SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON ®he Bail? iilaroonVol. 30. No. 21. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7. 1930 Today*» Weather:Unsettled. ProbablyRain or Snow.Price Five CentsANNUAL PLAYEST OPENS TONIGHTName Second Orchestra For PromGENE FOSDICKTO SUPPLEMENTMUSIC ^ ROADSWill Provide ContinuousDancing AllEveningGene FoscUck and his Bal Tabarinorchestra has been selected to siipple-jiient the music of Dusty Roads attlic twenty-sixth annual WashingtonI’rom.Music for dancing will be continu¬ous throughout the evening, to pre¬vent congestion on the dance floor.Dusty Roads will play for the GrandMarch, at 10, while during the supper,which is to be served at 11, music isto be provided by Fosdick.Fosdick, with a ten-piece band, willprovide the slow, soft, sweet musictor which he is famous. His band hasplayed for five seasons at the Ross-Fenton Farms, Asbury Park, N. J.,for three seasons at the Embassy clubin Miami, Florida, and has had en¬gagements at the Royal Danila. PainiBeach, Florida, at Sherry’s in NewVork City, and at the Congress 'notci,Chicago. His orchestra is at presentplaying Saturday nights at the Bal'I'abarin in the Hotel Slierman.The Prom, which is to be held Feb¬ruary 21 at the South Shore Coun¬try club, will last from 9 till 2. TheGrand March is to be led by MarcellaKoerber, Catherine Scott, HaroldHaydon, and Dexter Masters.Tickets may be obtained for $7.75at Woodworth’s and the Universitybookstores, the Phoenix office, and atfraternity houses. I Name Eight UshersI For Millay Readingi! Eiglit club girls have been namedto serve as ushers in Mandel hall onthe evening of Edna St. Vincent Mil¬lay's appearance on this campus underthe spotisorship of '1 ne Forge. Theyare Eleanor Maize, Quadrangler; MarySheean, C^uadrangler; Anne Bolling,Sigma; Martha Harris, Wyvern;Priscilla Bishop. Esoteric; Harriet.MacNeillo, Mortar Board; FrancesBlodgett, Pi Delta Phi; and RuthLyons, Sigma.Choice seats are still available forthe performance of this noted poet(Continued on page 4) Band Adds StageShdhD to ConcertIn Mandel Feb. 14MRS. McCORMICKEXPLAINS WORLDCOURT OPPOSITIONAnd Does It in Spite ofMuch Hecklinglorga Discusses“French in East"Dr. Nicholas lorga, rector of theUniversity of Bucharest, who is re¬garded by faculty members as one ofthe outstanding Roumanians of the<iay, will speak on “French Influencein the Near East’’ in the AssemblyRoom of the .Social Science Building'I'uesday at 4:30.Arrives TodayI^rofessor lorga, whose visit to theUnited States is being made at the in¬vitation of the Nicholas lorga Clubof Indiana Harbor, Indiana, will ar¬rive in Chicago from New York to¬day. His lecture is being given atthe suggestion of Professors CharlesE. Merriam, John Shapley and SirWilliam Craigie.The list of Dr. lorga's literary andhistorical works constitutes an exten¬sive bibliography. The majority ofhis books have been published inRoumanian, French and German. Thetwo which have appeared in Englishare “The Byzantine Empire,” and “AHistory of Roumania.”Varied InterestslUs interests in Bucharest are di¬verse, according to Dr. Craigie, whowill introduce him Tuesday. In ad¬dition to political and scholarly enter¬prises he conducts a mission schooland a popular university, a printingestablishment for providing peasantswith inexpensive editions of goodbooks, and a museum for the displayof Roumanian and other eastern Eur¬opean art.He studied at the Universities ofJassy and Paris and received the de¬gree of doctor of Philosophy at theUniversity of Leipzig. He has receiv-(Continaed on pnge 2) I Highliglus in Mrs. .McCormick’s ad-I dress yesterday;I “I want to break up factionalianj within the Republican party inI Cook county. At present, groupsof candidates are in the habit ofcombining for mutual benefit, dis¬bursing patronage, and further ce¬menting intra-party alliances. 1am running as an independentwithin the party, and by headingthe ticket, propose to have somesay about other candidates.”“For the people to control theirgovernment fully, they must voteat the primaries, in order to de¬cide on the precinct or ward com¬mitteemen whO' run the party’sorganization.”“I don’t want the United Statesto be involved in any war wedon’t choose to involve ourselves(Continued on page 4) A hand concert, but one patternedafter a Balaban and K«atz stage showrather than the staid military concertscharacteristic of bands, will be offeredby the University band under the di¬rection of Mr. Palmer Clark Fridayevening, February 14, in Mandel hall.With a solid background of marchesand military band music, the presenta¬tion will be livened with jazz arrange¬ments and popular tunes, symphonicand tone work, bass and trombonesolos, all inter.spersed with minstrel-show informality, humor, lighting ef¬fects, drapes, and entertainment. Inspeaking of the concert, Mr. Mort,manager of the band, stated thatthough an effort was being made toeliminate the staidness of typical bandconcerts, the quality and artistry ofthe presentation will not be lessened..Admittance to the program is freeas the result of a special effort madeby the band organization to get the(Continued on page 2) Maroons OpposePurdue SaturdayNight in BartlettLineups:ChicagoChangnon, (c)StephensonBoescIFishAslilev PurdueHarmesonKellerMurphyBootsWoodenBy Oscar SelukraStretch Murphy, who is well knownin these parts, will make an appear¬ance tomorrow evening with fourotlier Purdue players to play a confer¬ence basketball game against the Ma¬roons at Bartlett gym.Look to Murphy.Murphy naturally will be the cyno¬sure of all eyes. Last Monday eve¬ning, the Purdue center went on arampage against Ohio State, scoringtwenty-eight points before the finalwhistle sounded. This, by the way,broke the mark lie establis hed lastyear against the Maroons when he(Continued on page 2) Announce ScheduleFor Playfest ShowsThe Dramatic association is an¬nouncing the schedule of perform¬ances of Playfest for the benefit ofthose who may wish to attend boththe basketball game and the plays .Sat¬urday night.“Babbitt’s Paradise” at 8:30.Intermission at 8:50.