Vol. 28. No. 21.Main StreetBy Milton S. MayerJohn J. Mitchell never in all hislife heard of me, and now he is dead.He never in all his life heard of anyof us, any more than George Wash¬ington heard of him, or Shakespeareof George Washington, or Socratesof Shakespeare. It is an inalienabletruism that men who are great tothe.eternity of the future are noth¬ing to the eternity of the past. Inwhich triusm one or another, of usought to find a moral lesson, andprofit by it. But none of us everdoes. But even to so simple a manas Your Correspondent, this infer¬ence is plain as the sun: that thework of the world must be done, thatthe miseries and penalties of theworld must be borne, that the pleas¬ures and gifts of the world must bereaped. You and I, as we drivel ouryouth away circuitously, seldom, ifever, sit down in a big chair, foldour hands over our midriffs and mut¬ter, through the fog “Ours, as theGood Book says, is truly a wondrousheritage. To us the earth bequeathsitself. The future holds no terrorsfor us, only the ills and the goodsthat the present holds for the pres¬ent. And, by St. Runyon, that is so.There are some mighty well shinedshoes for us to fill. For instance, thepast three months have taken anawful toll out of the ranks. First,Leonard Wood, soldier. Two weekslater Ogden Armour, packer. Andthe next dark day Elbert Gary, man¬ufacturer. And now the banker.General, captains of industry, masterof finance—all of them the verygreatest in their fields. Swish!—onegust of wind, and they are the dustyequivalents of the centuries. And weare next in line. Le roi est mort—vive le roi! It’s a rum go.While we are treading on the heelsof the great and shoving them intow'hat Ambrose Bierce called death’sbaby carriage, it is solemn to musefor a moment on the requisites forgreatness. This last week-end, a fewof us shunned the road to Rome andtook ourselves into the woodland ofWisconsin, and into the thickest ofthe woods—Madison. Coming home,we failed to stop at a hazy sort ofsign that commands “STOP,’’ andthereby calls your attention to thethriving, God-fearing village ofEvansville, Wisconsin. A fellow ofsober age and rural aspect poppedout of the void and, motioning us tothe side of the road, began fillingout a card that later took the formof a summons. One of the boys de¬trained and tapped the pompousReader of the Law on the shoulder.“My good man,” said my friend, “bywhat right of heaven or earth doyou detain us?” “Yew didn’t stop atthe Arterial, young feller,” repliedthe Dispenser of Justice withoutlooking up. “And what does thatmean?” my friend inquired. “Itmeans that yew be thar at the City |Hall at noon tomorrer.” “Don’t benuts, mister,” my friend rejoinedcongenially. At this the wooden sol¬dier was animated with fury. He es¬corted us to the sacred presence ofMr. Fred Gillman, chief of police(and his brother-in-law). We hadoffended his greatness. In the eyesof his fellow citizens he was one ofthe pillars of society. He had prob¬ably never been outside of Evans¬ville, and he had hitherto been sat¬isfied that his own importance wasmatchless. John J. Mitchell had nev¬er heard of him, but then he hadnever heard of John J. Mitchell. Andour captor will never know, to hisdying day, that the world thoughtmore of John J. Mitchell than it didof him. There are points of viewfrom which greatness is an easything to lay hold on.If I am called upon for a reporton the Universitas Wisconsinensis,situated on the shores of beautiful(see booklet) Lake Mendota, andrecently visited by me (see above),I shall say that conditions are un¬changed. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1927 Price Five CentsDEDICATE HOSPITAL, CLINIC TODAYROUSE IS NAMED SENIOR PRESIDENTOTHER POSITIONSWON BY GORDON,KENDALL, BOYDFootball Captain WinsPresidency OnFirst VoteKenneth Rouse was elected presi¬dent of the senior class at the elec¬tion held last Friday. In winning,Rouse defeated the other two can¬didates, Fred von Ammon and Mil-ton Hayes, by a large majority ofthe votes cast.Ken Rouse is best known on thecampus for his work on the footballteam of which he is captain thisyear. He is also a member of theY. M. C. A. cabinet, the electionboard, and Sigma Nu fraternity. VonAmmon, a member of Phi GammaDelta fraternity has been active instudent vaudeville performances,having managed the recent Dads’Day performance and the Interscho¬lastic vaudeville last year. He is amember of Blackfriars and was fea¬tured in the show last year.“Tex” Gordon Is TreasurerFrances Kendall was elected vice-president, defeating Catherine Fitz¬gerald and Carol Hess in a closerace. Frances Kendall is generalmanager of Mirror, a college aide,and a member of Wyvern.The office of treasurer was won byTex Gordon who defeated the onlyother candidate, John Kennan. Gor¬don, an Alpha Tau Omega, won his“C” in baseball, is treasurer of theinterfraternity council and co-lead¬er of the interfraternity ball.Brady ProtestsRuth Boyd was elected secretaryof the class in a close decision overDorothy Low, the other candidate.Paul Brady has filed a protest ofthe sophomore election held lastWednesday.Silver Loving Cup,Charms, and PrizesGo To Ad WinnersThe advertising department isthrowing out halt to the freshmen inthe form of a quota and point con¬test. Eacn one is given a quota, andif he fulfills this, he is given a ma¬roon charm and a cash prize. Pointsare given for proof reading, carryingcopy, and getting advertising. Whena person makes a hundred points, heis given 3 on the football contest, onwhich each freshman is teamed, andwhich is divided into quarters ofthree weeks. The individual who hasthe most points in the football con¬test wins a silver loving cup.At present six men are entered inthe contest, but more are needed, andthose who come out now are assuredof an even chance.CITIZENSHIP GROUPOF Y. W. HOLDS TEAMrs. Quincy Wright of the inter¬national peace committee of theLeague of Women Voters, will speaktoday at a tea to be given by theCitizenship committee of the Y. W.C. A. from 3:30 to 5 in the Y. W.room of Ida Noyes hall.The purpose of the meeting is todiscuss what can be done in a con¬structive way to arouse women stu¬dents’ interest in current affairs andproblems, and in the need of intelli¬gent voters. A regular discussiongroup working on these principles,may be