WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill- an account of Mt. Oread Society Polly Gowans, c'41, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 Dr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Davidson were dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Mu house last night. Dr. Brennan was in the department of chemistry. Harold W. Compton and Henry Widner of Pittsburg, were guests Saturday night at the Pi Kappa Alpha house. Watkins hall will hold open house tomorrow night from 7 to 8 o'clock The initiation of pledges of Sigma Eta Chi, Congregational church sorority, was held Friday evening at Evans Hearth. The meeting was in the form of a dinner followed by a memorial service Rev. Joseph King was the speaker. The following women were initiated: Lorraine Polson, c'41; Gayle Warren, c'41; Kathryn Werges, c'41; Jean Steele, c'41; Virginia Laughlin, c'42; Doris Twente, c'42; Mary Lou Holloway, c'42; Evelyn Rummel, c'42; Gregory Crawford, c'42; Frances Perkins, c'43; Durlee Pellins, c'42; Ruth Christianston; Dorothy Dale Dear; Ben吨婴 Lettra, fa'41. --bride's mother, Mrs. Avery Johnson, 645 Tennessee. Mrs. Chain is a member of Pi Beta Phi. Mr. Chair is a member of Phi Gamma Delta. They will be at home in Ablifer, where Mr. Chain is associated with his father in the Security Flour Mills. Additional to the nine Chi Omega initiates listed Tuesday are Anne Marie Carliele, c'42, and Ann Catherine Cosgrove, c'42. Week-end guests at the Delta Chi house were: Bill Barber, Emporia; Fergell Greml and Bill Meyer Wichita; and Hugh Hitton, 34. Sunday dinner guests at the Delta Chi house were: Bill Barber, Enporia; Doris Sholander, c.42; Madge Jones, c.42; Hugh Hiatt, Kansas City, Mo.; and Ted Muller. '38. Visitors at the Delta Chi fraternity house Sunday were: Mrs. L. M Troup and Elenor Troup of Kansas City; Dick Oster, Kansas City, Mo.; and William Burkholder, Valley Falls. Mr. John J. Moore, secretary of the Y.M.C.A was a dinner guest at the Delta Tau Delta屋 last evening. After dinner he spoke informally to the pledge class of the fraternity. The marriage of Jane Johnson, Is, to John Howard Chain, 37, took place yesterday at the home of the Alpha Kappa Psi, professional commerce fraternity, announces the pledging of Verre Merys 'b'uncl; and James Hydle, e'42. Shields Haerle, c'42, was a dinner guest Sunday at the Acacia house. Pi K. A.'s Celebrate National Founding 71 Years Ago Kappa Eta Kappa announces the pledging of Leland Freminth, e'42 and Richard Weber, e'40. The K.U. Dames sewing club will meet Thursday afternoon with Mrs Carl MacFarlane, 1343 Tennessee street. The Sigma Nu fraternity entertained with a dinner dance Saturday night at the Hotel Eldridge. The guests were: Betty Burray, ed'ncl; Helen Stransky; Jeanette Dunn of Kansas City; Ellen Irwin, ed'ncl; Ann Murray, fa'24; Hortense Horton, *;* 41; Helen Meycill, V4; *;* 43;凰McDonald, *;* 42; Louse Taylor, *;* 49; Virginia Hilbber of Kansas City; Helen Yelpman, *;* 39; Corin Heap-Henry, *;* 40; Katherine Goldsmith of Kansas City; Jane Anderson of Kansas City; Mary Markham, fa'29; Suzanne Lowderman, *;* 39; Barbara Edmonds, *;* 40; Meredith Dyer, fa'29; Martha Jane Starr, *;* 41; Marina Pennington, *;* 41; mary Neel, *;* 40; Betty Crawley, *;* 41; Mary Lewis, *;* 40; Shirley Ann Maupin, fa'29; Mary Ellen Schonberg, *;* 41; cuth Kollet;玛丽 Alice Horner, *;* 42; Patty Ledyard, *;* 42; Jeanne Sunderland, *;* 42; Elizabeth Kirsch, *;* 41; Bee Patton, *;* 40; Jane Schleagel, *;* 40; Mary Ewers, *;* 42; Peggy Wadhams, *;* 42; Virginia Appel, *;* 42; Margaret Gray, *;* 42; Mary Margaret Coogreve, *;* 40; Betty Bruner and Bette Riley of Columbia, M;*;* Patty Wadley, fa'ncl; Jean Dunham and Roberta Lutz of Kansas City; Jayne Echles, *;* cunel; and Julia Henry, ed ncl. Dinner guests at the Alpha Kappa Pal house Sunday were: Don Crane Profess. John Faust, Kenneth Middleton, gr.; and Loren McMarcock, gr. In addition to the Kansas delegation, others are expected from the University of Missouri, University of Nebraska, Kansas State College, and Members of the Beta Gamma chapter of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will attend the annual Founders' day dinner Friday night given to Delta Alumni chapter of Greater Kansas City, at the Hotel Phillips. T. M. Beaill, vice-president of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, from Norman, Okla., will speak. Next week he will speak at similar meetings at Joplin, Mo., Fayetteville, Ark, and Dallas, Tex. Herbert H. Burdick, the faculty of the University of Oklahoma, will accompany him. Suggest Shake-Up In Small Loans the Missouri School of Mines, all o. which have active