“Home Rule” at 8:52.Intermission at 9:12.“Within the Four Seas” at 9:15.Scores from the Chicago-Purduegame will be announced between plays.The last play will run for 45 minutes.FOUR MEDIEVALDOCUMENTS ONEXHIBIT TODAYRANEY SUBMITSLIBRARY REPORTIssues Account of Workin 1929 HERRICK HOLDSSCIENC^FORUMDiscussion Sunday Firstof Series Dates Range fromTo 1767 1505EDWARD DAVISONCHOSEN AS NEXTMOODY LECTUREREdward Davison, English poet andcritic, has been chosen to deliver thenext William Yaughn Moody lectureat the University, it was revealed bythe Moody committee yesterdayDavison, who is only thirty-two yearsold, will speak in Mandel hall Tues¬day evening, February 18th, at 8:15.Though Davison’s special interestis in the criticism of poetry, his read¬ing and singing of folk songs havebeen attractive features of his lecture-tours. In 1914, when he was sixteenyears old, he joined the British navy,and before the war was over he hadmade a literary reputation by contri¬butions to such English periodicals as“The Westminster Gazette” and“Land and Water.”After demobilization he spent threeyears at St. John’s college, Cambridge,where he took the M. A. degree. Heedited the “Cambridge Review” andbecame one of the leading debaters ofthe Cambridge Union society. Hepublished volumes of verse in 1920and 1923, and after graduation be¬came editor of the “Challenge,” aweekly review of politics and litera¬ture.In 1925 he came to the UnitedStates and spent that year on theEnglish faculty of Vassar college. Inthis country he has published a col¬lected volume of poetry, ‘‘Harvest ofYouth,” and a volume of critical es¬says, “Some Modern Poets.” .Mr. M. i.lewellyn Raney, director!Ilf tlic University libraries, has sulimit-{ed to I’resident Hutchin.' a lull ac- ■count of the work of the librarie.s dur- jing the past year and a prophecy ofthe work to lie done in the future. |Perliaps the most radical change jtlii.s year was applied to the Reading !rtiom in Harper. In September, half,of its contents were emptied into the jnew Social Science reading room and ,the stacks. Over nine thousand vol-1limes from E 11, whicli was closedto undergraduates last year, werebrought in to replace the other books.Mr. Raney 'oelieves that this change isa pedagogical improvement. It is re¬ported that there has been a loss forthe three quarters that the system wasin operation which amounts to 431.In other words, for every 1,140 stu¬dents who were honest, there were atworst 2 who yielded to temptation. Theday circulation of books was 30,389.the night circulation, 31,153. Finesamounted to $4,458.42.Dr. Chang AddressesChinese Students onU. S. Lecture Tour C. Judson Herrick, author of “Theriiinking Machine ’ and "The Brainsof Rats and Men,” will conduct thefirst of a series of open discussionsfor men Sunday at 7:30 in the break¬fast room of Hitchcock hall. The dis¬cussion will center around the subject;"Docs Scientific Knowledge ImpairAesthetic Appreciation?” This will bethe first campus attempt to introducesuch a discussion.After Professor Hejrick has fin¬ished, the meeting w'ill be thrownopen to discussion on forum principles.No admission will be charged at thisor any subsequent discussions in theseries.The series w'ill be continued everySunday night. Among the futureleaders of the discussions are Pro¬fessor Edw’in Arthur Burtt of thephilosophy department, Dean Chaun-cey S. Boucher, Dean William E.Scott, Professor Thomas V. Smith ofthe philosophy department, and others. Four documents, bearing datesranging from 1505 to 1767, w'ill go onexhibition today in the showcases inHarper W 31. They have been se¬lected from the Norfolk collection of180 manuscripts and documents, chief¬ly parchment, of which eighty are ofthe seventeenth century, and 100 orthe eighteenth century.A pre-reformation will, dated 1505,in the twentieth year of the reign ofHenry \’1I, bequeaths the furred gownof the long-dead man to his son, andhis "Movable I’roperties to Margaret,My Wife." The parchment is writtenin English, but at the bottom of thewill proper appears a paragraph inLatin, inscribed in a different hand.This was added when the will wasprobated.VV’ritten in cursive script, in whichtlie letters of the words are connectedas they are in modern longhand, is awill made November 20, 1547, in thefirst year of the reign of Edward VI.(Continued on page 2) FARCE, COMEDY,AND DRAMA ONTWO-D^ BILLFour Dress RehearsalsAdd Final TouchTo ShowFour days of dress rehearsals, morethan a mont’ ’s work in staging andlighting, and two quarters of writingand revising plays comes to a climaxtonight at 8:30 when the third annualPlajfest opens in the Reynolds thea¬tre. Farce, comedy and drama com¬pose the bill for the Dramatic associa¬tion’s yearly experiment with studentwritten, acted and staged plays.Final dress rehearsals of the threeplays were held last night. Wednes¬day evening the authors of the playsand members of Director Frank H.O’Hara’s class in play productionwitnessed the rehearsals and suggest¬ed last-minute revisions.Add Ducey to “Home Rule”Betty Ann Ducey has been addedto the cast of “Home Rule,” Mrs.Marguerite Harmon Bro’s comedy of ahospital room, as the nurse. Marguer¬ite Fernholz and Stoddard Small com¬pose one of the couples of the play,and Helene Johnson and Gerald Ryanare the other half of an oddly mixedquarset brought together by sick¬ness.In Mrs. Bro’s story of modjtrnChina in revolutionary days, ‘‘Withinthe Four Seas,” Edward Swartz hasbeen substituted for Alexander Dun-say. Lucile Hoerr plays the Chinesegirl; Beatrice Scheibler, the grand¬mother; and Russell Huber, the aris¬tocratic father. Howard L. Willett,Jr., plays a British missionary; Nor¬man Bridge Eaton, an indolent young.