SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1920 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS RAGE THREE Charles Beach Gets Four Months and $325 Fine for Selling Liquor Twenty-five Students Attend Court When Judge Gives Sentence Charles Beach, senator here, first year from New Bedford, sent out a memo to the judge requesting $200 and roc which amount to about $125, for valuation of the injury in the district court. The injury was in the district court by Jamaica Hugo Mae. The defendant will be held on appeal. Beach was convicted last year on the justice hearing and the University withheld his degrees. Beach appealed to the district court and was convicted Nov. 4. He was arrested or charged by brought by a federal officer, and he pleaded guilty in June and bought a quantity of the booklet from Beach. The Post Office Is Moving There were about 23 inter- tendants from the Hill at cour- the sentence was given. The Post Office is Moving The Lawrence post office force becomes the Post Office, permanent quarters in the A. D. We building at 793-214 Manasquan and 800-596 Marion during part of the construction a addition to the post office building Want Ads --ward Weld of Knaus City. Student giants were Gordon Kingley and Meria Geltman. Classmates were David Clarke, St. Clairco, and Mrs. Zada M. Helsek. EAT YOUR SUNSHINE meal morn a Tavern. Both chicken dinner breakfasts are served on Sunday, but meals throughout the a 14th & Tenn. LOST: Alpha Delta Pi banked tween Snow Hall and Varsity ater, Reward, Call Larry Jubb. TUTORING - Six bennies, 84, I. 12 Greek, German, Spanish, French were those in mashup form quarte at Beck Noel). Presidential M. English, half-past fee. For twenty-five, award of Larry Larry, award of Cail Larry Larry. LOST: An Alpha Omicron I Tuesday. If found please retur 1144 Louisiana, or phone 888. BOOM AND BOARD: Meals, ta- day, Sundays included, $5 per wrs. R, S, Stldam, 3067R, 1401 tuckery. WANTED: Room with kitchen, vienna or two-room apartment light housekeeping by two up classman, near University; $16.00 month. Address "X" care Daily 1 sun. WANTED: Thirty young men work during the K. U, M, U. H. Call between 5:30 and 6:40. Hc. Call 1234 Ohio. Please see us. KEYS MADE for trunks, auto- bies, door and paddock; goo- paired, pairs and shears sharpe Padlocks and nighthatch locks sale. Rutter's Repair Shop, 8 6th. Business and Profession DIRECTORY --ward Weld of Knaus City. Student giants were Gordon Kingley and Meria Geltman. Classmates were David Clarke, St. Clairco, and Mrs. Zada M. Helsek. BUTLER MOTORS Wilton Knight and Wishart Corp Good Used Cars. 617-19 Mar THE CHARTLON INS. AGENT We Protect and Serve You—So that You May Render Useless. Phone 689 Insurance I FIRST CLASS DAMMER BOOP BOB STEWART 818 Mass. Lawrence K Sheet Metal Work and Furnaces E. W. PENCHARD Roofing Guttering Phone 245 13 East 818 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Frys Glass Exclusively 1025 Mass. MODERN SHOP SHOP J. A. LYONS DR, C. E. ORELUP—EYE & EAR Special Attention to Fitting of Glass Phone 443 Office oire Crowd Crim FRANK H. LESCHER SHOE REPAIRING 812 1/2 Mass. Phone TROLLER & TELEMARKER 812½ MASS. Store REMOVAL Phone 2 GOOD & RICHARDS Dealers in Wallpaper and Painters, Ph. 620 Opp. Fire Dept. 207-209 W. Ph. 620 Opp. Fire Dept. 207-209 W. DR. FLORENCE BARRINGE OSTEOPATHIC PHYSician Phone 2337 900% Massachusetts H. W. HUTCHINSON 731 Mass. Store REMOVAL Phone 3 HARELY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE New and Used KNOLES BICYCLE Shop Phone 915 1014 Max. C. C. COBB Radiator, Body and Fender Wear Radiators rebuilt, heat sensors polled Radiator, Body and Fender Worn Radiators rebuild; bent torsion rolled breaks welded. 10 East Eight. Phone 817-543-2655 Announcements Prof. Robert Calderwood of the department of speech and dramatic art, who was ill last week and could not address the Chapin Institute club chair, sought a timeout to chalk his regular meeting at Wiesbaden's campus at 6 p.m. Miss Marion Pernis, assistant professor in the department of design will give a lecture in Spencer-Thurley Hall on Friday, Nov. 26, the history of her piece which she exhibited there from Nov. 3 to Nov. 27. The group includes forty paintings; come are frames and portraits by artists including Jacques Gautier, Academy at Colorado Springs, Others are mountain and landscapes secured during the summer of 1928 and 1929 in Eden Park, Colorado. In addition, in the latter part of picture There will be a meeting of the SOCIETY (Continued from page 1) Week end guests at the Alpha XI Delta house are Ratha Porter, Dorozie Haint, Margie Wills, Gloria Renner, of independence; Nell Marle Downer, Katherine Hees, of India; Donna Christie, Richard Chester; Virginia Gulman, Ruby Pe Tumberikhe, of Holdingham, and Mr. B. W. Sugard of Lawrence. The chaperons were Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg, Mrs. L, C. Harris and Mrs. Frances Goodell. Gamma Phi Beta will entertain the members of the faculty at a reception next Wednesday evening from 7:30 until 9 o'clock. The members of Phi Beta Pi entertained at their annual fall formal at the chateau house Friday night. The house was decorated with red, blue and green lights and white