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 Bench, senior here last year from Needles, was sentenced to four months in the county jail and fined $200 and costs which amount to about $155, for violation of the no-toxicating law, nowiley murders a teenager in New York. Hugh Munn. The defendant with drew his motion for a new trial. The Post Office Is Moving Beach was conquered last year by the justice hearing and the University passed to the district court and we conquered it. He was brought in as a forced officer, who it was revealed in the testimony when bought a quantity of the best food. The Laevacre post office force will be "at bat" tomorrow in its ten porch quarters to the City of Vancouver. The building, at 1405 South Seventh Street, this building will be used during part of the construction of an expansion to the city's Seventh and New Hammersville. There were about 25 interested attendants from the Hill at court who the sentence was given. Want Ads 二. 判断单项选择题(共15小题) EAT YOUR SUNDAY most meal in v. 64 Tavern. Both chicken dinners and vegetables are served on Sunday, and nightshirts throughout the 14th & 14th Tern. — 20 LOST: Abba Deba Pi taskbook beween Snow Hall and Varsity. Theater, Call. Rallie Jardid, 236. TUTORING - Six lessons, $4 Latino, Greek, German, Spanish, French in each language. Prerequisite: you must attend two in manifold form, inquire at Book No.12. Freedman Math. English, Math. half price. Two or three hours of study per week. award; PcC Call Larry Jaccod. $200 LOST: An Alpha Onieron Pi ping Tuesday. If found please return 114 Louisiana, or phone 888. — 158 ROOM AND BOARD: Meals, two a day, Sundays included. $3 per week Mrs, R. S. Stidman, 2076R, 1041 Kunucky. —57 WANTED: Room with kitchen pri- vidence or two room apartment for light housekeeping by two upper classmen, near University; $16.00 per month. Address "X" care Daily Kills san. —57 KEYS_MADE for trucks, automobiles, door and padlocks; gris repaired, knives and shears sharpened; Padlocks and nightlight locks for sale. Rutter's Repair Shop, 8 Eighth Street, #6. —f- WANTED: Thirty young men to work during the K. U. M. U. grand call between 5300 and 6400, Harry Call, 1100 0100. Please phone deph phone. Business and Professional DIRECTORY BUTLER MOTORS Willys Knight and Whippet Cars Good Used Cars...617-19 Mass. St. THE CHARLTON INS. AGENCY We Project and Save Yee—So that you May Rent Same Car... Phone 689 Insurance Bldg. FIRST CLASS EARBUR SHOP BOB STEWART 838 Mass. Lawrence, Kan. Shoe Metal Wear & Towne E. W. PENCHARD Roofing + Gathering Skiplights Phone 245 13 East 8th St. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glass Exclusively 1025 Mass. MODERN SHOP SHOP J. A. LYNCH 836½ Mass. Lawrence, Kan. DR, C. E, OEELUP—Evt & EAR Special Attention to Fitting of Glasses Phone 445. Office for Crowd Drain Stock FRANK H. LESCHER SIDE REPAIRING 812% Mass. Phone 256 GOOD U KICHARS Dealers in Wallpaint and Paints, Lawrence, MA. Php. 620 Opp Fire Dept. 207-209 W 8th. DR. FLORENCE BURROWS OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN 3237 www.3095.massachusetts H. W. HUTCHNSON HUTCHNSON 731 Mass. House Bldg. Phone 395 HARVEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES and RAILWAYS of KNOLES Bicycle SHOP Phone 915 1014 Mass. C. C. COBB Radiator, Body and Fender Worth Radiators rebuilt, boat fenders worn and breaked wrenched. 10 Eightth. Eight phone. 486. Announcements F. Prey, Robert Caldwerd of the department of search and dramatic art, who was ill last week and could not address the Chipman Edward's club, will be the spoken tonight at the Wiesenthal's at 6 p.m. Miss Marion Peers, assistant professor in the department of design will give a lecture in Spencer-Tauverman Hall at 10:30 a.m. explaining how the museum exhibits them from Nov. 2 to Nov. 17. The group includes forty paintings; some are figures and pencil drawings; others are sculptures. Academy at Colorado Springs. Others are mountain and landscape scenery painted during the managements of 1986 and 1989 in Eaton Park, Colorado. Art in the latter is pictured. There will be a meeting of the Rhodecounty committee Monday_31. ward Weld of Kansas City, Student guests were