THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 28, 1915. 1 - Where Colleges Miss the Mark By Hi C. Howe ' H.' C. Howe Is professor of modern' 'English literature at the -University of Oregon. His article, which he cheer- L fully admits deals with "a heresy in American educational circles" is. brief ly, an appeal for the establishment of i the English and Canadian pass man1 a n.i hnimii rrtun -iVBtpm in an atternot. to cur American university ills. In cidentally, such a movement is now und-r way in the I'niversity of Ore gon and will probably within 60 days rimf before ttie full faculty In the form of definite legislation for a vote. Oberitn college of Ohio also la consid ering it. 1'niv eiKit v of Oregon, KuRone, Or.. Feb. 27. During the last 20 years the attendance, at American universities has increased enormously. Less than : generation ago the present enroll ment at the University of Oregon would have entitled the Institution to be called the largest university in the I'nited States. Yet today, enroll ments of 5000 p.nd C)00 students are ; too common to excite remark. It is curious that the period of this sudden expansion of the mil versit ies should also be notable for increasingly 'harsh c-ttticisin of their work, but it is so. Forty or 50 years ago the colleges wei-r criticized solely because of the restricted range of their studWs Greek, latin, mathematics and some times a slight rattling of 'he dry bon'-s of philosophy comprised the whole list. There was here no view of tb orderly causal development of human " laws, arts and institutions, 'no Inves . tigation of man's relation to nature. no study of the laws of wealth, or of Apolitical science, no training of mind 1 or hand or eye for life's actual hysi '. ncss; and the current saying was that 'college was a cloistered life, out of touch with the busy complexity of i, modern civilization. 'The universities have met this crit icism by adding shops and laborator ies, and a thousand new subjects f study. They have gone farther afield from everyday life to add Hebrew and 'Sanskrit, but they have nddwl a host "; of modern languages. Tlieyiave built , museums of ancient art, but they are themselves teaching pupils block - smithing, dancing, piano playing. : drawing and butter making. If a boy or girl wishes to enter upon any voca tion in life, the universities hiisten to offer him a condensed and systema . tlzed preparation for it. The criticism of our colleges for academic seclusion and Impracticallty is as dead and out Of date as the Pharaohs. And at the very time of broadening their intellectual outlook ho as to earn ; the proud right to boast of interpret ing the whole of life, the colleges have advanced their standards. The four year high schools do now much Of the work formerly occupying the college curriculum, and the college student is today nearly four years older and wiser than his predecessor of Daniel Webster's generation. Shaxp Criticisms Made. Tet in spite of the amazing vitality ' and adaptiveness, and the greater ma turity and capacity of their pupils, the colleges are more sharply criti ' cised than ever before. As Dean E. U Nichols, of Cornell. -8. This is a time of widespread discontent with American college edu cation as a whole. . . . We are told that students .cannot write Knglish, and are for the most part without ap preciation of literature; that they are unable at graduation to read Franch or German or Latin; that they are un able to apply their mathematics even to the simplest problems." He finds some misconception in this. Why expect the student of piano play- ' lng- or butter making to read French or Latin? Why expect the student of earthquakes or insect life either to write or to read literary Knglish? In part the public Is criticizing the eol- . lege man for failure in lines he bus never attempted. But Professor Nich ols himself bears witness that Ameri can university students show too gen erally a lack of interest and a dearth of scholastic ambition. Spurred by the censure of today as by tha.t of 40 years ago, the American universities are using whip and spur to drive their students to the springs of learning. This earns a new reproach, that our college education is a system -which does not carry its own appeal and has to be forced on the pupils by penalties and rewards. But whip and spur don't make the colt drink deep at the Pierian spring. They only make him balk and buck. Moreover, this surprising distaste for knowledge, which certainly is shown by many a college man. is ac- quired by him in the preparatory school, where whip and spur, bit and bridle are still more coaxingly used. "We must agree with Professor Nich ols "that ltcannot be cured by a far ",rther application of the methods that produced It." ' What then? When our worrying col lege faculties will stop trying to make the horse drink and let him alone a " little, he will drink of his own accord. Sinaple-isn't it? But the thirst to ., Know is an inborn instinct, and will have Its way, if we let it alone. In our colleges today are many stu- ' dents of 24 or 25 who iiave been school teachers, newspaper reporters and the like. They desire particular informa tlon," but the college rules force