TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1928 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS --- 1 PAGE THREE Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society - an account of Mt. Oread Society M. JEAN CASKEY, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call K.U.215 after 5, call 2702-K3 Other guests were: Olive Harte, c18 Higiene Lee Williams, c41 Hilary McWilliams, c40 Elizabeth Dearborn, c41 Wilma Stewart, c41 Betty Coulson, c49 Mary Meyers, c18 Marilou Miller, f41 Martina Markwell, c41 Jane Cowles, c41 Michelle McKenny, c41 Pat Owen, b19 Tilda Fowler, c41 Marjorie Smyth, c19 Moraine Moore, c41 Betty Brown, c41 Virginia Gray, c41 Rene Kiskadden, f41 Ruth Lickin, h41 Hannah Hanlon, d41 Donna Hughes, fa41 Mary Bett Coidale, c41 Florence Fellow, h41 Heddon, h41 Ernestine Swaford, f41 Margaret Lecy, c41 Alcean Jones, c41 Taylor, f41 Jean Talbott, c41 Orphna Jane Smith Nancy Cochrane, c41 Nancy and Mr. Johns Lewis, fort Scott Mr. and Mrs. Johns Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. Deng Gough, Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Buchanan, La Members of Alpha Tau Gamma fraternity entertained with a formal Christmas dance Dec. 17 at the hallway in the Memorial Union building. During intermission the guests were provided with refreshments and entertainment at the De Luxe cafe. The chaperons for the evening were: Mrs. William Huttig, Mrs. Edda Patterson, Mrs. John Terry, and Mrs. Harry Russell. Invited as special guests were members of the Kansas State chapter of the fraternity at Manhattan. Ki Phappa Pai fraternity held election last night, and the following officers were elected: President, Ted North, b38; vice-president, Tom Strickland, c38; treasurer, Neal Cook, c38; secretary, Martin Thomas, c39; messenger, Bill Lenhart, c40; sergeant-arms, Smith Ainsworth, c39; chapain, Bob Hunt, c39; Pam-Hellenic representative, Lester Combs, b39. Miss Jean Clark, former member of the St. Louis Municipal Opera company, and James R. Patterson, reporter on the Kansas City Star and a graduate of the University, served as a curator for Church in Paola Saturday. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Leonard S. Kent, pastor. Alpha Chi Omega announces the engagement of a former University student, Margaret Lockard, to Harold Hedges, a graduate of the University. Mr. Hedges is an alumnus of Delta Tau Delta. Miss Lockard and Mr. Hedges live in Kansas City, Mo. Classified Ads IVA'S LOST: Monday afternoon between Fraser hall and Rowland Book Store No.1, $10 bill. Reward. Phone 2877, Vela Fulk. -71 I V A S Shampoo and Wave 35c Complete Permanents $1.50 up Phone 533 941/2 Mass, St. SHAMPOO and 25c wage, drip Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and Wave, dried, 50c End Curls $1.00 up, Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up, complete MICKY BEAUTY SHOP 732¹ Mass. Phone 2353 SKATES and SLEDS GUNS and AMMUNITION Basketballs RUTTER'S SHOP Your Locksmith 1014 Mass. St. Phone 319 WAVE, new styles, any style 25d firecracked SHAMPOO 35d firecracked Economy prices on other beauty work also. END CURLS, $1 up, inquire 7 Experienced Teachers New Equipment Added IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP 941'l Mass. S., Phone 533 Next door Keeler Book Store WAVO BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo ... 25c up Finger Waves ... 25c (dried) Permanents ... 2.50 up 05 ... 091 Miss. St. Phone 95 — 921 Miss. St. TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920 - 12 Mass. Phone 12 ☆ ☆ ☆ Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Polutus, Rollette, N.D., announce the marriage of their daughter, Mary Patricia, to Edward R. Ash, c.40, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ash of Wichita. The wedding took place Dec. 24 in Excelsior Springs, Mo., with the Rev. A. Hedges, under the presidency of Mr. Ash, performing the nuptial service. The wedding day was the twenty-ninth anniversary of the parents of Mr. Ash. Mrs. Ash is a graduate of Mary's Academy, Willow City, N.D., and later attended the Jamesstown College, Jamesstown, N.D. Mr. Ash is manager of the recreation room at the Memorial Union building. ☆ ☆ ☆ Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, will give a dinner for members of Theta Sigma Phi professional journalism society, chisla theological college, Colonial Tea Room. The dinner will be followed by an hour dance. ☆ ☆ ☆ The University Women's Club will entertain with a tea Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock in the Memorial Union building. Mrs. Carl Althaus is general chairman in charge. All members of the club are invited to attend. ☆ ☆ ☆ Stanley Lindley, '27, son of Chancellor E. H. Lindley, spent the holidays visiting his parents here in Lawrence. Mr. Lindley is now doing clinical work in the medical school of the University of Minnesota. Mr. and Ms. Leo Flickenger of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, announce the birth of a son Dec. 21, 1937. Mrs. Flickenger, the former Gertrude Searey, '28 of Leavenworth, was a journalism major. ☆ ☆ ☆ Kappa Alpha Theta announces the marriage of Jean