. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN published Tuesday and Friday morn- nings by students in the Department of Journalism from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1916, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Act of March 3, 1873. Subscription price, fifty cents for the six weeks' session. Phones: K. U. 25 and K. U. 150. Address all communications to The Summer Session Kansan, Lawrence Kansas Ben Hibbs Editor Chester Shore Business Manager No men living are more worthy to be trusted than those who toll up from poverty.—Abraham Lincoln. AN OPPORTUNITY Next Thursday and Friday Summer Session students are to be given the opportunity to prove themselves truly a part of the great student body of the University of Kansas. The Summer Session lives in a different atmosphere at K. U. that does the student of the regular year. There is less of fun and more of work in the short summer term. Those who have been here only during the summer or for several summers do not have the same feeling toward the institution as those students who have spent several years here. Still, it is our school. Whether we come from Kansas or from Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas or some other state, at present we are all Kansans. The school was established by the state of Kansas for the people of Kansas and is supported by taxing the people of Kansas. Whatever we may owe to schools we have attended in the past, we still owe something to K. U. And this week we shall all have a chance to pay that debt. And it is an honor! We have a chance here, not only to show our respect and gratitude to those men and women who gave their lives in the service of their country, but also to show our respect and gratitude to the University, which, for a longer or shorter time, has been our home. In subscribing to the Memorial Fund, you are not paying anything to the University. You are paying in part the debt you owe to those who gave their lives that you might enjoy peace and prosperity. HIGH POINT MEN During the past three years in Missouri Valley circles, one name has stood out above all others in connection with track athletics. That is the name of Everett L. Bradley, member of the United States Olympic team in 1920 and Captain of the Kansas track team in 1922. In writing headlines for news stories of track meets, one line has appeared with such frequency as to become almost trite, "Bradley high point man." Missouri may have had its Hamilton, Nebraska, its Smith, Grinnell, its Paulu, its Rathbun, and Kansas Aggies, their Watton; still the headline stood, "Bradley high point man." If Kansas won the meet in which she was entered, and in the 1922 season, she almost invariably did, it was largely due to the efforts of Bradley. If the Crimson and Blue went down to the fact that Bradley was individual point winner. Steady and consistent he has been the greatest track man who ever ran under K. U. colors. And now comes the announcement that Emerson Norton, of the 1922 Freshman squad, has even greater track possibilities than Bradley. In the Missouri Valley telegraphic meet for freshmen, which was held this spring Norton alone, turned in a greater number of points for his team than did the entire squad of any other team which was entered. At the Chamber of Commerce meet in St. Joseph, Mo., the Fourth of July Norton again placed high, with a total of $16\%$ points. To these two men, Bradley and Norton, Kansas *owes* and 'will owe a great deal.' To Bradley, the veteran who has completed his career as a Jaayhawk track, star Kansas owes the respect which is due a man who has done his best at all times to place the Crimson and Blue in the lead in athletics. To Norton, Kansas owes the support and loyalty which will be necessary to make of him an athlete worthy to take the place of Bradley LOVE Love is a day With no thought of morrow. Love is a joy With no thought of sorrow. Love is to give With no thought of receiving Love is to hear Without quite believing —Charles Henry Webb. Kansan Krackles Now that radium is only $2,250,000 an ounce, perhaps the dollar watch will again be sold for a dollar. It is reported that the world's largest shipment of washing machines is on its way to Los Angeles. Perhaps, after all, there was some truth to that talk about cleaning up Hollywood. Just when we think that peace has been sighted in Ireland, we learn that there is another revolution smoldering underneath. One dared revolution after another. Birmingham, Iowa, boasts of a woman who has spent several years in piecing together a 30,000 piece quilt. Patience, Congress, you'll get that tariff bill patched together yet! When those union miners at Hirin, Illinois, come to pay their debts in the next world, they'll probably find themselves on a coal shooting job where they can't strike. Those 10,000 blacksmiths who left their forges at 10 o'clock the other morning evidently believe in the silicon, "Strike while the iron is