-\merican; Pat Magee, a Chinese-bred(Continued on page 4)Announce FiskePoetry ContestHARKNESS GIFTINSURES SUCCESSOF YALE PLANSDr. P. C. Chang, Dean of NankaiUniversity, Tientsin, will discuss thepresent situation in China when hespeaks Monday at 3:30 in the Rey-1nolds club house as guest of the Chin- iese Students’ club. IDr. Chang is an authority on Ch'ii- jese culture, and is making a lecturetour of the United States with theview of disseminating inforniation onChinese drama, poetry, and art.His brother, who is president ofNankai, visited the University severalyears ago and spoke to his country¬men; since Nankai is supported bythe Boxer indemnity fund, all Chinesestudents who are studying in Amer¬ica, attended there at some formertime.Mrs. B. W. Dickson, advisor toforeign students, will be host to Dr.Chang for dinner at the Quadrangleclub, preliminary to his talk. Present ‘‘Fourteen”And “Rehearsal” AtDames Club Meeting“Fourteen” by Oliver Gerstenbergand “Rehearsal” by Christofer Morleyare the two plays which w'ill be pre¬sented by the Dramatic group of theUniversity Settlement League beforethe Dames club, at their regular meet¬ing Saturday, at 2:30 in the theatreof Ida Noyes hall.The casts of both plays are com¬posed of university professor’s wives,with but one exception. Mrs. Dr.Breed, Mrs. A. E. Clark, director, andHarry T. Moore, borrowed from theTower room players for the occasion,comprise the cast of the first play.“Rehearsal” has the following cast;Mrs. Blair, Mrs. Beven, Mrs. Bills,Mrs. Brumbaugh, Mrs. Freeman, andMrs. Merrill, Mrs. A. J. Brumbaughis supervising Morley’s play.Mrs. I. M. Wagenman will sings#»1«»rt«nns b»‘twepn the plays. Edward S. Harknfess, YaR ’97, la-stMonday niadV an enormous gift toYal^ in ord^ to insure the completionof tlit^ House^ Plan started at Yale.The. Hous^ Plan is ^ |)lfm in whichgr6uas o^ irndergr^duales of abcyit200^ ^ch shall li\T together and '>attogether.Mr. Harkness has already donatedabout $12,000,000 to Harvard for theirHouse Plan, .\lthough the amountof his late.st gift to Yale is still un¬official, it is believed to be above 10million dollars. Mr. Harkness’ motli-!er, Mrs. Stephen V. Harkness, sev¬eral years ago gave to Yale the Mcm-g^rial Quadrangle, a senior dormitory,which included the Harkness tower?a noted piece of Gothic architecture.Famous educators throughout thecountry, such as Secretary of the In¬terior Wilbur, Dr. Abbott Lowell ofHarvard, John Grier Hibben ofPrinceton, and President Hutchins ofChicago, believe that Mr. Harknesswith his gift will help open a newera in college life. gVadustl\ Pthe\ ClJ 'rORGAN RECITALThis afternoon’s five o’clock organrecital in the University Chapel willinclude “Allegro from Sonata I” fromGuilmant; Bach’s “Prelude and FugueVI”; “Invocation” from Mailly; Pie¬tro Yon’s “Echo”; and the "ConcertPiece II,” by Parker. Porter Heapswill present the program. entered in the eleventh an-Billings Fiske Poetry con-raduates and under-must ftia. in by March 1 atThe rules ofthat the poemhas Vever\ beerT published, that thecontrinshtiem be typewritten, and thatit be subtnitted under a pseudonym^with the real name of the author putin a sealed envelope. The poem it¬self may be of any style or lengthand may either be one poem or sev¬eral poems with one theme. Thewinner will be announced at the Juneconvocation, and will receive the $50prize.Established in 1894Horace Spencer Fiske, of the De¬partment of Public Relations, whohas been associated with the Uni¬versity since 1894, established thiscompetition in 1920 in honor of hisfather, John Billings Fiske. JohnFiske was a graduate of Union Col¬lege, New York, and a pioneer pas¬tor in the Middle west. HoraceFiske, besides his work as former ed¬itor of the University Record andwith the University Press, is the au¬thor of several collections of poems,and contributor to many anthologies.Frankenstein Last WinnerLast year’s prize went to Alfred V'.Frankenstein, undergraduate and au¬thor of “Syncopating Saxophones,”for his contribution, “John Henry:an American Episode.” This workbrought the comment from John Fin¬ley of the New York Times, to Mr.Fiske, “I congratulate you on evok¬ing this contribution to literature.”(Continued on page 4)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 7. 1930iatlg iiarnnnFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morniniCB, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Spring tiuarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription rates13.00 per year ; by mail, $1.50 per year extra. Single copies, five cents each.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressely reserves all rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationEDWIN LEVIN, Managing EditorEARLE M. STOCKER, Business ManagerROBERT L. NICHOLSON, Assistant Business ManagerHARRIET DEAN HATHAWAY, Woman’s EditorHENRY D. FISHER, Sports EditorEDITORIAL DEPARTMENTIEDWARD G. B.^STIAN News Editor1 EDG.\K GREEN WALD News EditorJOHN H. HARDIN News EditorMARJORIE C.AHILL Junior EditorMARION E. WHITE Junior EditorFRANCES STEVENS Literary EditorWILLIAM R. HARSHE Whistle EditorMDNEY GOLDBERG Day EditorLOUIS RIDENOUR Day EditorMERWIN S. ROSENBERG Day EditorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF. Day EditorM.ARGARET EGAN . Sophomore Editor. -TANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE WERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTABE BLINDER Advertising ManagerLEE LOVENTHAL ...Advertising ManagerLOUIS FORBRICH . Circulation ManagerROBERT McCarthy _..Sophoroore Asst.JAMES McMAHON Sophomore Asst.NED VEATCH Sophomore AsstSPORTS DEPARTMENTALBERT ARKULES Asst. Sports EditorWALTER BAKER Sophomore EditorHERBERT JOSEPH . Sophomore EMitorMARJORIE TOLMAN -Woman’s Sports EditorTHE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM1. Encouragement of student participation in undergraduate campus actk'itics.^ 2. Promotion of student interest in lectures, concerts, exhibits and othercultural opportunities.