Haines, 37, of Augusta, to Ben A. Barteles, 36, Law College, whose an event of Dec. 29 in Augusta. Jeannemet January, c.39, has been elected president, and Rena Corbett, c.40; vice-president, of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. ☆ ☆ ☆ Charlene Barber, fa'39, was a luncheon guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house yesterday noon. Annie Green, '35, of the Department of Justice in Washington, was a visitor on the Campus yesterday. La Riene Nash of Topeka is spending a few days at the home of Prof and Mrs. Bert A. Nash. Sigma Kappa announces the engagement of Keith Whitelitz, gr. Lawrence, to Keuil Starr, csp, of Eudora ☆ ☆ ☆ Wendell Layman, fs, is spending a few days at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity house. Mimiscapolis, Jan. 3. —(UP)Dr. Victor Heuer, traveler, lecturer and author, told a University of Minnesota audience that developing an available alfalfa salad would add valuable elements to the American diet. Dr. Heiser Boosts Alfalfa Be it enacted by the Associated Men of the University of Kansas: Section 1. That section five be amended to read as follows: The division of net sales, manager and his assistants, forty per cent to the editor-in-chief and his assistants, and twenty per cent to the Kansas business manager and his assistants, made in the following manner. Following publication of each issue, profits, if any, shall be determined and divided, according to the percentage assigned by editor, and S10 to Signal Delta Chi, according to the 40 per cent clause stated above, provided that the total payments received each to the business manager and editor and 20 per cent to Signal Delta Chi; provided further that if the total payment ATTESTED; Moe Etterson Secretary M.S.C. Diany Doolews, President M.S.C. E. H. Lindley, Chancellor APPROVED. Announce Poetry Contest The William Hortend Carruth Memorial poetry contest for the year 1938-49 has been announced by the department of English. The first prize will be $60, the second $40, and the third $20. To each contestant who is awarded honorable mention a bounce of name the poetry will give. Then the open to all students regularly enrolled in the University. This contest is being given in memory of his service as teacher, poet, and leader at the University of Kansas. He was a student at the University, and a graduate student at Harvard. Curruth became a faculty member at the university department, and later the vice-Chancellor for several years. He soon gained recognition as a poet, his best known poem being "Each in His Own Tongue," which was published in 1914. His best books include "Kansas in Literature" and "Letters for American Rivers." Although announcement of the judges has not yet been made, it is expected that at least one well-known contemporary poet will be on the committee. W. S. Johnson, professor of English, is chairman of the awards committee and is in charge of selecting judges. Mr. Curruth was later professor of comparative literature and head of the department of English at Leiden University until his death Dec. 15, 1234. Poems of any length or classification will be accepted, but no contestant may submit more than one paper. Three typewritten copies of each poem must be in the Chancellor's office before noon, April 4. The announcement of the awards will be posted on the Campus information is posted on the Campus bulletin boards, or may be obtained from Professor Johnson. Table Has 3,560 Pieces Pueblo, Colo. Jan. 3.—UP)—Jose Mc S. Pheccters, retired carpenter, has completed an ornamental table at the age of 75, into which he put 3,500 separate pieces of wood which are fitted together with such materials that no flaw can be covered even with a magnifying glass. Mare Island, Cal., Jan. 3- (UP) —What Saint Patrick did to the snakes in Ireland, Rear Admiral Clarence Kempf proposes to do to the rats in the navy yard here. A week was spent by the crew and not by Pied Piper tethering either. Admiral Declares War on Rats State College, Pa., Jan. 2. (UP)—One doesn't keep up with the Joneses at Pennsylvania State College; one tries to keep up with the Millers Lead Smiths At Penn State College. A count of the recently-issued student directory shows that there are 27 Jones in school, 62 Smiths (counting one Smyth), and an overwhelming—well, more, anyway—total of 64 Millers. Other popular names r us thun: Wilson, 20; Hoffman, Johnson, Williams, 23 each; Myers, 20; Taylor and Brown, 18 each. Exeter, Cal, Jan. 3—(UP) -A400 pound bear from the nearby Sieras experiment on the saying that "an apple a day keeps the doctor away" and found that maybe it did keep the doctor away but not the owner of the apples. D. G. Wood, who finally shot the apple stealer, declared it had consumed between two and three tons of the fruit. Perth, Australia, Jan. 3. — (UP)—Mickey Mouse is becoming a veritable missionary among the savages. Explorer Michael Terry, from Western Australia, reports that after taking his camel boy to see a Mickey Mouse film at Kalgoorlie, the boy learns about the dangers of Mickey Mouse dance steps and they were immediately incorporated into a new tribal