MAH 4 IJ'i^•liI' ■T|,i ‘r/} **iri oop/f' Tfiau|> iiairoonVol. 31. No. 75. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1931 Price: Five CenteCURRICULAR REPORTOMITS SUGGESTIONSON COMPULSORY GYMDaily Maroon InvitesStudent OpinionOn SubjectWILL PRINT VIEWSSentiment of Campus MayBear Influence onDecisionBy Waller W. Baker !No consideration reffardinj? com-1pulsory gym work at the University iis included in the curriculum recom- !mendations of the new educational isystem according to a preliminary in- |quiry into the report of the CollegeCurriculum committee. The propos¬als listed in the document will besubmitted to the Faculty for actionshortly.That no decision has been reachedon the subject of Physical Culturedoes not nece.ssarily imply that thecommittee intends to waive the issue.It may be interested in gathering theconsensus of student opinion beforeannouncing its policy on a matterconcerning the undergraduate body.Print Student SentimentIn the hope that the Universitymay gain an unbiased opinion on thetopic from the source which, is affect¬ed most directly, The Daily Maroon,through its “Athenaeum” column,will print in its ensuing issues theviews of contributors on the prosand cons of “Compulsory PhysicalCulture”. This enlistment of studentinterest is in accordance with TheDaily Maroon’s aim of clearly reflect¬ing campus sentiment.The conditions governing the ac¬ceptance of articles for publicationin the “Athenaeum” are as follows:the name of the writer must be dis¬closed to the editors but a psuedo-Tjym may be used on the printed ar¬ticle; the contribution must remainthe property of The Daily Maroon.Uauc Affect* Men and Women |Whatever action may be taken bythe Faculty can hardly be madewithout a consideration of what thestudents think. To bear any influ¬ence whatsoever, the representativeview’ of the whole student body mustbe expressed. The issue of “Com¬pulsory Gym” is not confined to menalone; the question and its ultimatedecision will affect the Athletic de¬partments, both of men and women.If the Faculty should decide to re¬tain Compulsory Physical Educationat the University, the old athletic pol¬icy of the administration will remainstable; if the body recommends theabolition of the two year involun¬tary system of physical training, theresult will be an expansion of Intra¬mural facilities and a broadening ofits scope of activities. Hold Current EventsContest Exam TodayCompetitors in the New YorkTimes Current events contest willtake the official examination to¬day from 2:30 to 5:30 in Cobb208 under Assistant ProfessorHarold F. Gosnell of the PoliticalScience department.The first part of tfie test, whichis devoted to factual material,will require one hour, and the sec¬ond part which requires originalthought, will last two hours.Prizes for the three winning pa¬pers are $150, $75, and $25. Thebest of the campus papers will besent to the national committee todetermine the intercollegiate prizewinner of $500.Questions will cover a knowl¬edge of political events of worldinterest, economics, the trends inmodern literature and a generalview of the news. MAROON GAGERS GETMUCH-NEEDED RESTExhibit DrawingsBy Mrs. HutchinsIn Wieholdt 205Renaissance Society AlsoPresents Works byFaggi, StorrsBy Agnes GaleThe present exhibition of the Ren¬aissance society in Wieboldt 205 isunusual in that it presents drawingsby three American sculptors, MaudePhelps Hutchins, Alfeo Faggi, andJohn Storrs. It is interesting to seein the work of all artists the evi¬dence of strong feeling for sculpturalform.. JUrs. Hutchins has submittedoutline drawings of the figure, donefrom five-minute poses, in a verysimple, free, and vigorous manner.Volume is strongly suggested, withgreat economy of means.Alfeo Faggi, whose first Chicagoexhibition was offered by the Ren¬aissance Society in 1921, is one ofI the best known sculptors now work¬ing in this country. His highly orig¬inal brush drawings almosit over¬whelm the observer, with their vividand positive design. Details areeliminated to the limit of recogniz-ability. No painter could have madethese drawings; the way in whichthey are conceived and presented isdistinctly that of the sculptor.Mr. Storrs is a Chicago man, wholives most of the time in Paris. Heshows here six very beautiful silverpoints, and six drawings made withthe lithograph pencil. The latterare new, and have never before beenpresented. Mr. Storrs has done some(Continued on page 3) Varsity Quintet SentTo Showers AfterLight DrillA needed rest was accorded theMaroons after a busy week-end ofbasketball against Indiana and Illi¬nois, when Coach Norgren sent thevarsity five early to the showers af¬ter preliminary basket and foulshooting. But two games remainon the Chicago schedule; the lasthome encounter for the seasonagainst Ohio State Saturday and areturn engagement with Michigan atAnn Arbor the following Monday.Ohio NextOhio State previously defeated atColumbus by a single point, the re¬sult of a converted foul by Ashley,will present the same lineup at Bart-j lett that So very nearly won in thej first game. Fesler, Ohio’s great all-! around athlete, and guard and! scoring threat of the Buckeye team,I will be the main cog in the machineI which Chicago must prepare to stop.' Against the Maroons at Columbus,1 the burly star was all over the flooron defense and crashed through theChicago defense eight times for.scores.Chicago’s unexpected defeat at thehands of Indiana last Saturday, andthe Buckeye’s 31-15 defeat of theHoosiers the following Monday placethe odds a trifle in the favor of Fes¬ler and company, although a previ¬ously defeated team is always theunderdog. Chicago’s strong showingagainst Illinois, who displayed abso¬lute championship class in her vic¬tory, showed a decided improvementin her play over the Indiana gameand with three days left before theOhio ganMi, Norgren should have.whipped the Mapoons into form com¬parable to their performance againstthe Buckeyes at Columbus.Alumni ScrimmageShortly after the first five andPorter, who played the entire Illinoisgame, had descended to the show¬ers, Norgren scrimmaged his secondstring composed of Rexinger, Schlif-ke, Dzuibaniuk, Fraider, and Wien,against a team of recent alumni, atthe present time caught in the un¬employment whirlpool. CharlieHoerger and Gist led the attack forthe unemployed, each scoring easilytime and again. Dzuibaniuk crash¬ed past the Alumni defense to missat least ten set up shots. As the starof