?■ -,■,i¥laroon “B^at Purdue” Pepmeeting called for Fri¬day night.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1928 Price Five Cents—Section IDuring the lull in political mud-slinging in which the contributors tothis column have indulged for thepast few weeks, I shall take the op¬portunity to stick in my two bitsagain.Thoughtlessly I have neglected toinform my constituency of my ownpolitical leanings—a most lament¬able error on my part but one under which the campus seems to bebearing up tolerably well. I am aSmith man. And the Maroon is edi¬torially a Smith paper. Whether ornot it has been officially announcedas yet I don’t know, but there aresome on campus who have inferredas much. CHAPEL COUNCIL FINISHES PLANS“Beat Purdue ” Is Campus ShoutLivelier PoliticalInterest Urged byG. O. P. LeaderNow if you should hapen to bea supporter of the illustrious butportly puppet who bears the Republi¬can standards, and if you shouldcome to me and ask me why I erson-ally was a follower of the HappyWarrior, I should look up at yourserious countenance with a naiveexpression in my blue eyes and an¬swer innocuously, “1 like the man.”All of which I realize would notconstitute a valid argument in theleast and would probably provokethat look of infinite .scorn of whichonly you hard-headed, somber-souled Republicans are capable. Andalthough I should feel properly re-proache<l. I. like truth when crusoedto earth, should rise again and goblissfully on my ignorant way.But if you should come to me inan authoratative manner and de¬mand why The Daily Maroon is sup¬porting Mr. Alfred E. Smith ^or thePresidency of these United State;I should rise with all the majesty be¬fitting any Managing Editor and re¬fer you to Mr. Victor F. Roterus,Chairman of the Editorial Board ofThe Daily Maroon, paragon of poli¬tical wisdom, and gentleman of joits,whose business it is to produce validarguments in substantiation of myown editorial rashness. I have utmost confidence in Vic and am ner-suaded that the array of editoriallogic which that genius shall trot outbefore your eyes on page two of thissheet during the next few v'eeks willbe .sufficient to convince all but anobstinate few of you of the unim¬peachable justice of Our Cause.That last sentence was such astrain on my limited vocabulary thatI shall have to lapse back into mon-osyllabics for a few lines or two un¬til I catch my columnistic wmdagain. I W’ith government, national andi local, penetrating almost every in-• dustrial and .social activity in thecountry, a livelier, more intelligentinterest in politics was urged lastnight by A. W. Jefferis, Republicancongressman from Nebrkska, whospoke as an accredited representativeof his party in Harper Mil underthe auspices of the University Hoo-ver-Curtis Club.Theme Is ProsperityCongre.ssman Jefferi.s’ address cen¬tered around the campaign keynoteI of the Republican party, prosperityand the tariff. He insisted that theI schedules fixed by the Fordney-! McCumber bill should be untouched.I attributing an appreciable part ofI the nation’s wealth to the operationI of a high protective tariff again.stcheap foreign importations.Taxes Reduced.Among the recommendationsCongressman .Jefferis recited for thecontinuance of the G. O. P. admin¬istration were large reductions in in¬come taxes, classified in the lowerbrackets and the “wide-spr.ead pros¬perity of the nation.” He recognizedthe acute plight of the farmers, butdeclared that the value of their as-ses.sable property had been aug¬mented five billion dollars since the Staff of MaroonIVfakes High MarksContrary to the general ideathat extra-curricu’ar activities re¬sult in a lowering of scholarshipgrades, not one of the thirty-fiveupperclassmen working on TheDaily Maroon has been declaredineligible owing to poor work inclassrooms.Some excellent individual rec¬ords were established. One of theSophomore women had 52 gradepoints for the last nine majors,and 36 for the last six majors.Two had 50 grade points for ninemajors, and one of these .’tlso hada perfect record of 36 gradepoints for the last six majors.InterfraternityDebaters HoldFirst of SeriesIntramural debating, making itsentre into The University, got un¬der way last night with the firstround of its elimination debates forthe fall quarter in rooms C and Dof the Reynolds Club before an au¬dience of fifty. Six of the sixteenteams entered, met last night on thequestion, “Resolved :That Alfred E.Smith should be elected President ofThe United States, with the follow-Goodhue SketchesBeing Exhibited Four Ex-MaroonGridmen at PepGathering Fridaying results: Phi Kappa si, affirma¬tive, won from Phi Sigma Delta* | campus before the pep meeting, and“Beat Purdue” wdll be the key¬note of the first pep session of theyear, held Friday evening at 7:15in Mandel hall. Coming on the eveof the second home conferencegame, an effort will be made to cre¬ate fighting, spirit for the fray withthe highly rated Boilermakers.Coach Stagg and former Maroonstars will endeavor to furnish theinspiration needed to rouse the teamto the pitch needed to overcome thehandicap of previous defeats by-Iowa and Minnesota.Ken Rouse HereKen Rouse, ’27 captain and All-Conference center, “Bub” Hender¬son, captain in ’25 and now assistantcoach, “Chuck” McGuire, star of ’21and ’22 and captain in ’22, andLawrence Whiting, captain in 1911and donor of the present electricscoreboard at Stagg Field, are allslated to .speak.Froth Make SignsFreshmen will be required to at¬tend and to make “Beat Purdue”signs. Harry Hagey, who has beenin charge of the Green Cap club, ex¬pects the cheering “C” this Saturday to furnish extra pep, and helparouse^the team and the studentbody to a high pitch of enthusiasm.The University band will head theparade through the streets around Four Sets of FijiBrothers in SchoolPhi Gamma Delta claims thecampus record for the greatestnumer of sets of brothers in onehouse. There are four sets ofbrothers active in the Phi Gamhouse: John Weaver and HenryWeaver, both Juniors, from Mor¬ristown, 111.; Ralph McCormack,Senior, and Bob McCormack, Ju¬nior, of Chicago; Kenneth Crow¬der, Soph, and Frank Crowder,Frosh, from Sullivan, Ind.; andKnowles Blanchard, ' Junior, nnlC. C. Blanchard, Frosh, of Har¬risburg, Penn. Both of the Crow¬der brothers are redheads. TICKET DEMANDFOR DEDICATIONTOPS ALLOTMENTCongregation of 2,200 toAttend CeremoniesIn New ChapelLeader DescribesCzech Democracy,Only Decade OldLast week I saw A1 Smith. Iliked A1 Smith very much. I heardA1 Smith talk to the professors. 