PAGE FOUR WEDNESDAY. MARCH 16, 1932 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Hargiss Expects Sixty Candidates on Football Field Kansas Coach Will Spend Next Four Weeks in Tutoring Team Prospects ON SIX-DAY SCHEDULE With formal football practice on an afternoon, Coach H. H. Wargus expected 10 letter men and a squad of new material of about 50 to report for Monday and yesterday afternoons were devoted mainly to checking out equipment, but work in training on them was done. Three men have turned out for the two days' practice, but Coach Hargiss stated yesterday that he expected 60 for The spring session will consist of only four weeks' training, but work will continue six days a week, and will be followed by a longer period of less intensive practice, according to Coach Hargias, who will conduct the practice with the assistance of Larry Mullins, "Frosty" Coach, Steve Stinshaw, and Roland Logan. Practice will be restricted for the first week or so to drill on fundamentals. In the last part of the training session, the work will be continued in actual scrimage, to help determine a possible regular lineup for the fall. Letter men who turned out for yesterday's practice included Ormano Mansour, a coach at Hanson. Those expected to be in uniform for today's workout were Arthur Baker, "Speed" Atkinson, Zovinnik and Ernie Caswell, Warren Plass and Ernie Caswell. Carnie Smith will not train this spring, as he is out for the baseball team. Pete Mekhering will report after games against Italy in tryouts in United States Olympic wrestling team. --announces a Sport Shorts When the Kansas basketball players cast ballots to choose an honorary captain for the season they didn't know where to go and were going to tie for the honor. After the voting was over it is easy to see that there was a strong desire to create a thug as could have been done. O'Leary and Page were the guiding hands of the team on the court this season. O'Leary was the scoring threat in a tightly contested, cool, defensive work. The crowd loves a scorer but Page was about as much a force against this fan this year as anyone on the court. Charles Corsaut, basketball coach at Kansas State, said at the banquet for the Kansas basketball team, that Kansas had won the toughest basketball race in the Big Six race this year that he once came into conference circles. The Aguilles helped the Jayhawkers take undisputed possession of first place in the conference by defeating Mossori and served as coach of the suit the Kansas State coaching team was invited to the banquet given by the team in honor of the Kansas队. "Babe" Ruth is still holding out. At Westbrook Pegler puts it, he is crushing over a patty $10,000. It seems the Yankees are going to wear with the hard time stuff as yet and thinks that the Yankees should gamble $80,000 on an old man so far as base- "Pepper" Martin, the super-star of the World series last year, is playing good baseball for the Cards in exhibition games. His ability to break up games and make make outs of the opponent in general seems to be as good as ever. Farmers Petition State to Curb Ravenous Ducks Benington, March 16- (UF)—Ravenous ducks, raiding Ottawa county farms, are doing so much damage that farmers are petitioning the state for They have been swarming into fields at night and eating grain farmers put out for their livestock. Thousands of ducks wintered on Lake Goodwyn in the Ontario county state park northeast of here. Apparently they were with the deputy warden's bill of fare. Claims for damages done to farm crops have been filed with the forestry fish and game department at Pratt They were not paid for lack of funds they had been paid by farmers General Roland Boyton. From them they got the following opinion, "Frankly, there is little I can say that will help the farmers. These farmers, or others, would violate a state law, a federal law in shooting the ducks." "On the other hand, I am sure the game commission at Pratt has correctly advised that the department has no responsibility to claim for damages done by ducks." Patronize Daily Kansan advertisers Intramural Games --announces a The semi-finals in each division of the intramural indoor basketball games were played by teams from Kappa Sig's running a close race for high honor. Sig's wins of the season will be recorded in Beloit. Division 4: Marshall, S.P.E.; Brink beta; Morrison, K.S.; Austin, Beta. The entrants were divided into six divisions. Those in the semi-finals were: Gruber, Theta Tau; and Baxter, C.D. Division 2: Hainsley, Triangle; Boer, K.J.; and McMahon. Division 3: Kiel, Kapp Sig; Bechtel triangle; Dodge, Beta; and Leidig Lapia Sigma. Division 5. Langle, Triangle; Youngst- metha, Teta Tau, Frazier, Phi Gam; and McDonald, K.S. Division 6: Ives, K. S.; Barber, Delta Chi; and Colson, Kappa Sig. All semi-final matches must be played and results turned in to the