J, _I .�i!-oneUniversityChicagoWeeklyEdited and Publishedby the Students � � �Published every Thursdayin the Year at the Uni­versity of ChicagoThursday, July 25, 1901,,IIPRICE FIVE CENTS VOLUME IXNUMBER 40 Established 1892'I .. ---------I .... ------------- .. --.rWINDSOR <I; KENFIELD PUB. CO., CHICAGO.ADVERTISEMENTSPERRY = WEBB=ADAMS co.... UNIVERSITY HABERDASHERS ...For Ladies and Men.Special Prices to Students.Telephone 1327 Oakland.Four 'Trips to City Daily. 9 A. M. Boats Made.A. SWANSONWoodlawn Park and Chicago ExpressTrunks delivered to all parts of the city.Furniture, Piano Moving and Storage.Main office 412 East 63rd Street. City office 42-44 State StreetTel. Oakland 421. Tel. 1366 Central.......................... � ., .• ASHEVILLE, N. C., AND •! VIRGINIA HOT SPRINGS !• •• •i THE BIG FOUR ROUTE i• •, .• INDIANAPOLIS •; CINCi�Z-ts��LLE ;! 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Fol- �, low your fad in winterless California under : I� summer skies �t Golf grounds and expert players at princi- ,� pal California resorts �� The California Limited, �� tri-weekly, Chicago to Los Angeles. Be- �!� ginning early in December, daily, Chicago 6� to Los Angeles and San Francisco . �Jt .�� Finest train in the world. Only line under �� one management, Chicago to California #>� Santa Fe Route �t Ask for illustrated pamphlets' . -. ..� J. M. CONNELL, Gen. Agt. Pass. Dept. �J� T�e Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe R'y. �� .1Og Adams St., Chicago �� �����.�.�.���� -. �.�.��University of Chicago Week y.SINGLE COPIES 5c. CHICAGO, ILL. JULY 25, 1901. VOL. IX., No. 40.The Art of Leo Tolstoi."The business of art lies just in this,-to makethat understood and felt which, in the form ofargument, might be incomprehensible and inac­cessible."So writes Tolstoi in his essay, "What isArt"? And elsewhere in his definition of art, hetells us that the business of art is to transfer toother men by means of external symbols the art­ist's feeling or attitude of mind regarding a cer­tain phenomenon or a certain set of phenomena.To Tolstoi art means nothing more nor less thanthat. To be sure, in the practice of art thereare certain limitations, as, that the attitude of theartist must be original, contributing somethingto the advantage of rnankin d, or that the artistmust have clear and definite. knowledge of hismaterial; but these are secondary and adven­titious circumstances.The only two. indispensable qualities of an art­ist, in To1stoi's opinion, according to his definition, Iare artistic talent and insight, by the former ofwhich he means the ability to use effectively the"external symbols," the form, the execution, andby the latter, understanding, "the purified side ofmind," necessary to the "penetration into theactuality of phenomena and to the giving of anovel and true attitude towards the world.", Tolstoi's nature is more than likely better fit­ted to the nature of his ideas of art than per­haps that of any other writer. For with his dis­tinct self-consciousness he has doubtless morethan any other writer incorporated ·his ideas inhimself and in his practice. Let as view him andhis work in the light, then, of his artistic the­'ones.A moment ago I used the phrase, "the actual- ity of phenomena," quoted from P. \. Sergy­eenko's "How Count Tolstoi Lives and Works."Probably no man has ever lived who has comecloser to this actualitj of phenomena than Tol­stoi. His nature is to its very foundation a real­IStiC one. With all his strong hope for the fu­ture, all his idealistic outlook, Tolstoi is first andlast a man who has penetrated into his owntimes and dissolved them to the last grain by hiswonderful analysis. N ever the thinnest veil ofcloud, either personal or conventional, dims theobject that falls beneath his piercing vision. Ar­nold, �n his essay 011 Tolstoi, remarks upon thepeculiar sensitiveness and consciousness of theSlav nature to all the movings, not only of itself,but also of neighboring selves and of the externalworld. Tolstoi is the complete example of thisstrange and wonderful quality. l'But, hand in hand with this essential charac­teristic of the writer, goes another not less essen­tial, one which 'in OUf modern,' western worldof sick sophistication. is so far lacking as gen­erally to be forgotten in anything but cantingcriticism. I can think of only one writer of thiswestern world that satisfies the condition of thedivine simplicity of. all g reat artists, of Homer, ofMoses, of David, and that is Whitman. It seemsalmost the special prerogative of eastern Europe,of certain Russians to possess that large andgodlike simplicity. And the wonderful partof it is that it is a simplicity in which, asin a macrocosm, lie all the qualities of other men,all. their complexity and sophistication andsickness, and by which they are presided overand unified into integral sanity and vision.From these two qualities of sensitiveness andIII'simplicity, spring the almost inconceivable andapparently naive fidelity, the truth to nature, andthe insight of Leo Tolstoi. By their aid he has- formed. a sane and honest estimate of things,gained a special and really new attitude towardsthe world and life, an understanding, not perfectperhaps, but so only because as yet incomplete.Strange as it may seem, when one has exam­ined Tolstoi's insight, and the character uponwhich that insight rests, one has practically donethe same for his artistic talent. The substance ofTolstoi's work and his metier are absolutelyfused; they are, as it were, the obverse and thereverse of the same sterling coin. And this initself is perhaps the highest possible praise ofTolstoi's a-rt. For it means that it is absolute,that it moves inevitably, that the Iact and its tell­ing are one, and that accordingly the artist him­self is as a transparent glass through which isseen the actuality, as the author sees it, that is,his impression of that actuality, which means, histruth. For a universal and sensitive artist suchas we have found Tolstoi to be this means thatthe artist's truth is the truth which all men mustacknowledge, and which "the recipient of the ar­tistic impression seems to have known already butwhich he has been unable to express," as Tolstoihimself puts it. With most authors of novels,their personality is so clouded with its ownfumes that their lens is colored or dimmed ordistorting, and the image, as the author sees it,is unreliable and not the actuality that must in­evitably come home to the reader as part of him­self and his experience, the actuality absolutethat convinces beyond criticism, the actuality thatmakes the uncritical, naive reader exclaim insurprise, as I myself have heard (as if it were astrange and unprecedented thing for them to findreality and truth in novels or even to supposethata novel might be true �nd real) : "Why, I'yC!known just such people," or, "How can he knowwhat I, a woman, think and feel," or still again,"That's just as if I were living through