Tickets may be obtained jwithout charge at Room M-10, Har- jper Library.An unknown donor gives thefunds annually by which these lec¬tures are secured with the specialobject of placing before the stu¬dents of the Univeristy a numberof interesting men talking on di¬verse subjects.FACULTY IN ANNUALDINNER AT COMMONS I lie hoard, as appointed by Presi¬dent Mason, consists of the followingmembers: Profs. A. H. Compton,Edith Abbott. If. F. Flint. C. XV. Gil-key. Shailcr Mathews. G. B. Smith. 1).H. Stevens, \\ . H. Spencer: and stu¬dent members: Kenneth Rouse. AllanHcald, Eleanor Wilkins, Jean Dickin¬son, Frank Ward. Francis Holmes,and Minott Stieknet.Instructors Radicaland Pacifists, SaysMajor E. Hadley“Socialists, bolshevists, and paci¬fists arc members of the faculties ofa hundred and fifty of our colleges,”declared Major Edwin Hadley in aspeech before the meeting of theGovernment club at the Drake ho¬tel Monday. Radicalism and pacifismare being instilled into the youth ofthe country both by such professorsand by the activities of various or¬ganizations styled “liberal clubs,”to be found on almost all campusesthe Major asserted.Major Hadley vigorously attackedthe tendency toward pacifism, inhis speech.Nelson AddressesWestminster ClubBertram Griffith Nelson, associateprofessor in the Department of Eng¬lish will speak before the Westminsterclub tonight at 7:45 in the north re¬ception room of Ida Noyes hall, onthe subject, “If I Were King.” Mr.Mack Evans who was scheduled tospeak is unable to keep the appoint¬ment. and will speak at a later date. Three hundred members of thefaculties of the University were pres¬ent at the annual faculty dinner heldMonday at 6 in Hutchinson Com¬mons. President Max Mason pre¬sided, and the traditional speechesI were made. Every year at this din¬ner there are three addresss by newcomers and one by an old member.The speakers were Professors W.F. Ogburn and E. J. Kraus, Mr. M.| L. Raney and Dr. A. C. Noe, recent¬ly returned from Russia. Conduct FreshmenOn Library ToursEnglish 101 groups are being con¬ducted on tours through HarperMemorial library this week to ex¬plain the use of the library and thedepartments from which books maybe obtained. Contrary to the usualcustom these trips have not beenheld in connection with the generalcampus tours.Page Two3Iu' Daily ffllaromtFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished 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 yiar extra. S ngle copies, five cents each.Entered as second-class mail at the Chicago Postoffice, Chicago, Illinois, March 13, 1906,under the act of Ma.rch 3, 1813.The Da ly Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any material appearingin this paper.OFFICE—ROOM ONE, ELLIS HALL5804 Ellis AvenueTelephones: Editorial Office, M’dway 0300, Local 245; Business Office,Hyde Park 4292; Sport jffi ce. Local 80, 2 ringsMember of the Western Conference Press AssociationThe StaffAL E. WIDDIFIELD, MANAGING EDITORCHARLES J. HARRIS, BUSINESS MANAGERGEORGE V. JONES, CHAIRMAN OF THE EDITORIAL BOARDROSELLE F. MOSS, WOMEN S EDITOREDITORIAL DEPARTMENTMenLeonard BridgesMilton S. MayerCharles H. Good ...Robert McCormackDexter W. MastersLouis EngelEdwin Levin News EditorNews EditorDay EditorDay EditorDay EditorDay DditorDay EditorWomenMargaret Dean Junior EditorHarriet Harris Junior EditorMary Bowen Literary EditorRivalind Green Sophomore EditorHarriet Hathaway Sophomore EditorAIdean Gibboney Sophomore Editor SPORTS DEPARTMENTVictor RoterusRobert SternHenry FisherE'm -r FriedmanE ; marette Dawson Sports EditorSports EditorSport AssistantSport AssistantWomen’s Sport EditorBUSINESS DEPARTMENTRobert Fisher Advertising ManagerRobert Klein Advertising ManagerHubert Lovewell AuditorJack McBrady Circulation ManagerWallace Nelson Classified ManagerJoseph Klitzner . Advertising Correspoo/V>n»THE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM1. Encouragement of student initiative in vndergraduaet ac¬tivity and scholarship2. Augmentation of the Department of Art and establishmentof a Department of Music.3. Extension of the Intramural principle.4. Abolition of the “grade curve.”5. Co-operation with the Honor Commission.6. Promotion of undergraduate interest in educational lectures.7. Encouragement of the Intercollegiate Debate.8. /approvement of the Year Book.9. Cue Sophomore Honor Society.THE NEW PLUMAGEThe Old Bird has been preening her feathers these days. Youwon't recognize her when she leaves the editorial bird cage to¬morrow for her initial appearance on campus this year.Yes, you have changed, old Phoenix bird, you have a differ¬ent complexion, a fresher plumage, and individualism that makesyou stand alone in the world of college comics.We had glanced through the proogs of the first issue. Wehad read the pages of short, nonchalant comments from the in-soucient hand of the Phoenix editor; we had perused through thetheater notes; the literary critique; the “Paris letter” and thecharming article on Europe. That wisecracking, querile tonethat used to suffuse the publication was gone. There was theimprerssion of mellow maturity, sane wit, satire, cleverness, evensophistication perhaps.The makeup has been changed in the enttirety—typeface,heads, columns; everything has undergone a regenration—orshall we say rejuvenation—at the hands of the new management.The Daily Maroon, for perhaps the first time in its history,heartily endorses and recommends the 1927 Phoenix. We be¬lieve it is a high class publication. We prophesy that it shall bessoon recognzed as one of the foremost Hammer and Coffin pub¬lications in the collegiate world.Yoou’re welcome, George.MANY THANKS, MEDICSWE HAVE wondereci, we students in Arts and Lit, about yournew medical school. And we have been secretly a littlejejalous. Your towers are higher than ours, your buildings arenewer and more fully equipped, your floor space is almost thesize of our whole campus. We have had nightmares in which wepictured the giant Medicine, a knife in one hand, a bottle ofether in the other, overwhelming the cohorts of the Arts andsetting up a dictatorship under the God Science to rule its van¬quished with an iron hand.Of course these were only nightmares, but we really didwonder if in the future the Medical school would be a branch ofthe University of Chicago or vice versa. Not that we under-valuated the importance of medicine. Perhaps it was just ourpetty pride. Anyway—WE FEEL better about it now. You have opened up yourdoors and asked us over. Besides this you have offered usthe right hand of fellowship. You have told us that when wewere ill you would try and help us out. We appreciate thatgreatly, because over on our side of Ellis Avenue we are alwaysgetting sick, and even our department heads are not much goodto us then.You may feel sure that we are going to take advantage ofthis offer. We’ll be over often. We haven’t any guides overhere, but you can drop over and browse around any time. Any¬thing we have is yours. THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927GREEK COUNCILOFFICIALLY ENDSPLEDGE SEASON(Pledge List Continued From Yes¬terday)Delta Kappa Epsilon—LaurenceSmith, Ralph Twist, Merrill Gren,Hugh MacKenzie, Oak Park; FrankButler, Chicago; Clarence Cushman,Omaha, Neb.; John Inness, La-Grange; Stanton Arnold, SidneyGorham, Hinsdale; Robert Mac-Neille, Glencoe; George Veeder, Wil¬mette.Delta S’gma Phi—Guy Warren,Duluth, Minn.; Fi’ank Harris, Don¬ald Black, George Popham, JohnCarana, Chicago; William Ramsey,Buffalo, S. C.; Lewis Lloyd, Strea-tor; George Keil Mansfield, Ohio;Frank Callaghan, Jim Bailey, OakPark.Delta Tau Delta—John Watson,William Sullivan, Robert MacWor-ter, Donald Carroll, Chicago; Gor¬don Kerr, Minneapolis, Minn.; JohnSchwindel, Valparaiso, Ind.; How¬ard Bowman, Streator.Delta Upsilon—Robert Purcell,Robert Colwell, James Crimshaw,Don Cooperider, Charles Baker, A1Bleaker, Frank Metcalfe, AlfredAbrahamson, Carl Moses, WolfredRedding, Red Wing, Minn.Kappa Nu—Melvin Wollens, Jer¬ry Cohen, Allen Reiwitch, SidneyRam, Chicago; Jerry Licht, Knox¬ville, Tenn.; George Chaznow, Waco,Tex.; John Schwart.: Tigerton, Wis.Kappa Sigma—Brant Bonner,William Coles, John Hardin, PhelpsHowland. Richard Hunt, James Hut¬chison, Howard Larimer, StewartMatson, Max Mauerman, SylvesterMoebs, Eugene Peterson, JosephSorenson, Riiy Zimont, Chicago; Wil¬liam Benese, Cicero; William Elliott,Kansas City, Kans.; Anthony KimRichest itiCream!J,UST full of creamy flavor!Fresh milk with all its creamroes into it until NestleY ijrichest in ere *<~i of all! Look1 fortheciean, silvery wrapper.5c (J lUc — ami ciiiJdc•>to the mel, Gary, Ind.; George Lock, HotSprings, Arkansas; Edwin Mc¬Cracken, Shreveport, La.; DonaldVetter, Stevens Point, Wis.Lambda Chi Alpha—Marvin Mil¬ner, Albert Eller, Richard Fletcher,John Spuck, John Link, Harry Au-spitz, Earl Harder, Charles Nebel,Chicago; William Krog, Henry Har¬rington, Oak Park.Phi Beta Delta—Norr.an Gold¬man, Jerome, Soloman, Fig Firstein,Chicago, Ill.; Sam Kaufman, Tulsa,Okla.; Isidore Nelson, Gary, Ind.;Julius Mayer Indiana Harbor, Ind.Phi Delta Theta—James Porter,Thomas Slussey, Frederick Mass,Chicago; Marshall Fish, Gary, Ind.;Walter Jeorse, East Chicago, Ind.;Martin Hardy, Ivan Thompson, Ar¬kansas City, Kas.; Vernon Miller,Ute, Iowa; Louis Forbes, Antioch;Warren McCandless, Hinsdale.(Continued in Tomorrow’s Issue) noons by the Divinity faculty, and, inaddition, there should be other typesof meetings, ranging from the addressto the liturgical service led by the Uni¬versity choir. The first of these to heinstituted will he held on Wednesdayeven at seven in Joseph Bond chapel.This series will he inaugurated Oct.12th In President Mason of the Uni¬versity and President Swift of theBoard of Trustees. During the fol¬lowing weeks, addresses will be givenby well-known members of the vari-ons University faculties and visitors.Correlate Religious Groups"The board also aims to correlatethe various religious agencies nowworking on the campus and to pro¬mote social service by members of theUniversity."It will welcome suggestions at anytime by any member of the Universityas to how it may best meet the largeresponsibilities entrusted to it.”Adopted by the Board at theirmeeting. Oct. 11, 1927. CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—Ford touring. NAMEYOUR OWN PRICE. See now. Mid¬way 0431.FOR SALE—Late model Dodgetouring. Excellent condition. Fournew tires. Must sell immediately.Sacrifice at $275. Call Neff at Fair¬fax 5191, after 6 p. m.FRENCH TUTORING—Phoneticsfrom Forbonne. Books furnished,Mr. M. Barton, care Maroon.WANTED—A number of studentsto undertake ticket disposal cam¬paign. Apply immediately. Dr. Wiev-er. Central 8436.LOST—Dog, Daberwan Pincher.Black with brown markings. Blackharness. Clipped ears and bobbedtail. Call Midway 0718. Reward.FRENCH TUTORING—Phoneticsfrom Sorbonne. Books furnished,Mr. M. Barton, care Maroon.President Names Boardof Religion(Continued from page 1)est values of life, the hoard believesthat its special task is to multiply op¬portunities for the acquisition, expres¬sion and deepening of very form ofidealism worthy to command the re¬spect of a University community.Co-operation Sought“ 1 his purpose can be realized onlyas faculty and students co-operate inail honest experiment in the organiza¬tion of the religious life of a Univer¬sity rather than of an ecclesiasticalgroup.1 he board undertakes to furnishopportunities for the expression ofvaried religious interests of the Uni¬versity. These will include the Sun¬day morning services as now conduc- >.tei in Mandel assembly ball and the SAWYERSSLICKERSchapel services conducted daily at It Will Surely Rain /Get a Sawyer Frog Brand Slick¬er now and laugh at the storm.It you have friends keep an extraslicker for their convenience.Siiwyer's genuine oil slickers arcguaranteed waterproofon - E.Special Service CorOriental StudentsCanadian Pacific’s White Em*press fleet offers you the largestand fastest liners to the Orient*all at low cost, and the highstandard of service everywheremaintained by the “World’sGreatest Travel System.” Fre¬quent sailings from Vancouverand Victoria. To Japan 10 days*men China and Manila.Always carry Canadian PacificExpress Company’s Travellers'Cheques, negotiable everywhere.fWU Information, tailing date* and plant 14Hit, from local tUamthip agents. orR. 5. tLWUKInl, Sieamstiip Gen¬eral Agent, 71 East Jackson Blvd.,Telephone Wabash 1909.For freight apply to W. A. Kit-termaster, General Western FreightAgent, 940 The Rookery, Chicago,III.CanadianPacificWorld's Greatest Travel System EVERY pipe is a Sunny Jimmy-pipe when it’s packed with P. A.The tidy red tin chases the blues—and how! Why, you feel bet¬ter the instant you open the tinand get that marvelous P. A.aroma. Every chore becomes acheer, and you’re sitting on topof the world.Then you load up and light up.That taste—that never-to-be-for-gotten, can’t-get-too-much-of-ittaste! Cool as a cut-in from thestag-line. Sweet as retaliation.Mild and mellow and long-burn¬ing, with a balanced body that PA-is somelittlecheer-leadersatisfies, right to the bottom ofthe bowl.You find that P. A. never bitesyour tongue or parches yourthroat, no matter how often youstoke and smoke. Get on thesunny side of life with a pipe andP. A. Buy a tidy red tin today andmake the personal test. Pipes wereborn for tobacco like this.P. A. is sold every¬where in tidy red tins,pound and half-poundtin humidors, andpound crystal-glasshumidors with sponge-moistener lop. Andalways with every bitof bite and parch re¬moved by the PrinceAlbert process.Fringe albert—the national joy smoke!