* 3. Abolition of grading systm and extension of research principles.j 4. Cessation of extensive building program.I 5. Adoption of a plan for supervised, regulated rushing.INSTITUTIONS DECADENT AND INSTITUTIONSFUNCTIONINGThe apathy of an undergraduate body, induces in part byadministrative negligence and part by an accentuated intellectualcynicism, might be discerned in a more rational phase than the ap¬parent condition might lead one to infer. It may not all be an in¬sensibility to ordinary undergraduate stimuli; it seems more a real¬istic phase of student evolution, a stage in intellectual growth.In two weeks the Washington Promenade will be ushered inwith a fanfare of publicity. The grand formal of the year will h'avebeen forced before the attention of the campus, kept bouyed upthrough the furtive attempts of the leaders and promoters, livingon artificially amid the lassitude of a student body which just willnot respond. Last year’s pleas for student support was accompaniedwith the threat that the Prom would not be continued another yearif expenses were not met. Expenses were met, and we have anotherProm.But the lack of interest would indicate the shift of the socialcenter away from the locus of campus. The Daily Maroon believesthat the Prom, as an institution, should be continued. But apparent¬ly when the original associations have lost their symbolic signifi¬cance, leaving only the material event lingering on as a testamentof that conception, and the automatism of the habit has lost itshold, the Prom has apparently become decadent and students osten¬sibly do not want it.We do not advocate the abolition of the Prom; rather we be¬lieve that any means, short of artificial distortion of its values beattempted to institutionalize what should be an embodiment of morethan a mere social display, should signify a yearly consensus of un¬dergraduate enthusiasm.Tonight the Dramatic Association exhibits a program of com¬plete student creations in its annual Playfest: plays written, acted,and directed by students. This group has formed an institutionwhich needs no artificial sustenance. The members keep it goingfrom inner enthusiasm, unaffected by campus response. Their re¬ward is not publicity; it is more close than any activity at the Uni¬versity to true artistic merit which brings its own satisfaction. Theworks tonight ,while inevitably naive and unpolished are probablymost certainly ambitious and aspiring, and, though not completelyunaided by professional coaching, have a force which rides overstudent apathy. The response will be in themselves. The real sup¬porters who have ingrained this institution with the force of habitwill keep it from crumbling.Next Thursday The Forge brings Edna St. Vincent Millay toMandel hall in a reading of her poems. The capacity houses of pastappearances might portend a huge profit for the small handfull whoassume the promotion of this enterprise. Students respond to thisphase of campus life in a wholesale fashion which discounts radi¬cally the “student apathy” theory. The Forge management needsno artificial support to keep alive. The magazine is published jthrough the proceeds of the lecture series which it conducts through- jout the year. jSo there are institutions decadent and institutions functioning. ^The decadence of the one type does not mean a lack of service; it !merely means a shift of ernphasis from the bizarre to the intellectualor aesthetic. TTere is some merit in attempting to save those which,like the Prom, will have a liver utility when reorientated. Official NoticesThursday, February 6Radio lecture: “American Litera¬ture since 1890,’’ Professor Percy H.Boynton of the English department,8:20, Station WMAQ.Divinity chapel: Dr. Reinhold Nie¬buhr of the Union TheologicalSeminary, New York, 11:50, JosephBond chapel.Panatrope concert, symphony rec¬ords, 12:45-1:15, Reynolds clubhouse.Public lecture: “Factors Influenc¬ing Healthy and Unhealthy Behav¬ior,’’ Dr. Lawson G. Lowry of the In-;! stitute for Child Guidance, New'j York, 4:30, Joseph Bond chapel.Public lecture: “History of theLatin Quarter in Paris,’’ Dr. d’Irsay,4:30, Pathoolgy assembly room.Public lecture: “The Chicago Pub¬lic Library,’’ Carl B. Roden, libra¬rian, 4:30, Harper M16.Physics club: “Some Present Prob¬lems of .Astrophysics,’’ AssistantProfessor Otto Struve, Yerkes obser-1vatory; “Saha’s Ionization Theory,’’!Dr. Christy. 4:30, Ryerson 4:30.Organ music, Frederick Marriott. |5:00-.t:30, University chapel. 1Public lecture (downtown):'"Knossos’’ (illustrated). Associate'IProfessor Huth of the Art Institute,;0:45.Friday, February 7Radio lecture “.\inerican Literaturesince 1890.“ Professor Percy HBoynton of the English department,8:20. Station WM.AQ.University chapel service: Dr. Rei/.-hold Niebuhr of the Union Theologi¬cal seminary, New ’l ork, 12:00, l^ni-versity chapel.Public lecture: “Factors Influenc¬ing Healthy and Unhealthy BehaviorII.” Dr. Lowry (The Divinity schoolin cooperation with the Graduateschool of Social Service Administi^t-tion) 4:30, Joseph Bond chapel.Organ music, I’orter5:30, University chapel. Heaps, 5:00-Public lecture (downtown): "Knos-sos" (illustrated). .Associate ProfessorHuth, 6:45, the .Art Institute.\AStVVH PiPF.P ACC31 N. State St., Chicago MAROONS OPPOSEPURDUE SATURDAYNIGHT IN BARTLETT(Continued from page 1)totalled twenty-six points in onegame..Although the Maroons entertain nohope of victory, they have no inten¬tions of allowing Murphy to enjoyhimself. The Chicago quintet show¬ed improved form two nights ago■when it lost to Illinois by three points,after its disappointing performancesagainst Michigan last week. Thegame was raggedly played at timeshut the Maroons showed plenty ofspirit and agility and may turn in adifferent kind of performance tomor¬row evening.The Maroons will not be so meas¬urably handicapped at the center postas it was last year when \*irgil Gistconceded five inches of height to Mur¬phy. Boesel, who will jump centerfor the Maroons, will nevertheless havehis work cut out for him. The Purdue center is an all-aroutid player, de¬spite the belief held Ity many thathis height is his only merit. WhetherBoesel will be able to keep Murphyfrom peppering the basket, even withhis >ix feet four inches of height, re¬mains to be seen..\orgren will have Iiis strongestlineup pitted again>t the invaders. 1 he<iiniinutive Steiilienson is liack anaiii.'It a forward position. Paul led the.Maroon attack against Illinois, sink¬ing four lia'kets and Coach Norgreiineeds his basket eye. Marshall Fishwas tlie only other regular who foundthe basket at the down state gym andlioth he and Stephenson will lead theChicago attack. BAND ADDS STAGE iSHOW TO CONCERT IIN MANDEL FEB. 14lORGA DISCUSSESFRENCH IN EAST(Continued from page 1)ed the lionorary I’h. 1). from Stra-^^-.bonrg and Lyim an;i is a member of:the .Academie des Inscriptions •.