it my­self. It all seems so natural, doesn't it?" This,I say, is the case with most novelists. But withTolstoi the truth is the very opposite. And thesecret is merely this: that, aroused by the factsof life as they stream in upon him through thewondrous, achromatic lens of his senses andbrain, Tolstoi weaves upon the woof of the ]066aroused feeling the weft of these facts whichhave so impressed him, recreating them, andgiving them vitality and place in the great or­ganic whole of nature.In detail, from the nature of his metier, Tol-­stoi is different from all the artists of the westernworld. Tolstoi long ago chose for his mannerrealism, that is, the presentation of actualities forthe sake of producing an artistic impression. Butthis realism altogether differs from the realismof other novelists. It is a thing in itself.The western novelist, taught by the precise,definite, logically but unfaithfully cut French.realist of the style of Flaubert, de MaupassantTurgeneo, and Zola, selects out his event or char-­acter, severs it on all sides from the infinite andintricate environment of complete existence, fromthe apparently useless chaos of beings and objects.and events surrounding, and, as it were, special­izes in it, simplifying, condensing, heightening­it. Not so Tolstoi. Tolstoi, though he wouldlike to deny it, is ruled, not by the rationalistic­conception of man as an abstract rational being,but by the modern tendency towards determin-­ism which inevitably links man with all his sur­roundings, from the highest to the most slightand trivial; every human being is essentially atone with his environment. And this not onlygives Tolstoi a higher kind of realism than that­of the French, but it gives him so much ampler­reaches of experience to work upon, so muchgreater richness and variety of material in the­shape of event and character. It divorces himfrom convention, and gives him free play overthe whole spectacle of human life; and this in his-­books convinces and delights. Tolstoi's horizons.are the horizons of life itself, and are thereforeour own horizons to the extent that we recognize­everything as_ true that is ringed by them.I have read Tolstoi, like Whitman, in the openair; and there is in him the same naive fidelity,"the great amplitude, rectitude, and impartiality­of N ature." One finds in him something thatreminds one of the sunlight, the rains, and the­grass that blows."placatumque nitet diffuso lumine caelum."In "Resurrection," Maslova leaves the prisonin the morning to go to the court and walks along­in her painful prison shoes. "Passing by a corn­dealer's shop, in front of which a few pigeons.were strutting about, unmolested by anyone, thepr isoner almost touched a grey-blue bird withher foot; it fluttered up and flew close to herear, fanning her with its wings. She smiled,then sighed deeply as she remembered her pres­ent position."Here is the simplest, slightest, and most unob­trusive and unnoticeable incident in the world,a little bit of the great swarming world of citylife, and yet set, as it is, in the emphatic position,the end of Chapter I, and employed with the mostdelicate handling to indicate the finest shades ofsignificance, it lights up the whole inner natureof the heroine of the novel and her psychical sit­uation at. the moment of its occurrence. Andnothing else could have performed the same of­fice with equal satisfaction and reality.Read the wonderful chapter entitled "Mari­ette," in Book II. There is nothing in Meredithmore subtle, more delicate, and more apocalypticthan the short tete-a-tete between the well-mean­ing but weak N ekludoff and the coquettish elas­tic and elusive princess. N ekludoff had justcome from his efforts to gain a pardon for theinnocent Maslova, to whom by virtue of a sadoccurrence of many years before he was morallybound. When he saw Mariette, however, alight­ing, brilliant and sparkling, from her carriage,'('he suddenly brightened up and felt inclined tosmile." He was led up to her mother's room,where he found the two laughing over something"un pen sale," as the French would say. "Hewas about to censure Mariette in his mind forher levity when, noticing the serious and evenslightly dissatisfied look in his eyes, she suddenly,to please him, changed not only the expressionof her face, but also the attitude of her mind ;for she felt the wish to please him as soon asshe looked at him. She suddenly turned serious,dissatisfied with her life, as if seeking and striv­ing after something; it was not that she pre­tended, she really produced in herself the verysame state of mind that he was in, although itwould have been impossible for her to expressin words what was the state of N ekludoff's mindat that moment." This is the keynote of the 1067chapter. The mobile Mariette actually seduces,not consciously, but through mere habit, N eklu­doff into the sacrilege of disclosing all the thingsnearest to his heart in a vulgarly intimate yetoutwardly refined interview. The analysis of herdelicate insinuation into N ekludoff's inner life isone of the greatest triumphs of narrative art yetachieved.And then the end of the chapter! "That night,when Nekludoff was alone in his room, and laydown, after putting out his candle, he could notsleep. He thought of Maslova, of the decision ofthe Senate, of his resolve to follow her in anycase, of his having given up the land. The face ofMariette appeared to him as if in answer to thosethoughts-her look, her sigh, her words, 'Whenshall I see you again'? and her smile seemedvivid as if he really saw her, and he also smiled.'Shall I be doing right in going to Siberia? Andhave I done right in divesting myself of mywealth'? And the answers to the questions onthis St. Petersburg night, on which the daylightstreamed into the window from under the blind,were quite indefinite. All seemed mixed in hishead. He recalled his former state of mind, andthe former sequence of his thoughts, but theyno longer had their former force or validity."There is the work of the supreme artist. Itis out of your life, out of mine. It condemnsyou, and yet it enlightens you and fortifies you,and you rejoice in the glorious draught of thattruth. And it is all so simple, so transparent, socircumstantiated by a hundred touches, consciousbut not artful, that to question it never occursto you. It is like reading from the open scrollof the man's own lighted consciousness. And thelightness, the firmness, the simple epic characterof the whole taut page where there is never aword too much, where the form clings to themeaning as the skin clings to the plastic mov­ing muscles beneath! It reminds one of the sim-. plicity and directness of the fairy tale, and thatdespite their unmeasurable difference in com­plexity of subject matter, profundity of insight,and significance. Tolstoi's narrative is as plainand open as common daylight.1068Mr. Howells has said that Tolstoi has no man­ner, that he is above manner, or, rather, that