( ) TO GERMANY FOR HIS BRIDE UNIVERSITY MAN TO WED ABROAD. Alfred Powell, Last Year's Freshman Football Player, Sailed Yesterday for Coln. Another romance, involving a University man, has come to light. Alfred Powell, of Wichita, who was a member of last year's freshman football team and a prominent wrestler, sailed yesterday on the Lusitania from New York, for Cöln, Germany, where on February 22 he will be married to Helene Steinbüschel. Miss Steinbüschel's parents at one time lived in Wichita, where the girl and Powell were in the same class in the high school. Miss Steinbüschel, who is highly gifted as a musician, left last May for Coln, Germany, where she is studying voice, piano and pipe organ. After the marriage the couple will tour Europe until the first of June, when they will return to the United States. Mr.Powell will then go into business with his father, who has extensive brick manufactories in southern Kansas and northern Oklahoma. The wedding will be a formal one, at the Episcopal church of Cohn. While in Europe Mr. Powell will investigate the brick industries of the different countries in which he travels. Mrs. Effie Pyle Fisher, '01, is a cousin of Mr. Powell. She is the wife of a Methodist missionary now in Europe. Mr. Powell will make a special trip to see her, while on his wedding journey. TWO DIFFERING VIEWS. W. A. White and W. Y. Morgan on Journalism Schools. The afternoon program of the journalism conference yesterday was made up of short discussions of the various problems involved in teaching journalism. Following the luncheon at the Eldridge house, Chancellor Strong called on William Allen White to talk on "The Newspaper Man's Objections to Schools of Journalism." "My objection to the shool of journalism are theoretical," said Mr. White. "I never have thought much of the general idea of courses in journalism. It has seemed to me always that what a student wants to do in the University is to confine himself to he regular college courses, if he wants to go into newspaper work later. I have often wished I had spent less time on the college paper when I was in school, and had put it in on mathematics or some other study that would have made me precise and exact. "But practically, I must say that I can't object much to what the school of journalism is doing, as the best reporter I have ever had was made the efficient man he now is by his training in the University. I do think, that conditions would be improved if a man had to take the college course before the special work in journalism was open to him." A little later in the discussion W. Y. Morgan was called upon to talk. He took exception emphatically to Mr. White's remarks. "Mr. White knows better than to believe the things he has been saying," said Mr. Morgan. "It he had studied mathematics or some of the more exact subjects when he was at the University instead of hanging around the college paper and the downtown newspaper offices, he would have been somebody else than Bill White. The things he did in college have a great deal to do with making him the success he has been in newspaper work. "Some speakers here today have seemed to take the view that maybe the idea of having a school of journalism has not yet been proved a good one. I have no sympathy with that view. The school of journalism has already proved a success and will be a greater success in the future. "Look around over the state of Kansas, and you will see that the one-half or two-thirds of the newspaper men of the state are college men. That is true of editors, and it is increasingly true of reporters. The newspapers of the state are practically in the hands of the college men of the state." "This fact shows that great change has taken place in newspaper work in he state since the early days. The proposition of starting a newspaper means more nowadays than the acquisition of an army hand press. It is a complicated undertaking, demanding special training. "To give that special training, the school of journalism is needed. It is a winner. It will be an absolute necessity to the journalism of the future." I LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING Because I know how to execute them in an artistic manner and, without making you endure a tedious wait. There is nothing about the intricate mechanism of the finest watch that I do not thoroughly understand and there is no piece of gold or silver repairing so delicate that I cannot fix satisfactorily, and you will be surprised when you find out how little I charge. The College Jeweler 911 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas. Henry Allen and Walter Williams in Friendly Fray. WHEN EDITORS DEBATE. yesterday morning in chapel the Chancellor staged what the advance notices said was to be a fiery debate. The principals were Henry Allen, the Wichita editor and spellbinder, and Walter William, dean of the Missouri School of Journalism, southern gentleman, and silver tongue orator The debate was without decision and was a draw. Henry Allen led off. He stepped to the center of the stage and opened up. "Modern journalism," he said, "has made all the whole world akim. The United States is now more of a neighborhood than the village community of forty years ago. Today a pulse beat in the China sea neverbrates around the earth and sets millions of hearts aglow. The newspaper takes up the four corners of the earth and dumps