PAGE TWO 4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 6. 7 ing i nameh; usati studen cation, in the diate; cise of veLOP 7. 7 which it reik pared WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1933 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS AL PRAIRIE BROOKPEE Inventor-in-Chief Chiles Associate Editors Vigil Parker Managing Editor ARNOLD KREETMANN Campaign Editor Campa Editor Colleen Coleman Smart Editor Paul Woodmesser Editor Paul Woodmesser Socialite Editor Greethold Orden Exchange Editor Laboratoir, Brunishut Advertiser-Editor MARIANE INCE Advertising Manager MARGARET INCE District Manager Jack Galenitt Pelahouce KARAMAN BOSS Robert Wilhelm Marianne Robert Marianne Robert Salfrey Scott Ibryllou Ibryllou Martina Lawrence AIFEoud Broodwein Aifeoud Broodwein Arnold Kroemann David Smith David Smith FEMALE Business Office KU 16 News Room KU 27 Night Connection, Business Office 2791K Night Connection, News Room 2792K Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Press of the Department of Subscription price, $1.60 per year, payable to advance. Single copies, 5 each. Entered as second-class matter September 12, 1910, at the office at Lawrence, Kansas. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1933 THE N.S.F.A. CONVENTION The convention on the campus of the National Student Federation of America, with its representatives from approximately 25 colleges and universities of this western central region of the United States, shows again the broadening scope of student interest and the increasing purpose in student activity. This organization, of which our University is a member, states its purpose in the annual report: "We would achieve a spirit of co-operation among the students of the United States to give consideration of questions affecting student interests. We would develop an intelligent student opinion on questions of national and international importance and foster an understanding among the students of the world in the furtherance of world peace." In working toward these ends, the federation acts independently of political parties or religious creeds. The convention held in Law rence will devote two days to the consideration of vital student affairs, activity fees, bookstores, student government, grading systems, and questions that are of concern to the vast majority of the student bodies of the representative schools. A discussion of economies in general will be followed by more specific work on student finance. The last day of the convention will be given over to international affairs. The facing of the striking problems which are constantly present themselves and the solution of these problems by the students' own efforts will develop a stability of mind in our students which can not be broken down by hair-brained ideas or radical reforms. So long as American students face and solve their own problems, we need fear no such uprising as has occurred in Germany. It is the hope and desire of the participating students that from this convention may come resolutions on education which will aid in the solution of troubling student affairs and lead to more intelligent student government. May we add our most sincere wishes for a successful conference and the realizing of the high ideals of the organization. ACCIDENTALLY June 1 will bring the first day of examinations to end the spring semester. It might be a good idea to write this date down some place where it can be seen with some regularity between now and then. Old Father Time will keep right on plugging away, clipping off the seconds without regard to the mess he is leading us into. It would be an accomplished if some one could get next to the old gentleman and make some arrangement for extra time to prepare for the finals, but such a feat is very improbable. In order to avoid the terrible dilemma usually so prominent among the students when quiz time finds them unprepared, it might be a way out if some one would determine to start studying now, and then accidentally do it. BACHELORS AND MAIDENS For years college women have been hearing how they are endangered their chances of getting a husband by increasing their knowledge. In fact some clever investigator has recently determined that from 30 to 50 per cent of American college women have swapped their chances of marriages for a gilt-lettered diploma. But practically has been has been said concerning the fact that it works both ways. The poor man who goes to college is also less likely to marry—although for slightly different reasons from those of his educated sister. Fortunately it has never been said as yet that a woman did not want a college man for a husband because he would intellectually be her equal. The man who goes to college marries from