>:Paris and the .Academies of Roumania.Stockholm, Prague, Cracow and Bel¬grade. 1 (Continued from page 1)University to underwrite the perform¬ance so that it might be open toeveryone on the campus who desiredto attend.Soloists for the concert will be Ken¬neth M. Moody, bass player, and all¬city high school champion upon thisinstrument two years ago, and ReubenLisse, trombone player.1 his coticert will be tiie winter jire-sentation of the band on the campus. 'It will be followed liy another during'the spring quarter. I FOUR MEDIEVALDOCUMENTS ONEXHIBIT TODAY(Continued from page 1)On February 14, 1755, Henry Dalefiled a statement of bankruptcy, whichbears one of the rectangular bluestamps which were one of the causesof the American revolution. On theoutside of the document appear vari¬ous additions made by the courts inwhich the statement had been filed.Henry Watkins, a boy “about sev¬enteen.” apprenticed himself as amariner in 1767, during the reign ofGeorge III. The indenture makingthe agreement legal also bears one ofthe Stamp Tax seals, and contains,folded within it, a clipping of blackcrepe, possibly part of that draped onhis grave when he was lost at sea.Next Thursday at8:15THE MILLAY RECITALShe Will Cause a Furor!TICKETS ATThe Bookstore, Woodworth’s,Mandel Hall Box Office(which is open from 10 to 4)You Will Enjoy Sunday Dinner at theRambler Tea RoomA delicious six course home cooked dinner with choice of chicken,baked ham and sweet potatoes, roast lamb or ourspecial tenderloin steak.I :00 to 8:00 85 centsA SPECIAL SUNDAY EVENING SUPPER5:30 to 8:00 40 centsThe Rambler Tea Shop5628 Kenwood Ave.hm ®n nrshmSt. Paul’s ChurchSOth and DorchesterParish Office; 4945 Dorchester AvenueI'el. Oakland 318.5REV. GEORGE H. THO.MNSREV. OTIS C. JACKSON•Sunday Services:Holy Communion, 8:00 A. M.“The Outlook for World Peace’’Temple, LondonChurch School Service, 9:30 A. M. 'Morning Service, 11:00 .A. M.Fvening Service, 5 P. M.Young Peoples’ Society, 6 P. M. Chicago EthicalSocietyA non-sectarian, religious society |to foster the knowledge, loyc and :jiraclire of the riK.lit. 'THE STUDEBAKER THEATRE418 S. Michigan Avenue \SUN1).\^’, l■l.BiU^\R^■ 911 A. M. ;Dr. Horace J. Bridges jwill P-.’ I“Middletown,” America’s Hopeand America’s Menace |A’l seats free. Vi^i^or.s cordially iwelcome. , Hyde Park BaptistChurch5600 WoodlawB At«.Norris L. TibbettsHolland W. SchloerbMinisters11 :(i() a. m.—“W liy Doe.-^ Jcmis.Mean .Mucli to .Some People?" R.W. Schloerb.7:(H) p, in.— Discussion groups.8:00 ]). in.—Three speakers of threedifferent races. The Church ofThe Redeemer(EPISCOPAL)6(th and RIackstonaRev. F. S. WhiteUniversity Student Pastor*Rev. W. S. HorstickAssistantSUNDAY SERVICESHoly Communion, 8:00 A. M.Choral Eucharist and Sermon,11:00 A. M.Choral PN’cnsong and Sermon,7:30 P. M.Three services every week-day,Chuch open every day for prayerand meditation.UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF DISCIPLESOF CHRIST57th and UniversityMinister: Edward Scribner Ame*Director of Music and Education, Basil F. WiseSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 9Sermon: 1 1 A. M.—“Ceremonial Dramatization.’’Wranglers at 5:30—Mr. John Kirmiz will speak on “Egypt.” THE RED BRICK CHURCHForty-Sixth and Woodlawn Avenue(New Church, Swedenborgian)PERCY BILLINGS. PastorA bright, helpful service every Sunday morning at 11:15,with an interesting, practical talk and a hearty welcome.Sunday, February 9: Sermon Subject, ‘‘Inheritance, En¬vironment, and Destiny.”Tune in Sunday, WMAQ, 12:45 to 1:00, and hear a goodtalk.THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1930 Page ThreeBetween the Twoof UsByAlbert ArkuletandWilliam HarshePaul Green’s play, “The FieldGod,” now showing at the Goodmanis good drama. Such a play, follow¬ing “Tour du Monde,” is more thanIndicative of the broad field overwhich a good repertory company mayrange. Harry Mervis, who played toperfection the punctilious Mr. Foggof Jules Verne’s drama, is Hardy |(iilchrist, a farmer, in the new pro-1duction. He is a fanner, moreover, a 'North Carolinian farmer w'ith an au-1thentic dialect, and with a role thatcarries him from atheism to agnosti¬cism and back again to atheism. Orrather he ends up by believing firmlyin himself and, perhaps, that he i^(icxl. The motives that would lead astrong, positive, and self-sufficientman into still stronger doubt must !)epowerful. Paul Green has seen to it |that they are. 'It IS a little (litTicult to say just |what is the exact purpose of the play. 'It IS certainly against emotionalism inreligion. In the first scene of the 'fourth act there s a Iiigbly emotional¬ized appeal by the parish preacher, ac¬companied by several neighbors, andit ha< several “revival meeting” and“holy roller” aspects. There is sucha heavy emphasis here that it is not ibard to >ee that the author’s sym- jpathy is entirely with the tortured jGilchrist who remains obdurate to all ipleas to save his immortal 'onl andto live in peace. His wife surcomes to,the hysterical situation, believes thatthe ghost of his first wife haunt> herand that her own marriage is one of 1lust and not of love and leaves him. ;The last scene consists chiefly of a ,>«olilo(juy by (iilchrist a> doubt enters :his mind. He is, however, a fanner,a man dealing in earthy and material ,things and he keeps hi^ taitli in him- |self.'The curtain ^cts on a rising note of ■hope for the future Hi^ wife- return;and his renewed faith in himself seem jto promise much. W hether Paul !Green believes that Man is tiod ican not -ay. The play, as a whole is •intense, sincere, a little depressing, and,unified. Unified in spite .■! some oli-'stetrical cuts n a too-long la-t act.Depressing because the author is in-1tluenced by the Irish dramatist- and ihis humor is chosen tor em]>hasis rath- jer than for relief. N’e\crtlieles-. it is Iexcellent and interesting entertain- jment.