them into classes with youngsters of 17, as sign them so many inches of algebra or metres of French to learn per day, and make them come up and recite on these microscopic assignments as if they were pupils in the fourth grade. Then the professor waxes sarcastic because they show no enthusiasm for such "learning." Askrthese men what they wish to -lo, and you find; they wish to master Broke Her Husband Of Drinking . An Illinois Wife Broke Her Husband - From Drinking With a Simple Recipe 'That She Cave at Home. That the liquor habit can be ban ished aecretly.is the claim of a well kriown Peoria, 111; woman, whose hus band. was a heavy drinker for years. In a recent statement she said: "I broke my husband from drinking: with the 'following; simple, Inexpensive re cipe which I gave secretly: To 3 oz. of water add 20 grains of muriate of ammonia, & small box of Varlex Com pound and 10 grains of pepsin. Give teaspoonful three times a day at meal time la the food, or in the cof "f ee ; tea "or milk. ; This recipe can be filled at any drug- store, is perfectly . harmless and has no color, taste or smell.'- Any i wife or mother can .stop their dear one from drinking the iania as liha v ion and- at very- little ex- ons." Adv.". : . , w. " ! THE DOGS OF WAR FROM THE ENGLISH POINT OF VIEW -i , ' , ' " - - ' ' "' . . II III I H I" ' . - tHARK .HARK! THE DOGS DO BARK r 1 KeirodiH-ed herewith is a poster recently received from England which point of view. The poster was originally reproduced in colors and certain subjects in the library, or per form certain experiments in the lab oratories. Then, in the name of com mon sent-e, why not let them do it, consulting with the . professors of the branches concerned, of course, report ing their results from time to time, and subject to searching examination when they come up for a degree? Why should men who can investigate for themselves be laboriously taught like children? Is the American university a strait-jacket, or an opportunity? This is heresy in American educa tional circles, but it is no novelty. The English universltie ; and the Univer sity of Toronto long ago recognized tiie fact that their students divided naturally Into "honor men,", who could learn, and "pass men" who must be taught. But it Is more than time that American universities ceased treating all students like grammar school boys. We have, and will have, many mere pupils, who must be led by the nose. Hut we have also many active minds, men and women who can be fellow students with Hieir professors, and we must treat them accordingly. The cur ious thing is the ease with which the American university system can be adapted to this end. We have only to take off the strait-Jacket, turn them loose in -the fields of learning, and re cord and credit their' voluntary achievements. After all, there are many young men and women who do not need their mental nourishment pre digested by the professorial mind. The professor may be forced to revise a little his theory of his own import ance, but we shall hear fewer " com plaints that our students are reluctant to learn. THOUSANDS WITNESS THE DEDICATION OF SAN FRANCISCO FAIR (Continued From Page Eight.) sent into the Kootrvil district of the Panhandle, Idaho. American capital is ready to engage in the manufacture of dye, according to a statement of Secretary Redfield to the senate. Nearly six times as much wheat was exported from this country In January as during the same month last year, according to figures an nounced by the department of com merce. During that month 24.803,660 bushels were exported. Similar in creases were shown In flour, beef and all breadstuffs. Legal and Criminal. CALIFORNIA oil operators"-at San Francisco were still stunned over the svipreme court decision handed down in the case of the government against the Mid-West Oil company of Wyoming. Entry claims of corpora tions and individuals to petroleum lands in California alone, aggregating nearly a billion dollars, are nullified by the findings of the court. Healing of the applications for par don made on behalf of Richard Ford and Herman Suhr has been postponed to March 5. Ford and Suhr were sen tenced to life terms in Folsom prison for their connection with the Wheat land hopfield riots which resulted in the murder of E. T. Manwell. then district attorney of Tuba county. The month of April will go down In California's history as the month of hangings. The "death schedule" calls for the execution of five murderers during April. Two men will be hanged on April 16. two on April 23 and one on April 30, unless the pres ent dates are changed. J. C. Wilson and B. A. Wilbrand, former stock brokers, charged with complicity with Charles F. Baker, as sistant cashier of the Crocker National bank, in embezzling funds from that institution, went to trial at San Fran cisco before United States Judge Dool ing. The finding of a black bag contain ing several pieces of jewelry with the stones missing, is the only clew to the robbery of the Beverly Hills ho tel, Los Angeles, when the bungalow of Mrs. A. H. Smith was entered and Jio.000 in diamonds and money taken. Two new robberies were reported at the Beverly Hills hotel, Los Angeles. The newest victims and