five to twelve years later than the man who does not go to college. While in school he meets the highest class of women, socially and intellectually, and when he marries that is the kind of woman he wants. She in turn demands a higher standard of living. It will take the average college man from three to eight years to establish himself in the business world. During this time he will have had less opportunity to associate with women of the type he would choose for a wife, and most of the women he did know will have married. In the meantime he will have found that his career and his clubs occupy his days, and he will regret giving up his freedom. As a result, another college bachelor is added to the role. A QUIPS from other QUILLS There is an opportunity offered somebody to invent a deck of floating cards to be used in playing solitaire in a bath tub $\cdot$ McPherson Republican. By this time the banks should be adopting as a theme song that old number. "Ann't, We Got Funds?"—Indiana Daily Student. If you think there are no insulting cuss words in the sign language, note the impure's thumb when it says the man is out—Daily Trojan. Few are so color blind that the can't distinguish the long green.—Mehican Republic. Campus Opinion --picking his men, had at last involved himself with a rascal. . . Editor Daily Kansan: We spend several thousand dollars on the football team, a trifle for track equipment, more for the basketball team, and do it gladly. However, when it comes to scheduling out-of-town matches for the tennis team or even buying them a dozen halls to play with, we have some spot in the school's pocket-book. The University of Kansas has won the Big Six tennis championship for the last two years. During that time, they have been less and less supported by the school, until now the members of the team have to buy their own rackets, strings and even halls out of their private funds. And the worst part of it all is that K.U. has a team this year which could issue a challenge to any college team in college basketball. And the team this year is "Junior" Coen, former Davis Cup player; Sterling Cutlip, Greater Kansas City champion; Arthur Voss, Kansas state champion; Andrew Reed, twelfth in the Missouri Valley ranking. Rather than stating here my opinion of those persons who feel that swiping posters (especially before the time of the advertised program) is necessary to a proper collegiate atmosphere in their rooms, I shall merely hope that those two paragraphs will serve to remind you of the least. May the exhibitor hear from other mouths than mine all the things I'd like to say here. These few remarks are addressed in particular to the person who removed a poster from the billboard east of the University. The East-West Revue had, of course, depended upon that poster for advertising purposes. The School of Fine Arts warned us to "use plenty of nail" is proof that the practice is wide-going. M. M Editor Daily Kansan: H. A.B. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN ALL UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION; The annual Honors convocation will be held at 10 o'clock Thursday morning. April 20, in the University auditorium. E. H. LINDLEY. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Newark University at Chapel Hill at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication day Vol. XXX Wednesday, April 19, 1952 No. 150 II. UNIVERSITY CONVOKATION The K. E. Brunch of the A. I. E. E. will hold a meeting in Marvin hall, Thursday, April 20, at 7:30. Professor D. C. Clark, of the Sociology department. Wednesday. April 19, 1933 No.150 A I E E: Regular meeting of A.S.C.E. Thursday, April 20, at 7:30 p.m. in room 210 Marvin hall. A motion picture on the Jackson county highway developments will be presented at this meeting. EDWIN ELLIOTT, Secretary. A. S. C. E.; RICHARD FOOR, Secretary The regular meeting of the Kansas Association of Chemical Engineers will be held at 7:30 Thursday evening, April 20, in room 101 Chemistry building. Election of officers will be held. Refreshments will be served. MACDOWELL: The annual meeting of the honorary members of MacDowell club will be held Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in the central Administration rest room. All members please be present. Guests may be invited. LINDLEY DeATLEY, Secretary. MACDOWELL: MARY BUTCHER, President. MID-WEEK VARSITY: The regular mid-week variance will be held tonight at the Memorial Union building. On account of the NSE.A. Convention the variance will be hold from 8 to 9 o'clock, one hour later than usual. OZWIN RUTLEDGE, Manager. PHI CHI THETA: Installation of new officers will be held at the home of Mrs. Blocker 1807 Alabama street, this evening at 7:30 o'clock. JUANITA MAYOR, President. Women in Womens Club will sing before the Kiwians club Thursday no 12.30 sharp, at Wiedemann's. Every member is expected to be present. 