PAGE TWO TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1920 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansar University Daily Kansa Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAB Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEP __CLINTON FEENEY Associate Editors Hurk R. Smith Iris FitzSimmons MANAGING EDITOR LESTER SUHLER Composer Editor Eugene Baldy Chemist Cameron Carson Night Editor Christopher Ropp Specialist Editors Chereese Ropp Sparting Editor Richard Jones Society Editor Marcus Uniess Society Editor Marvellous Uniess Athletic Editor Robert Plessey Alumni Editor Robert Plessey **MANAGER** BARIDARA GLANVILLE Foreign Adm. Mgr. Assistant Adm. Mgr. Assistant Adm. Mgr. District Adm. Mgr. District Adm. Mgr. District Adm. Mgr. Mentor Dirpmnt Mentor Dirpmnt KANSAS BOARD MEMBERS Lester Hobbs Mary Wooly Wilmer Moore Marine Jones J. Glassville Telephone Business Office K. U. 68 News Room K. U. 25 Night Connection 201K1 Polluted 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 Trust of the Jesuits. Subscriptions price, $1.00 per year, parcel in advance. Single single coupon. In advance, pay the fee on the first September 17, 1916, at the post office at Lawnery Kanker, at the post of March 3, 1919. TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1930 One day in the year, is all we set aside for her own special one. Just one day out of the many. But every student know how much pleasure it is to have mother here for that day, and how much she enjoys it. The day affords her a chance to visit son and daughters, and it is a time that the campus can be shown her in its Spring attire. But with the coming of Mother's day, would it not be a good plan to pause a moment and think over what mother has done that we may have the opportunity of attending the University? To think about it would be to appreciate her more. Perhaps there are some here whose mothers had to do much whispering in father's car before he could see the need of a higher education for his child. Perhaps mother aided the cause by skipping a little here and there. One does not need to be a hero-worshipper of mother, but it does no harm to give her a little appreciation. May 4 will find her with us, and she will be heartily welcome. We read that half a peanut will sustain one hour of mental effort. Wonder if instructors will ask how many had their half-peanut before beginning lectures. SHE TRIES HARD According to poets, there comes a time of year when the flowers are blooming, the sun is shining, the birds are singing, and all that sort of thing. The season is still called, after an ancient custom, Spring. At the approach of this season, a gill-edged film of happiness is allowed to descend upon everyone, and one is expected to be glad he is alive and so snoring when the redhair starts his morning revuele. To college students who are so unfortunate as to be romantically inlied it is a season of chivalrous evenings and anxious days. Chivalrous nights because the warm night air, the moon, the whispering trees, the chirping crickets, and the croaking bullfrogs call-anxious days because the lessons have not been prepared. The anxious days sometimes threaten to destroy the buffer film of gladnessness that joyous Spring sends to wrap about her little earthlings and protect them from cold realities, but still the student is not supposed to let them outweigh the good tidings that the evening shadows bring. And still some students persist in being decidedly unhappy. Others are only partially happy, in a restless, vague sort of way. But Spring cannot be blamed for that. She does everything in her power. Who can ask for more? "It isn't safe to go anywhere in a hired dress suit because it puts one in the glass with congressmen," Will Rogers said. Judging from this there are many potential congressmen on the Hill. THE MAN WHO LAUGHS The boast of Doctor Brinkley, of KFKB and gonl gland fame, that he is able to produce testimonials, a la Lydia E. Pikham, the proffessor of his no-called surgery, in suffering severely from a dose of its own medicine. A. B. MacDonald has produced in The Kansas City Star a number of testimonials no derogatory to Doctor Brinkley's practice that the esteemed doctor, in order to save his face, will probably to do more than send a trainload of rejuvenated octogenarian ants to Washington, as he inferns that he could do. But the last of Mr. MacDonald's testimonials is the best. He found a former nurse at Doctor Brinkley's sanitarium who testifies that the doctor used to derive much humor from the situations in which his unfortunate patients formed themselves after submitting to his stricteries. The nurse charges that Doctor Brinkley highly enjoyed the business of fooling his patients into thinking that his treatments would make them young again. We hope that the doctor's high glee over his patients' discomfiture will in some measure compensate him for the black eye he is now receiving. When he appears before the state medical board June 17 he will have a chance to explain reasons for his actions which are contrary in many respects to the ethics of the medical profession. THE PARKER NOMINATION The debate on Parker's confirmation was opened yesterday by Senator Borah who delivered himself of a three hour tide against the southern justice. He was to continue his speech this afternoon, Borah charges that the defendants of Parker who stated that Parker was simply following a precedent of a higher federal court when he