formed later in the quarter. A. A. Stagg Ill GivesHoliday to GriddersAmos Alonzo Stagg, III, wasborn to Mr. and Mrs. AlonzoStagg, II, at 9:30 Sunday nightat the Lying-in Hospital. The boyis the first child of the secondgeneration of the Stagg family.He weighed seven and one-halfpounds when born. His mother isreported as resting well. Dr.James Henry Bloomfield attendedher.Both the father and the grand¬father of the boy were overjoyedover the addition to the Staggfamily. When asked for a state¬ment, “Lonnie” said, “We arevery happy.” A. A. Stagg, I, how¬ever said that he had declared aholiday for today, but no actionhas been taken by the school exec¬utives.Sophomore HonorClubs AbandonPlans For DanceNo Score Club-Skull and Crescentdance will be held, according to thedecision reached by those two or¬ganizations in joint meeting. Theproximity of the interfraternitydance and inability to find anotherdate are the reasons for this decision.Although the dance of the sopho¬more and junior honor societies maybe held in the spring, it is not pos¬sible to hold it on the date set, Nov.18. This date is so close to that ofthe interfraternity ball that Mrs. R.V. Merrill, director of social activ¬ities of the University thinks that itwould be unwise to hold two dancesof such magnitude within that time.It happens, however, that this par¬ticular date is the only one on whichproper accommodations can be se¬cured.For the present, therefore, theScore Club and Skull and Crescentdance is unconditionally off. Thereis all likelihood of its being heldsome time later in the year, but noth¬ing definite in this line can be issuedat present.ALUMNI DRAMATISTSAUTOGRAPH PHOTOSFOR TOWER STUDIOAutographed photographs of manyalumni who were prominent in theDramatic Association have beenframed and will be placed in theTower room in Mandel hall. Thegallery will consist of forty picturesof men and women who were connect¬ed with the Tower Players, Gargoylesand the other dramatic groups.The assortment of celebrities willinclude Milton Sills, William Green,of the Goodman Theater players, EveKohl, a prominent actress, and Mrs.Howard Willet, President of theDrama League of America. Mr.Frank O’Hara, director of under¬graduate activities, has communicatedwith people who were prominent indramatics as far back as 1902.‘Maroon’ RequestsSubscription BooksThe circulation department of TheDaily Maroon has requested that allclub and individual saleswomen whohave not yet turned in their subscrip¬tion books for The Daily Maroon doso at once. As soon as all books havebeen turned in thte circulation depart¬ment will announce the winners ofprizes and will award commissionsfor all subscriptions. CUTTER, JUNIORPRESIDENT, PICKSCLASS COUNCILTwelve Men and EightWomen SelectedFor CouncilThe council of the Junior class,anounced today by Charles Cutter,newly elected president, is as fol¬lows: John Crowell, Robert Fisher,Harry Hagey, John Jackson, RobertMcKinlay, Milton Mayer, VerlonMeskimen, George Reed, PerryThomas, Charles Warner, Saul Weis-low, and Richard Williams. Womenon the council are Ethel Brignal,Florence Buddig, Charlotte Eckhart,Elzabeth Gates, Dorothy Hartford,Ellen Hartman, Florence Herzeman,and Dorothy Sylvester.Crowell s a member of Delta Up-silon, as is McKinlay and is businessmanager of the Cap and Gown. Mc¬Kinlay has also been active in inter¬scholastics. Fisher is a Beta and ad¬vertising manager of The Daily Ma¬roon. Hagey, Chi Psi, is junior man¬ager of intramurals. Jackson, Kap¬pa Sigma, is captain of the cross¬country team, and Williams, AlphaDelta Phi, is captain of the trackteam. Mayer is a member of ZetaBeta Tau and is news editor of TheDaily Maroon. Meskimen, Alpha TauOmega, has been on the basketballsquad. Reed is editor of Cap andGown and a member of Alpha SigmaPhi. Thomas, Phi Kappa Psi, Warn¬er, Psi Upsilon, and Weislow, PiLambada Phi, have all been in Black-friar’s shows.Ethel Brignall and Dorothy Hart¬ford are members of Quadrangler,Florence Buddig of Wyvern, Char¬lotte Eckhart of Sigma, ElizabethGates of Mortar Board, Ellen Hart¬man of Esoteric and Dorothy Syl¬vester of Chi 'Rho Sigma.Season Tickets forCampus DramaticsOn Sale This WeekOne hundred season tickets for theDramatic Association’s new yearlyprogram of five plays may be pro¬cured by the faculty, students, andalumni for five dollars. According toHadley Kerr, president, the objectof the season tickets is to assure theassociation of an interested audience.All tickets entitle the bearer to a re¬served seat.The association will present “DaisyMayme”, George Kelly’s latest NewYork hit, on Friday. “Caesar andCleopatra” by Shaw; the AnnualPlayfest, a group of plays writtenand acted by students; and The Mir¬ror production will be given later inthe quarter. The fifth play will bepresented early in the Spring quar¬ter.The box office will be open dailyuntil Friday from 10 to 5 in the Rey¬nolds club corridor.NUMERALS AWARDEDAT W. A. A. MEETINGW. A. A. will hold an open meet¬ing today at 12 in the gymnasium onthe second floor of Ida Noyes hall,to award numerals and pins.The annual Chicago Night dinnerwill be held Friday at 6 in the biggymnasium. Tickets may be pur¬chased for one dollar at the deskin the check-room of Ida Noyes hall,or from Ethel Brignall, chairman ofthe committee, Flossie Herzman,Ruth Moore, Alta Christenson, AliceWiles, Annette Allen, or CarolineTetzel, assistants. Memorial HospitalTours Start TodayTours opening the Albert Bill¬ings Memorial hospital and theMax Epstein clinic to the generalpublic will be conducted today forthe first and last time in the his¬tory of the hospital. It is expect¬ed by officials of the hospital thatmany students will take advant¬age of this opportunity to visitwhat is acknowledged to be oneof the finest equipped and mostmodern hospital groups in thecountry.Official delegates to the medicalconvocation held yesterday weretaken through the buildings yes¬terday afternon. The clinics andlaboratories were open for inspec¬tion from 4 to 6, and tea wasserved in the Billings library onthe second floor of the Universityclinics.Burlesque Game,Stunt FeatureFreshman CircusPlans for the freshman circus tobe presented between the halves ofthe Chicago-Wisconsin game are tak¬ing form under the leadership of therepresentatives of the groups. Pres¬ent plans