1saw A1 Smith smile. I shoulc liketo vote for A1 Smith, but mammasays I am not old enough to vote.Just the same mamma says I canpray for him, for I do want .41Smith to win. Isn’t that nice? I An exhibition of original dravv-j ings by the late Bertram Goodhue,designer of the new University Cha-j pel, has been placed on view by theRenaissance Society of the Univer¬sity.These drawings may be seen inroom 205 Weibolt from 2 to 5:30daily, beginning Thursday, Oct. 25and extending through Wednesday,Nov. 7.The exhibition is the sixtn in aseries which the society is devotingto the new chapel.At the .same time, announcementis made of a motion picture, to begiven Monday evening in HarperE 11. This picture shows the wholeprocess of manufacture, from mod¬eling to ca.sting, of the Indian sta¬tures, by Mestrovic, that are to beerected in Grant Park.A goodly number of the pigskinheroes have been taking up bedspace in the Billings torture palacesince last Saturday’s disastrous butgallant stand against the Minnesotacolossi. Yards of tape and gallonsof liniment have been consumed.And now the football team is ableto sit up and take a little nourishment.The athlete’s life is a hard oneand a dangerous one, and yet eventhis comparatively tame business ofperforming calisthenics on a key¬board is not without its hazards. Itoo have been to the Billings Hos¬pital and I too have been swathedin tape. It was my proboscis whichthe doctors saw fit to drape with thecloth of martyrdom, and although Ifelt somewhat offended that a moreheroic part of my anatomy was notselected, I swallowed my hurt andemerged triumphantly bandaged.And I attribute my affliction solelyand wholly to my art. What sacri¬fices are not made in thy name, OJournalism! McLean Talks onThomas Sydenham“The Life and W’ork of ThomasSydenham” is the subject of a lec¬ture to be given by ProfessorFranklin Chambers McLean of theDepartment of Medicine today at6:45 in the Art Institute. ProfessorMcLean will speak of the greatchanges and advances in the studyof medicine made by Dr. Sydenham,who is said to be one of history'smost famed physicians.Unlike his contemporaries, Sy^l-enham was an advocate of cb.nica!observations and not a believer inthe unquestioning acceptance of thetheories and facts disclosed in pastresearch.WANTED — FRESHMENFreshman men and women arewanted on the staff of The DailyMaroon. Although many have comeout, at least ten more freshmen areneeded. Students interested in thework of any department, especiallythe editorial staff, should report im¬mediately. Kappa Sigma, negative, defeatedZeta Beta Tau; Pi Lambda Phi, af¬firmative, won the decision over Sig¬ma Chi. Phi Delta Theta won bydefault. Mr. Leonard Great wood,president of the Debating Union,which is sponsoring this intramuraldebating, judged.Four more debates tomorrownight at .seven in the Reynolds clubwill culminate the first round. Theseeliminations will end Nov. 5.PUBUCATION BOARDTO DISCUSS CHANGEOF POUCIES TODAY will also play during the meeting.Nelson TestifiesAs Hoover ManChanges in the policy followed bythe undergraduate pubications atthe University will be discussed, andplans for the year will be formulat¬ed, at the first meeting of the jointFaculty-Student Board of Publica¬tions today in the Men’s Commonsroom in Classics at 3:30.Representatives from each of thecampus publications will be pre.sent.Louis Engel, managing editor ofThe Daily Maroon, has been chosenby the Board of Control of that pub¬lication as its representative GeorgeMorgenstern will be spokesman forthe Phoenix. No repi’esentative forthe Cap and Gown has been selectedby late yesterday afternoon. I am for Hoover because he doesnot hold any quack remedies to thefarmer; their troubles are economicnot political and he tells them so.I am for Hoov'er because the elec¬tion of Smith would in no w aychange the legal status of the liquorquestion and would encourage boot¬legging and lawlessness. jI have more faith in the men be- |hind Hoover, than in the men be- jhind Smith.The question of religion does notenter. If both candidate.*? wei’eProtestants I would vote for Hoo¬ver. If both candidates were Cath¬olic, I would vote for Hoover Ifboth candidates were Atheists Iwould vote for Hoover. I io notconsider it necessary to vote for acandidate I do not want, to demon¬strate my religious broadmindedness.I am taking the advice of mv S nithfriends and not alowing religion toinfluence me.Dean B. G. Nelson. Improvements that have come toCzecho-Slovakia since it won its in¬dependence from the Austrian em¬pire in 1918 were described by Wal¬ter Vogta Benes, brother of Edou¬ard Benes, Czech foreign nrn ster,yesterday afternoon in Harper Milbefore the Slavonic club.A democratic republic in whichall the national minorities are rep¬resented has been established fromthe chaotic group of nationalitieswhich fought itself free from Aus¬tria, declared M. Benes. A moreequitable distribution of economicadvantages than the aristocratic sys¬tem of Austria allowed has been effected through parceling out land tothe peasants in small quarrtities.Dr. Matthew Spinka, librarian ofthe Chicago Theological seminary,interpreted M. Benes’ address,which was given in the Czech lan¬guage.Y. W. PLEDGES FAILTO REACH GOAL SETFOR FINANCE DRIVEPresident’s AbsenceDelays French Club Gosnell AnnouncesPlans for ContestAbsence in California of