© 1927, R. J. Reynolds TobaccoCompany, Winston-Salem, N. C.iCHURCHEDITION ®he 'Bmiv ftooon CHURCHEDITIONTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927UNIVERSITY SPIRIT IS ONE OF TOLERANCE11I - CENSUS REVEALSWIDE VARIETY OFRELIGIOUS FAITHSJewish and Methodist Lead,With PresbyterianClose ThirdJewish and Methodist students arein greater strength in the Universitythis fall than those of any other re¬ligious preference. 710 students haveexpressed a belief in the Jewishfaith, while 652 are Methodists.Third among the religious prefer¬ences are the Presbyterian, with 532.Baptists and Roman Catholic arefourth and fifth with 381 and 360.There are 227 Episcopalians. 207Lutherans, 220 Congregationalilsts,187 Disciples and 110 Christian Scien¬tists. 1161 students have expressed noreligious preference.The remaining students are divided Ibetween a widely divergent group ofreligions, ranging from Baconians,Buddhists, Confuscianists. Alhensians, |and Nestorians with only one student jeach, to the Unitarians with 74.Three students, strangely enoughall women, have announced them¬selves as Progessives, Freethinkersand Independents. There is one eachof Russian Orthodox, Christian Or¬thodox, Federated, Dunker, Church ofGod, Metropolitan, Independent Re¬ligious Societty, Wesleyan, St. Bridesand N’azarenes. ()ne student an¬nounces himself criptically as W. B. T.anti another as V U. A.Universalists claim 59, UnitedBrethren 26, Swedish Mission, 16,Evangelical. 36, Latter day Saints, 20,and Greek Orthodox. 10. Other re¬ligions are Quakers. All Souls, Union,Interdemoninational, African Meth¬odist Episcopal Reform, ApostotlicChristian, Community. Ethical So¬ciety. United Church, Liberal, Men-nonite. Agnostic, Christadelphian, andChurch of England. Dr. Carlisle AcceptsPosition in BostonDr. Carlisle, religious directorfor Presbyterian students, hasleft the University to accept aposition offered to him in Boston.He is to be director for thePresbyterian students in the fiftyodd schools in and about Boston,including Harvard and Wellesley.He will be in charge of a churchhouse for these students.Dr. Carlisle has been with theUniversity for the last three yearsacting as advisor for Presbyterianstudents and director of the West¬minster Club. He was affiliatedwith two neighboring churches,First Presbyterian Church andHyde Park Presbyterian Church.Mr. Nelson Readsto PresbyteriansThe Westminster Club, the campusPresbyterian Club, will hold its firstmeeting Wednesday, October 12, at7:45 in Ida Noyes Hall. ProfessorNelson will read “If I Were King.”All Presbyterians and all others whoare interested are invited to attend.The regular meetings of the clubare held the first Wednesday eveningof each month in Ida Noyes Hall. Onthe third Wednesday of the monththere will be an informal tea at 3:30for all Presbyterians. Students areurged to come in order that they maymake friends among their denomina¬tion.The officers of the club are FaeThorne, president; Ashburn Koch,vice-president; Virginia Lane, secre¬tary; and David Prosser, treasurer. The new building of the ChicagoTheological seminary being construc-j ted a‘ Fifty-eighth street and Wood-| lawn avenue will be finished by Mayj 1. 1928. The exterior work has been| completed except for the tower, whichj lacks thirty feet of its full height. Thecost of all the building new and al¬ready erected. will approximate$1.000.000.The business offices will he locatedon the first floor of the western wing,while Graham Taylor assembly hallwill occupy the second, third, andfourth floors. Henry M. Hookerhall, the center wing, will house thelibrary and stockroom. Five floors ofoffices for the seminary faculty willhe built in Lawson tower. An “re¬shaped cloister that will he decoratedwith sculptured heads placed at eacharch where the curve begins to swingup from the straight line of thecolumn will follow the west hall ofTaylor hall and the south wall ofHooker hall.The dormitory, already buillt, com¬prise the east wing, and ThorndikeHilton chapel adjoins the west wing.The north and south sets of windowsin the chapel were replaced this sum¬mer with windows fashioned by theWilletts studio at Philadelphia. On abright day the gray frames seem toquiver before one’s eyes with the bril¬liant colors of the scenes.Religious EducationClub of GraduatesDiscusses ProblemsCONGREGATIONALISTSHAVE SOCIAL TIMESThe first meeting of the Congre¬gational Club was held Oct. 13 at theChicago Theological Seminary. Thisgroup does not limit its membershipto Congregationalists, but is open toUniversity and Seminary students ingeneral. The purpose of the club isprincipally recreational, although Uni¬versity men of note, as well as out¬side speakers, are invited to talk fromtime to time. The officers arePresident, William Roblyer, Vice-President, Kathleen Mainstock, Sec¬retary, Monrova Strain,, Treasurer,Harold James. The Religious Education Club,one of the University’s livest organ¬izations, has an active membershipconsisting of graduate students,though any interested may enroll asassociate members. At the monthlymeeting in the Common Room ofSwift Hall, Ivan G. Grimshaw pre¬sides with Miss Dorothy Gross assecretary.While educators of national reputefrequently address the club, its great¬est value lies in the opportunity of¬fered for students in the religious ed¬ucation field to present results of theirresearch for the discussion and help¬ful criticism of the group. NANDEL CHAPELSPEAKERS NAMEDFamous Men To SpeakThis WinterSEMINARY TO BEFINISHED MAY 1Buildings Approximate OneMillion Dollars Religious services at Leon Man-del hall have begun for the autumnI quarter. All students at the Univer-! sity are assured both a cordial wel-I come, a worth-while morning. Every! Sunday at 11, celebrated clergymen! representing many denominationsand coming from other cities of thej United States will deliver stimulat¬ing, sincere sermons. An attractivei feature is the students’ choir thatsings at every service, accompaniedj by the organ. The names of theministers who have been engaged tospeak, with the date for the sermonof each, follow:Oct. 16—Bishop Charles E. Brent,Buffalo, New York.Oct. 23—Dr. Henry Sloane Coffin,president of the Union Theologicalseminary, New York City.Oet. 30—Rev. Lynn HaroldHough, Central Methodist Episco¬pal church, Detroit, Mich.Nov, 6—Rev. Hough.Nov. 13—Rev. John Herman Ran¬dall, the Community Church, NewYork City.Nov. 20—Rev. Randall.Nov. 27—Rev. A. W. Beavan,Lake Avenue Baptist church, Roch¬ester, N. Y.Dec. 4—Rev. Earl Wallace Petty,First Baptist church, Pittsburgh, Pa.Dec. 11—Rev. Petty.Dec. 19—Convocation Sunday.The Reverend James Gordon Gil-key, (brother of Dr. Charles W. Gil-key of the Hyde Park Baptistchurch), South Congregational 1chui‘ch, Springfield, Mass. “Jesus Best PatternFor Life” — StaggWhen I was a Student in col¬lege, I felt a definite need for areligion to live by, the same as Ido now. The problems which thecollege boys and girls meet, andthe decisions which they have tomake, are real and constant, andI know from experience they canbe solved best only when one lineshimself up with the highest andbest teachings of behavior.Personally, I have tried to letthe life and teachings of Jesuspattern my life—and I am stilltrying. Amos Alonzo Stagg. CHURCHES AND RELIGIOUS CLUBSOFFER DIVERSITY OF OPPORTUNITYTwenty Churches ReserveOct. 16 As StudentSunday Denominational GroupsEncourage FreeDiscussionBAPTISTCHURCHIS94 YEARS OLDOldest Church ir> DistrictNears AnniversaryMethodist GroupPlans FellowshipThe Wesley Foundation, the stu¬dent Methodist organization on thecampus, plans to open its autumnquarter activities in the launching ofa drive for new members within thenext few weeks. This group offriendly young people has a three¬fold aim; namely, to promote a cor¬dial fellowship among the membersof its denomination, to serve them asa means of social and religious devel¬opment and expression, and to fostercooperation between the Methodistchurches in the community and theMethodist students in the University.The officers, elected last spring,are Thomas Marshall, president;Clark Mathews, treasurer; EthelynAbraham, secretary.Meetings are held regularlythroughout the school year.WOMEN TRAINING FORGOOD LEADERSHIPChinese ChristianAssociation MeetsThe Chinese Student Christian As¬sociation meets bi-weekly at thehomes of members or in one of theUniversity Lunch-rooms. The groupengages in religious discussion in sem¬inar fashion. T. C. Fan is presidentof tthe association and D. G. Chicn issecretary-treasurer. The Astrato Club is a religious so¬ciety for Methodist women of theUniversity. The membership is selec¬tive, and its ceremonies secret. Theclub is organized for the purpose oftraining religious leaders.The meetings, held every otherweek, combine the business and socialwith the religious interests of themembers in the reading of some re¬ligious book.The officers are Ethelyn Abraham,president; Elizabeth Donnelly, firstvice-president; Gertrude Holmes, sec¬ond vice-president; Dorothy Hutchin¬son, secretary; and Ruth Bryan,treasurer. Ninety-four years ago the city ofChicago and the First Baptist churchwere born. The one was incorporatedas a village only a few months priorto the founding of the other by fifteenearnest men and women. For manyyears the church grew apace with thevillage and wielded so great an in¬fluence that no progressive enterprisewas undertaken at that early periodwithout the participation of Baptists.The University had its origin in acommittee of the congregation sum¬moned by the pastor, Dr. J. C. Bur¬roughs.The church, a beautiful Gothicbuilding at 935 East Fiftieth street,will celebrate its birthday with ananniversary sermon to be given by itspastor, Rev. Perry J. Stackhouse,on Sunday, Oct. 16, and with an an¬niversary dinner to be served in thebanquet room on Wednesday evening,Oct. 19, at 6:30. The dinner will befollowed by a program in the auditor¬ium at 8, in which both stereopticonpictures and scenes presented by cos¬tumed members of the congregation,interspersed with music and address¬es, will be commemorative of the es¬tablishment and long, energetic ser¬vice of the church to the city. Thecelebration will end with the specialprogram of the Women’s Benevolentand Missionary society on Thursday,Oct. 20, at 1:30. Twenty churches in the Univer¬sity neighborhood have set aside Oct.