their losses are: E. R. Wood and daughter, . To ronto, Canada, two valuable stickpins; Misses Sadie Costello and E. Hoag, considerable money taken. Iavid Fountain, convlctfed of the murder of little Margaret Milling, was isentenced at Sacramento to be hanged on April 30, at Folsom prison. Judge Glenn, In administering sentence, showed .no feeling whatever for the prisoner and as he closed the sentence, sharply commanded Fountain to "sit clown."" ; . T4ie he was passed In United States District ; Judge Cooling court at ,Ran iranciscu during the hearing of -the I NEW BOOKS -1 ii iiii iiii ii 1 1 ii ii ii iiii ii 1 1 iiiiiiii i iii iiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiimi i iiiiiiiiiiii in ii mi iimi mil iiitt By Sam Itaddon Jr. '"Scattered Leaves," by Andreas Bard. Rev. Mr. Bartl was formerly rector of St. Paul's Episcopal church in Walla Walla, Wash., and is now a pastor in Kansas City, Mo. He has written a number of poems and the group recently gathered is published by the German Literary Board of Bur lington, Iowa. The poems display a love that has lingered and that has lent a beauty to his soul; they also show a faith inGod that animates the thought of the au thor amid the din of the world. In the soul of my songs. Beloved, I find Thee everywhere! He writes in the verse that is the dedication to the little, artistically paper-bound and printed book. In "A Prayer" Mr. Bard makes a powerful appeal that his soul live, on and thus voices immortality: 'Mid life's surrounding discords O sus tain The harmony within; extinguish not The spark divine, and .let iue not in vain Dream for my storm-swept soul a worthier lot Than that of pebbles on oblivion's shore Or hush hope's yearning voice forever more! Once again in "The Fadeless Flower" is the sustaining, sunny Influence of love on the poet shown. O give me he land where the spring never dies. Where voices of joy will not mingle with sighs. When wildly the autumn wind blows; Though heavens be gray or heavens be blue. Dear Heart, thou art the sunshine true. And my love the fadeless rose Among the 46 poems there are four in German and eight that the poet has translated from German into English. Mr. Bard's translation into German of Tennyson's "Crossing the Bar" pre serves the beauty and effectiveness of the original, though of course the simple power is not so full as in the English. The same meter is used and the same rhyme scheme Goethe's "Wanderer's Night-Song" Is so admirably translated that the spirit of the original Is almost the same in the English. Gently steals a dream of peace O'er the hill; Not a breath stirs in the trees, All is still: And the linnet's even-song Softer prows Troubled heart, thou too, ere long, ; Shalt repose! Several poems of Heine's are trans late 3 with a faithfulness that Is not so strict as to destroy the simplicity. Andreas Bard shows a rare facility of rhyme, a poetic sensitiveness to the tenderest forms of beauty, and yet a responsiveness to the biggest things of life and love. His poems are evi dences of a genuine love of woman, of nature, and of God. case of J. C. Wilson and B. A. Wil brand, stock brokers, charged with conspiracy to loot a national bank. The state of Georgia filed in the supreme court of the United States a brief in the case of Leo Frank, under sentence to die for the murder of Mary Phagan. Arguments in the mat ter will be heard Thursday and Fri day. Frank has appealed to the high court in his final fight to escape death. Four robbers dynamited the -safe of the Princess theatre, in the loop dis trict, Chicago, and escaped with $3000 cash. Apparently the robbers at tended the performance at the theatre and hid In an alcove while the rest of the audience was leaving the build ing. They bound . and gagged the watchman and proceeded about the robbery in leisurely fashion.. C. H. Canby, president of the Chi cago board of trade, testifying in the investigation being conducted at New York into the rise in the price of bread, said prohibition by , the .govern ment of wheat exports was the only check " to rising prices : possible.' He said such action would leave the wheat raising regions of the westta the same disastrous position as 'were the cotton growers of the south when ship ments of cotton were checked: John Foster, a night watchman, shot his wife four times and fatally, -wounded her and then sent a bullet into his own - head, at; San Leandro. - He- may recover.'