VOLUME VI. NUMBER 34.PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY IN THE YEAR AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPRICE, 10 CENTSSPECIAL PRICESTO STUDENTS Auditorium, Wabash AvenueADVERTISEMENTS.����®0���0®�����®��0��� ������ ��� ���The curriculum of this school of medicine requires a � (b� «ni��r$ity COllf9f of �proper preliminary education, and four years of study in r» f m'" t m�di\in� v».college, devoted to laboratory, didactic and clinical in- 'x'ji t\ lnn�st\ a ')ij('!Ql(, \1 \. \1 •••• and Surg�ry 'fQI...struction, to recitations and to manual training in the )(ji 'r(j(use of instruments and appliances. 0 ®Instruction is given in two capacious, well-lighted edi- � The Eleventh Annual Session be- ®fices. The new building contains five large laboratories, � gins Sept. 21, 1898, and continues for �in which are conducted the practioal laboratory courses '!Ql(, eight and one-half months. The 'fC7l."in Anatomy, Physiology and Histology, Chemistry, Ma- )(ji ')lj(teria Medica, Pathology and Bacteriology. ® course of study covers a period of four 0The old building is devoted to instruction by clinics, 0 years. Lab 0 rat 0 r y branches are �didactic lectures, and bv numerous important practical � grouped in the first half and clinical �courses in manual training in manipulations and in the � studies in the last half of this period. 0use of the instruments employed in medicine, surgery, M The medical buildings are situated -,Q(.obstetrics and the specialties. 'r(j( '){jiManual training in all departiiieiits-of -medicine is a ® upon the University Campus. Ample �special feature of the - instruction in this college. .Bys- . ,� clinical material is afforded- by the �tematic recitations, conducted in five commodious reci-. ® hospitals. and dispensaries of Minne- �tation rooms, are regarded as a most important means of ® apolis and St. Paul. 0teaching.With over seventy professors and instructors, and � s. ' For information address, �with ample room and appliances, this school is able to )ij( )ij(furnish its classes with the most approved systematic � PARKS RITCHIE, M.D., Dean, �education in medicine. � �Physicians and medical students are invited, to visit 'fQ!... University of Minnesota, 'fC7l."the laboratories and to. inspect the educational appli ')IJi ')lj(ances of this school. �'fC7l.,,-,Q(. Minneapolis, Minn.'fC7l.,,'fC7l.,,�For further information and forannouucements apply. )t'j(')IJi)ij( ')IJi')lj()(jito the Coilege Clerk or to the Secretary, ��� �®0J. H. ETHERIDGE, :.\'[. :P,l 29 �y��hingl-.on se, Chicago. - ��0�����®����0�®�0��:6usin¢$s Suit$�_of IMPORTED and the best $11\ 00DOMESTIC GOODS for �y!.._Mr. W. Baines, "I have used one of yourSpennymoor, writes: 'Swan' Fountain Pens ev-ery day in our establish­ment for nearly three years, writing on the coarse tbrown paper, and on the finest note. I may saythat it is as good now as it was the day I bough tit." fiz�tt� tailoring Co.MADE IN THREE SIZES: � /nfe Hyde Park Floral CjlA;giN246 E. 55TH STREET (PULLMAN BLDG.)$2.25, $3.50, $5.00 EACH. Weddings, Banquets. Receptions and Funeral Orderspromptly attended to.Choice Plants and Cut Flowers. �:��!����o Cut Roses a Specialty.Illustrated Price Lists sent on application.If your stationer cannot supply, we will fill yourorder upon receipt of price. Call up Telephone Oak. 523WHEN YOU WANT A CARRIACE.We have the handsomest turn-outs on the south­side. Our prices are reasonable .MABIE, TODD & BARD,.. Manufacturers ..130 Fulton Street,NEW YORK. 152 Monroe Street,CHICAGO 4746-4748COTTAGE GROVE AVE.ADVERTISEMENTS.@OftN1"ER off,. Is the Best Too Good. .. BC� For your Home?If not, takeDISTILLEDWATERICEIts USE is ADVISED by nearly ALL PHYSICIANS, whocommend it because of its known purity, Typhoid germsnever lurk in the ice made from Distilled Water byThe Consumers Company,- A Double Distilled, Aerated Water, unequaled in purityand unexcelled as a Delicious Table Water.Sparkling Hyd:rox The King of Pure Sparkling Mineral Waters.Hydrox Lithia Double Distille? Water and Lithium Carbonate. The ideal Lithia Water.The greatest dissolvent known. .Hydrox Mine:ral Wate:rs In ·SIPHONS. Guaranteed Pure and of Standa�d Proportions, .HYO ROX rt��g: r=U::;;;:������;;;IN6,_ lemon Soda .ALL MADE F�OM DOUBLE DISTILLED WATER BYTHE C'ONSUMERS COMPANYWorks: 35th, -Butler and 36th Streets CHICAGO'AT THE PRESENT TIMETHE NORTH SHORE SUPPLY COMPANYNo, 1576 Sherman Avenue EVANSTON Telephone, Evanston 180Sell and deliver above products in Evanston and Rogers Park. iii-------------------- .-�-----�--,l" Do you know what the object of the Faculty was in making registration binding for sucha long time?""All I know is that two of its members asked Grace and me to marry them, on the sameday the rule was announced."UNIVERSITY OF GHICAGO WEEKLY.SINGLE COPIES lOC. VOL. VI, No. 34.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, JUNE 9, 1898.Dav ana nigbt.Day and Night,Are sisters bright.Day is the elder, is tall and fair,Has'a presence as fresh as an early June morn,Sunny locks, and a stately experienced air,­As charming a lady as ever was born.A summer sunrise,Always shines from her eyes,And before them the shade of despondency flies.Younger NightHas the lightOf the sunset glow on her round dimpled cheek,And a voice like the zither's melifluous strain,And a glance so enchanting, so queenly, yet meek,That it brightens like moonlight the shadow of pain.Love has woven a snareOf her soft raven hair,And has caught me a most willing prisoner there.-c. B.AN ALLEGORY.A man looked upon a lovely prospect. Before him,stretched a valley with gentle slope, and on either sidehills lifted their green summits against the blue of thesky. The man started on his way. There were flow­ers, many and beautiful ones, blooming by his path,and he stopped to gather them. But as he rested inthe shade, a traveler passed by. "Why have yougathered these plain flowers?" he asked the man. "Ina grove on yonder mountain there is a flower growingbeside which these are poor indeed.""Tell me the way that I may go there and get it,"said the man. The traveler told him the path bywhich he must go, and the man threw away the blos- som he had gathered and began the climb. The pathwas long and rigorous. And when at last the manreached the spot the traveler had told him of, his feetwere cut and bleeding, and his clothes torn and ragged.He reached down and grasped the flower he had soughtso long. But alas! as he held it before him, .the pet­als fell from it and left the stem emyty and odorless inhis hand.The man turned back down the mountain, but whenhe reached t�le valley again it was winter; the leaveshad fallen from the trees; the brook had frozen over,and the snow was deep upon the ground.leaned wearily back against the wet bank as he :fi n­ished loading the driver's scraper, and repeated halfaloud, half to himself, "The fool, he missed hischance."352 UNNERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY.The Man in the Ditch.A fine cold rain was falling. The clouds that hunghalf way down the side of the mountain seemed tobreathe their gloom and dismalness into the tempersof the men and horses at work on the big canal thatwound along, keeping its level on the plain below. Thehorses plunged and panted through the mud in thebottom of the ditch; and the drivers swore and threwtheir whole weight on the lines to keep the anxiousbeasts from falling on the slippery batiks. But theman who held the scrapers in the ditch never swore,and seldom spoke to the drivers as they passed in andout with their loads. He did not appear to be one ofthem. His face was not weather-beaten and beardedas theirs were, and he was slight of build comparedwith his brawny companions.A man hunting on the lake close by fired a shot ata flock of ducks circling overhead, but he was toolate and no game fell. "The fool, he missed hischance," said one gruff driver The man in the ditch It Belonged to Him.The engines on the elevated road puffed and hur­ried overhead. The surface cars clanged through thestreet; ex.press wagons rattled past, and heavy draysmoved slowly along. Men and women hurried andpushed, dodged back and forth between the movingwaaons and cars. Newsboys added their wails andpipings to the tumult of the street. The great, silentbuildings stood around, grim spectators of this pettystrife. In rhe alley, by the corner of one of them, anItalian stood and guarded his candy stand. Hebrushed the big, wet snowflakes from the oilcloth thatcovered his little table, and smoothed it affectionately.It belonged to him.THE NOTE= BOOK.The Split in the Western Intercollegiate.--Per­haps no event of such importance has ever occurredin Western athletics as the revolt of the three Univer­sities-Chicago, Michigan and Illinois-from theWestern Intercollegiate Association .. The reason fortheir revolt was because tne Graduate Committee, whohave the annual Western Intercollegiate Meet incharge, refused to bar Maybury on the ground of pro­fessionalism. The three uni versi ties believed theyhad ample proof of the faat that Maybury had run formoney.According to the rules of the Graduate Committee,all charges against a man accused of professionalism,together with the evidence must be in by a certain day.It was impossible to hand to the committee the strong­est evidence against Maybury in the time allotted bythe rule. Consequently, that part of the evidencewhich they did consider was meager and was so over­shadowed by the mass of affidavits prepared by May­bury, that the vote of the committee was unanimousin declaring Maybury innocent. Eoilowing the decisionof this cornmi ttee, the U ni versi tses of Michigan, Illi­nois and Chicago promptly withdrew from the meet,and held a meet of their own on Marshall field. On Saturday night the three revolting universitieswere expelled from the Western Intercollegiate Asso­ciation.The stand taken by the three universities is of sucha determined character that it is quite probable thatfor the next few years there will be two organizationsholding annual field meets with the ultimate result ofthe crushing out of the one or the weaker association.Prominent as are the Universities of Chicago, Michi­gan and Illinois, their accociation Wil1110t be that one.The Chicago Naval Reserves when they reachedKey West were assigned to different ships. CecilPage and Leffingwell are now polishing the brass-work,discharging guns, reefing the topmast, splicing thefo'c's'le, and executing other nautical performanceson the Oregon-the far-famed, far-and-fast-sailing,torpedo-boat-destroyer-destroying man-of-war. Web­ster Smith was assigned to the St. Paul, where hepromenades the ratlines under Captain Sigsbee's or­ders. Lieutenant Stratton has not yet got a job, whichwe take as an indication that he is waiting for a goodone.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY.The Semi-Annual.c=Hereafter announcements willbe issued only twice a year. We are delighted to hearit. It has always worried us to see the prodigalitywith which the University blew in her substance inthe production of books, the only purpose of which,apparently, was that a thousand under-graduatesmight lose one apiece. The rule that registrationmust hereafter be for two quarters in advance is alsogood news. It will result in more consistent and con­secutive plans for study than prevail when the student,especially the new one, doesn't have to look ahead.Mr. P. Merrill Griffith, '97, was appointed UnitedStates Consul toMatamoras, Mex­ico, by PresidentMcKinley 1 a s tweek. Matamorasis a city of twentythousand people.This is the firstpresidential a p­pointment givento a Universi ty ofChicago man.Since graduat­ing from the U ni­v ers i t y, Griffithhas been Superin­tendent of Schoolsin Sabina, Ohio,where he has beenmost successful.While in the U ni-P. MERRILL GRIFFITH.versity he was apopular student and prominent athlete. He was amember of the All-University foothall team, of theUniversity Choir, of the Glee Club, and of the SigmaChi fraternity.The" Cap and Gown."