hot." Improvement of the depressed business condition in Mexico is indicated by the kidnapping of American citizens. After one attempts to eat a dish of jello he wonders why the word "shimmying" had to be coined to describe a movement of the modern dance. "Take your stenographers to the ball game and dictate your letters in the grand stand," advises the Topeka Capital in boosting for the home team. "Old stuff," says the married business man. "That explanation was worn out long ago." "Pussyfoot" Johnson and his backers should start a great dry ship line and give it the name "Sahara." A woman judge in New York is convinced that "men are not as bad as they are painted." Thank you, Judge. At last the men have official, feminist legal support for what they are telling the women all these years. A "private stock," valued by its owner at one million dollars, is in danger of confiscation by government officials in New Orleans. The company is investing in a seaport town where Shipping Board vessels must be restocked. A Tennessee man, whom the doctor had scheduled to die when 21 year old, recently celebrated his hundred birthday. Of course, the doctors are dead now and we have only the man' word for it, but we presume that th doctors must have been mistake and that the man did not die. The following is a portion of an article appearing in the Literary Review of June 24, and written by Ruth Garver, A.B. '22, who is now one of William Allen White's assistants. Miss Garver is well known at K. U., and especially do the renders of the Orend Magazine magazine announce publication. Space does not permit the printing of the entire article. The extract follows: K. U. Girl Fights Back YOUTH REPLIES AGAIN To the Editor of The Literary Review: Sir: They never have done with us? We have been reprevised for smoking cigarettes, reprimanded in press and pulp for rolling our nose and bobbing our hair, and for the scarcity of our garments, and now Aymar Emilian must demonstrate The Literary Review of June 6 because we don't read Steven and Kipling and do read Anderson and Hergesheimer. We "forward looking young women" have passed with a shrug innumerable statements regarding our dress and Official Summer Session University Bulletin Copy received by Florence E. Bias, Editor, Chancellor's Office until 19 o'clock noon, Mondays and Thursdays. LOST AND FOUND DEPARTMENT: Vol. I. July 11, 1922 The attention of Summer Session students is called to the Lost and Found Department which is located in the University Business Office, Fraser Hall. All found articles should be turned in promptly and inquiries concerning last articles made at this office. KARL KLOOZ, Chief Clerk. FREE LECTURES ON MUSIC S. Dana Townsend of New York City will deliver a series of lectures at 3 o'clock daily in Fraser Chapel. The schedule is as follows: Tuesday Shakespeare and Music. Wednesday English Literature and Music. Thursday American Literature and Music. Friday History and Music. The讲座 will be one hour in length and are open to the public. H. J. RUTLER, Dean Tell me this, Mr. Embury, when you and other youths in your salads days were praising Stevenson, Kipling, Morris, weren't there men of an older generation sitting back, eyeing you askance, and shaking their heads at the follies of youth which caused you to embrace the new writers and forget the old? But you didn't forget the old? Ah, that is it, Mr. Embury, and neither have we R. L. I in her shirt We, too, save our pennies hoping that he one day we may purchase the biographical edition and that, later on, perhap, we may stand in the garden where Steven played as a boy; may ALL-UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION THURSDAY: An all-University convoitation is called for Thursday, at 10 a.m., in Fraser Chapel. Classes will meet as usual before 10 and after 11, the hour from 10 to 11 bing:vacated for the convoitation. KENT Director Summer Session. EDITING AND NEWS SUPERVISION ROUND TABLE: A round table session of the class in editing and news supervision, open to all who are interested in high school newspaper direction, will be held Wednesday at 8 a.m. in Journalism 107, also Friday at the same place and time. STUDENT VOLUNTEER PICNIC: L. N. FLINT, Prof. of Journalism. conduct. Some of us there are still—and a majority of the truth be known—who do not roll our hose, not because we consider such practice immoral but because we find it uncomfortable. They should we disillusion the poor dears, whose only occupation seems to be rolling at us? Their disappearance would be greater than their relief, fear, if they were to come; that no small number of the modern girl still has two garments—will Ellen Ferber and the local pastors specify what two—under their modish dresses please. The K. U. Student Volunteer Band for Foreign Mission will have a plenic Friday evening. Meet at the Museum at 6 o'clock. All Student Volunteers who are in Lawrence for the summer from other colleges are cordially invited. It