Gordon Kingsey and Melia Gormit. Charionees were Kevin O'Brien and Kristen St. St. Clair, and Mrs. Zota M. Healzer. Week end guests at the Alpha XI Delta house are Ruth Patina, Dorothy Hint, Marple Wills, Gloria Renner, of Independence, Nell Marl Dewser, Katherine Bees, of John Daunt South, Bambi Smechke, of Winona Timberlake, of Hissing, and Mrs. D. W. Stugard of Lawrence. SOCIETY (Continued from page 1) The members of Pin Beta Pi entertained at their annual fall formal at the chamber house Friday night. The house was decorated with red, blue and green lights and white swans. The chaperies were Mrs. O, C. MacLane and Mrs. Gerritte Poveon, MacLane and Mrs. Gerritte Poveon, Jack Warfield's Steven Symponettes. The Kappa Kappa Gamma house was decorated with balloons, cherry anemones, and silhouettes Friday through Saturday. Competitions for the party were: Mrs. T, S. Stower, Mesa, J. H. Krane, Mrs. Belle Wiltel and Mesa, N. K. Thompson, Marcella Miller of Norwich was an out of town guest. the chaperone were Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Mrs. P, H. Klinkenberg, Ms. L, C. Harris and Mrs. Frances Goodell. Ganna Pitt Betl Beta will entertain the members of the faculty at a reception next Wednesday evening from 7:30 until 9 o'clock. Elizabeth Millington of Pittsburg and Inaud Sandy of Reynard are guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house during the High School Editors Con Earl Eckhardt of Kansas City and Hugh Brown of Independence are week end guests at the Phi Mu Alpha house. Washington, Nov. 16—(UP) All adjournment plans were abandoned today as the Senate, leaderess and tired, entered upon its third continuation day of 34-hour sessions on the cultural rate section of the caroll bill. Notice was served by a new band of Bronxilars known as "the young guard" that the long and harrowing were gold and yellow streamers and colored, lights., Chaperones, were given a variety of glitter and, Mrs. Glen Lehmann, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Walker, were guests THE KANSAN MAGAZINE 'Young Guard' Works To Get Speedy Legislation SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANS I leaped from my bed of thorns. I wasn't a physical wreck. I would really live. Bring on your world, I fight it. I'm not in such a terrible shape, after all. Lawrence, Kansas, November 17. 1929 Vol. No. XXVII Santa Fe Excursion American Royal Live Stock Show Physical Examinations Required By Kaltun Haines I didn't have a chance to say anything. First thing I knew I was jumping wildly around the room wearing out my weakening heart. Next, the doctor whacked me on my back, pounded my chest, and put my neck through many exercises. I was weak. I really could not last many more minutes. Gold clawed themselves up and down my wrist. I would simply have to tell him to call the hearse. My back was the next thing to be scrutinized. The "back specialist" gazed and gazed. I commended to be embarrassed. Maybe I had not washed quite spatially before I left, or did the big event: "You are getting wings." What a relief: "You carry your books in one arm and that makes one shoulder lower." Would not that instructor who began the foolish idea of bringing books to me make you look physically unbalanced because of her? By Kathryn Hayes QUILL Into the "eye and ear" room we went trembling. If I should stutter as I tried to, Last Lesson I felt weak. My ambition to compete the world was drooping. Perhaps I was a delicacy. "I guess she will go into Class A." "Take off your mules, please. Oh! Yes!"—many n nod of the head accompanied the words for a examiner counted my ten toes. "I thought so. You, girl, my wear high heels." Oh! earth swallow me. "I have a little exercise to correct that." Wherewith my poor innocent foot which had never harmed anyone was wounded and left to run down like a clock. Senate Cannot Adjourn seconds we be continued under pressure as long as possible to accelerate passage of the legislation. The "young guard" claims Mr. Hirschberg's responsibility for the so-called "old guard" leaders to carry out the president's wishes —Lida Eckdall. I stumbled dizzyly along the edge of the pool (the exam was in the swimming