-After an opportunity tobecome thoroughly familiar with the" Cap and Gown,"the general opinion of the campus is that it is the bestannual published at the University. This superiorityseems to lie in the fact that it is not a conventionalcatalogue like the' 95 and' 96 books and like majorityof annuals from other colleges. It has a dash andspice peculiar to itself; a breaking away from accepted 353theories, an independence in thought and artistic treat­ment which is refreshing. In short there is a collegeair clinging to the pages, a bohemian tone, due, if wemistake not, to the ideas of the denizens of the" Mai­son des Vagabonds" where, according to the imprinton the last page of the book, the work took form. Thebooks are selling rapidly, and the management expectsto dispose of the entire limited edition by July first.We have received annuals from all the large easternand western colleges. Corn�ll and Chicago are easilythe best, and only in qnantity does the former surpassour own.Sidney L. Webb.-Last Friday afternoon SidneyWebb, the well known author and economist, gave atalk in Cobb Lecture Hall on the" London CountyCouncil.' Like many of his compatriots, he is an in­teresting speaker, and his speecli on the LondonCounty Council was all the better because he has beenthere. He- is at present a member of that body andof one of its leading committees-that on SecondaryEducation. Among economists and sociologists hisname is widely known as a writer:His leading work is the History of Trades' Union­ism, which he wrote in collaboration with Mrs. Webb.Together, also, they edited the Industrial Democracy,one of the leading works on that subject. Mrs. Webb,who was Miss Beatrice Potter, has written a valuablework on Co-operation.Mr. and Mrs. Webb are making a two months' visitto this country. For the next two weeks they willreside at Hull House.The University Settlement Lawn Party was heldon Friday, June 3, on the campus. Women and chil­dren from the settlement were the guests of the Uni­versity. Games and refreshments were played andImbibed respectively in the afternoon. In the eveningthe following program was presented by the in Kent,Miss Hofer conducting:1. March-Flag Song. _ Neidlinger2. The Robin Neidlinger3. Exercises.(a) The Fairy, I4. (b) Nursery Rhyme, Reinecke(c) Doll's Cradle Song,5. Boat Soug-- Duet Acton6. Cornish Lullaby Field7. Fair Snow White � Reinecke354 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKL Y.The Wisconsin Cardinal of June 4th makes the fol­lowing statement in regard to our position of last Sat­urday : "We were hopeful that some kind of anagreement might be patched up during the day thatwould enable the meet to come off as arranged. It isprobable that the failure to do this, and the mean andunsportsmanlike conduct of Chicago, Michigan andIllinois toward Wisconsin, had a dampening effect onour men and prevented them from making better time. "Memoranda.Miss Catherine Paddock sails next Saturday for Europe.Mr. Walter Sharpe left Saturday to join Roosevelt's roughriders.Students will hereafter be expected to register for twoquarters.Mrs. Hieronymus visited her daughter in Foster Halllast week.Prof. George E. Fellows and family sailed for Europe on. Saturday.A reception was given Saturday to the alumnae of prep.schools in Chicago.Prof. Coulter delivered an address last week on" SomeProblems in Botany."Mr. Sidney Webb delivered an address last week on theLondon County Council.Prof. Tarbell gave a lecture last week on" Greek andItalic Antiquities in Chicago."Ralph Waldo Webster, '95, and English Walling, '97, willtour Europe this summer on bicycles.Dr. John Henry Barrows, at Vespers on Sunday, spoke onThe Ethics of Buddhism and Christianity.Prof. Hall gave a lecture on Friday evening on Spectro­scopic Investigations with the Yerkes Telescope. The fourth annual congress of the Illinois Society forChild Study was held in Kent Theatre on Friday and Sat-.urday.The tennis team that will go to Michigan on Saturday willbe Harvey McQuiston, Paul McQuiston, Blackwelder aadGottlieb.Students about to take Junior college eert.iflcates will notbe exempt from examination except when they have nomore than twenty majors.Mr. Daniel B. Southard, who was struck in the temple bya pitched ball while practicing batting last week, is slowlyrecovering at his home in Englewood.A very interesting illustrated lecture, on "A Literary Pil­grimage," was given last Tuesday evening by Zella AllenDixson to her Extension Classes and friends, in HaskellMuseum assembly room.Sunday morning, June 5th, in the absence of the regularpastor, Dr. William Colledge, Zella Allen Dixson occupiedthe pulpit of the People's Church, Aurora, Illinois. Thesubject of the discourse was" The Intellectual Environmentof the Citizen."Wilbur Bassett leaves Chicago next Saturday for a trip toCalifornia, where he will spend two months on a sheep ranchin the wild and wooly country east of the Sierras. We trustthat the new hireling shepherd, when he seeth the wolfcoming, will not flee. Bassett vacates a reporters hip on thePost, to which McIntyre, '01, succeeds. I.l\fORGAN PARK.The Academy lost at tennis to Lake Forest Academy in amatch played on the Academy grounds last Saturday.The class day exercises will be given on campus Fridayafternoon, June 10. A reception is to take place in theevening.Saturday evening, June 4th, the Junior class gave a re­ception in honor of the Senior class at the beautiful homeof Mr. and Mrs. C. Zeiss on Prospect Avenue.The baseball game last week Wednesday between MorganPark and Northwestern Academys, was won by North­western, by a score of 12 to 2. The game Saturday withLewis Institute was a victory for Morgan Park, score 28 to 7.THE MAYBURY CASE.Belowwill be found a presentation of all the evidence againstJ. H.Maybury, which has been sent to the Graduate Commit­tee of the Western Inter-Collegiate Amateur Athletic Asso­ciation. Anyone who is in doubt as to the professionalismof Mr. Maybury, is invited to read it and then pass judg­ment. We first submit the Rules of Eligibilit.y of the West­ern. Inter Collegiate Amateur Athletic Association, in orderthat no doubt may exist as to what is an amateur and whata professional under the rules of W. I. A. A. A.RULES OF ELIGIBILITY OF THE W. I. A. A. A.RULE I.No person shall be allowed to compete at any athleticmeet of this Association who is not an amateur as set forthin Rule II. of these Rules of Eligibility. RULE II.DEFINITION OF AN AlIIATEUR.An amateur is a person who has never competed in anopen competition, or for money, or under a false name, orwith a professional for a prize, or with a professional wheregate money is charged, nor has ever at any time taught, pur­sued, or assisted at athletic exercises for money, or for anyvaluable consideration. But nothing in this definition shallbe construed to prohibit the competition between amateursfor medals, cups, or other prizes than money. And it ishereby expressly declared that this deflnition is retroactive.To prevent any misunderstanding in reading the above,the Association draws attention to the following explana­tions and adjudications:UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY. 3.';5An athlete has forfeited his right to compete as an am a- Copy of an article printed on page eight of the Minneapolisteur, and has thereby become a professional, by- Times, Aug. 19, 1894.(a) Ever having competed in an open competition of anysort of athletic exercise-i. e., a competition the entries towhich are open to all, irrespective as to whether the com- HITTING THE GRAVEL.petitors are amateurs or professionals, and whether suchcompetition bA for a prize or not. A ST. CLOUD PHENOllfENAL RUNNER.(b) Ever having competed for money in any athletic ex-f. ercise.(c) Ever .having competed under a false name in any ath­letic exercise.(d) Ever having knowingly competed with a professionalfor a prize, or where gate money is charged, in any athleticexercise.(e) Ever having taught or pursued as a means of liveli­lihood any athletic exercise.(f) Ever having directly or indirectly accepted or re­ceived remuneration for engaging in any athletic exercise.An athlete shall hereafter forfeit his right to compete asan amateur, and shall thereby become a professional, if, atany time, he shall- -(a) Directly or indirectly receive payment for trainingor coaching any of her person in any athletic exercise.(b) Directly or indirectly receive payment for servicespersonally rendered in teaching any athletic exercise.(c) Directly or indirectly receive payment for servicesrendered as Referee, Judge, Umpire, Scorer, Manager, Di­rector, or in any other capacity at any professional or ama­teur exhibition or contest of any athletic exercise what­soever.Copy of an article printed on page one of the MinneapolisTimes, September 2, 1893.CRAIGIE WON.[Special Dispatch to the Times.]T. CWUD, ept. l.-Charles Mack, of Minneapolis, whosereal name is Craigie, won a race here to-day with James May­bury, of St. Cloud. The race was 100 yards and was won byabout six feet. The purse was $200, and a large amount ofmoney changed hands. This is the first time Maybury hasever been beaten, and much interest was shown in the race.A}i'FIDA VIT OF PUBLICATION.TATE OF MINNESOTA, ! ss.County of Hennepin,J. A. Werner, being duly sworn, deposes and says: that henow is, and during all the time herein mentioned has been,in the employ of the printer and publisher of the newspaperknown as" The Minneapolis Times," and during all said timewas, and now is, the foreman of said newspaper; that saidnewspaper, "The Minneapolis Times," was, during all saidtime, and still is, a daily newspaper printed and publishedat the City of MInneapolis, in the County of Hennepin, inthe State of Minnesota, on each and every day of the week;that the annexed printed notice of" Craigie Won," heretoattached and made part hereof, was copied from the originalarticle, taken from the columns of said newspaper, and wasprinted and published in said newspaper on page one the2nd day of September, A. D. 1893.J. A. WERNER.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 26th day of May, A. D. 1897.[SEAL] CHAS. A. TULLER, Notary Public,Hennepin County, Minnesota. HE EQUALS THE WORLD'S RECORD, 50 YARDS IN 51-5 SECONDS,IN A RECENT RACE.T. CLOUD, August 18 ( pecial).The leading topic among the sports for the last few dayshas been the phenomenal speed made by James Maybury ina fifty yard foot race, Wednesday evening, with W. H. Jonesfor a purse of $50 a side. 