the contents into the lap of the ordinary citizen. Every day eighty five million Americans read the same news, and the same thoughts No wonder the country is unified and patriotic." Mr. Allen quit before his time was called and it was the turn of Walter Williams. Mr. Williams lives in Columbia, Mo. Columbia is the seat of the University of Missouri. It is on a branch line of some railroad. Therefore Mr. Williams was late. He came up strong, however. "The idiot is the only man," he said, "that does not need preparation for his lifet's work. News paper men need education in their chosen field. They are not merely recording angels, they are inter preters and prophets. Moses was the first great editor. He wrote all the news, good and bad, that came under his observation. Luke was the greatest reporter. He wrote of things he saw and then added a touching human interest Great editors are great prophets they are the men who peer into the future and see the larger good. They work in the interest of the public and have a highly developed sense of personal service." To Take Business Course. Flavel Robertson and Leo Bozell will enroll in the Lawrence Business College next term. They will carry some University work on the side. We satisfy that hungry feeling at the College Inn. Good home made pies at the Peerless Cafe. New dates and figs at Vic's. Before you were married you bought a box of Wiedimanns candies. Has your wife received any in the last year or so? Hot soup for lunch every day at the Peerless Cafe. SPECAIL PICTURES TONIGHT AT THE AURORA, JOINING A FRAT, and two biograph pictures Try the nut crisp, brizil, pecans, and English walnuts at Wiedimanns. Eats better than it looks and looks fine. Take your meals at the Peerless. Salted almonds and salted peanuts just the thing for social gatherings, at Wiedimanns. Don't fail to go the Aurora tonight. ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY that you can get anywhere, and some things you can't, at MOFFETT'S. ANY COMPETITIVE PRICES MET. Both phones 312, 829 Mass. street. Students will find a good chicken dinner at the Fairfax for 25 cents on Sunday. Club stewards will never make mistakes by ordering their ice cream of Soxman. Bell 645, Home 358. We do particular cleaning and pressing for particular people. The Lawrence Pantatorium, 12 West Warren street. Phones 506. The electrical engineers had their pictures taken this week by Squires. Friday and Saturday are fruit salad days at Wiedimanns. Shultz, the tailor, has his spring samples in. We call for and deliver the party gloves we clean. Reynolds Pantatorium, 1019 Mass. Bell 1361, Home 5642. Annual K. N. G. hop. Ecke's hall, Jan. 21. Shanty's full orchestra. Admission $1. Everybody invited. LOST—A kite shaped pin, black and gold. Reward, return to 1011 Tenn. St. Bell2160. It will pay you to try the Fair fax meals. Quick service. 21 meals. $4.00. Special prices on all leather goods just now. Pillow covers nearly one-half price. See window at Boyles, 725 Mass. All flavors in ice cream and ice at Soxman's. If you wish MOFFETT to make your PHOTOGRAPH for the Annual, book your appointments early and avoid having to wait. Either phone 312. Loomas for senior pictures. Lost—A Vassar college seal pin; finder please return to registrar's office. Reward. Florence Barnard, 1231 La. st. Waterman's new self-filling Fountain pen is the very best self-filler offered. Let us show you. Boyles, 725 Mass. st. For Rent—Modern room, suitable for one or two boys, at 1218 Tenn. Bell 2101. We make a specialty of furnishing ice cream, etc., for parties and such like. Call E. G. Soxman & Co. Now is the time to begin to consider that spring suit. Schultz the tailor. Loomas Studio, 719 Mass. st. Almost a hundred different local view post cards are now sold for 1 cent each at McColloch's drug store. Club stewards will never make mistakes by ordering their ice cream of Soxman. Bell 645, Home 358. Lost—Fraternity pin, Pin Gamma Delta; return to 745 La. and receive reward. 18-21 Notice to Club Stewards: We have made special arrangements this year to provide the BEST of meats at the LOWEST prices. Call and see us. ELIOT & JOHNS, University Meat Market 1023 Mass, St. Both Phones 991 TELL US YOUR Piano Trouble We can help you out We make Pianos We rent Pianos We move Pianos We refinish Pianos We tune Pianos We sell Pianos on easy payments if desired. Bell Bros. Piano Co. MANUFACTURERS 925-927 Mass. St. -WE HAVE- Good Typewriters FOR RENT. BOUGHTON'S 1025 MASS. ST. Sale begins Jan. 17th and continues to Feb. 1st. Big bargains throughout the store in goods you need, at cost or less, Including, Books, box stationery, gold pens, teachers' bibles, framed pictures, books, WIP Paper rare bargains in this department. Supply your wants for spring. Come early for your Choice. CLEARANCE SALE J. A. KEELER 939 Mass St. Spring suits. Shultz, 911 Mass. up stairs. Safety === Service === Speed Dustless, perfect track,and new steel passenger equipment which is the finest equipment that money can buy一are afforded to patrons of the Union Pacific "The Safe Road to Travel" Electric block signals—dining car meals and service "Best in the World." For literature, information, rates, etc., call on or address E. E. ALEXANDER, C. T. A., 701 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas. H. G. KAILL, A. G. F. & P. A. Union Pacific R. R. Co., 901 Walnut St., Kansas City, Mo.