TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1935 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS Hill Society BEFORE 1 P.M. CALL, K U, 25; BETWEEN 7:30 AND 9 P.M. CALL, 2701 K U, or 2702 K U Downing, Blake Wedding Maurine Downing, 34, of Lawrence, and David G. Blaker, 35, of Kansas City, were married yesterday morning in Kansas City. Mrs. Blaker is a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority; Mr. Blaker is affiliated with the Sigma Chiatry fraternity. Riley-Boylen Wedding Margaret Ida Riley, 32, and Robert Logan Boylen, both of Kansas City, were married Saturday afternoon at the home of the bride's mother. Alpha Xi Entertains Mrs. Boylen is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Members of Alpha XI Delta entertained at dinner Saturday evening at Wiedemann's in honor of Mrs. Olive Tergeson Wagner, of Carthage, Ill, and Chambers, of the same city. It was announced at the dinner that Chi chapter will be inactive this year. Miller-Leonard Marriage Milton-Jefferson Marriage Miss Fern Miller, of Lyons and Dr. Marilyn Miller, of Lyons, were married last Saturday at the home of the bride's parents. ☆ ☆ ☆ Beta Theta Pi alumni who were presen- t for rush week were: Ted Pierson, James Harker, Russell Field, Ed Sharpe, John Buchler, Benny Gridley, Peter Thomas, Reitz, Robert S. Patt, Merle Smith, Justin Hill, J. C. Nichols, Miller Pitru, Prunt Turtur, Lawrence Fiklker, William Buckingham, Dickie Williams (Spinnack) Arkison, Robert Rankin, Franklin Barrow, Dr. Grever Dr. Dr. David W. Robinson, and Lieutenant John L. Threeckmorton, who was the guest of Russell Field. Among the alumni who attended the rush week activities at the Delta Tau Delta house were: Bill Cochrane, Howard Patterson, Patterson Groves, Martin Dickinson, and Vic Phillips, Kansas City; Jim Allen and Dyle O'Neal, Chaila Wichita; Jerry Baldwin, Wichita; Wendell Klein, Dick Edelbate, and Dick Gelvin, Teppea; Gene Coombs, Lawrence; Max Hammel, Clay Center; and Bill English, Macksville. The following alumni returned for rush week at the Sigma Phi Epion house: Emmit Hagerty, Richard Beezer, Ray Childers, James B. Murphy, Robert Eckert, John R. Burdick, Reynold Cray Butterfield, Dr. James Naismith, Jack Naismith, Ed Fisher, --and Equipment to Give You the Latest Hair Dress Park Delta Thea alumni who returned for rush week week. Lacy Hainey, Harry Darby, M. D. Wooldenthal, R. E. Calen, Stephen O'Neill, E. James and George Gard, Kansas City; John Sleeper, Chanute; Donald Boynton and Duke Kimble, Topkaka; and Kenneth PHONE K.U.66 Randall Bundy, Ceil Paxton, Lucern Roberts, Bid H. Winters, Harold Kelley, Greene Williams, Gray LVitt; Richie Gorman, Richard Hunt; Richard Garrett, and William Jones. Among the alumni who attend ruth week activities at the Phi Kappa Pi house were: Dick Wells, of Hutchinson Winn Tate, Dan Easterly, Bink Templeton, Don Fitzgerald, and Bob Lamar Kansas City; Bill Hook, Wichta; Bennett Bubb, Topeke; and Bob Feagan and Hoover, Junction City. TADGA—A half grown police dog with round brown leather collar. Please show her the way to the Emery, Apt 201 or phone 1494. -5 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Sigma Nu alumni who were here for rush week included; J. L. Terry, Ralph Wells, Jack Flood, Dr. Edward H. Hasinger, Murray Dangraile, Bill Harrison, Farrell Strawn, Paul Parker, Edward McKernan, and Bill Phipps, Kansas City; Ole Ohrn, Jack Hickey, Robert Ewing, Professor Elmengel, and Hugo Rumsey, Lawrence; Ben Brunner, Wamego; Walk Payne, Larsus; Russell Young, Des Moines, Iowa; Dwight Wallingford, Channeu, Irian Craig, Joplin. TAXI Among the alumni participating in rush week activities at the Alma Tau Omega house were: Arthur Crumb, Jack Tuttle, Bick Cory, and Arnold Zieshnia, Kansas City, Mt. Wayne Knowles and Allen Beauty, Bronx; Jes Ther, Chateau Beaty, Satiun; John Hole cook, Cook; and Joyce Trombold, Bethel. LOST AND FOUND Alumni who visited at the Phi Gamma Delta house during rush week were: Gu McGrew, Ralf Martin, George Lopp, and Stuart Evans of Kansas City; Caitie Hyder and Earl Kirk, Hutchinson; Jo Brack, Great Bend; Senator Jack Delaney, Topека; Glenn Cunningham, Elkhart; and George Brown, Wichita. ROOMS FOR RENT Aoccia alumni participating in rush week activities were: Allen Fisher Houston Gray, Herbert Sandell, Karl Scott, Ceill Haas, Charles Hazen, Herschel Washington, and Rex Christa Kansas City; Harold Dresser, Leavenworth; David Trips, Hartington; Kelly Burdett, Burdett; Robert Daniel Garnett. PENT MISCELLANEOUS Boarding: An abundance of well cooked food, $4.50 a week. Also special rates. Boys and girls. Two double rooms. 14$00. Hillside Club, 1247 Ohio. -6 ROOM AND BOARD STUDENTS: Boys or married couples, one, two, or three-room apartments. Also, nicely furnished downstairs rooms for boys. Call 2828R. TAXI BOYS: Large single room, $18; double room, $7.50 person. Convenient location. 