• ♦A repertory comi any has many ,problems. It must achieve variity. 1 'can conceive of tew greater contrasts ;than between *’ Tour du Moiule and '“The I'ield God. ” It i- to the ever- I9ailj7iWaroonSPLASHESCoach Percy McGillivrayThis is the first of a series of articleson the Swimming Team WOMEN ANNOUNCECLASS CAGE TEAMS.\ man who is popularly concededto be one of. if not the most, outstand¬ing authoritie.s in the country on wa¬ter polo is Coach Percy McGillivray.In 1925, when a conference met forthe adaption of the pre.sent set of wa¬ter-polo rules. Coach Mlcfiillivray wasone of the memliers. Coach Mc(jil-livray has been writing the interpre¬tation of the rules of the game for theofficial .Spaulding guide • since thegame has been anything like what wcknow as water-jiolo.He has educated the officials ofnumerous other colleges in the art otcoaching. ])laying, and refereeing tin-sport. During 1P27 and 1928 lie ref¬ereed the .National .\. .-X. C. cham-pion.-hip games. I'ntil the new ruleswere contrived in 1925, the game re¬sembled a grand free-for-all. .X mancould Iu>ld an i-pponent under wateruntil he drowned without even beingpenalized—a very delightful littleform of amusement. The ganie ti.\now become one of the most fascinat¬ing that the field of university athlet¬ics affords. It is fast, exciting, andre(|uires great skill, strength and en¬durance.Trainer of CoachesCoach .XIcGdlivray ha- attained con¬siderable renown as a trainer tifcoachc.s. During the summer he holdsclas-cs at I’artlett to which athleticdirectors flock from all over thecountry for training in the art ofinstructing swimmes. In addition tobeing a eoai h of coaches, “Mac” is anexaminer of examiners for the Na¬tional Rod Cross Life Guard .Associa¬tion. I'.ach groni) of life-guard- ha-an official who sees to it that the force!maintains an even standard of efficien¬cy. Mcfollivray is. in his turn, one ofthe three men in this entire disyictw hos«' bu-iness it is to see that thereofficial- are themselves effici<‘nt.He ha- al-o figured as a -'Tt t>fconsulting engineer in the construc¬tion of innumerable swimming pools,and although he has never written ahook on the subject, the amount ofaflvice he has passed out on the sub¬ject would make a very informative W’omen's class basketball teamswere announced fast week by Miss.Margaret Burns and Miss .Alma Wy¬lie of the Women’s Department ofPhysical F.ducation..\Ii-s Burns, coach of the Fresh¬man and Junior teams has placed thefollowing members of the Freshmansquad on the class team: Ruth Fish¬er, Helen Taft and Helen Walters,forwards; ICsther Feuchtwanger Mer-riam, Mar\ Richards, guards, and.Mice Steiner, .Alice Freudcnthal, Cath¬erine Doheny and .Audrey Pierce sub¬stitutes. The Junior team will bemade up of .Martha Janota, FvelynBailey, and Helen .Stoll, forwards;Mary Budd. Lillian Schlesinger andRachael Smiley, guards; and HerthaLuckhardt, .Margaret .Morris and .Mar¬garet Simon, substitutes..According to .Mi-s .Alma Wylie,coach of the sophomores and seniorsthe following will make up the sopho¬more team: Ruth Lyman and HelenPillans, forwards, with Margaret Hilland Jeanette Stein as alternates forthe third po-ition. ml Margaret Potts,Hortense .Selig and .Adele I'ricke,guard>. with Dorothy Mohr as thesub-titute. Members of the .Seniorteam are Bertha Heimerdinger, OliveKggan. Ro-e i^esnick. forwards, andOpal Holtz, Jeanette Holmes andHelen I.amborn. guards. Frances.Swineford and Geraldine Hacker willhe Used as substitutes.The basketball sea-on will openMonday, February 10 with games be¬tween the -ophomores and the juniorsand the Freshman and Senior teams.volume. He has accomplished somerather -tartling feats with men whohad weak heart-. Parker Hall, a for¬mer caiitain of the swimming team:ind the son of the dean of law schoolwho died not long ago. was forbiddento -wim by his physician- becauseof a bad heart. “Mac” took him inhand, and by the time he graduatedhe was entirely cured. McGillivray;il-o -ncceeded in practically curing theson of another jirofessor, Harry Har¬kins, by careful training.During the time that the ('oachhas been with the Cniversity he ha-tnrned out a set of champs once, andbase finished high in both -wimmingand water i)olo every year with con-(Continued on page 4) Start New PlanFor Track EventsIn I-M CarnivalIn accordance with the suggestionoffered by the Committee of Rulesand (Complaints, appointed at the lastIntramural banquet and headed byRalph Lewis, sports manager of A.T. O., the Winter Carnival track andfield events will be run off under twodivisions. There will be a separatedivision for freshmen, who shall notbe allowed to compete in the upper-class division. .All events will be runin the freshman division except therelay, and points will count towardthe championship in the ratio of oneto two, winners in the upperclass divi¬sion receiving twice as many points asthe freshmen.In the past the track meets havebeen won by fre-hmen of varsity cali¬bre who have later won numerals andvarsity letters. .Since the IntramuralDepartment is unable to bar thesemen irom intianmral competition, ithas been necessary to have a separatedivision for all freshmen in order tomake the upperclass division truly in¬tramural in spirit, and to limit the ef¬fect of freshmen on the outcome ofthe meet. Freshmen who have wontrack numerals shall be ineligible tocompete.Points fur the first five places inthe upperclass division w'ill be 10, 8.6. -4. 2. In the freshman division, 5.■1, .1. 2. 