'I'he race was arranged betweenthe backers of the two men during the afternoon of thefame day, and was run on the track of the A. R. U. picnicgrounds. In starting the first time the men, for some reasonor other, did not get away evenly and Maybury made noeffort to win. The judges awarded the race to Jones. May­bury'S backers immediately challenged Jones to anotherrace for $100, which he accepted, and in this race is whereMaybury made the fift,y yards in the remarkably low timeof 5 1-5 seconds, eqaling the world's record for that distance.The referees were F. M. Low and Ben McLain, and Chief ofPolice McKelvey acted as starter; D. Hanlon time ke'eper.The friends and admirers of Maybury are more sanguinethan ever that he can best any man in the state, and theyare ready to back him for any amount since his race Wednes­day evening.He was born in this city December 6, 1875, and is the sonof ex-Alderman Maybury, who was the Republican candinatefor the legislature two years ago. He attended the StateNormal school several years, and the last term he attendedthe law school of the State University at Minneapolis. Thefirst record of his speed as runner was made during the fieldsports of the commencement exercises of t.he normal schoolin 1892, where he won nearly every footrace with perfectease. A year later he won an exciting 100-yard dash in afree for all 'at Osakis; time, 104-5, for SoP. After that .bemet and defeated Beriram, of Little Fal l=, in 100 yards in10 1-5, for a purse. Charles Craigie, of Minneapolis, camenext and beat Maybury by a very small margin. Then fol­lowed a series of races between Valentine of Minneapolisand Nelson of Litchfield, both of whom he defeated in 10 1-5.In an open race at Paynesville last fall, between Craigie,"Cash" Grim and Nelson, he got second place, Craigie lead­ing him again. He was then matched with Craigie and beat,him on a track in this cit.y in as pretty a finish as was everseen in this section, Craigie leading him to the 75-yard mark.Here Maybury came up to Craigie and passed him withinten feet of the tape. Time, 10 seconds.'I'Itis season he has been matched for only three races sofar, winning everyone. One was against Scherfenberg ofDetroit, whom he allowed a handicap of two yards inJOO ;another one, a sweepstakes open to the world, on July 4 inthis city, beating Jones and Watson of St. Paul, and the lastone fr om Jones this week. He is now anxious to meet anyman in Minnesota for that distance, Craigie preferred. Heis only in his nineteenth year, measures 5 feet 8Yz inches,and weighs 155 pounds.W. H. Jones is a railroad man, but has considerable expe­rience on the track. He is one of the speediest 50- yard run­ners in the state, and was considered the champion runnerhere until he met Maybury.and says that he is a resident of the city of Shullsburg, Wis­consin, and that on the 6th day of June, in company withJames Ernest Freeman he went to Madison, Wisconsin, andmet one James Maybury, who was at that time a student atsaid place attending the University of Wisconsin, and thenand there made an agreement with the said James Maybury,of which agreement a true copy is hereto attached, marked•• ExLibit A."*That said James Maybury signed said agreement underthe assumed name of Henry Sherwood, and pursuant to saidagreement then and there deposited the sum of $35.00 inmoney, which he took from Lis own pocket. That the saidJ. E. Freeman, who signed said agreement with the saidJames Maybury, alias Henry Sherwood, was and has beenfor several years a professional foot racer at the time he ex­eout.e d said agreement, That af'l erwards, to-wit, on the 18thday of September, 1895, the said James Maybury ran a racewith the said James Ernest Freeman at the city of Shulls­burg, Wisconsin, and at the time said race was run therewas a purse of $1,000 in the hands of a stakeholder, whichwas to be given and delivered to the winner of the race.The deponent further says that on August 2d he receiveda letter from L. W. Pollard, of Mineral Point, Wisconsin, ofwhich a copy is hereto attached, marke;l ., Exhibit B."Deponent further says, that on the 21st day of July he re­ceived a letter from L. W. Pollard, the stakeholder, in whichthe stakeholder says: '�Yours of the 29th received, and also:the C 'apitol State Bank of Madison sent me a duplicate draft.Maybury's mouey is up, and as he will agree to no otherstakeholder I will bold the motley."Deponent furtber gays, that at the time the agreementwas made to run the said race with Maybury, the said May­bury deposited $35.00 in money, and said that it was all themoney that he had with him.Deponent further says that after the race had been runon September 18, 1895, the said Maybury and those withhim objected to the stake-holder paying over the money inaccordance with the decision of the judges, and that depou­eut then informed the sai.l Maybury as follows: "There isone satisfaction, you will not run again in an amateurrace"; to which Maybury replied, "It does not make anydifference, I am downed now."Deponent further says that the said contract hereinabovereferred to was witnessed by M. A. O'Brien, who is now amember of the law class attending the University of Wis­consin, and L. W. Pollard, who is now an attorney at law atMineral Point, Wis., who drew up the said contract.[Signed] WILLIAl\f H. LOOK.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 29th day of May, 1896.[SEAL] J. B. SIMPSON, Notary Public, Wisconsin .."Exhibit B."UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY.AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION.STATE OF MINNESOTA,} ss.County of Hennepin.J. A. Werner, being duly sworn, deposes and says: that henow is, and during all the time herein mentioned has been,in the employ of the printer and publisher of the newspaperknown as the "Minneapolis Times," and during all saiJtime was, and now is, the foreman of said newspaper; thatsaid newspaper, the "Minneapolis Times," was, during allsaid time, and still is, a daily newspaper printed and pub­lished at the City of Minneapolis, in the County of Henne­pin, in the State of Minnesota, on each and every day of theweek; that the annexed printed notice of "Hitting theGravel," hereto attached and made a part hereof, was copiedfrom the original article taken from the columns of saidnewspaper, and was printed and published in said news­paper for one day; that said notice was first printed andpublished in said newspaper on page eight, the 19th day ofAugust A. D.1894:. J. A. WERNER.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 26th day of May, A. D. 1897.[SEAL] CHARLES A. TULLER, Notary Public,Hennepin County, Minnesota.AFFIDAVIT OF J. E. FREEMAN.It is but fair to state that Mr. Maybury presented an affi­davit from J. E. Freeman to the effect that the race was notrun for money. Mr Freeman's explanation of this is, thatMr. Maybury requested such an affidavit of him before heput up his forfeit money, because he wished to preserve hisamateur standing. The reason for Maybury's running underan assumed name is not explained.STATE OF WISCONSIN, l ss.LaFayette County.J. Ernest Fr-eeman, being first duly sworn, says that he isa resident of the city of Shullsburg, Lafayette County, Wis­consin.· That for the past three years he has been � pro­fessional foot racer and has run races for money for pursesreaching from $5.00 to $500.'I'hat in the summer of 1895be entered into a written con­tract to run a race with one James Maybury, a student ofthe University of Wisconsin, which agreement the said JamesMaybury signed under the assumed name of Henry Sher­wood, and a true copy of which is attached hereto, •• Ex­hibit A."*'I'hat pursuant to said agreement and on the 18th day ofSeptember, he ran a race with said James Maybury at thecity of Shul lsburg, Wisconsin.Affiant further says that he informed said Maybury thathe was a professional runner, and that said May bury at thetime he run the race well knew the affiant had run races forpurses and alongside professionals.J. ERNEf,T :B'REEMAN.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 29th day of May, 1896.J. B. SIMPSON, Notary Public, Wisconsin.AFFIDAVIT OF WM. H. LOOK.STATE OF WISCONSIN, l ss.LaFayette County.William H. Look, being first duly sworn, on oath deposes,� Foot race ag-reemeut on Page 358 .. LETTER FROM L. W. POLLARD, STAKEHOLDER.MINERAL POINT, Wis., Aug. 2, 1895.WilHam Look, Shullsburg, Wis.:.FRIEND LOOK--I sent Mr. Maybury his check back thatwas payable on the 18th and told him that it must be money,which he has agreed to send.I have the money deposited here at Mr. Hutchinson &Sons Bank.When I hear from Mr. Maybury I will write) ou.Yours, L. W. POLLARD,Mineral Point, Wis.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY.AFFIDAVIT OF F. F. STEIG1\'IEYER.CHICAGO, May 21, 1897.This is to certify-(1) That I am acquainted with a Mr. Cochems, Presidentof the University Athletic Association of Madison, Wis ..(2) That the said Mr. Cochem s, in company with Mr.Blackburn of the University of Chicago-formerly of theU of W.-visited me at my room, number' sixteen, GraduateHall, University of Chicago, on or about November 8, 1896.(3) That the said Mr. Cochems did say that Mr. Mayburywas a professional.(a) He stated that Mr. Maybury had run a race for moneyprevious to the meeting of the investigating board of lastspring.(b) He mentioned the amount of the prize and the placew here race was run.(c) He told, in detail, the manner in which the U. of Wis­consin athletes counter-balanced the affidavits secured bythe athletes of the U. of Minnesota. The substance of thispart of his story was as follows:After the Minnesota man had secured a number of affi­davits in town where race was run and thought he had agood case against Maybury, he allowed the Minneapolis pa­pers to publish enough of the case to warn Wisconsin ofher danger. Immediately Wisconsin secured a number ofaffidavits in the same vicinity to counteract the weight ofMinnesota's affidavits.(d) The debate before the committee of investagationwas long. In Mr. Cochem's words, as remembered andtaken down the same day of the conversation:"I worked like a bull for your men's votes. - N eel wasthere for California and Bliss for you fellows. I thoughtthat the way one went, both went. I sat opposite Carr Neeland I talked till nearly one o'clock and then he began shak­ing his head-Yes. 'I'hat's the way Maybury was cleared."FRED F. STEIGMEYER.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 21st day of May, 1897.[SEAL] BYRON J. PAR�{ER, Notary Public.AFFIDAVIT OF C. F. ROBY.CHICAGO, May 21, 1897.On or about the eighth day of November, 1896, in theroom of Mr. F. F. Steigrneyer, 16 Graduate Hall, the Uni­versity of Chicago, I heard Mr. Cochems, a student at theUniversity of Wisconsin, at Madison, make a statement inregard to the amateur standing of Mr. J. H. Maybury, also astudent at the University of Wisconsin.He said that Mr. Maybury had run a match race formoney in a small town, the name of which I have forgotten,and further stated that if the representative of the Univer­sity of Minnesota had not published in the daily papersaffidavits against Maybury's amateur standing, several daysprevious to the meeting of the Investigating Committee ofthe Western Intercollegiate Association, it would have beenimpossible to have cleared Maybury. As it was, the repre­sentative of Maybury had time to go to the town where therace was run and procure counter affidavits.CHARLES FOSTER ROBY.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 21st day of May, 1897.[SEAL) BYRON J. PARKER, Notary Public. 357AFFIDAVIT OF V. W. SINCERE.CHICAGO, May 21, 1897.'I'his is to Certify:That I, V. W. Sincere, a student at the University of Chi­cago, did hear Mr. Oochems, a student of the University ofWisconsin, say, about a week before the Wisconsin-Chicagofootball game of last fall, that he, Cochems, knew that J. H.Maybury was a professional. He said that Maybury, to hisknowledge, had run 3\ match race for money in some smalltown in Wisconsin, the name of which I do not remember.In addition, he stated the manner in which Carr B. N eel,the California representative, was induced to cast his votefor the amateur standing of Maybury, and gloated over thefact that Carr B. Neel was considered "easy."VICTOR W. SINCERE.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 21st day of May, 1897.