chapters. Some hundred-odd cities and 76 college towns in the wedge March 1 to celebrate the 71st anniversary of the founding of the fraternity at the University of Virginia in 1868. In Chicago the alumni will hold their 21st annual dinner where they will again present the Distinguished Alumni Achievement Award to a prominent alumnis for his accomplishments during 1938. In Birmingham, Alabama, the largest banquet will be held with Joseph Bentonman, Muskegan, as the honored guest. Senators, congressmen, and others in Washington, D. C. will honor the anniversary. Topeka, March 1 — (UP) — The business of making small loans will undergo a sharp shake-up in Kansas if a bill introduced in the house of representatives by Representative J. Rubenstein, reaches the statute books. Several house members, who opposed the measure when it was discussed briefly for the first time in committee of the whole, contended A second drastic requirement is that anyone making such loans must first secure the permission of the state bank commissioner, who then will issue a license if the application is approved. One of the first regulations the bill seeks to make is that interest on loans of $1,000 or less shall not exceed ten per cent per year. Then follows a provision which many house members content leans toward what they termed "class legislation." This provision requires anyone who enters the small loan business to prove, "in form satisfactory to the laws of the state," that he has available for operation of such business at the location specified in the application, "liquid assets at least $10,000." "Such a law would put many Kansens, now in the business on a legitimate basis, entirely out of business and leave such business open only to those of wealth," one member declared. Date Chosen For Y.M.C.A. Election Rep. Joe Nickell, Topeka lawyer who championed the bill, said it was designated to regulate the loan business and to sound the death knell for "loan sharks operating in Kansas." that the bill, if enacted into law would make the loan business an "exclusive" affair. The second Thursday in March has been set as the date for Y.M.C.A. elections. The nominating committee will be composed of the senior members of the cabinet and a member of the Advisory board. Five vacancies in the advisory board will be filled by election of the general membership at the same time the student officers are elected The Advisory board of the YMCA. Faculty, alumni and townpeoples. the nominating committee will be Paul Mortiz, c'39; John Lintner, c'39; Earl Stuckenbruck, c'39; David Angevine, c'40; George Thomas, c'39; John McFarland, c'40. The constructor in the department of religion and Advisory Board member. Oread High Seniors to Present 'The Seven Sisters' The senior class play at Oread Training school will be "The Seven Sisters" by Edith Ellis, and it will be presented sometime in April. MEIN KAMPF Truyots are being held today and tomorrow under the direction of J Marc Jantzen and Miss Ruth Litchen, instructors in education, assisted by John Nelson, gr. a practical teacher in drama. Topeka Architect Chosen To Plan Proposed Armory By ADOLF HITLER First complete, unabridged edition in English Daily Kansan Contest Blank THE BOOK NOOK (021) Mark No. 3 — March 1, 1939 Write merchants name in top line of each section and number of votes in right-hand column. Sign lower line in presence of merchant. Receive his deposit Deposit cleaned blank at Granada before Saturday, midnight. March 1 $3.00 let us reserve a copy for you 1021 Mass 'Y' Commissions Visit Frazier's Studio Sundav Tel. 666 9 votes with merchant's signature A trip to Bernard "Poco" Fraizer's studio in the basement of Spooner-Thayer museum was the attraction at the meeting of the creative leisure M.Y.C.A. and the Y.M.C.A. at 2:00 Sunday afternoon. Students were shown how clay pots could be made of pottery were shown and the various processes in making pottery and satins explained. Every state and 47 foreign countries are represented in the Harvard University student body. Louis H. Spencer, Topke architect, was appointed Monday night by a meeting of the joint Chamber of Commerce and city council committee, to draw up preliminary plans for the new Lawrence armory. Spencer is expected to submit plans in the near future and work will proceed providing the public voices its approval of the project April elections. The new structure would cost approximately $15,000. In the class basketball games last night, the juniors beat the freshmen 23 to 19. Women's Intramurals High point girl in the game was Irene McAdoo, who scored 16 points for the juniors. Virginia Anderson made four points for the