last year’s freshman aggregation,(Continued on page 2) PROF. COLE LEAVESFOR WASHINGTONRepresents University inAnthropologicalConferenceFay Cooper Cole, head of the An¬thropology department, will leavenext Wednesday for the anthropologi¬cal conference at Carnegie Institute,Washington, where he will representthe University in the joint rei,earchproject which is being cariied on inYucatan for a study of thj Mayanculture.Four UniversitiesFor several years past Carnegiehas been carrying on archeologicalprojects, unearthing valuable relicsef the ancient culture; until they de¬cided to make their survey anthrop¬ological as well as archeological, tostudy the living people as well astheir past achievements. With thisenlarged scope, Carnegie made Yuca¬tan its laboratory and invited sev¬eral other institutions to join her ina study of the Mayas. Harvard ismaking a study of the native medi¬cine practices; Michigan is studyingthe biological developments of therace; and the University* is work¬ing with the living people and theirlanguages.Languages; PeoplePi-ofessor Robert Redfield of theanthropologry department, is down inYucatan now studying the people;and with him is Dr. Androda, whois devoting himself to the linguisticelements of their life. As head ofthe department at the University,Dr. Cole will attend the conferenceand aid in planning future projects.After the conference, he will visitMexico City to study the Aztec ruins,and from there will go on to NewOrleans to confer with Franz BloomoB-^luns for the anthropological do¬nations which the University is plan¬ning for the World’s Fair.In line with the activities whichthe University is fostering in Yuca¬tan, the donations to the Fair in1933 will include an exact replica ofa Mayan temple, of which Dr. Bloomhas made a long study.Cole's Previous WorkPrevious to his present interest inMayan culture. Dr. Cole has led ar¬cheological expeditions in Southwestern America; and directed twoexpeditions to the Philippine islands,where he studied the pagan tribes.He led the Field Museum expeditionto Malay, Sumatra, Java, and Bor¬neo, and has written of the results(Continued on page 4)Crime PreventionExpert Talks HereThe causes of crime and how theynRay be used for its prevention willbe the subject of Henrietta Additon,director of the New York Bureau ofCrime Prevention, who is scheduledto speak tomorrow and Friday at4:30 in Bond chapel. Miss Additonwill talk under the joint auspices ofthe Graduate School of Social Serv¬ice Administration and the DivinitySchool which i.-? trying lo presentsocial problems as a phase of divin¬ity work.Miss Additon has been active inthe policewoman movement andheads the new bureau of men andwomen who ‘ are studying crimethrough social case methods. Theirobject is to study a person as an in¬dividual and to find the factorswhich caused him to commit crimevather than the crime itself.The bureau studies women andchildren not only in terms of theiroffense, but in terms of the causesfrom which the offense was born.Blind pigs, beaches, opium dens, andvice dens of all kinds are searchedout and their importance ascertained(Continued on page 8) AUSTRALIAN SEXLIFE SUBJECT OFROHEIM’S TALKDr. Geza Roheim, the first anthro¬pologist to fully accept the psycho¬analytic point of view, will presentthe results of his years’ research on“The Sexual Life of Central Aus¬tralia”, next Wednesday afternoon,"in Harper Mil.From 1929 to 1930, Dr. Roheimwas in Australia, interpreting theprimitive cultures from a psychoan¬alytic basis. It is the general fieldin which he has been working since1914, when he took his doctor’s de¬gree from Budapest. He then becamea member of the staff at the Hun¬garian National museum, a postfrom which he resigned in 1919 todevote his time exclusively to re¬search.During 1915, 16, and 17 his pa¬pers were published in Hungarianjournals and in 1921 he was*award-ed the prize of the International Psy¬choanalysis association for the bestwork in the field of applied psycho¬analysis. He is the author of threebooks on Hungarian folklore, andhas written two volumes, translatedinto English: “Social Anthropology”the “Animism, Magic and the DivineKing”.Next Wednesday evening in Man-(Continued on page 2) Chicago's First String QuartetAccorded Enthusiastic ReceptionBy Robert WallenbornFrom the time of its inception byHaydn, the string quartet, as a mu¬sical type, has been of the aristo¬cracy. It is not of the modern in¬dustrial world, but rather of thatage when people had leisure tostudy and to reflect. One associ¬ates it, peculiarly enough, with pow¬dered wigs and rococo salons, thestately hoop-skirted dames, andflattering courtiers. And it hascome down to us as the only musi¬cal genre which has not, and can¬not be accepted by the hoi polloi oreven by the average musician. It isprincipally something which belongsto the connoisseur and to the seri¬ous artist.Shows Great PromiseIn the last few years, however,a number of attempts have beenmade, notably in the United States,to popularize this kind of entertain¬ment. And tho the Gordon Stringquartet was conceived by the form¬er concertmeister of the ChicagoSymphony orchestra chiefly be¬cause of his love for the ensemble,and financially made possible by awealthy patron of the arts, its workis that of the other groups, name¬ly, to bring the classic quartet tothe people, and thereby aid in cul¬tivating the American taste. Andit shows great promise, if one is tojudge by the audience assembled atMandel hall yesterday afternoon,and by that audience’s enthusiasm.The artistic quality of the Gor¬don String quartet can hardly be criticised; these four musiciansplay with such ethereal purity oftone, such delicate nuances, andsuch perfect ensemble, that onefinds one’s self wondering even aboutthe possibility of such beauty onearth.This was particularly the casewith the Beethoven Quartet No. 3which opened the program, and inthe Schuman Quintet for Pianc andStrings, which closed the same, thoin the latter the assisting artist,Rudolph Reuter, used too much un¬necessary imagination, and inter¬rupted the flowing rhythm con¬stantly with his rubatos.Audience Prefers “Scherxo”The most interesting offering ofthe afternoon was the Turina “Laoracion del torero”, a fascinatingcombination of Spanish rhythms ina slightly modernistic medium ofexpression. True to the writer’sexpectation, however, the audiencepreferred the eighty-mile-an-hourMendelssohn “Scherzo” which fol¬lowed, while