are to have a burlesquefootball game, an audience for thegame, a series of circus stunts, andmusic. The tasks of providing thesehas been divided between the fellow¬ship groups. The plans will be furth¬er formulated when the representa¬tives of the groups will meet andhave lunch in Room D, in the Rey¬nolds Clubrooms.Groups Meet TonightThe fellowship groups of thefreshmen will meet tonight at 7:15.Groups 1 and 2 will meet togetherin the south lounge of the ReynoldsClubrooms, group 3 in Room A,groups 4 and 5 in Room D, group6 in the Commerce and Administra¬tion Building, 58th and UniversityAvenue, group 7 in Room C, group8 in the little theatre of the Rey¬nolds Clubrooms, groups 9 and 10 atthe Chi Psi house, 5735 UniversityAvenue.MULROY, PENSTONE,DAVIES ELECTED TOLEAD LAW STUDENTSMembers of the Senioj class ofthe Law schol last Friday sleeted thefollowing officers: president, WilliamDavies; vice-president, Max Lurie:secretary, Inez Catron; treasurer,James Daley; and councillors, Alex-!ander Elson, John Morris, and VictorWisner.In the Junior class the results ofthe vote were president, ThomasMulroy; vice-president, BenjaminGreenbaum; secretary, Robert Mc-Dougal; treasurer, Claire Driscoll;and councillors Chris Devatenos,Joseph Hasterlik, and Lester Plotkin.Freshmen returns were president,Giles Penstone; vice-president, Jose¬ph Cody; secretary, Jerome Weiss;treasurer, Paul Leffmann and coun¬cillors, Rudolph Bergeson, HeberTaylor, and Irving Goodman.Women CounsellorsMeet at Ida NoyesAll Upperclass Counsellors are re¬quired to attend the meeting whichis to be held at 3:30, on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes hall. New studentsto whom upper class counsellors havenot been assigned, should give theirnames to Laura Reynolds, in Kellyhall. AWARD DEGREESTO NOTABLES INMEDICALWORLDJames Rowland AngellDelivers Address AtConvocationAccomplishments of modern medi¬cine are the products of the scientificlaboratories and clinics of universitymedical schools, James Rowland An¬gell, president of Yale university,said yesterday in an address on“Medicine and the University” in the148th convocation of the University,which was part of the dedicationservices for the university’s newmedical school on the Midway.More Than Trade School“In the degree to which any medi¬cal college is merely a trade school—and there have been plenty of such—it has no real place in a univer¬sity,” President Angell said. “Theuniversity medical school should notonly open to properly qualified menthe opportunity for the mastery ofscientific methods of thought and theattainment of a sound scientificscholarship, but it should also cre¬ate and stimulate a vital enthusiasmfor continued growth in scientificand general intellectual power, to¬gether with the insistent ambitionto promote and extend the field ofgenuine knowledge.“We are all familiar with the de¬pendence of medicine on the physicaland biological sciences and we takeas a matter of course the require¬ment made of the medical studentfor a reasonably wide familiaritywith the sciences. But we have notas yet fully learned, what is, for ourgeneration and under our Americanconditions, quite as important, to wit,the fact that a constant interchangeand cooperation between the inves¬tigating organiz chemist and thepioneering pathologist, between thebacteriologist and the biologist, on(Continued on page 2)Capacity Crowd ToHear PhilosopherTonight at MandelBertrand Russell, well known Eng¬lish lecturer, is to deliver a talk on“Education and World Peace” at 8:15in Leon Mandel assembly hall. Afull house will be present as talltickets have been disposed of by thepublicity office.Mr. Russell’s work on this subjectis well known to all students of sci¬entific and social fields. In addi¬tion to being special professor atHarvard university for a number ofyears and now on the lecture staff ofthe British Institute of PhilosophicalStudies, Mr. Russell is a prolific andversatile writer of philosophic bookson many phases of social and physicalscience.Mr. Russell is not a stranger tothis country a? he has lectured manytimes here, his most recent appear¬ance hung at the Chicago Forum lastSunday.LECTURE PRECEDESSYMPHONY PROGRAMThe second of the University Sym¬phony concerts will be held today at4:15 in Mandel hall. A Bach-AbertPrelude, Chorale and Fugue willopen the pi ogram, following whichwill be presented Tschaikowsky’sSymphony No. 6, “Pathetic,” B Min¬or, Opus 74, and four movements ofa Glazouno^tr ballet from the suite,“Russes d’ Arrour,” Opus 61.An explanatory discussion of theprogram with } iano excerpts, will begiven by Mr. Mack Evans, choirmas¬ter and organist, today at 3:15 in theMitchel Tower studio.—(IJP ' "I" , . -Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1927iatltj ilanumFOUNDED 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 year extra. Single copies, five cents each.Entered as jecond-class mail at the Chicago Postoffice, Chicago, Illinois, March 13, 1906,under the act of March 3, 1873.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any material appearingin this paper.OFFICE—ROOM ONE, ELLIS HALL5804 Ellis AvenueTelephones: Editorial Office, Midway 0800, Local 245; Business Office,Hyde Park 4292; Sportk. 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 DEPARTMENTMenMilton S. Mayer News EditorCharles H. Good Day EditorRobert McCormack Day EditorDexter W. Masters Day EditorLouis Engel Day DditorEdwin Levin Day EditorGeorge Gruskin Whistle editorWomenMargaret Dean Junior EditorHarriet Harris Junior EditorMary Bowen Literary EditorRosalind Green Sophomore EditorHarriet Hathaway Sophomore EditorAldean Gibboney Sophomore Editor SPORTS DEPARTMENTVictor Roterus Sports EditorRobert Stern Sports EditorHeary Fisher Sport AssistantElmer Friedman Sport AssistantEmmarette Dawson Women’s Sport EditorBUSINESS DEPARTMENTRobert Fisher Advertising ManagerRobert Klein Advertising ManagerHubert Lovewell - AuditorJack McBrady Circulation ManagerWallace Nelson Classified Ad ManagerJames Paddock Office ManagerEarle M. Stocker....Ass’t. Advertising ManagerRichard Grossman ....Downtown RepresentativeWilliam Franks ....Local RepresentativeSidney Hess Circulation AssistantJames Rutter Circulation AssistantSam Teitelman Circulation AssistantAngus Horton Circulation AssistantStanley Dicker