PatriciaGillis, last year’s president of theFrench circle, has delayed the civ-le's first meeting, which will be heldat the French house Thursday, No-vemei 8 at 4:30. Henri C. E. Davidof the French department is to speakat that time, as he has at the in¬augural fall meetings of the circlefor the past ten years. His subjectwill be announced later. All stud¬ents of French have been invited toattend.Mr. David is an associate profes¬sor of French literature and hasbeen a member of the Universityfaculty since 1902. He receivea hisA. B. from the J’rench-American col¬lege of Springfield, Mass. Reports made by team c.aptains inthe Y. W, C. A. Finance Drive ata luncheon given yesterday at 12 'inthe Y. W'. rooms at Ida Noyes haPshowed that the teams have failedto reach the mark set for the drive.Only $565 has been received orpledged, and the quota which shouldbe filled by tomorrow calls foreighteen hundred dollars.Proceeds of the drive will go tomaintain the organization, to payfor scholarships, student loans, andto support branches in foreign coun¬tries. Jane Mullenbach, co-chair¬man of the drive urgL-d that thewomen redouble their efforts toreach the goal. Pledge money andneed not be paid immediately, shesaid.Assistant professor Harold F.Gosnell of the political science de¬partment represented the Universityat the fourth annual meeting of theIntercollegiate Council of the NewYork Current Events Contest whichmet October 20 in New York,All undergraduates are eligible tocompete in this contest, in whichprizes of $150, $75, and $25 willbe offered. The winner of the firstprize will have his paper entered inthe national contest wliere u prizeof $500 will be awarded. The threehour examination will take place inMarch. In this examination the es¬say type of question will not bestressed as much as formerly.All students interested in this e.v- iamination have been requested tusend their names to DV&t>'9oiiielLFaculty Exchange. New Classical ClubTo Organize TodayAll students interested in theclassics, not only in Greek and inLatin but in history, philosophy, endrelated subjects are invited to at¬tend a tea to be given today at 4 -.30in Classics 20. This meeting willmark the foundation of a_ new or¬ganization to be known as the Un¬dergraduate Classical Club.Dr. Robert J. Bonner, head of theGreek department, will discuss ten¬tative plans for club meetings dur¬ing the coming year which will in¬clude a Greek Symposium or aRoman banquet.Elene Rogers and Ruth fetersonwill be the hostesses at the teawhich will follow the program. The student allotment of admis¬sion cards for both the morning andvesper dedication of the new Uni¬versity Chapel next Sunday, Oct. 28has been completely disposed of, an¬nounces the Office of the President.These tickets were distributed at 8and at 1 yesterday and at both timesstudents were forming in line longbefore the appointed hour to securethe admission receipts. Nine hun¬dred tickets for the 11 o’clock seiv-ice and four hundred for the 4o’clock vespers were readily distrib¬uted and many were unable to se¬cure admission.Final Details Arranged“This evidence of student inter¬est in the new Chapel is a source ofgreat satisfaction to the adminisUa-tion, for ultimately the Chapel ex-i.sts solely for the spiritual benefitof the student body,” commentedDr, Charles W. Gilkey, recently ap¬pointed Dean of the Chapel, at ameeting of the University Chapelcouncil at his home last night.Final details of the services f/ereoutlined and the role of the ''hapelcouncillors defined at this meeting.At the morning service twelve ofthe councillors will direct the seal¬ing of the audience of some twenty-two hundred and will be assisted bythe regular ushering force of theUniversity. The other twelve of thecouncillors will act as the officialrepresentatives of the undergiadu-ate student body and, following theAides and Marshals who act as di¬rectors of the ceremony, will leadthe processional.Procession Stars at 11Councillors who will direct theseating are: Head Ushers, CharlesCutter and Alice Penning; As.sist-ants, Daniel Autry, Donald Bickley,Wanzer Brunelle, Harry Hagey,Dorothy Hartford, Harold Haydon.Walter Kincaid, .Jane Mullenbach,Margaret Stephenson, and BettyWhite. Those who will march in theprocessional are: Annette Allen,Elizabeth Bryan, Mary ElizabethCooley, Louis Engel, Aldean Gib-boney, John Jackson, Priscilla Kel¬logg, Muriel Parker, Robert Porter,Frances Rappaport, Georgia Robi¬son and Gregory Vlastos.According to present plans, theprocession gowned in full academicregalia, will proceed from Harperpromptly at 11 and marching down59th Street, wdll enter the Cnapelby the main or south door.Counsellors, FroshTo Meet At TeaFederation is giving a get-togeth¬er tea for Freshman women andtheir upperclass counsellors todayfrom 3:30 to 5 in the north recep¬tion room of Ida Noyes hall.Anne Bolling, chairman of thetea, will direct » tour of the build¬ing following which the Federationcouncil members and the upperclasscounsellors will serve refreshments.Tables will be set up in the southreception room, where bridge will beplayed. The tea is being held so thatthe Freshmen women may becomebetter acquainted.GERMAN CLUB MEETSDie Deutsche Gesellschalt willhave its bi-weekly meeting Friday, 4o’clock, Ida Noyes hall. The enter¬tainment will consist of a talk byDr. E. Lentner, refreshments, and amusical program.a:.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1928Satlg ifflaroottFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morniriiirs, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription rates$3.00 per year; by mai,, $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, 1897.