room). If it hadn't been the shallow end, I would have stared there. Such was my despair! When I stepped into the door leading to those required physical exams, I was feeling well in body, same in mind, and ready to go out to fight the world. I left—but that's the end of the story. "You taught me all I know of being glad I clad myself in my flimsy robe and in my adored mules. Chucked my heels at every step, I walked proudly to the first instrument of torture—a weighing machine. If I had known that她 had been a brazen artist, I would not know when, according to the law of gallantry, to stop, I would never have come. My escape was barred. Shuddered, I stepped on that fatal platform. I can well appreciate Marie Antoinette's sensation as she ascended the scaffold to her head cared for by her brothers, minimizing evidence, I believed, so I'll keep the secret. I toothed into the next room. A man with a reflector fastened around his head gazed at me through a tiny eye. "Bad-not, I didn't know which way you was good or bad ears—I didn't know which when he had finished. After he had written a lot of words in a fancy scrawl I was a broken-down piece of humanity, and "Miss Physical Wreck has this wrong—that is terrible—the other thing very hard." I couldn't, however, grasp the meaning of the long words. Whether it was written there or not, I was a physical wreck. I staggered to the last doctor. There was no need to keep still any longer. I might as well tell him I was broken a broken-down piece of humanity, and disappear from school. "You taught me all I know of being glan And being loved," and singing out spring days You set my heart attill at upward skies— To look up toward the sky with serene eyes. Ooh, ye! You taught me some of happy ways. But you forget—the way of being sad! --vest feast. A great feast it was to be, with venison, and wild game, and maize, and those queer dishes of beef and pork, and the queer ones as they would have had in old England, to be sure; no goose, or pig roasted whole and stuffed with apples; no puddings and sauces. But a feast at any rate. All the colony the huddled had preparation. Wives and daughters had stewed and baked. The odors from each cabin drifted into the air and became very strong—a spiced, meaty combination of odors that fitted exactly the cold keenness of the air and the spiciness of the pine needles. Above all things did Captain Miles love feeding. And in his cabin alone was there no preparation of cooking. It was the first guiding feast day, and no one to cook him a dinner. EVENING I sat in the dusky twilight Watching the shadows creep. The night with its daly breezes Was cooking the day to sleep. Robed in soft grey garments the clouds, as they floated by Showed a starry diamond necklace 'Round the throat of the moon in the sky. The lullaby song of the turtles Was so soothing, so beautifully sweet. That none could else but slumber As the brooklet glided on in defeat. No. 56 Old Mother Nature tucked A leafy blanket around each tree, As quietly the evening embraced The earth, the sky and me. -Helen M. Fitch. Margaret Roberts By F. L. Howser Ten Years—A City's Gift to Me By E.J. Howser The brakeman popped his head into the coach, "Kansas City, Missouri, Union Station," he called. We were rumbling over a bridge. I avidly stared at the dock and watched as the water creaked to the piers. The shore was lined with houseboats, dirty shanties connected to the bank by studded planks that stretched from the narrow deck to a steep, muddy path that disappeared into tall weeds and small islands of box cars blotted the river from my view. Stepping from the exit I climbed the long, winding stairs to B exit. Then I went into the street. I walked down Main. I passed second-hand stores, pawn shops, and penny galleries. Traps to get the greene's money? In front of the five-and-ten I purchased a newspaper. Help wanted. Auto mechanic, barber, lhotype operator, salesman. My courage began to ooze away. I was inexperienced. A young man just off his father's farm should not be seeking a position, what I needed was a job. With several advertisements underlined with pencil, I looaked a street car. The first and most likely