Advertising Correspondent“SURPRISE EXAMINATIONS” |OCCASIONALLY even at the University of Chicago we find asenior college course in which the usual method of procedureis for the instructor to come to class every day, sit at his desk withclass record and pencil, and spend the hour asking questions aboutthe subject he is supposed to be teaching. Not only is this systemin a certain sense an insult to his senior college students, but itmakes of the instructor not a propounder of truth but somethingon the order of a weighing machine upon which students awaittheir turn to stand.This system as it stands is bad enough, we think. Perhapsit is necessary. We doubt it. But when an instructor who“teaches” in this way supplements his method by the practice ofgiving examinations without warning—“surprise examinations”—we think the thing is being carried to an absurdity.The principal defense of instructors who conduct senior col¬lege courses in this way seems to be that this method is the onlyone by which they can ascertain whether or not students are keep¬ing up with the prescribed work. But, in the end, why should itmake a difference to an instructor whether a student does a partic¬ular piece of reading—on Friday or on the following Tuesday aslong as he does it and does it thoroughly ? In the case of papersand reports it is of course imperative that some time limit beset because of the necessity of grading. But where certain reg¬ular assignments are made, we see no reason why a senior collegestudent who has elected a subject presumably because he wantsto study it, should take a low grade in it merely because he a fewpages behind on a particular date.By the time a student has reached his last two years at col¬lege he has begun to specialize. The courses he is taking requirestudy of a c-oncentrative nature. They call for long and detailedreports. They demand special investigations and much field work.When a student is engaged in study of this nature he obviouslycan make little progress by mechanically devoting two hours aday to each of his courses. If he is engaged in an investigationwhich requires profound thought, or a report which requires thecollection of remote data, he is forced to divide up his time in adifferent way. He finds it more compensative to spend entireafternoons or evenings on one course.When such demands are made upon a student’s time—andthey are certaily the rule rather than the exception in the seniorcollege—a student must neglect certain of his courses over shortspaces of time.A “surprise examination” given by an instructor must in¬variably catch any number of good, earnest students in this pre¬dicament. Consequently, these students get grades which are low¬er than they deserve. If they had been previously informed of theexamination they would in most cases have found time to catchup, even if it meant the loss of a night’s sleep. It would be folly,however, for students to make a practice of going without sleepin an effort to “keep up with the class” when the required study¬ing could be done to greater advantage at a later time.At all events, the method is certainly not in harmony withour theory here at Chicago that education should be made a mat¬te rof student initiative. OFFICIAL NOTICESTuesday, Nov. 1Radio Lecture: “The Rise ofChristianity,” Shirley Jackson Case.Station WMAQ, 8:00 a. m.Religious Service for all membersof the University, conducted by theDivinity Faculties, Joseph Bond cha¬pel, 11:50 a. m. Dr. Lynn HaroldHough, Detroit, Mich.Faculty Women’s Luncheon, IdaNoyes hall, 12:00 a. m.Clinical Assembly, The UniversityClinics, 2:30 p. m. “Bacterial En¬docarditis” William S. Thayer, TheJohns Hopkins University, “Diseasesof the Gall Bladder,” Evarts Am¬brose Graham, Washington Univer¬sity School of Medicine.Public Lecture (downtown) “Per¬ez Galdos.” Professor Howard Kenis-ton, progessor in Romance depart-ent, Fullerton Hall, The Art Insti¬tute.The Christian Science Society,Thorndike Hilton Memorial Chapel,7:30 p. m.The Church History Club, Com¬mon Room, Swift Hall, 7:30 p. m.“The Student’s Contribution to Re¬search in American Church History.”Professor William Warner Sweet,Professor of History of AmericanChristianity.The Graduai* Classical Club, Clas¬sics 20, 8:00 p. m. “Historical Ob¬servations on Greek Art.” Mr. Ed¬ward F. Rothschild, temporary headof the Art department.William Vaughn Moody Lecture,“Education and World Peace.” Ber¬trand Russell, Philosopher, Essayist,Publicist. Leon Mandel AssemblyHall, 8:15 p. m. Tickets may be ob¬tained without charge in HarperM12, October 29, 31-November 1.Wednesday, November 2Radio Lecture: “The Rise of Chris¬tianity” Professor Shirley JacksonCase. Station WMAQ, 8:00 a. m.Religious Service, for all membersi of the University, conducted by theDivinity Faculties, Joseph Bond cha¬pel, 11:50 a. m. Dr. Hough.Meeting of the Board of PhysicalCulture and Athletics, QuadrangleClub, 12:00 m.The Junior Mathematics Club, Ry-erson 37, 4:00 p. m. “Selected Top¬ics fn Calculus of Variations.” Mr.Thomas Freeman Cope, instructor inMathematics department.The Zoology Club, Zoology 29,4 :00 p. m. “Studies of Animal Aggre¬gation the Protection of the Individ¬ual by the Mass.” Associate Profes¬sor Warden C. Allee, professor inZoology department.Public Lecture (downtown) “The■Problems of the Immigrant”, Mrs.Kenneth F. Rich, Director, Immi¬grants’ Protective League. Univer¬sity College Lecture Room, LakeView Building, 6:45 p. m.University Religious Service, Jos¬eph Bond Chapel: Organ prelude,6:45 p. m. Harris Rockwell Vail, in¬structor in music department, organ¬ist. Service, 7:00-8:00 p. m.Professor James Harvey Breastedin the department of Egyptology andOriental History, Professor Flint,dean of women and chairman ofUniversity Womens’ Council.Public Lecture (Social ScienceConference) “The Mind Body Prob¬lem in Its Modern Form” EltonMayo, Professor of Industrial Re¬search, Harvard Graduate School ofBusiness Administration, former pro¬fessor of Psychiatry, University ofQueensland, Australia. Harper As¬sembly Room, 8:00 p. m. AWARD DEGREESTO NOTABLES INMEDICAL WORLD(Continued from page 1)the other hand, and the clinician inany one of a dozen different fields onthe other, is just as indispensable forthe most effective progress of allconcerned.