TUESDAY, MARCH 21. 1933 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Hill Society Call K. U.-25 Before 12:30 p. m. Dinner at Broadview Inn The members of the Saturday Night club were entertained at dinner Saturday night at the Broadway Inn by Professor Dismissner Alter. Professor John Ise and Professor F. H. Guild were additional guests. After the dinner Professor Aller read a paper on the history of the movie, and traced the history of the search from the time of Plato to the present era. Marriage Announced Entertain Guest From China Mrs. Olive Burkland of Omaha announces the marriage of her daughter Nami Ceil to Charles Samuel Fobs. 4. Mr. Samuel Fobs, the son of Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Samuel Fows, of Kansas City, Mo. graduated from the School of Engineering of the University of Kansas in 1900 and was affiliated with Theta Pi. He is now with Black and Veatch, an engineering firm of Kansas City, Mio. Psi Chi Meets Leland Lan, Chinese graduate student, was among those invited to meet Miss Frances Wilson, superintendent of the school. She attended the school of Christian university, Shuangtung, China, and on furfong. She was the house guest over the weekend of Miss Florence and Emma Snow a week earlier in Dairy Sain. She is visiting at Baldwin. Professor H. C. Tracy spoke to the members of PSi Chi, the honorary psychology fraternity, at a meeting yesterday afternoon. His subject was "The Development of Motility in the Toadfish." After the business meeting ten was served. Miss Bealuh Morrison诵 Florence Campbell, c23, and Mary Francis Hatcher, c23, returned from Atchison last night accompanied by Susan Foster, Richard Drury, and William of Billham for Atchison. They were the guests of Kappa Alpha Theta for dinner. Tan Bet Pi elected 10 to membership recently. The following are the new members: Howard Oliphant, c;33; Edgar Gift, c;34; Verne Hail, c;34; Eddar Epp, c;38; Charles Smith, c;34; Paul Borel, c;43; Alfred White, c;43; William Martin, c;38; Glenn Hands, c;34; end Cyrus Cantrell, c;34. Mr. and Mrs. George Millard Hursley announce the birth, March 10, of, whom they have named George Millard Hursley, Jr. Mr. Hursley was formerly Carolyn Elizabeth Kelly. She graduated from the University in 1850 she and Mr. Hursley were prominent in the journalism department. Mr. and Mrs. Chad Odenen and their daughter Phyllis Jean were humbly and dinner guests at the Botan Theta Society in 1925, graduated from the University in 1926. The Chi Omega alumnae met Merdag at the home of Mrs. J. E. Hankins. After the business meeting, tea was served. The hostess was assisted in serving by Mrs. Richard Williams. Miss Audra Bunker and Miss C. Lamba The Lawrence Women's club held their March meeting this afternoon at Wiedemann's. Miss Rosemary telescoped professor of design, spoke in the Mrs. W, T. Carpenter was hostess to the Review club this afternoon at her Word has been received of the engagement of John Miller Kane, a former student of the University, and member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity and of Miss Marie Foster of Bartiessville, Okla. home. Dean Agnes Husband gave a talk on her trip to Mexico. Mrs. Faye Eaton and Helen Jean Gilchrist of Lawrence were dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house last night. The Round Table club met this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Ed Kline. Miss Eva Horton read a paper on "American Poetry." Mrs. Dismore Alter was hostess to the Ladies Literary league which met this afternoon. The Wednesday Duplicate Whist club will meet at Warkins Hall with Mrs. R. C. Morrow as hostess. Mrs. F. N. Raymond will entertain the Mercredi club at her home tomorrow afternoon. Mrs. U. C. Lott of Ft. Scott will be a dinner guest at the Beta Theta Pi House tonight. Kappa Kappa Gomma will be in charge of the W. S. G. A. tea tomorrow. Alpha Chi Sigma announces the pledging of Madison Marks, e33. At the Play (Continued from page 1) returns home unexpectedly to find his wife Violet, (Laurel Allen) gone theatrical on him is played with the usual Craften fashion. Could we say or should we say more? Laurel Allen plays up to the Craften fashion for the par pal value of her role. So, what more can we say for Miss Allen. Farrell Strawn, who laid 'em in the Jessica Crafton as Sally Hume, the much married and erotic woman who has been able to think it is—also has the Crafton approach—pardon, finesse—and one of the most colorful wardrobes seen in a recent movie, needed neither footwear nor nails. nails in the American Legion show are a couple of weeks ago, is Mr. Crottetch in the play—the man who makes the off-stage noise—and Strawn does much to keep the audience comedy-encouraged. Mr. Crottetch is a comedian of no mean ability. Betty Skirch is the very affected Marjorie Browne, a small town boy-friend chiseler, does a very effective bit of acting although one doesn't give a darn when it comes on stage in that raiding Riding Hood model in