FRIDAY, MARCH 16. 1934 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Delta Phi Delta Holds Pledging Delta Phi Delta, national art fraternity, held a meeting at the home of Miss Rosemary Ketcham for the purpose of having pledging services for the following. Frances Lantworthy, fa36, Geraldine Remmert, fa'uml, Evelyn DeGraw, fa'uml. A short business meeting followed the services. Miss Gladys Meyers spoke on "Cezanne." Refreshments were served. Gamma Phi Bhi announces the election of the following officers: Julia Markham, c'35, president; Mary Louis Becker, fa'35, vice president; Helen Jedlicka, c'35, secretary; Beulah Stanton, c'36, treasurer; Clarice Sloan, fa'35, freshman leader; Ruth Brand, c'36, corporeate; Janet Bower, c'35, Crescent correspondent; Avannol Bushmeyer, pan-hellenic delegate; Octavia Harris, c'35, house manager. Gamma Phi Beta Fleets Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae Elect The Kappa Kappa Gamma alumnae association held a business meeting Wednesday at the home of Mrs. A. B Weaver. The following officers were elected: Miss Vivian Skilton, president; Mrs. O. W. Maloney, vice president; Mrs. N. C. Johnson, secretary, and Mrs. R. C. Jackman, treasurer. Mrs. C. A Preyer is the retiring president. ☆ ☆ ☆ Mrs. J. D. Stranathan and Mrs. E. C. Buehler entertained with a bridge tea at the Manor Wednesday. Guests were present for six tables of cards and a number of others joined them for tea. Lavender was the prevailing color used in the tea table and bridge appointment. Mrs. E. H. Lindley and Mrs. Allen Crafton presided at the table. Dinner guests at the Sigma Phi Epison house last night were: Nadine Truxall, c'unel, Evelyn Farber, c'unel, Marilyn Kaysing, c'37, Evellyn Lelyn, c'unel, Barbara Neuberck, ed4, 38t Henderson, c'36, akhiyan Fay, c'unel, Shirley Salabury fa unl. The dinner was followed by an hour of dancing. Chi Delta Sigma entertained the following guests at dinner last night, followed by an hour of dancing: Maxine Boyle, c'34, Lois Foiser, c'37, Mary Lou Harrison, c'34, Ruth Leared, c'37, Dorothy Lewis, c'35, Leura Richards, c'34, Margaret Utt, fa 37, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brigden. Guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house last night were: Clyde Lay, Neodesha; Fay Short, Altoona; Paul Friley, Cherryvale; Ronald Smith, Neodesha; Harry McCugin, Russell Baker, Harold Cottner, and Joe Sharp, all of Independence. Kappa Kappa Gamma entertained as dinner guests last night Prof. Bob Haig, Bud Evans, c'36; Den Reed, c'unl; Marie Stevens, c'37; and Muriel Williamson, c'35. Dinner guests at the Delta Tau Deltu house last night were: Ada Belle Johns, c'37, Veina Mae McCoy, c'uncl. and Mary Janet Funnel. Gordon Gamble, Paul Hammon, Raymond Isle, and Clayder, all of Independence Junior College, were guests at the Theta Tau house last night. ☆ ☆ ☆ Dr. and Mrs. Forrest C. Allen were dinner guests at the Phi Kappa Psi house last night. Bob Simpson, c'36, and Ennis Sandberg, ph34, were dinner guests of Beta Theta Pi last night. Mrs. Harriet Gilbert Hutton, 26, was a dinner guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house last night. Dean Agnes Husband was a dinner guest at the Pi Beta Phi house last night. Dean Hoffman of Independence, was a guest at the Triangle house last night. Kappa Sigma announces the pledging of Robert Lewis, c'35. Will Present French Play Thirteen Students to Participate in the Thirty-third Annual Production Students of the department of romance languages will present the thirty-third annual French play in Fraser theater at 8:15 tomorrow even- Will Debate Against U. S. C. Monday MAURICE HILDRETH HUGH A. RANDALL Hugh A. Randall, c35, and Maurice Hildreth, c34, will represent the University in an inter-college debate to be held with the University of Southern California Monday night in Fraser theater. This is the first time the two schools have debated and the agreement between the two schools calls for a return engagement three years. Another debate between the University and the University of Southern California is also scheduled to be held at St. Mary's College in Leavenworth. victorious. Victorien Sardon's comedy, "Les Pattes de Mouche" will be given. Roles will be taken by Paul Rapoport, Wilma Bullard, Barbara Jane Goll, Robert Loveless, Ray Miller, Mary Lou Baghy, Samuel Ericson, Flavia Hay, Dale