the “Andante canta-bile” by Tschaikowsky, played asan 'encore, caused a furore, not en¬tirely justified.The University, and the city ingeneral, need an institution such asthe Gordon String Quartet. Unpar¬alleled in its field except by theKreisler and the Guarneri quartets,it offers a highly artistic perform¬ance of the “aristocratic” musicalrepertoire, and should therefore, at¬tract an increasing number of inter¬ested patrons. Janitor, Drama CriticLoses Pants in FireA disastrous fire broke outyesterday in Mandel hall, as theGordon string quartet strummedlustily on the stage. Disastrous,that is, to Charlie, famous criticof Mirror and Blackfriar showsand sometime janitor around theMandel premises.Not that the fire involvedany large pecuniary loss. Itseems, however, that the flamesdevoted especial attention toCharlie’s best pair of pants,which have been reported as atotal loss.It all arose from certain weld¬ing operations which were beingcarried on in Mandel basement.A spark jumped, and Charlie’spants flamed up. Quick work onthe part of the welding staffdrowned the flame in short or¬der, but the pants were ruined.But Charlie was in anotherpair of pants at the time.Select Page AsNew Mentor ofBaseball SquadWill Take ChargeMaroon Nine onMarch 24 ofHarlan O. (“Pat”) Page has beenappointed coach of the Universitybaseball team. Director A. A. Staggannounced yesterday. In puttingPage in charge of the baseball team,the Chicago athletic director is fol¬lowing his policy of making each ofhis chief assistants coach of a majorteam.Coach Nelson Norgpren, who tookover the baseball team one year agowhen H. O. Crisler left the univers¬ity to become athletic director at theUniversity of Minnesota, is coach ofthe basketball team. He took theball team to Japan last summer, hisclub making a brilliant recovery tobreak even in a fifteen game seriesafter losing the first five games inthe islands.Star As SouthpawPage was a star southpaw pitcherat Chicago for three seasons in 1908,1909, and 1910. The Maroons wonthe conference championship in 1909,largely because of Page’s pitching.His record in the Big Ten won himnumerous chances to go with majorleague teams, but he refused the of¬fers to accept the position at the Uni¬versity as baseball coach. His 1913team won the conference champion¬ship. Page took two teams to Ja¬pan, the Marorn club of 1910. fivitforeign team '.•) play in the East.(Continued on pai'e o»BRIDEWELL SERVESA S LABORATORYFOR POLICE CLASSUsing Bridewell jail as a labora¬tory, Professor August Vollmer’sclass in police administration studiedat first hand yesterday the problemsof the police with habitual delin¬quents and criminals. The groupspent three hours at the penal insti¬tution. While there they were ad¬dressed by Dr. Harry R. Hoffman ofRush Medical school, who is the di¬rector of the psychopathic clinic ofBridewell and one of the best knownpsychiatrists in Chicago.“Prevention of crime by punish¬ment alone will never succeed” wasthe theme of Dr. Hoffman’s talk. Heenumerated the types which will nev¬er conform to the standards of so¬ciety. Delinquents suffering fromsenile dementia and dementia prae-cox when released from confinementonly return to old habits.Dr. Hoffman states that thesetypes, along with the dope fiend, thrphysically crippled, general paraly¬tics, and degenerates, should beplaced in special institutions provid¬ed for their care. Dr. Hoffman be¬lieves that none of these “police re¬peaters” should be in penal institu¬tions.The students were shown throughthe buildings of the jail by WardenfContinued on page 2) TWELVE NAMED AS1931.32 HEADS OFWOMEN’S GROUPSMerriam Is Elected asNew President ofY.W.C.A.HILL LEADS W. A. A.Abells Heads Federation;Stinnett Made BoardRepresentativeTwelve women were elected yes¬terday in the foyer of Ida Noyeshall as the 1931-32 leaders of theFederation of University women,the Women’s Athletic association,and the Young Women’s Christianassociation.Rebecca Hayward, Elizabeth Mil¬lard, Martha Miller, and Ruth Wil-j lard were elected to the Executivej council of Federation yesterday by1 155 members of the association.Elect Abells Chairmanj At the last meeting of the coun-I cil, Ruth Abells was elected Chair¬man of Federation and Alice Stin¬nett was elected as representativeon the Board of Women’s organiza¬tions. All Federation officers willbe installed by the present counciltonight at 5 in Ida Noyes hall.Eighty-seven members of theWomen’s Athletic association elect¬ed as their leaders: Margaiet Hill,president; Harriet Ann rrinkle,vice-president; Leone Bailey, sec¬retary; and Isabel Peterson, treas¬urer. These new officers will as¬sume their robes of office at the an¬nual Installation dinner tomorrownight at 6 in Ida Noyes had wheneach officer of the present boardwill read the,pledge of service toher successor. Tickets for the din¬ner may be procured for 75 centsfrom any of the present Boardmembers.Y. W. C. A. OfficersOfficers of the Young Women’sChristian association for next yearare: Elizabeth Merriam, president;Andrea Radcliffe, vice-president;Florence AndreAAte, secretary; andJulie Grenier, treasurer.The old and the new officers ofY. W. C. A. will meet together with¬in a day or two to select the re¬maining members of the first cab¬inet and before the end of thisquarter they will meet again to se¬lect the members of the second cab¬inet. The newly elected officerswill not be installed until the firstor second week of Spring quarter.They and the remaining membersof first and second cabinets will as¬sume the responsibilities of their of¬fice at the annual Friendship din¬ner. The present administrationwill continue until that time.Hold Tarpon EloctionsTarpon club will hold its annualelections tomorrow from 9 to 1:30in the foyer of Ida Noyes hall. Allmembers of the club, in good finan¬cial standing, are eligible to vote(Continued on page 4)Free Cap and GownTo Lucky SubscribersMarjorie Berning received the luc¬ky number, 4601, last Thursdaywhen she subscribed to the 1931 Capand Gown and consequently will begiven a free copy of this year’s an¬nual. With the reopening of the sub¬scription drive, every Thursday willbe “Cap and Gown” day, and on thisday the person receiving the luckynumber will receive a yearbook free.Subscription booths have been plac¬ed in Cobb hall and Mandel corridor.The goal of this second drive hasbeen tentatively set at one thousandsubscriptions. An intensive cam¬paign last quarter resulted in a to¬tal