hehas the manner of reality. His manner is in­deed the unsophisticated, unliterary manner ofnaked, elemental verity. Tolstoi in a book like"Resurrection," in a story like "The Death ofIvan Ilyitch," or "Master and Man," leads usthrough. a great life-experience, from which weemerge, ourselves tortured and purified.And when we read a novel of Tolstoi's, we feelthe nearness of a man into whose hand we mayput ours in perfect trust, with no veil betweenus; his soul is ours, and our soul we willinglygive to him. Here is a man who, after the longexperience of life, has finally reached a noblepoise and sanity; here is a mind that has founditself, a mind without affectation, but filled witha sober, steady seriousness that reminds one offundamental things, such as eternity. In a pref­ace he once wrote to Amiel's "Journal Intime,"he says:"A writer is dear and necessary to us only inproportion as he opens to us the inner laboratoryof his soul, it being taken for granted, of course,that his work is new, and not something donebefore. \i\Thatever he may have written,-adrama, a text-book, a story, a philosophical trea­tise, a lyrical poem, a criticism, a satire,-wecare only for the inner work of his soul as dis­played in the production, and not for the archi­tectural construction according to which he ar­ranges his thoughts and feelings, while largely,and I think always, maiming them."Taking this last to be directed rather at themere all-absorbing technique of such men asKipling, Loti, Huysmans, and D'Annunzio, thanat the legitimate and sincere artistry which hehimself in such essays as that on de Maupassant,or that on the literary ability of peasant childrenso unreservedly praises and requires of the artist,.we find in Tolstoi the type he himself demands.And so his works live for us as revelations of thegreat emancipating truth, as revelations, then, ofhis own inner self, that self so wonderfully fash­ioned with crystalline insight, and so beautifullydowered with a talent transcending in flexibility,sureness, and strength that of any other novelistI know.I.Social.University of N ashville students gave a pic­nic in Jackson Park last Saturday.The Southern Club met in Haskell Museumlast Friday evening. There were "southernstories, southern songs, and a good southerntime .,The Ohio Club gave a launch party on thelagoon of Jackson Park last Monday.Tl:» South Carolina Club held a social meet­ing in the tent last Thursday.Students from Kentucky met in the chapel lastFriday morning and organized the KentuckyClub.Miss Blanche Felt has returned from an out­ing at Lake Minnetonka, Minn.Don Kennicott left last week for Denver, Col.Miss Leonard has returned from a visit tothe Buffalo exposition.Miss Ellen Ray is enjoying the summermonths at Hillside, \i\Tis.Frank Slaker is with a surveying part} innorthern California. He will return to LelandStanford in the autumn.\,\Miss Lena Small has returned from MountPleasant House, \i\Thite Mountains, N. H.Mr. R. E. Smith of Leland Stanford visited atthe Delta Tau House last Saturday.Last Thursday evening Miss Standart andMiss Mc Vickers, of Kelly Hall, entertained MissOsborne, Miss Cox, Miss 'Walker, Miss and Mrs.Tourneau at a chocolate.Miss Elizabeth Clarke gave a small dinnerparty on the nineteenth.Miss Martha VV ood and Miss Grace Reddyspent a day at the 'Varsity last week.A number of the Chicago students attended apicnic at Blue Island on Saturday. Two DeltaU's from Ann Arbor were in the party.Dan Trude last Saturday won second place inthe two-ball sweepstakes handicap for membersof the Midlothian club. In the contest betweenthe :i\J idlothian and Riverside teams, ProfessorZucblin of Midlothian was defeated 2 down byA lien of Riverside.Chas. Freeman has returned from a week'svisit with his brother Dwight and parents atWilmington, Ill.Professor Starr gave a reception in. Haskelllast Tuesday evening to the members of hisclasses. The professor is a unique and novelentertainer and never fails to give his guests aroyal good time. Interest is always heightenedin his receptions to his classes because in his in­vitation he also includes the wives and fianceesof his pupils, a fact which brought to light morethan one case of doubleness and desires to leavesingle blessedness.E. E. Irons of the biological department wastaken to the Baptist hospital last Saturday even­ing. He is threatened with typhoid fever.Professor Sparks and his history class in atally-ho visited the historic places of interest 111the city on Saturday last.Swimming Races.The first of the summer racing trials were heldat the tank last Thursday afternoon. The en­try list promised an unusually large crowel of 1069contestants, but many 'were evidently doubtful oftheir swimming ability for only a small percent­age came to the mark when the races were called.The handicapping was very well clone and sev­eral close and interesting finishes resulted. Theevents occurred in the following order, the menfinishing as named:20 Yards (Once Across Tank).Contestants. Handicap.Coo�e 5 secondsWiles . ScratchHeller . 3 seconds40 Yards (Twice Across Tank).Dead heat between Henry, who started fromscratch, and Cooke, who had 10 seconds handi-Time.IS;Y41616;Y4cap.(Scratch Event) Back Race.WilesChandler . . . .. . .Heller . '" . .Wiles ..... 132 Yards.. . . .. . .... Scratch 2-284-5Heller . . . . . . .. . IS seconds 2-34Chandler 17 seconds 2-39Majors and Minors.The union meeting of the Y. VV. and Y. M.C. A., held in Haskell last Sunday evening, wasled by Mr. Irving King. The subject was "ALaw in Spiritual Dynamics."A reception was held in Green Hall last Sat­urday from three until five in honor of thewives of students.President David Felrny of the Illinois StateNormal University visited the university lastweek.Professor Edmund J. James presided at theEducational Conference held in the Chapel lastMonday. The following addresses were made:"The University: A Broader View," Presi­dent W. R. Harper. "The Origin and Develop­ment of the niversity Extension Movement,"Professor Richard G. Moulton. "Some PracticalAssociations of the Lecture-Study Method," Mr.\i\T alter A. Payne.1070,\,THE ,.�,. l .University of Chicago WeeKly.EI;>ITOR.IAL BOAR.D.C!IARLES S. HAYES Managing EditorROBERT L. HENRY, JR. Associate EditorOffice Hours: 10:00 to 11:00 a. m. daily.ASSISTAN'I' EDITORS.CHARLES MACKAY VAN P A'I''I'EN.HARRY M. TINGLE.H. WILKENSON FORD.DOUGLAS SUTHERLAND.LEON P. LEWIS.WOMEN EDITORS.ALICE R. CORBIN. KATHERINE W. PALTZER.REPOR'I'ERS.JOHN A. LIGGE'I'T W ALTER JOHNSONN ARCISSA Cox MAURICE MANDEVILLEELIZABETH CLARKE NOHMAN M. CHIVERSTHEODORE B. HINKLEY BEN]. G. LEEFRANK J. SAHDAM MILTON G. G. SILLSHARRY A. EVANS FRANK R. ADAMSSTAFF AR1'ISTS.E. B .... COOKEM. G. SILLSA. T. S'I'EWARTH. M. TINGLEF. J. SARDAMBYRON G. MOON, Business Mauager.Office Hours, 10:00 to 12:00 m., daily, except Friday.Notice of "Change of Address" should be sent to the BusinessManager.Contributions are solicited from students, alumni and friendsof the University.SUBSCRIPTION RATE.One Year, (Four Quarters)One Quarter, payable in advance,OFFICE-BASEMENT, COBB HALL. $1.75.50A1l busiuess communications should be addressed to the Busi­ness Manager.Entered as Second-Class Matter at the Post-office, Chicago, Ill.Subscribers who are in arrears will oblige the"Weekly" by paying their subscriptions. Thewrapper will tell you date to which you have paidFraterni- In the foundations of Hitch-ties in cock, which are now being laid,Hitchcock. there are five divisions, whichappear to indicate that the plan has not beenabandoned of having fine' apartments to accom­modate five of the fraternities, in spite of the protests of the fraternities. 