uphold the "yellow dog" contracts in West Virginia, fail to remember that there was a later decision than the one Parker followed in which the federal court had abolished the "yellow dog" contracts. The argument has resolved itself into an argument as to Parker's attitude toward labor and toward the Negro. Parker is opposed by the same men who were opposed to Hughes, and most of the nominations by Coolidge. This unquestionably indicates that Parker would line up with the conservatives if appointed to the Supreme Court. At present three liberals, Holmes, Brandes, and Stone, remain on the court. Holmes is 89 years old. Aside from discussions arising to the personal integrity of Parker, it would seem that justice to a large portion of the people demands the appointment of a man of avowed liberal tendencies. Successive appointments of men of similar political bent smacks of oligarchy. THE RED MAN On a small reservation in northeast Kansas, a group of Indians are reported to be in poor health with some in need of medical attention and proper food. They are enduring hardships for lack of one more near them as an overseer, and their allowance from the government is extremely small. But this locality is not the only one in need, for a commission appointed by President Hoover found that in the Indian government boarding schools the children were living on a diet that cost only 20 cents a day. They could subsist on such a diet, but it was not enough to enable them to resist disease. Yet with reports such as these, Representative Louis C. Crantom of Michigan insisted upon the cutting down of appropriations asked by Heover to stop the slow starvation of Indian children in these schools. In this battle for food and clothes, however, public opinion forced the representative to allow twice as much for food as he formerly approved, although this still would not provide an adequate diet. Rather than for food, Crantom would appropriate money for labor-saving devices with operators for them, thus releasing the children from part of their labor for more time for studying. He forgets that under-nourished children cannot study properly. It is evident that a reform has been needed in Indian affairs if these people are to keep their health and their lands. More likely landing to them has not made the Indian independent. He needs someone as a guide, for many of the Indians do not yet have the property sense of the capitalistic Tendra huila la ulita季节规则 de El Atenco en este semestre jueve el primero de mayo. Es preciso que mi también. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVII Tuesday, 24 April, 1929 No. 167. FL. ATENEO: Square and Community Internship will hold a business meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 1, in room 311 Fraser, for election of officers, of the Squad. ROSARIO TUGADE, Presidente. SQUARE AND COMPASS; J. RAYMOND EGGLESTON, Secretary. SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB: Snow Zoeley club annual banquet will be held at the Colonial Theatre Thursday, May 1, at 6:20 pm. Please buy your tickets by Wednesday after- IRMA CASEY, President. Lecture fee is $200 per student. Attendance is illustrated lecture on "Present Day London for Students of Literature" on Thursday, May 1, at 4:30 p.m. in room 262 LECTURE FOR ENGLISH MAJORS: HOSE, MORGAN, Chairman, Committee on Meetings SCHOOL OF BUSINESS; SCHOOL OF BUSINESS School of Business on Wednesday, April 30. Polls will be open in room 114 Administration building from 8:50 to 11:30 a.m., and from 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. GILBERT GRAHAM SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ASSEMBLY: SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ASSOCIATION We will be held Wednesday morning at 12:20 in central Administration auditorium. My living room speaks up. Please call (843) 259-3611. The band will meet Tuesday evening this week at 7:30 on account of a rectal being held on Wednesday evening, K. U. BAND; J. C. McCANLES, Director. MACDOWELL, FRATERNITY: MacDowell fraternity will meet at 8 p. m. on Thursday, May 1, in the exhibition room on the third floor of west Administration building. There will be an exhibit of the work of members of the fraternity. Attendance is required. WILLIAM VANDEL, President. PEN AND SCROLL There will be a meeting of Pen and Scroll Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. in the rest room of central Administration building. Officers for the coming year will attend. white man with whom they have to deal. If trust estates were established for them, as commissioners Ibanez and Scattergood suggest, the Indian' chains would then be safe from designing persons. The United States government has a responsibility toward these charges. As yet the commissioners have made little progress toward providing vocational education for Indian boys and girls, but they do seek a basis for advancing the individual Indian how to make a living in competition with the white man. CLARK STEPHENSON, President. Italy Invites Students Florence, Italy—(UP) —A new Institute offering "the most practical and hospitable means to foreign students to study particular branches of Italian culture" will be established here in Florence, with new naval collections of manuscripts, the great art galleries and government II museums placed at the disposal of the Institute. Berlin — (UP) — There will soon be few, if any, sharp right-hand turns in Berlin's streets. In connection with street repairs