the last act. Robert Calderwood as Sydney Bradley, the lecturing Englishman, is the villain in the piece. A very charming villain to be sure, but the villain none the less. Calderwood has done one of Bradley's many roles in the part of Bradley and his satirist, the job does much to gloss over a few tedious moments in the second act. Dart Kernell as Sam Dearden, Number Two wollain, has a very small part which he does much. Acting in just the usual puckle, it's the little parts that count. All in all, Mrs. Bramwell is to be congratulated on her first full length play—she has done some one-act children's plays before—and we were disappointed that the first night audience did not take up our cry of "Author," In "Sauce for the Gander," Mrs. Bramwell, who is a graduate of the dear old U., has written a very able tale of a dog that lives in the brightest comedy sequences. We hope that the part of Nora is not autobiographical, for in the play Nora intends to give up playwriting. Mrs. Bramwell should not. real comedy, mind you, not farce that we have ever seen. time that we liked the play. All right, we did. Now, we want to give a hand to the cast and the crew. We can we hear our fellow students in Mies Wilen's class in Theory and Practice "Apple Pencil"—who had more to do with the success of the play than the cost of the show. That the play was the best cast one of the season, but we maintain that without the fine direction it had, it might have been a flop and we knew where he came. We saw the play in rehearsal. Want Ads twenty-five words or less. 1 list. five letters. 6 insets, 72c. Larger aid pro- teals. WANT AIDS ARE ACCEPTED COMPANISED BY CASH. Typical Word Families of German now on sale at Rowlands, 50c. Classifiers, analyzer, relates words (and their nouns) by leading to a deed of languages. —135 FOR RENT: 3-room apartment; private stairway hot and cold water; all modern. Phone 1253. 1037 Kry. — 133. Wanted: Experienced man capable of organizing and managing sales campaign among students at beginning of school next fall. Write application giving details of experience to Box G, care daily Kansan. -140 FOR THE JUNIOR PROM We Will Clean or Dye Your Evening Sandals Electric Shoe Shop NEW PRICES 101. 7 Mass. Rotation $ 2\frac{1}{2} $ 11 W. 9th per cue Swede's for Billiard's 731 Mass. St. Phone 540 $12^{95} Especially for Chilly Spring Evenings — We are offering a selected group of lighter, brighter Topcoats and Polo-coats in fashionable Tweeds and Velours at- SPRING! There are plenty of styles to allow a discriminating choice of belted backs, single and double breasteds. Tennis rackets restrung promptly. Weaver's Wonders if you are all fixed up for the Junior Prom Formals with Quaint Puff Sleeves or Cute Jackets $16.75 $19.75 Soft chiffons with clever little satin jackets or black chiffons with lace insets or organdie trim. Taffetas in the old fashioned style with puff sleeves and frills. And You'll Need New Evening Pumps Too Newest versions in fine evening pumps or T trap sandals . . . in black, white, or silver. Teens Just the Girdle You've Been Waiting For! $1.95 This little girdle is a pantie. And remember it has no supporters. It is ideal for dancing. The magician exhibits a flower pot with hinged sides on a table in the center of the stage. He opens out the sides to show that this container is empty. Closing it will allow the magician to enter it. After a short period of magic incantations he removes the screen. The astounded audience sees a beautiful display of the flowers inside. From the "empty" container, where did she come from? EXPLANATION: The girl was hiding behind the drape of the table. There is a trap door in the bottom of the flower pot, with a hole large enough to allow her to crawl through. She has a pink button on her wrist, a regular part of a magician's suit. The flower girl wears a rubber tunic and a bathing cap to keep her hair out of her face as she tumes down and the flowers expand when she emerges. Copyright, 1933, B. J. Bernolds Tobacco Company IT'S FUN TO BE FOOLED ...IT'S MORE FUN TO KNOW A trick frequently worked in cigarette advertising is the illusion that maddness in a cigarette comes from mysterious processes of manufacture. EXPLANATION: All popular cigarettes today are made in modern sanitary factories with up-to-date machinery. All are heat treated—some more intensively than others, because raw, inferior tobacco require more intensive treatment than choice, ripe to baccos. The real difference comes in the tobaccoes that are used. The better the tobacco, the milder it is. It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. That is why Camels are so mild. That is why Camels have given more pleasure to more people than any other cigarette ever made. It's the secret of Camels' rich "bouquet," their cool flavor, their lavender. Give your taste a chance to appreciate. It is greater pleasure and satisfaction. NO TRICKS JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN A MATCHLESS BLEND