5 WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22. 1937. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill --an account of Mt. Oread Society JUNE ULM, Society Editor Before 1 a.m. call KU-21; after 1, call 2702-83 Bruckmiller-Snahr Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Brücke, manager of Kansas City, Mp., announce the marriage of their daughter, Mary Jane, to Charles Engene Spahr, son of Mrs. C. T. Spahr, also of Kansas City, to her stepmother, place Sept 16 at Independence, Mp. Both Mr. and Mrs. Sphr attended the University of Kansas. She was a member of the Chi Omega sorority, and he was a member of Theta Tau, Sigma Tau, and Sigma Tau and Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternities. Mr. and Mrs. Spahr will be at her after Sept. 25 in Cambridge, and she will be emailed in the Harvard graduate school of business administration. Cordenier-Hargiss The Apple Delta Pi sorority announces the marriage of Alma Cordonier of Troy to Carson Hargiss of Hawiatha, which took place July 28, at the home of Dr. or Mrs. R. C. Cordonier in Troy, Mrs. Hargiss was a student at the University last year, and Mr. Hargiss attended Washburn University in Topeka. He was a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Hargiss are now at home in Hawiatha. Teagarden-Smith The Alpha Delta Pi sorority announces the marriage of Kathleen Teagarden, '36, to Norman Smith, both of La Cygne. The wedding took place Aug 22 at the house of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Teagarden in La Cygne. Mr. Smith, a student at the University in '35, was a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Smith are at home in La Cygne. Kappa Ea Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of James Clark, e38, and Richard Graber, e39. Phone K. U. 6 6 END CURLS, $1 up, inquire 7 Experienced Operators New Equipment Added IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP 491'1; Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keel Book Store WANTED: Roommate for quiet studious boy, also large double room for rent Meals if desired. Phone 21801. -115 STUDENT WASHINGS: Guaranteed satisfactory. Call for and deliver. Phone 2563M. -12 IVAS BEAUTY Shor 941½ Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keeler Book Store WAVE, new styles, any style 25c dried COTTVILLE CO-LIDS - COBK-Conkright Elliot of Vogue Beauty Shop in New York. Call 212-545-7760, Shop 9415 Mass. Old and new customers are welcome. Phone 333). -12 BOYS: 1 angle front room, 1 room for X boys. Very nice rooms, 1247½ Kentucky Phone 1075W. -11 SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty work also ROOMS FOR GIRLS: Twin beds, twin room. Bath: Gas and furnace heat. Entertaining privileges. One-half block north Corner, 1121 Ohio. Phone 1671-58. WAVO BEAUTY SHOP Phone 95 - 921 Miss. St. Shampoos 25c up Finger Waves 25c (dried) Oil Permeants $2.50 up CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 95 — 921 Miss. St. --------------------------------------- --------------------------------------dons Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Lefter, Marguerite and Alain Mait Lefter, Kansas City, Ms. and Mr. Z. Jones, Tompkins Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Dr. Clare H. Baker, Kansas City Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Smith, Waverly Mr. and Mrs. W., F. Morgan, Kansas City Jayhawk Barber Shop Jayhawk Barber Shop Completely Modernistic Enjoy the best at no additional cost. Hair cut 35c. Earl Ellis Joe Lesch "Bill" Hensley "Paddy" Hyatt 727 Mass. Sunday Subscribe for THE WICHITA BEACON Kansas' Greatest Newspaper Delivered to your door Dally and your address. Alpha Omicron Pi entertained the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity with an our dance Tuesday evening. 10 cents per week — Phone 2316 ------------------------------------- ------------------------------------- ------------------------------------dons Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Lefter, Marguerite and Alain Mait Lefter, Kansas City, Ms. and Mr. Z. Jones, Tompkins Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Dr. Clare H. Baker, Kansas City Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Smith, Waverly Mr. and Mrs. W., F. Morgan, Kansas City Sunday dinner guests at Delta Tau Delta were: --dons Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Lefter, Marguerite and Alain Mait Lefter, Kansas City, Ms. and Mr. Z. Jones, Tompkins Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Mr. and Mrs. Towe, Kansas City Dr. Clare H. Baker, Kansas City Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Smith, Waverly Mr. and Mrs. W., F. Morgan, Kansas City Don't Miss the Fun! Learn to dance—all the latest ballet steps SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN BEGINNERS Marion Rice Dance Studio Over Ramsey-Allison花店 Shop 927½ Mass. St. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Philips and daughter Mass. Ahleng ☆ ☆ ☆ BOSCHMAN, Dr. and Mrs. Servin, Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Johnson, Abilene Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Tanner and fami- lal friends Miss Mary Nicholson, "37, Ellis Bill Calhoun, "36 Kansas City, Mo. Ed Oden, "27, Kansas City, Mo. Cochrane, "36 ☆ ☆ ☆ Kappa Alpha Theta announces the engagement of Miss Florence Campbell of Kansas City, Mo., to Dr. Raymond B. Riley of Bay City, Mich. Mitx Campbell is a graduate of the University of Kansas, and Doctor Riley also is a graduate of the University in the School of Medicine. The wedding will take place in November. Visitors at Miller hall Sunday were: . Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Waggoner, OtkA 927 1/2 Mass. St. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Cornwall, Topeka ☆ ☆ ☆ "Oread House," an organized house for women at 1225 Orden, elected the following officers Monday; president Doris Schuerman, c38; vice-president Helen Palmer, c41; secretary Chesley James, c38; t隶师, Hesser Martin, c38; and publicity chairman, Marion James, c41. "Oread House" was organized this fall and has a membership of 20. Phone K. U. 6 6 WANTED: Student laundry, shirts 10c. Phone 1587J. -14 GIRLS: TWO-ROOM nicely furnished Sink, hot and cold water Frigidiaire, S. E. exposure, Phone 1131J 119 Vermport. -11 SAVE part of rent allowance for something else. Very nice double room 121. Sleeping porch, study downstairs, 45. Five block from campus. 845 Ala. -11 SHAMPOQ and 25c WAVE, dried SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dried Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and Water, dried Wave, dried, 5oc End Curls $1.00 up. Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up. complete Twenty-five words or less one incription, 21c; three innotations, 16c; six incription, 27c; contract rates, not more than 23 words, 92 per month flat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the KANIAN Business Office. MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 7321/2 Mass. Phone 2353 WANTED Typewriter Cleaning and Repairing CLARENCE M. BAKER 1323 Kentucky Phone 2095J Magazine Exchange 729 Massachusetts All popular magazines at onehalf to one-third regular price. MAGAZINES TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 ONE STOP Clothes Service Station SCHULZ the TAILOR 924 Mass. 4185. The Campus house, a semi-organized house at 1245 Orden, elected the following officers Monday night: president, J. V. Mann, c/ucl; counsel, Vincent Rethman, e'39; and secretary, Marvin Funk, gr. Buy GOOD shoe repairing Our Prices are RIGHT! OYLER'S SHOE SHOP 1346 Ohio The Venus Beauty Salon The Venus Beauty Salon Individual Booths Five Experienced Carers Featuring Cosmetics Vera Aderholm. Manager Phone 387 First floor, 842 Mass. George M. Flint, son of Prof. and Mrs. L. N. Flint, is visiting in Lawrence for a week. He will then go to San Antonio, Texas, where he is home office representative of the Acta Life Insurance company. Miss Jane Allen, 37, daughter of Dr. Forrest C. Allen, left Tuesday evening for California, where she will attend Leland Stanford University. Miss Allen is a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority. All old members of the K.U. Dames, an organization of married women students and wives of students, will meet tonight in the wom- ne's room. An administration building at 8 o'clock. All members are urged to attend. Fred Cook, Dodge City, was nl luncheon guest at the Delta Upsilon fraternity yesterday. Mrs. Fisher of Leavenworth was a visitor Monday afternoon and evening at Watkins hall. The pledges of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity entertained the pledges of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority with a baskin brook grove Monday evening. Sigma Kappa entertained Phi Delta Theta with an hour dance last evening. ☆ ☆ ★ Kappa