“Nor have we fully appreciatedthat by such close contact with theinvestigations of men nominally pur¬suing the interests of medicine, or¬ganic chemistry, physical chemistry,biology, bacteriology and psychology,to mention only a few of the sciencesconcerned, may at any moment bebrought face to face with facts ofrevolutionary significance for thosesciences. Yet such is the case, andthe university is the place in whichrelations of this kind can be mosteasily and profitably exploited.”President Angell reviewed thefour decades of effort which culmin¬ated in the present medical schoolat the university. “It is doubtfulwhether anywhere in the world forso long a period the whole programof medical education was ever moreexhaustively studied—a study whichhad the greater significance in thatit attempted on the one hand to meetthe requirements of the highestideals for medicine itself, while onthe other hand doing justice to theneeds of a great metropolitan cen¬ter like Chicago, and to the require¬ments and obligations of the two ex¬isting institutions, the university andRush Medical College, wfiose fusionshas produced the present school.”“While medicine is a very precioushuman heritage,” the Yale president .said, “the university is also of price- |less worth, and if the two are togo forward together, neither must be allowed to sacrifice the essential val¬ues of the other. Universities areamong the most lasting institutionsdevised by the mind of man, theyhave outlasted great political andeconomic institutions: They continuebecause they minister to certain ofthe deepest and most enduring ofhuman needs, needs whose thwartingmen will not long tolerate; becauseto them is confided the sacred torchof learning, beneath whose light andleading man makes his slow circuit¬ ous progress up the mount of wis¬dom. Let us therefore look ot it thatwe measure justly the values whichlie at the heart of this university,that asfeguard and perpetuate its un¬dying service to mankind.”President Max Mason, in his con¬vocation address, stressed the pro¬gram of medical research based onthe fundamental sciences. “We hopeto proceed in a manner typical of allour work of a professional nature,(Continued on page 4)Here it is!—the creamiestchocolateof all!ALMOST overnight the mellow creamyflavor of Nestle’s has made it the fa¬vorite in the most exacting cities in the country!And just for one simple reason — Nesde’s isrichest in cream of all milk chocolates! In 51and 10* bars, plain or with crisp toastedalmonds.Widely varied arethe jobs leading upto telephone man¬agement.Another questfor modern BalboasCOLUMBUS made possible Bal¬boa, and just so Bell has madepossible the pathfinders in telephonywho are now turning his vision intoreality.They are pioneering at the draftingboard, in the manufacturing depart¬ments, in the field and in the workwhich underlies all activity—manage¬ ment. In executive and administrativecontrol, in the supervisor’s opportunityto guide and inspire, there is no limit tothe possibilities of the progressive idea.T he questing spirit into new fieldshas achieved much, but the way re¬mains open for men of the cominggeneration to carry the telephone in¬dustry to still greater heights of service.BELL SYSTEMnation-wide system of 18,000,000 inter-connecting telephones•‘OUR PIONEERING WORK HAS JUST BEGUN”—^ 'Sell-out probable forMichigan game. (TtieS Maroons undismayed byOhio defeat.THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1927OHIO DEFEAT FAILS TO DISMAY TEAMBACKS TAKE RESTAS SQUAD DRILLSFOR WOLVERINESMendenhall, Raysson SufferBruises In OhioGameCoach Stag# ran his Maroon squadthrough a light workout yesterdayafternoon when they appeared forthe first time on the practice field.The team looked a trifle tired fromtheir trip to Columbus but otherwiseappeared in good shape.Backs RestOf the injuries, Rayssoon andMendenhall were the only two reg¬ulars who did not work out yester¬day. Both played a strenuous gameSaturday and were pretty badly bat¬tered by the Buckeye linemen. Theirinjuries however were of a minor na¬ture. Mendenhall nursing a bad el¬bow and “Speed” showing the marksof some bruises. Kyle Anderson,who was knocked cold in the open¬ing minutes of play against Ohio,made his appearance with the vars¬ity, looking none the worse for hisexperience.The Maroons took their defeatphilosophically as they went abouttheir work Saturday. The team feeisthat they were a better crew than theBuckeyes but some bad breaks anaOhio’s rejuvenated playing proveddisheartening.Point For MichiganChicago’s defeat has theoreticallyeliminated them from the Big Tenrunning but from all appearancesthere is a strong probability that noBig Ten team will finish the seasonwithout a defeat. To that extent,the Maroons are pointing for theMichigan tilt with a vengeance.The varsity went through dumm,offensive for a short period and thenretired for the day. The reserveswere not so fortunate as they scrim¬maged during the major part of theafternoon, using Michigan plays.The Wolverines’ famed passing at¬tack was called into use and thevarsity will probably face a stinbarrage of passing for the remaina-er of the week.McDonough played one of hisgreatest games as a Maroon againstthe Buckeyes. His defensive per¬formance was brilliant, time andtime again breaking through theOhio forward wall and nailing therunner behind the line of scrimmage.His field generalship was better thanusual and his plays carried moredaring attack than is his wont.Maroona Play GoodRaysson and Mendenhall bore thebrunt of Chicago’s attank. Speeddrove off tackles consistently for goodgains, while the sophomore flash dis¬played some beautiful broken fieldrunning. Libby, Burgess, and Leyersadded a lot of variety to CoachStagg’s offensive.The Maroons’ passing attack open¬ed up the eyes of the Buckeye squau.Once again, the “Old Man” proved heis the best exponent of the lateralpass in Big Ten circles. The de¬ceptiveness of the Chicago attack,featured by a beautiful overheadgame made the tilt last Saturday oneof the best played in the conferenceBucks FoughtGive the Buckeyes credit though!In the face of adverse criticism andhostile comment, they grimly wentabout their task with a determinationthat proved disastrous to the Marooncause. They tackled hard, fought forevery inch of ground, and played aremarkable game. Their sensationalstaving of Chicago’s drive whenRaysson failed by one inch to scorea touchtdown was one of the higi^lights of the game. DON’T Y’ KNOWBy Vic Roterus“The band is playing somewheretoo . . .”The Crimson, the campus organ ofHarvard, is a very unimpressive anda rather conventional affair, but ev¬ery now and then the editors tireof its conservativeness and, throughits editorial column, pen out some¬thing intended to jazz up the oldpaper and make it the talk of thecampus.