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationThe StaffLOUIS H. ENGEL, JR., MANAGING EDITORROBERT W. FISHER, BUSINESS MANAGERHARRIET HARRIS, WOMAN’S EDITORROBERT L. STERN, SPORTS EDITORVICTOR ROTERUS, CHAIRMAN EDITORIAL BOARDOFFICE—ROOM 16, 5831 University Avenue, LEXINGTON HALLTelephones: Midway 0800, Local 44, Hyde Park 9221MENCharles H. Good News EditorEdwin Levin News EditorRobert C. McCormack News EditorEdward G. Bastian Day EditorStanley M. Corbett Day EditorJohn T. Bobbitt Day EditorNorman R. Goldman Day EditorEdgar Greenwald Day EditorJohn H. Hardin Day EditorHenry C. Ripley Day EditorWOMENHarriet Hathaway Juivior EditorRosalind Green Junior EditorJ. Aldean Gibboney Feature EditorFrances A. Blodgett Sophomore EditorMarjorie Cahill Sophomore EditorPearl Klein Sophomore EditorMarion E. White Sophomore Editor SPORTS DEPARTMENTHenry D. Fisher Assistant EditorAlbert Arkules Sophomore EditorMaurice Liebman Sophomore EditorJerome Strauss Sophomore EditorEmmarette Dawson Women’s EditorMarjorie Tolman..Associate Women’s EditorBUSINESS DEPARTMENTElarle M. Stocker Advertising ManagerRobert Nicholson Circulation ManagerBlanche Reardon Secretar>Lee Loventhal Office ManagerRobert Mayer Downtown CopyFred Towsley Downtown CopyAbe Blinder Local CopyRobert Shapiro Local CopyHuge Mackenzie Advertising Rep. OFFICIAL NOTICESThursday, October 25Divinity chapel. Associate Profes¬sor McGiffert, of Ecclesiastical His¬tory of the Chicago Theological Sem¬inary, Joseph Bond chapel, 11:50. Friday, October 26Divinity chapel. Professor EdgarJohnson Goodspeed, of Biblical tmdPatristic Greek, Joseph Bond chapel. 11:50.Public Lecture (downtown), Ed¬ward Scribner Ames, Professor ofBacteriology club, Allan J. Mc¬Laughlin, , Surgeon, U. S. HealthService, “Experiences with AsiaticCholera,” Ricketts 1, 4:30.Public Lecture (downtown),Franklin Chambers McLean, Profes¬sor of the Department of Medicine,“Sydenham,” the Art Institute,6:45.The Sociology club. Professor Or¬lando Park of the Department ofZoology, “The Marginal Man,” Swift106, 8:00. ARE WE DOWN HEARTEDIF any answer butNOwere expected the question would be an insult.Football? Business? Just Alike? Serve to your utmostand ultimate success is certain. We serve the best asbest we can. Should we win your patronage?THE ELUS TEA SHOP940 East 63rd St.Delicious Food - Much or Little - Elarly and Late Philosophy, “Locke,” Art Institute,6:45.largest setiinaguiditypencUAtattdealersBuy^ adozen Superlative in quality,the world-|amou8\PENUSymmsdve best service andlongest wear.lOc eachAmerican Pencil Co., 500 Vl^illow At.,I Makers of UNIQUE Thin LeadI Colored Pencils in 20 colors—$1 dog.I D2, Hoboken, N. J.THE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM1. Encouragement of student initiative in undergraduate activityand scholarship.2. Application of research principles and abolition of grades forsenior college students.3. Promotion of undergraduate interest in lectures, concerts,exhibits and other campus cultural influences.4. Erection of dormitories and field house.5. Support of military unit.6. Adoption of a deferred fraternity and club rushing plan.TESTING THE STUDENT BODYPurdue, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Illinois staring them in theWith the Iowa and Minnesota defeats behind them and w’ithface, the Maroons are, it would seem, in for something. In eachof the four remaining games the experts will predict a defeat forStagg’s football team.Football fortunes in recent years have reversed so that evenPurdue, once merely feared by Coach Stagg, will come on the fieldSaturday afternoon a heavy favorite.We see in the coming Saturday afternoons a test, not ofthe( team, but of the nature of the student body. What, we won¬der, will become of the cheering which, even when the Maroonsare playing championship ball, is quite restrained and meagre?Will a losing team cause it to wither away into nothing, or willit prove to be a much-needed tonic that will call forth a greateroutward manifestation of the Chicago spirit?It is certain that the members of the squad haven’t resignedthemselves to a fatalistic outlook on the remaining games. Thenightly practice sessions produce the same pepper and determin¬ation that was evidenced at the beginning of the season. Al¬though the coaches and players cannot help but feel a bit dis¬couraged with a casualty list that reads like the result of a cav¬alry charge, they are not depressed, and they are not concedinga single one of the four remaining games.Although loud, hollow-sounding proofs of a Chicago spirit arefew at this school, we believe that a true, significant love of theschool, its associations, and its protections, is imbedded in thestudent body, and that it will crop out in a crystallized form dur¬ing the present crisis of the football team.Last Friday, a Big Ten football team whose fortunes took acomplete turn this year was accorded a send-off to a Conferencegame by only forty persons. We feel sure that when the Maroonstake off for Madison they will be given a much more loyal andlustier hand.THE WAYS OF FASHIONThe activities of the young ladies at fashionable eastern in¬stitutions is always intriguing. An article in the Milwaukee Jour¬nal makes us acquainted with the fact that cigarettes have be¬come too old fashioned now for the girl students at Bryn MawrCollege. Some of the more conservative undergraduates at thisfamous school, of which the daughter of former President Taft isdean, still cling to cigarettes, but “for the really up to date amongthe intelligentsia, the boyish cigarette is as archaic as the boy¬ish bob.’’ At Bryn Mawr the girls are smoking pipes.They are not the cumbersome pipe that weights on UncleJosh’s jaw, but are wee things made of ebony, rosewood, clay,amber, glass or whatever one can fancy. In defense of the prac¬tice the students remind you that the stuffing ingredient is cigar¬ette tobacco and not Peerless, and that Amy Lowell of the BostonLowells is said to have smoke cigars with one hand and writtenpoetry with the other. SHADOW WEAVESOur tremendous buying powergives university men suitsreally worth $50 at$ 33 50THE IJkST WORDIN COLLEGE STYLEThere are thousands here to choose from — oxfet’dshadow weaves, blue, brown, blue gray and tan shadowweaves. All the latest college models, 2 button highshoulder models — 3 button and double breasted models— notched lapels. All hand tailored — full of style andindividual, stirring, smart $50 values of out¬standing popularity.service*33 50Overcoats invast assortment»33 Full length-swag¬ger top coats50 35MAURICE L ROTHSCHILDMINNEAPOLIS State at JacksonCHICAGO ST. PAULTHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1928 /MAROON CRIPPLES RETURN TO PRACTICECHICAGO HARRIERSSEEK TO DEFEATlAFAYETTE SQUADMartin vs. Letts FeaturesCross-Country RunSaturdayPurdue’s stellar harrier squad ledby Orville Martin, conceded to bethe jrreatest distance runner in theconference this year, will come to• the Midway this Saturday with achance of defeat, for the first timein several years.The feature of the meet will bethe contest between Martin andLetts. The Chicajfo sophomore starplaced first in the dual meet withMinnesota last Saturday with thetime of 16:7 minutes. The Maroonchances are also strengthened byanother sophomore, Lawrence Brain-ard, who finished fourth last week.Big SquadCaptain Berndtson, who finishedeight at Minnesota, and Teitelmanwho was seventh are looked upon forplaces this Saturday. Holt, Farris,Ridge, Greenman, Swadesh, Lewis,Livingston, and Buchannan will runagainst Purdue Saturday,On November 10th the Maroonteam participates in a triangularmeet with Wisconsin and Minnesotaat Madison. Two weeks later theconference meet will also be heldat Madison.I-M NOTESThe Macs Junior touchball teamdowned the Hitchcock Hall aggregation 12 to 0 in the only game play¬ed yesterday afternoon. Phelan GroomsPurdue’s BacksOn Air DefenseFollowing the breakdown of hisforward pass defense that allowedWisconsin to come from behind andgrab a 19 to 19 tie with the Boiler¬makers here Saturday in a greatHomecoming battle, Coach JimmyPhelan is giving his backs intensivedrill this week on aerial defense inan effort to stop the finished over¬head attack of the Maroons at theMidway Saturday. Coming on theheels of gruelling battles with Mirnesota and Wisconsin, the annualtilt with the Maroons will tax thestamina of the Purdue squad andmakes the problem of reservestrength even more puzzling forPhelan.While Chicago has lost twostraight Big Ten games to Iowa andMinnesota, two of the strongestteams in the circuit, the past historyof Purdue-Chicago battles serves asa warning against any optimism inthe Boilermaker camp. Despite pre¬game dope, Stagg has aways demon¬strated his ability to pull team.s outof a sluhip and whip together sur¬prisingly strong combin.'itions as theseason progresses.Stagg’s eleven will be keyed to ahigh pitch following its two defeatsand is epected to make a great ef¬fort to stage a comeback of thesame type that the Boilermakers dis¬played here Saturday after drop¬ping their first Big Ten game toMinnesota. While the Staggmenwere decisively defeated by the Go¬phers, they enjoyed unusual successwith a daring aerial offense andcompleted a high percentage of theirattempts. BATTLE CONTINUESFOR POSITIONS ONWATER POLO TEAMEighty Gindidates FightFor VarsityBerthsWith more men out this year thanever before, the water polo team islooking forward to one of the testseasons of its existence. Eighty men,counting the Frosh as men, have an¬swered Coach McGillivray’s call formaterial and there are many athletesof worth among these.During the tri-weekly pratices theboys have shown great enthusiasmand some are displaying what thecoach calls "mid-season form,”which is to say they are in the piinkof condition. Coach McGillivray,admits that a little polishing is inorder in view of the very shorttime the squad has had to practice.Many Out For TeamThe athletes who are doing goodwork and are in line for positions onthe team are many. There are somany, in fact, that the Coach coulduse "Knute” Rockne’s famous sys¬tem of former years and have afirst team, seond team, third teamand so on.This year’s captain is Szold, whoshines at any position except goal-tender. Szold, Stephenson, and Mc¬Millan are perhaps the shiftiestplayers out. Bartoli is proving use¬ful around the goal while Getzov,Plimpton, McNeil, Rice. Klein andPercy are doing good work at guard.Don Moore, Jacobson, Silverstein,Lowenstein are expected to do somestrong offense work at forward.HAROON IMIGHT”l1 TONIGHT • 9:00 P.M.DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITYwill be hostsCome along with the crowd—Sing!Cheer!College frolic in addition to this galaPROGRAMFRANKIE MASTERSand his Collegians in‘^Creations In Jazz”withEDDIE HILLLYDIA HARRIS - - ON THE SCREEN - -Dorothy MackaillJack Mulhallin“WATERFRONTnU/fD THEATER}oALAB&NcKATZ 11 llfl EK Hockey Play ForWomen To StartNext WednesdayWomen’s inter-class hockey teamswill start the 1928 hockey season intwo games Wednesday, October 31 at2:40 when the freshmen meet thesophomores and the juniors play theseniors-The rest of the season’s games areschedued on Monday, November 5,Thursday, November 8, Tuesday, No¬vember 13, Thursday, November 15,and Wednesday, November 21 at 2:40on the hockey fields in front of IdaNoyes hall. On Monday, November5, the Freshman team will meet theJunior outfit and the sophomores willclash with the seniors. Thursday,November 8 will be the day of theFreshman-Sophomore and Junior-Senior struggles. Tuesday, Novem¬ber 13 the freshmen play the seniorsand sophomores meet the juniors.Thursday, November 15 brings theFreshman-Senior and Sophomore-Ju¬nior games and Wednesday, Novem¬ber 21, the Freshman-Sophomore andJunior-Senior clashes.The annual Alumnae-Honor teamgame will be played off on Saturday,December 1 at 10 A. M. The honorteam is chosen from the squads byteam captains and coaches and rep¬resents the best material of the sea¬son. Referees will be Miss MargaretBurns and Miss Orsie Thomson ofthe women’s department of physicaleducation. BADGERS MIX WITHWOLVES IN THREESPORTS