43 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1933 PAGE THREE NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Hill Society Call K.U. 25 Before 12:30 p.m. Sawyer-Hullinger The marriage of Helen Jean Sawyer and Edwin Ware Hullinger took place recently at Laguna Beach, Calif. Mr. Hullinger, who was formerly a student at the University, was at one time in college and studied law professionally. He was later correspondent in Russia, for the United Press, and is the author of several books. Makepeace-Johnson Lynn Maire Makepeace, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Makepeace and Floyd Allen Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Connor, son were married Sunday afternoon. The preview of the William Rockkill Nelson Gallery of Art and Atkins museum which was held Sunday night in Kansas City was attended by: Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lindley, Dean and Mrs. E. B. Stoffler, Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Burdick, Dean and Mrs. R. A. Schwegler, Dean and Mrs. Carl A. Preyer, Dean and Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, Professor and Mrs. Jeffrey D. M. Swearthow, Miss Agus Husband, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, Professor and Mrs. Allen Craffon, Professor and Mrs. E. C. Buchler, Dean and Mrs. Henry Werner, Dr. and Mrs. Frank Strunk, Professional and Mrs. Karl Mattern, Professor and Mrs. Verner Smith, Professor and Mrs. Roy Underwood and Professor J. M. Kellogg. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson were both former students of the University. Mr Johnson is employed at the Kansas Electric Power company. Out of town guests at the Phi Beta Pi formal party Saturday night were: Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Noel, of Colgate, Okla; Mrs. F. B. Ellis, of Pleasanton; Winston Anderson, Leonard Arman-tulous, John Barker, Ralph Caulk, Thomas Duckett, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dutton, Dorothy Ebbett, Clarence Francisco, Lawrence Geesell, Billens Gradinger, Howard Hamilton, Carl Leonard, Keith Ochlshlager, Schnelly, Fred Speer, Allan Townner, Howard VanOrdstrand, Leo Wenke, Betty Woodhouse, Lennel Wright, all of Kansas City; and Miss Beulah Williar, of Kansas City, Mo. At a meeting of the Cosmopolitan club Sunday a Christmas party to be held Friday night, Dec. 16, at 1325 West Campus Road was planned. The entertainment of the evening will consist in dancing, bridge and an interchange of Christmas gifts. Narciso "Bo" Abella, a french author from the Philippines Islands, was elected to fill the office vacated by Abraham Asis, gr. Phi Mu Alpha had as dinner guests Sunday: Zonella Emerson, Mary Louse Beltz, Isabella Waring, c. 37; Ruth Stockwell, fa'37; Corinne Dick, Maurine Jessie, Valere Davio, Irene Epher, A short musical followed the dinner. A short musical followed the dinner. W. A.A. will entertain with a Christmas dance Wednesday afternoon from 4:30 to 5:30 in the Robinson gymnasium. All members are asked to come and bring a friend with them. There will be a Santa Claus to distribute gifts, and music will be furnished by Vietroia records. The decorations will include a fireplace and an unusual Christmas The Kappa Alpha Theta alumnae entrained with a dinner last night at the home of Miss Jeanette Wheeler for the following guests: Dorothy Snyder, c'37; Mary Nicholson, ph'37; Martha Jane Shaffer, c'37; Nancy Wilson, f'37; Polly Strandberg, c'unell; Betty Williams, c'37; Jean Russel, c'37; Ruth Swarthowr, fa'37; and Warren Jaren, fa'uncl. Kappa Alpha Theta will be hostess tomorrow afternoon from 3 to 5 at the W.S.G.A. tea to be given in Central Administration building. Christmas decorations will be used. Mrs. P. H. Klinkenburg, housemother, will work. Delta Tau Delta entertained the following dinner guests Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Leach of Kansas City; Marilyn Kaysing, c'ary?; Frances Burrows, c'uncl; Helen Smedley, c'uncl; and Jess Trowbridge of Kansas City. Dean Agnes Husband will entertain the cabinet of the Y.W.C.A. at a tea at her home Thursday afternoon at 4:30 c'clock. There will be no cabinet meeting that day, according to Frances Ballard, c'34, president of the association. Kappa Sigma held its annual Founders' Day banquet last day, marking the fraternity's 64th year. Guests were Professor and Mrs. L. H. Axe, and Professor and Mrs. W. R. Maddox. Dinner guests at the Phi Beta Pi house Sunday were Maxine Light, c'35; Virginia Clark, of Parsons; and Mrs. S. T. Ryan, of Wheaton. Dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house Sunday were: Avanell Bush-meyer, Helen Jedlica, June McGinnie and Miss Catherine Clifton, of Paola. Weekend guests at the Delta Zeta house were: Rosalae Conrad, '33; Elekanor Montgomery, '32; and Elizabeth Conrad, '31. Dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house Sunday were: Margaret Pyle, Melba Reinicke, and Phil McKnight, '33. Delta Zeta pledges entertained the actives with a spread after closing hours Saturday night. Gamma Phi Beta will entertain Delta Tau Delta with an hour of dancing Thursday evening from 7 to 8. Dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house Sunday were Professor and Mrs. R. D. O'Leary. Chi Delta Sigma announces the pledging of Walter Campbell, Rocky Ford, Colo. Kenneth Kern, '33, was a weekend guest at the Triangle house. WE'LL COLLECT YOUR BAGGAGE —take it home...and bring it back again Wherever you may live, if it is within regular vehicle limits, Railway Express will call for your trunks and bags and speed them on fast passenger trains through to destination. You'll be surprised how easy it is and how quickly your trunks will be home. Thousands of fellows—boys and girls, too—have found Railway Railway Express has served your Alma Mater for many years. It provides fast, dependable service everywhere. For rates and security audits, merely telephone the local Railway Express office. Here is a simple time-saving suggestion that will eliminate a lot of unnecessary trouble and worry for you. Send all your bagage, trunks and personal belongings home by Railway Express. Then, after the