of eight hundred subscriptionsbeing sold, and it is hoped to addtwo hundred more this quarter.The deadline for individual photo¬graphs to be use in the annual hasbeen set for Wednesday, March 11,it was announced yesterday by ZoeMarhoefer, women’s editor. The 300students who have not yet visited Da¬guerre’s studio are asked to make ap-'.pointments before that date.Page Two! ia% marnonI FOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morninKS, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the AutunnnWinter and Springs quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University Ave.Subscription rates $3.00 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 expressly reserves ail rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationEDGAR A. GREEXWALD, Editor-in-ChiefABE L. BLINDER, Business ManagerJOHN H. HARDIN. Managing EditorMARION E. WHITE,ALBERT ARKULES,ASSOCIATE EDITORSWALTER W. BAKERMARGARET EGANHERBERT H. JOSEPH. Jr.JANE KESNERLOUIS N. RIDENOUR. IIMERWIN S. ROSENBERGGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEFSOPHOMORE EDITORSRUBE S. FRODINBION B. HOWARDJ. BAYARD POOLEGARLAND ROUTTJAMES F. SIMONWARREN E. THOMPSON Woman’s EditorSenior EditorASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERSROBERT T. McCarthyJAMES J. McMAHONSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTS.(OHN CLANCYEDGAR GOLDSMITHCHESTER WARDSOPHOMORE WOMAN EDITORSDOROTHY A. BARGEMAN ALBERTA KILLIEMAXINE CREVISTON ELIZABETH MILLARrMARJORIE GOLLEK INGRED PETERSENELEANOR WILSONJOHN MILLS, Photographic EditorNight Editor: Merwin S. RosenbergAssistant: Bion B. HowardCOMPULSORY GYM AGAINIn the near future the report on the reorganized curriculum willbe handed to the proper authorities for ratification. In this reportwill be included a complete working formula covering th‘e entiremechanism of the University as it will function next year under thenew plan. This report will unquestionably be the final word onthe subject as far as theory is concerned; thereafter the attentionof the administration will be directed toward putting these blue¬prints into actual, concrete form.We understand that the question of compulsory gym is leftout of the report entirely pending further investigation and inquiry.This may seem a ’small matter when an entire university is beingrevamped. After all it will not interest the prospective student orthe outside world to know that Chicago compels its new membersfor six quarters to parade about the floor of Bartlett in their im¬maculate white regalia for the sole purpose of living up to someabstract standard of manhood. But it does seem, on second thought,rather absurd to retain such a pathetic little tag of a one-time fool¬ishness in a metamorphosis which has attracted nation-wide atten¬tion.The very fact that anything definite about the matter was leftout of the report would seem to indicate that the compulsory gymproblem was regarded as a bit pressing and conspicuous, and thatits importance was intentionally somewhat enhanced by its absence.Perhaps the folly of it prompted this negative exaggeration.No doubt, when a final decision is made one way or anotherthere will be some who are dissatisfied with the results. However,from the viewpoint of the student there will probably not be verymany regrets should the inspection parade be discontinued. Themain objection so far has been that the gym classes have nevercontributed anything definite in the way of athletics, enjoyment, oractual physical improvement. No attempt has ever been made tomake the exercises enjoyable, or even competitive enough to war¬rant to decent interest in them. In the end they have been re¬garded as a waste of time which might easily have been appliedelsewhere.As we mentioned once before, the retention of this grade-schoolsystem of building up muscle will seriously retard the work of theIntramural department which has ever since its beginnings contri¬buted a very essential and enjoyable athletic program to the Uni¬versity. Just why compulsory gym has become such a permanentfeature when there are so many arguments against it, is perhaps theresult of the yards and yards of red tape necessary to change any¬thing, no matter how important, and at the same time try to getsome measure of satisfaction allotted to the various parties who takeoffense at innovations in their respective field.The Daily Maroon is asking for student contributions to itsstudent forum column on this subject. It will be the first feature ofthe reorganization which may directly benefit by such suggestions,and it is to be hoped that the lowerclassmen who shook their fists atthe old gym system the hardest will now avail themselves of theopportunity to voice their resentment on black and white. Then,if there is a possibility of a change, there need be no doubt as to howthe students feel on the matter,Perh'aps suggestions on Intramural control of physical culturewould not be amiss, either. TTie Intramural department which haslistened so long and patiently to new ideas and tried to utilize themwhenever they showed a glimmer of expediency would undoubtedlywelcome some genuinely helpful suggestions in a field which wouldmake its expansion practically limitless . . . E. A. G. THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1931THE TRAVELLINGBAZAARByART HOWARDFLOWERSBud East, as you may know, tooka trip all last week running in vari¬ous spots from New York to Deti’oit.It was when Bud was in Detroit thathe realized that back home on Fri¬day night they were pulling the Mir¬ror show and he wasn’t going to bethere. Being interested in one ofthe girls in the show, he decided tosend flowers. That would havebeen all very well and noble, but hesimply addressed the flowers (fourbucks worth) to Mandel hall. Ofcourse, there was no one in the showby that name, but the flowers foundthcfir way, nevertheless, to the prop¬er party.* * 4>SOPHISTICATIONGloomily, 0. T. Henkle walked outof Mr. Eckhart’s building at eleveno’clock yesterday, stretched andyawned. “I’m bored with life”, com¬plained Mr. Henkle. “I’m tired, thatlast class was dull, and things aregoing generally wrong. To makematters worse I’ve got to leave myeleven o’clock class ten minutes earlyso that I can get down to the CollegeInn for lunch on time”.