TUESDAY. OCTOBER 17 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society Betty Coulson, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 Theta Tau, oldest engineering fraternity of its kind in the United States, held its annual Founders' Day banquet in the Memorial Union building at 1 p.m. Sunday. Guest speakers were Ray Lawrence, representing the Kansas City alumni association, and Mr. H. H. Hopkins of Chicago, past national grand regent. Zeta chapter of Thetai Tuo here in Lawrence was founded in 1912, eight years after the national order was instituted at the University of Minnesota. The Kansas chapter held formal initiation services Sunday morning for Bill Douce, c'41; Bill Shears, c'40; Charles Baer III, c'41; Leon Schroetter, c'40; Tom Arbuckle, c'40; Bryan O'Bryan, c'41; Charles Cavonaugh, c'40; Bill Duncan, c'umel; and Harold Hight, c'40. Chemical Fraternity Initiates Kappa, Kansas chapter, and Beta Delta, Missouri School of Mines chapter, of Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity, host services at the EHSI Bailey Chemical laboratories Saturday night. University initiates were: Dr. Walter W. Deschner, assistant professor in chemical engineering Frank Hass, *c*40; Carl Johnson, george Leipman, *c*41; Ellsworth Stevens, *c*41; and Elien Stevenson, er. Midnight refreshments were served at the chapter house after the initiation. Kappa Alpha Theta announces the initiation of Jean Ann Cardwell, clue1; Jean Wenner, clue2; Lounsie Burchard, clue3; cue4; Alice Hartington, f6.43 K. U Dames Will Play Bridge The regular bridge group of the K.U. dames, association of wives of students, will meet this afternoon at the home of Mrs. R. N. Palmer, 1231 Kentucky street. The beginners' bridge club will meet in the Women's lounge of Frank Strong hall at 7:30 o'clock tonight. Chi Omega announces the engagement of Janet Wilkinson, c'40 to Clarence Winslow of Kansas City, Mo. Winslow was a member of the Kansas chapter of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Sunday Guests Still Roll In Delta Chi: Jean Merrill, c'43. Nobody eats at home these days. At least that's what the guest lists issued by sorority and fraternity were following were included for Sunday: WANT ADS LOST: Black coin purse containing two activity books, names on booke Nadine Hunt and Dorothy Page. Call Nadine Hunt, phone 860.-23 LOST: Barrel to black and brown Sheaffer pen. Yeager Thomas engraved on barrel. Call 2903. -25 LOST: A black leather zipper case containing a Spanish book and a pair of rimless glasses. Please re-insert the case, 1731 TELEPHONE, 2648R. -25 WANTED: Three girls to board. Located on top of Hill. Phone 964.-24 FOUND: Zipper key folder containing 5 keys. Owner may have same by calling at KANSAN office and paying for this ad. Initials R.W.R. on folder. -2* LOST: Man's small, yellow gold Elgin wrist watch with leather strap band. Reward. Loren Holllam. Phone 2581. -24 Reoile Durand, Mimi Hanna; and R. A. Masters, Kansas City, Mo. Kappa Sigma: Jeanne Brusca, Christian Wilson; and Chrissie Christman. Alpha Chi Omega; Mrs. H. H Rich, ColdWater; Mrs. B. Musselman, Arkansas City; Ms. Arden Morris, Mrs. Jerry Lues, Mary O'Brien, and Betty Aines, all of Kansa City, Mo.; Grace Vaines, Clay Center; Elizabeth Ann Bush, Englewood; Anna Katherine Kiehl, m^43; John Crary, m^43; and Frank Goodwin, b'41. Kappa Alpha Theta: Mr, and Mrs Woodward, Salina. Gamma Phi Bhi: Mr, and Mrs J. W. Edminton, and Virginia Edminson, at Allochism; John Page Jr., c'40; Dick Newlin, c'40; Charlie Henshall, '140; and Clem Fairchild c'40. Phi Kappa Psi; Betty. Jeanne Hess, c4; M31; Mirunhill, chf4; Doris Johnson, c4; Suzanne McNaughten; and Bill Capes, member of the Phi Pi chapter at Colorado University. Phi Gamma Delta: Mr. and Mrs. James Nelson, Toppea; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Black, Wichita; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Morse, Abilene; Marrion McKay, Jenne Fitzgerald, and Bain Frozier, all of El Dovare; Anne Carlisle, c'42; Diane Hass, c'42; and Janet Rober, c'43. Alpha Tau Omega; Dorothy Wise V41; Kay Stimson, cuncl; and Marjorie Smith, c'42. Sigma Nu: La Dean Davis, c'42. Signum Na: La Dean Davis, c42. Chi Omega: Joan Armacost and Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Faubian, all of Kansas City, M.oc; Bill McGimmis c41; Dave Young, e40; and Jack Dumagin, c42. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Nance Praath, c 43; Mary Fitzgerald, c 40; Becky Tremble, c 43; Mrs. Harold of Anthony; Jane Veatch, fa 43; Jama Lewis, ca 43; Marjorie Heimbrook, fa 41; D Dorothy Worth, ca 41; Joan Edmonson, fa 41; Kiskaden, fa 40; Norma Lee, ca 40; Betty Bell, ca 42; Dorothy Westfall, c 43; Francelle Zentmeyer, ca 40. Jo Anne Tagrant, c'43; Mary Alice Livington, c'40; Mary Bee Wier, c'41; Betty Campbell, c'42; Elizabeth Pears, c'42; Elizabeth Evans, c'41; Betty Blue, c'42; Celia Jane Boggs; Chestine Wilson; Diana Irwin, c'42; Mary Ewers, c'42; Carolyn Green, c'41; Mary艾莉 Elliot, fa'41; Cora Hepworth, c'42; Jean Hishaw; Virginia Bleanon; Jean Donelon, c'42; Ruth Rice; Nelson Sullivan; and Jean Bailey, c'43. Kappa Sigma fraternity announces the formal initiation of Carlos Vogeler, c'41. A. T.O. Initiates Four Alpha Tau Omega formally initiated the following men last night: Gerald Wright, c'umh; Leon Bereskin, c'umh; Michael C.42; and Brian Schroeder, c'omh; Weekend guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house were: Josephine Stevens, Kanaas City, Mo.; Peggy Morse, Abilene; Luke Taylor and Betty Wilson, both of Hutchinson; and Betty Amy Rhodes, Topela. Virginia Froman, Kansas City, Mo. Scott Fast, Seattle. The Kansas City Mothers' club of Delta Upson held a lunchroom and meeting at the chapter house yesterday. Virginia Freman, Kansas City, Mo; Elizabeth Newman, Fort Scott; and --anne Atlanta Fair offered a "Hall of Swing" with top-note dance bands as a side attraction, competing with a mammoth livestock show and a southwide exhibition of farm produce. **TODAY—** Y.M.C.A. membership dinner, ballroom; College faculty meeting, **Frank Strong auditorium**, 4:30 p.m.; final freshman debate tryouts, Green hall little theater, 4:30 p.m.; Student Christian Federation Myers hall, 4:30 p.m.; Y.W.C.A. personal relations conference, Henley house, 4:30 p.m. 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY - X.W.C.A.-W.S.G.A. Gingham Frolic, Memorial Union ballroom, 4-5:30 PM What's Happening This Week: THURSDAY- Sanakan club banquet, Kansei room, Memorial Union building; Phi Chi Thieu; 3:30-5:30 p.m.; Y.W. Freshman commission, Henley house, 4:30 p.m. Y.M. Freshman commission, Men's lounge, Memorial Union building, 4:30 p.m. On the Campus: FRIDAY - Freshman Barnet with Charlie Barnet, Memorial Union barnroom, 9-12 p.m.; SLEEE, dinner, Memorial University, 6:30 p.m; Y. Reintner, museum, 8-11 p.m. SATURDAY—Football; the university plays Oklahoma at Norman; College hockey play day. Marian Holefelder, Atchison, were weekend guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house. Laura Helen Johnson, ed'39, Kansas City, Kan., and Mary Lou Oliver, ed'39, Kansas City, Mo. were weekend guests at Walkins --anne Atlanta Fair offered a "Hall of Swing" with top-note dance bands as a side attraction, competing with a mammoth livestock show and a southwide exhibition of farm produce. Prof. and Mrs. E. C. Bucbler, with their daughters, Phyllis, Beatrice, and Rosemary, were dinner guests at Wadkins hall Sunday. Atlanta, Ga. (UF)—Fall time is county fair day down South, and the old-fashioned carnival calligraphy are competing with big-name swing bands as harvest-happy farmers seek to earn money jokes at Fatima, the dancing girl The Cherokee Indian Reservation in Western North Carolina has its special Indian Fair, with Cherokee ball games, archery and blow gun contests, pottery and basket shows and even an Indian baby show. The fairs range in size from the larger Southeastern Fair and Livestock Exposition at Atlanta to small fairs in southern states to 10,000 population or less. "Alluringly lovely, sprightly cheerful girls" plus free club acts and horse races awarded customers at the Winston-Salem, N. C., Fairis through the flue-cured to-bacons belt are gay affairs this year, despite a depressing selling season close of the auction markets close. Crops may be bad and prices worse, but the farmers usually reserve some cash to be spent around the multiduous midways that spring up during the autumn months. The Mississippi Free State Fair this year celebrates the discovery of oil in Yazoo county, a recent event expected to be highly profitable in the future for land-owners in the country. Southland Goes