1234567890 There will be an important meeting of Tau Sigma Thursday at 4:30, LILLIAN PETEISON. 图 TAU SIGMA The Y.W.C.A. cabinet will hold a joint meeting with the Y.M.C.A. cabin at 4:30 p.m., at Westminster hall, Dr. Urhuis will speak. John was convinced now that this whole affair was without old Tom's knowledge or consent. His rage against his father was wholly gone before a feeling that the old man was peculiarly dependent on him for aid in clearing his name of the snitch he had been placed on it in this community. Y. W. C. A.; BELOW ZERO Gorbel was the man, he told himself. This was Gorbel's doing from first to last. His father, after years of wieldy A Romance of the North Woods Again something new for a young man to consider as he rolls down alike camps. Until now this had been a fight without the law; now the possibility loomed that a governor state's authority might be called upon to persecute which was being directed against Elon Richards. CHAPTER VI SVNOPSIS Copies of the first chapters of the story may be had upon application at the Kannan Business Office. HAROLD TITUS FRANCES BULLARD, President Copyright. 1932. WNU ScripRc3 CHAPTER 1 "Tom" Benkap, his timber operator, ordered by his physicians to take a complete rest, plans a three months trip abroad, and makes to his son John, just commencing in the business, are broken, for no apparent reason. John Gulbran, Benkap's partner, whom John and other business associates of Benkap cordially dislike, is a bank of contentious business with a complete understanding. CHAPTER II — At Sheottring, his train delayed by a wreck. John is ordered to leave at once if refuses to answer. He doesn't realize it is a case of mistaken identity. John learns his father is believed to be out to warn his brother. He realizes it is a bearer. Be供畏 and unbelieving, he seeks employment with that company. At the office he finds Gorbel out, but Gorbel does not recognize him. The girl is Ellen Richards, owner of a bar in New York, and Gorbel name as John Steele, the Bekkin being dropped inadvertently, and John knowing the feeling against his own shows Ellen Kearse to believe that is his name. CHAPTER IV—After heroic effort, the team falls on the rails John, admitting Hilda to treatment, the conditions, begins to have a sentimental attachment for the girl, which CHAPTER V — The Richards harm a boy and burns in a fire. In the blazing fire out of the dead body of a stranger. He realizes the fire was set but returns to the house where he parties to such an event. Steele and Sherif Bradshaw arrange to work together on the fire. CHAPTER III—Ellen engages John as her formal man in a hand-to-hand operation of the Richards company culminates in the deliberate wrecking of a loothouse. but setting opinions alright, the release of this urge for Eleni Richards which was growing so enormously under his direct attention, paramount as they were. Other people crowded in before them. He must, above all, keep the Richards Lumber company alive until he could force matters to clear them. He went at once to Jack Tail and they stood outside the barn and talked for long. In the beginning the barn boss nodded mildly from time to time; at the end, he was spitting tobacco with a whip-heard enthusiasm. A team—a white team—came in off the job at moon. The teams, with their shovels and hoops, had chopped asteve thick sticks in two and thiff charmed them in the black hole. John went out with the loads, and he dropped off at the crossing WayBill looked at him liquorily. At two o'clock Jack Tait bitched the white horses to a light sleigh, tossed the freshly made blocks in, and drove off, elbowing rapidly. "Jim and his wife, here, are going to paint Sheinert tonight!" John laughed. "I just wanted to see that you got up the hump, Jack Tait's being in a team and I ride back with him, she says, 'This is a big baby, and they miss the popcorn! Do you do hide the key, in case I want to cool warm?' It was very quiet; a light snow was falling, fakes large and feathery, blots cut the out edges of the rooftops strudged down the main line, down over the break, on for twenty rooks. There he paused, looked right and left and nodded. "On top the door casing to the left," "Right." Good luck!" He stood there as the train broke over to the down grade, rocking in the late afternoon stillness towards Shoe string. "We'll carry the blocks over," he said. "This snow might stop; runner trucks wouldn't be so good. Horse tracks are harder to trace." While Jack fed his team John went into Jim's house and telephoned. A private line这面, with no chance of a central operator overhearing. He called for the mill foreman's office, and then Roberts answered, said锌。 