* * *BREEZOGRAMSAll college students remind me ofa layer of rock. They both seek thecourse of least resistance., * * *SWAN SONGFor the first time in our own briefstay here, we have noticed the Re¬corder’s office sending out “annoy¬ance slips” which are officially call¬ed absence notices. For four yearsthat we know of, at least, the record¬er, or most anyone else, for that mat-has never bothered anyone about notcoming to class. Now that it looksas though they never again will beable to force anyone out of bed, theyannoy us. The drowning man clutch¬es the straw.« * *SERVICEMr.^ Hutchinson, who got a jv^enhundred and fifty dollar raise recent¬ly and deserved it, gives four examsevery quarter as regular as clockwork. There’s no such thing as dodg¬ing any of them, come high water oranything else. Recently, studentJane Pebble Waterstone was sick inthe hospital, asked for an exam, hadit delivered by Mr. Hutchinson inperson, so the story goes.* * mNO JUSTICE,Margaret Egan, who writes stufffor this paper, wrote a story yester¬day sabout the Woman’s Federationand managed, at the same time, togive the girls mentioned a whole lotof activities that they weren’t mixedup in at all. The respective womencalled up and complained. Philos¬ophized Miss Egan, “Women. .. .areawful”.* ♦ •GRAFTSH. Joseph complains about the kidswho hang around near school withthe same questions all the time, “CanI watch your car, mister”, or, “Gotan extra ticket to the game”. Bring¬ing i^^ new idea, a kid stopped somefellow wUh the question, “Got adime for my trip to Europe?” andgot it ! !AUSTRALIAN SEXLIFE SUBJECT OFROHEIM’S TALK(Continued from page 1)del hall. Dr. Max Carl Otto, of theUniversity of Wisconsin, will presentthe last of the William Vaughn Moo¬dy series on philosophic ways of life.Dr. Otto, who is a professor of phil¬osophy and one of the most popularprofessors at Wisconsin, will speak on“A Crisis in Culture”, the view ofthe pragmatist. Dr. Otto lectured atthe University during the last sum¬mer quarter and was guest speakerat the banquet tendered in honor ofProfessor Tufts last quarter.BRIDEWELL SERVESA S LABORATORYFOR POLICE CLASS(Continued from page 1)James Curran and deputy WardenPeter Kelminski. The class will vis-I it the state prison at Joliet on March14, and will make a trip to the In¬stitute. for Juvenile Research pextI week. I Interclass Basketball.Dinner Held March 10j A basketball dinner for all teamsi participating in the Inter-class bas-j ketball tourney will be held nextI Tuesday at 5:30 in the small gym¬nasium at Ida Noyes hall. Both theFreshman and Senior teams arescheduled for two games before this^ date.Monday night the freshmen lost, to the seniors, 9 to 23, in a fast game,I giving the seniors the championship! of the class teams. The tournamentbegan Febuary 10 and games havebeen played every week since. Thei seniors lost the first game to thefreshmen and if the underclass teamj wins tha next two games and theI Seniors lose the next two they willI be tied with their upperclass com-i petitors.i The Sophomore and Junior teams,lagging far behind this place, playeda slow game Monday night, in which' the juniors beat the sophomores120 to 9.Syracuse Adopts ClinicFor ‘Co-eds’ ’ Mental Ills j.Something new in the \vay of clinics jis the “clinic for coeds” at the I’niver-sity of Syracuse, where, under the di-! rection of the dean of women, theI freshman girl is studied and cataloguedj as to academic pursuits, friendships,recreations, clothes, love affairs, reli¬gious ideas, vocational aspirations, useof money, and personal habits.I Among the information obtained in! this clinic is the fact that 41 percentj have the habit of smoking in college.I'hc data shows also that 8.S percentifif the first year girls have decided al-; ready what their work is to l)e afterj graduation. Twenty-three percent ofthe coeds avowed they had been in jI love many times; 8 percent said they jI had had occasional “crushes” on boys; j|2l percent said they had been in love'twice; lO percent said they had lovedonce, and 31 i>ercent said they hadnever loved at all!.\s a special concession to seniors; of Lynrhl)nrg college, they are allow-e<l to make dates with permision of theadministration, and leave the campusafter 6 in the evening without an O. K. Maroon Gagers GetMuch-Needed RestAfter Busy Week(Continued from page 1)he has suffered from an “off” streakin his shooting. Against Indiana, hisaggressiveness in following shots wasone of the bright spots in the Chi¬cago attack but his luck at hittingthe net was far from satisfactory.Parson* Big HelpAgainst Ohio, Chicago must relyupon the accurate shooting of Yatesand FLsh to insure victory. Againstboth Indiana and Illinois, Yates hasbeen unable to get lose for any ex¬cessive scoring, although against themini he crashed in several times forfast hook shots, only to see his ef¬forts rim the net and fall out. Par¬sons was one of biggest helps of theevening against both Indiana andthe Illinois. His two or three bas¬kets a game have come to be almosta certainty and his work on the floorhas shown a remarkable in^prove-ment over his inexperienced effortsat the beginning of the season.Stephen.son, who has been com¬pletely tied up in the la.st tw’o games,will probably have ample chance to.swish his side shots against the tight,around the basket defense of theOhio team.Says Women ShouldFavor Pipe to FagsProf, Samuel Stevens, professor ofpsychology at Northwestern univer¬sity, speaking to a group of womenstudents, advocated a pipe and re¬laxation while smoking.Since smoking cigarets is againstuniversity rules for women. Prof.Stevens suggessted a pipe for fullerand more lawful enjoyment.“You get no good out of cigaretsby .smoking them fast and frantical¬ly,” said the professor. “If you in¬sist upon tobacco, if you wish tosmoke for enjoyment, if you wanta genuine psychological benefit, youshould relax completely while smok¬ing.” EMORY UNIVERSITYi TO ADOPT QUARTERSYSTEM NEXT FALL—All schools of Emory univereiiy,Georgia, will be run on the quartersystem beginning next fall. Prof. J.G. Stipe, registrar, announced re¬cently.The change. Professor Stipe said, isIn line with new organization meth-cds adopted by leading universitiesin the country. Several Southern col¬leges are already running or. thequarter system.The chief advantage of the quar¬ter system, he continued, lies in theconvenience it offers in arrangingschedules. It will be possible forstudents graduating from the schoolof liberal arts at the end of the fallquarter to enter the law school im¬mediately. It also organizes gradu¬ate work in certain departments inthe school of medicine on a betterbasis.. Registration and payment of feeswill all be done at the same time,and all grades will be released at thesame time.The schools of liberal arts, busi¬ness administration, theology, andthe graduate school have been on thequarter basis since 1919. Accordingto Professor Stipe, Emory is one ofthe few colleges in the country thathave been running on a combinationof the quarter and semester systems.GOODMAN THEATREL*k» Front at Monro* Central 4030Until March 8“LAZZARO”By Luiyi PirandelloOpenins March 10: “The Addin* Marhine”By Elmer RiceSiiecial Mat. Thun., March 12Niyht* except Monday— Mat. FridayApply to Dally Maroon for Special Rate*$475 — EUROPE — $475With U. of C. Group—-July S-Auk. 25Italy, Auetria, Germany, Holland,BelRium, Franre, RnKlandMAKE RESERVATIONS NOW!