. The couple had been sepa rated for months. - . Attorneys for Miss Maud Armfield, motion picture actress who' was given H -verdict of 940.009 for ; breach of promise from Bryant Howard, of San shows the "dogs of war" in action, according to the . British was printed on fine calendar paper about three feet square. AND THEIR 1 AUTHORS "Woman and War," by Olive Schreiner. -A selection from the au thor's well known "Woman and Labor," reprinted apropos of the Euro pean upheaval. The author sums up her discourse with the conclusion; "War will pass when intellectual culture and activity have made possi ble to the female an equal share in the control and governance of modern na tional life; It will probably not pass away much sooner: its extinction will not be delayed much longer. "It is especially in the domain of war that we, the bearers of men's bod ies, who supply its most valuable mu nition, who, not amid the clamor and ardor "of battle, but singly, and alone, with a three-in-the-morning courage, shed our blood and face death that the battlefield might have Its food, a food more precious to us than our heart's blood: it is we especially who. In the domain of war, have our word to say, a word no man can say for us. It is our intention to enter into the domain of war and labor there till in the course of generations we have extin guished it." The work originally appeared at the time of the Boer war, the author liv ing at that time in Johannesburg. Frederick A. Stokes company. New yor! 50 cents net. "Our Criminal Criminal Law," by S. C. Denson. A plea for the indeter minate sentence, reformation, or "re covery"' of breakers of the law, and for new prison management. Mr. Denson reviews a number of cases of which he had personal cog nizance in the early days of California, shows wherein, in his experience and judgment, existing methods of im prisonment and treatment of prisoners is all wrong, and recalls the delibera tions of a number of prisoners who themselves reduced the fault and the remedy to the following proposition: "The whole system of confiscation of a jhah's time and opportunity to work, because he had the misfortune to violate some penal statute, is wrong and barbarous; it does not do the mal efactor any good and it does not ben efit society, while it does increase the burden of taxation., It is. better that all men should be employed at soma kind of work. It is cruel to deny to anyone the right to work, and the de nial .may make one a criminal. "No. convict should be sentenced to any definite term, and no full confisca tion of his time should be made. Every person convictect of a crime (less than such as to merit death) should be ad judged to earn and hav a specified sum of money by his own labor." Air. Denson submits a plea for prison reformation along lines already being followed to an ; extent in Oregon and elsewhere. Wllitaker & Ray-Wigging company, San Francisco. "Rada," a drama In one act, by Al Diego, announced that she will file suit in San Diego for $100,000 against Mrs. Medora H. Howard, Bryant How ard's mother. She will allege aliena tion of affection, it is said. Before the gaze of a crowded court room, the killing of A. B. Shaw, a watchmaker, by R. E. Umax, a weal thy Jeweler, was reenacted in Superior Judge Gavin W. Craig's court at Los Angeles during Lomax's trial on a murder charge. Because his wife had obtained a di vorce from him, Fred Cozzalli, 26, an Italian,. lay In wait for her as she was going to work, ' shot and mortally wounded - her ; and then ended his own life. The woman, Mrs. Ada Cozzalli, 23, died while en routte' to the emer gency hospital. . It was rumored at Milwaukee, Wis.. that a federal grand jury, investigat ing a white slavery charge against the Rev. James M. Darnell, of Kenosha, Wis., would refuse to return an indict ment. William J. -Klnnear, 80, a patient in the. National hospital at Soidler'a Home, Milwaukee, committed suicide by blowing his Drains out with a revolver. Rendered feebleminded through-age, Klnnear had ' been as signed to the hospital department for care. , Sheriffs deputies from- Los An geles are -co-operating with' the Long Beach police in an effort to capture the . two masked bandits who held up Assistant Agent Park of the Pacific Electric railway .at Long Beach and robbd hlra-of poo of the company's fund a . . - . , . - . -. fred Noyes. A Christmas tragedy of the Balkans. A plea, for peace. Rada is a widojv of a day widowed by war, and "the mother of a 12-year old daughter. Two soldiers have quar tered themselves In the cottage that shelters the woman and child. The lat ter unaware of the dangers about her, awaits only the coming of Santa Claus. Additional marauding soldiers demand admittance to the chamber in which mother and daughter seek refuge, and as entrance there is being forced, re. ports of two shots are heard from the bedroom. Blood trickles beneath the door. . Frederick A. Stokes company. New York. CO cents net. "The Adventures of Grandfather Frog." and 'The Adventures of Danny Meadow Mouse," by Thornton W. Bur gess. These are two of the volumes of the "Bedtime Stories," with which young and old readers of The Journal, In particular, are well acquainted. Harrison Cady has drawn the pictures for them, and puts Mr. Burgess spirit into his peculiar little animals. Little, Brown & Co., Boston. 60 cents per volume, net. "Opera Stories From Wagner," by Florence Akin.