1. These points shall counttoward the trophies..All teams must enter a relay teamto receive organization points. The(Continued on page 4) HARD FOUGHT BAHLES CLOSEPRELIMINARY ROUND OF “A”LEAGUE; PLAY SEVEN GAMESPhi Delts Beat Kappa Sigs, 13-12; Lambda Chis Win OverPhi Psis, 16-14; Macs and PhiKaps VictorsIn a series of hard fought games |last night, the preliminary round of ^the “A” basketball tournament was Ibrought to a successful close. ‘Phi Kaps 29; Chi Psi 18Phi K/appa Sigma had an easy timedefeating Chi Psi and this to tie iwith the latter for first place in the j.Alpha league. The 29-18 game was jnot at first an easy contest, but afterthe winners secured a sufficient lead jin the first half, they were able to Imaintain a safe margin the remainder |of the fray'.Macs 30; A. T. O. 10Alpha Tan Omega dropped a 30-10game to the Macs, and with it firstplace in the Gamma league. TheMacs took the contest after a hard,rough fought game that was not de^ !cided until the final minutes of play, ,slowed down by frequent fouling onboth sides.Phi Delts 13; Kappa Sigs 12Kappa Sigma missed a chance tomake it a triple tie for first place in.Alpha league by taking a 13-12 defeat!from Phi Delta Theta. The lead pass- jed from one team to the other, with !neither team stalling. It was a fast ^ game of clo-e guarding, both teamsbeing forced to take long shots be¬cause neither was able to get close tothe basket.Lambda Chis 16; Phi Psis 14Lambda Chi Alpha and Phi KappaPsi fought a hard battle to decidewho would take the cellar position inthe Gamma league. Nebel, of theformer sank the winning basket ofthe 16-14 game, and tied the standing.'N’ebel made ten of the w'inners’ six¬teen points.Alpha Epsilon Pi 18; Phi B. D. 13.Alpha Epsilon Pi took an 18-13 vic¬tory from Phi Beta Delta after a game,featured by much fouling on eachside. The game was slow for thisreason, no exceptional playing beingexhibited by either team.D. U. 13; Kappa Nu 10Delta Upsilon took a hard foughtgame from Kappa Nu, 13-10, that had*little bearing on the Beta league,standing. The winners trailed 6-3 atthe half, but came back strong, tak¬ing little time to secure a lead. Cooper-ider scored eight of the winningpoints, ali field goals.(Continued on page 4)HEAR THIS REMARKABLEORCHESTRAThe whole south side is talking aboutHENRI GENDRONand his recording orchestraHenri Gendron has scored successes at theHarry Richman Club, New York; the Bal-aban and Katz Theatres; the MontmarteCafe, Chicago; and at large hotels in Chi¬cago and other cities.COME AND HEAR THEM FOR YOURSELFThe Venetian RoomThe Southmoor Hotel67th St. at Stony Island Ave.Don’t Forget to use your Maroon Club Tickets forWednesday night dates. The tickets can still beobtained at The Daily Maroon office free of charge.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7. 1930r4 iVbisJie START NEW PLANFOR TRACK EVENTSIN l-M CARNIVALLIFE'S TOO SHORTYou pass—and as youGo your •way, the songsStop short within the birds,The laughter of the shafts of warmsunFades till the world reflectsBut the shadows of grey skies above—You are goneVI sigh—and as that cryOf tumbled heart and prideSpends itself, once more the songsswell forthFrom birds on wing; again theJ)ancing sunlight warms my soul—Life’s too short for passing fancies . .A. C. E. (Continued from sports page)relay shall count as an upperclassevent, although one freshman may runon each team.The prelims, will be run off Tues¬day, March 4, at 3:30.Members of the Rules Committee:Ralph Lewis, Sports Manager, ATO..\llan Fast, Sports Manager, PhiK. Psi.E. J. Brislen, Sports Manager, A.Sig Phi.Bob Prince, Sports Manager. PhiDelta.Russell Kitz. Sports Manager. PhiD. Theta.I-M BASKETBALLRESULTS FARCE, COMEDY,AND DRAMA INVARIED PROGRAMA COUPLE OF WET ONES'‘Let’s go ride a few serfs,” saidthe old feudal lord.And then there was the girl whodidn’t like waves but did like tn goto the divorce and see the tied comein.There was once a \'ery ConceitedFreshman Football Player and he wastii^lling a Fraternity Gathering justhow Good he was. He told abouthow easy it was for him to go througha Line and break up Plays, ffe justgave a Pu*h and the Line went downlike a Card House.There was an Alumnus around forl.unch that Day and he stood it fora Time. Then he said slowly, ‘Ttst >o bad Son that God didn't give youa Prehensile Tail so that You couldmove Houses.” (Continued from sports page)T. K. E. 15; Delta Sigs 7I'au Kapi>a Epsilon was unable to jdo little in the first ball against Delta ISigma Phi, for the score was fourapiece, with the latter team having agood chance to tie for first place inthe Delta league. T. K. F.. in the sec¬ond period held their opponents tohut an additional three points, them¬selves meanwhile scoring eleven, andwinning first place in the Deltaleague with five victories. (Continued from page 1)•American; and Alice Stinnet, hisgrandmother. Frank Mayer-Oakeswill take Willett’s place on Satur¬day when Willett goes to Wisconsinwith the wrestling team.R. Allen Hadeii, Charles S. Phillipsand Alvin Reiwitch compose the castof Edwin Engels satire on modernart, “Babbitt’s Paradise.” Saturdaythe track team will take Reiwitch toPurdue, and Willis .Aronson will playhis role of the youngest Mr.Kaufmeyer..Authentic native costumes have beensupplied for the Chinese play, and aspecial unit set which serves as aI>ackgrouiul for all three plays is em¬ployed. .Art of the Picasso school willal.so be a feature of “Babbitt’s Para¬dise.”Dean Charles VV'. Gilkey of the Uni¬versity chapel will introduce the playsthi.s evening, and Professor PercyHolmes Boynton of the English de¬partment will act as master of cere¬monies tomorrow.rickets may be obtained at the boxoffice before performances. They areone dollar.Captain Harry Changnon has ac-cepted ai: invitation for the basketballteam to attend the .Saturday perform¬ance after their game. NAME EIGHT USHERSFOR MILLAY READING(Continued from page 1)and may be secured at the box officein the corridor of Mandel.The first copies of the initial 1930edition of The Forge: A MidwesternReview, will be on sale the night ofthe performance, February 13.MRS. McCORMICKEXPLAINS WORLDCOURT OPPOSITIONSPLASHES ANNOUNCE FISKEPOETRY CONTESTAND ABOUT AIR PI..WES—IT’S NOT THE COST — IT'STHE KEEP UP.FIJI.BETWEEN THE TWO OFUS(Continued from sports page)Goodman has done. And done well.“Holiday”. Philip Barry's comedy,.which scored last season in New Yorkunder the direction of Arthur Hop¬kins, is scheduled to follow "The:• Field God. "CLASSIFIED ADS (Continued from sports page)'istcncy. He says however, that henever coached a team, except as anavocation, until he started with Chi¬cago, but be has certainly rolled upa record for actual swimming prow-,ess that i> worth shooting at. Hewa.s the \\ cismuller of his day, an I..