intramural office by Friday evening. When these are over another drawing will be made. If the winner has the majority of two men from the same organization meeting in the division finals. Relays Committee Begins Work for Coming Event Will Select One Sophomore Tomorrow to Complete Group The Kansas Relays committee met westerday afternoon in order to organize the event, which will be held April 23. Fred Bachelor, CW, was elected president and appointed. The publicity committee is composed of Gordon Sloan, C³, chairman; Jordan Dennis, C³, $3D Bachelor; C³, Nathan Evanov, C³, $3D Evance; C³, $3D Slainleigh Tier. 734 Those appointed to the promotion committee are John Sleeper, c35, chairman; Maurice Rice, c34, and William Dodderidge, c35. On the program committee are John Sleeper, chairman; Charles Maule,ph32 and Clarke Adams,c35. One more sophomore will be chosen to fill out the allotted number of sophomores on the committee. All those wish to apply should present themselves in person before the door and enter room 206, Robinson gymnasium. No written application is necessary. TEMPERANCE TALK WILL BE WEDNESDAY; NOT THIS FRIDA The lecture, by Miss Aubra Williams, on "Science Temperature Instruction" will be given Friday afternoon at 4:30 PM on Wednesday. Attendance will afternoon, as previously announced. Kappa Sigs Losc Court Game Miss Williams, who is a graduate of Bethel Academy, Ashbury College, will come under the auspices of the Worcester University professors and lectures have been well received everywhere. Her lecture at the University will be given before the students of the college. Ms. Williams will ball. Miss Williams spoke last week at Witcha and Friends universities. Last evening the Kappa Sigma fraternity journeyed to Topoka to meet their brother fraternity at that school in a friendly basketball game. The Kansas Kappa Sigma's came back, however, on the short end of a 35 to 20 Begins Outdoor Practice Members of the track squad began outdoor practice yesterday and will continue to train outside if the weather remains good. The first meet scheduled so far is the Kansa Ralphs which will be held April 23. It is probable that a month's schedule about the middle of next month but no definite plans have been made. Roho Ruth Sigaw for 1977 Babe Ruth Signs for 1932 St. Petersburg, Fla., March 16—UPD St. Petersburg rushed his 1932 home contract to the Boston Braves for a contract supposedly calling for $75,000. Rescue 16 From Ice Floor Pinechuck, N. Y., March 16—(UP) Sixteen men, trapped on a floating ice foe when it broke away and drifted Lake Eric, were rescued today. Men had been on the ice since dawn Wall Keeps Safe Combination Memphis, Mo. March 16 (UP) — When the combination ticket is shut the safety device was destroyed by fire no one in the firm could remember the numbers and unlock the safe. Then Hugh Walker recalled that he had a safety device on the wall of another store. Investigation revealed it was still there. WHO Assesses SURVEY Dates March 10, 2016 Harey nationally to value wheat in the bin at 25 cents a bushel, the county clerk has announced. Credit receipts for wheat in elevators are being assessed at the millage rate. Will Access Stored Wheat Joan Bennett Married Hollywood, March 16 — (UP) John Bennett, the youngest of three daughters who followed Richard Bennett to screen and stage fame, will be married here today to Gene Markey, Motion picture writer. Lenora, March 16- (UP) - A meteor weighing about 6 pounds has been found on the heavier Mindirap farm near McKeesport, college student. McPherson College student. During the cold spell of last week, was not uncommon to hear the statement, "We have seen the insect pests." However, according to Dr. H. B. Hungerford, professor of entomology at the University of Wisconsin. 'Insects Not Killed by Cold Spell of Last Week,' Says Dr. Hungerford Doctor Hungerford stated that the spring generation of insects has not been batched at this time of the year. He said that "it is a good weather has no effect on insect eggs. Doctor Hungerford explained that insects could withstand prolonged low temperatures, and that they were sudden, and gave the insects a chance to adjust their body fluid to the new environment. He said that it would be impossible to grow degrees to kill insects in the adult stage. Wilbur Coen Will Leave Wednesday for Houston, Texas Wilmer F. Coen, Jr., c33, coach of the Kansas tennis squair, will wrap Wednesdays' competes in the annual River Forest Club singles and doubles championships. Competing in the matches will be such as those at the Philadelphia; Clifford Sutter, of New Orleans; H. Ellsworth Vines, Jr., of Anaheim; and Willem L. Allison, of Fort Wayne. fo Try for Championships KANSAS MINE SAFETY ABOVE ANNUAL SEASON Coen and the other members of the Kansas team have been practicing for sometime in the Robinson Gymnasium. The first match of the