winners. Katherine Green contributed to the freshman, followed by Dorothy Smith, who made six points. REWARD: for return of "Outlines of Geology" by Lonwell, Knopf, and Flint. Call 1978. Dale Corley, 103 Total Votes WANT ADS LOST: Green and black Sheaffer fontain pen. Name Betty Jean Lost in Fraser or just out side northwest. Call 5421. -105 REWARD for return of lower top of a Conklin Fountain Pen. Jim Terrill. Phone 1978. We have the clothes that will mark you as being correctly dressed at the "Junior Prom" You get the "date" The "corsage" The "taxi" from Jewelry to Tux Suit Collars to "Tail Suit" All new, and this year styles are as different as the Waltz and Shag Tux Suits $25 & $35 Tails $35 Arrow Shirts $2.50 & $3 Formal Ties 75c Black Hose 50 & 75c Jewelry $1 to $5 At the same time the juniors were defeating the freshman, the seniors were trouncing the sophomores, 27 to 9. Not too late to fit you out sir! And correctly. D. J. Willetts led the senior scoring with 15 points. Margaret Vanage leaved seven points. Betty Bridges made seven points for the losing Gled to show you The class game scheduled for tomorrow night has been postponed until Tuesday night. At 8:30 that night the freshmen will meet the sophomores the sophomores will play the juniors. The Home of Arrows 24 votes with merchant's signature Irene McAdoo, ed'40, won the basketball free throw contest with 21 baskets out of 25. WIN 6 DR. GRABOW PIPES IN AN EASY AD WRITING CONTEST The first round of the ping pong singles tournament should be turned There's Nothing to Buy DR.GRABOW DELUXE COMPANION CITY Dr. Gribow pipes areipes Dr. Gribow smoked by machine, with fine tobacco, to make them sweet They're in girl gift! They cost only $1.50 that's the story of how you get a same size space, using the Dr. Grabow facsimile cut. The best aid wins a set of Dr. Grabow Pre-loaded Pipes in a gift box. All entries become the property of Writes as many ads as you wish, but do not use any network work as no traffic will be sent. The D Grabble Ad Editor i.Daily Volunteer by qualifying in the training will appear in the ads. The winning ad will appear in the March 22 issue of this paper. All decisions final. Closing date March 11. NO BITE.. NO BREAKING IN.. NO BITTER TASTE FOR sheer exhilation and well-being you'll delight in Arrow's new formal attire. Born with a royal touch the *ARROW* LIDO dress shirt is designed to make it easy to wear in the new narrow bosom. Even suspender loops and a trouser tape are provided to keep the shirt well behaved and always in place. You wear it or single breasted dinner shirt if you want it. The formal Arrow white tiles are superb—self knotted, yet launcherable. The butterfly type is the one preferred by Arrow wing collars . . . HOST, PROM and LIDO, are best sellers. 35c. How to feel comfortable in a Dress Shirt One of America's favorite dress shirts is the Arrow Shortchair. Shoreham's attached collar is most comfortable, and its soft, pleated bosom-like good manners — is never out of place. You'll like this popular dress shirt. ARROW SHOREHAM $3 No ordinary shirt is Arrow's new Lido. First, you can't find better tailoring thanArrow puts into it. Second, its handsome,narrow bosom thwarts balloons and makes a nice pape-nder loops keep it forever in place. ARROW LIDO $3 All Arrow Shirts have the Mitoga SHAPED Fit and are Sanfiorid-Shrunk (fabric shrinkage less than 1%). 63 votes with merchant's signature in tomorrow or defaulted, according to Miss Ruth Hoover. City planning is now offered Connecticut College students in a special course called "clvlc art." --- PATEE All Shows 15c Any Time Ends Tonite 'PRIDE OF THE NAVY' JAMES DUNN ROCHELLE HUDSON "GOLD DIGGERS IN PARIS" RUDY VALLEE News and "Mental Poise" and ELVIRY THURSDAY 3 Big Days A-STOMPIN' AN' A-SINGIN' AN' A-SWINGIN' T'BEAT ALL GIT-OUT! WEAVER BROS. and ELIVIRY "Swing Your Lady" "Ghost Town Riders" Humphrey Bogart Louise Fazenda 2nd Feature Two-Gun Terror of the Plains! BOKER BAKER Get on in first Thrillin' Chapter of Our New Succes! "DICK TRACY RETURNS" 12 votes with cashier's signature The Hill's Hangout! Continuous From 2 Every Day! The Grandest College Musical of Them All! "COLLEGE SWING" Martha Raye - Bob Hope Burns & Allen - Ben Blue NOW! AND THURSDAY 10c 'til 7; then 15c EXTRA! "THE PRIVATE LIFE OF MUSSOLINI!" An Outstanding Novelty Feature! Produced by EDWIN W. HULLINGER Former K.U. Journalism Professor Intimate Highlights in the Life of the World's No. 2 Dictator! Sunday! 'Cocoa nut Grove' 12 votes with cashier's signature DICKINSON Last Times Today Dorothy Lamour in "ST. LOUIS BLUES" Starts THURSDAY Watch for Our "BLESSED'EVENT" 1-4 votes with cashier's signature