[SEAL] BYRON J. PARKER, Notary Public.AFFIDAVIT OF 1\'1. E. COLEMAN.CHICAGO, May 21, 1897.On or about November 8,1896, in Room No. 16, GraduateHall, University of Chicago, then occupied by Mr. F. F.Steigmeyer, Mr. Cochems, of the University of Wisconsin,while discussing the amateur standing of Mr. Maybury, alsoof the University of Wisconsin, acknowledged that Mr.Maybury had run a match race for money in a small townin Wisconsin, the name of which I do not r�call. Mr. Coch­ems further stated that the representative of the Univer­sity of Minnesota on the executive committee of the W. 1.A. A. A. had become possessed of affidavits proving thatthe said race had taken place under the above-stated condi­tions, and that the said representative had published or al­lowed others to publish the said affidavits some time previ­ous to the meeting of the executive committee of the W. 1.A. A. A., and therefore the representative of the Universityof Wisconsin on the above committee had had time to pro­cure from the aforesaid town counter affidavits.Mr. Cochems also stated that if the said representative ofthe University of Minnesota bad not published or allowedothers to publish the aforesaid affidavits, it would havebeen impossible to have cleared Mr. Maybury of the chargeof professionalism. MELVIN E. COLEMAN.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 21st day of May, 1897.[SEAL] BYRON J. PARKER, Notary Public.Cook County, Ill.The following evidence was sent in to the Graduate Com­mittee by the University of Chicago.AFFIDAVIT OF GEO. H. BROWN.CAMBRIDGE, Ill., May 23, 1898.I, George H. Brown, of Cambridge, Ill., do hereby maked-position that the man represented by the picture heretoaffixed ran in foot races here during the Henry County Fairof Ill., 1894, for which money prizes were given. I sawhim. [Photograph of J. H. Maybury inserted here.][Signed) GEO. H. BROWN.UNIVERSITy OF CHICAGO \VEEKLYASTATE OF ILLINOIS'l ss.Henry County.I, U. B. Taylor, a notary public in and Ior the said countyin the state aforesaid, do hereby certify that George H.Brown, personally known t.o me as the same person whosename is subscribed to the foregoing article, appeared beforeme in person and acknowledged that he signed and sealedsaid instrument of writing as his free and voluntary RCt.Given under my hand and notarial seal this 2�d day ofMay A. D., 1898.C. B. TAYLOR, N.otary Public.AFFIDAVIT OF CHAS. B. PORTER.ANN ARBOR, Mich., May 24, 1898.I, Charles B. Porter, of Ann Arbor, Mich., do herebymake deposltlon that the man represented in the picturehereto attached ran in handicap footraces at Cambridge,Ilt., during the Henry County Fair of Ill., 1894, for whichmoney prizes were given. I saw him. [Photograph of May-bury inserted here.] [Signed] CHAS. B. PORTER.STATE OF MICHIGAN, 1 ss.Washtenaw County,Subscrihed and sworn to before me this 24th day of May1898. PATRICK KERNAN,[NOTARIAL SEAL] Notary Public.COpy OF A TELEGRAM RECEIVED LATER.Mr. Porter says that in this race Maybury ran under thename of John Graham:ANN ARBon, Mich., May 26, 1898.Horace Butterworth, Chicago University:I ran in the footrace at Cambridge during the HenryCounty Fair in 1894 with the person described in my affi-davit of May 24, 1898. CHAS .. B. PORTER.The following letter is introduced as a side light on thewriter's reasons for sending absolute proof of Mr. May­bury's professionalism. Mr. Orton besides making an affi­davit, furnished the origlnal copy of the agreement betweenJ. E. Freeman and J. H. Maybury alias Henry Sherwood,also the copy of the complaint of Chas. C. Miller plaintiffagainst B. F. Morgan defendant:Prof. A. A. Stagg, Ohicago, Ill.: MAY 26,1898.My DEAR SIR-I may have put my head into a hornet'snest, but I d.o not regret it. If the Wisconsin Universityboys can't win without stuffing with this kind of material,better not win. I favor athletics, even football. Anythingthat is honest won't hurt a boy, but our University boysneed n.o special training in trickery. That will come whenthey enter politics, and that is soon enough. I did not wit­ness this race. Shullsburg is only ten miles distant fromhere, and hundreds witnessed it, and any amount of proofof identity can be had if desired. I was given to understandby Mr. Pollard that the reason Maybury used the alias inthe contract was to avoid becoming a professional.A Very truly yours,f):' P. A. ORTON.AFFIDAVIT OF PHILO A. ORTON.STATE OF WISCONSIN, l ss.Lafayette County.Philo A. Orton, of said County and State, of lawful age,being first duly sworn, deposes and says: . that the foot raceagreement, which is attached to this affidavit, has been indeponent's possession 'Since the trial in the Circuit Courtof LaFayette County, at Darlington, of a certain actionwherein Charles C. Miller was plaintiff, and B. F. Morganwas defendant, which trial occurred in June, 1896. That thefirm of Orton & Osborn, of Darlington, with 'J. B. Sirnpson,Esq., of Shullsburg, Wisconsin, were attorneys ill the said action for the defendant. The said contract-was given intodeponent's possession by Levi W. Pol lard, Esq., who is namedin the contraot, and in whose possession the same had been,as deponent was informed by said Pollard, since Its execu­tion up to that hour.Deponent further says that the person specified in saidcontract as Henry Sherwood, one of the contracting parties,was James Maybury, as deponent has always been informedand verily believes.Deponent further says that Charles C. Miller, the plaintiffin said action, was the backer of Mr. Maybury, alias Sher­wood, at said race, he putting up Maybury'S part of thepurse and betting on Maybury about Five Hundred Dollars($500) addit.ional. That after the race had been decidedagainst Maybury, the said Miller brought the action abovereferred to, to recover f'rom Mr. Morgan, the defendant, whowas stakeholder, the money which he had bet upon the raceand lost by the decision of the judges; the statutes of Wis­consin giving to a person betting money the right to bringsuch action.Deponent further says, that the documer t hereto attached,marked Exhibit" B," is a copy of the complaint in the actionof Mr. Miller against Mr. Morgan, from which it will be seenthat Mr. Maybury and Mr. Freeman were the parties whoran the foot race.Deponent further says that the plaintiff, Mr. Miller, recov­cred jugmont in said action against the stakeholder for theamount demanded in his complaint. That the deponentassisted at the trial of said action in behalf of the defendant.That Mr. Miller, Mr. P.ollard, Mr. Morgan, the defendant, Mr.Look, of Shullsburg, and 'several other persons testified inthe case, and that all of them alike stated and testified thatthe race was between James May bury and Freeman, andthat the recovery in said action was for money bet uponsaid race, and in making np the purse referred to in theannexed contract. -Deponent further says that he is sixty-one years of age,and has resided and practiced law for forty years in the Cityof DarIiugton, Wisc.onsin, and that he now is and has beensince its organization, president of the First N ational Bankof Darlington, aforesaid.Deponent further says, that he has no interest whatever inthe question of whether Mr. Maybury is an amateur or a pro­fessional athlete, and that he is only actuated in makingthis statement and the disclosures in it by a desire that theboys from all the universities shall have a fair show, andthat the boys from no university shall be permitted t.o im­pose upon their fellows, as of their number, those who areprofessional athletes. PHILO A. ORTON.Subscribed and sworn to before methis 26th day of May, 1898.R. E. ORTON, Notary Public,[SEAL.] LaFayette Co., Wis.*Oopy of the original agreement between J. E. Freeman andJ. H. Mayb�lry alias Henry Sherwood:FOOT RACE AGREEMENT FOR A PURSE OF $1,000.'I'his is an agreement between the undersigned that arace is to be run at Shullsburg September 18, 1895.This is to be run by Henry Sherwood and J. E. Freeman adistance of one hundred yards.Starb is to be a flying start.The track is to be agreed upon by J. E. Freeman andHenry Sherwood on or before the Ist of September, 1895.The winner is to take 73 per cent. of the gate receipts and25 per cent. to loser. [,UNNERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY.The expense of the track to come out of gate receipts be­fore divided.Thirty five dollars a side is deposited this day. Two hun­dred dollars a side is to be deposited on or before the 1st ofJuly,1895. That is one hundred and sixty-five a side thesecond deposit.The remaining three hundred a side is to be deposited onor before the day of the race.The money is to be deposited in the hands of Levi W.Pollard, who is to deposit it in any bank, after the first de­posit in his discretion in the town of Shullsburg, which isthe F'irst � atioual Bank of Shullsburg.In violation of the above articles the violator is to forfeitall money deposited.Witness, M. A. O'Brien,L. W. Pollard. HENRY SHERWOOD,J. E. FREEMAN."Exhibit B."-IN LAFAYETTE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT WISCONSIN.Charles C. Miller, Plaintifllvs.B. F. Morgan, Defendant.The complaint of said plaintiff, by Cleary & Cleary, hisattorneys, respectfully shows and alleges, that on the 17thday of Septetnber, A. D. 1895, he placed in the hands of saiddefendant, B. F. Morgan, the sum of $4:90 in cash, and onthe 18th day of September, A. D., 1895, the further sum of$490 in cash; and that the same was placed in the hands ofsaid B. F. Morgan, the defendant, upon a bet and wagermade by this plaintiff with W. H. Look and others, andthat the said B. F. Morgan was agreed upon as a stake­holder upon said bet and wager.And the plaintiff further alleges that the money was soplaced in the hands of said defendant aforesaid upon thebet and wager, the conditions of which were that a foot racewas to be run between James Maybury and one Freeman,at Shullsburg, Wis., on September 18, 1895; and the saidfoot race was run on said day.Plaintiff further shows and alleges that after said footrace was run on September 18, 1895, the said plaintiff de­manded of the said defendant the repayment of said sumsof money so deposited with defendant by plaintiff as afore­said.The defendant then and there refused to repay the saidmoneys to the plaintiff, and thereafter on the same day paid out the said moneys to other parties.The plaintiff further shows and alleges that by reason of .the foregoing, the said defendant became indebted to thesaid plaintiff in the sum of $985.Wherefore, The plalntiff demands judgment against thesaid defendant for the said sum of $985, besides the costsand expenses of this action.CLEARY & CLEARY,Plaintiff's Attorneys.Charles J. Webb, being first duly sworn, deposes and saysthat the above is a true copy of a deposition, an agreement,and a complaint, the originals of which are in the posses­sion of Professor A. A. Stagg, of the University of Chicago.CHARLES J. WEBB.STATE OF ILLINOIS, lCounty of Cook. � ss.I, R. E. Mallory, a notary public in and for the said CookCounty, in the State aforesaid, do hereby certify thatCharles J. Webb, personally known to me to be the sameperson whose name is subscribed to the foregoing instru­ment, appeared before me this day, in person, and acknowl­edged that he signed, sealed and delivered the said instru­ment as his free and voluntary act, for the uses and pur­poses thereon set forth, including the release and waiverof the right of homestead.Given under my hand and notarial seal, this 2d day ofJune, A. D. 1898. R. E. MALLORY,Subscribed and sworn to before methis 2d day of June, 1898.[SEAL] R. E. MALLORY, Notary Public.AFFIDA VIT OF PUBLICATION.STATE OF ILLINOIS, l SS.COUNTY OF COOK.I, F. T. Richards, foreman of the printer and publisher ofTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY, do hereby make depo­sition that .the material contained in the following article isan exact copy of the material as presented to me by A. A.Stagg. F. T. RICHARDS.Acknowledged and sworn to before methis 9th day of June, 1898.