- This is a reader for primary grades, and carries special local interest because the author Is a primary teacher in the Irvlngton school, Portland. The "stories" are told in conversa tional sts'le, tho author having endeav ored to make them complete, with only those parts of the original tale which are strong and sweet. Houghton, Miff lin Company, Chicago. According to the advance notices George Palmer Putnam, secretary to Governor Withycombe, has produced a work entitled "In the Oregon Coun try," which includes descriptive ac counts of northwestern trips, out-of-door exploits and legendary history, Fifty illustrations show that the ar tistic will bp an Important feature of the volume. Descriptive accounts of ramblings in Oregon, Washington and California are to be included in 12 large chap ters, and there are stories of trips along forest and mountain trails, on foot and on horseback, and with gun, rod and camera; of the ascent of peaks and long canoe excursions, all replete with incidents of Interest and rich with word pictures of the country traversed. The volume particularly directs attention to the wealth of at tractions for the sportsman and the lover -of out-of-doors, while incidents of the west's life today and accounts of its legendary life of yesterday round out the narrative pleasantly into a work not only of Interest, but of real value. The introduction for the volume 1b written by Governor Withycombe, who recommends it enthusiastically as a desirable addition to the state's litera ture. Mr. Putnam is the author of a vol ume on South America, "The South land of North America." and is also a magazine writer. He was located for some time at Bend. Or., before becom ing private secretary to Goernor Withycombe, and came originally from New York. He Is a son of a member of the publishing firm of G. P. Pnt- nam's Sons. Arrested as he stepped from the steamer Harvard at San Pedro, Cal.. E. J. Ryan, 22, accompanied by Miss Ethel Hotchkiss, 17. augbter of a prominent San Francisco ' merchant, was charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor and will be held pending the arrival of detectives from San Francisco. ' Executive. SUPERVISION by America of the distribution ""-of American foodstuffs . in Germany was said at Wash ington to be the basis of this gov ernment's latest proposal for an agree ment on the war zone situation. The house appropriations committee refused to recommend an appropria tion of $290,000 to reimburse Dan bury, Conn., hatters for fines imposed under the Sherman anti-trust law. William C. Delancy, director of the government's war risk bureau,, an nounced that insurance rates on American vessels, , with cargoes con signed to German ports,' -have been temporarily suspended. This suspen sion was ordered, "Delancy said, pend ing receipt of full -information by Sec retary of the Treasury McAdoo of the losses of the American steamers Evelyn and Carlb. " Administration officials said that the American relations with England and. Germany were - "practically un changed." Secretary Bryan and others -disclaimed knowledge of .foreign ad vices' relative ' to Inquiries made in London and Berlin in 'an effort to end the present hunger war. University and College N ews Recent Happenings on the Nation's Leading Campuses. Enrollment Affoxs. The following figures, recent ly published In Science, show the relative ranking in enroll ment of the leading American universities. The figure in clude the summer session en rollments with due allowance for double registrations. Former Enroll- In ment. crease. .11,294 1.365 Rank. College. 1 Columbia 2 California 8,180 3 Chicago 7,131 Wisconsin .... 6",696 1,109 297 806 536 784 311 634 327 405 832 552 195 6$ 250 265 26 349 5 6 8 9 10 11 Pennsylvania .. 6,505 Harvard 6,411 Michigan New York 6,319 6.142 Cornell 5.939 Illinois ....... 5,664 Ohio State ... 4,94 3 12 Minnesota 4,484 13 Northwestern . 4.072 14 Syracuse 3.193 15 Missouri 3,385 16 Texas 3,371 17 .Yale 3,2 8 J IS Neoiaska 3,199 Reed College. Four new tennis courts are to be con structed on the Reed college campus within the next 30 -days, according to fhe contract let to Oskar Huber, suc cessor to the Barber Asphalt company. The courts are the gift of a friend of the college, who refuses to let his name be given out: and with the addi tional equipment, they will cost $6700. Professor Norman F. Coleman, head of the Mnglish. department at the col lege, spoke on the "Wordsworth Coun try," the pretty part of England, where Wordsworth lived and wrote, at the as sembly Thursday. The lecture was il lustrated with slides made from pic tures which Professor Coleman collect ed while on his recent trip through England. He also gave a lecture on "England and the War," at the Central library Thursday evening. Rabbi Jonah B. Wise, of Temple. Beth-Israel, was the chapel speaker Thursday morning, and on Friday Rev. L. K. Richardson gave the talk. Next Friday morning Rev. T. L. Eliot will bo the chapel speaker. The last lecture of the series of hy giene lectures for men was given last Thursday afternoon, at 4Ho'clock, in the college chapel, by Dr. Noble Wiley Jones, who spoke on "The General As themic State." The lecture was illus trated with a number of radiographs and drawings. Miss Josephine Hammond, professor of English, gave a reading of "Rada," by Alfred Noyes, and "The Little King," by W. Bynner, last evening, in tha chapel, for thbeneflt of the Belgium Relief Fund, under tho auspices of the Amanda Reed association of Reed col lege. This association was Just re cently organized among the women of the college, and It took this opportunity of Duttinz itself Into prominence. On Tuesday evening, at 7 o'clock, lf the chapel, a debate will be held on the question, "Resolved, That there should be a literacy test for