{ Myron L. Carbon Bowen S. S. AcenryCampua Rep. OR Normal 73.^1I Blake Hall—9 5507 8. Habted St.THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1931 Page Three-IUNIVERSITY BULLETINWednesday, March 4, 19318:35—Radio Lecture, “News from the Quadrangles,” StationWMAQ.I 1 :50—Divinity chapel. Walker Moore Alderton, the Chicago The¬ological Seminary.12:00—Undergraduate Political Science council, E-45 Harper.12:00—^Anderson society, celebration of the Holy Eucharist,Thorndike Hilton chapel.2:30-5:30—New York Times Current Events Contest, open to allundergraduates, Cobb 208.4:00—Public lecture. (Alumni Committee on Vocations), “Build¬ing,” B. M. Pettit, Indiana Limestone company, Eckhart 133..4:00—Aychud tea, for all Jewish women, Ida Noyes library.4:15—El Circulo Espanol, Associate professor Carlos Castillo, ofSpanish department, Ida Noyes hall.4:30—Public lecture, “The Reading Process,” Dr. Michael West,Principal of Teacher’s College, Dacco, India, UniversityCollege, 18 South Michigan Avenue, Room 1 102.4:30—Public Lecture—(The Graduate School of Social ServiceAdministration and the Divinity School), “Crime andCrime Prevention,” Henrietta Additon, director. Bureau ofCrime Prevention, Police department. New York City,Joseph Bond chapel.4:30-4:30-4:30- -Zoological club, “The Evolution of the Titanotheres,” Pro¬fessor A. S. Romer of the Zoology department. Zoology 29.-Junior Mathematics club, “Graphical Methods for the De¬termination of Orbits of Double Stars,” Associate Profes¬sor Kurt Laves of Astronomy department, Eckhart 209.-Graduate home economics club, Hoffman house.5 ;00—Lenten vesper service. Dean Charles W. Gilkey, the Univer¬sity chapel.7:45——Philosophy club, “The Brain and Will, Associate ProfessorRalph Waldo Gerard, of physiology department. Classics18.5:00—Philological society (Members only). What Is a Phoneme?Professor Edward Sapir, of Anthtopoly department, and ANote on the Words for ‘Man* in the Indo-European Lan¬guages.” Professor Carl Darling Buck, of ComparativePhilology department. Classics 20. ^ ..8:00—Sociology club, “The Measurement of Social Attitudes,Professor L. L. Thurstone of the psychology department. So¬cial Science assembly room.8:15 University Debate—Debating Union vs. Grinnell College—Topic: Unemployment Insurance, Harper Mil, AdmissionFree.Exhibit DrawingBy Mrs. HutchinsIn Wieboldt 205(Continued from page 1)of his most notable work in the newChicago Board of Trade building.The Renaissance Society is indebt¬ed for the privilege of showing thesedrawings, to the Chester Johnson Gal¬leries for Mrs. Hutchins’ work, toMiss Alice Roullier of the AlbertRoullier Galleries for that of Storrs,and also for the red horses and thered crayon of a boy by Faggi. The other Faggi drawings are lent forthis exhibition by the artist himself.The student of art will find the ex¬hibition refreshing and liberatiand the casual visitor may see some¬thing entirely new. Most of thedrawings are for sale.CLASSIFIED ADS5701 Blackstone—1st floor cor. forDoctor or Dentist or both. 7 rooms,2 baths, and extra lavatory $105. Sec¬ond floor $120. 5703, first floor $105.All first class. A. H. Parker, 1500 E.57th St. RUN PREUIMRIESOF TRAU EVENTSFOR I-M CARNIVALPreliminaries in the track eventsof the Seventh Annual IntramuralCarnival were held yesterday after¬noon in Bartlett gym, while finalsin the two field events, high jumpand shot put were also run off at thesame time. No preliminaries wereheld in the freshmen and upperclasshalf and mile runs, as all entrantswill run in the finals Friday night.Qualifiers for the finals are asfollows:Freshman 50 yard dash—Pyott,P Ipha Delta Phi; Kerr, Alpha DeltaIhi; Page, Alpha Delta Phi; andCliver, Chi Psi.Upperclass 50 yard dash—Gumm,Ponies; Hunkel, Tau Kappa Epsilon;Ching, Chicago Theological Sem¬inary; and Lynch, Alpha Tau Omega.Freshman 50 yard low hurdles—Kerr, Alpha Delta Phi; Page, AlphaDelta Phi; Berg, Alpha Tau Omega;and Evans, Beta Theta Pi.Upper<^Iass 50 yard low hurdles—Hunkel, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Ching,Chicago Theological Seminary; Dag-neau Gates hall; and Valentine, PhiPi Phi.Freshman 440 yard run—Berg,Alpha Tau Omega, Buck, Lamb¬da Chi Alpha; Falstein, Phi BetaDelta; Bowman, Phi Kappa Psi;Rubin, Kappa Nu; Funkel, Zeta BetaTau; Offil, Kappa Sigma; and Litow,Phi Beta Delta.Upperclass 300 yard run—Wood¬ard, Gates hall; Gumm, Ponies;Valentine, Phi Pi Phi; Vleck, AlphaSigma Phi; Behrstock, Tau DeltaPhi; Schmidt; Parker, Delta KappaEpsilon; and Finkle, Ponies.Relay—Phi Pi Phi, Alpha TauOmega, Delta Upsilon, and Phi DeltaTheta.Freshman shot put—Whittier,Phi Gamma Delta; Oppenheim, PhiSigma Delta; Zimmer, Delta KappaEpsilon; Page, Alpha Delta Phi; andMarks, Phi Delta Theta. Distance37 feet 10 inches.Upperclass shot put—Van Nice,Delta Kappa Epsilon; Ingalls, PhiKappa Psi; Horwitz, Phi SigmaDelta; Rieger, Phi Pi Phi; Marver,Phi Beta Delta—Distance 41 feet 10inches.Freshman high jump—Evans, BetaTheta Pi, and Pyott, Alpha DeltaPhi, tied for first; Whittier, PhiGamma Delta; Johnson, Phi DeltaTheta; and Shaeffer, Kappa Nu, andWagner tied for fifth—Height 5 feet5 inches.Upperclass high jump—Burns,SPECIAL SHORT TIME ONLY50g Reduction with This AdAFAMOUSPUSH-UPPERMANENTWAVEHAIR DYEING FACIALS$3.50 up $1 upSPECIAL ALL WEEKHair Cot. SOe; Shampoo, 50c; Marcel, 50c; Arch, 50c: FincerWaro, 50c I Manlcarc. 50c. ANY THREE FOR - $1 ITAMOUS PERMANENT WAVE SHOPS, INC.LOOP SHOP—202 S. STATE. 13th FI.NORTH4775 MUwaakoo Arc., Nr. Lawrcnco, 2nd FI.4802 Broadway, Nr. Lawrcnco, 2nd FI.— —4550 N. Woatem Ato., Nr. Lawrence, 1st FISOUTH724 W. OSrd St.. Nr. Halstcd. lat FI7750 S. Halstad SL. Nr. 70th St.. 2nd FI—•220 Cottaye l>roTe. Nr. OSrd St., 2nd FI. — —lllOO-OI Santh Michlyan Avo., Roonu • and 7 (Raacland)WESTtool W. Nartk Are., Pr. Crswfard. 