O'Brien, Barbara Pendleton, Clarence Bridentine, Vernon M. French, and Ruth Barnard. No admission will be charged. The play opens with I, the servants opening a country residence which has been closed since a night three years before, when Clarise, now Mine, Vanhove, left for Paris to be married. Clarise, her husband, her younger sister Marte, and witty relative, Suzanne, are to stay in the old house. Paul, ward of a neighboring family, comes to see Marthe, with whom he is in love, but upon hearing his guardians' voices, escapes. Another caller, Proper Block, recently returned from the East Indies, tells Vanhove that, in order to receive an inheritance, he must find a wife, and asks for Marthe's hand in marriage. Clarise, however, who had formerly had a love affair with Proper, will not consent to such a match. Clarise and Proper, during their affair, had communicated by notes left in a vase. Clarise learns that the note she wrote Proper asking him to follow her to Paris to prevent her marriage with Vanhove, never reached him, and must before still be in the vase. Both Clarise and her husband jealous disposition, and Proper, in order to compel Proper to agree to his marriage with Marthe, try to recover it, but are repeatedly foiled. At last Proper succeeds in recovering the note, but Suzanne, who has seen him, resolves to get the note for Clarise. DRESS UP-IT'S SPRING In the beginning of the second act, Paul comes to Prosper's study to challenge his rival for Martha's hand. Finally Prosper succeeds in calming him, and Paul leaves to go hunting with a group of gentlemen who have just arrived. Prosper is left alone with Suzanne, who urges him to consider Clarisse's happiness. He gives her the freedom to search for the note which is hidden in the study. After a frantic search in which Clarisse participates, Suzanne finds the note. She then tells Prosper that it is not Clarisse, but she who loves him. Prosper, captivated by her pluck and cleverness, consents to burn the letter. The people then return from the hunt and Paul's engagement to Martha is announced. Suzanne accepts Prosper. William M. Boddington, prominent Kansas City, Kan., lawyer and a graduate of the University of Kansas School of Law, was the speaker at the weekly forum of Phi Alpha Delta, national fraternity, last night in the chapel of the University of Kansas. Phases of the Practice of Law." A general discussion followed his talk. PROMINENT LAWYER SPEAKS TO PHI ALPH DELTA FORUM PROMINENT LAWYER SPEAKS Phi Chi, medical fraternity, announces the pledging of Reuben Turner, c'36. Schulz's Suits Are Guaranteed to Fit—the bang must be right. The spring patterns will take your fancy, and the price just what you want. Judge Means of the Douglase county district court, will be the speaker at the next forum to be held Tuesday, March 28. The petition is invited to attend the forums. Repairing, Remodeling and Cleaning Department DeLuxe. Xavier Club Joins National Group The Xavier club, Catholic mens organization decided at a meeting last night to affiliate with the Newman club, a national Catholic organization. SCHULZ THE TAILOR New Location — 924% Mass. Editors to Pick Candidates Kansas Hall of Fame Election Scheduled for Spring Nomination blanks for candidates to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame will be sent to all the editors in the state this week by Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic fraternity, which sponsors the election. This is the fourth year in which members to the Hall of Fame have been selected. The idea was put into effect by Carl Cooper, '31, who is now a reporter on the Wichita Eagle. An editor chosen to the Hall of Fame must have been dead for at least three years. These blanks will be returned, and the list of nominees sent to members of the Quarter-Century club, which consists of those editors in the state who have operated their papers for 25 years. These men will select the member for the Hall of Fame for this year. Those who have received the honor in previous years are Sol. Miller, Major Joseph Hudson, Marsh Murdock, D. R. Anthony, Noble Prentice, D. W. Wilder, selected in 1931; E. W. Hoch, 1932; and John A. Martin, 1933. The all-musical vespers program which will be presented by the School of Fine Arts Sunday, March 18 at 4 pm will be heard over station KFKU. This will be the last vespers program broadcast