mums. (C) Chapman University. (C) Chapman University. (C) Chapman University. Mrs. Joel McNeal and Mrs. Gertrude Pearson, Jack Warfield, Miles Simmons, Jack Warfield, Miles Simmons. The Kappa Kappa Gamma house was decorated with balloons, chrysanthemums, and allibouncees Friday. The party was sponsored by Companions for the party were: Mrs. T, S. Stovay, Mrs. J, H. Kraepe, Mrs. Belle Willem, and Mrs. N. K. Thompson. Marcelia Miller of Woodworth was an out of town guest. Karl Eberhard of Kansas City and Hugh Brown of Independence are week end guests at the Phi Mu Alpha house. were gold and yellow streamers, and colored Hints. Chapmanes were blue with yellow flowers. Mrs. Mina, Mia, Glen Lehmann, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Walker were guests Senate Cannot Adjourn Elisabeth Millington of Pittsburgh and Toolkind Bandy of Refore are guests at the Alpha Delti Pi屋 donde la High School Edulcon Con- 'Young Guard' Works To Get Speedy Legislation Washington, Nov. 16—(UP)—All adjournment plans were abandoned today as the Senate, leaderless and tired, entered upon its third continuation day of 11 hour sessions on the rate section of the tariff bill. Notice was served by a new band if Rombloneans known as "the young junal" that the long and harrowing sessions would be continued under pressure as long as possible to accelerate passage of the legislation. The "young guard" claims Mr. Hoover is dissatisfied with the failure of the so-called "old guard" leaders to carry out the president's wishes Santa Fe Excursion American Royal Live Stock Show THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE TWO Steuben's Organ O "And." Max returned, thoughtfully, "can you prove that an organ is not wicked?" By Kenneth Seltsam Max answered his own question, "Of course, you QUILL Like many of the somewhat isolated mid-western farm settlements, Steuben, a proprospero) little Dunkard community, hay peacefully in the midst of an ocean of prairie land, quite away from the cities. It is only a few miles to the mark. On the north were the low uncultivated hills with their equally unfertile marshy bottoms. Ten miles, or more to the south wound the waterless Arkansas, on each side of which was an uneven row of hedges stretching almost the entire distance north and south, indicated the eastern extremity. Years before, when the first of the colony had come, they had planted those trees with that intention. There was no need for such demarcation on the west, because the horizon was only the unbroken, rolling plain. All were silent. In approximately the center of the roughly square area, which was dotted with neatly kept farm houses, and upon perhaps the highest point, stood three buildings. On one side of the broad road was a rather dilapidated white frame church, with a small rectangular school nearby. The third structure, located on the southwest corner of the road and was set on the edge of a small wheat field, then becoming green under the intense, yellow April sun. This last presented rather a queen condition of additions, each of which seemed to express a different architectural idea. Nevertheless, it served in dual purpose well. The front window provided much light, while vided living quarters for the owner, a robber, full-faced, middle-aged bueheler, Max Yoder. If Mas Yoder's house was queer, Mas Yoder, himself, at least as the older members of the colony saw him, was even more queer. It was not that he appeared particularly different. Of course he was in charge of all the rest. It was his ideas that were queer. For an elder in the church, and a person who, having lived in Staben all of his life, should know better, he had lately been doing some "thinking and questioning" about what people quiet-spoken Herzertzetter had necessarily expressed the matter. Only recently Max had purchased a radio—a thing previously unknown to the Dunkard colony, and then, instead of confining it in the back of his house, he had lected it to the very end of the store, supposedly so that everyone hear it. Max was always that way. They never knew exactly how to interpret what he said. Finally, Eric Brushacker, the oldest among them, explained, "We've come to ask your advice, Mr. Yoder. You remember what we were talking about at the new church. Then you know what they said, Sunday. Well, we just wondered if you could think of any way we could go aboot: to change their minds. The church in the Leba Settlement has an organ. I know, because I've been in it. Anyway, that's not really a problem. We've got money of our own to use, too. But just because they can't find anything in the Bible about organs, they think they must be wicked things!" As is often the case in such communities, the young people of the Settlement, most of whom had been away to Normal School at one time or another, would learn from their experiences that was a champion—a means, and perhaps the only means, by which the older circle might be influenced. He not only understood them, but also did not seem to mind saying what he thought in the presence of others, that he had been there themselves, had necessarily availed all their lives. Early one morning, Adolphie, who helped about the store, came rushing in