Friday. March 17, 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the - Hill - Alpha Tau Omega announces the pledging of Merle Bempelt, c'42. Theta Epsilon, Baptist church sorority, met Tuesday evening at the host of Poik and Mrs. L. E. Sisson, at the Sisson Sisson, Sisson, refreshments were served. Kappa Alpha Theta entertained the Beta Theta Pi fraternity with an hour dance Tuesday evening. Estelle Hall, Pittsburgh, and Margaret Stough, Mound Valley, are guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Mr. and Mrs. W, W. Eichenberger Macksville, were guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Wednesday. Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the marriage of Jean Wyatt to Jack Bridendal of Kansas City. The marriage took place in Salina last evening. Mr. Bridendal is a member of Phil Delta Theta fraternity. Thursday dinner guests at the Chi Omega house were: Prof. and Mrs. H, L. Smith, Prof. and Mrs. John B. Virtue, Prof. and Mrs. C. J. Posey, and Miss Beulah Morrison, professor of psychology. Charles Nice, c39, was a dinner guest at the Phi Mu Alpha house last evening. Dr. and Mrs. H, H. Lane announces the engagement of their daughter Eleanor Hope, to R. Richard Jenner of Chancellor. Miss Lane attended the University and is a member of Alpha Xi Delta sorority. Mr. Jenner is a member of Kappa Eta Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity. Dinner guests fat the Phi Kappa Pi paternity last night were: Harold Addington, c'38; Warren Anderson, c'41; Lyle Willis, c'41; Louis Fokkele, c'39. Alpha Tau Omega fraternity entertained with a buffet supper and hour dance Thursday evening. Music was furnished by Clyde Smith's orchestra. Guests included: Maxine Almon, c4; Betty Coulson, c4; Jane Eckles, c'uncel; Olga Farey, Michigan University, Alicia Houston. Ruth Hudson, Ruth Hudson. Sam Kellan, c4; Marceline Vine, c41. Gail Little, f'aunl; Marioul Miller, c'11; Ada Mosey, c'11; Ann Murray, fa'42; Mollie North, c'40; Pat Owens, b'39; James Parry, c'42; Peteretmeyer, fa'42; Shirley Jean Ruble, c'41; Virginia Ruse, c'41; Mike Ishida, c'41; Springer, c'40; Geraldine Uml, ed'40; Le Vera Umbach, c'41; Patty Jane Wadley, f'aunl; Joan Whitenburg, and June Whittenburg. Joseph Murphy, c'42, and Annette Reid, b'39, were dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house Thursday. Dinner guests at the Phi Dhi Theta house last night were: Maxine Miller, c'41; Bob Tibbets, c'40; Mr. C. K. Nessebrode, Kansas City, Kan; and Bud Tholen of Leaven- worth. Dr. E. F. Stuart and Mr. J. E. Heiser of Atchison were guests at the Delta Tau Delta house yester- day. Dinner guests at the Delta Upsite house last night were: Ruth Killett; Mary Elizabeth Kirsch, clyns; Alys Magill, clyn; Jean WANT ADS WANTED: Laundry. Shirts 10s, rough dry, 7c a pound. Shirts finished 8c each. Family bundles finished 10c a pound. Phone 24438. PATEE All Shows 15c Any Time TODAY AND SATURDAY 2 FIRST-RUN HITS! America's Favorite Action Gal Comes to Life! "Adventures of JANE ARDEN" ROSELLA TOWNE WILLIAM GARGAN 2nd Feature — ROY ROGERS "ROUGH RIDERS ROUND-UP" MARY HART News and "Dick Tracy" SUNDAY "NEWSBOY'S_HOME" McFarland, c'42; and Mary Jane Robinson, c'42. Clifford P. O. Porborne, associate professor of philosophy, was a dinner guest at the Stigma Alpha Epilon house Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lyons of Coldwater, Kan., were lunchroom guests at theh Kappa Sigma house Wednesday. Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of Loris Boster, c'42. Guests at the Delta Chi bifte dinner and hour dance Thursday evening were: Pauline Sheerman Better Brown, c'40; Joyce Seaman, c'38; Doris Twentie, c'42; Betty Lou Green, c'42; Mary Elizabeth Weir, c'unc1; Ruth Linck, c'40; Madge Jones, c'42; Caroleyn Humphrey, c'41; Betty Burry, ed unc1; Berna- dine Hall, fa unc1; Jean Werner, fa 42; Dorsis Shelander, c'42;贝特 Godfry; Jane Barnes, fa 42; Barbara Daniels, c'unc1; and Levina Rich- ards, c'42. Guest at the Pi Beta Phi house for lunch yesterday were: Alice Schwartz, fa'uncl; Mary Jo Connelle, c'uncl; and Betty Jane Sayles c'40. Band Gives Fifth Broadcast Monday The University Band, directed