SATURDAYNext Saturday might well hetermed “Michigan Day” from thestandpoint of the Badgers, for Wis¬consin and the Wolves will hook upin three contests on that date. Head¬lining the Card is, of course, thefootball game which brings CoachThistlethewaite's eleven and theMaize and Blue team together at thenew Ferry Field.At Madison the Cardinal reserveswill attempt to keep their recordclean when they engage the Michigan“B” squad in a grid contest at CampRandall stadium. The Wisconsincross country team will run a 3 and3-4 mile race with the Wolverines atAnn Arbor in the morning before theVarsity football game-The Badgers survived their recentbattle with the rejuvenated Boiler¬makers satisfactorily. All of the menare in shape to practice, althoughSmith, battering sophomore fullback,and Gantenbein, left end, are stillfavoring minor injuries. No one isdiscouraged at the outcome of thePurdue tilt because of the greatcomeback staged by Wisconsin whenthe game appeared to be lost.HOLD ENTERTAINMENTForeign students throughout Chi¬cago are invited to attend the Sun¬day evening gathering of the Inter¬national Fellowship culb to l^e heldin Ida Noyes hall. At the last ofthese entertainments more than twohundred students of all nationalitieswere present. LEVERS, RAYSSONVAN NICE RETURNTO VARSITY SQUADStagg Stresses Defense AsMaroons Prepare ToMeet Purdue^ Darkening shadows over the train¬ing field brought the floodlights andthe ghost ball into the midst of Ma¬roon activities last night. With mostof the crippled veterans out for p^*ac-tice, the varsity began to assumemore formidable proportions for theurdue scrap.The varsity line assumed the de¬fensive while Jerry Fisher's fresh¬men hammered away but with littlesuccess. The Varsity wall lined upwith' Kelly and Priess at the ends,Krogh and Brown at the tackle posi¬tions, Cushman and Brislin at guardsand Small at center.The regular backs worked somefast and smooth running playsagainst the second string line. Men¬denhall, Van Nice, and Leyers show¬ed up for the first time this week,but Mendenhall was the only backwho indulged in the prolonged work¬out.REMINGTON STANDARD TYPE¬WRITER. PRACTICALLY NEWfor sale. Cost $100.00 new; will sell fori$37.50 cash. New Black and Red ribbonand supplies included. Also have L CSmith ypewriter, Kood condition, $?.6.00.Will brinR either machine to your roomfor satisfactory trial. Call Fairfax 6931.ask for Mr. Mayne; or leave your phoneand name.I ^^^HESTERFIELD stands out as the mildcigarette that satisfies.' That is becauseit l)as taste. Its mildness is not fiat orinsipid—Chesterfield ba^ character—fiavor—aroma^and appeal* Due first, to the ex* tra fine quality of its tobaccos, and secondljrto the can’t* be*copied manner I of theirblending and cross*blending.They are mild—.yes, very mild, and yetthey satisfy.IPage Four THE .DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1928CLASSIFIED ADSTO RENT—Two room apartment.Housekeeping privileges if desired,5718 Kimbark, Hyde Park 3170. PLE WANTED—Freshman canwork on staflF. Liberal commissionpaid, .\pply at C. & G. office, Lex¬ington Hall, after 2:30.WANTED — Men and women.Quick way to make big money, fullor part time. Mfg. Agy., 1401 E.57th St. YOUNG COUPLE—Will sacrificebeautiful furniture, only 2 months old;3 pc. frieze parlor set, carved frame;two 9x12 Wilton rugs; 8 pc. walnutdining room suite; 4 pc. walnut bed-FOR SALE—Underwood typewrit¬er; slightly used. Vincennes 4244.LOST—Heavy gold man’s ring setwith sardonyx at Ida Noyes hall. Re¬turn to office at Ida Noyes for suit¬able reward.UNFURNISHED APARTMENTFOR RENT OR SALE—High grade100 per cent co-op bldg. Five largerooms, tile bath. Frigidaire refrig¬erator, new decorations, inside in¬cinerator, selected neighbors, 2 blks.to Univ., 1 blk to Midway. 3 blks toJackson Pk., 1 blk to bu^s line, 2 blksto surface car, 2 blks to electrified1. C., moderate rental or sales price.*For appointment call Edgewater7480, after 11 a. m.FOR .‘^ALE—Muskrat coat likenew, $75.00; Electric Radio $40.00Hvde Park 7006.TO RENT—Pleasant room lacing |Roslie Park. Freedom and privacy. ■near 57th and Harper. Call Midway :4759.TO RENT—Nicely furnished roomswith private family $5 per week.5344 Maryland Ave., 2nd floor.CAP AND GOWN SALESPEO-Hi] EXECUTIVE■secretarialTRAININGSpecial Colletic Classes arranged »o as not to con¬flict with cullege work, tnrollment limited to highschool graduates or equivalent. Coeducational.rhonf State ISHl for particularsCHECC SCHOOL 22S North Wabaah AvonuoDept. D. M. CHICAGOefUrCKic a<^o.,., Game -0'\iTblERE -V or dot'■ Ocl 27It' k/13 A vCRo 0 1^i3T-e3en\ci ^itieOrdcrOI guilders'musicTrttiMATTim And It ICahft Ai ana ^“'I*Oot MarhaCT A"<i H.j'J'Bi4j «t >111 .^1Tx-hiCaCOThey Call It “Nostalgia’’Just plain homesickness—that’swhat it is. Nothing will cure itso surely as snappy music foryour room. Portable Phono¬graphs-; latest record releases.Radios, too. Newest Song Hits.And all not more than ten min¬utes away.Loxi.’ Monthly PaymentsWOODLAWN STORE:870 Elast 63rd StreetLyon^ HealyOpen Evenings Till 9 O’clock. A BEAUTY SHOPFOR U. OF C. WOMENShampoo and MarcelFinger Wave or Water$1.00Wide Permanent WaveWith Six Months’Service Free$5.00LUCIUE PRINCE6100 Woodlawn AvenueDorchester 878110% Reduction to Co-eds room suite; 2 lanip.s; davenport andend tables: mirror ; pictures; silverware. small rugs; 5 pc. breakfast set; alllike new. Will take $550 for all, worthNunH-BushoJnkteAfashion^Qxfords $3000. Will pay for delivery, alsoseparate. Winner, 8228 MarylandAve., 1st apt., one block east of Cot¬tage Grove Ave., phone, Stewart 1875,Chicago.You can stand on anyshoe — but not standout. Get the good shoehabit in college. WearNunn-Bush oxfords,fashioned to fit at theankle and heel. Nogapping. No slipping. TAKE LECTURE NOTES IN wUOEU«e Owen ABC ShorthandEasy to Learn — Elasy to Write —Easy to ReadCircular on RequestANNETTE E. FOTH538 S. Dearborn St. Room 1003Harrison 1747or1460 E. 67th