immigrants sim ilar to that provided In the bill vetoed by President Wilson." The speakers ar H. II , Moore and C. F. Rochet, af firmative, and J. M. Howes and E. R. Means, -for the negative. President William T. Foster will be the vesper speaker In the chapel today, at 4 o'clock. His subject will be "Tha Spirit of the West." University of Oregon. James Donald, of Baker; Rose Siler, of Spokane; Ruth Sears, Beulah Stebno and Louis Holsington, of Eugene, were graduated from the university at the end of the first semester. They will receive their diplomas at the June commencement. Donald and Miss Stebno were honor students. Bryant DcBar, of Eugene, and Ern est Vosper, of Portland, have gone to San Francisco, where they will act as guides in the Oregon building at the Panama-Pacific exposition during the next four weeks. They are fully equipped with information regarding the state. The other two university students who have been chosen to act as guides, Charles Collier, of Eugene, and James Donald of Baker, will fol low in two veeks. A new party will leave every two weeks and the rep resentatives will be selected by a fac ulty committee from a list of 100 stu dents who have signified their will ingness to go. The Oregon Agricult ural college will have a similar rep resentation. Dr. G. Stanley Hall has wired that he will take a place on the next sum mer school faculty. Dr. Hall Is presi dent of Clark university, and is wide ly known as a specialist in child psy chology. Elwood P. Cubberly, head of the de partment of education at Stanford uni versity, who nSade an educational sur vey, of Portland schools some years ago, will be another summer school lecturer. A third will be Charles Fors ter Smith, professor of Greek at the University of Wisconsin. The mlneroiogy class is classifying the rocks in the university collection, and is making up boxes of specimens, which will be lent to high schools for studies in physical geography. The boxes contain from 20 to 25 classes of minerals, and from 12 to 15 rocks that Illustrate geological points. The first high school to call for a loan collection was that o Myrtle Creek. Twenty-seven per cent of the women of the third year clas6 are wholly or. partially self-supporting, and their average annual college expenses are 1478, where they are registered from outside of Eugene. Of the junior men, 94 per cent are partly or wholly self- February and March Bring Out TJn ightly Spots. Sow to Re move Easily. The woman with tender skin dreads February and March because tl ey are likely to cover her face with ugly freckles. No matter how thick her veil, the sun and winds have a strong tendency to make her freckle. - Fortunately for her. peace of mind, the recent discovery of anew prescrip tion, othine double strength, makes it possible for even those most suscepti ble to freckles to keep their skin clear and white. No matter how stubborn a case of freckles you have, the double strength othine should remove them. Get an ounce from youV druggist and banish the freckles.' Money back if it falls. I . , - - Adv.' FRECKL supporting. The statistics have compiled from seporta made by 119 out of 112 third year students. ..." Harvard University. ; Donald E Dunbar. '13. a first year ! student in the Harvard law school, hs tjust received word that his essay of- , fered in competition for the- Hart, i Shaff ner & Marx prizes, has won first in the graduate division, the prize be- , ing J 1000. - Dunbar was one or the leaa ing students in his college class, a member of Phi Beta. Kanna. and edi torial chairman of the Crimson during- ! his senior year. Following graduation ! he spent a year abroad pn one of the Sheldon traveling fellowships. Columbia University. In the report of the committee on women graduate students at Columbia university,' Dean Virginia C. Gtlder- I sleeve, chairman, urges the' securing i of fellowships without restriction of i sex, asserting that the committee doe.4 i not think It fair that a woman grad- juate student, however, brilliant and promising her -scholarly ability, fchould be, merely because of her sex, shut out entirely in the university from the honor and aid whtch a fellowship gives. The committee notes the srreat !ncrean In the iivimlur of women students reg- istcred under the graduate faculties, the number last year being 711, Jiearly 100 more than the previous year,; while out of 488 candidates receivings the master of arts. degree 221 were women. and out of 63 receiving the degree of doctor of philosophy 11 were women. . Oberlin College. The special committee in charge of loans to students at Oberlin college re ports, hat a very significant percent age of the young women enrolled in various departments of the institu tion depend either entirely or in part upon their own resources for their college education. Of the 80 women classed as wholly or partly self-supporting, seven are working. for all of their room and board, 1 4 for part. Thirty-seven have borrowed money; 38 are earning money while studying'. 