now going on, street corers at heavy traffic points are being ordered to speed up traffic at intersections. At The Concert With interesting stories and some less interesting intellectual tales in music, the University concert poem makes an impression during their evening spent with the five new artisans who gave him the violin, viola, cello and both Hik, violinist, student of Prof Karl O. Kueteren and Lalita Appleton, pianist, student of Prof Carl A. By Lela May Ensign Miss Hill opened the program most appropriately with Handel's "Sonata in D Major" which, in the Adagio, her first movement, had an ecclesiastical tone. She also opened an opening professional. The closing movement, "Allegro," furnished a lively contrast and prepared the auditorium for her range of artistic tute to come. Miss Hill's second number, the difficult Wienbach "Concerto in D Minor," was well intertwined with short piano pieces, and there were also though parts were less interesting. The recurring melody of the "Rosetta" piece was very tight, very short. The "Finale" was a hitting close to the roar of the chorus. A few dreamers and dreamers but very, very short. The "Finale" was a hitting close to the roar of the chorus. A few dreamers and dreamers but very, very short. The "Finale" was a hitting close to the roar of the chorus. A few dreamers and dreamers but very, very short. The "Finale" was a hi The height of beauty was reached in Bick's "Air on the Q String" as an act of strutting and striking in music that reveals to the human mind life as only art can, and HE has tried to embrace her with her audience. She closed her program as appropriately as it was opened, this time with a happiness as arranged by Kroiser. Loclie Thomas, fa30, accompanied Miss Hill. Mrs Thomas, a violin major herself, seemed to understand the Your Union Building is just the place for YOUR SPRING PARTY Your banquet and dancing may both be upstairs and you can have a good banquet at a reasonable cost. The Cafeteria Feature Event Wednesday — Thursday Nothing is good enough but the best NEW DRESSES To Meet SPRING OCCASIONS Smartly and Thriftily Wisconsin Boys Expected to Plant 400,000 Trees $14.75 The loveliest dresses we could find . . . in the moulded waistline, even hemline versions of the 1930 model With feminine collars and jabots—soft bows at neck, waist and wrist—new sleeves . . . new shirrings . . . and countless other finishing touches! The most dashing new prints . . . the most delectable spring solid colors . . . to make your spring wardrobe the height of perfection . . . in smartness and thrift! Sizes for women, misses and juniors. J. C.PENNEYCO. needs of the soloist thoroughly and played the piano parts with much interest. Miss Appleton's second group of interpretive numbers brought her closest to her audience. The first group, composed entirely of students intellectually interesting with its four classic dances, but it can hardly be compared to the winner won the hearts of her audience. But in the second group her first number had a warmth in its "岛Spell", that took the imagination to explore beyond the sea and seas, so fresh and sunny was the piece and its interpretation. The comparison, the "Gold Fish" of Debussy, was both descriptive and interpretive. The "Gold Fish" of Debussy is a fish in a bowl, frightened, and darting away at great speed, but always full of flashings of moments of light and movement. Miss Appleton's closing number was the "Rhapsope d'Avergne" by Saint-Jean de Vence, played by Professor Preyer on the second piano. The number was dominated by power and ecacies, but now it seems that the feelings of loneliness would hold awake only to be swept away in instant by the on-crust of the rhapsody. Wisconsin's form youth are taking an active part in the state's reforestation program. Over 450 have already been planted in the Junior Forest Range project. Have you taken advantage of the It is expected that 900 boys and girls will plant *400,000* seedlings this year as compared with the *325,000* planted in 1925 by 862 project workers. The stagnum of these runners is "Have Boys and Trees Grow Up Together." The idea of having the boys and trees grow up together has taken hold readily. A study of the control of insects which attack trees is also included, one of the methods being the encour-agement of certain birds to live nearby. Junior Forest Ranger work is carried on as a club project. It includes such work as learning to identify the plants used for the proposed plantings, information on time of planting, and method of planting. The work is started by making cuttings from the trees, then arranging a nursery bed where the seedlings are grown. These are later transplanted to another plot where they are set out on the sites selected. special prices on Reference Books $ 1 0^{\mathrm{c}} $ to $ 5 0^{\mathrm{c}} $ Price Reduction! HOLEPROOF HOSIERY made to sell for $1.95 to $2.95 now selling for— $1.45 Choose from these lovely shades created by Lucile of Paris Claire Tunis Gurn Metal Creeole Coquette Sylphe Porcelaine Mocca Rose Brune Grain Krimmer Ficole Moderne Champagne Starting tomorrow, 350 pairs of fine all-silk chiffon and semi-chiffon stockings from our regular stock of $1.95 Holeproof Hosiery and $2.50 and $2.95 K. T. C. brand hosiery on sale at $1.45. This is a royal opportunity for those who want to wear a hose or a hortense of its real worth. These are discontinued numbers but the shades the styles and the quality are highly desirable.