To Countu Fair The fair season will last until late November. around our stadium to be turned on at night—three-piece bathing suits for all male students—dress our drum majerule in full length skirts; 6:30 curfew for all Beta's putting an ending to their saparilla nipping after 10 p.m. have the Graduate Magazine, Kansas Engineer, and the Freshman women seeking nomination for either vice-president or secretary of the freshman class must submit their applications to the committee in the Memorial Union building Thursday at 4:30 or 7 p.m. Members of the committee to consider the applications are Velma Wilson, c'40, Maurine Mong, c'40, Maurine Gray, c'40, Mary Garrison, c'40, and Agnes Mumert, c'40. NOTICE (Continued from page one) On the Shin Sour Owl stumped "Censored and Approved" by the dems of men and women subject to the approval of two-thirds of the M.Y.C.A. and Watkins hall members—and (this'll slay you) shoot down all students who have read and approved of Steinbuck's vulgar novel "Grapes of Wrath." After these reforms are instituted, our uncle Zuke can visit us without being shocked at the University's worldiness Hey! Rake Robertson! "How about making Becky Tremble, the Theta pledge, your glamour-girl subject in the next Sour Owl. At the moment putting the men out would make her a swell Christmas present. The Acacias, being informal gents, leave their pajamas on while eating breakfast. Max Fessler, being an absent-minded professor, left his on under his trousers—to meet a class rather day. Domestication has set in in the Fowler-Meininger case Tildie sits and knits while Walt sits and edits the Sunday Kanan on Sundatitudes. "Dangwood" Randall Rides Again—Like a flash in the pan she flipped herself madly down the Chi Omega steps and into the arms of "Chibay" Winslow. "Chinzy" had just finished the last song before Olivia Oh upon the announcement of his engagement to Janet Wilkinson, and Mary Louis was late again. Bryon Sarvis, in his Psychology of Advertising and Salesmanship class—'Now, children, what does the 'Mush' need to succeed?' 'Mush' tacked Neal Lypsom. We really know—know—we only heard that Alpha Chi Marq Marigett Cosgrove is happily submerged in married bliss with Phi Pai Kirk Owens. It is attending Colorado U, this fall and when Miss Marq Marigett came from a visit to State this week she muttered something about being married. Anyway she has a marriage ring on her finger. THE CAMPUS FAVORITE And Styled by M GREGOR proving to be one of the most popular coats of the season. THE SPORT CLOTH JACKET - IDEAL for all out door wear and knocking about the Hill. - Colors—Gamel - Green. Luggage - Sizes 36 to 46 TAMPAX now IN TWO SIZES COME IN - LOOK OVER OUR SPORTSWEAR DEPARTMENT Junior Tampax for the waning days is of smaller diameter than Regular Tampax and less absorbency. Otherwise identical Largo Economy Size Box of 40—98c Junior and Regular Box of 10-33c NOTIONS First Floor BOOK SALE! ABOUT 2000 DISCARDED REFERENCE BOOKS Values 32c to $5.00 Now Going AT (Nothing Over 50c) $ 1^{\mathrm{c}} $ Per Ounce $ 1^{\mathrm{c}} $ (Nothing Over 50c) NEARLY EVERY SUBJECT REPRESENTED THIS WEEK ONLY! "Come In — Browse" MAIN STORE 1401 OHIO YOUR TELEPHONE is carrying quite a load In the last few years, taxes on telephone service in Kansas have been growing. Last year they amounted to about a million and a quarter dollars—an average of $6 for each telephone we serve. For every Bell telephone in Kansas, taxes take a sum equal, on the average, to two months of payments on each telephone. Taxes are necessary, of course. But the fact remains that increasing taxes, along with increasing wages, are responsible for increasing costs. And in spite of better methods and constant economies on the job, the costs of furnishing your telephone service have been increasing at a faster rate than this company's revenues in Kansas. SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO. Reowlly, dearie, you didn't suppose I'd continue dating him if he hadn't invited me to the Frolic . . . ! It's the limit --- 600 tickets --- no more Advance Sale $2 At the Gate $2.25 Purchase of a ticket today is your best insurance for a place in the Memorial Union Ballroom Friday night for ... Charlie Barnet at the FRESHMAN FROLIC FRIDAY,OCT.20 Tickets at--- Bell's Music Store Union Building Business Office