is when Mr. Aymar Embury accuses us of not being familiar with "The Master of Ballantrae" by name that we rise in justifiable indignation and call a halt. Mr. Embury forgets that the first verses chanted by the generation he is deriding were the son's "A Child's Garden Of Verses." He says: "I have read Treise and of Island' when he was four, and of Kipling the 'Jungle Stories' when he was nine; of Maurie Hewlett, of Meredith, of Hardy none." "Treasure island" at fourteen! Of course, New York children may be different: I can only speak of my own childhood in Nebraska and Kansas, where, though we have no Hippodrome, no Zoological Gardens, no subway, we have a better land by far, where little children "know their books by pictures" long before they can read. And among these stories will always be the found 'World's Garden of Verse' the 'Just So Stories' "Alice in Wonderland," Water Babies "The Penguin Family Robinson," "Robinina Crusoe," often "At the Back of the North Wind," and sometimes that pretty conceit which all children should know, "The Wind in the Willows." RUFUS M. CASE, State President. And their living essayists come in for their share of our leisure hours; we find that we like Galsworthy almost better as essayist than novelist; Chesterton we like, Lucas, Belloc, and Benson. And on this side of the Atlantic we discover Irving, Thoreau, Emerson, Repplier, Crothers, Hearn, and Strunsky. We also discover that we dislike Mencken and adore Chris Morley. Why? Because Morley shares our enthusiasm for R. L. S. and has even made a pilgrimage to the Stevenson haunts in Edinburgh, and it is Mencken, I believe, who is trying to tear down the Stevenson tradition, putting in his place Sherwood Anderson with his banal attempts at realism, and others of his mind. see the window through which he looked at the garden, with child's eyes still, while writing the verses. And it is ours to remember always, whatever crabed age may say, that Stevenson once wrote: "The true wisdom is to be always seasonable", and to change with a good grace in changing circumstances. To love play things well as a child, to lead an adventurous youth, and to settle when life is quiet and smiling age, is to be a good artist in life and deserve well of yourself and neighbor." Ruth Jane Garver. Lawrence, Kansas. WANT ADS WANTED--Two ladies and one gentleman of education and refinement to take up educational work locally and generally. Salary guaranteed. Permanent position if available. B. G. McFall, General Delivery. 6-7-8. FOR SALE - Underwood Typewriter. Good as new. Must sell before Summer Session ends. $47.50. Address X. Y.-Z. %Kansan. LOST—Andale dog, black and tan with spots on breast and feet. Reward. Call 1761 or 1303. BOARD—Breakfast and six o'clock dinner served at 1128 Tenn. Will serve during the last four weeks of Summer Session. FOUND—Green sweater coat, on north tennis courts. Owner pro- property and pay for this ad. Kansan Business Office. TYPIST, experienced in manuscript editing and revision for publisher wants theses and other typing work. Call Park — K. U. 9. LOST-On the hill Friday night. Wrist watch with black leather strap. Phone 1879. Reward. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. J. R. PAYNE. (Exodonist). Praec- tures, and surgical lesions of the mouth. Gas-Oxygen and Conduction 891-307-305 Perkins Building. Phone 989. DALE PRINTING COMPANY. First class work. Prices reasonable. Phone 228. 1027 Mass. Street. CHIROPACTORS DRS. WELCH & WELCH, CHIRO- PRACTORS, graduates of Palmer school. Phone 115. Office over Houk's. CHIROPRACTORS THOMAS ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP. Rubber heels in 10 minutes any time. 1917% Mass. DR. A. J. VANWINKLE, Your Osteo- path. 1239 Ohio. Phone 1031. PROTCH The Tailor BULLOCK PRINTING COMPANY. Stationery-printing of all kinds. Bowersock Building. Your Osteopath A. L. NANWINKLE Dr. A. J. VANWINKLE is giving special attention to Hay Fever. Bring in that old case and let's clean it up. Office, 1329 Ohio St. Phone 1031 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist). Eyes examed, glasses made, Office, 1025 Masa. Cold and peppy drinks are to be and at Rankins Drug Store—Adv. Drink McNish Soda Water. Made with distilled water—Adv. Everything in Music at BELL'S MUSIC STORE FOR YOUR STUDIO Gorgeous Mandarin coats, Mandarin skirts, embroidered wall hangings, exquisite lacquer and many other interesting articles from China MISS LAUREN STEVEN Ohio Tel. 2102 Varsity Theatre Wednesday and Thursday Shows --- 3:00 7:30 9:00 "ACROSS THE CONTINENT" Mile-a-minute romance tingling with dare-devil stunts and packed with fun. Theodore Roberts and Mary MacLaren in the supporting cast. Larry Semon in ___ "A Pair of Kings Children 10cts SAY! How would a nice juicy steak this thick, We serve lots of them every day, and they are only one of the many favorites to be found on our menu. broiled to perfection suit you? Yes at the cool, comfortable DeLuxe Cafe 711 Mass, St.