Alpha Theta entertained Phi Kappa Psi last evening with an hour of dancing. Miss Jean Eubert and Miss Joan James were luncheon guests at the Pi Beta Phi house Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Flint of Poria, Ill. 111, have returned home after spending the week at the home of Prof. and Mrs. L. N. Flint. Chi Omega entertained Sigma Alpha Epsilon with an hour dance Tuesday evening. Dorothy Curry, Miller hall, visiter her parents, Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Curry in Topeka, Saturday and Sunday. ☆ ☆ ☆ Venereal Disease Clinic Unattended by Afflicted The Boone county clinic is for those people who cannot afford to pay for treatment of venereal diseases. Each patient is charged 25 cents to pay for the medicine used. The doctor is matched by the doctors and the hospital. Columbia, Mo., Sept. 21—(UP)—Dr. J. T. Capless, director of t h Boeon county venereal disease clinic, said that only a small number of cases were treated at the Boeon county hospital where the clinic is located. Dr. Caples urged those who thought they might have syphilis or gonorrhea, or might have been come to the clinic for examination. a doctor explained that the next goal of the Public Health Service of the United States was the eradication of syphilis. He said that this would be achieved in a year's time if the diseased would submit to treatment. Recent information discloses that the structure of the buried rocks underlying Kangaroo is much more conditioned is indicated by surface conditions. Kansas Rocks Are Complex Sub-Surface Laboratory Organized by K an s a s Geological Survey Accordingly, the Kansas Geological Survey has this fall organized a sub-surface laboratory, under the direction of Raymond Keroher. It is the purpose of this laboratory to study in insulating residues and other techniques in the use of all parts of Kansas, so as to determine more accurately the thickness and structure of the various buried formations. Need Accurate Knowledge Need Articulation More accurate knowledge of subsurface chemistry is highly important to the oil and gas industry, said Dr. R. C. Moore, state geologist and head of the department of geology at the university. While at present the main oil production is in western Kansas, and some of the survey's projects are now focused there, supplementing work carried on by private enter- tors will be active also in eastern Kansas. Dr. G. E. Abernathy, recently added to the staff of the Geological Survey, is gathering new information in the southeastern counties of the state, and J. M. Jewett has been added to parts of neighborhood counties. Working with Petroleum Group This work, says Dr. Moore, is planned not only with reference to the renewed activities in the shallow fields of the eastern part of the state, where repressing and other methods are increasing with prolific reference to increasing knowledge of sub-surface geology in central and western Kansas. In conjunction with the project, the Survey is cooperating with the new petroleum engineering department of the University, wherein Prof. Engene Stephenson, newly appointed to the faculty, is developing a research program in petroleum engineering at the Missouri School of Mines, and for the past few years a petroleum engineer for Cities Service at Bardesville, Okla., has been added to the State Geological staff staff as a research assistant in petroleum engineering. He is rapidly setting up the new laboratory equipment for the Survey and department's use. Missouri Traps M Wolves Frederickton, Mo. Sept. 21—(U.T.) Tapney, Pa.) Kemp stored his traps until the opening of the fur season, convinced that he had done his part in exterminating wolves in southeast Missouri. Kemp recently killed his ninety-sixth wolf. Miscourian Trans 96 Wolves WE SERVE LARGE CAFE Regular Meals Plate Lunches Quality Beverages Free Shrimp Friday Evening 18 E. 9th Nation-wide Contributions May Erect New Eugene Field Memorial Plans for the proposed national Eugene Field Memorial with a statue of Little Boy Blue to be erected in St. Joseph are progressing steadily and the campaign for funds, conducted on a national scale, will soon begin. The architect's drawing of the memorial, in the form of an exedra situated on Lovers' Lane, has been completed by the St. Joseph firm of Eckel & Aldrich, the designers who collaborated with Hermon A. MacNell, the New York college and bas-reliefs, Pink