* * *Now during autumn there arefour good subjects on which the edi¬tor of a college daily may chooseto dilate. They are, namely, thefootball team, the band, the classelections, and fraternity and sororityrushing. In the instance I have inmind the Crimson Editor found edi¬torial inspiration in the Harvardband,—to be specific, in the perform¬ance of that group of musicians dur¬ing the Holy Cross game this fall.In the editorial the Crimson Editoraccused the band of having the in¬excusable band manners not to playthe Holy Cross song or form thevisitor’s letter. He also rapped thedrum major whose approach towardthe goal posts is a signal for bettingin the stands on whether he willcatch or miss the baton. And hewound up thusly, “If Harvard root¬ers are to be damned to see theirdrum major outjuggled every Satur¬day by an embryonic W. C. Fields,they should at least be spared thehumiliation of apologizing for themanners of its representatives.”* * *The editorial, which was printedunder the title of “Dirty Music,”received quick ractions in the formof two violent letters from the Pres¬ident of the Harvard band and theDrum Major. Apologizing for the“disportionate amount of space givento the Harvard University Band”the Editor of Crimson printed thetwo lengthy letters and wrote areply editorial. The President of theband wrote that the editorial, “DirtyMusic,” was unjust for “the facts inthe situation are that the HarvardBand played a Holy Cross song, the‘Slogan March’, and, while playingthe same, marched to the Holy Crossstands and formed an ‘H’. The DrumMajor reiterated this, besides writ¬ing, in defense of his juggling, thatthe Holy Cross Drum Major had amuch smaller baton.* * *The Editor answered, “ ‘H’ is forharlequinate and a sense of humor.Time was when it stood for Harvard.One is informed that two weeks agoon a Saturday afternoon it stood forHoly Cross, thereby performing themusical feat of doubling in brass.Consequently those who read theMail column in this morning’s Crim¬son may be pardoned for assumingthat it stands for hodgepodge andheartburn. If the Crimson has erredin not being able to distinguish HolyCross’ Marching Song from ‘Hallelu-juiah’ the fault lies not in the re¬semblance between the two anthems,but in the fact that the Crimson edi¬tors are tone deaf, having been sofrom birth. At the Dartmouthgame. . . the Band was louder; itwas not only louder—it was fun¬nier.” The Editor concluded, “TheCrimson does not choose to run until1928,—any more editorials or com¬munications on this subject.”*' * *Outside of the fact that the Bostonpapers had something on the affair,I suppose that will be the end of it.This is to be lamented for I fearthat the Crimson will revert back toits policy of just being a staid oldpaper, when with such a fiery, sar¬castic Editor as the Editor of Crim¬son evidently is, the Crimson wouldbe, at its worst, interesting reading.WyR—Evato”d(,fl,mzzm,Cd x.M lb Several Hundred Seats RemainFor Michigan Tilt; Sellout SeenWith the Michigan game still fivedays away, there are but a few hun¬dred seats left for sale. A completesellout is expected by Wednesday.This means that Saturday the Ma¬roons and Wolverines will play be¬fore a record crowd of 55,000 whichwill be the largest crowd that hasever watched a gridiron game fromStagg Field.When Chicago meets Wisconsinhere in their annual clash on Novem¬ber 19, undoubtedly the attendancerecord will again be smashed. Bythat time the corner stands will becompleted, and with the expectedsellout, 56,000 will be inside the field.By indications from ticket sales,when the Maroons travel to UrbanaNovember 12 to stop the Illini’schampionship march, the entireKAPLAN UNDERGOESAPPENDIX OPERATIONWord comes from the hospital thatBob Kaplan, basketball star of lastyear, is rapidly recovering from anoperation for appendicitis, and will,in all probability, be in fit shape toreturn to his old position at forwardby the time the season starts. Atfirst it was feared that complicationsand weakness resulting from theoperation would keep Kaplan out ofthis season’s play, but the latest re¬ports have it that he will soon bein fit shape. school will be on hand to watch themdo it. Chicago has been allotted8,000 pasteboards for this game andapparently none will go begging.With the game still two weeks off,only about 2,000 seats are left.To help get this army of rootersto the game, the Illinois Central R.R. will run twenty-four specialtrains to Urbana besides those onthe regular schedule. The first ofthese specials will start about 6:00a. m., and the last one at 9:30 a. m.Saturday. It is requested that thosegoing to the game this way make ap¬plication early, in order to assureevery one a fair fight for a seat.The new $10,000 electric score-'board recently installed at the northend of the University of Illinois sta¬dium has received compliments fromvisitors who point out that it is ad¬mirably in keeping with the archi¬tecture and furnishings of the mam¬moth memorial.Ideal for GiftsBeautiful as fine gold. Dur¬able as good steel.A. RUNEMAN6712 Stoney Island Ave.Plaza 2261 FIRST INTER-CLASSHOCKEY GAME TODAYFORTY ON SQUADSWomen’s hockey squads will op¬pose each other today at 2:30 on theMidway in the first game of theinter-class tournament series.Miss Margaret Burns, Miss MaryMcBirney Green and Miss OrsieThomson, coaches, have chosen thefollowing women as members of theclass squads:Seniors: Polly Ames, Janet Child,Gudrun Egeberg, Naomi Fike, Mil¬dred Heindl, Roselle Moss, HazelPhillips, Elva Westbrook and EleanorWilkins.Juniors: Dorothy Baker, DorothyEnsheimer, Margaret Force, Marcel¬la Gedons, Mariane Lipson, GeorgiaMatthews, Eleanor Metzel, FrancesNelson, Margaret Schmitt and EdnaWilhartz.Sophomores: Ma!ry Abbott,Frances Carr, Clair Davis, EleanorGrossman, Geraldine Hacker, BerthaHeimerdinger, Catherine Hugley,Suzanne Kern, Sinah Kitzing, LucilleMayer, Beatrice Scherbler, CarolynStieglitz and Helen Walter.Freshman: Helen Abt, Helen O’¬Brien, Ella Drumm, Dorothy Hall,Margaret Gillespie, Ruth Lackritz,Joan Nold, Marion Rosenstein, Lil¬lian Schesinger, Antoinette Seiys andHelene Simon. Substitutes for to¬day’s game will be Claire Despres,Lois Dodd, Lucia Downing, OliveEggan, Katherine Kellog and MurielLubliner. ILLINI, GOPHERSPERCHED ON TOPOF BIG TEN HEAPMaroons Have Chance ToUnperch Zuppke’sTeamConference StandingsW T L PIllinois 2 0 0 1000Minnesota 2 1 0 1000Chicago 2 0 1 667Michigan 2 0 1 667Northwestern 1 0 1 500Ohio State 2 0 2 500Wisconsin 1 0 2 333Indiana 0 1 1. 