St. Prescription PharmacyM.tVASLOirS1401 E. Marquette RoadTelephone Dorchester 0125Chicago, 111.1515The Uj>to«>nBlack Russia Calf,Also Brown. Nunn-Bu^ SRoe Sf^42 N. Dearnbom bi.32 W. Jackson Blvd.115 S. Clark St.Chicago, Ill.THIS WEEK ONLYA Special Sale ofNew BooksAt ^/2 Our Regular PricesBURT CLARK) Bookseller1459 East 57th StreetSkrip, fueeesaor toink, makjt all penswrite better, andthe Lifetime penwrite besLIdentify the Lifetimepen by thisuduudotA ^ood sportNo matter what it is called upon to do, from themaking of three clear carbons to answering theLIGHTEST TOUCH of a feathery handwriting, the Life¬time® pen is always a ^ood sport. A dependableperformer! And that’s why the Lifetime pen is apicked favorite in forty-one per cent of the lead¬ing colleges and universities of America. Perfectform in every event, plus the economy of the life¬time guarantee and the thrill of its brilliant beautyhave made it a winner everywhere. And its Titanpencil twin shares the honors—a pair of ^ood sports.'“Lifetime" pen. $8.75 Lady "Lifetime", $7.50 Others lower"Lifetime” Titan oversize pencil to match, $4.25At better stores everywherePtNS* PCNCILS-SKRIPW. A SHEAFFER PEN COMPANY • FORT MADISON. 10WA Henru CLijttoii 8 SonsSTATE and JACKSON—ChicagoEvanston Gary Oak Park^ '' <.rty ItrandWhaPs New inSuit Colors?^c) Siicicty llrandCocoa Brownft• •Silver Bluef f• •Ebony GrayO Society BrandIn TheLyttonCollege ShopThe new colors hotfrom the artists brushwhere you’d expect tofind them first—in theCollege Shop. Tail¬ored into Suits of cor¬rect University styleand smartness at$ 50Chicagoan ** Suits, $35 and $40% ...Zf^t Bailp ittaroonUME29 PART 2 Editor, Louis H. Engel CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1928 Business Manager, Robert W. Fisher NUMBER 19The Wildcat Tamesy' the Bulldog. Over 35,000 peo-'' pie saw the Northwestern “Wildcats” 'clash with the Butler “Bulldogs” in a hardfought grid contest that opened the season atDyche Stadium, Evanston, Illinois, on October 7.Butler put up a game fight all the way but the “Wildcats” triumphed 14 to 0. The photograph showsCaptain Holmer of Northwestern stoppedV after an eleven-yard romp throughthe Butler line.{Pacific and Atlantic).ratijSiittkt o the Great Christy Mathewson—This beautiful gate at the entrance to Bucknell University’stadium will ever be a memorial to the sterling athlete who always gave his best. It was erected byrganised baseball and dedicated as a memorial to Mathewson last June. It is a fitting tribute to alan whose mattnaniiiiity m both tnumph and disaster has given a deeper significance to athleticendeavorStanford Presents Its Presidential Can-didate —Herbert Hoover, the Republican nomi¬nee. as he looked when a sophomore in 1894. It wasat Stsmford that he met Mrs. Hoover. Probably theytrolled together under the picturesque arches and theharming winding drives of the Palo Alto campus. Nat-rally, Stanford is proud of its illustrious alumnus whoame there as a poor boy and worked his way to an en-ineering degree -and then to fame and fortune. Thisiould be an inspiration to all undergraduates. Of course,lere are not enough presidential nominations to goround, but that problem can probably be solved bysome brainy student. {Underwood andUnderwood){Wide World)Archer-ess on Horseback. MissNancy Johnson, of the BancroftSchool, Worcester, Massachusetts,puts a new kick in archery by re¬trieving her arrows on horseback. Heads 68,000 Michigan Alumni. E. J. Ottaway, ofPort Huron, Michigan, is president of the University ofMichigan Alumni Asf"K;iation—one of the largest in thecountry, {Underwood and Underwood)Alligator Ariationmodel with am~woollining, invai^f[^ forthe ntreet-^uUM formotoring, $20.00.Same, model innervice cloth, an-lineil. $10.00.{Walter Roaaer)Mis« H«Mn Goodrich, of Med¬ford. MaaMchuaett*—Radcliffe atu-dent in the unusual combination ofcap and gown and megaphone. Thismay be only a manifestation ofKultur crying aloud for more fol¬lowers ia the quest of knowledge-—rapidly becoming recognized as amajor fiaa-~tion of American collegeli' life.{Pacific and Atlantic)ssOut for Badger Blood IAlabama will ezpect greatthings of her star half¬back, Davis Braefield,when the Southern uni¬versity meets Wisconsin inone of the most importsmtinter-sectional footballgames of the present sea¬son. It will be played atMadison, Wisconsin, onNovember 3.A amii MMIaiiWill Make Good Wivesfor Some Men? Seniors atthe University of SouthernCalifornia telling the worldthat each one has caught aman, and that she expectsto marry him soon. It is anannual affair for the en¬gaged girl to step throughthe traditional pansy wreathof good luck. Steppingthrough this floral wreathautomatically announces anengagement. Probably it’sthe climate. Who can tdl?(Pacific and Atlantic)Three Prominent Sen¬iors at Harvard. What’swrong with that caption?Certainly, little girl, allseniors are prominent ev¬erywhere. Well, then, theseare more prominent. Theyare—left to right—JohnParkington, Jr., secretaryand treasurer of the 1929junior class—football let¬ter man; F. G. Moore, vicepresident of the 1929 jun¬ior class—also a footballletter man; and WinslowCarlton, president of the1929 junior class—memberof the student council,treMurer of the PhillipsBrooks House, secretaryof the Owl Club, and mem¬ber of Cerclc Francaise,Harvwd Choate Clyb,Hasty Pudding Instituteof 1770, Iroquois Club, andSignet Society.