[SEAL] WILLIAM H. CARTER, Notary Public.QUADRANGULARITIES.The streets were deluged with moonlight. Theground was frozen hard; it felt like stone under ourfeet. The air was cold and sweet; it had the pleasant­ness in our throats of cold water after a dusty drive.We had been together to see Julia Arthur in "A Ladyof Quality," Miss Wylie and 1. As all the seats onthe ground floor had been taken, we had bought bal­cony seats; and as we had been alone we had comehome immediately after the theater, instead of goingfirst to supper. Now, as we walked rapidly from thecar to our house, we were counting up how muchmoney we had in this way saved, and congratulatingourselves hilariously on our wise economy. . As we passed a row of 'tittle stores on Fifty-fifthstreet, we saw one still brightly lighted. W. nin, onthe wide wooden sill of the window, among torn andrumpled newspapers, lay a two-year-old child asleep.Beyond stood the child's mother, the little woman towhom we take our laundry. Her dingy, clinging cal­ico wrapper showed how bony her shoulders were,how hollow her chest. Her thin face, though wetwith perspiration, was without color; it was haggard,and set in lines of terrible weariness. Her prominentblue eyes were more staring than usual. She wasironing still, at twelve o'clock; ironing collars at threecents each. 359l1NIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY.On Tuesday evening' the following sophomoreswere initiated into the Order of the Iron Mask:Walter J. Schmahl. 'Rowland T. Rogers., Otto Hakes. Emory C. Andrews.LeRoy T.,Vernon. Carl Davis.Spencer M. Brown. Ralph Hamill.Ralph Manning.SOCIAL.Mr. S. B. Anderson is wearing the pledge ribbons ofDelta Tau Delta.Beta Theta Pi gave an informal dance at KenwoodHall Thursday night.'Our business manager, Charles Gallion, was mar­ried oil Tuesday 'morning to Miss Lucille Banta.Western Collegiate Meet.Last Satu�day' aiternoo�ii Michigan, Illinois andChicago held a triangular meet on Marshall field, indefiance of the Western Intercollegiate meet.It proved, to 'be a 'very exciting meet; two recordswere broken and two others were equalled. Von Oven,the Illinois giant, sent the ,16-lb.' hammer 130 feet,which beats the old record, held by Edgren, by over6 feet. Hoagland, from Illinois, lowered the recordin the mile walk from 7.26 to 7.11 %'. R B. Smithtied the mile run record of 4.33, and McLean, of Mich­igan, ran the 220 hurdles in 25:2-5 seconds, tieingKraenzleiu's record. Every event was hotly contested,and althoughMichigan won by wide margin the strug­gle was exciting at all stages. I Chicago won secondafter a hard struggle with Illinois, and on the wholeour athletes made a very creditable showing. Follow­ing are the summaries of both meets, and a comparisonof the records shows the Marshall field meet, taken asa whole, to have been the superior one. 'Summaries of Western Collegiate meet:One hundred and twenty-yard hurdle-MacClean, Mich­igan, first; Webster, Michigan, second; Calhoun, Chicago,third. Time, 0.16 3·5.One hundred yard dash-Burroughs, Chicago, first; Thom­as, Michigan, second; Westphal, Michigan, third. Time,0.101·5.One mile run-Smith, Chicago, first; Wood, Michigan,second; Beers, Chicago, third. Time, 4.33.Four hundred and forty yard run-Teetzel, Michigan, first;Fair, Chicago, second; Thompson, Michigan, third. Time,0.512-5..' One mile bicycle-Baldwin, Michigan, first; Thompson,Illinois, second; Goodenow, Chicago, third. Time, 2.404-5.One mile walk-Hoagland, Illinois, first; Brookfield, Mich­igan, second; Tryon, Michigan" third. Time, 7.114·5.Two hundred and twenty yard hurdle-MacClean, Mich­igan, first; Webster, Michigan, second; Calhoun, Chicagothird. Time, 0.25 2-5.ATHLETIC.Baseball. 'Hail to Captain Sawyer, for by his timely hit wewon from Illinois last Saturday. It was the most ex­citing game played on Marshall field this year. Gor­don Clarke pitched better ball than MacCullom, andyou all know the result. We won by a score of 2 to i.It was one of those games that will go down in thehistory of our institution: It proves that the playerscan run the bases as they should be run. It showedthat they can coach as they ought to coach, and itfurther showed that they possess that admirablenever-die spirit which wins so many games.Illinois played as good a game as did Chicago, andit was .simply a question of the better team winning.Clarke did excellent batting, and Fulton (of Illinois)participated in many fine plays. Keep up the goodwork, boys. Remember the championship! N extSaturday you meet Michigan.THE SCORE.Chicago. RH PAE Illinois. RH P AEMerrifield, 3b.. 0 0 4 1 0 Fulton, 3b ..... 1 1 2 4 0-Herschb'g'r, cf 1 1 3 0 0 Thornton, rf.. 0 0 3 0 1Gardner, c ..... 0 0 9 2 0 J ohnston, lb.. 0 o 13 0 0Kennedy, lb ... 0 1 10 0 0 Winston, 3b. .. 0 0 2 1 0Sawyer, rf... .. 1 1 1 0 1 Shuler, ss ..... 0 1 2 4 0Vernon, ss ..... 0 0 0 4 0 Lotz, cf ....... 0 1 6 0 0Clarke, p ...... 0 3 1 3 0 Wernham, If.. 0 0 3 0, 0Smith,2b ..... 0 2 5 4 1 McCullom, p .. 0 0 0 3 0Wriedt, cf ..... 0 0 0 0 0 McGill, c ...... 0 1 0 0 0Total 2 8 33 14 2 Total.. .. .. .. 1 4*31 12 1=One out when winning run was made.University of Chicago O 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1-2University of Illinois O 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0-1Three-base hits-Herschberger, Kennedy, Fulton. Homerun-Sawyer. Bases on balls-Off Clarke, 7; off McCullom,2. Struck out-By Clarke, 7. Hit by pitcher-Sawyer.Double plays-Smith to Kennedy; Shuler to Johnston.Passed ball-Gardner. Time of game-Two hours 15 min­utes. Umpire-Jevne.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY.Eight hundred and eighty yard run-Hatch, Michigan,first; White, Chicago, and Hayes, Michigan, tied for second.Time, 2,02 2-5.Two hundred and twenty yard dash-Burroughs, Chicago,first; Thomas, Michigan, second; Thomson, Michigan, third.'rime, 0.22. IQuarter-mile bicycle-Brown, Chicago, first; M. H. Pettit,Chicago, second; Thompson, Illinois, third. Time, 0.34.Discus throw-Moran, Illinois, first; Caley, Michigan, sec­ond; Mortimer, Chicago, third. Distance, 103 feet 2 inches.Running high jump=-F'louruoy, Michigan, first-height, 5feet 7Yz inches; Schmahl, Chicago, and Byrne, Illinois, tiedfor second-height, five feet 6Yz inches.Putting sixteen-pound shot-Sweeney, Hlinois, first; Mo­ran, Illinois, second; Enochs, Illinois, third. Distance, 36feet.Throwing sixteen- pound hammer-Von Oven, Illinois, -first;Mortimer, Chicago, second; Enochs, Hlinols, third. Dis­tance, 130 feet.Running broad jump-MacClean, Michigan, first; Keator,Illlnois, and Russell, Michigan, tied for second. Distance,22 feet 3Yz inches.Pole vault-Leake, Chicago; Adams, Michigan, and Baker,Michigan, tied for first and divided the points. Height, 10feet.Summaries of Inter-Collegiate meet:One hundred and twenty yards, hurdles, finals-Jackson,Lake Forest, first; Green, Knox, second; Brown, N orth­western, third. Time, 0.17 3-5.One hundred yards dash, finals-Maybury, Wisconsin,first ; Jones, North western, second; P. Fox, Wisconsin, third.'rime, 0.10.Four hundred and forty yards run-Cassady, Purdue,first; P. Fox, Wisconsin, second; Sturgeon, Northwestern,third. Time, 0.52 1-5.One mile bicycle-C. J. Taylor, Wisconsin, first; Feree,Drake, second; Page, Minnesota, third. Time, 2.30%.Quarter-mile bicycle-C. J. Taylor, Wisconsin, first; H. H.Taylor, Wisconsin, second; Feree, Drake, third. 'I'ime,0.343-5.Two hundred and twenty yards dash-Jones, N orlh western,first; P. Fox, Wisoonsin, second; McGowan, Wisconsin',third. Time, 0.23 2-5.Two hundred and twenty yards, hurdles-O'Dea, Wiscon­sin, first; Sellard, Drake, second; Brown, Northwestern,third. Time, 0.27 3-5.Eight hundred and eighty yards run-Sturgeon, N orth­western, first; Nelson, Minnesota, second ; Henry, Wiscon-­sin, third. Time, 2.04 3-5.One-mile walk-Pease,Northwestern, first; Hartman, Wis­consin, second. Time, 7.53 4-5. Bredstein, Wisconsin, dis­qualified for running.Discus throw-Stangel, Wisconsin, first; Granke, Wiscon­sin, second; Forest, Wisconsin, third. Distance, 117 feet 4inches.Running high jump-Fram, Wisconsin, won; Mason, Wis­consin, second; Holland, Drake, third. Height, 5 feet 8inches.Putting shot-Brewer, Northwestern, won; Perry, North­western, second; Harbaugh, Knox, third. Distance, 33 feet.Running broad jump-Gaines, Minnesota, won; Hobart,Knox, second; Perry, Northwestern, third. Distance, 21feet 1% inches. Throwing the hammer-Levings, Northwestern, won;Stangel, Wisconsin, second; Harbaugh, Knox, third. Dis­tance, 110 feet.Pole vault-Wilson, Northwestern, won; Jones, North­western, second; Rowe, Wisconsin, third. Height, 10 feet.Tennis.Interest in tennis (at the University) last week wasdivided between the interschoolastic tournament and around robin in doubles between the members of thetennis team to choose the Michigan four and thedouble representatives in this year's western intercol­legiate tournament. The selection of the Michiganteam on double representation is a rather novel idea,and though it may seem to bear rather hard on someof the better single players who were unfortunatelypoorly mated in doubles it certainly increases theIchances for our success. Michigan, though she has anumber of strong players, is particularly weak indoubles, so that by sending two double teams to AnnArbor this week we practically assure ourselves of twomatches.The MacQuiston brothers came out of the roundrobin an easy first as was expected.' For secondplace there was a hard fight between Gottleib andBlackwelder and Halsey and Poulson, the formerfinally winning by a very pretty exhibition of uphilltennis. Halsey, however, has been unable to domuch playing for two or three weeks and was clearlyout of condition. The MacQuiston brothers as Uni­versity double champions will also be our representa­tives in the intercollegiate tournament to be held weekafter next. The choice of the two representatives insingles will be made by another round robin tourna­rnent, to be held this week and next. However H. M.and P. D. MacQuiston are the probable winners.Halsey will be unable to compete, but Gottleib theironly other competitor may upset all calculations beforehe gets through. Blackwelder, Poulson, Belfield andPage have all dropped out out of the race.Summary: MacQuiston brothers beat Blackwelderand Gottlieb, 6-3, 6-3. Blackwelder and Gottlieb beatAnderson and Belfield 9-7, 6- 3; beat Page and Rich­ards 6-3, 4-6, 7-5; beat Halsey and Poulson 1-6, 6-4,7-5·Halsey and Poulson beat Page and Richards 6-2, 6-c;beat Anderson and Belfield by default.Anderson and Belfield beat Page and Richards 7·5,6-3·The Inter-Fraternity Track neet. ,An inter-fraternity track meet will be held on Mar­shall field Wednesday, June 15. All of the fraterni­ties have entered and the contest will be amusing ifnot exciting. M. D. Harris is president, and M. M.Plowman secretary of the association.