000Iowa 0 0 2 000Purdue 0 0 2 000Upsets again featured the confer¬ence title race. The Illini becamewith Minnesota the leading contenderfor honors. Michigan and Chicagowere deefated and in all probabilityput out of the race unless some moreof the upsets occur.Illinois will have to down Chicagoand Ohio State before it will havebeat the most dangerous aggrega¬tions remaining on its schedule.Minnesota has fcnly one Ei£ Tengame left on its schedule, the Mich¬igan tilt.If the Maroons win their remaininggames and if Michigan defeats theGophers, they will be at the top ofthe heap with five victories and onedefeat.Ain’t It a Grand and Glorious Feelin’f• •t •• •• .• By BRIGGS\mh£m Th£ boss offers To dropYoU AT YoUft. HOME OtJ H \ sWAV To YhE CoUn/TrV CLUB amd v/hl~n ne Gets To YbURhumblc. shack A6Ks toLAse Vour Telephone - AmD Hie MNDS Hts CI<3ARBTT£CCasb is Empty Whilewaitimg om a busy limeAnp You offer, him. okje ofYour cigarettss with gomehesitancy Knowing T^t heSmokes am imported Brand - amd them he. praises YpurTaste in Cugarettto-SK I ES OH-H- Boy! AiMT it AGR R-RAMD AMDGLOr-Ft- R--Rious Feeuu' ?7he Smoother and better Cigarette.... not a cough in a carloadG1927. r. l.orUlard Go . K*t. 1760Page FourMe ■A "WhistlePAINFUL PEREGRINATIONS OFA PROWLING PUPOnce there was a garbage houndWho every night did prowl aroundFor garbage.This fearful, gormandizing bruteWithin each can infixed his snootFor garbage.But, oh, alas! One night ill-fated—While head in can he masticatedGarbage,—Above his dome, the heavy lidFrom off its moorage slyly slidAnd hit him hard; oh yes, it did—His neck was of his head quite rid. .And now, exactly as he’d craveHis head has found a fitting graveIn garbage.—j. f. d.How About Two Unused Tickets forthe Oklahoma GameGeorge;Will you exchange roller skatesfor parachute, or what have you?—Lord Lloyd’s LadyCRESCENTonthispalenightthe moonbeckonsuntilI toomustgoanddance withstars—Half-circle.WE OFFER A PRIZE OF FIVEMAROONS TO ANYONE INTER¬PRETING THIS IN THE MOD¬ERN SENSEThere are no stars; there is no sky,The shoe-trees blooms no more.So he took his hounds and trailed aflyAcross the bar-room floor.—Boo.Dear Geo:I. Snapper, from the University ofAmsterdam, was among those ivhohelped .celebrate .Halloween .lastnight in Mandel by giving one ofthose thrilling addresses before theScientific Assembly.—C. H. G.Heresy! Blasphemy! Agnosticism!Iconoclasm!George:Stop it! Your last contributor’sday was terrible! Terrible! Why,dammit George ,what was in it?“Song of Abelard” by j. f. d. . .Hell! If the whole Reynolds club¬house could be purchased for a pro¬verbial “song,” j. f. d. would haveto write a complete symphony to buyone billiard ball.Fiji brilliantly cracked the ancientgag about the fellow who was ineli¬gible for public appearance and soflunked Public-Speaking. Confoundit, why didn’t he have him disquali¬fied for using cough drops as apony?Eee? God, Geo . . , the womanmay have pretty legs but somehowshe can’t seem to write poetry withthem.Etc., etc., etc.,Terrible, I say, terrible!Why damnation, the only versatilecontrib in the whole university, theonly one who strikes me as both in¬telligent and interesting, the onlyone who merits my whole-hearted ad¬miration (I thank the Lord for hispresence) is——The Poisoned Pen(sex unknown)Here’s Something to Think About,ContribsGeorge:How about a contribs contest todevise a column head appropriate tothe new col, con.?—Willi.CONTRIBUTORS DAY again. Weare in the office at noon daily, andwish everybody’s step right in andintroduce themselves. THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1927AWARD DEGREESTO NOTABLES INMEDICAL WORLD(Continued from page 2)conceiving the medical school to bethe cutting edge of a tool thestrength of which is furnished bythe departments studying the funda¬mental facts, utilizing men trainedfor the deeper insight, and not mere¬ly in the technique of formal per¬formance. The real university func¬tion is there—to train for that curi¬osity of mind by virtue of whichfacts may be applied with intelli¬gence, developing a new type of per¬formance so that science may ad¬vance.“The University of Chicago in thismedical school is the administratorfor those whose intelligent and gen¬erous desire it is to accomplish prog¬ress in medical research. The list ofgenerous and humanitarian citizensof Chicago and elsewhere who havemade this project possible is too longto recite. The educational founda¬tions have also assisted and providedfor unit projects of vital importance.For the university, I can but saythat we feel an appreciation and aresponsibility; an appreciation forthe confidence expressed in choosingthe university as the director of then-efforts for the benefit of humanity.We hope that the spirit of our per¬formance will never depart from theaims that President Angell has ex¬pressed, a training for fundamentalinsight, that technique and proceduremay improve year by year.”Honorary degrees of Doctor ofScience were granted to Dr. FrankBillings of Chicago; Dr. William S.Thayer, professor emeritus of medi¬cine, Johns Hopkins university; Dr.Karl Landsteiner, member of theRockefeller Institute for MedicalResearch and Dr. Refus Ivory Cole,dire&or of the Hospital of theRockefeller Institute for Medical Re¬search.In presenting the Frank BillingsMedical Clinic and its million dollarendowment fund to the University,Bernard E. Sunny, chairman of theCitizens Committee and chairman otthe Board of Directors for the Il¬linois Bell Telephone Company, cit¬ed the important part medical re¬search in general and Dr. Billings inparticular has had in raising healthand efficiency standards in Ameri¬can industry.