by Russell L. Wiley, will present the fifth in its series of radio broadcasts Monday night from 8 to 3:30 over the Kansas network. To make the series of broadcasts possible, he has set up the date of the annual spring band concert to March 30. The four stations which compose the network broadcasting Monday night's program are WIBW, Topeka KANS, KWIS; KCKN, Kansas City; and KSAL, Wichita. WIBW will broadcast the concert and the other three stations will rebroadcast it. Outstanding on the program will be Techiklowsky's "Concerto for flute," by Jan Chlapisu, professional accompanist to Hal Dellinger. f'49. The band will play Allard's "The Skyliner March" and open and close the broadcast with the Alma Mater, "Crimson and the Blue," "Trium-virate," by Ernest Williams will be played by the band's cornet trio instead of "Three Solitaire" by Victor Herbert as previously announced. The next band broadcast will be Monday. April 3. Metzler and Padden Secure Jobs Metzler and Padden Secure Jobs Donald Metzler, e39, and W. E. Padden, e39, have secured positions in the National Survey. The two mechanical engineers will go into southwestern Kansas with the Survey. **Come in today and see the Jarman Style Charts. Let us give you this tip—set out your suit-tie combinations. And let us show you, while you're in, the other ways in which Jarman leads the suit—and in comfort, in real wear value.** (as first shown in Esquire) Economy Bloc Threatens to Cut Relief Request HAYNES & KEENE Spot Cash Store 819 Mass. Washington, March 17—(UP) —The Democratic economy bloc in the house threatened today to cut Press Freedom protections for a request for an additional $150,000. The house deficiency appropriations subcommittee has not discussed a compromise figure yet, but some of its members are talking about shopping $25,000,000 or $50,000,000 from the bill. - House Deficiency Appropriations Subcommittee Has Not Considered Comprison Figure $5 TO $750 MOST STYLES While the subcommittee awaited full data on relief expenses, policies and payrolls. Works Progress Administrator F. C. Harrington prepared to issue orders this weekend for relief expenses of relief rolls by 400,000 persons. Harrison's orders will be mailed within the next 72 hours. Conference with WPA's nine regional directors, he has arranged a schedule to fire 400,000 early in April, 600,000 early in May and 200,000 more in June. Discharge of these 1,200,000 persons would bring relief rolls down to 1,800,000 by the end of June. Cuts Are Needless Preparations for the cuts, Harrington said, were necessary inasmuch as the agency must assume that only the $25,000,000 voted by congress last month will be available. In even congress votes the new request of $150,000,000, or a part of the schedule would be weeded. WPA officials said reductions would be based on ability of individual areas to best absorb the shock of the cuts rather than a flat naton-wide reduction. The workers alliance has announced that it will poll all WFA workers on feasibility of a "jobless march" on the capital or an dismissal orders are received. Meanwhile, there was continued pressure for an investigation of WPA. Rep. Eugene E. Cox (D-Ga), introduced a resolution in the house that would authorize the appropriations committee to invest gore relief and its administration of provide $30,000 to finance the inquiry. In a radio address last night, Rep. Clifton A. Woodrum, D.(Da, Vn), called for a complete accounting of the costs of $250-$250, 000,000 appropriated this year. To Make Investigation The last figures made public by the WPA were on Feb. 18, which revealed 3,010,000 persons on relief. The latest chart shows that employment on WPA drapped at 2 of April, Feb. 25, and 2,997,118 on March 11. Justice Harvey to Speak At Phi Alpha Delta Banquet Justice W. W. Hervey, of the Kansas supreme court, will be the guest speaker at the banquet given by Phi Alpha Delta, national legal fraternity, at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, at Wisdemann's. The banquet, given in honor of the newly initiated members, will have as guests the Benton chapter from the University of Kansas City, the Benson chapter