'Perhaps we are mis­taken, and that the plan has really been aban­doned, but appearances indicate the contrary. Atany rate we have heard no official statement tothe effect that Hitchcock Hall will be used as anordinary dormitory, and not for fraternities.Some time ago letters were sent to each of thefraternities asking them if they would be willingto move into a hall on the Campus, evidently hav­ing Hitchcock in view. As far as we are able tofind out the answers were unanimously unfavor­able to the proposition.The reasons why the fraternities do not wishto move to the campus are plain enough. N at­urally they do not wish to. be under the thumbof the University. I ot that they are doing any­thing they are ashamed to have known. It hasnever even been hinted that the fraternities arenot behaving properly. Any hint of anything ofthis kind has never even become gossip, whichis good proof that it does not exist. But nat­urally the feeling of being watched is galling.Another reason is that an unpleasant feeling ofaristocracy might be brought about, which doespot exist at present. If the fraternity men hadprivate entrances to halls which other men couldnot enter, there would necessarily be ill feeling.Thirdly, every fraternity would know exactlywhat all the others were doing, which mightprove embarrassing, especially during "rushingseason." There could be no privacy. Studyingwould be greatly interferred with by continuousvisiting "roughhouse," and so forth. Fourthly,the halls provided would be too large for someof the fraternities and too small for others. .Thehalls would all be alike, which would be anotherdisadvantage. Each fraternity takes pride inits house and would like to have it different fromthe others. Finally, most, if not all, of the Ira­ternities hope to own houses of their own, andsome have already taken steps in this direction.The proposed plan would make this impossible.Taking it all in all the concensus of opinion ISdecidedly against moving to the campus.A little over a week ago DeanStatistics. Tufts, speaking to the Seniorcl-ass, gave several extremely in­teresting and important facts regarding theclasses of students now working at the Univer-10711ii}tI:W}�dt¥j·; ;t#iiH�'Y'!}\ ::v\tr.:{/:+%f;'�;@K%'l'·;:}J¥1�:7.K;q;:�,:,;:/{ ·P.{t�LJ�:,;!g.($rm} �h'{i:().Wjt:;ei\W;<*i+pi'!_j¥>;*FUX'�sity. As he intends at some near date to givethe result of. his inquiries, statistics, and theoriesbuilt upon them, we shall not make any use ofthem in this place. Suffice it to say that theproportions of the students about to enter thevarious professions are somewhat startling, andin their way disconcerting. Dean Tufts tells usthat of all the students at the University, by farthe largest proportion are there for the purposeof education for teaching. To use a phrase nothis, the university is rapidly developing into anormal college. Of course, the fact carries on itsface a serious problem. Students, finding this out,will leave a University apparently relegated to acertain sort of tendency for universities wherethere is greater variety and greater fitness for theirparticular profession. Not only this. Prospect­ive students will be driven away, and before longthe University will be left stranded high and dry,a school for teachers. Of course, this can neverhappen as a matter of fact. President Harper,at whose instance Dean Tufts is making his in­teresting investigations, is making great effortsto found new colleges in connection with theUniversity. Witness the recent acquisition ofRush Medical and of the Emmons Blaine school.Ev€rything is being done, not perhaps to coun­teract the prevailing tendency, but to inauguratenew tendencies which will bring the whole or­ganism to balance' and neutralize bad effects ofa system of merely normal training. And rightin this connection, let us say, that coeducationhas had no small influence in bringing about.present conditions. With a system such as is inoperation at Harvard, such conditions' are muchless liable to develop. But doubtless this whole·question will be fully discussed in Dean Tufts'forthcoming review of the situation and sugges­tions as to remedies.A Qqestion- A woman who has had muchable experience of the world, talkingTheory� recently with several collegemen told them frankly that she did not believethat' coeducation in colleges caused the men con­sciously or unconsciously to be more careful in their bearing toward women. Indeed, she com­pared the college man, in this respect, unfavor­ably with the man who has not enj oyed the ad­vantages of college education.'On the face of it this would seem to be a gravecharge, a severe criticism of college men and anarraignment of the co-educational system. Forone of the chief arguments in favor of co-educa­tion has been that the constant association ofwomen with men students would tone the latterdown, so to speak, and reduce to a minimum themore boisterous expressions of college spirit. Butthis is a theory and a theory only. Co-educationassumes a condition of equality. It assumesthat women are mentally and physically able todo as much work as the men in the same way,in a given time. And there is nothing wrongwith the assumption. In co-educational institu­tions there is little to choose between the work ofthe co-ed and her fellow student of the strongersex. But does not the very fact of the equalitylead to a wrong conception? The co-ed asks forno discriminations in her favor and none aremade. She enters into direct competition withthe men and the men come to feel after a timethat they are under no obligations to sacrificethemselves in any way for her sake.In the strictly academic world to which theyboth belong, the college man sooner or later re­garcls the co-ed as one who is capable of caringfor herself; as one Who does not need and doesnot care about the attentions and courtesieswhich under other conditions he might bestowupon her. Perhaps this attitude is all right inthe lecture room. One thing is certain, it is afact. Perhaps, also, it works no harm there, butthe trouble is that the attitude remains with themen when they are in other places and surround­ed by other associations than those of the classroom. This leads to embarrassments and to suchcriticisms as the one cited above.All this is suggestive and indicates that oneof the the�ries of the co-educationalist is, as yet,not beyond the realm of theory.Students from Denison College gave a launchparty in Jackson Park last Friday evening.Major Shurtz.SIDE STEPS WITH YOUNG MEN.Here we are, boys. Down with the sleeves;the girls object.Deal' Major Shurtz:-Will. you please answer through the columns of theWeeklv the following questions?Why do so many of the young men go about with­out hats and with their heads away forward? \Vbydo so many of them go without their coats in thepresence of ladies?Why, if they must wear short sleeves, do they notweal' undersleeves ? (These might be made of laceor muslin.)Why is it that the men who dress in the oldfashioned way, look better dressed than ever before?,Vith humauity,A Regular ·Coed, Not a Summer Sojourner.