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO . WEEKLY.UNIVERSITY OF GHICAGO· Wn;n;KLY.Business Manager. as well as the inadequacy of the unfurnished andnoisy waiting rooms. A cloakroom! where people areconstantly passing in and out on their errands, servesa useful purpose, but not the purpose of a quiet andcomfortable parlor. It was the latter that Ethel Millerwished to furnish.She did not realize her wish before she died, a fewmonths ago. But after her death her mother senttwenty dollars to the officers of the Y. M. C. A. to beapplied to the end sought by Miss Miller. The officersgot permission to use room D I I, on the fourth floorof Cobb, and then raised thirty dollars more. Theyput their fifty dollars into the hands of Miss Ida Bur­gess, an art decorator of Chicago, who furnished theroom. It is now just the sort of place that is neededfor its purpose. It is pleasant to the eye, there arecomfortable chairs and lounges, there are magazines'on the tablet; and a girl may go there and lie down ifshe's tired, or make herself at home otherwise.EDITORIAL BOARD.EDWIN CAMPBELL WOOLLEY, '98, - Managing Editor.JOSEPH E. FREEMAN, '98, - - - Associate Editor.ASSISTANT EDITORS.RALPH LEROY PECK, '98.ALLEN GREY HOY1', '99.NOT'!' WILUAM FLIN'.t, ' 98.WILLIAM FRANCIS MC DONALD, '98.JOSEPHINE TURNER ALUN, '99.FLORENCE MC MAHON, '99.ROWLAND T. ROGERS, '00.WALTER J. SCHMAHL, '00.LEROY T. VERNON, '00.FRANK B. RAE, JR.CHARLES H. GALLION,SUBSCRIPTION RATE:One Quarter. payable in advanceOue Year. (Four Quarters).OFlnCE-COBB HALL, 58TH STREET AND ELLIS AVE.Entered. us Second-Class Matter at the Postoffice, Chicago, Ill.VOL. VI. THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1898. No. 34.We print this week the evidence againstOur Revolt. Maybury, upon which the Universitiesof Chicago, Michigan and Illinois base. their claim that the Wisconsin sprinter is a profes­siona1. It was unfortunate that a11 of this evidencecould not .have been placed in the hands of the Grad­uate committee in the time given by the rules of theassociation for the considering of charges. But as itwas impossible to do this we believe that this evidenceis strong enough to convince the college men of theWest that Maybury'has run for money and that thethree revolting universities are justified in their posi­tion. While many members of the Graduate commit­tee state that they are morally certain that Mayburyisa professional, their decision rested on the evidencewhich- could be brought before the committee. Ac­cording to this evidence the Wisconsin, track teamcaptain was acquitted ..While it is to be regretted that the break occurredin the manner it did we believe that the ultimate effectwill be beneficial to the purity of Western athletics.In times pas� �lany Western colleges may have playedprofessionals, but at the present time Wisconsin i, theonly prominent offender. From time immemorial looseness has characterized her ethics in baseball, foot­ball and track, and now she refuses to reform. Thatbeing the case we dare take the stand we do with thefirm belief that our position is the right one.Few people have ever been so devoted to theD 11. University as Ethel Miller, the little womanwho used to be seen in her chair at everyevent where the College was concerned, and whomeveryone knew and admired.. With her originatedthe plan of furnishing a comfortable placeto whichwomen of the University, especia11y those who livedoff the quadrangles, might go when they wished torest and lounge. The need of such a place is apparent,s .752.50I�We are sure that this room, situated as it is in sucha convenient part of the campus, would be used moreand appreciated better if it were known better."By heaven! it is a glorious sight to see" themilitary companies drilling on the campus these sum­mer afternoons. They are clad in uniforms of whiteduck trousers and caps and dark coats, and twice aweek they parade in the open air. They are yet un­armed. One of the warriors when asked when theywould get their guns replied, "The Lord only knows."But still, when the crowds gathered along the front ofCobb hear the sharp commands of the captain,and see the movements of the eighty white legs asregular and certain as if they were the parts of onegreat machine, the sight, if not fearful, is martial andim pressi ve.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEEKLY.For Meeting Paptist Young People's Unionat Buffalo, N. Y., July 14-17, the Nickel" Plate Road will selltickets at rates lower than via other lines. The accommo­dations are strictly first class in every particular, and it willbe to your advantage to communicate with the GeneralAgent, 111 Adams St., Chicago, before purchasing yourticket. Telephone Main 3389.-------Teachers VVantedBy the Berkshire Insurance Company of Pittsfield, Mass.,to represent them as Special Agents in the State of Illinois.Contracts will be made with a few male teachers who cangive good references; trial given during your vacation; ifsuccessful, permanent contracts will be made. Life insur­ance, as practiced by the Berkshire, affords a remunerativeand honorable occupation for those desiring to change fromteaching to some other permanent and agreeable life work.All policies issued by the Berkshire are protected from for­feiture by State law. Its strong financial condition, its largedividends to policy-holders, its liberal policies, its prompt­ness in paying all legitimate claims, and its excellent repu­tation, make the Berkshire a most desirable company.WILLIAM D. WYMAN, Manager, for Illinois.(Mention this publication.) - 100 Washington St., Chicago.Brink's Express Company is the most reliable and quickestin the city and the prices are cheap. They have severalagencies in Hyde Park near the University, the addresses ofwhich may be found in their advertisement on another page.Baptist Young People's Unionwill be pleased with a ride to Buffalo and return over theNickel Plate Road. Choice of water or rail route betweenCleveland and Buffalo, within final limit of ticket. Call onor address J. Y: Calahan, General Agent, 111 Adams St.,Chicago, for particulars. Telephone 3389 Main.Madame Ripley, of 344 Sixty-third street, is especiallyprepared to make ladies' bicycle suits in the latest styles.She will make up a very pretty suit for $10 to $12.To the Ladies and House= Wives,N ow is the season of the year that you must look to yourclothing to avoid having it ruined by moths. It will saveyou annoyance and regrets. Take it to the WoodlawnSteam Dye House, 446 E. Sixty-third street. Call on Mrs. Walsh, 366 E. 63d St., for Stylish Millinery.VACATION WORK. Write to the Racine Knitting Co.Racine, Wis., for particulars of profitable summer workPleasant and requires no experience.First Excursion of the Season to Buffalovia Nickel Plate Road, July 14-17, at one fare for the roundtrip. Choice of water or rail route between Cleveland andBuffalo within final limit of ticket. For further informationcall on or address J. Y. Calahan, General Agent, 111 AdamsSt., Chicago. 'Phone Main 3389.FOR RENT.-Ij'or the summer, well furnished house, 5737Rosalie ct. Terms moderate.The Berkshire Life Insurance Company, of Pittsfield,Mass., began business in 1851, and is controlled by theMassachusetts Life Insurance Laws, acknowledged the bestin the world. For details apply to FRANKLIN WYMAN, specialagent, 100 Washington Street, Chicago, Ill.One Fare for the Round Tripto Buffalo, N. Y., and return, account Baptist Young People'sUnion meeting, July 14-17. Rates lower than via other lines.For full information call on or address J. Y. Calahan, Gen­eral Agent, 111 Adams St., Chicago. 'Phone 3389 Main.How's This?We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Ca­tarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.F. W. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O.We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all busmesstransactions, and financially able to carry out any obligationmade by their firm.WEST & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists,Toledo, O._ Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directlyupon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. 'I'estimonials free.Hall's family Pills are the best.B IdeI SylphCV CrawfordC VietorL OverlandE: CrawfordS PREPARE FOR FIELD DAYby strengthening your system with�-:-a foe to fatigue. Approved by the most experiencedtrainers.N. W. University, Evanston, Ill.l}fe.ssrs. Armour &- Co., Chicago, 11/.Gentlemen :-1 take great pleasure in recommendingyour" Vigoral" to athletes in every branch. r used itdaily at the Training Table of the Northwestern Foot­ball Team during the past season, and find it to be justwhat you claim for it and more. I shall always use iton my Training Tables."V. C. BRYAN, Physical Director.A beef preparation made byArmour & Company, Chicago.For sale by Grocers and Druggists.$7500 & ROBT. WHITE BCLUBS. -A$60QQ 0 VICTORL CLUBS. L$5000 CADDIE L$4000 P BAGS. S$3800 ----CRAWFOR[) � C�.$3000 53 Washington St. A STITCH IN TIME.A. E. ANDERSON ff CO.fasbionabltCailor .. 45 & 47 JACKSON sr,REPRESENTED BYGEO. H.SA WYER •• ;53 SNELL HALLwhere samples a"e on display.DRESS SUITS A SPECIALTY.iv ADVERTISEMENTS.U(lO� '" "'l"V[� 'HVq ).p'WILSOIoI..(.Ol..lIl11' f,.nur",Northern Mic�igan • •• Transportation Co . 'Mtlt. riu��(d*'",,,,'tRIIAlO,,""·"·I"Unh ersi t y of ChicagO' Weekly,Chicago,Ill.Dear Sirs:-Prom inquiries among Ollr cus t omer-s .as to where thnfirst saw our adv.ertisement, we find "e have had subst�tial r-e-turns from out" adv-erUsement in the Universi ty of Chicago Weekly.Acme Cycle Co ••"1'. K. Thompson, Mgr.CHICAGO(FINE STATIONERS TO THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO.)Jln Engra"�d Plat� and fifty Btst Quality eallillg £ardsfor Ont DOllar.Evervthing in Fine Cor-respondence Stationery.Initials, Monograms. Crest s and special devicesstamped in colors and bronzesv-se- * * ""* *DUNWELL & FORD m WABASH AVE.•"The Great Lake Michigan Route.""'.'"Steamers City of Charlevoix and Petoskey,4: Sailings Per Week 4:For Ludington, Manisteet Frankfort, Traverse City,Old Missiont Charlevoix, Petoskey, Bay View,Harbor Springs, Mackinac Island, and allNorthern Michigan Resorts and Points East via the Great Lakes.JJ. .JJ. .J).SEND FOR OUR TOURIs'r GUIDE.Offices and Dock. East End Michigan Street, Chicago.E. W. SEYMOUR, R. F. CHURCH,Spring and Summer Styles Now Ready.£0" don't 1t��" topav ol)�r $2.50rer vo�r bat.Our $2.50 hat look sas well and lasts aswell as other people's$4.<hl hats.The Famous� Tailoring Co.are now located at .•..•346 E. FIFTY=FIFTH ST.with a full line ofImported and Domestic WoolensFor the Spring and Summer Tradealso Cleaning, Dyeing and RepairingWe have built up our reputation by combining all the highestpoints of excellence in the garments which we turn out. We standto-day in the vanguard of advancement of fine tailoring, and handleonly such fabrics as tasty and fastidious dressers can wear with prideand satisfaction.General Mannger. General Passenger \gent.TELEPHONI�. MAIN 572.B�m�m�mmBBB�aaammmamm� �m; Brtmntr'S fIOrtntint ••• ;m Our latest product is the finest and most per- Mm feet biscuit possible to make. Of a flavor mm most pleasant and agreeable, and' dainty iri m� appearance, it has met with the highest ��� praise of biscuit connoisseurs. �m As a tea table biscuit and for light lunches Em it is superb. Its place is on every table and IIm buffet. See that YOUl' Grocer gives youBremner's �11orentine mm D. F. BREMNER BAKERY IIm� OF NATIONAJ� BISCUIT CO •• CHICAGO.�mmsmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmChicago Conservatory ....A SCHOOL OF MUSIC� Orcaiiorry ANDJ:)rcamaiiiQ ArciiAuditorium Building•• Chicago •• The Best Instructors for all gradesof Students.Private Lessons may begin at any time.Low Rates for Beginners.SEND FOR 'CATALOGUESAMUEL KAYSER • • • • • • • • • PresidentADVERTISEMENTS. vI' W. E. BEAUDRY,5411 WOODLAWN AVE. Telephone Oakland 1123.Branch Store, 55th and Monroe Ave., 'Phone Oak. !)26."'--�B��yMAN �Cut Flowers, Designs, Decorations, Trees,Shrubs, Vines.The Place •••For you to buy your smokingtobacco is at LEE'S CIGARSTORE, I keep only the best.I have the best assortment ofhigh grade cigars in HydePark. Don'tForget myBarberShop.]}.I havenone butFirst-classBarbeesesIf you desire <lQQ!2 work andthe preservation of your linen,rather than cheap work andthe rapid wearing out of yourgarments, send to Munger'sLaundry, 5203-5 Lake avenue.Telephone, Oakland ll83."t,.,t,.,tWAYTE LAUNDRY ...Main Office, 308 DEARBORN ST.TELEPHONE 102 HAlunSON.AGENTS AT UNIVERSITY;University Express Company's Office, Basement, Cobb Hall.5. E. Dickerson, Room 16 Snell Hall. c. G. LEE,• -------. 25l E. 57th Street.c. Q. LINES � C�.Artistic .. Picture. FramingPASSE-PAR-TOUTS A SPECIALTY.Special Attention Given to Re-Gilding.