Minisaur granite will form the background for the bronze figure of "Little Boy Blue," and his toys. On the upper part of the central figure will be a portrait medallion of Eugene Sarge surroundedy by carved verses of certain of his poems. On one side is a monochrome image and has inscriptions of "Wyken, Blynken and Nod" and "The Little Peach." W. S. Aldrich, the architect, winner of the Rotch travel scholarship, was later a student at the American Academy of Fine Arts in Rome for three years, and was director of the academy for one year. His contemporaries and fellow students were MacNeil, the sculptor; John Russel Pallery, designer of the Mellon Art Gallery; George Beck the mural painter; and Ellhu Vedder, Jr., the painter. the sculptor, MacNeil, spent several years studying and working abroad. Establishing his studio in New York, his first memorial was the one to President McKinley in Columbus, Ohio. He has done war memorials for Alany and Philadelphia, executed the statue of Erz Cornell for Ithaca, N.Y., and the Fort Sumter Memorial at Charleston, S.C. The most important of his architectural works is the building of the U.S. Supreme Court building. His medalistic work includes the United States quarter dollar in 1916. Funds for the memorial are to be raised by a nation-wide campaign, including contributions from school children and college students as well as from large donors. A committee of former residents of St. Joseph formed to aid this work includes Gen Malin Craig, chief of staff, U. S.A.; Walter W. Head, president of the national council of the Boy Scouts of America; Erik E. Hollis of Kansas City; and Harold Hall, assistant general manager of the New York Times, who once held down Field's old desk as city editor of the St. Joseph Gazette. A special university and college division committee includes Dr. Edward Hardrigs Griggs, author and lecturer; Frederick A. Middlesbrough, president of the University of Missouri; and Homer Croy, novelist and playwright. Let Your Mind Alone By James Thurber (Author of My Life and Hard Times) $2.50 The Book Nook 1021 Mass. St. Ancient Dart Interests Visitors Jack Cotter, field director of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia for an expedition in the southwest this summer, and William Clark of the same institution, lurbed with perf. Loren C Eisley of the sociology department at the University Club Tuesday. For the past three years the expedition has made excavations in New Mexico, during the first two weeks of the program. Professor Elsayn accounted them. Both Clark and Cotter expressed regret that Dyche museum was not open, as they had hoped to see the extinct bison which Prof. S.W. Jenkins and H. T. Martin had published open at the turn of the century. This case, in which a dart was associated with an extinct type of bison, was similar to another discovered by Cotter and Clark, which also had a dart-head in the vertebra. In addition, they reported that more discoveries in Folsom place covered unimassed lands again. These discoveries were made in the dead lake regions around Portales and Clovis, N. M. From a cave in the Guadalupe mountains, the expedition secured the remains of a number of small mammals. The cave in the past has yielded the remains of a musk ox, extinct American camel, and horse, in association with the Folsom dirt point. It is hoped these creatures will throw more light on the possible return of the Folsom culture. Golf Fan Plays 147 Holes in a Day According to Professor Eaisley, C. P. Schultz, of the University of Nebraska, who has recently been specializing in a study of the rodents of the last portion of the glial age, is highly enthusiastic about the species discovered, and optimistic about the light they may cast upon the time of extinction of many late Pleistocene animals. Morris turned in a 555, 33 strokes under par for that many holes on the course. Warrenens, Mo., Sept. 21—(UP) Whom Morris, local golf fun fair, will host this weekend, will be the Warmonsburg course one day last week "just for the fun of it." Buy a Meal Ticket $2.50 Ticket (Value $2.75) $5.00 Ticket (Value $5.50) "Big Apple" VARSITY A Three-Star Attraction FEATURING ★ Trucking Contest (To Find the Hill's Best Trucker) The Two Steppers (Sensational Colored Dance Team ★ Dale "Brody" Schroff (As Master of Ceremonies) LOUIE KUHN'S ORCHESTRA STAGS Friday, Sept. 24 Watch the Kansan for More Details. 75c -DATES