(Well wouldn't that jolt your sunburned,crazy bone? Let the leader of masculine dressreform, mentioned in ·the last column, try theundersleeve dodge by all means. Mosquito net­ting would be very attractive, besides being use­ful.)Really my dear friend, there is much sensein what you say, and your questions are pointedand searching, the kind the Maj or likes to re­ceive. The first query is easy: In the wordsof the proverb, the young man thus describedhasn't found his hat yet, although he is certainlylooking on the ground. Attitude suggests a"grind" doesn't it? 2. Because they do not be­lieve that the ladies should have a monopoly ofcool dress."Why is it that the men who dress in the old fash­ioned way look better dressed than ever before?"Give it up, unless it is because "virtue is itsown reward." They are martyrs, the faithfulsouls, and we are glad there are not many ofthem.Agonized Professor: Although I have nottaken my M. D. I think I can diagnose the caseof your moustachiod little friend of the Frenchclass. He was once teacher's pet down in thelittle red school house, and has never gotten overit. Squelches served hot and occasional dosesof chalk will alleviate the misery, although for achronic case, such as you describe, there is nopermanent cure.Observer: Hard luck, old man. You say youwere standing in your usual hatless, coatless con­dition, pensively watching the progress of thetunnel, when the Summer student took you for 1072the "bus" driver. Well you couldn't expect herto know the difference. Teamsters and hack­drivers are the only coatless men in Goeselville,you know. But hard luck anyway.Tom Golden Locks: Certainly keep cool at allhazard. Call on your North Shore friends, coat­less and with your sleeves rolled up. If theygive you the frosty shoulder, it will be in thename of humanity, and you will feel like a hero.Anthropology Shark: No. Columbus discov­ered America in 1492.Try the Maj or's great "YVho V\Thy" contest:The celebrity this time is the proof reader, some­times known as the "Master of Smiles." Do yourecognize him? Faithfully,MAJOR SHURTZ.Response."Sweet Earth," I prayed, and i11Y prayer wasknown,(For the green leaves rustled fitfully,And the waters smiled as they wandered onIn their journey to the sea),"What shall I do to escape from love,For love assaileth me;Where shall I go to escape from love?For claimless would I be."Where shall I go?» (And the waters ceased,The leaves hung still in air) ;"Though thou go to the farthest ends of earth,Thou shalt find that love is there."By a thousand things would thy heart be stirred,By a thousand whispers touched;By the desert sands would. thy breast be burned,By the palm's long fingers clutched;"The mountain streams would twine their armsAbout thine ankles bare ;A diadem of mountain snowsWould fillet-bind thy hair."For thou art part of every place,Each place shall stamp thy soul,Or ever the silver cord be loosed,Or broken the golden-bowl!" -A. R. C.. Waters," Photographer to the University of. Chicago, ����i�i:£trU\:e�d St.,Buck Tries His Hand.Last Friday evening two of our genial friends,Lowry, '00, and Ewing, '00, were renewing thedays of their youth in watching the high diving,acrobatic feats and other things of interest atSans Souci Park. -Finally they sauntered up tothe "nigger baby" stand."Now, Buck," said Lowry, "you usecl to cutthe plate on a throw from right field, now I'llpay for the balls and you do the throwing-threebabies, five cigars." Thereupon the ex-Staggitegrabbed one of the balls and 'with mighty move­ment hurled the sphere at the numerous Sene­gambians before him-but each stood unmoved."Here, hold my coat," said "Buck," growingexcited, and then singling out two grinningbabies, he let fly, but not even did the balltouchthe skirts of the long-dressed infants."Here, hold my hat," cried the nonplussed"Buck," kindled to wrath by two failures andthe annoying expression of merriment in his com­panion's eyes. Surely a man divested of hat and.coat-s-a modern "summer Beau Brummel," canoverturn two babies with one ball, whereuponwith careful poise and with all the strength of hisrustic-trained arm he shot the last ball at themocking rows of African princes."What shall I hold next?" said Lowry to hislugubrious friend, as a portly, middle-aged mancame up, tookthree balls and coolly tumbled overthree babies.IASic Transit.The house was too exquisitely perfect for itsrustic purpose. Set high on the wooded bluffabove the narrow smooth beach where the wavesbroke blue and pink and silver in the twilight,with screened verandas hung with swinging set­tles and lined with low wicker chairs and pilesof cushions, and broad stone terraces without;and Persian rugs on polished floors and deepfireplaces set in high dull oak panneling within,the house and the park were "Country Estate"with large capitals. As we passed' under the. mock portcullis upheld on great cedar posts atthe entrance of the grounds,' we felt luxury breathing from the dogfennel and yellow daisies'along the drive. Even the stable was more lux­urious than a house. In fact, we thought thatthe stable was a second home as 'we pas edamong the trees to the beach for our humblepicnic.In the course of events it became necessaryfor us to telephone home, and so our strongestman and senior girl went up to the great-house,boldly for we all felt that we were equal in birthand breeding, if not in wealth or charity andgood works to the highest in the land.As they entered the telephone hall they in­q uirecl carelessly if the lovely, haughty mistressknew what the toll to the city was. And thedame answered as though her proud lips dis­dained to form the words of vulgar traffic. Butthey laid the small coins on a carven table in abeautiful room through which they passed tothank the gracious hostess.On one of the verandas sat a handsome, ratheryoung man in white clothes-and on a sand pilein the garden-far from the beautiful real beach,sat an exquisitely beautiful child in a pink andwhite frock and shoes.As we paused on the bridge over the ravine,mysterious in the twilight, our friend of thewhite flannels came trotting after us. In a voicefull of uncertain bon camaraderie he called: '"Didn't you people forget to pay the toll?"Aghast we stood, un til our strong man ,1grewtaller and straighter. And he smilerl a little ashe said:"We placed the twenty-five cents beside thelady's hat. We felt some delicacy in speakingof it." M. N. C. I,IIThe Seduction of a Soul.A youth once wandered through a forest,blithely rejoicing in the spring, in love of life,in nature, in the laugh of the stream and thecheerful rustle of the trees. Far down in ashady dell he came. upon a thin old man whosesharp features looked as if they had been seton edge by a thousand exposures to the elements .As the youth approached, the man gazed at him�!