“Opportunity”—the opportunityof the citizens of Chicago to take anactive part in extending the bound-ries of medical knowledge and theopportunity of the University to leadin this research work—was thetheme of President Mason’s response| in accepting the gift of the Citizen’sCommittee.“We are happy in the creating ofthis Clinic and this endowment,” saidPresident Mason, “the manner ofraising the funds has been one of op-; portunity and not of compulsion. Wej are happy in the name of this Clin¬ic—Frank Billings—which will go onI time without end.”Departmental assemblies in theJ new Clinics heard seven famous med¬ical men on recent developments in| research. Dr. W. Mansfield Clark,UNIVERSITY LUNCH5706 Ellis Ave.Try Our Minute Service Lunch35cChop Suey & Chow MeinOur Specialty professor of Physiological Chemistryat Johns Hopkins University spokeon the subject of “Reduction of Dyesby Biological Systems.” Dr. RobertGesell of the University of Michigantold of his work in the regulation ofrespiration, and Dr. Arthur Loeven-hart of the University of Wisconsindiscussed Drug Tolerance and itsMechanism.Dr. Karl Landsteiner formerly ofthe University of Vienna and now amember of the Rockefeller Institute,recognized as one of the two fore¬most iminuology experts in the worldtalked on “Some Recent Investiga¬tions on Antiques.” Urea Executionin Nephritis” was the subject of Dr.Donald Van Slyke’s address. Dr.Van Slyke is also frmo the Rocke¬feller Institute. Dr. Alfred E. Cohn,internationally known heart special¬ist discussed “Medicine and Science.”Medicine is a science concernedwith three interests, teaching, prac¬ticing and investigation, said Dr. A.E. Cohn of the Hospital of the Rock¬efeller Institute for Medical Re¬search, in his address on “Medicineand Science” which followed presen¬tation of the Billings Clinic.QUAD PLEDGESThe Quadrangler announces thepledging of Alice Benning and Vir¬ginia Melody on last Thursday.CLASSIFIED ADSSalesmanager to organize salesforce to sell new vocational characteranalysis to the student body with amoney back guarantee. Write A. C.Beech. 12017 Parnell Ave.Tutoring small children by an ex-pereienced kindergarten and 1stgrade teacher. E. C. Handley, 5533Kimbark Ave.WANTED—Young woman to carefor 2 children some afternoons andmost evenings for board and room,and small salary. Call Plaza 2650.5720 Drexel.STUDENTS—Men preferred, fortemporary work by the hour. 8 to 9If you want a home cookedmeal call 5650 Ellis Ave.Price 40cMrs. Greenstein, Prop.What’s Wrong WithThis Picture?PITY the poor “frosh” who,childlike, doesn’t know howto mount his drawing paper onthe board. However, with Hig¬gins’ Drawing Board and LibraryPaste his troubles will all be over.Even for Freshies it will mountthings flat and keep them thatway! Maxwell Parrish, whosepictures hang in the rooms ofmany a “dorm” and fraternityhouse, says,“7 have never foundanything to replace it."FOR SALE BYUNIVERSITY BOOK STOREWOODWORTH’S BOOK STOREFINNEGAN DRUG CO.T. R. WOLFExceptionally Good Food atDATTELBAUM’SBAKERY AND DELICATESSEN63rd at Greenwood 5240 Lake Park Ave.Salads, Sandwiches, SodasCakes, Pies and Pastry Tasty LunchesWE TAKE ORDERS FOR PARTIESBOVERI RESTAURANTEXCELLENT ITAUAN TABLE D’HOTEA La Carte Service12P.M.- 10 P. M.MIDWAY 2107 1645 E. 53rd Street a. m. and 10 to 12 a. m. Five dollarsfor five hours to be arranged. Leavename, address, phone number at Em¬ployment Bureau.TWO-ROOM KITCHENETTESUITE WITH PIANO, $13.50. 6026Ingleside. To rent— 2-room frontsuite; range, wall-bed, overstuffedfurn. $11.50. Single suites $6.00 up.WANTED—Popular traternity mento sell orchestras. Good opportunityto make money in spare time. Long-beach 6370.MEN—One or two to live near U.Combination sitting and bedroom$5.00, no other roomers, 1007 E. 60thStreet, Apt. 4. Riggs, Phone Dor.7941.FOR SALE—Ford Touring. Runsfine, $75.00. 5729 Kimbark.EXPERT COACHING: In Frenchby foreign student of Paris. Com-ersation a specialty. 6060 Kimbark,Midway 8354. —TYPEWRITING—I am now inposition to do typing of term papers,^Il'W'GO/TOWER63 RD AND BIACKSTONEC&'vJplvsAjunrv, GUacuxLVAUDEVILLEwAND THE BESTFEATUREPHOTOPLAYSComplete ChangeOf Program EverySunday & ThursdayBARGAINMATINEES DAILY SJUST THE PLACE TO SPENDAN AFTERNOON OR EVENIN6 thesis and any other general typingmatter desired at regulation prices.First class work guaranteed. Pleasecall at Room 16, Lexington Hall ortelephone Local 143.J. H. FINNIGANDruggistCigars, Cigarettes, Candy,Ice Cream •55th St. at Woodlawn AvenuePhone Midway 0708 Everything From theOrientat5644 Harper AvenueWe are wholesalers and there¬fore you benefit by our cheapprices.Bolotin’s Oriental GiftsTel. Hyde Park 9448THE SHANTYis servingAn attractive, wholesomedinner every eveningfor 50c.Other Dinners 65c and 75cTHE SHANTY EATSHOP1309 East 57th StreetWE WILL PLACE ON SALE TODAYA SMALL LOT CONSISTING OF A HUNDRED ANDTWENTY FIVE BOOKS BY ANATOLE FRANCE. AR¬THUR PINERO, MAX BODENHE1M, GAUTIER, DOSTOE¬VSKY, MAX BORN, JULIAN HUXLEY, WILLA CATHER,MAX BEERBOHM and others at the special price ofNINETY FIVE CENTS EACHAll of these books were published at from $1.50 to $4.00each. The total value of the lot at the original price exceedsthree hundred and twenty dollars.All books are new and in perfect condition save that the dustjackets have become soiled or damaged.These books will continue on sale until Nov. 5th.OUR FIVE CENT SALE CONTINUES UNTIL NOV. 5thBURT CLARK, BOOKSELLER5642 HARPER AVE. Six Block. East of Mandel HallOpen 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.The one cigarette in a millionThe instant a Camel is lighted, yousense that here is the distinctly bettercigarette. Anti how this superior qualitygrows with the smoking! Choice to¬baccos tell their fragrant story. Patient,careful blending rewards the smokerwith added pleasure.Camel is the one cigarette in a mil¬lion for mildness and mellowness. Its de¬cided goodness wins world popularity for Camel. Modern smokers demandsuperiority. They find it fulfilled inCamels, and place them overwhelminglyfirst.You should know the tastes andfragrances that choice tobaccos reallygive. Camels will reveal an entirelynew pleasure. And the more ofthem you light, the more enjoyable.“Have a Cameiri . J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.€7 1927——GEO-G