from the porch he had been sweeping, to tell Max, who was busily sorting the mail in the post office section of his room. He sat down, with a glum appearance. Immediately Max dotted his black apron, and stepped quickly behind the counter. Although when the door opened to admit four or five young men, Max knew they had not come to buy groceries, he in apparent seriousness, began, "Good morning, boys. Now what can I do for you?" We have some people up in the shop. They are fresh, indeed, Skultz brought them up in the mail from Pontina, this very morning." "You left your work at one of the busiest times in that you pay me a vial?" Max interrupted. "We'd better." Karl Hottrapp, a tall light-heired boy, stepped forward slightly to say, "Why, Mr. Yoder, we-we didn't exactly come to buy anything, this morning,' but—" can! You are all too bushish. What is wickened, anyway? Well, I don't know. Whatever it be, though, it is not in an organ! Of course, we'll mind that minds. There'll be an organ in the new church!" During the days that followed, Max Yoder, from all appearances, did nothing out of the ordinary. Just kept the store running as usual. At the church, when it opened in 1946, perhaps final decision regarding the new church should be postponed another week. For reasons by no means the same as his, other of the congregation had done. He smiled at the boys knowingly and continued. "I'll see to that." Feeling that their mission had been completed, the young men departed. As each of the farmers looked through his mail, the next morning, he found a small white card bearing the name of Mr. Kelley. All your family and any visiting friends are asked to Max Yoder's store to a meeting on Thursday past noon at two o'clock. Farm chickens (young chickens), there is to be after that a talk on Spring Crops to be heard from the Better Farms Meeting in Kansas City, Mo. The people in the settlement were, above all else, systematic farmers, and they liked Farm Agent Zirkle, for what he told them had always proven practicable. So it was that on Thursday at the appointed time, almost every one of the chairs that had been conveniently arranged in the various unoccupied spaces in Max Yedder's store, was filled to capacity. The chairs included steb, barried, resilient men. In addition, few women, their padded round faces framed by the quintet black bonnets of their sect. Then, too, there was a group of boys that always congregate on such occasions. The schedule for the afternoon had been so arranged that Mr. Zirkle was to talk until the time when the radio speech would begin. All were most attentive to his suggestions, and later, in spite of his absence, they talked with him. The radio was delivered in itself; they became equally interested in the Better Farn discussion. Throughout the program, Max Yoder sat in the back of the room, his arms folded and a satisfied expression on his face. At the close, he came to the front and began talking. They were joined on the formtion sent, whereupon they went with him into another room. A few minutes later, the boys returned carrying enormous dinner plates, upon each of which was a haeping quantity of steaming curry puffs two large saucage sandwiches. After all had been served and friendly conversation had begun, Max slipped quietly around to the radio. With a minimum of disturbance and with an arm resting against his chest he justified the instrument so as to bring into focus a soft musical number then being played. Immediately the room became extremely quiet. As Max turned, a mass of bewildered faces faced toward him. He was not surprised, but the music the musical background, "this is organ music. Maybe you've never heard an organ before. You know we've been wondering whether or not to have one in the new church. Of course, our organ would be a great gift. This, but it would be on the same principle, only-" "We don't want our meeting ruined," interrupted an elderly man in the back of the room, bluntly. It was vident that the majority of the listeners hardly knew what to do. Had they been more impulsive of temperance, perhaps they would have arisen from their chairs and immediately left the place, but as it was, they just sat. When the several organ numbers had been finished, Max turned the radio off. Silently the group departed. A few minutes later, he took his kindest step, but most of them merely gued at him much in the same manner as a timid dog regards a somewhat cruel master. "Listen to the music a little longer, Mr. Swarths." *Must returned calmly, "and perhaps you will think dif-** *ficult." In the minds of the young people of the German Baptist Settlement, the next Sunday morning, as they sat through the regular service which preceded his business meeting, there was a great deal of interest. Many were still afraid. Since Thursday, everyone, young or old, who had not be had at Max Yoder's store, knew just what happened. Some were thoroughly pleased with the organ idea, but some, or at any rate those most outspoken, were quite easily displeased. It was impossible to determine what Max Yoder's expectations were from looking at him; for as usual, he would have been comfortable bench composely—almost indifferently. Finally