season will be with the Missouri team on April 14. The matches will be held in the University Athletics. The probable Kansas team will consist of Cutip, Coen, Prosser and Hard. Coen and Lett now hold the doubles championship which they won in the tournament last spring. They will defend the title and each will try for the singles crown. To Feature Olympic Race KFIKU Will Give Dramatization of 800-Meter Run A dramatic sketch of the 800-meter race of the 1912 Olympic games will be presented at the CICFAC in Paris on Saturday KFRU by Brutus Mann, track coach, assisted by various members of the team. The 800-meter event of that year was the climax of the 1912 games, which were held in Stockholm, Sweden, and is known as one of the outstanding races of all times. The contestants comprised the fastest field of half-milers everathered. In working out the sketch, Coach Hamilton has written many letters, in order to verify the accuracy of details. Coach Hamilton, who was himself a member of two Olympic teams, those of 1920 and 1924; is chairman of the Kansas between of the Olympic financial com- JQUOR PROBLEM CONTEST OPENED BY INTERCOLLEGIAN The basketball games between the Freshman and Sophomore women and the Junior and Senior women, which were postponed until tomorrow night. New York, N. Y., March 16—(NSPA) —An editorial content, announced in the current issue of The Intercollegiate, which seeks to challenge editors or signed articles dealing constructively with the problem of liquor. Several topics are suggested, including the need to control its Use," Personal and Social Effects of Alcohol," "Should the Use of Liquor in College Be Controlled?" How?," A Constructive College Pol- The article which must be written by an undergraduate expressly for this contact must be not longer than 500 words. The author should be a college paper or magazine on or after Feb. 15, 1932. It should be submitted to the editorial editor by the date of publication. All judges have been selected and $100 will be given in prizes, the first being $40. Editorials could be sent to the editor at the University of New York, 347 Madison Avenue, New York City. Women's Sports The canker worm moths, which are seen caught in tree bands, said Doctor Hungerford, have been active since December, and have probably already laid their eggs. He said the small grass-hoppers which appear so early in the spring, will eventually pass through the winter, and are not the kind which destroy so many of our crops. This larger species, he said, was probably unaffected, was probably unaffected. The only insect on which this cold snap might have been seated, stated in the letter from the author, is that winter covering of straw and grass was burned off before the cold, and grass was still present. Kansas ranked slightly better than the country as a whole in its safety records, the figures show. The fatality rate was almost identical with the national rate for Kansas, but the fatality rate was 15 per cent better. The fatality rate for Kansas mines was 205 for each million hours of work performed, while the rate for the entire country was 206. The non-fatal injury rate in Kansas and 109 for the United States. Washington, March 16 — (UP) Twen- mage were killed and 423 were injured in accidents in Kansas coal矿 dur- ing a mine explosion. The federal statistic recently released. KANSAS MINE SAFETY ABOVE AVERAGE OF WHOLE COUNTR CHANCES OF HOLDING A JOB BEST BETWEEN 36 AND 4 Philadelphia, March 16—(NSFA). In an interesting survey made in Philadelphia by the Industrial Research Department of the Wharton School of Finance it has been discovered that those between the ages of 36 and 45 have a chance to get married. A position than those of a younger or older age. This fact was made public by Emmet H. Welch, research associate. He also points out in his account that though you may be over 45 and you are an old man, your chances of holding jobs are much better than those of youths between the ages of 16 and 25. According to this report if you are of the age of which the largest percentage of those desiring work and employed employment are women, your opportunities of securing employment are decidedly more favorable. Women desire employment, in general, are holding a larger percentage of candidates that are of the same class. Be awake. Read the Kansan. Am Arbi, Mih. March 16 (NSFA) —In an interview, given to a "Michigan Daily" representative, Governor Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland, wet candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, declared that there is no "declaration" among the college and university students of the country. The governor admitted that his experience with modern universities was not very great, but he insisted that "no evidence" for the many criticisms of student imbibing. To the college correspondent Governor Ritchie added: "But the