| 16 as student Sunday. Minister* willdeliver sermons of special interestto men and women of college age,Bible class lessons will be devotedto discussions of student problems,and a cordial welcome is extendedto every student by the membersof all congregations.Among the Bible classes, two areespecially noteworthy because oftheir unusual appeal to University| thinking. These are the classes led| by Hugh T. Martin, attorney for| the Illinois Life Insurance Co., atthe Woodlawn United PresbyterianChurch, and by Milton McLean, exe¬cutive secretary of the campus Y.M. C. A. at the Hyde Park Baptisti Church.Sermons On YouthDr. Ames, pastor of the DisciplesI Church, will talk on the topicj “What Can We Hope For—With| Such Youth?” The theme for Oct.i 16 at the Universalist Church, St.1 Paul’s on the Midway, is “Liberal-| ism—a Religion for Youth.”Young People’s Church Clubsmeet almost universally in the cam¬pus churches. One of the strongestof these is that of the Hyde ParkBaptist Church. Here the group isdivided into a class of women, called“The Quest Group,” under Mrs. C.W. Gilkey, and “The Men’s Club,”under Prof. Lyman.Holy Day Service*The Temple (Isaiah-Israel) iscompleting its Holy Day servicesearly next week, and a large num¬ber of Jewish students are expectedto attend.Universalist ChurchStresses LiberalismIn Religious IdeasL. W. Brigham, pastor of the Uni-versalist church, St. Paul’s on theMidway, will speak next Sunday onthe theme, “Liberalism, a Religionfor Youth.” The theme expresses thespirit of the church. Universalistsfeel that rationalism has a place in !religion, and that religion is a wayof life, not an isolated once-a-weekexperience.Liberals in religion and those with¬out church connections are especiallywelcome here. Services are at 9:45Adult Class: 11:00, Morning Wor¬ship; 7:00, Young People’s GroupDiscussion and social hour. Catholics ArrangeVaried ProgramThe Newman Society offers RomanCatholic students a program of socialmeetings combined with inspirationaltalks by college professors and otherleaders of present-day thinking. Thesociety aims to provide Catholic stu¬dents with a source of informationon all subjects pertaining to theirreligion generally.The first meeting will be held thefirst week in November, which willbe followed by two or three othersduring the quarter. The meetingsare open to all students regardless ofreligious belief and the membershipis open to Catholic students withoutelection.The officers are John McDonough,president; Aldine OKeefe, vice-presi¬dent; Marian O’Toole, secretary; andDan Costigan, treasurer. The freshman who pauses on 57thStreet in the evening when the chimesin Mitchel Tower peal out the oldfamiliar hymns, typifies the religiousspirit of the University. Whatever hiscreed, a tolerance for his fellows is thedominant reaction in that freshman’smind to the music of the chimes.This spirit of tolerance, which is theheart of the University’s religious life,is catried out in the programs of thedenominational clubs. “The religiousprogram of the University,” says Mil¬ton McLean of the Y. M. C. A., “ischaracterized by the wideness anddiversity of opportunity, and, hv theattitude of tolerance. Services rangefrom a little group of Quakers whoworship in Hilton Chapel to the Sun¬day morning services which fill Man-dell Hall.”Clubs Open to StudentsStudent clubs for Roman Catholics,Disciples. Dunkers, Methodists,. Pres¬byterians, Congregationalists, Univer¬salists. Unitarians, Episcopalians,Lutherans, Evangelists and ChristianScientists are very active on campus.Most of these groups arc open to anystudent; a few are limited to believersill the faith which they represent.These clubs in general are free dis-cussional groups, with a wide-awakeeye to campus problems, and a pro¬gram of both social and religious at¬traction. They meet at the churchesor in the homes of members.Meet MonthlyThe Newman Society, open toRoman Catholics, the CongregationalClub, the Disciples Club, the Murray-Ballou Club for Universalists. theEvangelical Club, and the West¬minster Club for Presbyterians, meetmonthly. The Lutheran Club meetsbi-weekly; and the (.'banning Club(Utarians), Wesley Foundation(Methodist), St. Marks Society(Episcopalian) and Christian Sciencemeet once a week.Live OrganizationDraws Back AlumsFor five years one of the liveliestorganizations on campus hasbeen the Lutheran Club. That itsgatherings provide wholesome enjoy¬ment to all Lutheran students, isamply shown by the prevalence ofUniversity alumni who make a poiiCof returning for our meetings.The regular meetings of the clubare held bi-weekly.The officers, Harold Schwede, pres¬ident; Fern Fister, vice-president;Edith McDonald, secretary; and EdRausch, treasurer, take this opportu¬nity to extend a hearty invitation tothe incoming and old students to at¬tend the club’s first meeting thisquarter at Ida Noyes Hall on Friday,October 14, in the evening.Christian Scientiststo Meet Next WeekMANDEL MINISTERSLISTED IN HANDBOOKJapanese StudentsHold ReceptionThe first meeting of the JapaneseStudent Christian Association will hea reception of American and Japa¬nese students in the Japanese Y. M.C. A. T. Chiba, national president ofthe organization of which the Uni¬versity club is a chapter, is alsopresident of the Chicago chapter,which includes Northwestern Univer¬sity students. The “C” handbook, sponsored bythe Y. M. C. A. at the University,has succeeded in linking the normalinterests of the institution to thoseof religion with its list of celebratedministers who are to speak this yearat the Sunday services in Leon Man-del hall.Improvements include expandedspace for appointments, insertion ofthe dates of the football games anda more extensive history of the Uni¬versity. George Reed was editor,Milton Peterson, business manager. The Christian Science Society willhold its first meeting of the fallquarter October 18, Linnie Whitney,president, and John Keenan, secre¬tary-treasurer of the club, announce.The meeting will be open to all stu¬dents, since the membership is notlimited to Christian Scientists.Live Near Fiftieth?Sample St. Paul’sStudents who live north of thecampus will find a warm welcome atSt. Paul’s church. Fiftieth street andDorchester avenue. Sunday morningservices are held at 8 and 11. TheThe Young People’s club meets forsupper at 6.LPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927STAFF OFSPECIAL CHURCH EDITION—1927Louis EngelEdward G. BastianHoyt TrowbridgeFae ThorneMiriam MillerEmelyn RowellEdna Grosse Editor.Associate Editor.Associate Editor.Assistant.Assistant.Assistant.Assistant.Published jointly by The University of Chicago YoungWomen's Christian Association and Young Men’s Christian Asso¬ciation. CHRIST CHURCHHAS ATMOSPHEREOF DEVOTIONFrequent Services Are Held;Organizations WelcomeStudentsI RELIGION AND EDUCATION’T IS not because it is the fashion of the hour that the Univer¬sity will stand for religion. It will stand for it because webelieve that the whole history of the race shows, and never moreclearly than now, that learning and religion can never be safelydivorced. Each needs th other. Religion needs the free atmos¬phere of the University to keep it from becoming superstition orbigotry. Learning needs religion to keep it from becoming sel¬fish and pedantic.The University will therefore stand for both—not to pre¬scribe for you the type or character of your religion—not to im¬pose on you creed or ritual, but by its chapel and its Sunday ser¬vice and in various other ways constantly to remind you thatreligion, self-chosen, self-directed, unconstrained individual and Christ Church, Woodlawn Ave. and65th St., extends a cordial welcome toall students, especially Episcopalians.They are invited to attend its ser¬vices and take as large a part in itsother activities as he demands ofcampus life allow.Sunday services begin with theHoly Communion at 7:30 in the morn¬ing. All departments of the ChurchSchool meet at 9:30. offering instruc¬tion for all ages. The choral Eu¬charistic and sermon is at 11; Even¬song, with a short address, is sung at7:45.In addition to the services theYoung People’s club of the parishmeets every Sunday evening at 5,and it invites all students to partic¬ipate in its activities. The first hour Iis devoted to games and other socialamusements; supper is then servedat nominal charge. The following jhour is devoted to discussions, speakers or music.The local chapter of the Brother- DISCIPLES PLANHOUSE FOR MANYGRAD STUDENTSProf. Ames Giving a Series,“What May We Hope for,"With Such Youth?”CHRIST CHURCHDR. T. G. SOARESAT OLD CHURCH SMITH APPOINTED TOPULPIT OF HYDE PK.METHODIST CHURCHKenwood Community HasPhysical Trainingsocial, is an essential element of the highest type of life.”— , hood of St. Andrew conducts a Men’sFormer President Ernest DeWitt Burton, in his address at the | Bible Class on Sunday evenings atCommemorative Chapel assembly in Leon Mandel hall. Oct. 1.1 6Th°se who wish to do so n,ay I* j join the Young People’s Club at sup- I“ ‘ I per before the meeting. The regularmeetings of the chapter are held onGO TO ( HI KC H TO (»I\ E, NOT TO RECEI\ E the first and third Thursday eveningsof every month at 8. All Brother-MOST people think of going to church in terms of what they ll0°d men are cordially invited tocan get out of it. But the only adequate reason for going to atten •church is to see what you can give.WHAT’S ON TODAYYou may think that you haven’t anything to give. But youhave. For one thing, by your presence in church you can giveyour supporrt to an organization which is, with all its failings,the biggest force that there is for a better and richer social order.For another thing, you can contribute to the church a freshpoint of view on many subjects. The churches, at any rate thechurches around the University, want to know what the studentsare thinking about. It doesn’t get anywhere to criticise thechurch around the fireplace in a fraternity house. If your criti¬cises are worth anything, make them where they will be heardby somebody that can do something about them.But the chief contribution you can make in church is that ofyour worship. People mean different things by “worship” anddifferent things by “God.” There is plenty of debate on whatthese terms signify. Worship, however, is a fact of experience.Those who have had the experience know that it is something youdo and not something that is done to you. They know that it issomething that is hard to do, but something that is worth doing.More quiet, more knowledge of the value of things not made The chemistry Journal Club willwith hands, more sense of the beauty of holiness, compose one of meet today in Room 16, Kent hall,the greatest social needs of our time. j at three. Mr. E. J. Snyder willIf you go to church, go for what you can give, not for what' sPeak on “Thyrox.”you can get. The people who are always trying to get something,generally end up by getting what they don’t want.When Christ said, “It is more blessed to give than to re¬ceive,” He was talking good psychology. He was talking aboutthe whole of life, not just about putting nickels in the collectionbox. The Board of Women’s Organiza¬tions will meet at 12:45 in theAlumnae room of Ida Noyes hall.* * *President Max Mason will speakon ‘‘Religion and Education” at theregular University Religious Serviceto be held at noon today in the Jo¬seph Bond chapel. Mr. Harold Swift,president of the Board of Trustees,will preside.