&� ...,�JC,!���! _-1074through a sort of field glass of a peculiar and an­cient pattern. He smiled sadly as he greeted theyouth."Good morrow," said the youth. "Why, sir,do you sit in the shade and gloom, when thewarm sun dances so merrily without? Perhapssome ailment assails you?""Nay," quoth the old man, "but whyforeshould I sit in the sun? The sun-pshaw-'tishere now. but in a few hours 'tis gone. But thegloom-ah! that is perpetua1."The youth being young, failed to detect anyflaw in this logic and began to regard the wordsof the stranger as wisdom. So much does ignor­ance reverence plausibility."But come," continued the old man, "nowtell me, pray, what you seek in the depth of thewood ?""I," said the youth, halting as if in the con­fession of a guilty secret, "I am seeking to verifymy Idea1. I would see truth, naked and freedfrom the harness of conventionality.""Truly a strange place for such a quest," saidthe old man, deliberately, "but remarkable as itmay seem, I can help you."As he spoke, he had been deftly poising andarranging some filaments of a brightly coloredweb of so brilliant a design that the few stray. sunbeams which struggled through the trees lin­gered tenderly over it as if it were of a kindredcelestial birth.The youth gazed in breathless admiration. "Inever saw anything so beautiful," said he. "Sure­ly, that must be the soul of an angel-or, per­haps, it is the child of tears and sunshine, a rain­bow."The old man shook his head. "No; this," andhe touched it gently and caressingly, "is yourIdeal. It is the most beautiful thing in the wholeworld. Compared to this, the truth is hideous.The world is empty, a lie, and every deed in ita concession to crime.""Say not so," said the. youth, '''tis a goodenough world and I long to make my mark in itand to_ claim my Gretchen, the embodiment oftruth made beautifu1.""You do not know," said the old man, sadly,"but you shall learn. This glass of mine has themarvelous power of penetrating to the souls of men. Take it. Go look upon the souls of yourfellows and behold the truth. As for the glass,return it to me when you will."The youth, doubting, yet curious, took theproffered glass and departed.On the following day he returned, his facedrawn and his step lagging. He found thestranger in the same place. He received himwith the same sad smile. "You have seen-"-Enough," said the youth. "You wereright; it's all a lie.""And Gretchen?""Even Gretchen. Her lips were mine, but hersoul," the youth almost broke down, and theninterrupted himself. "Give me back my Idea1.It is at least beautiful, even if it is false."He- looked at the spot - where the beautifulthing had been and saw in its place a grey, shriv­eled mass which crumbled to dust at his touch.With an exclamation of despair he sank dazed­upon the grass.The stranger looked on him pityingly and saidgently, "Your Ideal is gone, hut in its place Iwill leave you my glass, which I trust will bea safer guide to life."When the youth arose, he looked for thestranger, hut he was gone. Then his glance fellupon the glass at his feet. He picked it up andstarted to raise it to his eyes, hut resisting theimpulse, he threw the glass far from him to themiddle of the stream, where it sank with a heavysplash that seemed to deaden all the laughter ofthe running water. And after that the youth,now stoop shouldered and grey, turned andwalked sadly away into the deep shadows of thewood.Many of the students and faculty of the Universrtyof Chicago are buying their furnishings of Philips.Are you?Please call and be convinced that it is not neces­sary to go down town to supply your needs. Rightgoods. Right prices.C. B. PHILIPS.Men's Wear, 238 E. 55th St., near Washington Ave.. -TR� EARL & WILSON'SCOLLARS &CUFFSr T':i� BEST t;AADE: _'__ ------------ ADVERTISEMENTS• tiU""""UU""UU�UUUU""""UUUUHUUUHUUU""""��1f.i Students Headquarters for good tneals down town is at ii 300-30� D::�o:n��R :�F. �!;��� URANE o�po�rborn i.""��flt�""""""""""""�""""""""""�'Jtfl\Ji"�"" ..A. E. Thomas is learning how to be a cornking on his uncle's farm in Iowa. He says thathe incidentally has many a game at golf withan ax for a driver, a hoe for a cleek, and a pitch­fork for a lofter. He intimates t1�at the pumpkincrop will not be ripe for husking before he re­turns.$13.00 TO BUFFALO AND RETURN $13.00via the Nickel Plate Road from Chicago, forthe Pan. American Exposition. Tickets onsale daily, good leaving Buffalo up to mid­night of the tenth day from and includingdate of sale. Also tickets on sale dailyChicago to Ruffalo and return at $16.00 forthe round tr ip.twi th 15 day limit, includingdate of sale. $21.00 Chicago to Buffalo andreturn, good for 30 days .-������������ithasW:::\:\=:::\:\=:::\:\=:::\:\=::"\+:::\:\='""""":+\=""":\:\=�ll#b# U-PI-DEE. #b#: k' A new Co:ed has alighted in town, ,made�v� U-pi-dee, Uvpi-da l .!1'b.j.!o11' 11' In an up-to-datest tailor-made gown,U-pi-de-i-da! 11' 14'.\o+k,!+ The boys are wild, and prex is, too, ""'k�11'V 11' You never saw such a hulla-ba-loo. 11'V 14'�k.!+ CHORUS. - U-pi-dee-i-dee-i-da ! etc. #k#ftV 11' Her voice is clear as a soaring lark's, l/And her wit is like those trolley-car sparks 1.i.f,b.!+ 'When 'cross a muddy street she flits, ""'bl++t 11' The boys all have conniption fits! 11' 14'ikb.!+ The turn of her head turns all ours, too, .lfb.\o+-M' f1' There's always a strife to sit in her pew; 14' 11'.\o+k"", 'Tis enough to make a parson drunk, ""'k�f1'V 11' To hear her sing old co-ca-che-lunk t 11'V 11'#k# The above, and three other NEW verses to U-PI-DEE, #k#V and NEW WORDS, catchy, up-to-date, to many Vothers of the popular OLD FAMILIAR TUNES; be-""'b.!+ sides OLD FAVORITES; and also many NEW SONGS. ""'b"'"11' 11' SONGS OF ALL THE COLLEGES. 11' 11'#b# Copyright, Price, $ISO, postpaid. 190U. #b#.!+b"'" HINDS « NOBLE, Publishers, New York City. ""'bl+oH' 11' Schoolboo'ks 0/ all jJUblz'shers at one store. 