()------5654 LAKE AVENUE.2ND DOOR NORTH OF 57TH ST.MARQUETTE � LAUNDRYc. F. WEST, Prop.Main Works, 5801=3 Cottage Grove Ave.SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS.COLLECE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONSOF CHICAGO.THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE OFThe University of Illinois.Facilities unsurpassed. Four years �radedoou rse, Investlgnt.ion of wr-ll prepared stu-dents. DR. WM. ALLEN PUSEY, Secretary.103 :'\tate street, Ch icugo.SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ANATOMYHarvey Medical CollegeLectrn-es aud demonstrations every week dayevening Clinics all day. Four year gradedcourse. Send for announcement.FRANCBS DICKINSON, M. D., Secretary,167-169m171 S. Clark sr., Chicago.NORTHWESTERN ...... University Medical SchoolOnr Plnnt, Facilities and Record merit in­vpstigatioll. For circulars and informationaddressDR. N. 5. DAVIS, JR.,2431 Dearborn St., - Chicago.Established 185</. incorporated rsoo.»: /f.' '/I:/�erA-/� <6a.:§eu:. at (fi'/ec/uo. �?�.c ff�-t.e4-.225-227 c5'/_.ce �-t.ee.c<6�?o../. H. Dimery, T. W. Gilmore,President, V. Pres. &> Treas.fox RI�tr mnk eom.,anv • •Supply the Leading Hotels, Clubs andRestaurants with••• MILK AND CREAM •.•Family Trade Solicited3016 COTTAGE GROVE AVE.TELEPHONt': SOUT ... 476 Oakland 5!i8- PHONES ;- U uited 154H. ZEISS.. LADIES' TAILOR ..9 E. 47th Street ChicagoUntil Angust l!)th we will muke all silk lined. tailor made snits for $35.00. Bicycle suits $�!). :WA N T E 0 By Old Estnbltshed Honse+High Gr-ade .M au 01' W oman, ofgood Church staud iug , to act as Mu uag erhere and do office work and oor-respondeueeat their home. Business ulrpauy Imilt up andastablrshed here. Salary $900. Enclose self­addressed st a mped envelope for our terms toA. P. Elder, Gen srul Manager,18t' MichiganAve., Chicago, IlLMarshall D. Ewell, LL. D., M. D., Dean.Fall ter-m will open September 5, 1898. Threeyears course. Improved methods unitingtheory and practice. The School of practiceis the leading fpatnre. Evening sessions oftell hours a week for each class. Studentscan be self supporting while studying. Ar­rangements made for supplementing prelim­inary education. For catalogue, addressw. f. Momeyer, LL. B., Secretary,618-619 Ashland Block, Chicago, Ill. ",HAND WORK�Nelson's Model Hand LaunQry251 Fifty=fifth St.We solicit yonr Laundr-y, Br iug' you r work01' drop postal reqnesting wagou to call .Dtstributor-s of PURE COUNTRY MILKManutacturers of CREAMERY BUTTERBOWMAN DAIRY CO.South Division Office;3514 and 3516 Rhodes AvenueEnglewood Office:(:)939-41 Wentworth AvenueL. MANASSE ... OPTICIAN88 �II""'. TribuneMadison ._ BJdg.Street· ,"WI.: . ChicagoSpectacles and eyeg lasses scientifically ad­justed, and Leuses gr-ound to cor-rect thevarious defects of vision. Frames made to fitthe face properly. Optical Instruments ofevery descr-iptdou, Eyes tested free.Tel. Oakland 863Th6 UniV6rsitu floristFReSH CUTROSESAND CARNATIONSASPECIALTYVI ADVERTISEMENTS.Rooms.THE MONROE APARTMENTS.MonroeAn especially desirable home for Avenue Near Fifty=Fifth Street.members of the University. $ $ $ $$ $ $ $ Ninety-Three Apartments and Sixty-Five SingleFine Elevator Service.Electric Lights.Steam Heae,Hot and Cold Water.Gas Ranges. First Class Cafe in theBuilding. Apartmentsand rooms especiallyadapted to studentsand small families.FOR PRICES AND PARTICULARS CALL AT THE OFFICE OF THE BUILDING.'. THE MONROE COMPANY, •R. P. SHIELDS, Manager.SEASON OPENS=JUNE 22���E WHALEBAOK-So S. CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS-THE LARGEST ANDFASTEST EXCURSION STEAMER IN THE WORLDTO AND FROM CHICAGOLEA YES CHICAGO week days 9 :30 a.mLeaves Chicago Sundays 10:00 amExtra Trip Saturday 10:00 p.mL�AYES MILWAUKEE week days 4:00 p.mLeaves Milwaukee Sundays 5:00 p.mLeaves Milwaukee Sundays 3 :00 a.mFARE FROM CHICAGORound trfp, returning same day $1.00Round trip, unlimited 1.!)OOne way 1.00Saturday night trip, unlimited 1.50FARE FROM MILWAUKEEOne way $1.00Round trip, unlimited 1.50Children 6 to 12, ha1f fareSPECIAL RATES TO SOCIETIESBicycles Free. Music. Cafe.DOCKS { gyN�e:�k!�f��:·J:��� St.For other information apply toO. S. WHITSLAR, Oen. Pass. AgentIS9 LASALLE ST. OHICAGOCANCER, SALT RHEUM,.RHEUMATISM, PILES,and all BLOOD DISEASESCured by fluid and solid extrnctofRed Clover Blossoms.:Beat Blood Purifier known. not a8L::YiR.ed����::'��:':�i�! �'!�• world·widerellutation. Send for�t:�o.&.I�P4�:'S()t��:. CHAS. FINKELSTEIN 387 E. 63rd Street$���m�rcbant tailor N. W. cor. MonroeAvenueOREAl REDUCTION IN FINE T AILORINO ...Nice Business Suits to order $15.00 up.Nice Pants to order.... .... . . . . .. .. 4.00 up.S U'I S Steamed cleaned and pressed $1.50T Dry cleaned and pressed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1.00Sponged and pressed ,. . . . . . . . . . . .75.' Dyed and pressed.... . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. 2.00PANTS Steamed cleaned and pressed $ .5�, Sponged and pressed.... .... . . . .1;)Special attention given to ladies' garments.Repairing done at very reasonable prices.Absolute satisfaction guaranteed.1�lja,1Quickly secured. OUR FEE DUE WHEN PATENTOBTAINED. Send model, sketch or photo. withdescription for free report as to pateutabtlity. 48·PAGEHAND·BOOK FREE. Contains references and fullinformation. WRITE FOR COPY OF OUR IIPECIALOFFER. It is the most liberal proposition ever made bya patent attorney, and EVERY INVENTOR SHOULDREAD IT before applying for patent. Address:H. B. WILLSON & CO.PATENT LANYERS,LeDroltBldg., WASHINGTON, D. C .Or, OUR SAVIOUR IN ART.Cost over $100,000 to publish.Nearly 200 full-page Masterpieces of OurSavior and the Mother, by Great Masters.A per-usal of this superb work is like tak­ing a tour through all the Art Galleries ofEurone,A glance at these matchless, thrilling pic­tures brings tears to the eyes of everyone.Christian men and women paying forhomes taldng from three to ten orders dailyhere in Chicago and everywhere.Sells itself-so beautiful when people see itthey want it.Selling rapidly all the way from the Klon­dike to Rio Janeiro. Never sold in this ter­ritory.Published a year and in its twentieth edi­tion.Presses running day and night; call andsee it.Get sole management of large field and 100Agents and you have a fortune. Salary $900to man or woman good church standing toact as manager and correspondent here.Call or address A. P. T. Elder. ManagerSubscription Depur-tment, 189 Michigan Ave­nue. Chicago, HI.E. B. MOORE &- C�.48 and 50 Randolph St.Parquet Floors Moore's };'loor WaxFine wooa Flooringwooa CarpetTelephone Main 779s. KAHN� FINE TAILORINO..Cleanin�, Dyeing lind Repairing Neatly DoneLadies' Dr-esses Cleaned. Dyed and PressedFirst-class wor-k at reasonable prices451 E. FIFTY-FIFTH ST.Omaha Bldg. Bet. Lexington & GreenwoodHannah M. Hart,� Hair Dressing amI Manicuring Parlors.242 EAST 55TH STREET.Open eveu ings till 8. 'Phone 510 Oak.Polynice OilCURESRheumatismLumbago NeuralgiaDyspepsia & Kindred DiseasesThis new French medical discovery hasbeen used with remar-kable snccess in Belle­vue Hospital, New York: Howard Hospital,Philudeluhia : Maryland and Johns HopkinsUuiversttv. Baltimore: and in var-ious otherhospitals in the prominent cities. .What a Physician says:J oh TIS Hopkins University.Baltimore. April 5th, 1997The experiments made here at the Hospitalwith the Polynice Oil, witnessed by me, hav­ing been very successful, I hereby recom­mend it in all cases of rheumatism.(Signed) DR. F. L. ROGER.POLYNIOE OILImported from Paris. 50c. per bottle. Sentupon receipt of price byDR. ALEXANDRE, SPECIALIST,pf Paris, 1218·0 St. N. W., Washington, D.�. ADVERTISEMENTS.LAKE BREEZESbring relief from the sweltering heat ofthe town or city. They raise your spiritsand restore your energy. The greatestcomfort and pleasure in lake travel ison one of theLAKE MICHIGAN AND LAKE SUPERIORTRANSPORTATION CO'SELEGANT STEAMSHIPS. �����f)�;$20':<:)�e�e'Print�THE PRINCELYCARMENTMAKERt"� But $20I want to merit your patron­age, otherwise I don't want it.REPAIRINGvii• BICYCLES • W9pdlawn Ice Cream Co'y,'__:.·40t East Fifty-Seventh Street ... �- _Sailings between Chicago and MackinacIsland four times every week, atextremely' low rates.The new steel steamship "Manitou" is amagnificent vessel, elegantly equipped withevery comfort ana convenience. Tri-weekly'twixt Chicago, Charlevoix. Harbor Springs,Petoskey, Bay View, Mackinac Island, etc.T..... Write for interesting read-/.�$U��.., ing matter, sent free, or ask""i: \i� your nearest agent. Address"I 0 _ Jos. Berolzheim, G. P. A.=l� LAKE Mien. AND 'LAKESUPERIOR TRANS. CO.Ru.h and N. Water St., Chicago,C. L. LUNDGREN,554 55th Street.Practical Root and Shoe rlaker.Repatrfug done in 11 workmnnlih:emanner onshort notice at very reasonable prices.--1'HE-Calumet Hand Laundry462 E. FIFTY-FIFTH ST.StrictlyHand Work Special Ratesto Studentsw. & R. Cycle Co.BICYCLES BUILT TO ORDER.Repairing, Nickel plating, Enameling. Framescut down, Electric work, Locksmithing.266 EAST 67TH STREET.WHEELS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED. W. H. MORSCHES, MGR.Renting, Repairing, Instructions.WHEELS CLEANED 75 CTS. Suitings in city are now being dis­played by PRINCE. We make aspecialty' of $20.00 Suitings inImported Scotch Worsteds andFancy Cheviots, and guarantee youFit, Finish and Grade.118 -120 E. MADISON ST.to tbt Stu"tnt$������() ������;$20.�-===-�$20.()<:) �l!)�e � EJ 1t>-��� �Eye GlassesMade byFitand StayComfortablyWestern Steam Dye Works,608 E. '63rd and 228 35th St.AUGUST GUENTHER, Prop.Reasonable prices. prompt work. Satisfac­tion gnaranteed. Work called for and deliv­ered. Give me a trial and be convinced.RENTING BICYCLE LESSONSM.O.AMENTSOUTH SIDE BICYCLE EXCHANGE209 E. 57TH STREETDISCOUNT TO UNIV£RSITY TRADE C. A, BASSET, MGR.MANUFACTURERS OFFINE ICE CREAM AND ICES.Satisfaction guaranteed. 6252 MADISON AVE.viii4 J 34 Cottage Grove Ave., cor. Bowen.ADVERTISEMENTS.Selecting aBicyclerequires thought and goodjudgment. The safety andpleasure of cycling dependupon material, used andmechanical construction. e: '\.����� \- ma$t�n THE (J�IVERSITT, � '" TAILOR,Sterling Bicycles"BUILT LIKE A WATCH,"are safest to buy, possessing every feature thatmakes a bicycle strong, safe, speedy, superb.Sterling prices for '98: Road Models, $60 and $75.J�acers, $85. Chainless, $125. Tandems, $125.Catalogue free.High-grade wheels within everybody's reach.Sterling Cycle Works,274-276-278 Wabash Avenue, Chicago. 1I1<II'BEING connected with a large'- woolen house Mr. Masten is� enabled to make to measure a suitequal to any $25.00 Suit for $0.75,The Pick of a large variety of foreign and domesticwoolen is offered.All wool pants to measure and to fit for $3.00.Special price to students on anything in the house.mona reb £ycl� £0.Writ¢ fOr}lrt £atalogu¢ •• n�w York[ondon Hamburgand are pl¢as¢d. £bitagoADVERTISEMENTS.II A GENERALPACKAGEANDBAGGAGEDELIVERYTO ALL PARTS OF CITYAND SUBURBS.----STORAGE AND VANS:132-138 W. Monroe St. Exp.110OFFICE:84 Washington Street. Exp.109Branch Offices:Avery's Pharmacy, 55th and MonroeOak. 526H. D. Jones, 132 E. 53rd StreetOak. 829J.J. Magee, 57th and Lake AvenueOak. 933Brink's Office, 6408 Wentworth Ave.Went. 574n�w Ri��ra Caf��409 E. 57th St.Club Rates (8 in Club) - $2.50 per week.Combination Lunch, 11 a. m , to 3 p. m , - 10 c.Regular Meals 25 c. each.2 I MEALS FOR $4.00.Excellent Service. Experienced Cook.CHAS. ZIEGLER,UNIVERSITY CYCLERY.COR 56TH STREET AND ELLIS AVE.Repairing a Specialty.Reenameling and Remodeling.Wheels Built to Order.AUGUSTA PETERSON,•• [adi�s' Dr�ssmak�r and eostum�r ••-----;;0+0 .. - ---Ball, Wedding and Tailor-Made Costumes. a Specialty.55 10 MADISON AVE.� THE W.J. FEELEY CO.6 MONROE ST.c. EU'l.blelllSIN SILVER, 50 CENTS.Emblems, Badges, Pins. Jewels, etc.Penmants on sale at Unioersiiu Press,Mme. Riplev - -LADIES' TAILORING andFINE DRESS MAKING ..•••344 E. SIXTY -THIRD ST. Chicago.Choice Cigars andTobacco Laundry OfficePorter in attendanceClEO. F. AIKEN•• BARBER ••446 Fifty-Fifth StreetCOR. LEXINGTON AVENUEFirst-class work Formerly 556 55th Streetguaranteed bet. Ellis and InglesideSoutb Park 6arb�r Sbop5656 LAKE AVENUEis the place toGet Your Hair Cut, Shave, Sham­poo and Shoes Shined.LAUNDRY AGENGY J. A. GREENE, PROP. mm.