At dusk he heard Jack Talt coming and walked out to meet him. "I's Steele, Roberts. How do things stand?" "Not so good! We've only got thirty thousand in the yards tonight and it's snowing here." "Now listen; and don't ask questions. Get your supper as soon as you can, come back to your office and stand by the telephone." "O. R." answered the man. Stuccel and Jack seize a cold meal hastily and went outside. From the sligh they carried arm loads of bread, and Jack climbed the track down beyond the break in the grade. This doom, Jack took the knife and stabbed him in the chain to it and drove his team across the tracks to the long line of Balkman and Gorbel stands waiting on the street. "All right," he said, and Jack spoke to his horses. They leaned into the collars, strained, bung, and then the car slowly started to move. The wings of the plow had showed the snow back to give ample room. Jack hooked his chain to the arc bar of the first cars front trucks while John knocked the blocks from the door and placed the car, grapping the brake wheel. With the wheels once turned it was easy. Out on to the main line they trudged and John set the brake brad. unily, driving the shoes tighter against the wheels as the grade became pronounced. "Steady new. . . . She wants to roll!" He was straining on the wheel with all his weight. Jack pulled in his team until stuck on the chain of clams in the snow, an adventure that led him to the rail before the wheel while the tire mucked into its charred surface and the wheels sank to a grudging halt. Quickly they threaten more blocks in place and turned the horse over. Down they came with another ear, repeating the process, careful to let it ease most gently against the first they heard. They went on for a while, counting the running fast. Back again. They spoke but little and then in undentures, though they were miles from other ears. Snow fell faster. Ankle in deep light, deep fluffy fakes坠 ear straight. The last car went into place; the final coupling was made. "Get your team back to the sleigh now," John waltsporred. "Tell call Roberts." "Ought to be. Always is. That's orders. Yes, I can see the light from here." In the house again be rang the mill office and the foreman answered at once. "Is the last yard switch open?" John asked. "Then stay in your office and keep your eyes open. And if anybody starts down that vard get 'en back'" ("To Do, Continue") LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. LOOK!! You've Wanted Fraternity and Sorority Crested STATIONERY - AT A PRICE - So Here T's 32 Sheets Crested 25 Envelopes "Cellophane Wrapped" After College WHAT?. Harry D., Watts, V. P, of James Stewart & Co., inc., builders of computers and word-says. World progress depends upon engineering. No wonder degree college students look toward computing; you must have a technical background, ability to take the course, and take advantage of the breaks." Buy Edgewater in anywhere two in one Ready, RUBBED and Edgewater Plug Silicone package to pack up humerion. Some humerion. Some sealed tin. Of course most college men know Edworthy*. They like its distinctive flavor that comes only from this blend of old lilac butter. Perhaps you liked it a lot. You can also laurus to Lars & Bo, Co. 105, S 2d, B1, Richmond, Va, and you'll get a free sample packet of Edworthy. *A recent investigation showed Edworthy the potential for lilac butter. "ABILITY to take the knoches." And yet brains count above all. That's why in engineering, as in college, a pipe is the favorite smoke. A pipeful of old EdgeWorth Smoking Tobacco clears the brain for those intensive problems that confront the engineer . . . or the college man. © EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO Another aid to business ...a Teletypewriter "Central" Working out new ways to serve the communication needs of the public is an objective always in the minds of Bell System men. The new Teletypewriter Exchange Service—typing by wire—is an example. For some years Private Wire Teletypewriter Service has speeded communication between separated units of many large organizations, Telephone men—anxious to make this service more widely useful have now established Teletypewriter central offices, through which any subscriber to the service may be connected directly with any other subscriber. Both can type back and forth—their messages being reproduced simultaneously at each point. This new service provides fast, dependable communication and does for the written word what telephone service does for the spoken word. It is one more Bell System contribution to business efficiency. BELL SYSTEM 1 TAKE A KIP HOME BY TELEPHONE LATTONIGHT AT HALF-PAST EIGHTH