PAGE FOUR SUMMER SESSION KANSAN FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1939 High School Superintendent Is Summer Session Golf Champion Ray Nichols, who finds time to keep his golf game from getting rusty while serving as superintendent of schools at Auburn, Kansas, emerged as champion of the Summer Session golfers when he beat Paul Oglevie in the finals of the recent University tourney. Nichols had drawn a bye in the first round and had eliminated Art Lawrence in the second round and Harold Reade in the semi-finals before meeting Oglevie. Oglevie defeated Chet Shepherd, H. A. Wolgast and Ed Ash on his way to the final round. Nichols also broke the course record at the nine-hole Hillview course, south of Lawrence, recently, when he shot a sizzling 66 to beat Chick Pontius' course record of 67. Rod Wakeland of the University golf team equalled Pontius' mark last spring. Six Non-Conference Cage Games Scheduled Non-conference basketball games scheduled for next season will be with Oklahoma A. and M. at Lawrence, December 5; Central Missouri State Teachers at Warrensburg, December 8; a two game series with Southern Methodist University in Lawrence sometime between December 15 and 19; Oklahoma A. and M. in Lawrence, February 15; and Creighton University in Lawrence, March 4. The first conference game will be with Oklahoma here January 5, and the usual conference double round robin schedule will be played. Five more names have been added to the list of persons securing appointments this summer through the University Teachers Appointment bureau according to H. E. Chandler, director. University Teachers Appointment Bureau Places Five More Albert W. McCullough, Ph.D. '38, will teach microscopic anatomy at the University of Arkansas, Little Rock; Naomi Gragg, A.B. '37, will teach English and speech in the Glasco High School; Ingebore Swanson, B.S. '35, will teach commerce in the Lyndon High School; Agnes Wiens, gr., will teach English and physical education in the Horton High School; and Fiske Mountain, B.M. '26, will teach music in the high schools at Downs. Holtzclaw on Semester's Leave To Work for Board Henry F. Holtzclaw, professor of economics, will have a semester's leave of absence from the University beginning in September. He will work with the railroad retirement board in the Kansas City area, according to Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University. He will be assistant to William A. Murphy, regional director for the retirement board. Doris Fleeson O'Donnell Takes Vacation in Europe Mr. and Mrs. John O'Donnell, sailed Wednesday on the Manhattan for several weeks vacation in Europe. Mrs. O'Donnell, who was formerly Miss Doris Fleeson, and a graduate of the University, is one of the most noted journalists in the east. Both she and her husband are Washington correspondents for the New York Daily News. R I D E Early and Late Horses 50c per Hour MOTT STABLES Phone 346 4 Blocks West of Campus Health Director to Speak Health Director to Speak Dr. Robert H. Riedel, director of the division of venereal disease control of the Kansas State Board of Health, will speak on venereal diseases in Prof. A. H. Turney's Monday morning. Kenney Pi Lambda Theta Delegate Kenney Pi Lambda Theta Delegate Miss Risha Kenney, secretary of the Correspondence Study bureau, is attending a convention of Pi Lambda Theta, professional education sorority, in San Francisco, on her vacation. She will also visit at Palo Alto and Los Angeles before returning home by the southern route. Schoewe and Geolgy Majors Return From Six-Weeks Field Trip W. H. Schoewe, associate professor of geology, and eleven geology majors recently returned from a six-week field trip through western Kansas and Colorado. The group spent four weeks studying rock formations and doing detailed mapping of the country surrounding Garden park, which is located near Canon City, Colo. A trip was made to the Great Sand Dunes and the El Capulin national monument in New Mexico. They also visited in the same state an extinct volcano which, it is believed furnished Kansas with some of its volcanic soils. During the last two weeks of the trip, they visited national parks, monuments, and places of geological interest in Arizona, Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, South Dakota, and Nebraska. The students who made the trip are: Charles Allen, Great Bend; Edward W. Borger, El Dorado; James Cooper, Winfield; Hugh Crain, Paola; William T. Frazier, El Dorado; Loren W. Hallam, Salina; James Johnson, Wichita; Carl Moritz, Marysville; Charles B. Morgan, Ottawa; Max F. Shoemaker, Pomona; and Carlos Vogeler, Caracas, Venezuela, South America. Smith Law Article Given First Place in Quarterly An article by James B. Smith, professor of law, was given first position in the July issue of the Temple University law quarterly. Smith's topic was, "Constitutional Limitations on Sovereign Competitions." The editors of the magazine expressed "appreciation for a truly commendable article," to Professor Smith. "Advertise? I no need to advertise! I sell da apple without your "advertise". I tink datsa foolish!" --to Tony and he'll say, "I no advertise!" But, of course, you know that he's doing just that, perhaps in another way. He does it when he puts up that sign . . . when he paints his cart a bright red and blue so that it can be easily identified, so that it looks gay . . . when he stops at a busy corner, because Tony knows that he can sell more apples when more people see his apples . . . when he shouts "Apples!" as he pushes his cart along. TRY SOME OF THESE FINE APPLES 3 for 10c TALK ABOUT ADVERTISING TONY HAS LEARNED the first principle of successful selling: bring your wares before the eyes of great numbers of people and you can sell profitably! But not everyone in Lawrence is a Tony, and few businessmen specialize in apples. Moreover, Tony is satisfied with the number of apples he sells. A progressive merchant would never stop there. Tony is advertising—yes, but in a feeble, limited sort of a way. If you are not like Tony—if you are not satisfied with the number of "apples" you are selling, and you want to sell more—you'll advertise in a newspaper that has a loyal local following, one that is read by thousands of people who are able to buy your "apples". In Lawrence, that paper is the University Daily Kansan. Advertise Where You Get the Best Results! The University Daily Kansan Read by People Who WANT to Buy!