304 W. 14th. Phone 1477. -5 CLASSIFIED ADS UPPER CLASSMAN or professor: A large, comfortable, nicely furnished rooms in private home. Use of piano and home privileges. Phone 2859 - 9 GIRLS: In quiet, modern, private home, attractive living-bedroom with studio coach. First floor front. Three girls $4.50, two girls $6.00. Board if desired. Might consider kitchenette. 1611 New Hampshire. -6 BOYS: Two rooms to rent at 1542 Tennessee. One single and one double Phone 1721J. -6 BOYS: Large rooms with tita bath for men students. Excellent meals. Free basement laundry $275 a month. The Museum, 1914, Michigan. Phone: 2422. PHONE K.U.66 Phone 12 • 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. Student Loans ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. HOUK'S Barber Shop "The Shop of the Town" 924 Mass. Expert Operators WAVO BEAUTY SHOP 921 Miss. Phone 93 Finger Waves 25c Permanents $2.50 up Ruth Baker, Lois Milton, Operators RADIOS FOR RENT Phone 303 Twenty-five words or less are inside, 25c; three inside, 36s; six inside, 72c; contract rates, not more than one the rate. Invoices. Office. Payable in advance. Cash advances at the Kauai Business Office. HANNA RADIO 904 Mass. Keys for any Lock New night locks, padlocks & keyhole locks in stock Alumni who visited at the FI Kappa Alumni house during rush week were: Paul Flug, Sperner Gard, and John Lipo, Kansas City, Mo.; Clarence Moehring, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Gordon, Gordon Shaun, Dick Strong, and John Wall, Topeka; and Joe Kaul, Hope DOOR CLOSERS REPAired & NEW ONES INSTALLED. All edged tools sharpened. Rutter's Repair Shop Your Bonded Locksmith. 014 Mess St. Phi 319 visiting alumni at the Sigma Cma house during rush week included the following: Nick Noland, Woodbury Martin, Merton Dell, Todd Woodbury, and Frank Woodbury, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Baily, Kansas City, Kansas; Judge Lydon Price, Lyndon Harvey, Shultz, Shultz, Nehri, and John Davis, Torkea. Alumni present for rush week at the Delta Uplonion house were: Cornelius Ashley, Wesley Cromer, Earl Scott, Willford Van, and Harold Warmer, Kansas City; Benjamin White, Benner Springs; Tom Collins, Enterprise. Long Had Colorful Career ☆ ☆ ☆ Louisiana Politician Had Extreme Likes and Dislikes (United Press Staff Correspondent) Announcement has been made o, the marriage of Genevieve Bero, 31, of Parma, to Thomas Seur, Jr. 35, The business took place September 7, in Valle- cia, Calif. Mrs. Sears was a secretary in the English department. Sears is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Tau. Bero-Sears Wedding (United Press Staff Correspondent) Around a vivid personality such as Heyc Long there invariably grows up an abundance of aecdotes, traditions and legends illustrative of the man's life. Heyc Long himself was steeped in color. Some of the tales are told to emphasize his coarser qualities. Others, full of sweetness and light, are of the "prIZE-food-good-to-mother" variety. Out of these stories, however, one draws the ultimate conclusion that the outstanding characteristic of the man is his confidence in himself and his destiny. A famous astrologer permitted him to let her read his horoscope. She enraged on the possibilities of his future in public office. “Oh, you don't need to tell me any of that,” he said. “I can take care of that myself. What I want to know is will I be able to shoot a good game of golf?” He liked golf, was a poor player, and never gambled, either on his own shots or those of anybody else. He played once with Walter Hagen, Joe Kirkwood, and "I'll bet you $10 I can hook around that tree and land on the green to the left of the min." Kirkwood said. "Go on and make the shot, I don't want to bet anything." Kirkwood insisted, knowing of his aversion for golf gambling. "That ain't the way to fix grits or fry ham," he told her. aversion for golf gambling. "All right," said Huey. "I'll bet you can play golf with me, you can." Kirkwood made the shot and Weiss paid. He had fixed likes and dislikes in the matter of food—and he enjoyed eating. He didn't eat eggs or drink coffee, and he didn't eat sugar or fruit and ham. One morning his cook failed to fix the dish to his satisfaction. His greatest gustatory fondness, however, was for "politiker" as those who recall the famous corn-pone conspiracy that raked through the south will remember. Huey advocated the dunking system. liquid, apply paprika and salt, and pour on chilled head lettuce." "I'ts the way I fix 'em," she replied firmly. “It's the way you did fix 'em,” said长 “You're fired.” He liked his steak with well-done, and he enjoyed cooking. With Oscar of Paris, he was able to wield the whiches which the famous chef said