67 are using or have used money saved from their own earnings. The industries reported are school teaching, 40; house work, 18; office wonk, 11; with a scattering distributed among can vassing, nursing, teaching music, art ist, market gardening, library assist ant, postofflce assistant, playground work, seamstress and curio aales woman. Technology. The Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology is taking definite steps toward the extension of better relations be tween the Institutions of higher learn ing In the ITnlted States and South American republics. The fnstltufe has Just received a brochure in Spanish, setting forth the work done there, and Paul G. Hilken, '03. and Roger W. Bab son, '98, are now on a tour of South America, largely in the interests of "Tech." Alumni through the southern con tinent have been notified, and fceveral reunions are being planned for the pur poes of having a good time together and to aid the work of Mr. Hilken and Mr. Babson. Cornell University. Wrork has begun on Cornell's first dor mitories. Two buildings are now un der construction, and the contracts for erecting the third will soon be award ed. It is expected that these three res idence halls will be completed by next January. When finished, they will ac commodate 200 men. The trustees have had plans drawn for 15 residence halls, and for a great student commons. The whole group "of buildings will stand on tliat part of tha campus, just below the library slope. The entire group will provide accom modations for about 1200 men. Dartmouth College. Thirty-four men were separated from Dartmouth college as a result of defi cient scholarship during the first sem ester, according to a report made by th dean today. This is a slight de crease over the figures of last year, and is notable in Its inclusion of one Junior and seven sophomores. The reasons for this Increase are not given by the dean in his report, and the re sult is generally assigned to one of two causes: the fraternity acttvity during the first semester, or a tightening of the regulations. University of Pennsylvania. Greek letter fraternities hive re ceived the official indorsement of Pro vost Smith at Penn. Speaking at the freshman chapel exercises, a few days ago, the provost told the students that they would get much more out cf col lege in every way If they "made" a fraternity. "I 'made' a fraternity when I was an undergraduate," said Dr. Smith, "and it had a powerful influence on my future life." By the rules of the university and fraternities, it is not permitted to ask a freshman to Join until noon March 8. Wellesley College. The seventh session of the graduate council of Wellesley college, held on Saturday and Monday,' January 30 and February I, included delegates from Denver, Kansas City. St. Louis, Chica go and Atlanta. In the discussions it was proposed that the council should arrange for a meeting of associated Wellesley c lubs," to be held In San Fran cisco during the coming summer, at the time of the meeting of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae. " Yale University, Nearly -all the interests of the uni versity last week were subordinated to the Junior prom of the class "ft 1916, which was danced as usual at the Sec ond Regiment armory.. General Educational News. It will cost $2,504,962 to furnish frea text books in the public schools of New York state, according to a report made to the legislature on January 21 by John H. Delany, state commissioner of efficiency and economy. Commissioner Oelaney makes no recommendations re garding the advisability of supplying free text books. The cost of annual re newal would be $985,581. " The average cost per pupil would be $1.23 In the ele mentary schools and $4.84 in the soc cfndary schools. The total estimated nchool registration affected by the text book buestton for the current year 1,594.610, of whom '1,446,311 are In the elementary schools and 148,299 in tho secondary schools. BUSINESS UPTURN SHOWN Chicago, ' Feb. 27i- Railroad man agers of lines touching Florida and gulf winter resorts assert the upturn in business conditions is evidenced b'y the heavy increases in pleasure travel in the southern states. December rec ords showed considerable improvement and the increases In January were even more marked, v The. Southern railroad and " connecting . lines recently 'have been obliged to operate nine extra sec tion of regular; trains, . 2 extra Pull- man cars and seven extra coaches. endel Sisters Puzzle New York By Gotham Knickerbocker. New York, Feb. 27. New York li never tired of discussing the mystery or the wendeis. No one has ever sug gested an even probable explanation of the strangest family in America; The four Wendel sisters ha. $60.- 000,000.; - y-... r. Three unmarried sisters live v a Fifth avenue in an antique $500(1 house on a lot assessed at l,S97.00Ov i lie rourin tmarrieaj lives on uen. tral Park West. . , ; The four sisters have been - enor mously, wealthy from birth.: ' They nave never ridden In an auto. They have never been on a yacht. They have never attended a theatre.) They have not bean in a church foi." 20 years. - They never wear any article of Jcw- eiry. .... , .