11' fI'��������"""=\:\==\:\==\:\=���£:�£,:�������� a hiet $1.25 postpaid. Moneyrifunded if not per­.fectly satisfactory.It is seldom that we, or any other pub­lishers, are able to say truthfully of a bookthat" every mail is bringing orders for it."Yet this is the simple truth regardingGordy's New Psyc/iotog),Superintendents are crdering it for theirteachers v--training classes and readingcircles. Principals are ordering it fortheir psychology classes -v+not only Nor­mal Schools, but High Schools. Individualteachers are ordering it because, as theysay, some fellow-teacher has a copy andco-nsiders it an indispensable part of theequipment of any teacher who proposesto do his best.RINDS &: NOBLE, Publishers4-5-13-14 Cooper Institute ri. Y. Cjt7Schoolbooks of all publishers at one store,Tickets Chicago to New York and return atspecial reduced rates. Write John Y. Cala­han, General Agent, 111 Adam's St., Chicago,for _f.ull particulars and folder showing time oftrams, etc.LOW RATES TO BUFFALO EXPOSiTIONvia the Nickel Plate Road. Also specialreduced rates Chicago to New York and return.Three through daily trains with vestibuledsleeping cars and excellent dining car service,meals being served on the American ClubMeals plan, ranging in price from 3S cents to$1. 00. Chicago Depot, Van Buren St., andPacific Ave., on the Elevated Loop.Write John Y Calahan, General Agent, 111Adams St., Chicago, for full information .aridbeautifully illustrated descriptive folder of theExposition Buildings and Grounds.::�===-==-=-.::==..:-.:-::::.:-.:�-.:-.:-------------.:-.:-.:-.:-.:-----.:-.::------�.::---------.:�;f::: T lati :::I:: rans ations I::'::: Literal, Soc. Interlinear, $r.so. I47vols. I:::q :l!::: Dictionaries iiiI:: German, French, Italian, Spanish, I::I:: Latin, Greek, $2.00, and $1.00. I::iii Completely Parsed Caesar, iiiI: I Book I. Has on each page, interlinear :::.:,:,: translation, literal translation, a nd iii:every word completely parsed. $1.50' IIH: I::::: Completely Scanned and Parsed Ae- :::11' neid, Book I. $I.50.ReadyAugust,I"OO. II,:::l � :"I:: HINDS & NOBLE, Publishers, :1:'Iii 4-s-6-12-13-14Cooperlnstitute, N.Y. City. !iiI:: Schoolbooks 0./ all publ.'shc1·s at one store. Ii::��=---:.:.-::.:.-::-::.-::.-::.:.-=.:.==:.=:.===:.=-=.-::.=:.:.-::.==-:.-:.=-:::.-:.-::.-::-::-::-::-:.:.-::!J:NlARTVNPHOTOGRAPHER andMINIATURE ARTtSTOPEN 8:00 A. M. to 6 :00 P. M. Indoor and Outdoor WorkSPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS Finishing by All ProcessesSTUDIO: 5704 Cottage_ Grove Ave., CHtCAGO ....................................................� 'Pen-e/lmericen 'Tourists �� Western folks visiting the Pan-American this �� summer should not fail to add to the summer's outing �.... a visit to the Metropotis of the Country by way oj the �� West Shore Railroad, Buffalo to New York and� Boston, by this route the best uiew of the grand and �.... beautifu] scenery of the Hudson River is obtained and �) the finest and richest regions and cities of the Empire ......, State a re passed in review. ,..� Call on nearest ticket agent for further inform-a- �.... tion or address, �� II.McCARTHY, General Western Passenger Agent, �� 205 So. Clark Street, : : / Chicago, Ill. �.TTTTTTV"T'TT .......... TT .............. TT.AD VERTISEMENTSAMERICA:S MOST POPULAR RAlLWAY6 �� �6 �� �� 6& 6SERVICE:@HI@1t(;O•..,,,..<,� ,,:' ALTON,.. __IF YOU ARE CONTEMPLATING A TRIP, ANY POR­TION OF wrrrorr CA.N BE MADE OVER THE CHICAGO.&. ALTON, IT WILL PAY YOU TO WRITE TO THE UNDER­SIGNED FOR RATES, MAPS., TiME"TABLES, ETC.GEO. J. CHARLTON,GENERA.L PASSENGER AGENT,CHI\JAGO, ILL.Chas. W. Dahlgren & Co.MANUFACTURERS. OFBANNERS, PENNANIS,BAO'6[S, [tc.151·t53', (Clark Street,C'HICAGOWRitE FOR CATALOGUE,_McKEOWN BROTHERS CAR:��T��I�D[RS494�96 E. 47th Sh, bet. langley & Champlain AveS,Some of the work done by usduring the past two seasons:., Built Grand Stand at Ma rsha ll Field, U. of C.,.seatmg lQ,OOO people. .:Remodeled severa.l residences.Weather-stripped 5;noo windows in residences.Furnished and fitted up 15 stores and offices.Laid 20,000 feet of hardwood floor ing ,Furnished and put up 750 storm windows."Onty Ptr st-Cfass Workmen Empl s yed. Distributors of PURE COUNTRY MILKManufacturers of CREAMERY BUTTERBOWMAN DAIRY CO.South Dtvision Office:3514 and 3516 RHODES A VENUEEnglewood Office:69;�9·41 WENTWORTH AVENUETURKISH B thRUSSIAN . d uSI Bes!oLine IIII. I I •St.PaulMinneaeolis"The Finest Train in : theWorld" leaves Chicago dailyat 6:30 P. M. It is electric­lighted,steam-heated and car­ries a Pullman Buffet SmokingCar.The European Plan DiningCar service is a special featureof excellence on this line.TICKET OFFICE, 211 CLARK STREETFOX __ ...... ____.LEADING BARBER 75 CENTSBest in the city �Nlost centrally, locatedOPEN DAY A'ND NIGHTSARATOGA HOTEL 161 DEARBGRN.... STREETStudents Hair Cutting and BeardLADIES' s:':���n��u;�C;�ecialtieS I MONROE RES1AURANTThose who enjoy a good mealEA.T A.T THEOrders taken for Baggage ExpressingCigars- and T'obacco 621 E. 551'* ST.Works: 33d and Shields Av, Phone South 804ESTABLISHED 1870WAYTE LAUNDRYMain. Oflice: 308 Dearborn. St.Phone 102 Harrison CHICAGOBUNDLES CALLED FOR EVERYWHEREL. MANASSEOPTICIAN\J\/e have 46 Madison. Street.moved toWhy Use Poor. Unwholesome �MHk?When for the same money you canget it pure, sweet and extraordinarilyrich, delivered in sealed bottles,by calling up telephone South 817,or dropping a postal toSIDNEY WANZER & SONS305 Thirtieth Street ::293 E. SSth S'treetClean and prompt serviceAn elegant meal for 20 centsn and nH:and La u n d r y,Strictly Hand WorkPhone Drexel 8861. Laundry, 515 E. 55th St,ADVERTISEMENTS.,----------------------------------��---------------------. =� . =SUMMER ;��M ----�-rllw, "'i SOPERSCHOOLoFORATORY i��II Summer Term Opens 1111II� July 1, 1901. 1111i! ',II',The oldest and best established school in the city,II�' gives reduced tuition rates to Summer students. 1111It gives courses in: "'It NORMAL, METHODS DF WIltH, GENERAL and INSTRUCTION, III!� PROFESSIONAL, JOURNALISM, 'II'III WORK, also PHYSICAL 1 __ '"11'", LAWYERS' CULTURE, 1,111II CLASSES, DELSARTE, �lUI PUBLIC P ARLIMENTARY '!'lUI SPEAKING, LAW, FENCING, "�I HPOST GRADUATE VOCAL �IIIII WORK. EXPRESSION. IIIU� Also in PIANO, VIOLIN, MANDOLIN, GUITAR, '!I'M BANJ,O _and VOCAL MUSIC. '11111WI For further information address or call on: 'IU' II! H. M. SOPER. Pres. 1ml 17 D, Van Buren St., ,I_IOO�==-����_-_;�CA:�� Theoretics Est�etics... THE. ..CHICAGO PIANO COLLEGETheoreticalBranches andMusic­Kindergarten.Offers UnrivalledCourses ofInstruction inViolin. Voice,Organ, OrchestralInstruments. OPENALL THEYEAR..Summer TermBEGINSJuly Second.Fall Term During themon th s of June,July an d August,Certificates goo dfor a year of tui­tion will be sold ata larg-e reductionfr0111 catalog rates.BEGINSSept. Ninth.HAHMON H. WATT,DIRECTOR.Theor etical Deportment,For particulars on this point, and tor other infor­mation, Catalogs, Sample Programs of Concerts, etc.,address:Charles E. lAlat:t, Director.KIMBALL HALL243 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO.Technics Pedagogics,--------------------------------------.,CHICAGOKENT COLLEGE OF LAW �JOHN MARSHALL LAW SCHOOL·.Law Department of Lake Forest UhiversityHON. THOMAS A. MORA.N, LL. D., DEAN.Both day and evening courses with complete curriculum in each.DAY COURSE: Day sessions are held during the morning and after­noon hours.