dance. Bear Too Fond of Apples Haywire-breathe, how was he to live? Perhap... Savages Like Mickey Mouse Continued from page 1 Any budding musician is welcome to submit his or her efforts. Chorus tryouts will be held a week from Wednesday. The producers could just about make expenses by charging for this, because who ever saw a girl tryout for the front line in a long dress. This Japanese boycott talk has to stop. After all, we're not mad at the poor little silk worm. Cotton hose could make even Dietrich's look bad. We Vetarians of Future Wars will suffer a lot, but this is the last thread. Boycott, no silk hose; "Boy-caught," silk hose. Speaking of Marlene Dietrich, the last issue of Life says that she is through. Something has happened to the American appetite. People would rather look at Lily Pons' tonsils than the Dietrich's legs. She made six flops in a row last year and get $450,000 for doing it. Today, no job. She can do a "beautiful" job of kicking, though. Aesthetic Reveling, Or Fun On the S.S. Panchromatic by stevendavidesq His first impression was that the earth had reversed its course. Suddenly the trees, the houses, the entire environment, for that matter, went around in a circle. It was a curious sensation, wrist, a sensation that one knows perhaps on a decade, and he felt that he was living through it, feeling it, sensing it. And it gave him a feeling of buoyancy the like of which he had selldom known. The swirling, floating, yet rhythmic feeling that only the adventures may know and appreciate. It was like listening to Ravel's Boloero...or Benny Goodman. But just as it had started, so did it stop. He remembered now that he was somewhat uncertain as to how just he did start; it was enough to know that he had started. For after all, he was not a greedy person, not the type who would take a library if you gave him a book. A life his he had been that way, unasking, unselfish... `there came, at this point, a sound not unlike a thud. Yes, it was a thud, and it was accompanied by a guching sound, somewhat hissing in nature. He had the impression that he had been used as material for a steam-roller to roll up. Yes, that was it.` He wondered vaguely whether he would ever be able to walk erect again, to face his fellow men on an equal basis, or whether this might be the end... That empty feeling still persisted and then he remembered something: He had forgotten to take a breath. After a moment's speculation he concluded that he would try breathing, just for the hell of it. He summoned all his strength, as they say in detective stories, and tried at it. "And you knew how," he became nervous. Perhaps he would never breathe again. This was food for more thought; if he couldn't Everyday Special Chocolate Milk Shake and Ham Salad Sandwich 20c UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-basement Memorial Union "Fall?" inquired a slightly asexu voice. "Hup," groaned he, thinking things he could not gain willpower to state. "Hup." "I beg your pardon?" nasal-voice asked. "Hun." said he. "I think you're nuts...or drunk maybe," the voice concluded. And the man went away, muttering about the ice on the sidewalk. Call Travels 18.000 Miles Carmel, Calif. Jan. 3. — (UP) -Mrs. Elisa Lincoln Bennett received a telephone call from Sydney, Australia, routed the long way around the globe via India, England, New York and across the continent, a distance of 18,000 miles. The call had originally been made for the direct connection from Sydney here, but it was routed the other way. The charge was $23 for the first three minutes. Weather: Fair to putrid Tuesday, more of same Wednesday. What is your "after Christmas" price for a new suit? You mention it . . . and we'll meet it. We positively refuse to introduce this stock of fine, new Winter suits and Obercoats to the 1938 straw hats. Every suit here has a date in some Lawrence house where the head of the house has a head for figures. WINTER SUITS $17 - $22 . $29 HE SELLS 20 MILLION POUNDS OF TOBACCO A YEAR Bob Cooper—tobacco auctioneer-tells why he, and other tobacco experts,prefer Luckies... "I've been auctioneing for 20 years," says Mr. Cooper, "in Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee...and I've seen the tobacco Lucky Strike buys at auction after auction. It's the best in smoking quality." "Luckies suit my throat, too, as well as my taste. Even after crying out bids 7 hours a day, Luckies never bother my throat in the least." (Reason: the exclusive "Toasting" process expels certain irritants found in all tobacco.) "In every section of the Tobacco Belt where Iauctioneer," Mr.Cooperadds,"I've noticed tobacco men smoking Luckies." HAVE YOU HEARD THE CHANT OF THE TOBACCO AUCTIONEER? Listen to "Your Hollywood Parade" · Wed. NBC Radio Network, 9 p.m. "Your Hit Parade" · Sat., CBS, 9 p.m. "Your Hit Parade" · Mon.-Thu fr., CBS, 11:15 a.m. (All Central Time). Are you benefiting by the experience of the tobacco experts?...Sworn records show that among independent tobacco experts, Luckies have twice, yes—twice, as many exclusive smokers as have all other cigarettes combined. WITH MEN WHO KNOW TOBACCO BEST-IT'S LUCKIES 2 TO 1