the long first service was over, and the second began. Frederick Schumacher, the tall grey-haired preaching elder was in charge. With an air or dignity, which had been assumed for such a time to make it permanent, he began, "Fellow men were invited to come and see of the new church. At a meeting of the board of elders, it was voted that with your approval, we accept the plans presented three weeks ago. It was also voted that the new sanctuary is to include no widely intrusions such as the organ. The chamber has a large organ and solemn, and therefore as plain as possible." "Brother elder," Max Yoder exclaimed suddenly, "at a time like this, we can’t help being reminded of the building of the first church here. My father and your fathers came way out from Pennsylvania to this Kansas prairie because they thought there was something valuable in plain living. They built this church. And now we are making plans for a future where we will have different. All of us have more than enough to live in here are full, and our fields are fertile. But still you’re right, we must never forget what our father came for. And yet, just as things are different all about us, our young people have different problems and ideas, even though we might think they shouldn’t have. So, brother elder, I move that we permit them to buy an organ, with this provision: it shall be placed in the bismarion room and be used for worship. We will fully uphold the worthy idea of “plain living” and at the same time meet the new problems." "I record the motion," Karl Holtznappel hastened to say. Mr. Schumacher's dignity was somewhat disturbed. He stammered something about it not being exactly right, but finally called for a vito, margin of two, Max Yoder's proposal was accepted. And so, Stenbren got an organ. Generally speaking, the members of the colony thought of the whole affair as a compromise. There was to be an organ, if — They were not as shreded as Max Yoder. None of them were shredded. They had the new church been completed but before the organ had been ordered, he had spent some length of time carefully measuring the wall space in front of the little chapel. Not one of them understood people well enough to know, as did Max Yoder. The choir members were responsible for the life of the new church, the little red-ribboned mezzo at Pontius would be forced for, to assist in moving the organ from the basement to the first floor. No Cook for Miles Standish (Continued from page one) "John," he beamed, and his voice broke the silence like the log cracking. "John, I want you to help me. You see these weapons and trophies hanging on the wall; all marks of valor, won on the battlefields of America." John asked, "Think what it might be acceptable to a maid?" John Alden looked up. "Surely, in all Plymouth there is no man more respected than you. All know your bravery; all know that but for you, the colony must long since have perished. A maid who knows your bravery may indeed ungrateful. What, sir, is on your mind?" Captain Miles fidges with the iron candlestick on the mantel. "John," he began, "tomorrow is the feast day, and before long it will be Christmas week. When you come to town, take one to keep the cabin and bake puddings and roast game. Now there is a maid here in the colony who is alone, and it is bad for her to be in the alpine. John, go to her for me and make her offer of tea, so that I can do old captain who is afraid to do it for himself." John Alden gaped. What had happened to the old duffer? "sit," he replied, "I have no words to make proposals, and methinks I have heard say that walsome welcomes them better coming from one's own lips. Still, if I can help you, so be it. Would it please you to tell me, sir, the maid's name?" "Priscilla," said Cantain Miles. Read the Kansan Want Ada And then it was that John Alden threw down his papers and, grabbing his greatcat from its hook, dashed out the cabin door. Priscilla! Dolt that he was, he might have known it. Why had he not had a watch? He did not deliver the message? He couldn't tell that to Priscilla. He had just been planning the words in which he would ask her for himself that very night. Hadn’t she let him escort her home from the meeting-house, or did she not, because business was this that he should promise to Princess if that old duffer of a captain. Still, he had promised. He beamed Priscila's cabin, the odors of spices and baking floating into the air the most sensual the moment she stepped out. She moved as she moved about inside; saw her, through the opening at the top of the door, rise from before the door. (Continued on page three) for Economical Transportation Ford Touring—good condition. Priced to sell quick. good Ford coupes—just what you need for this winter. Low cost and up-keep. Ford Coach—excellent motor and good appearance. One you can feel proud to own. HAMILTON Motor Co. 1928 model A Ford—sport cabine. A dandy and piced right. Save the depreciation on new one. Demonstrate Dodge coupe—good transportation. A low cost. 7th & Vermont Phone 534 --arp "he Cheese" b Presents Fantastic Y. Playwright Iled With Bright mance in Antery Perched le Cliff Cannibals - Ship- WEDNESDAY Student Activity Tickets f Green Hall