* * *“Health and the Community” willbe the subject of informal discus¬sion at the University College Pub¬lic Lecture to be held tonight from6:45 to 7:45 to the downtown Lec¬ture Room of the Lafceview Building.A small admission fee is charged.A WAYHe was saying something which applies, among other things, jto the matter of going to church.THE STUDENT’S ( REED“We are persons in process of becoming; we have natures we cantrust and use fully, human nature being what it is.We believe in the holiness of life, and in its destiny.We have a glorious heritage of the spiritual victories and know¬ledge of men since the first man pulled himself upright, downto this very moment in our Association life, and we mustknow it and use it for the sake of the future.We can have confidence in God, and truth is the echo of his mind,and goodness the working of his spirit and beauty the verytexture of his. garment; we believe in God, the most splendid jadventure of humanity.”—Leslie Blanchard. “To every man there openethA Way, and Ways, and a Way,And the High Soul climbs the HighWay,And the Low Soul gropes the Low,And in between on the misty flats,The rest drift to and fro.But to every man there openethA High Way and a Low.And every man decidethThe Way his soul shall go.”—John Oxenham, “Bees in Amber” The Kenwood Community church,located at Greenwood avenue andForty-sixth street, is at the presenttime without a minister. Dr. Theo¬dore Gerald Soares of the departmentof religious education at the Uni¬versity will preach every Sunday un¬til the pastoral board of the churchdetermines upon one of the severalprospects whom it has under consid- i "ve years o d*eration. Dr. Soares is said to rankwith Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdickand Henry van Dyke as one of the[ four or five great ministers of thej Uinted States.Founded forty-two years ago, the| Kenwood Community church is the! oldest interdenominational religiousinstitution in Chicago. Thirty-fiveI different sects are represented in itscongregation. Nominally its creed is! the Apostles’ creed, hut in practicej all that is required for membershipj in the church is a belief in Jesus1 Christ.Besides encouraging and guiding' the spiritual urge, the church offers! splendid opportunities for building up1 bodily vigor as well. Classes in phy¬sical culture will be given for bothmen and women twice a week; theschedule, however, has not yet beenformed for this fall. In addition, thechurch will organize four basketballteams, two for either sex, which willchallenge other church teams.Of chief interest to students of theUniversity is the Young People’sBible class, which meets every Sun¬day at 12:15 to study the Bible underthe guidance of Mr. Wilson Killogh.There will be two outstandingnights in the regular course of thechurch this fall. On Oct. 29 will begiven a Hallowe’en party at whicheveryone will be welcome. Studentsof the University are especially in¬vited. On Nov. 8 the biennial bazaarwhich the Mission Guild is preparingwill take place. Rev. Robert J. Smith has been ap¬pointed to take the pastorate of theHyde Park Methodist Episcopalchurch. Fifty-fourth street andBlackstone avenue, by Bishop Ed¬ward Holt Hughes, it was announcedat the closing session of the RockRiver conference of the MethodistEpiscopal church Monday evening,Oct. 10. Rev. Smith, about thirty-has made an excel¬lent record at the Broadway Meth¬odist church on the north side. Dr.Charles A. Gage, who has been min¬ister of the Hyde Park institutionfor four years, will in turn occupythe pulpit left vacant by the ap¬pointee. Plans for the Divinity House of thei Disciples church, to be erected onthe church lot at 57th St. and Uni-i versity Ave. are in the hands of thej architects, Dr. Ames said last week,j The house will include chapel, library,| and social rooms, with dormitory fac¬ilities for about twenty-four studentsj in the upper floors.The house will also furnish muchwider opportunity for young people’sI meetings than are now possible in thelimited space of the church. TheWranglers, a young people’s organ¬ization, now holds Sunday eveningmeetings, with a program of musicand discussion for members and theirguests. The Disciple’s Club, a cam¬pus organization of Disciples, meetsmonthly.The church itself endeavors to pro¬mote through all its activities an in¬telligent and practical type of re¬ligion. Persons are received intomembership without formal creedalor ceremonial tests.The sermons during October dealwith the question, “What May WeHope For?”, each Sunday dealingwith a phase of the question. Thetopics are “What May We Hope For,Being So Human? With Such Lux¬ury? With Such Youth?” The dis¬cussion of youth is for student’s Sun.day, October 16.University Religious Club Directory“Visit Your Denominational Club”NEW CHAPEL(Continued from page 5)nue and Fifty-eighth Street andnoted for its artistically conceivedwindows is open to everyone formeditation and prayer.On Oct. 20 in Leon Mandel hallDr. Vogt will make an address onthe University chapel, speaking inthe William Von Moody lectureship.COMMUNITY CHURCHESCirculation Manager,The Daily Maroon,University of Chicago.Dear Sir:Enclosed find check—money-order for subscription toThe Daily Maroon for year—quarter.Subscription rates:$3.00 per year—$4.50 mailed.$1.50 per quarter—$2.00 mailed. BAPTIST:First, 935 E. Fiftieth St.Hyde Park, 5600 Woodlawn Ave.Woodlawn, 6207 University Ave.CATHOLIC:Church of St. Thomas the Apostle,5648 Kimbark Ave.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE:Ninth, 6158 Woodlawn Ave.Tenth. 5640 Blackstone Ave.CONGREGATIONAL:Hyde Park, Fifty-sixth St. andDorchester Ave.DISCIPLES OF CHRIST:University, 5655 University Ave.EPISCOPAL:Christ Church, 6451 WoodlawnAve.Church of the Redeemer, 1420 E.Fifty-sixth St.St. Paul’s, 4945 Dorchester Ave.EVANGELICAL:Immanuel, 7000 Michigan Ave.JEWISH:The Temple (Isaiah-Israel), Fifty-first St. and Greenwood Ave. St.LUTHERAN:Windsor Park, Seventy-sixthand Saginaw Ave.Woodlawn Immanuel, Sixty-fourthSt. and Kenwood Ave.METHODIST:Hyde Park, Fifty-fourth St. andBlackstone Ave.Woodlawn Park, Sixty-fourth andWoodlawn Ave.PRESBYTERIAN:Hyde Park, Fifty-third St. andBlackstone Ave.SWEDISH:Mission Tabernacle, Sixty-secondSt. and Langley Ave.UNITARIAN:First, Fifty-seventh St. and Wood¬lawn Ave.UNIVERSALST:St. Paul’s on the Midway, SixtiethSt. and Dorchester Ave.INTERDENOMINATIONAL:Kenwood Community, 4600 Green¬wood Ave. CHANN1NG CLUB( Unitarian.)Pres.—C. Stanley Anderson. 5823Maryland.Treas.—Helena Calles.Meetings every Sunday evening at 6o’clock in the Parish House ofFirst Unitarian Church, 57th andWoodlawn.CHINESE STUDENTS’ CHRIS¬TIAN ASSOCIATION(Branch of the InternationalY. M. C.A.)Pres.—T. C. Fan, 5802 Maryland;Tel.— Hyde Park 7424.Sec.-Treas.—C. G. Chien.Bi-weekly meetings are held at thehomes of faculty members andlocal pastors.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETYPres.—Linnie Whitney, 2810 E. 78thSt.Sec.-Treas.—John Krenan.Meetings are held at 7:30 everyTuesday evening in the Thorn-dyke Hilton Memorial Chapel.First meeting this quarter—Oct.18.CONGREGATIONAL CLUBPres.—Charles Erasmus, 6133 Wood¬lawn.Sec.— Howard Anderson.Treas.— Donald Sterling.Meetings are held regularly on thefirst Thursday of the month inthe new Theological Seminary at1163 E. 58th St.DISCIPLES CLUB( Church of the Disciples of Christ.)There are on officers at present dueto graduation. Watch for an an¬nouncement of a re-organizationmeeting.EVANGELICAL CLUBPres.—Armin Schiek—7004 S. Mich¬igan; Tel.— Stewart 1732.Sec.— Henrietta Drager.Treas.— Esther Zumdahl.Meetings to be announced.JAPANESE STUDENTS’CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION( Branch of the InternationalY. M. C. A.)Pres.—T. Chiba.Other officers are F. Makamura, S.Tateuchi, K. Tatahahi. There aremonthly meetings.LUTHERAN CLUBPres.— Harold Sehwede, 5527 Mary¬land; Tel.— Hyde Park 0946.Sec.— Bessie Vecans.Treas.— Rudolph Ericson.The first meeting of the quarter willbe held Friday evening, October14, in Ida Noyes Hall.MEADVILLE CLUB(Unitarian)Pres.—Alfred Hobart, 5569 Wood¬lawn; Tel.— Midwray 6215.Sec.-Treas.— Ransome Carver. Meetings are held the second amithird Sunday afternoons of eachmonth at 5:30 in Meadville House,5669 Woodlawn.MURRAY BALLOU CLUB( Universalist)Pres.— Louis A. I,. Magraw, 5845Drexel.Sec.— Lambert Case.Treas.— Margaret Day..Meetings to be announced.NEWMAN SOCIETY(Roman Catholic)Pres.—John McDonough, 5725 Wood¬lawn ; Tel.— Hyde Park 3250.V. I\—Aiden O’Keefe.Sec.— Helen O’Toole.Treas.—-Daniel Costigan.The first meeting of the Quarter willhe held the first week in Novem¬ber.ST. MARK’S SOCIETY( Episcopal)Student Chaplain—Rev. C. L. Street,5756 Kimbark; Tel.— Fairfax7988.Pres.—Marion McGann, 1101 E. 53rdSt.Vice-Pres.—J. H. McBrady.Sec.—Carol Simons.Treas.—Donald Bell.Meetings are usually held on Sundayat 4:30 in the Episcopal ChurchHouse at 58th and Kimbark.WESLEY FOUNDATION( Methodist)Pres.—Thomas Marshall, 7358 In¬diana; Tel.—Stewart 3628.Sec.—Ethelyn Abraham.Treas.—Clark Mathews.Meetings to be announced.WESTMINSTER CLUB(Presbyterian)Pres.—Fae Thorne, 6023 Ellis; Tel.Midway 3372.Vice-Pros.— G. Ashburn Koch.Sec.—Virginia Lane.Treas.— David Prosser.Meetings are Oct. 12; Nov. 9; Dec. 7at 7:45 P. M. in Ida Noyes.*Y. M. C. A.Executive Secretary—Milton D. Mc-I>ean, 2nd floor of Reynolds Club¬house.Pres.— Minott Stickney, 5735 Uni¬versity; Tel.— Midway 9129.V. P.— Ken Rouse.Sec.— Clarke J. Mathews.Y. W. C. A.Executive Secretary—Margaret Lo¬gan Clark, 2nd floor of Ida NoyesHall.Pres.— Gertrude Holmes, BeecherHall; Tel.— Dorchester 3306.V. P.— Miriam Miller.Sec.— Francis Kendall.Treas.— Emelyn Rowell. ‘i\iiPage FiveTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927ST. JAMES METHODIST CHURCH ERECTION OF NEWEDIFICE BY FIRSTPRESBYTERIANNEW CATHEDRALLOOMS IN MIDSTOF UNIVERSITYBaptist Church Under Dr. BoyntonDevelopes anThe Woodlawn Baptist church,(5207 University avenue, offers oppor¬tunities to young people for both re¬ligious instruction and pleasant socialcontacts. The Bible schools, whichmeet each Sunday noon, are open topersons of every age. There is a spe¬cial class for college students. TheYoung People meet every Thursdayat 8. The program these eveningsusually consists of devotional serv¬ices, followed by plays, musicales, orgames.Besides promising a warm welcometo University students who may liketo attend the Bible classes and YoungPeople’s meetings, the church issuesa cordial invitation to them to cometo the luncheons served by the Wom¬en’s Circle the first and third Fridayof each month from October to May.The price is forty cents.Only one of the many useful and Active Membershiphelpful services the church rendersis its custom of conducting a ChineseSunday school every Sunday after¬noon from 3 to 5. During the twenty-five years of the existence of thisschool fifty-seven Chinese have beenbaptized.Compared with several others inthe community, the Woodlawn Bap¬tist church is young, having beenfounded in 1890, two years before the 'establishment of the University onthe Midway. Since then not only itscongregation has expanded to 1200members, but its organization has ex¬tended its interests into over thirtydepartments of local church work andrelated activities.Morning services begin at 10:30every Sunday; the evening servicesare usually evangelistic meetings atwhich Rev. Boynton often commentsfrom the pulpit upon the world’s hap¬penings. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHChanning Club Combines ReligiousDiscussion and Social LifeTwo things about this church areof pai’ticular interest to students.The Channing Club, a student club,meets in the parish hall of the churchon Sunday evenings. It is one of themost free discussion clubs about thecampus. All sorts of subjects comeup for the talk, some cultural orartistic, others touching upon thelatest radicalisms in religion andmorals. It is a live club, interestedin a religion which is eager to facenew conceptions of life frankly andfully. The social aspects of the clubare pleasant. An informal supper isserved at six o’clock every Sundayevening before the discussion. Occa¬sional dancing parties are held andthere are some plans for a dramatic I interest during the new season,j A student class, open to both men1 and women, will be conducted by Mr.Roland Haynes, secretary of the Uni-| versity, at o’clock on SundayI mornings.The First Unitarian Church is thegrey stone building at the corner ofWoodlawn avenue and Fifty-seventhstreet. It was the first Gothic chapelto be built in this vicinity. Mr. Mor¬ton D. Hull, now congressman fromthis district, gave the funds for itserection.The ideal of this Unitarian Churchis free and open-minded thought withnatural and dignified worship. Itseeks to develop rich cultural usageswhich might conceivably be the normof the future American Church.NEW CHAPEL TO BE CENTER OF RELIGIOUS LIFETo Be Home of GrowingReligious Idealismin QuadrangleThe University chapel being builtat Woodlawn Avenue and Fifty-ninth Street is nearing completion,and the architects hope to have itready for dedicatory services by nextJune. It embodies the performanceof the condition which Mr. John D.Rockefeller laid down when he madehis final gift of $10,000,000 to theUniversity. The specification wasthat $1,.100,000 of this fund beused for the construction of a chapelwhich should both assert the dom¬inance of religion in the institutionand represent the cardinal idealembracing the endeavor of all de¬partments of instruction.The late Mr. Bertram G. Goodhueof New York, one of the outstand¬ing architects of the country, waschosen to sketch plans for the struc¬ture, but after having started thework, he died before finishing. Thedesigns, however, were ably com¬pleted by his assistants.Work was begun in August, 192.1,and has continued steadily to thepresent time. The full height ofthe building, eighty odd feet, hasbeen reached, while the tower haspassed the half-way point. Work¬men are putting on the cement roof,a copper one will follow. The costof the completed building will ap¬proach $2,000,000.The structure is large having aseating capacity of 2,000 and meas¬uring 2f>4 feet in length and 118feet in width, while the uncompletedtower reaching up from the eastwall will be 200 feet high. The pat¬tern is Gothic. As one looks at thebuilding, he is impressed by thesharply-cut masses of stone risingto the ragged, unfinished top. Thedesign departs from the general Eu¬ropean type mainly in its providingfor four large windows in place ofmany small ones.The chapel’s interior will be fin¬ished in warm-colored stone andwill contain statues sculptured abovelife-size by Mr. Lee I.awrie.Eminent architects all over theUnited States have been watching Dr. W. H. Boddy Ministersto a GrowingCongregationThe First Presbyterian Church ofChicago, Sixty-fourth Street atKimbark Avenue, William HenryBoddy, minister, is now in the midstof erecting a beautiful new churchat a cost of half a million dollars.the work and say that the chapelwill be the most beautiful exampleof ecclestiastical architecture ini America. Only a few weeks ago, inj a conversation with Dr. on OgdenI Vogt, who is minister of the FirstUnitarian church and author of“Art and Religion”, Mr. Ralphj Adams Cram, a celebrated AmericanI architect and writer, gave highJ praise to the University chapel.Mr. Cram was formerly the part-; ner of the designer of the buildingj the late Mr. Goodhue.With the addition of the newstructure, the neighborhood has be¬come, in Dr. Vogt’s mind, quite re¬markable for its chapel. The JosephBond chapel, constructed in EnglishGothic style, is located just south¬west of Swift hall and holds noonservices for all students four daysa week. The Thorndike Hiltonchapel, adjoining the Chicago The¬ological seminary at University Ave-(Continued on page 4) ST. JAMES M. E.A MODERN CHURCHHas Modern Plant and RichTraditionsIf you are desirous of attending achurch that is rich in tradition yetwith a keen vision of the presenttask and its responsibility we inviteyou to St. James Methodist Churchlocated at Forty-sixth Street andEllis Avenue. Three of St. James’pastors have been made bishops,namely: Dr. McIntyre, Dr. Quayle.and Dr. Mitchell. A high standardfor the pulpit has always been main¬tained and Dr. King D. Beach, thepresent pastor, continues to maintainthis high standard. He is a graduateof Albion College and received hismaster of arts degree from the Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania. The degreeof Doctor of Divinity was conferredupon him by Albion College in 1921.Dr. Beach studied two years at Col¬umbia University specializing in psy¬chology, economics, and sociology.His sermons show keen insight intothe problems of modern life and areanalytical and logical, refreshing aswell as helpful to the trained mind.In this beautiful church, Univer¬sity students will find provision forboth intellectual stimulus and socialevents. The building includes socialhalls, well-equipped kitchen and din¬ing rooms, a gymnasium with lock¬ers and showers, and a stage.(Continued on page (5) LIBERAL CHURCHWELCOMES STUDENTSINTO MEMBERSHIPAll Souls Liberal Church, Black-stone avenue and 66th place, is ofespecial interest to University stu¬dents for two reasons. First, be¬cause the Rev. Fred Merrifield, pas¬tor of the church, is a very wellknown member of the University’sBiblical Literature depai'tment: andthen because of the unusual charac¬ter of the church itself. All Souls isan independent church entirely freefrom denominational or creedalshackles. To join the Church, onesimply subscribes one’s name to theBond of Union: “We join ourselvestogether in the interest of Moralityand Religion, as interpreted by thegrowing thought and purest lives ofhumanity, hoping thereby to bear oneanother’s burdens and to promoteTruth, Love and Righteousness in theworld.”Since the church was founded topromote community well-being, itsemphasis is on practical helpfulness.Through the community service pro¬gram more than 150 boys and girlsof every faith are reached each week.To quote one of the church brochures,“This same emphasis on practicalhelpfulness characterizes the intel¬lectual activities of the church. Thesermons . . . which include fre¬quent reviews of significant booksand articles, may be depended uponto keep one abreast of the more im¬portant currents of thought in phil¬osophy and science as wrell as in re-(G’ontinued on page 6) TEMPLE PLANNINGCOMMUNITY HOUSECollege Age Students FormSpecial CongregationThe Temple (Isaiah-Israel), at the jcorner of Greenwood avenue and jHyde Park boulevard, hopes to erect ia new community house on its jgrounds within a year. This will 1necessitate the tearing down in part, |at least, of the building which is lo- jcated just north of The Temple andcontains the offices and the Sunday :school rooms.Organizations which may attractthe interest of students at the Uni¬versity are the Junior Auxiliary,which includes young people of bothsexes from fifteen to nineteen yearsold, and the Junior Congregation, theages of whose members range fromeighteen to twenty-four years. The new parish house is expected tobe completed by Christmas. It hasbeen planned for a modern pro¬gram of religious education. Thestandard sized gymnasium, chapel,and assembly will have special at¬traction for young people.During the erection of the newchurch over one thousand peoplecrowd the morning worship at11 and the Church School at 9:30which are being held in the Wads-wrorth School Building at 64th andKenwood Avenue.Evensong, a service for youngpeople, is being held from five tosix in the Immanuel Lutheran churchat 64th and Kenwood. The YoungPeoples’ Christian Endeavor Societymeets from six to seven in the sameauditorium. Plans are being madefor the young people to adjourn tohomes for a social and fellowshiphour.University men will be interestedin the two classes for young men inthe Church School, and Universitywomen will be welcomed by the FortDearborn and the Diakonia Classes.A cordial invitation is extended toall students and faculty.In the Ministry of Music we haveMr. Daniel Protheroe, director of alarge chorus, with Miss Helen Pro¬theroe as soprano soloist, and Mrs.Anne Pearson Maryott, organist andassociate director.Page Six THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927UNUSUAL PROGRAMON SUNDAYS ATBAPTIST CHURCHWoodward to Address Men;Dr. Gilkey to Preach on“Wake Up Your Gums”The Sunday evening services of theHyde Park Baptist Church, 5600Woodlawn, are planned particularlyfor University and community youngpeople. The programs are arrangedby the Young Peoples’ Church Club,which, since its origin in 1920, haslived up to its name. The talks ofthe ministers, Charles W. Gilkey andNorris L. Tibbetts, are pointed di¬rectly toward the experiences andneeds of young people. At six o’clocksupper is served in the social hall.At seven, college men have the op¬portunity of hearing outstanding menfrom the University and the city ad¬dress the Men’s Group. Vice-presi¬dent Woodward is to speak on Octo¬ber 16. At this same time collegewomen will find congenial companyin the Quest Group. There is a spe¬cial group for graduate women whichmeets in the church parlor.An inspiring service of worship be¬gins at eight o’clock. Mr. Gilkey haschosen “Wake Up Your Gums’’ as hissubject for October 16. It is partof a series of talks on American Per¬spectives Revealed in Recent Adver¬tising. Every other week one of thechurch homes holds open house forthe young people, following the even¬ing service.The thought and worship of theSunday morning service held ateleven o’clock has been shared regu¬larly for many years by large num¬bers of University students. Cam¬pus men and women are invited to at¬tend the morning class at ten o’clock.Baptists students are especially in¬vited to a “Dutch” Dinner on StudentChurch Sunday, October 16, at oneo’clock in order that they may beintroduced to each other, meet theyoung people of the church, and be¬gin to make friends. “Dutch” meansexactly what it says: dinner will beserved for fifty cents. Students whoplan to come are asked to write ortelephone the church making reserva¬tions before Friday, October 14. Hereis a chance to invite friends! H. P. PRESBYTERIANTHE COMMUNITY’SOLDEST CHURCHDr. Davis, Popular Speaker toMany Student Audiences,Is Pastor St. Mark’s to HearRev. Alfred Newberyat Autumn DinnerFor the annual fall dinner of theStaint Mark’s Society in Ida NoyesHall at 6:30 Tuesday, October 25, theHYDE PARK BAPTIST CHURCHCHICAGO LAWYERTEACHES CLASS ‘Come to Church’—Christian ScientistsActive Christian EndeavorMeets at SevenANNUAL BANQUET OFWOODLAWN LUTHERANTO BE OCTOBER 21 The Bible School of the WoodlawnUnited Presbyterian Church offersunusual opportunities to Universitymen and women. Hugh T. Martin,j attorney for the Uinois Life Insur¬ance Company, teaci es a class forj men and women of college age Sun-j day mornings at 9:45. There is alsoI splendid opportunity for teaching in; the Junior, Intermediate, and HighI School departments of the Bible! school. One of the largest societiesof the United Presbyterian church isj the Christian Endeavor which meets1 at 7:00.The next Communion service is( October 30. Students are especially| invited to attend on that day. Stu¬dents, already members of a UnitedPresbyterian church, are invited toi write for their letters, and other stu-j dents without church affiliation arealways warmly received.Rev. R. C. Gibson has been theminister for a number of years. Dur-j ing his pastorate in the UniversityCommunity he has been a friend ofstudents.The Woodlawn Immanuel Luth¬eran church, Sixty-fourth street andKenwood avenue, will give its an¬nual student banquet in honor ofthe Lutheran students of the Uni¬versity on Friday, Oct. 21 at 6:30in the church. All Lutheran stu¬dents are cordially invited to attend.Furthermore, the church not onlyurges Lutheran students on thecampus to join its congregation butwill extend a warm welcome to allattending the University who visitthe services. One of the many ad¬vantages which the church offers toLutheran students is perfect freedomto use the building for their ownsocial functions.The order of services for eachSunday follows: church school, 9:45;morning service, 11; vesper, tea, 6;Luther league (young people’s or¬ganization), 6:45; evening service,8.In a letter to the Y. M. C. A. Credit Given forCourses in JewishHistory at TempleUniversity students will he inter¬ested to know that courses in Jewishhistory, for which credit is granted atthe University of Chicago, are nowbeing given at the WashingtonBoulevard Temple. 