2nd FI2047 N. etcaro Are.. Nr. DiTortoy, lat FL4002 W. Madison St.. Nr. Crawford. 2nd FLOPEN 0 A. M. TO 0 P. M.PHONES HARRISON 0732-6723...^..PALIaado 7101...SUNnyaide 2061..„..ARDmore 1580NORmal 0060STEwart 2080...DORchester 4218.COMmodore 1107ALBany 7180SPAnIdinc 1127-VAN Barm 8182 C40United States DepositoryChecking Savings and In¬vestment Accounts of Pro¬fessors and Students in¬vited on the basis ofSAFETYSERVICEandCONVENIENCEHYDE-PARK-KENWOODNATIONAL BANKof Chicago53rd Street and Lake ParkAvenue Student Editor WhoFought for FreedomOf Press Is SuspendedThe sensational attempt of TheI. liV’ssey, official student newspaper oftile I niversity of British Columbia, toretain the freedom of deciding whatit shall print was terminated ratherignoniiniously recently with the sus¬pension of the editor, Ronald Grant¬ham, from the university, thus forc¬ing cessation of publication of the pa¬per.I he editor of The L’liyssey publishedan editorial criticizing the Provincialgovernment’s proposed policy of re¬ducing appropriations for the univer¬sity and the cutting dowTT”of enroll¬ment. On the following daj-, the eveof the legislature opening, Pres. Klinckgave vcrlial orders to the editor to re¬frain from criticism, editorially or oth¬erwise, of the university, the faculty,or the government until the facultyhad reached a decision regarding theeditorial in question.Publishes Forbidden InterviewBlit the editor considered he wasonly to refrain from any editorial com¬ments and so published student inter¬views with leading students, all ofwhich supported the stand of The Ub-yssey. On that score, the president,without consulting the Students’ coun¬cil, by whom the editor is elected, andto whom he is nominally responsible,suspended him for direct disobedienceof orders and not for the opinions ex¬pressed in his editorials.Students Support EditorThe students’ publication board ofthe university came to the support of their editor and issued a final twosheet paper with double headlines:"President Suspends Grantham, Ubys-sey Suspends Publication.” In a let¬ter to the paper the publications boardstates that it cannot continue publica¬tion under these conditions and pledgesits support to the editor.The students of the university at anAlma Mater society meeting the sameday by a vote of 920 to 421 decided togive no expression of opinion until allaspects of the situation were studied.There were charges of railroading atthe meeting, but the proferred resigna¬tion of the student president, DonaldHutchison, was declined. Since thenstudent and local press feeling has runvery high in favor of the editor and ageneral walkout of students it not un¬likely.Government Aid NeededThe offending editorial after settingout in general terms the university’sadvantages, declared. ‘Tn spite of itsgood name, in spite of growing publicappreciation and support, the univer¬sity has not received a very generoustreatment from the present govern¬ment. Expansion is needed . . . Theminister of education, however, pro¬poses not to encourage the growth ofthe University of British Columbia,but to check it.” Crime PreventionExpert Talks HereProf. Paul Cret WinsBok Architecture PrizeDelta Tau Delta; Young, Alpha TauOmega; Balsley, Delta Kappa Ep¬silon; and Slater, Delta Upsilon, andBowers, Phi Gamma Delta, tied forfourth—Height 5 feet 5 inches.In addition to the regular trackfinals, an interclub relay race willbe run Friday evening, the partici¬pants being men selected by the clubs.Finals in the,intramural boxing andW'restling tournaments will also berun off during the Carnival, but be¬cause one man in the 145, 165, and175 pound weights is both wrestlingand boxing, only the boxing matcheswill be held in these three divisions. Word was received here Wednesdaythat Paul Cret, Philadelphia, consult¬ing architect of the university, has beenawarded the Bok prize of $10,000 foroutstanding services to architectureduring 1930..\ccording to Arthur L. Peabody,state architect. Prof. Cret has servedin his present position since 1903 andhas been influential in the buildingof a “more beautiful campus.” Hewas last in Madison in the spring of1930.Prof. Cret is a member of the fac¬ulty at the University of Pennsylvania,and has served for a number of yearson the Philadelphia civic committeeon architecture. The cash award isa donation of the late Edward W. Bok,well known author.PATONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERS (Continued from page 1)in the influence they exert on theindividual. The results’ of the firstyears’ work will be evaluated in thereport to be made March 15.The New’ York bureau is the firstof its kind in the country. In De¬troit, the w'omen are in charge oftheir own department and in Chi¬cago, Avomen work under the men, af¬fording them little opportunity topursue this specialized branch ofprevention and of juvenile delinquen-ey. IVDss Additon sees in Vollmer’s po¬lice class an opportunity to build upin Chicago an interest in the preven¬tion as well as the detection of crime.Select Page AsNew Mentor ofBaseball Squad(Continued from page 1)'.A inning ten str^'ight games, and his1915 team A\'iiin'rij fifteen straight.Coach Page is noAv at the WhiteSox training camp as guest of Man¬ager Donie Bush. He will takecharge of the Maroon baseball teamabout March 24.With the appAia/i.en’. of Page asbaseball coach, the Maroon athloiic-raff which supervises major athlet¬ic.® is composeJ i f former Chicagomen. A. A. Stagg, athletic director,and football Ned Merriam, track,Nelson Norgren, basketball and PatPage, baseball, are all former “C”i.ien.Get Your MealsJ. & C. RestaurantSelected Quality FoodSea Food a Specialty1527 E. 55th St. Mid. 5196THE STUDENTSTYPING SERVICEManaged by Frances A. Mullen, A.M.EXPERT WORK ON THESES ORSHORT PAPERS.1326 E. 57th St. Dor. 2806What Do You Mean: ''Satisfaction'?^ It would take a number of answers toexpress the concept of satisfaction — service,perhaps, or quality, or price, or any combinationof these three.^ Maid-Rite shops are patterned as an¬swers to this question; Maid-Rite food preparedto express the concept. Only in that way cansuccess be achieved!