prospects asked for a tire salesman. I went to the establishment. The employment manager was brusk, "Next week, maybe," he told me, "Business is shack now." That was all. My spirits sank lower. Into what manner of life had I entered? Was the city the haven and fountain of wealth I had thought it? So far I had not found it so. I rode back to the business district for my evening meal. I was hungry. A sirioin of beef read well, but when it came I was disappointed. Thick (Continued on bane bar) No Cook For Miles Standish By Margaret Kilborne QUILL Mr. Longfellow was a poet, which explains a great many things. Why, for instance, he wrote about the Pilgrims, who first made Thanksgiving. Why, too, he could not see that Thanksgiving is a better time for stories than the first spring when the pilgrims returned to their hometown—up especially for stories of a grizzled old warrior who chooses to fall in love. Why he should devote his story to the adventures of that hardy soldier, Captain Miles Standish, and touch so lightly the more intimate relations—indefinitely more interesting stories than those of the eyes which through laughs like a sparkle of sunlight falling through autumn leaves, and brown hair that spun funny, unrually curls beneath her Puritan cap, and who was named Priscilla. Yes, undoubtedly it was only that Mr. Longfellow did not know beware of what he was after all only a poet. But here is the story— The New England woods, outside the little clearing in which stood the cabins of the Plymouth colony, lay fresh and white-carpeted beneath the first snowfall of the season. Green fir tree needles stretched in a pattern of dainty, ice-coated fillets, and brown pine cones showed starkly on a few branches, with their softness expected. And why not? For the next day was to be Thanksgiving, and what is a woods to know of Thanksgiving? At the head of the cabins built in a line down the clearing stood perhaps the bleakest cabin of all, that of Captain Miles Standish. Captain Miles inside his window, looking out at the cracked glass of his windowpane. The frost had left delicate tracery ripples oddly like the pattern of the fir-needs outside, inviting anyone who stood there to scratch pictures upon it. But Capt Miles could not see clearly through the frost coating. His grizzled beard bristled with his mouth drew down with a severe petrolauce. A deep wrinkle furrowed at the top of his nose and was doing when he was most out of humor. Witches take it, what sort of colony was this? *Tomorrow* was the day for the buret. At the other end of the clearing a slight figure in gray, wearing a white cap, ran to the cabin door, carrying wood in her hands, and hurried inside. The girl was a small child, and there was a maid! All week cooking had been going on in her cabin as in the others, only hers had seemed move savory. She was alone, too, since her father and mother had died in the first sickness, and could live like John Alden, and had a way with word.— A log cracked in the fireplace which filled the end of the room, and Captain Miles turned around. At landfall the letters from the sailors writing letters for the Mayflower which was to sail the next morning on its return trip to England. The heat从 the fire reddened his face, serious as it bent over his writing, up to the roots of his light Good old duck, was John. Had seen him through many a scrape. Of course! Why hadn't he thought that duck would come in? Captain Miles stumped across to the fireplace, loudly, so as to leave no chance of not hearing him. Read the Kansan Want Ads. Ford Touring—good condition. Priced to sell quick Ford Coach—excellent motor and good appearance. One you can feel proud to own. 2 good Ford coupes—just what you need for this winter. Low cost and up-keep. HAMILTON Motor Co. Dodge coupe—good transportation. A low cost. 1928 model A Ford—sport coupe. A dandy and priced right. Save the depreciation on new one. Demonstrate. 7th & Vermont Phone 534 --e Cheese" untastic Presents Playwright ince in Anrry Perched Cliff d With Bright nibals - Ship- EDNESDAY dent Activity Tickets reen Hall --- I LISTEN TO YOUR HEART—and I DO IT DERBY. BRAY HALF AS PART AS HIS DOWNS, WHILE HE STANDS.