holidays, send your baggage back the same way and Railway Express will handle it swiftly, safely and promptly direct to your fraternity house or other residence. Express service an economy not to be sneezed at. AGENCY, Inc. SERVING THE NATION FOR 94 YEARS NATION-WIDE SERVICE RAILWAY EXPRESS The Westminster A Cacella choir held a party at the home of Dean D. M. Sworthout at Valley View after their rehearsal which was held last night at 7:30. Mrs. P. E. Emery of Lawrence was a Sunday dinner guest of Chi Delta Sigma. "STANFORD DAILY" PUBLISHES NEW LITERARY SUPPLEMENT "The Stanford Daily," published by the University of Stanford, recently inaugurated a new practice in the publishing of university newspapers by the University Press. It is a regular daily edition. The supplement is to be called the "Stanford Criteria." The first edition of the "Criteria" contained the work of 17 Stanford students and faculty members, and featured a symposium conducted among representatives of the faculty on question: "The Books I Enjoyed Most During 1933." Although published in newspaper form and size, space figures computed on the first edition showed that the "Stanford Criteria" will be the largest literary supplement on the Pacific coast. AT MINNESOTA UNIVERSITY CAFETERIA PRICES LOWERED A reduced price for meal tickets is being established in the Union cafeteria at the University of Minnesota as an economy aid to students, according to the Minnesota Daily. The new plan includes 17 meals for $2.50, which is approximately 15 cents a meal. Based on prices previously recorded, this is the most likely day, supporters of the plan assert. The plan is "strictly an experiment," J. C. Poucher, director of service enterprises, said. It will be carried out during the remainder of the quarter, when will depend upon the demand for such an arrangement by the students. Miss Meguiar Speaks to Freshmen Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, assistant professor of home economics, spoke to the freshman commission yesterday afternoon on the subject, "Dress." This meeting concluded a series of talks which have given this fall at the commission meetings about the different phases of personality. The first meeting of the Girl Scouts training class which has been organized at the University under the direction of Miss Prien, who is a member of the national Girl Scouts association, was held an afternoon at Robinson gymnasium. Training Class to Discuss Various Phases of Work During Course The course will last five days during which time Miss Prien will discuss such subjects as the purpose of the organization, its code of honor, the formal scout meeting, and recreation among the scouts. About 25 girls have already signed up for the course. A fee of $1 is charged for attending the meetings. Girl Scouts Hold Meeting The remaining classes will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday night, 4:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday afternoons, and 9 Saturday morning. Miss Prien is also organizing a class among the scout troops of Lawrence. All those who are interested in this kind of work are urged to enroll. KFKU --rom. Musical program arranged by Roy Underwood, associate professor of piano. Tuesday 00:00 p.m. Eighty-fifth Athletic Interview presenting Mike Ahearn, director of athletics, Kansas State College, with Professor E. R. Elbel. Wednesdav 2:30 p.m. K.U. News Notes prepared by the K.U. News Bureau 2:45 p. Elementary French Lesson, W K. Cornell instructor. 15. p.m. The Pupil Insists, "Give me up to date training," Professor H. E. Chandler. AFTER THE PLAY HOT CHOCOLATE HERE TODAY at the GONE TOMORROW! Union Fountain 10c Sub-Basement Memorial Union And you can't borrow one unless you're lucky! THOUSANDS of men are still trying to borrow a copy of the last issue of ESQUARE—the magazine for men only. Those who were fortunate enough to buy one, did so the morning it came out. By noon most of the men's stores and newstands were frantically reordering and, though we printed over forty thousand additional copies, *that* wasn't enough. Anyway, the second issue of the first and only general magazine for men is out today. And if you were one of those who got left at the post in the scramble for copies of the first issue (or even if you weren't) this is to offer fair warning that the first issue of ESQUIRE gave only a sort of budding notion of what this second issue is like. ESQUIRE Ernest Hemingway, John Do Passon, Gilbert Seldes, Morley Callanhug, Montague Glass, George Ade, Robert Hobbie, Bobby But, in addition, (slow down, big names ahead) we've included Emil Ludwig, Paul Morand, Louis Golding, Westbrook Pegler, Irwin S. Cobb, Dwight Fieke, Alexander Millerand, André Manuros, Owen Johnson, Thomas Burke, Jack Dempsey, Louis Joseph Vance, and—well, this could go on for forever in a 160 large and ever picked entertainment a man ever picked up between two covers—and couldn't lay down. There is actually the wordage-total of two popular novels in this one issue. There are over forty pages in color. There are full page cartoons galore. There are full-color pages of men's clothes "their clothes"—not "fashion." (We mean, you can wear them.) As for the ladies, we have just one word of comfort. ESQUIRE makes a swell Christmas gift for any man. With this issue it becomes monthly—50 cents a copy, 5 dollars for year's subscription. Esquire Publishing Company, Palmolive Building, Chicago, Ill. On Sale at All the Better Men's Shops, Department Stores and Newsstands THE MAGAZINE FOR MEN ON SALE These slippers are as warm and cheerful a greeting as Christmas itself. 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This year the nation is going back to the old habit of remembering old friends . . . for, after all, what else is there to remember? This year, you can afford the practical, stylish and economical gifts you will find here. Whether you pay 50 cents or 50 dollars . . . there is a brand new bundle of happiness waiting to slide down your own stocking when you attach it to some one else's. We're ready NOW. Ober's HEAD TO SPORT OUTFITTER All of our finest suits now $29.50 You better hurry!