^ Students—forming the large portion ofMaid-Rite patroneige — are particular in thechoice of food. But the many friends Maid-Rite has made among them leads to the conclu¬sion that a successful answer has been found to“Satisfaction.”The Maid-Rite Shops1309 E. 57th Street1324 E. 57th StreetPage Fou THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1931Business Will Not MixWith Studies, HeClaimsDON! WORK WAYTHROOGH COLLEGE, illini wturday117 H PMC undefeated water polo teams1 KM* ff AllIlU ,clash for conference supremacy' when Coach McGillivi-ay’s tankmentravel downstate for a swimmingmeet with Illinois on Saturday. TheMaroon poloists are present Big Tentitle holders, and have remained un¬beaten for two years in collegeI competition.The teams are about evenly match¬ed in the swimming events, with themini holding a slight advantage inthe 420, 220 and fancy diving. Theother events should be divided be¬tween the two squads.McGillivray will use Oker, Moore.McMillan, Brislen, Earlendson andPoska in the free style events andthe relay. McMahon and Rittenhousewill perform in the breast stroke,and the back stroke assignments wilgo to Stevens and Brislen. Ritten-house will compete in the divingevent.The Chicago swimmers will bid forconference tank honors in the BigTen meet to be held March 13 and14 at Michigan.Just when Johnnie Workaday,ambitious cousin of Joe College, isplanning to board the next train forcollege, where he expects to supporthimself and win an education at thesame time, a professor steps for-w'ard and tells him that he shouldnot be allowed to go to school.Prof. Henry Robinson of an east¬ern university intimates that a stu¬dent who expects to nourish his soulat the breast of culture and his bodyon the bounty of some one who willlet him work five hours a day forhis room and board will not be able ;to do either well, so should relin- 'quish one for the other.Unemployment DecreaseThe professor’s argument seemsto have little effe<?t on the employ¬ment situation as seen by the of¬ficials of a western Y. M. C. A. stu- ;dent bureau however. About ninety-five students wanting odd jobs haveleft their names with the bureau,while sixty-three were given jobs inDecember and eighty-six in January.Thirty-three students want per¬manent work, while twelve wereemployed in December and twentyin January. Both figures show’ a de¬crease, because of the unemploy¬ment situation in Columbia and thesurrounding community has causedJess work than in other years.Keep Deadheads OutProfessor Robinson presents along but unconvincing argumentagainst students w’orking their waythrough school, in spite of the factthat nearly two million of the fivemillion college students in theUnited States are partly or entirelysupporting themselves.He says, “A high quality ofscholarship or intelligent interest isnot to be expected from a studentw’ho comes to class dulled and sod¬den from fatigue. Economically andsocially the only solution to theprobem is to keep the deadheadsout. Make it harder to stay in col¬lege—and within a few years col¬lege w’ill mean more than a youthfullark.”Thus the doctor is in direct op¬position to the ideal of .\mericandemocracy which would put an edu¬cation in the hands of all that wouldwork for it.Cut Enrollment Three-fifthtHe would cut college enrollmentby two-fifths at one single stroke.Then, should he pare off those incollege for the social life whowould be forced to leave when dead¬heads are kept out, he would prob¬ably cut off another fifth. Such a cutwould mean that the present 2 per¬cent of our population that is col¬lege l)red would decline in a gener¬ation to less than 1-2 of 1 percent.On the other side of Dr. Robin¬son’s theory is stated in the wordsof Theodore Roosevelt, who said;‘Tf you can’t get thru college inany other way. work your way thru.But don’t try to go to school at thesame time. Take a job for a year,save money to see you thru a coupleof college years, and then repeat theperformance.” Twelve Named as193M932 Heads ofWomen’s Groups(Continued from page 1)in this election. Candidates for of¬fice are: for president and vice-president, Helen Stoll and HarrietGerber; for secretary, Eleanor Slus-ser and Gertrude Fox; and fortreasurer, Jane Wertham and Ma¬rian Harkins. Plans for the Instal¬lation dinner are not yet completed,Ruth Lee, president, announcedyesterday.At Virginiaand Kentucky... down wheretobacco growsPROF. COLE LEAVES(Continued from page 1)of his world research in “ChinesePottery in the Philippines”, “WildTribes of the Davao District” and“Nature of the World and Man”.BEAUTIFUL TYPINGSarah TaylorWork Called For and Delivered1434 Plaisanee Crt. Plaza 5346(Blackstone south of 60th) Wabash 6360EVERY FRIDAY NIGHTisFRATERNITY ANDCLUB NIGHTat theDILL-PICKLE CLUB18 Tooker PlaceLADIES FREE! college men choosethis one outstandingSMOKING TOBACCOThe men w.io go to the univer¬sities of V'rginia and Kentuckyknow tobacco . . . they see how itgrows and what makes it good.So when Virginia students, andthe men who stroll down old SouthLimestone Street in Lexington,pack their pipes with Edgeworth,their choice tells volumes about thecool, slow-burning quality of thisfavorite smoking tobacco.It’s the same story everywhere—North, South, East and West. In42 out of 64 leading colleges anduniversities, college men prefer thesmooth, fragrant hurley blend ofEdgeworth. Try Edgeworth your¬self. You’ll find more pleasure ina pipe than you ever knew before.Every tobacco store has Edge-worth, 15^ the tin. Or, for generousfree sample, write to Laiiis & Bro.Co., 105 S. 22d St., Richmond, Va.EDGEWORTHSMOKING TOBACCOEdgeworth is a blendof fine old hurleys,with its natural savorenhanced by Edge¬worth’s distinctiveeleventh process.Buy Edgeworth any¬where in two forms—“Ready-Rubbed"and “ Plug Slice." Allsizes, 154 pocketpackage to poundhumidor tin. You could go shoppingwith your eyes shutYou could turn your back to the counter andyet be perfectly sure of getting the things youwant. The exact quality of fountain pens, col¬lars, or candy, or soap, or typewriters that youlike best is handed to you instantly when youask for it by name.You don’t have to look, because you knowthat advertised brands will be precisely thesame today as they were yesterday. The factthat they are advertised guarantees that theirquality will be maintained. Their makers haveplaced themselves on record.Advertised products are honest products.It is the unadvertised things—the “just-as-goods” and the “almost-the-sames’’ that arelikely to vary in quality.You save money and you save time whenyou make a habit of buying standard goods—as advertised.Read the advertisementsand know what andwhere to buy.