over the station this year. Remaining special programs scheduled include the Kansas Relays the Baccalaureate address, and Commencement exercises. Women Voters Select Sherwood for Leader (Continued from page 1) JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Winifred Koenig 2 Dorothy Scott 2 Bernhard Brookley 2 Beulah Stanton 1 Jenice Jenckes 1 Katharine Jarrett Kathleen Teegarden 4 Betty Ann Stauffer 3 Harriet Sheldon 2 Bronice Jean Deniels 1 Secretary SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS Vice President Barbara Goll Helen Krug Mary Wilson Nancy Newlin Betty Tholen ... Annette Lawrence ... Carolyn Bliss ... Ruth Lea Learned ... Virginia Martin ... Mary Katheryne Dorman ... Marie Stevens Demonstration Given With Moving Pictures at A.S.M.E. Meeting Engineers See Welding Film The demonstration consisted of cutting metal plates with the oxy-acetylene blow torch, cutting a metal plate with an oxygen jet, machine cutting metal plates with the oxy-acetylene blow torch, paddle welding, and the Altoe method of back-hand welding. A moving picture film showing the new type of welding perfected by the Air Reduction Sales company, Kansas City, Mo., and a demonstration of this welding constituted a very interesting program presented to about seventy-five members and guests at the A.S.M.E. field in Fremont, Calif. J. M. Hangies of the Air Reduction Sales company, conducted the demonstration. Among the guests who attended the meeting were several of the visiting Independence Junior College students, including Eugene Haskell Institute and his welding class. Robert Calderwood, professor of speech and dramatic art, will speak at the next regular meeting of the A.S. M.E. April 9. Hammers Brothers Given Paramount Offer By Cinema Scout When entering class last week, Burt and Jim Hammers, c35, were noticed by a representative of Paramount, G. H. H. Lamb; who made inquiries about their dramatic talent and found that they had been in several plays. He saw them and told them of their possibilities for enteri- ne the movies. Photographs will be sent to New York, and if these are passed on by authorities Burt and Jim will be given a free trip. either to Chicago or New York, where they will try out in motion pictures. The scenes will then be sent to directors in Hollywood, and if they are accepted, six-year contracts will be offered to the Hammer brothers, paying $100 weekly, after the first six months, and $800 weekly at the beginning of the last year. And Jim have not said definitively whether the contract will end or whether the contract it is offered to them after the trouys. They say that as yet there are too many "if." Try a BANANA SPLIT UNION FOUNTAIN injury Rescuer Memorial Univ at Your Rent a Book to Read This Week-end. The new books that everyone is talking about are here. 15c for 5 days. 1021 Mass THE BOOK NOOK Tel. 666 ABE WOLFSON Money to Loan on Valuables Shoes and Gents Furnishing Goods Misfit Clothing Bought and Sold Jewelry and Watches Guns and Revolvers Old Gold Bought 637 Mass. — Phone 675 Want A Bargain? Social Stationery 75 PIPES by the box and the pound About 75 or 80 boxes priced from $1.00 to $2.50 in order to make room, go for- In order to clean up our broken and odd lots we are putting about 75 pipes from $2 to $5 of popular makes in this group to sell for--- These are all clean and represent leading brands If you want a good pipe, perhaps you will find a curve or straight stem to please you. Come in and see them. You'll be surprised! Need anything in the drug or sundry line? The street is torn up in front, but we're still doing business. Use the phone for delivery. Rankin's Drug Store Handy for Students 1101 Mass. Across from Courthouse Phone 678 ALADY writes:—"I like your candid way of asking me to compare OLD GOLDS with my present brand ... instead of bombarding me with brazen claims. I have been wedded to another brand for five years. But your sporting approach has persuaded me to try OLD GOLD." We claim no special credit for being fair to the other fellow. We've simply found that the best way to make an OLD GOLD convert is to invite him to try OLD GOLDS a few days and smoke out his own facts. No better tobacco grows than is used in OLD GOLDS. And they are PURE. (No artificial flavoring) AMERICA'S Tune in on TED Fio-Rito's seminational Hollywood Orchestra every Wednesday night—Columbia Chabot