25 North KarlovAvenue. More detailed informationmay be secured from Dr. Kaeysitz,1800 Sheldon St. The Tenth Church of Christ.I Scientist, 5(>40 Blackstone avenue, iseager to welcome new applicants formembership. Students at the Univer¬sity under twenty years of age arewarmly invited to visit the Sundayschool, which meets every Sundaynoon for instruction from the BibleJ and the Christian Science textbook.In addition to these opportunities for| religious education and improvementin the Sunday school, the churchmaintains a reading room at 5500Blackstone avenue, which is opendaily from 9 to 9, except on Wednes¬days. when it closes in time for theservices at 8. and on Sundays, whenit is open front noon until 7:15. Hereall literature put out by the ChristianScience Publishing society may beread, borrowed, or purchased.Services are held every Sunday at10:45 in the morning and at 7:43 in theevening and are conducted mainly bythe First Reader who, aided by theSecond Reader, reads the Lesson-Ser¬mon printed in the Christian ScienceQuarterly. The order of service in theManual of the Mother Church is ob¬served throughout.Every Wednesday evening at <8 isheld a meeting at which the FirstReader reads selections from theBible and front "Science and Health,with Key to the Scriptures" by MaryBaker Eddy.The subject of the Lesson-Sermonfor Sunday, Oct. 16 is “The Doctrineof Atonement." while the Golden Textis Galatians 2:20, “I am crucified withChrist: nevertheless T live; yet not I,hut Christ liveth in me: and the lifewhich 1 now live in the flesh I live bythe faith of the Son of God. who lovedme and gave himself for me.” EVANGELICALSBUILD IN SPRINGA New Community House forYoung Peopleof the University, the WoodlawnImmanuel Lutheran church writes,“Entering students particularly areurged to remember that even astheir college work should enablethem better to take their place inthe world at large, so their partici¬pation in the life of the churchshould enable them better to taketheir place in the world of Christianideals and actions.”Y. M. Plans Program to MeetInterests and Needs of StudentsThe Young Men’s Christian As¬sociation begins the work of the yearwith a well planned program anda strong cabinet.At the first meeting of the Cab¬inet, Tuesday, Oct. 13, Pres. Stiek-ney outlined the plans and policiesof the year. The cabinet is to meetat 8:00 every other Tuesday eve¬ning. Leading faculty men and min¬isters will be invited to speak in¬formally at the meetings. Some ofthe outstanding phases of the pro¬gram for the year are:1. Six to eight visits to commun¬ities where week-end conferencesare to be conducted among the boys.2. Three Internationa! Friendship Institutes in communities varyingfrom 2000 to 10,000 in population.These institutes to be conducted bystudents from other lands.3. A program of group life forthe entire Freshman class to be fol¬lowed by an intensive programamong a selected group of Fresh¬man. This later group to be knownas the Sir Geo. Williams Club.4. A unique devotional service inthe Hilton Chapel Tuesday morn¬ings at 7:15, planned primarily formen seeking to learn the art ofmeditation.5. An active cooperation with thechurches in the special studentnhur^h SnnHov and in Denomination- Dr. Willis L. Goldsmithal Club programs.6.A number of informal “fire¬side meetings” of fraternity anddormitory groups.Pres. Stickney announced the fol¬lowing new members of the cab¬inet:John Crowell, finance chairman;Daniel Autry, religious meetingchairman and Giles Penstone, CivicInterest chairman. The Immanuel Evangelical church,at 7008 South Michigan avenue, isplanning to build during next year.Tentative decisions provide for theerection in thp spring of a new com¬munity house next to the pastorageon one hundred front feet of landowned by the church. By the yearending May. 1927, $75,000 had beenraised for this purpose.Organizations of the ImmanuelEvangelical church open to Univer¬sity students are the junior and se¬nior branches of the Young People’ssociety, which, composed of both menand women, meet on the first Tues¬day of each month and discuss ques¬tions suggested by “The Tidings,” anewspaper published by the NationalYoung People’s society. The presi¬dent is Mr. Herman Benz.In addition, the Young Indies’Bible class, “Semper Fideles,” andthe Young Men’s Bible class meetevery Sunday morning at 9. The Hyde Park PresbyterianChurch is the oldest protestantchurch in the community. Long be-! fore the University was established,, pioneers had planted this place ofi worship in the isolated village of! Hyde Park. For seventy years thischurch has had a continuous history, and its record of achievement andj service is a notable one. It has al-' ways had a close sentimental connec¬tion with the University, many of itsmembers being on the University fac¬ulty. It has in turn been able to min¬ister to thousands of university stu-j dents.The Young People's Society for theuniversity ages meets at 5:45 onSunday afternoons with tea. Thishour is one of introduction andfriendship. Discussions on varied andvital subjects led by competent groupleaders follow. A general forum forj expression of opinion is maintained.; At 9:00 the first Sunday evening ofeach month, a social is held at whichscores of young people are presentand in addition to this the social pro¬gram includes some sort of get-to¬gether every two weeks.One of its strong features has al-i ways been the quality of its music, |and today it has as its organist, jPhilip Manuel, one of the leading!musicians of the city. The quartette jassociated with him handles the great )' classics of music with spirit and un- ;derstanding.The minister of the church, R. M. !Davis, has been in the pastorate forsix years following a long line of fav- Iorably known preachers. Dr. Davishas held pastorates in San Francisco,Boston and St. Louis. He has stu¬died at Harvard. Boston. Washington, |Missouri Valley College, San Fran- jcisco Theological Seminary, Andover, jand Cambridge Episcopal. His en jgagements to speak at colleges, uni- jversities and student conferences !carry him throughout the count. . . Father StreetReverend Alfred Newbery will be thespeaker.The Reverend Charles L. Street,Ph. D., Episcopal student chaplain,has announced an autumn quarterseries of Sunday afternoon meetingsat the Church House at 58th St. andKimbark. On Student Sunday, Octo¬ber 16, he will speak at the informalreception for new students from 4:30to 6:00.A communion service will be heldevery Sunday morning at 9:00 inpresident; Jack McBrady, vice-presi-Hilton Memorial Chapel.The officers are: Marion McGann,dent; Carol Simons, secretary; Don¬ald Bell, treasurer.Dr. Hopkins to TalkDiety of Christ”onTHE SCROOBY CLUBIS SOCIALLY ACTIVEAT HYDE PARK CONG.The Scrooby Club is the studentorganization of the Hyde Park Con¬gregational church. The club meetsat 6 o’clock Sunday evenings at theChurch House, 1364 E. 56th St.; anhour is devoted to student discus¬sions, followed by a buffet supperserved in Dewhurst Hall which ad¬joins the Church House. Once amonth Scrooby Club gives a dance.The next one is a Hallowe’en partyto be given October 28, at DewhurstHall. This is a Scare Crow mask af¬fair and you are invited to don youroldest clothes and join us.Dr. Willis L. Goldsmith, who hasalways been associated with churchesin college communities, came to thischurch last fall. The church offers afull Sunday program, beginning witha “college class” at 10 in the morn¬ing. The regular church service isat 11. On Student Sunday, October16, Dr. Goldsmith will speak on “Ed¬ucated; For Better or For Worse.” LUTHERAN CHURCH INWINDSOR PARK KEEPSSTEP WITH PROGRESSLiberal ChurchWelcomes Students(Continued from page 5)ligion. Political and economic prob¬lems are treated fearlessly and with¬out projudice.” Mr. Merrifield’s “acti¬vities as chairman of the ChicagoCouncil on World Unity are makingAll Souls Liberal Church nationallyknown.”St. James M. E.A Modern Church(Continued from page 5)The social hour of the Epworthleague begins at five-thirty. Uni¬versity people are especially invited.“The Church of the Living God”will be the subject of Dr. Beach’smorning sermon on Student Sunday,October 16. The Windsor Park EvangelicalLutheran church, located at Seventy-sixth street and Saginaw avenue inone of the most flourishing com¬munities in Chicago, was foundedonly twelve years ago, but has keptin step with the progress of theneighborhood. Its members areready to extend a hearty welcome toall students of the University.Its faith finds its basis in theApostles’ creed. The ch urch be¬lieves that every thought, word, oract offending the law of God is sinand that Jesus Christ died in man¬kind’s stead for mankind’s sin. It isproud of its faith.Services conducted by the Rever¬end Arthur H. Kaub commence at10:45 every Sunday morning. The jBible study group meets at 9:30 un- |der the guidance of Mr. E. W. Bu-row. Beautiful organ music fillsthe interval.Moreover, students will be espe¬cially interested in the meetings ofthe young people every second andfourth Tuesday of the month at 8in the parish house.On the campus the church is rep¬resented by the Luthern Waltherleague, whose meetings are an¬nounced on the bulletin boards. Four of the most remarkable booksabout the Christian religion that haveappeared in recent years are those byBishop Charles Gore, formerly Bishopof Oxford, and afterward Bishop ofDurham. These hooks are the basisof an unusual series of sermons an¬nounced for the Sunday morningsin October and November at TheChurch of the Redeemer. Blackstoneavenue and East Fifty-sixth street.The Rev. Dr. John Henry Hopkins,Rector of the parish, invites the stu¬dents of the University to a'l of theservices. The sermons on the “Dietyof Christ” are mentioned only be¬cause they are a special feature ofthe immediate program.Cf particular interest to youngpeople are tlm meetings of the YoungPeoples’ S >r:: 'ty on Sunday after¬noons at 5:30 in the Parish House.Supper is served at 6. The YoungMen’s Bible Class me«*ts every Sun¬day at 10 A. M. Rev. Benjamen Hor¬ton, assistant rector, D th° leader.The Rev. Dr. John Hopkins’ BibleClass for women and men m ets at7:45 P. M. on Fridays in the Chapel.Swedish Mission HasGolden AnniversaryThe S ved’sh Mi sjon ta'ermrV,located at I angley avenue and Sixty-second street 5*5 prenarii'r to ce’e-brate its fift:eth ann:versa v ” ithjubilee festivities to he held fromThursday, Nov. 19. to Sunday. Nov.20. Besides the attendance of theformer pastors who are now living,a special concert will he on° of themost attractive feature- of the tendays.The Mission tabernacle flourishedat La Salle and Thirtieth streetsfrom the date of its establishment in1877 until 1913, when the buildingwas sold to colored people. The cor¬nerstone of the present church waslaid in 1912, and a year later thestructure was dedicated. During itsfifty years of existence the churchhas sent six missionaries to China,two of whom died during their workof preaching the gospel.Chicago Sends Good DelegationTo Conference at Lake GenevaAt the first Geneva Conference ofthe Y. W. C. A. held at College Camp,Wisconsin, from July 31 to August 8,the University of Chicago was rep¬resented by twelve women. Prof.Arthur H. Compton of the Universityof Chicago