�.m: •• a..��� ••••••• m�w1ll[��� ����1ll[mMm ONE FARE �L?sR$2�OOUND TRIP HmD (fROM C��CT��O $19.50) HIlm Nationabg�����I��ciation DBmD Washington, D.������ 7 to 14, 1898. mB�1� Baltimore & Ohio Railroad !JIml�Jm THE NATIONAL HIGHWAY. 1ll[JlIDM�I By daylight through the picturesque and historic valley of the DB�). Potomac; with stop-over privileg-es.1 Tickets via the BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD will give you the l',_ choice of two routes. either on the going or return trip, and enable -,'m"DI,� you to visit such point" as I'D;3 Deer Park, Mountain Lake Park, Harper's Ferry,Gettysburg, Antietam, WinchestertDB Valley of the Shenandoah, mD�<. � Etc., Etc. [1� SPECIAL N. E. A. TRAINS FROM CHICAGO. lI'D Call on your nearest Ticket Agent for detailed information, mm� is or address,.,J D. B. MARTIN, M. P. T. B. N. AUSTIN, G. P. A. .JHMALT;O__ *_;;"IB]�ff�rsonJf��.Pbarmacyc. W. GOODFELLOW, R. PH., MGR.Corner 55th· Street and Jefferson A venue.RICHARD A. McCURDY, President. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded.Cash Assets, Over $225,000,000CHAS. H. FERGUSON & SONS, DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND TOILETARTICLES.Illinois General Agency.THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANYOF NEW YORK.GENERAL AGENTSTacoma Building, Chicago, U. S. A.������������������������t:: fl;fl;n.fl;fl;fl;fl;fl;fl;fl;fl;fl;fl;n.n.n.n:iT.fl;n."iT. ���� The iarqest mamufacturers oj Athlectic �1��l� and Bicycle Sttpplies and uniforms in �1��l� the uiorld, . �1�&j� A. G. SPALDING & BROS. ���� "The Name the Guaraniee:" �1��l� Official outfitters to the leading college. �1��l� athletic club and school teams of the �1��l� u. S. Eve1'y requisite j01' Base Ball, �1��'� Athletic Sports and Pastimes, I@rThe �1��l� Spa!ding Offi<;ial League Ball adop.!ed by �1�"'1100: Nat.iona.l, l\hnor. College and �chool �I;i"l� Leagues. Base ball Uniforms, Bats, ���l� Gloves, Mits, Chest Protectors, Shoes. �1��l� The Spalding Chainless BiCYCle} 1898 �1�i:Jl� TheSpaldingBlueRace1'(chain) M ���l� TheSpaldingRoadwheel(chain) odels �1��l� NEW YORK. CHICAGO. �j�m������£����������£���m. GEO. A. MUGLER,Artistic Picture Frames15 WASHINGTON ST.N. E. CORNER WABASH AVE.Take Elevator .... CHICAGO. Special Attention Given to Re-GildingVVM. JABUSCH,m�rcbant tailor272 E. 57th Street, Rosalie Music Hall Building,formerly with Edward Ely Company.A liue of Suits and Overcoats made to orderin first-class style and workmanship at rea­sonable prices. Special attention to Ladies'work and Cleaning. Dyeing and Repairing. DR. E. S. SAWYERDentistTELEPHONE 252 55th StreetOAKLAND946ChicagoCollege ofLaw ... LAW DEPARTMENTOFLAKE FOREs;rUNIVERSITYAthenreum Bldg.•• FACULTY ••HON. THOMAS A. MORAN. LL. D., Dean.(Late Justice of Appellate Court.)HON. H. M. SHEPARD.(Late Justice of Appellate Cour t.)HON. EDMUND W. BURKE.(Judge of the Circuit Ct. of Cook Co.)HON. S. P. SHOPE.(Late Justice Supreme Ct. of Illinois.)HON. O. N. CARTER.(Judge of County Court.)HON. JOHN GIBBON�, LL. D .(Judge Circuit Conrt. Cook Cou ntv.)ADELBERT HAMILTON. ESQ.C. E. KREMER. ESQ. E. C. HIGGINS. E:;;Q.F. F. REED, ESQ. C. A. BROWN. E:'Q.DARIUS H. PINGREY, LL. D.ELJ\-IER E. BARRETT, E�Q .. Secr eto rv.Fall i��a!>J�ih:e��;::nd��r��.1897.Diplomas granted on two years' atteudauceadmit to bar of this State on motion.Degree of Bachelor of Laws confer rr-d onthose who complete the three years' cour-sesatisfactory to the Faculty.For further information address the Sec­retary.ELMER E. BARRETT, LL. B.Suite 1501, 100 Washington Street, Ch;cago.ADVERTISEMENTS.Special Designs and Estima tes Furnished if Desired.G1..;; e,� STA:! ST.;J 5f\e��eimer.....- JACKSON BOUL.Specials for Friday and Saturday, June 10-11.� BUY OF THE MAKERS �Store: 14�I�i��ba.lhAve. JOHN A. COLBY & SONS Factory: �tlgl�zabethStGrasp this golden opportunity to provide yourself with Rich Raimentat about the cost of cloth. We display the Richest Treasures of theTailor's Art, and the most perfect productions from the Shears of Cutterscelebrated all over the continent for their Artistic Work.Blue Serge Suit!il, single or doublebreasted sack styles that, are new and hand­some. They are perfect in fit and finish,with best farmers satin linings and Frenchfacing. Friday and Saturday $7.�0G�nniue Thibet Cloth Suit, in blue andblack. Single or double-breasted sack.They are stylishly made and well trimmed.Men of taste and fashion should step ill Fri­day or Saturday and examine this line.At $9.00lUixed Cassimt-re "'uits. All colors a udpatterns to select from. They come in single and double- breasted styles; sizes. 34 to 48;r-egarlar-s, stouts and slims: any man can befitted from this line. Warranted pure wooland fast colors. .Friday and Saturday.Price $10.00)1'an('.y CheckNl �nits, in all styles.Of the very finest grade Globe and-Hocka­n n m Worsteds. including pin checks andplaids. 'I'h ese goods are the finest produc­t ious and have merits possessed only bv $20a nd $2;) custom snits. The most, fastidiousdr-esser can gratify his tastes from this line.Friday and Saturday $ I 2.00� Present this copy at our s to r-e and gt·t one- of OU1' ImllOl'tell ClothesBrllshes )1"'RE"� ,vith every suit in OU1' :llt-u's (�IOtJliug De])al'tluent Frhtayor �aturday (only).OPEN EVENINGSun til 6:30 p, rn. OPEN SATURDAYun til lO:30 p. m,II A GENERALPACKACEANDBACCACEDELIVERYTO ALL PARTS OF CITYAND SUBURBS.STORAGE AND -VANS:132-138 W. Monroe St. Exp.110OFFICE:84 Washington Street. Exp.109Branch Offices:A very's Pharmacy, 55th and MonroeOak. 526H, D. Jones, 132 E. 53rd StreetOak. 829J. J. Magee, 57th and Lake AvenueOak. 933Brink's Office, 6408 Wentworth Ave.Went. 574n�w Ri��ra £aft_.6>409 E. 57th St.Club Rates (8 in Club) $2.50 per week.Combination Lunch, 11 a. m , to 3 p. m . - 10 c.Regula r Meals 25 c. each.21. MEALS FOR $4.00.Excellent Service. Experienced Cook.CHAS. ZIEGLER,UNIVERSITY CYCLERYICOR, 55TH STREET AND ELI,IS AVE.Repairing a Specialty.Reeuarnel iug aud Remodeling.Wheels Bu ilt, to Order.AUGUSTA PETERSON,•• [adi�s' Dr�ssmak�r and eo�tum�r .•-----::o�o.·---Ball, Wedding and Tailor-Made Costumesa Specialty.295 FIFTY- FOURTH ST.LAKE BREEZESbring relief from the sweltering heat ofthe town or city. They raise your spiritsand restore your energy. The greatestcomfort and pleasure in lake travel ison one of theLAKE MICHIGAN AND LAKE SUPERIORTRANSPORTATION CO'SELEGANT STEAMSHIPS.Sailings between Chicago and MackinacIsland four times every week, otextremely low rates.The new steel steamship "Manitou" is amagnifi�ent.- vessel" elegantly equipped withevery comfort an-a convenience. Tri-weekly'twixt Chicago, Charlevoix, Harbor SpI'ings,Petoskey, Bay View, Mackinac Island, etc..Write for 'interesting read-ing matter, sent free, or askyour-nearest agent. Address0__ Jos. Berolzheim, G. P. A.111 'LAKE MICH. AND LAKELMAL.S:U:.�. SUPERIOR ..-RANS. CO.Rush and N. Water St., Chicago.Soutb Park 6arb�r Sbop5656 LAKE AVENUEis the place toGet Your Hair Cut, Shave, Sham­poo and Shoes Shined.LAUNDRY AGENGY J. A. GREENE, PROP. ADVERTISEMENTS.Illinois General Agency.THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANYOF NEW YORK.RICHARD A: McCURDY, President.Cash As set s, - . - "Over $225,000,000CHAS. H. FERGUSON & SONS,Tacoma BUildi;ng�ENE:AL A,;ENTSChicago, U. S. A.������������������������l� rr: rr.rr. ff,ff,!Toff,", ITo rr: rr: a.mrr.rr.rr.rr.rr.rr.a.rr:�r��l� The laTgest maruufacturers oj Athleciic �r��l� and Bicycle St£pplies and uniforms in �r��� the world. �r��II� A. C. SPALDINC & BROS. ���... "The Name the Giuiraniee;" �r��l� Officiai outfitters to the leading college. �r��l� athletic club aud school teams of the �r��l� u. S. Every requisite for Base Ball, �r��'� Athletic Sports and Pastimes. �The �r��l� Spalding Official League Ball adopted by ..;;11.: National, 1\, inor. College and School �r�i".... Leagues. Base ball Uniforms, Rats, �ri­�l� Gloves, Mits, Chest Protectors. Shoes. �r��l� The Spalding Chainless Bicycle � �r��l� The Sp aldinq Blue Race1'(chain) 1898 �r��l� TheS1JaldingRoadwheel(chain) Models �r�'�l� NEW YOHK. CHICAGO �r�m���£�����������������mGEO. A. MUGLER,Artistic Picture Frames15 WASHINGTON ST.N. E. CORNER WABASH AVE.Take Elevator .... CHiCAGOSpecial Attention Given. to Re-GildingVVM. J ABUSeH,m�rcbant tailor272 E. 57th Street, Rosalie Music Hall Building,formerly with Edward Ely Company.A liue of Suits and Overcoats made to orderin first-class style and workmanship at rea­sonable prices. Special atteution to Ladies'work and Cleaning. Dyeing and Repairing.]�ff�rsonJl�tPbarmacyC. W. GOODFELLOW, R. PH., MGR.Corner 55th Street and Jefferson A venue.Prescriptions Carefully Compounded.DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND TOILETARTICLES.DR. E. S. SAWYERDentistTELEPHONE 252 55th StreetOAKLAND946ChicagoCollege ofLaw ... LAW DEPARTMENTOFLAKE FORESTUNIVERSITYAthenreum Bldg... FACULTY ..HON. THOMAS A. MORAN. LL. D., Dean.(Late Justice of Appellate Court.)HON. H. M. SHEPARD.(Late Justice of Appellate Court.)HON. EDMUND W. BURKE.(Judge of the Circuit Ct. of Cook Co.)HON. S. P. SHOPE.(La te Justice SupremeCt. of Illinois.)HON. O. N. CARTER.(J'udsre of Connty Court.)HON. JOHN GIBBONS, LL. D.(Judge Circuit Court. Cook County.)ADELBERT HAMILTON. ESQ.C. E. KREMER. ESQ. E. C. HIGGINS. ESQ.F. F. REED, ESQ. C. A. BROWN. ESQ.DA.-RIUS H. PINGREY, LL. D. -­ELMER E. BARRETT, ESQ., Secretary.Fall j��a!>j�ih:e���:;nd��r��. 1897.Diplomas granted on two years' attendanceadmit to bar of this State on motion.Degree of Bachelor of Laws conferred onthose who complete the three years' coursesatisfactory to the Faculty.For f'ur-ther information address the Sec­retary.ELMER R. BARRl<--;TT, LL. R.Suite 1501, 100 Washington Street, Chicaj!o. L_ THE W.J.FEELEY CO.� 6 MONROE ST.c. EInbleDlsIN SILVER, 50 CENTS.Emblems, Badges, Pins. Jewels, etc.Pennants on sa'le at Unive?'sity Press,Mme. Riplev ••LADIES' TAILORING andFINE DRESS MAKING .....344 B. SIXTY-THIRD ST. Chicago.Choice Cigars andTobacco Laundry OfficePorter in at.tendauce(iEO. F. AIKEN•• BARBER ••446 Fifty-Fifth StreetCOR. LEXINGTON AVENUEFirst-class work Formerly 556 55th Streetguaranteed bet. Ellis and InglesideA. McAdams .:.Cor. 53rd st. and Kimbark Ave.Tel. Oakland 863Th6 UniV6rsitu floristFReSH CUTROSESAND CARNATIONSASPECIALTYThe Perfect TrainNewest Pullmans, Buffat-Smok ing-LibraryCal', Through Dilling Cal', Pintseh Gas .The Direct Route2265 miles Chicago to Los Angeles.The Shortest Time72 hours from Ch icago, 69 from St. Louis,_ j Apply to any Agent £01' detailed information.RENTING BICYCLE LESSONS REPAIRINGM.O.AMENTSOUTH SIDE BICYCLE EXCHANGE209 E. 57TH STREETDISCOUNT TO UNIVERSITY TRADE C. A. BASSET, MGR.ADVER TISEl\IENTS.partg LineTelephoneFORPRIVATERESIDENCES!.-EBONY FINISH. - NICKEL PARTS.WALL SPACE REQUIRED lOX 6 1-2 IN.Bell rings only when yourown telephone is called.NO BATTERY AT THE RESIDENCERates range from $60 peryear for four party to$WO for individual line.�� A SOCIAL CALL BY TELEPHONE. To 6eWilhinReaCh�by telephone of the policeand fire departments, and ofyour grocer, butcher, drug­. - gist- and others with whomyou have dealings, rendersyour home life SAFER, MORECONVENIENT and MORE COM­FORTABLE, andWby Sbould�ou notfacilitate and make lessburdensome the details ofyour household t ran s a c­tions, as well as the detailsof your business life?£bitago (¢l�pbon¢· £ompany C2��T::�!IN::::�����TTHE MONROE APARTMENTS.Monroe Avenue Near Fifty=Fifth Street.An especially desirable home for members of the University. ,J). ,J}. ,J}. ,J}.,J}. ,J}. ,J}. ,J}. Ninety-Three Apartments and Sixty-Five. Single Rooms.Fine Elevator Service.Electric Lights.Steam Heat,Hot and Cold Water.Gas Ranges. First Class Cafe in theBuilding. Apartmentsand rooms. especiallyadapted to studentsand small families.FOR PRICES AND PARTICULARS CALL AT THE OFFICE OF THE BUILDING.+ THE MONROE COMPANY •R. P. SHIELDS, Manager. /'