(Harvard Pictorial) fhc imartest Coatoff ffhc ieasonTHE NEW ALLIGATOR AVIATION MODELHK new Alligator Aviation moilel breezes into theFall season with all the freshness of a erisp autumnday. Allij^ator has ^one far l>eyon<l prevailing standardsof swa^ji^er appearance, fine tailorin<]; and distinctivedesign. The famous Alligator line includes a wide rangeof moflels, attractively tailored from Alligator Balloon(doth. Alligator Silk and Alligator Slicker fabrics. Theexclusive Alligator process makes all imxlels ahscdiitelywatefprcN>f under the most drenching rain. Alligatorsare sold at the best stores and all genuine Alligatorsliear the Alligator lal>el.THK 4LI.I(;AT0R COMPANY, St. iMtthALLIGATORtraoc-mark rcg. u. s. pat. opf."Wr A I. I. K I N l> S O K© C. P. Inc., 1928.A Movie Star's Daughter Mops Up. This dainty tar isMiss Frances Rich, of Los Angeles, daughter of Irene Rich,the well known and stately moving picture actress. Thiswas snapped on the Smith College campus where MissRich is a popular undergraduate. It looks like a propertymop to us. {Underwood end Underwood)f Mem- ^ory of ItsWar Dead.The University ofCincinnati recentlyopened this beautifuland modem men’s dormi¬tory. It is dedicated tothe memory of thosealumni and studentswho gave theirlives duringthe World. War.\ {John P. /\ Cemp) ^Black Leads Big GreenTeam. This is RichardW. Black, a star backand captain of the Dart¬mouth eleven. CaptainBlack and Coach JessHawley are optimisticabout the prospects forthis season. One fact iscertain; that is, the teamwill fight to the bitterend, come what may.That snappy Hanoverclimate breeds fightingmen.{Pacific and Atlantic)Steffen ThinksWell of Him.Carnegie Techlooks to HowardEyth, sopho¬more half-back,to register con¬siderable yard¬age this season.Coach WalterSteffen, whospends his non¬coaching hourson a judge’sbench in Chi¬cago. predicts agreat year forthis husky andfleet back.{CarnegieTartan) 117,000 Fans See Notre Dame-Navy Grid Clash in Chicago. Chevignyof Notre Dame making an end run in the second quarter of game againstNavy in Soldier Field, October 13. The largest crowd ever to attend a footbcdlgame turned out to witness this colorful intersectional struggle.{Pacific and Atlantic)DemonPhotographers!Snap Into It! {Below) Don't Ponder Any Longer. The one wearing the blanket is the goat.{Pacific and Atlantic)We want pictures to repro¬duce in this feature—thekind of pictures that willappeal to the student body—unusual pictures—inti¬mate pictures—beautifulpictures.Prizes for the best actionand still picture publishedeach week.We pay for all picturesaccepted.Seeks Success Where Missionaries Failed. To gathermaterial for his Doctor’s thesis on anthropology, 23-year-old Cornelius Osgood of the University of Chicago will livefor fifteen months in the desolate Great Bear Lake regionggj.dence of the weird Hareskin Indians. Two missionarieswere murdered by these Indians in 1912. A Northwestmounted policeman brought the murderers back to jus¬tice. The oiJy other white men to penetrate the countrywere the famous Arctic explorers, Steffanson and his{llnderwnnd and Underwood) Prominent In Yale Activitiee.Josqph E. Lowes, Jr., of Dayton, Ohio,known as Joe in New York, NewHaven and points north, such asNorthampton. He is a member of Chicompanion, D’Arcy Arden. Psi, business manager of the YaleNews, and secretary of the SeniorClass—a permanent office in which hewill continue after graduation.{Yale Pictorial) Submit photographs tor1 1 ri i1I 1 }S j 11TWellesley College Starts a New Year.Students gathering before first chapelservices. The senior dons her cap andgown. {,Wid« World}Rifh't from Yale to th« International Polo Four I Frederick WinstonChurchill Guest, captain of the Yale polo team last year, was one of the outstandingstars in the defeat of the Argentines by the United States in the recent internationalseries. Three games were required to decide the championship of the Americas asthe Argentines won the second game. Guest did marvellous work in the decidinggame which the UnitedStates won by 13 to 7. Thisis the first time that a collegeplayer has made a namefor himself in internationalpolo within a few months ofhis being graduated fromcollege. Guest, apparently,has a long career in p>oloahead of him. He playedNumber 4, or back, succeed¬ing Devereux Milbum, whorecently announced his re¬tirement.(Pacific and Atlantic)Piles up 134 Points in First Two Games! The Lafayette eleven has startedthe fcxDtball season with a rush at the fast pace of more than a “jxiint a minute”—the mythical goal of ambitious coaches. Albright was defeated in the first gameby 78 to 0, and Muhlenberg fell in the next game by 56 to 0. Here are 14 firststring men. Left to right—Back row: Wilson, Morrison, Woodfin, Shellenberger,Pursell, Chimenti, Captain Guest. Front row: Sherwood, Soloff, Thompson,Kressler, Sami, Shelly, McKean. , Bartoht)The Furrowed Brow of a Football Genius. Coach BZuppkc is leading the University of Illinois for the sixteersuccessive year He has made an enviable record andusuall3' found near the top. Last season his team won tConference championship without any doubts aboutsuperiority. This year the team looks good, but the cancoach is warning his charges about the insidious dangersbeing too optimistic.( Underwood and Underwood)Stout, Steady, andServiceable—that’s theway Captain Bruce Du¬mont, of the Colgatefootball team, looks tous. Apparently, thereare no frills about thissturdy gridiron warrior.Bruce plays guard, andhe has also made an en¬viable reputation as akicker.(Pacific and Atlantic)Collects Many“S’s.” SteveHamas is expect¬ed to break along-standingrecord at PennState by winningten “S’s” duringhis college days.The present rec¬ord is nine whichhas been attainedby Cy Lungren,Glenn Killinger,Mike.Psdm, andHinkey Haines.Hamas now hassix letters. Hewon four lastyear in football,basketball, track,and boxing. If hesirins focr thisyear, the recordis his.{W S. Turner) The Little Giant ofWisconsin. This is“Bo” Cuisiiiier, midgetof the Cardinal squad,who scored one touch¬down and played aprominent part in thatearly season grid upsetwhen the Badgersdowned the mighty No¬tre Dame. Cuisinier isa clever ball carrier andpasser and his showingin his initial appearancein college football givespromise of a great gridcareer,(Underwood andUnderwood)ENJOY FOOTBALL and Other Seasonable Out-door Sports withSNUGGLE RUGFor sale by leading stores everywhereSNUGGLE RUG COMPANY GOSHEN, INDIANManx Roto