- They have never used an elevator. . They never give a social entertain ment or receive callers. -'- So far as known, they, have never given money to charity, , i Like-little gray mice In an abam! oned church, the three Wendel sisters flit about their strikingly ugly big house Just opposite th Union League club, A great department storel has reared Itself across the street on on side. A tall office building overlooks another side. The magnificent nsw New York public library is one block away. Their home lies midway be tween the imposing Grand Central end Pennsylvania terminals. The lUbway half circles them, being one block away on the east. They dwell In what has Just become the heart of the fash ionable shopping section. Before their doors streams the most magnificent procession of private vehicles to be seen anywhere in the western hemi sphere, if not in the world. What ia behind these doors? Now and then an old employs of tha great Wendel estate, second in wealth only to the holdings of the Astors, passes into the hall, the floor of which shows bare tiles in geometrical-pat terns without covering. The hall tr reached by three sets of doors. Jn th rear of the hall is a treat wooden stairway, and from the massive balu strade a ponderous Iron gas Jet gives a faint glimmer of light. The Wen- dels do not use electricity. Don't they . I approve of It? Nobody knows. House Bams as In 188. From thejhall open the library, par lor and dining - room, all kept ex actly as they were when the builder of the house, John Wendel, died in 1869. The floor, of colored tiles, la scarcely relieved of Its barrenness by the small rug under the great ma hogany table In the center of tho room. The furniture Is all old and massive. Every picture on the wall, as through-. out the house, Is covered with whits muslin winter and summer. -What is on the floors above I cannot tell you.. Although the building is four stories and a half high, there Is no elevator or dumbwaiter.. Two middle agod maids wait on the three strange sis ters. All the sisters sre clad in-the same way. They wear black iresacs." cut in the style of two generations back. They make their own clothes and wear them until slightly shiny; Their gray hair is drawn tightly back from their foreheads. On two sides of their house the Wen del sisters have a yard, encompassed by a high wall, 'This yard Is worth about a million dollars. Tha 'sisters take exercise here, but only In the eve ning, when no one can look down upon them Irom the high buildings nearby. The life of the-fourth sister, Mrs. Luther A. Swope, Is almost a replica of her sisters. But she does venture twice a week to the little old fash ioned Wendel office at 175 Broadway bare of telephone" or modern office fix ture, where the Wendel estate -nterv its business. She Is a slender, square shouldered woman, who dresses In the styles of 1880, like her sisters. But she is not quite so shrinking as they,' she has the firm Jaw of her brother, John G. Wendel. who died last Decem ber, at Santa Monica, Cal., and to her the three maiden sisters turn over the responsibilities of the $90,000,000 for tune. Aside from Mrs. swope's tegular; visits to tho Wendel offices the only; excursion of the strange quartet into the light of day are their spring trips: to their country place at Irvliifjton on. the Hudson and their fall trips hack to New York. The Jrvlnglon estata Is even more sequestered than ' the Fifth avenue dwelling. There ia a high surrounding wall. Scarcely a neighbor remembers ever seeing one of the sis ters' faces, except whh they arrive J for the hot season and wncn they leave. r Zdv la Seclusion. ' Their sole vehicle at Irvlngton Js a; two-seated family carry-all, of a type popular in the seventies. It appar ently dates from that period. A deal-, sr who lias delivered milk and gro ceries to the housa every summer for 10 years says he never lias seen any of the alsters. Mrs. Swope's husband is past 80. They have no children. There were seven members in . this generation of the Wendel family and only these four sisters remain. Where will the money go when they die? Will a dis tant relative some day pslnt the White Wray red with their millions? : Can you suggest What makes these sisters lead this dreary, mlsanthropio life? Have you your solution of the mystery? Pafa In flMMlthjtm ftcft.1v tlfl V quired the habit of climbing the or ange trees. GRANDMA NEVER LET HER HAIR GET GRAY Kept . her focks - youthful, dark, glossy and thick with common garden Sage and Sulphur. When you' darken your hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, because It's done so naturally, so evenly. Preparing this . mixture, though, at-home 1 mussy and 'trou blesome. For. CO cents you- can buy at ' any drug . store the ready-to-uo ionic calUd "Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Compound." You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with It and draw this through your, hair, ' taking on small strand at a time. By morn ing all gray hair disappears, and, after another application or two, 'your hair becomes beautifully darkened,- glor and luxuriant. You will also discover dandruff is gone and hair has stopped falling. .- .- f Gray, faded . hair, though no dis grace, Is a : sign of old age, and as we all desire a youthful and attractive appearance) get busy at once wl)i j Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur and lotifc r years younger.. - .;,'.-.; lAdv.)