■\. C. star, and one of the famousthree-man team f-f Crane High con-1■listing of his brother Perry. Phil Nel-lon. and himself, which absolutelyruled prep-schod! competition in allswimmiiig events during its existence, jCoach McGillivray is 39 years old,,but he can still outswim most of the !men on his team and can play a game ,of water-polo that is something forthe young bloods to prick up their |ers about. I'ach day he dives into the .tank and i-addles around with the fel¬lows. acting more like a kid than aseriousminded “Coach of Coaches.” (Continued from page 1)William Lyon Phelps, professor ofEnglish at Yale, on receiving a copyof the University Record with thepoem, wrote. “Thank you very muchtor the I'liiversity Record. What aninteresting magazine it isl That prizepoem is really remarkable, both forits originality and its vitality. It cer¬tainly deserved the prize."The majority of the prize winnershave received further distinction inwriting. Elizabeth M. Roberts, vic¬tor in 1921, has published “The Timeof Man,” and “My Heart and MyFlesh.” George Dillon, author of"Boy in the W’ind,” won in ‘25. Ster¬ling North, ’27 winner, is co-author ofthe recent best-seller, “The Pedro('lorino.” (Continued fiom page 1)in.” (Referring to the worldcourt).Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick,Republican candidate for United Statessenator and ccngressman-at-large fromIllinois, traded questions and answerswith a University audience of 200 orso yesterday, and came out smilingand on top.Skirmishes with AudienceWhile she had prepared a speech,shouts from the audience querying heron her stand against the world courtled her to change her plans andplunge into a series of skirmisheswith members of the audience, in¬cluding Professor W’ooddy of the po¬litical science department.Explains StandMrs McCormick explained her op¬position to the world court of inter¬national justice;“Three years ago the United Statessenate approved entrance into theworld court with five reservations. TheSHUBERTGreat NorthernNow IMayingPrior to New 'york OpeninsThe Messrs. ShubertpresentThe Season's Greatest Musical Play“NINA ROSA”By OTTO HARBACH■Author of "Rose Marie,*' "No. No, Nanette"Music by SIGMUXD ROMBERGcomposer of"The Student Prince." "The Desert Sonn”Lyrics by IRVING CAESARwithGUY ROBERTSONand cast of 125FOR SALE—Tuxedo, $”0. Orig¬inal price $110. Plaza 0958.FOR SALE—Coop. 5 rm. sunpar•lor, Nr. I. C., L, Midway. TelophoueDorchester 4828. PATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERSTYPEWRITERSSOLD RENTED REPAIREDAll Makes All ModelsNew and Used Portables $5.00 Per Mo.Portables, Demonstrators, $60.00 val $48.00PHILLIPS BROTHERS1214 E. 55th St. Plaza 2673 A Short Walk Takes You to theELLIS TEA SHOP63rd and EllisLUNCHEON — 50cTry Our 6 Course Dinner 75c—5 to 10Delicious SandwichesFountain Specialties^otels HmdepmereFor Every Off-Campus FunctionDinner-Dances — Club MeetingsBanquetsThe facilities of THE WINDERMEREare beautifully suited to your needs.Here you will always receive completesatisfaction.GIVE YOUR NEXT OCCASION THEPRESTIGE OF A WINDERMERE SETTINGHyde Park Boulevard at 56th Street Fairfax 6000 Distinctiveness!ON THE CAMPUSIt’sAtmosphereAT THE BLACKHAWKIt’sCoon-Sander^sNighthawksEARL RICKARD, Master of CeremoniesBrilliant! Ecstatic! Snappy!The BlackhawkRESTAURANTWabash and Randolph two most important, that is, thefourth and fifth, provided that if theUnited States became a member ofthe court, it could withdraw at anytime it chose; and tliat the Leag^ue ofNations could not ask the court for anadvisory opinion on questions in whichthe United States had an interest orclaimed to have an interest, withoutthe assent of the United States.‘‘The senate provisos were sent tothe secretariat of the league and tothe nations signatory to the protocol.The secretariat requested PresidentCoolidge to send representatives tointerpret the fifth reservation. ThePresident declined, subsequently de¬claring that he considered the matterclosed.“Some time later a committee ofjurists of the court asxed Elihu Rootto examine the fifth reservation witha view to restatement. Acting in aLook for the Venetian Star★studiotea shop—Delicious Food—Van'll find it at The Studioaynid charming surroundingsand the smart set of the Uni¬versity Quarter. : After¬noon tea is a far more de¬lightful ritual if you chooseThe Studio.—for h-picurcs—NUMBER 13Ct EAST 57TH ST.Brtwera Kenwood ft Dorchester private capacity, Mr. Root joined SirCecil Hurst and drew up what waslater called the Root formula. Thedocument will be presented to the sen¬ate for approval following the navaldisarmament conference. I intend tooppose it.“This is my reason for opposition:If the United States is a member ofthe court, how can it not be morallycommitted to the decisions of thecourt and to their enforcement by theleague? The nation can be more ef¬fective in world affairs if it is free toact it chooses.”When Semester ReportsAren*t So Good—keep up the old Chicago fightingspirit—whistle the latest songhit (Lyon & Healy has it) or ifyou can’t whistle turn on theradio (in portable, table andconsole models at Lyon &Healy’s) or the phonograph'.All the newest records. Just ashort hike from the campus.WOODLAWN STORE:870 East 63rd St.Lyon&Heal^Open Evenings Until TenWW WWWYoung MenAre Exai^tiniK AboutTheir CloiheNThey insist upon authentic styles, lastingquality, satisfuetorv \ 'hiring and valueFor years we have eiiJoy»*<l the privilege ofmaking clothing for thesemen, and it is very gratify¬ing to see the great numberof th cm who have grownup in the business worldand who continue to buyJEKKE.MS Tailoring liecausethey know they always getdependuhle clothes at pricesthey know are right.And that is why so many aretaking advantage ofJERREMSBetween Seasons SaleA Suit with Extra Trousers orKnickers for the price ofthe Suit Alone65 *75 *85Inclndln^j Xew l$hetland»ANDUPFormal, Business and Sport Clothes7 South La Salle Street 71 East Monroe Street324 South Michigan Avenue140-142 South Qark Street, Near Adams225 North Wabash Avenue at IFocker Drive