from Washburn College, and William O'Shea, national justice of the organization from Chicago. Justice Harvey will speak or "Provisions in Kansas Probate and Real Property Codes." Your shirt drawer isn't complete without an ARROW HITT! More men wear the Arrow HITT shirt than any other non-wilt-collar shirt in the world! Because: (1) Its collar gives your Hitt a starch-like neatness with soft-collar comfort . . . (2) Its incomparableArrow tailoring steps up your appearance . . . (3) It is Sanlorized, guaranteed never to shrink! . . . Come in and get your copies of this best seller today. Arrow HITT is $2 SHORT NECK! Wear Arrow GORDON or TREND-long points give your neck altitude. Are You Collar Blind? If you want to make the most of your face, select Arrow white shirts with the right style collar to fit your type of neck. Arrow whites are world-famous, revolutionary in design and renown for the best-fitting, best-looking collars that ever circled a neck. Arrow whites go with all your suits, always smart, always right. LONG NECK! Wear ARROW WINDEN leather collar—short points down altitude, low NORMAL NECK! Wear Arrow RADNOR — round points, very tight — rows look well on you Alumni Start World Cruise; Attend Session at Oxford Ghester Woodward, '96, prominent alumnus and former president of the state alumni association, and Mrs. Woodward, '00, are off on another of their world cruises. The Woodward made their first stop last Monday in Los Angeles, where Mr. Woodward addressed the KU. Alumni association, of which his son Tom, 20, is president. From Los Angeles, the Woodwards will journey to San Francisco, then to Japan, China, India, the Suzu Canal, the Mediterranean Sea, and to England. Gordon Oxford and Trump are two Arrow shirts every college man should own . . . they're long on wear and short on the purse-shrubs. Only $2. ARROW SHIRTS Arrow shirts are Sanforized-Shrunk (fabric shrinkage less than 1%) Although Woodward graduated from the School of Pharmacy of the University in 1886, he still finds time for more school work. This is why he attends lectures at the summer session of Oxford University in England. DICKINSON NOW Thru SATURDAY CHARLES LAUGHTON in THE BEACHCOMBER Already Nominated as One of the Ten Best for 1939! ADDED HITS! Schubert's Unimplied Symphony Betty Boop Cartoon Fox News Grantland Rice Sportsreel SUNDAY SUNDAY Russell To Evaluate School Dr. F. O. Russell, associate professor of education and director of Oreund Training school, will go to Seattle to evaluate the high school there. Quill Club to Reorganize Thursday Evening at Frasor The University chapter of the American College Quill Club will have an important reorganization meeting Thursday evening, to formulate plans for a drastic change in policy from that of former leaders. Leo Freed, c'40, Chancellor, announced today. All old members, natives, and pledges are to attend at 7:30 in the Green Room of France has the *Bible* of Christ. To approach mid-sister examine. ROTHSCHILD'S HAS THE CLOTHES Youthfully Yours 895 Two piece casual dress of Shetland wool. Gay swing skirt topped by a rakish, embroidered jacket. Sizes 9 to 15. Rothschild's ELDRIDGE HOTEL Every school boy knows the story of Abraham Lincoln. Few college graduates take time to think of what odds he overcame to become President. In the above illustration the artist crystallizes the historical legend which was an important factor of Lincoln's growth. He studied persistently in the unsteady light from flames in a fire-place. Had Lincoln been of less-hardy mold his eyesight might have failed him at an early age. But his whole life was bound up in hardships—akin to the age. In 1939 the luxuries of a luckier Lincoln are commonplace or necessity. Our light comes from lamps of scientific eye-ease construction. Through one medium, another product of the progress of our age, such former luxuries are made universal because they fall in a price range most of us can pay. That medium is advertising. Advertising is the blood of large scale production which allows low cost on goods. Modern men may ride the crest of progress already made toward Shangri-Las only dreamed of by Lincolnns.