were "excellent." He made his own roquefort cheese dressing—"dream the cheese to a little virgin egg until it becomes a thick little vinegar until it becomes a thick On one train journey to Washington, "potlikker" revived him, after a bad cold, when all else had failed. Whereupon Long went to the kitchen and cooked his own breakfast. He was living in his berthe, miserable, unhappy, unable to sit up, unwilling to eat. Long's secretary wired ahead to obtain turtle greens and other ingredients. The chef made corn pone. An impressive procession left the dinner for Long's drawing room—a wafter with the table, another with a silver soup tunnel full of pollkiser. The headwater marshaled them before the sick man's couch. Long waved them away weakly, then smelled the savior of the meal. "Maybe I can take a spoonful," he said. He took a spoonful, then a cupul, then the contents of the tureen, dunking the corn-powder industrially the while. His color and strength returned. He was a well man. Incidentally, his favorite cold cure was a combination of aspirin, citrocarbonate, epomis salts, and an apple—in that order. He liked Liederkran cheese, but preferred Camembert. Frequently he lunched on watermelon, cheese and There are those who noticed, in his last two years of life, a considerable softening in the manners of the man. He was less boisterous and blistering, less blatant, more polished. Some leaven was working to accomplish the change. Perhaps it was the cultured environment in his own home. Sooners Race With Time ice cream. There was little attempt to diet, though his frame was inclined to be pudgy in his later life. Oklahoma Gridmen to Have Twelve Days Before First Game Norman, Sept. 16—Tailing on a field enclosed by hedge and canvas fence with only water boys and a handful of newspapermen there to see. Capt. Lawrence “Biff” Jones is busy building an Oklahoma football squad in the 12 team available before the opener against Colorado at Norman, September 28. Daily a squad of 55 Sooners is being whipped through two-hour morning and afternoon practice sessions; Jones, Jake, Hockenberg, Jeremy, or attorney; Lawrence "Jay" Haskell, freshman coach; and Frank "Spee" Moore, former Louisiana State player, who will help with the ends until December 1. The team is getting enough work out of them to Jones has formed the squad into five eleven for team maneuvers and will daily change their personnel until he learns each man's ability. Scrimmage won't start until the men look ready. He'll need a new kit, new aids, hils, Drakins and Moore, have yet seen a single Oklahoma player scrimmage. OKLAHOMA DISTANCE RUNNER WILL MEET COUNTRY'S BEST Tom Stidman, lice coach, and Paul Young. Freshmen assistant, are teaching fundamentals to the turtles, guards and ecetors. The forwards are practicing bucking the new charging machine, and although its strong steel spring is built to resist shock, Stidman's for-ces have been pushing it all over the field. Norman, Sept. 16—Floyd Lochner Oklahoma's National College two-mile champions, will face the nation's fastest two-millers at New Orleans, Dec 28, during the invitation meet held at Sugar Bowl football game. Lochner's invitation was received this week by John Jacobs, soon track couch, from L. D. Bindetto, secretary of the Ohio College Oriole Mid-Winter sports association. NOW OPEN The Cafeteria send each man dripping to the showers. Memorial Union Building The Cafeteria will be open every day except Sundays at these hours: Breakfast Luncheon 7:30 to 8:45 11:30 to 1:00 Dinner 5:30 to 6:45 (Except Saturday evening) A special meal served noon and night. Our expert lady cooks prepare your food so that it tastes like "mother's cooking." WIDE VARIETY — SPEEDY SERVICE EAT "ON THE HILL" TODAY EASY WAY TO PICK A COURSE HEN $A$ LAYS EGG WHICH LANDS ON HEAD OF ALDERMAN FLOOK $B$ WO BROADCASTS HIS INDIGNATION. This ANGERS THE GOAT AND HE MAKES A DASH FOR the DUMMY PANTS $C$ PLUGGING IN SOCKET WHICH STARIS FAN $D$ FAN BLAWS COURSE CARDS OFF STAND AND STUDENT SELECTS THE COURSES WHICH STICK TO FLY PAPER $E$ THE SAVINGS SITTING- UP NIGHTS WORRYING ABOUT WHAT COURSES TO TAKE ...AND AN EASY WAY TO ENJOY A PIPE ONE COURSE THAT IT'S ALWAYS SAFE TO TAKE IS TO PACK YOUR PIPE WITH PRINCE ALBERT IT'S MILD AND COOL —NEVER BITES THE TONGUE PACKED RIGHT-IN TIN! THERE'S NO WASTE OR BOTHER — PRINCE ALBERT COMES IN ITS THE FINEST TOBACCO, WITH THE "BITE" REMOVED. ALWAYS MUILD. SO MORE MEN SMOKE P.R.A.TH ANY OTHER BRAND THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF RELIGIOUS ENGINEERING 1892 R. B. J. Ferroglia Tobacco Company, Winston Salem, N.C. PRINGE ALBERT THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE! DON'T FORGET TO BUY ORGE TO BUY THE JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE WHEN YOU PAY YOUR FEES A Saving of 20%