Physics Departmentshowed some pictures of his tripthrough the Orient, taken by hismovie camera, at one of the eveningmeetings of the Conference.Some of the outstanding speakersof the Conference were: Kirby Page, Editor of the World Tomorrow, How¬ard McCluskey, from the PsychologyDepartment of the University ofMichigan, and Dean Voight fromOhio University.This conference was attended bywomen from the many different col¬leges in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illi¬nois, and Wisconsin. Several univer¬sities sent larger delegations than theUniversity of Chicago. The OhioState delegation numbered over forty.Team changes 41‘Beware ofPurdue” to ‘‘Beat Purdue!”THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927 Ticket sales indicate newrecords in grid attendance.STAGG SPEEDS PRACT1CE AS GAME LOOMSPSKJ., A.E.P., D. U.; WIN OPENING TOUCHBALL GAMESRAIN SLOWS UPPLAY; TEAMWORKPROVES RAGGEDPsi U., 1926 Title HoldersLook Strong InVictorySlow games, caused by rain, andone upset featured the season open¬ers in the I. M. touchball league.Psi Upsilon, as expected, defeatedZ. B. T. 18-0. A. E. Pi took thesupposedly strong Sigma Nu teaminto camp by the score o f 12-6. P.U. showed their expected strengthin defeating Tau Delt 30-0. KappaSig and Phi Lam, both showing astrong defense, fought it out to a0-0 tie. Chi Psi and Beta also dis¬played defensive strength in a 0-0deadlock. The Sig Chi vs. Delta Sigame was called on account of rain.P.i U., 18; Z. B. T., 0Psi U., last year’s champions,swept through Z. B. T. in a fastgame in impressive fashion. Free¬man starred for the winners by longruns for two touchdowns. Maclayaccounted for the other score. TheZetes seemed unable to organizetheir defense against the fast PsiU. backs.A. E. Pi, 12; Sigma Nu, 6A. E. Pi furnished the biggestupset of the afternoon, as Sigma Nuwas expected to have little difficul¬ty beating them. Arkules accountedfor the first score in the openingminutes of the game. Brignall thenevened the score with a long endrun but A. E. Pi came back againand scored the deciding touchdownwith Klein’s r»0 yard run.D. U., 30; Tau Delt 0In the fastest game of the dayD. U. swamped Tau Delt. Changnonand Holinger starred for the win¬ners by accounting for most of thetouchdowns.Chi Psi, 0; Beta, 0Playing the slowest game of theafternoon Chi Psi and Beta wereunable to break a deadlock, evenwith the help of two overtimeperiods. Hagey was the outstandingman for the Chi Psi’s.Kappa Sig, 0; Phi Lam, 0Kappa Sig and Phi Lam, playinga slow brand of touchball, were un¬able to score on their rather laxoffensive play and finished theperiod locked in a 0-0 tie.MULROY’S MIDGETSIN SHAPE FOR TILTTom Mulroy’s ninety pound Mid¬way Midgets are getting ready for thebig tussle. Almost daily the fourteenmembers on the squad practice at IdaNoyes Ficlld in order to be in pre¬paredness for the big annual gamewhich takes place with another light¬weight team in Stagg Field imme¬diately preceeding the Chicago-Wis-consin one.The Midgets promise to provideenough thrills during their game tomake the work of the Maroon andBadger giants seem tame in compari¬son. Most of the Midgets groundgaining is done by Buddy Sherer,quarterback, and Frank Wright, full¬back.I. M. ANNOUNCEMENTSDespite the fact that the offficial I.M. season has already opened, manypositions for men are open in the in¬tramural department. Men desiriousof jobs should report to the I. M.ooffice. Six I. M. GamesOn Day’s ProgramOf the six games to be playedthis afternoon the A. T. O.-T. K. E.and Alpha Delt-Phi Sig tilts are ex¬pected to have much bearing uponthe title race.3:00 FieldPhi Delts vs. Lambda Chi 1Phi Kaps vs. T. S. O. 2A. T. O. vs. T. K. E. 34:00Alpha Delts vs. Phi Sigs 1Macs vs. Phi Betes 2Phi Gams vs. Alpha Sigs 3HARRIERS EXPECTUPHILL STRUGGLE;—Coles and Berndtson HavePossibilitiesi !Maroon prospects in cross country !I track though more cheerful than last j| year are still nothin gto build high |• hopes on. Of the experienced run-• ners from last year there are onlyj Jackson, Dystrup and Dick Williams,j captain of the track team back. BothI Williams and Jackson last year placedj in the upper half of the conferencerun. This showing last year coupled |with inevitable improvements seem 1to offer an assurance of at leasttwo good runners for the long-dis¬tance jog.Two other men also bid well tomake the team. They are “Rudy”Coles who is a junior in school hutgoing out for the varsity for the firstj time and Berndtson who also has ex-! cellent prospects. If these two run¬ners pan out as expected Chicago Iwill have a five man team that, !though not very likely conference Ichamps, will be able to make a good (showing in any meet that they enter.Another man, Burke, who showed Ifine prospects last year was expected .; to help bolster up the team but he 1has dropped out of school.According to Dick Williams therewere no Freshmen of any promise in jlast year’s squad except one and the |j team will have to depend almost en- !j tirely an old material. This one |} freshman, Penner, was the first place |winner in the Intramural run. Hemay be able to displace one of theold men and get a regular positionon the team but he is not beingcounted on as yet.Wisconsin which has won the con¬ference championship for three yearsrunning is generally considered tohave the best prospects for coppingit this year but little is known about1 the other teams and Chicago may i! end up high.According to schedule on October22, Chicago will have a Quadrang¬ular meet with Indiana, Northwest¬ern and Wisconsin at Washington |Park; on November 9 a dual meet jis scheduled with Purdue here, andon the 19th of November the con- |ference meet will be held at Ann IArbor. This meet will mark theclosing of the season and it is upontheir showing in this meet that theschools’ ratings will be made.VETERAN CARDINALHARRIERS VICTORThe brilliant 23 to 22 victory ofthe Wisconsin cross country teamover Kansas University last Satur¬day reinforced the Cardinal’s pos¬sibilities of annexing the harrier titleof the Big Ten again this season.The time was 17:45:6. Coach Jonesthis week began training his pupilsfor a quadrangular meet at Chicagoon Oct. 22 with Northwestern, In¬diana and Chicago. Unprecedented Ticket Sales ReportedIn Wake of Enthusiam Over VictoryDON’T Y’ KNOWBeginning with Purdue Saturday jafternoon Chicago meets as formid¬able an array of teams on successiveweek-ends as any team in the coun¬try. Pennsylvnia, Ohio State, Mich¬igan, Illinois, Wisconsin all followone another in an uninterrupted line.One thing is certain whatever maybefall, and that is, those of thesquad returning next fall will not,no matter where else they may belacking, be handicapped by inexper¬ience.o o o oPurdue with her tricky offense,Penn with her hidden ball and endruns plays, Ohio State with her off-tackle slants, Michigan with heraerial game, and Illinois and Wis¬consin with only Anna Eva Fayknowing what should furnish theMaroon squad with a good chunk ofinformation of what is being donearound the country in a footballway.o o oAt least I hope this is true, forI would like very much to see theHoosiers successful on their eastern 1trip. Harvard who like many a jgood school has suffered a declinein her athletics—and •who, by the jway, has applicants for admissionsend a personal photograph with jtheir applications—has, on a mildscale, been trying to recover lostprestige. They have experimentedwith coaches and achieved little orno success* and last year someoneover there happily thought that afew intersectional victories, espe¬cially over Big Ten schools, wouldgo a long way in making Harvardonce again the scene of Frank Mer-riwell fiction.o o oAnd in finding Big Ten teamswhom Harvard could be dependedupon to defeat Purdue and Indianalooked the most likely. Last Sat¬urday did the most awful thing ex¬pected of them and won. Nowalthough I have the utmost respectfor Harvard and her traditions, and ■would like to see her once moreascend the pinnacles of athleticprestige, I am loath to have her doso at the expense of the Big Ten;and so it would gladden my heart jconsiderably if Indiana succeeded in iromping over the Crimson in themanner of Purdue.Crew Most PopularSport At HarvardCrew is the most popular Fresh¬man sport this fall, according to jfigures given out yesterday by the jDepartment of Physical Education iat Wadsworth House.Rowing leads the list of electivechoices with a count of 197 men,who are reporting daily to Coach H.H. Haines at the Weld Boathousefor preliminary practice on the ma¬chines and in the twenty-oared bargeLeviathan ,and for subsequent as¬signment to crews.Tennis follows in the order of ,popularity, with 183 men signed up 'for play on the Soldiers Field andJarvis Field courts.Football ranks third in the list,134 first year men having signified jtheir intention to work on the jFreshman and Dormitory squads un¬der Coaches E. L. Casey, ’19 and A.W. Samborski, ’25. Sellouts For Big GamesTo Fill NewStadiumThe University athletic fundstands to reap in a full harvest infootball proceeds this fall. The pasttwo games have been very success¬ful for early season games and theprospects for the gates for the fu¬ture games seems to indicate un¬precedented ticket sales. Accordingto Mr. Blair, who is in charge ofticket sales, the outlook for all thegames after Purdue and possibly alsothe Purdue game indicates completesell-outs. Purdue has taken oversomething like 6,000 seats whichthey are undertaking to sell to theirstudents and the followers of theirteam. Besides these six thousandseats they have the option of buy¬ing more and if they exercise thisprivilege to any extent there willbe a sell-out for the game. If theydo this they will have about half thestate here for the game.2200 “C” BookAbout twenty-two hundred “C”books have been sold and about 20,-000 seasons seats have been sold tonon-students. Besides these seatswhich are of course sold for all thegames the Football Committee hasbeen literally swamped with ordersfor seats for individual games. Ifthe present rate of applications keepsup the Committee expects to makecomplete sell-out for all the gamesin this way without selling any overthe counter at all. This situation issure to exist for the Michigan andWisconsin games at least and pos¬sibly for some of the others. In re¬gards to the out of town games, alight migration is expected to OhioState not exceeding 1,000 to 1,500,however. This is not as large itseems as this is not all U. of C.students but includes all the ticketssold at th*» ticket office.For the Illinois game a Maroonavalance is expected. Prospectivefigures for this games cannot ob¬tained the University is opposed tostudents attending the away fromhome games. However the IllinoisCentral R. R. is preparing aboutthirty special trains to run down toChampaign on the week-end of thebig games. One of these trains is forstudents exclusively called the Ma¬roons and leaving from 53rd Streetat 7:15 on the morning of the game.By means of these trains the I. C.expects to accommodate somethingsomething like 18,000 people fromChicago.GREATER TURNOUTFOR HOCKEY SOUGHTDearth oi candidates for women’sJunior and Senior hockey teams willeliminate upperclassmen from falltournament competition unless othersregister for the advanced class withinthe next few days.Seven seniors and twelve juniors arethe only representatives of the Seniorcolllege teams who have appeared atpractice sessions up to date. Manyhave had no team experience and willhe of little help to their teams in casethey make the squad. Some old starsare back. Among the seniors PollyAmes, Gudrun Egeberg and MildredHeindl are strong defensive players.Alice Wiles and Edna Wilhartz willhe a decided help to the Junior team.Juniors and seniors may still comeout for hockey, according to Miss Or-sie Thomson. Senior college coach,Upperclassmen are tto be remindedthat