- EVENING COURSE: Evening sessions are held each week-day even-in a. between the hours of 5:30 and ':1:00 o'clock, with ten honrs' sessioneach week. This course affords young men who are engaged in lawoffices and elsewhere during the day an opportunity to pursue a regularcourse of law studies under proper instruction.Prepares for admission to the Bar in all States.Degree of Bachelor of Laws conferred upon those who completethe Three-Year Course to the satisfaction of the Faculty.College graduates who have .a sufficient amo�nt of credit in legalstudies may be admitted to ad varrced standing It?- e�ther course ..Arrangements made for supplementmg preflm ina ry education­For information address the Secretary.ELMER E. BARRETT, LL. B.,1503-100 Washington St., Chicago. Faculty:HOI1. John N. Jewett, LL. D., Dean. Hon. James G. Jenkins.Hon. James H. Cartwright, (Judge U. S. Circuit Court._(Justice of Illinois Sup. Ct.) Hon. Luther Laflin Mills.John W. Ela, Esq., Hon. Georg-e E. Adams, A. M.Arthur J. Eddy, Esq. Stephen S. Gregory, A. M., LL. H.Frank H. McCulloch, LL. B. Wm. H. Dyrenforth, LL. B.,John F. Holland, A. M. Edwin W. Moore, A. M.Henry Schofield, A. M., LL. B. Clarence T. Morse, A. B.Wm. Meade Fletcher, B. L. Michael F. Gallagher, LL. B.Edward M. Winston, A. B., LL. B. Louis M. Greeley, A. B.Opens Sept. 9. Three year's course leading to degreeof LL. B. Evening classes. Lectures, Text-book and casestudy. Summer term during June 24-August 30. For An­nouncement, address, EDWARD T. LEE, Secretary.GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY(FOUNDED 1789)SCHOOL of· LAWWashington, D. C.GEORGE E. HAMILTON. L. L. D., Dean.An undergraduate course of three years leading to the de­gree of Bachelor of Laws. For students completing the under­graduate course, a post graduate course of one year leading tothe degree of Master of Laws. A well selected corps of.professorsand instructors. Unusual facilities by reason of location at theNation's Capitol,For information, circulars, etc., address5. M. YEATMAN, A. "M., Secretary,506 E. Street, N. W. THE COLUMBIAN VNIVERSITYWASHINGTON, D. C.LAW SCHOOL, Waltet S. Cox, LL. D., Dean.A three years' course leading to tbe degree of LL. B.PATENT LAW COURSE in charge of Melville Church, LL. M.SCHOOL OF COMPARATIVE JURISPRUDENCE AND DIPLOMACY.Charles W. Needham. LL. M., Dean.A two ye a rs ' post-graduate course leading to the degree of LL. M., D.C. L., and M. Dip.Among the Lecturers and Professors are: President B. L. Whitman,D. D.; Hon. John M. Harlan, LL. D .. Justice. of Ull�ted States SupremeCourt. Hon. David J. Brewer, LL. D., Justice Uri it ed States SupremeCourt� Hon. David J. Hill, LL. D., Assiftant Secretary of State; Hon·. JohnW. F�ster LL. D., Ex-�ecretary of State; Hon. William Wirt Howe,sometime Justice Supreme Court of Louisiana: Hon. Willis Van Devanter,Ass't. Attorney General U. S.; Hou. Lyman J. Gage, LL. D .• Secretary ofthe Treasury; Hon. William P. Wilson, Sc. D., Director Phi�a�elphiaCommercial JlIuseums; Hon. J. L. M. Curry , LL. D., Ex-M1111ster toSpain and other distil1guished lawyers and diplomats.The location at the National Capital affords many advantages to thestudent. For catalogues and information address,CHARLES DRAKE WESTCOTTSecretary of the Schools of Law, 1420 H Street, W .. shlng'ton, D. C.MEDICAL SCHOOLCHICAGO nEDlCAL COLLEGEThis school has been a leader in advanced standards and methods of teaching in medical education for forty years.For circulars address the Secretary, OR. ARTHUR R. EDW ARD5, 2431 Dearborn St., CHICAGO.----------------------------�--------------------------�----------------------------------------------------------NORTHWESTERN UN_IVERSITY LAW SCHOOLCHICAGO. ILLINOISPETER S. GRosse UP. LL. D., Dean.The course of study extends over a period of three years,and upon the satisfactory completion of the work the degreeof LL. B. is conferred.The following- are Professors in this school: Peter S. Grosscup,LL. D. (Wittenberg College), Judge U. S. Circuit Court; NathanielC. Sears, LL. D., (Amb ers t College), Judge of Apoelate Court;Harvey B. Hurd, LL. D., Edward A. Harriman. A B., LL. B.(Harvard); Blewett Lf'f', A.M., LL. B. (Harvard); Edwin BurrittSmith, A.M., LL. M. (Yale); Julian W. Mack, LL. B. (Harvard);John H. Wigmure, A.B. LL. E.; Frank O. Lowden, A.B. LL. B.The quarters of the School are in the Y. n. C. A. Building,153 La Salle Street, CHICAGO.For circulars address PROF. E. A. HARRIMAN, Secretary.1301 Association Building, Chicago, Ill.������"""""''''''''''''�'''''''''"'''''�i 1 HE CHICAGO HOMEOPATHIC i$ MEPICAL COLLEGE... $$ THE LEADING CLINICAL $$ SCHOOL OF THE WORLD $i Cor. Wood and York Streets .��:�: ..:o:��:c �� Personal and Bedside Instructton-s.lust What Students Needi# OPEN TO BOTH SEXES ON EQUAL TERMS.i .... For Announcements or ARM D Id M DI f ':ld •• C ona, • • iother n o r rua.t iou , a, res s$ '.rhe Dean of the Faculty, . 338 Park Ave •.• CHICAGO, ILL.c.�""""""''''''����''''''��''''''''''''"'''''"'''''"'''''v NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF PHARMACYCHICAGO.Course for the degree of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, occupying twofull school years, agg-regating about 76 week!'. Extensive laboratorycourses in Chemistry, Pharmacy, Dispensing, Pharmacognosy, Pharma­ceutical Asaay i ng , etc. Six laboratories. Eleven teachers. Send forcirculars. Address,OSCAR OLD BERG, Dean.24�1 Dearborn Street, CHICAGO.WE TEACH MEDICINE TO WOMENSend for circular "K."Northwestern _llniversity Woman's Medical School333=339 South Lincoln St., CHICAGO$.==---"" -:-z:::.-.=-"" =.:: ;'jjtffi==== =:::: lilt:�I The Art of Medicine Cannot ��= Be Learned f'rom Books. =Ult Study medicine where the practice of medicine is illustrated- HII"It in clinics, nearly every hour of the day f()o{"the entire four years. lUImI HAHNEll1ANN MEDICAL COLLEGE AND HOSPITAL, ;IIII of CHICAGO, has the largest clinics in the City of Chicago. ""�� College and University graduates admitted to advanced standing. ��lilt Three terms a year; any two of which constitute a Collegiate till'"l year. tillrt:1 Students may enter at the beginning of any term. Diplomas M"t"It will be .g.ranted at the end of each term. IIml The next term begins September 9, 1901. liltlilt HENRY U. WILSON, n, D., Registrar, "ttlilt 2811 Cottage Grove Avenue It"UII DR. E. S. BAILEY, Dean. tiltttlt titI!afi=======H=ft§====I"n:Ifi==5==�,:------------------------------------------,Univ-ersity of Illinois.College of Physicians and Surgeons,of Chicago, Illinois.Continuous Course; . Terms begin 1st October, Februaryand June, Unsurpassed Clinical and Laboratory Advantages,Descriptive Catalogue sent on application. Persons interested inmedical education should addressDR· FRANK B. EARLE, Secretary,'-: ••N.e.w.:BI.u.i.ld.in.g.�.o.f.' .c.o.ll.e.g.e.o.p•p•.•u.'O.O.k.C.O.'.H.O.8.p.i.t.a.1' c.o.n.g.r.e.s.s.a.n.d.H.o.n.o.r.e.s.t.s •.,.C.H.I.C.A.G.O., .I.L.L•.• )