situation cannot be too bad, for I have been in Am Arbi for an half and half without found a drink yet." Drinking Situation Not Hopeless Edward's Cleaners 205 W. 8th St. Phone 185 Plain Coats and Dresses Suits Cleaned Hats Cleaned and Blocked 25c DR, L. H. FRINK. Dental Gum diseases. X-Ray. General Practice Nerve Block for sensitive cavities People's Bank Bldg. Phone 571 K-Aggies Elect Cage Cantain Manhattan, March 16—(UP)—Andy Skradskis, graduate of Wydowale High School, Kansas City, Kan., will cap the season with a win in team ball next season. Skradskis, a junior here, has won two letters. His first game was captain of the team a year ago. DR. H. X. DOLEN Dentist Dickinson Theatre Building Men enjoy their radios, their automobiles, profit by the results of modern diagnosis and surgery, inhabiting karyolysis and air. But of the attitude and point of view of research, of the stern dissection, of disease, they are still mostly in ignorance. Economize at KEELER'S BOOK STORE Books School Supplies Pictures Chicago, March 16—(NSPA)“A general lack of understanding of what research is all about, and the fact that our general social behavior so slowly adapts itself to the gifts of scientific knowledge in building factingacts with regard to the position of research in our social order,” said Dr. Harry Woodburn Chase, president of the University of Illinois, in a recent address on “Research and the Social Order” before a meeting of the University Society of Engineers in Chicago. "We people in the educational world are in some measure to blame. On the other hand, they have adapted to develop in the minds of our students a very clear notion of what it means to be a teacher and often handled as though all of them were to be candidates for the doctor- DR. J. W. O'BRYAN. Dentist Insurance Building, Phone 507 Prevention and treatment of pyrethrum and other diseases of the gums. DR, L. H. FRINK, Dentist President of Illinois University Encourages Scientific Investigations Research Aids Social Ills H. W. HUTCHINSON Dentist FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE X-Ray-General Practice Phone 395 731 Mass. Christian Science Organization. University of Kansas This is the year for EUROPE $106 (up) LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1035 M... for a delightful crossing in modern Tourist Class—and prices in Europe are at rock-bottom. LIMITED vacation budget will take you to Europe this year. Via White Star and Red Star you travel in the best of company, with a guide, and jolly times, at fares from $106 one way, $187.50 round trip. Entitled In Europe you'll find prices amazingly low. Your American dollar goes further than it has in years. You can easily visit Europen and save money. Famous ships to choose from, including Majestic, world's largest; Pempherd Island, Pempherd Island, and many others. Send for booklet to tourist Class CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: THE ROAD OF SPIRITUAL ACHIEVEMENT PAUL A. HARSCH, TOLEDO, OHIO in Member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston. Mass. Mo., or Agents. WHITESTAR-REDSTAR International Mercantile Marine Lines 1025 Mass. Lawrence, Kansas Administration Auditorium, University of Kansas FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1932. 8:00 P.M. THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND FLOWERS Fresh each day---with all the trimmings potatoes, salad. and dessert ---from our green houses which are the largest in Eastern Kansas. WARD'S "Flowers of Distinction" Phone 621 931 Mass. A Steak Dinner for 35c 1340 Ohio Jayhawk Cafe That's only one of the delicious, really satisfying meals, lunches and dinners you will find here at the same price. "You can't beat it at the price' VARSITY THEATRE Hurry! Last Chance to See William Powell in "High Pressure" TOMORROW St. Patrick's Day Special See the Stars- of the Stage Play Herbert Marshall Edna Best "Michael and Mary" A Story of a Love that Lived Through Life's Darkest Threats Added— Adobe "In the Shade of the Old Applesauce" Screen Souvenir - News Shows 3 - 7 - 9 Prices—Mat. 10-15c; Eve. 10-25c in Friday - Saturday— "Law and Order" Walter Huston Harry Carey Ramon Hatton WALTER LIPPMANN WALTER LIPPMANN The United States in World Affairs $3.00 The Book Nook TAXI 25c Plymouth and Chrysler Cars 12 TAXI HUNSINGER When the "Breath of Spring" Assails you and that longing for the wide open spaces cannot be repelled— Call 433 and a will be delivered to you at once. FORDS 10c a mile CHEVROLETS 12c a mile DODGES 14c a mile —plus 20c per hour RENT-A-FORD DICKINSON NOW! NOW! Yesterday, fame bestowed her highest laurels on GEORGE ARLISS in the MAN WHO PLAYED GOD... A Warner Bros. Hits with VILLE HEMING BETTE TEES and distinguishes him by John Adolph, who made "The Millionaire." You owe it to yourself to see it! Friday - Saturday- Edward G. Robinson and Loretta Young "The Hatchetman"