results of the hockey tournamentwill he an important factotr in deter¬mining which class shall receive theinterclass cup at the end of the year’scompetition in sports. Purdue Alumni OutFor Game in ForceSix hundred Purdue alumni,toother with 120 band mem¬bers have made reservations atthe Windermere hotel for thecoming week end. This advanceguard is an indication of thelarge number of rooters thatwill aid the Boilermakers intheir attempt to gain a victoryover Chicago. A big alumnimeeting is planned for nextFriday night in order to get theformer students pepped up forSaturday’s game.WILL USE SOPHS-HANLEY THREATBergham and Haas ExpectedTo StarPossibilities that a sophomorebackfield will be inserted into the] Northwestern lineup for the OhioS game at Columbus Saturday was im-| minent as Coach Hanley began prep-l arations for the coming struggle.Highly dissatisfied with the show¬ing of his regular backs in the Utahi game last Saturday, the new Purplementor plans to work his youngstersj on the first string eleven duringi practice this week. It was thesesophomores who pulled the Utahgame out of the fire after the vet¬eran backs had failed to get go¬ing.To Use BacksTwo sophomore backs, Rus Berg-herm and Johnny Haas, showedthat they can carry the oval and un¬less Coach Hanley decided other¬wise these two halfbacks will see alot of service against the Buckeyes.Bill Calderwood, a sophomore full-i back, also demonstrated a lot ofability and should see action Satur¬day. Bert Fox who was understudyto Moon Baker last fall and conse¬quently did not break into the line¬up is coming along fast as quarter¬back on the second eleven.However, it is not likely that suchmen as Capt. Gustafson, Tiny Lew¬is, Walt Holmer and “Yatz” Levisonwho constitute the regular backfieldwill remain on the bench throughout, the Ohio engagement. The chagrinj they will receive while working outJ with the scrubs this wreek may be! just what they need to get them in| shape for the game,j Over a thousand rooters fromI Evanston will accompany the Wild-| cats on the fahio trip. These fans| will be led by the 100 piece North-I western band. Students and alumni! will leave Chicago Friday night on1 three special trains over the Penn-1 sylvania railroad.Zuppke Has VastRespect For AmesCoach Bob Zuppke calls Iowa Statethe toughest early season opponent,with the exception of Nebraska, thatthe Illini have booked in years. IowaState came perilously near upsettingthe Nebraska Cornhuskers in theirfirst game this season, a fumble anda penalty giving the Nebraskans a6-0 decision.On the eve of the Big Ten cam¬paign, Zuppke is putting together ateam that may be more permanentthan preceeding lineups. Humbertshould be available as fullbackagainst Ames and other team prob¬abilities who have been indisposedare expected to be back in harness.Line candidates are staging a hotcompetition with talented sopho¬mores and lettermen fighting forevery position with the possible ex-I ception of center where all-confer-I ence Bob Reitsch holds forth. VARSITY PRACTICESSIGNALS; RESERVESSCRIMMAGE FROSHLinemen Go Through HeavyDrill; “StopWelch”In a driving, miserable rain whichshowed little letup during the entirepractice session yesterday, the Ma¬roons underwent another stiff after¬noon of training in preparation for thePurdue game next Saturday, a tiltwhich Midwayites are already labeling’as a crucial struggle.Coaches Jackson and Crisler tookj the linemen in charge and spent a hitof time polishing up their work. Cris¬ler who scouted the Harvard-Purduegame brought hack some interestingreports about the intersectional match.The linemen heard plenty about theprowess of Welch, who made such abrilliant showing in his first game.I Welch hit Harvard’s line repeatedlyI for big gains, and after he had startedI the route. Koratisky, Purdue’s batter-I ing fullback completed the rest of thehavoc.Regulars in Signal PracticeThe regulars, fit and ready now forthe Boilermakers, indulged in a long1 session. Mendenhall and AndersonI worked at the halves, McDonoughcalled signals, and “Rudy” Levers op-i erated from his regular position. Rays-I son returned to the firrst team for thej time since he sustained injuries in thei Oklahoma tilt. “Speed” looked goodin his workouts yesterday afternoonand expects to be in fine shape forSaturday’s tilt.The freshmen again furnished theopposition for the afternoon. Equippedwith Purdue plays, the freshmenscrimmaged against the reserves.They made good gains in the earlierpart of the workouts, their passes ef¬fectively making long gains. CoachStagg Hayed the reserves on theirslow workout, and smarting under hiswords as well as the exhortations ofLine Coach Jackson, they smeared thefreshmen continually.The maroons are speedding up inI their workouts as Saturday’s game| looms up in the offing. Wilcox, theI Boilermaker captain, will be on thesidelines Saturday, as his leg is noti fully recovered, but Coach Phelan hasj just as an important a threat inI Welch. The Texas Cyclone is theway they label him down in Indiana,and from reports emanating from La¬fayette, the Purdue mentor has greatfaith in his ability to come throughSaturday.In the Maroon camp, a feeling ofdetermination prevails. There is littleover-confidence among the squad,since Purdue is looked upon as one ofthe strongest teams in the country.The Maroons feel that, having beatenIndiana, it is not impossible to repeatthat stunt against Purdue.I-M GOLF ENTRIESMUST BE IN TODAYGolf enthusiasts should be sure tohave their entries in the I-M officetoday if they want tto compete in theannual I-M tourney. Dr. Molanderannounces that twenty teams have al¬ready sent in their entries. Pairingshave almost all been sent out, andcomplete schedules will soon be dis-j tributed. First matches must bej played by Oct. 17.One hundred twenty doubles horse¬shoe-pitching teams have already beenj entered. Students not connected withj any organization are urged to enter.as individual awards are given in ad-I dition to team awards.Contestants in the cross-country| meet should start getting in conditionfor the run which occurs Nov. 2.j Graduates should enter their teamsnow, as competition starts soon.Page Eight THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927NOTES FROM THE GARRET1. To M. S. M.Twilight casts a screen . . .A silver sheenOver the day’s harsh hour® . , .And like a dreamOf golden loves and lovely bowersWe live againThrough years of painAnd ponder over memories . . .Once,—they were our rhapsodies . .—Eee•‘PRESS Photographs R. 0. T. C.Today,” read the Daily Maroon head¬line yesterday. Our esthetic selfwould be much happier if, for achange, they’d press their uniforms!THE RIGHT Honorable JamesWeber (pronounced "Weebev”)Linn's method of imparting inform¬ation to his classes has reached us.and we deem it of sufficient im¬portance for quotation. “First,” say-the genial Weber, “I tell my stu¬dents what I’m going to tell them;than I tell them what 1 tell them,and then, to top it all. I tell themwhat I’ve told them'”THE FABLE AESOPOVERLOOKEDTriumphantly the college manIn W-3 JBethinks him of the noble workHis college brain has done . . .From out the dusty archivesHieroglyphics he has fishedAnd copied them on seven slipsFor seven books he wished . . ,Upon the grim card catalogsHe looks with cold disdain!For HE is one to persevere . . .HE has not searched in vain!He leans upon the table;At the silent “lifts” he looks.He waits . . He hopes . . He gasps . . He walksAway with Seven books,—Le ColporteurYOUNG MR. Dick Grossman whohelps with the Daily Maroon’s ad¬vertising in between classes andmeals, made a terrible mistake theother night. He okayed the adver¬tising proof at the printers, and thefollowing day when the paper cameout the Gargoyles Tea Room ad wasupside down! We bet that the nexttime he goes there for a meal theywill serve him coffee first, then des¬sert, then meat, potatoes, vegetableand salad and finally soup'CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENTFrom last Tuesday’s paper:“ROOMS—2 rooms, quiet, adjacentbath gents; (5141 Evans, Fairfax3121, Private family.” The personrenting will be lucky in having theassociation of such clean men! around here, but it sure gives a modern civilization when Stagg didfellow a feeling of satisfaction to j not fear pUmue:know that he’s a big ham on cam- ! GEO-Gpus!” IMR. JOHN HERMAN McBRADY,R. C. F. C. (Royal Canadian FlyingCorps,) recently appointed Stewardof The Pickwick Men's Club hasbeen flooded with congratulations.For the press, Mr. MeBradv madethis statement: “Pm no pig whenit comes to gluttonizing all the glory6°'cK9*GO/TOWER63RD AND BLACKSTONEVAUDEVILLE-AND THE BESTFEATUREPHOTOPLAYSComplete ChangeOf Program EverySunday & ThursdayJUST THE PUCE TO SPENDAN AFTERNOON OR EVENING ON OCTOBER 12th, 1492—fourhundred and thirty-five years ago—Columbus discovered America. Thedate is famous as one of the fewOctober twelfths in the history of FOR RENT—5519 Kimbark Av¬enue, 4-room English basement apt.near campus, furnished, newly dec.,modern and convenient for smallfamily. Rent $45, no linens.(StOmdaluilPlud&it:Miclien.The Slickest Coat on the Campus!No well dressed college manis without one. It’s the orig.inal,correct oiled si icker andthere’s nothing as smart orsensible for rough weatherand chilly days.Made of guaranteed water¬proof oiled fabric in yellow,olive-khaki or black. Hasall-’round strap on collarand elastic at wrist-bands.Clasp-closing styleButton-closing styleStamp the correct name inyour memory and buy noother.JWavfJViuM:The “Standard Student” ismade only by the StandardOiled Clothing Co., N.Y. C.Slip one on atWoodworth’sU NIVERSITY l?OOKSTO RECARSON PI HIE SCOTT & CO. Do these questionsinterest you ?1. How do college men like the bondbusiness?2. What type of man is most successful?What income can a man expect in the4*5-6.8. bond business?What are some of the difficulties ofthe business?How is a clientele built up?Is the bond business expanding? Whatof its future?What different kinds of ability doesthe bond business provide room for?Does the bond business develop char¬acter and business judgment?THESE and many other questions pertinent to col¬lege men who are considering the bond business as alife work are answered in our booklet, “ The BondBusiness as an Occupation tor College Men,” Weshall be glad to send you a copy, upon request.If rite for pamphlet CM-XHALSEY, STUART &, CO.INCORPORATEDCHICAGO NEW YORK. PHILADELPHIASCI S. La Salle Si. 14 \\ all St. 111 South Ifth St.DETROIT MILWAUKEE ST. LOUIS601 Griswold St. 44; East Water St. 119 North 41b St. BOSTONSi Devonshire St,MINNEAPOLISCiq Second Ave., S.J. H. F1NN1GANDruggistCigars, Cigarettes, Candy,Ice Cream55th St. at Woodlawn AvenuePhone Midway 0708 UNIVERSITY LUNCH5706 Ellis Aye.Try Our Minute Service Lunch35cChop Suey & Chow MeinOur Specialty 1 WANT ONE MAN(in each house)To Represent Selecman’s, Inc,THE UNIVERSITY SHOP315 Plymouth CtThis shop specializes exclusively in clothes for the Universityman. I he man in each house who is selected has an un¬usual opportunity. I will interview men all this week andwill make selections Oct. 18.•SHORTY” SELECMAN.BOOKSText-books for all classes-and second-hand. t POSTAL STATION■ A New ServicePackages insured, Letters registered, Stamps and IMoney Orders sold, etc.-newAll the newest publications inFiction, G e neralSubjects,* P oetry,Drama, etc.Many BargainsLearn to BrowseHereStickers like the cut above for books,suitcase, windshield2 for 5cEither side gummed TYPEWRITERSALL MAKESRent—Sale—ExchangeExpert RepairsNewColoredCoronas AllthePortablesGYM SUPPLIESfor BothMEN AND WOMEN i FOUNTAIN PENSQUICK REPAIRSNOTEBOOKS AND FILES Write your firstletter home oncSTATIONERYReal “doggy"papers of all kindsGet YourGREEN CAPSHereI KODAKS AND SUPPLIESFilms Developed24-Hour ServiceFrom 10:00 A. M.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE