This issue of the Kansas is deficated to our air-minded readers. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Vol. XXVII Meatly fair tonight and Wednesday, cooler tonight with frost or freezing temperature --the ages, confessedly the first fumil- job of his Maker, a sort of short- over, a damaged piece of goods. And why fate has prolonged his ngoy, God only knows, unless perhaps man looks upon a comic relief in the human tragedy. AROUND M T. OREAD Hohen Mullin, of the Alpha Delta Pi house, is ill at the Lawrence Memorial hospital. No.34 The Kansas Board will meet tomorrow at 3:30 to approve appointments on the University Daily Kansan for the next four weeks period. William Duggerhy, editor-in-chief of the Kansas Daily Kansan, will announce all appointments except the sports editor who previously been appointed for the football season. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1920 The funeral of Mrs. H, W. Wagner, who died from injuries received in an automobile accident Saturday, March 26, 2015. The body will be taken to Troy and a double service will be held tomorrow with the body of her mother Marianne Eleanor Wagner c/e90 in the crash. Miss Eleanor Wagner c/e90 is the daughter of Mrs. Wagner Gladys Small, '51, who was recently operated on for gather at Research Hall in Portland, will be able to return to school this semester. After she leaves the house in Portland, go to her home in Maine. Brig. Gen. S. Heintzelman, commandant of the general service schools at Fort Leavenworth, will designate a university in all-Uni-verity conference, Nov. 11. General Heintzelman succeeded General King this fall as commandant of the service schools. Robert McNair Davis, dean of the School of Law, left Saturday, Oct. 19 for Memorial, where he will spend a week attending a conference of the American Bar Association. The Jay Jones announce the following pledges: Delores Van Payman, Tami Barker Cornelius, Tuan Richer Cornelius; Shirley Carex; Mary Ekean Haskins, Gamma Phi Beta; Gertrude Brown, and Wilma Schmidt; this conference initiated a下午 at 4:30. Mr. V. L. Morrison's 8:30 economy class will leave on a field trip to Kansas City at 7 a.m. Friday morning. They will visit the Armour Company plant, Kansas City Board of Trade, and the Ford Motor factory. Thurio Newell has been confined to the hospital the past two days with an attack of acute tonsillitis. Quack club will meet Wednesday evening at 7:45 in Robinson gymnasium. The last week will be pledged at this meeting. Stunts and games will be A meeting of the Sour Owl Board will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 in room 102 of the Journalism building. The second smoker of Alpha Chigma, professional chemical fraternity, was bell host last night at the chapel of the university. D. Paience of the chemistry department was the speaker of the evening of Chemistry's grounding of Chemistry as a "Science." Lagan to Trial on Friday New members for Pen and Scroll honorary literary society for fresh men and sophomore will be chosen 7:30 in Fraser hall. A committee chosen from the members will read submitted manuscripts. Candidates will be judged on merits of their paper according to record, and their interest in writing. The preliminary hearing of Rolan Lagan, 18-year-old high school youth who was charged with the murder of Reese Beasel, a junior in the University, has been continued from this afternoon until Friday at Jupiter Justice R. B. Steven announced today. Preliminary Hearing For Beach Assailant Is Continued The hearing was continued because of the uncertain condition of Beach Pearl, who had nearly pears to be slowly improving. Lagan was arranged but plead not guilty. The shooting occurred when Beach and a companion came upon three men in the backyard of a duck cabin northwest of Saturday night, Oct. 12. Lagran ran to his car, secured a revolver and went inside the building, wounding him, witnesses say. A new $185,000 stadium has been completed at the University of Ohio. It was dedicated at the Ohio-Ohio Wesleyan game. Angels Wept When Man Was Created and Woman Has Laughed Ever Since. William Allen White Tells Press Clut New York — (UIP) — "The angels wept when they saw man move into this world, and the woman has been there all along." The Women's Press club last night in answer to the Allen White told the Women's Press club here last night in answer to the "Has woman a sense of humor?" "I have often wondered why God kept man the poor, miserable defective taint he is, even after God had him a second try at it and had created man out of Adam's adam. White said that Jesus had not sisted eternally elud in that shard shift of little, brief authority, making angels wee and women laugh; Man, a Fumbled Job Man, a Fumored Son "Here he stands persisting through New Honorary Colonel Will Be Presented at R. O. T. C. Inspection Adela Hale, c31, Holds Covete Title; Two Companies are to be formed The date for the first inspection of the R.O.T.C. men will be held toron day afternoon. At this time the honorary colonel will be presented Two companies are to be formed company A to consist of four platoons and company B which consists of one A, which is the larger, will be made up of members of the coast artillery unit. Company B consists of members of the engineering unit. Since all the ornaments have arrived and are being checked out to those who need them, it is important that they have his ornaments in the project position, the R.O.T.C. should be on the top of the cap, on the KU, on the top of the cap. Miss Adela Hale, c'31, who has been chosen cadet honorary colonel, will be presented at the inspection tomorrow row. The officers chosen last spring will be installed with the exception of Cadet Major G. E. Berg, who although was appointed to school not in school this fall. The other officers are Cadet Captain R. G Dresser, Cadet Captain E. H. Nird, Cadet Captain M. A. Nairn, Cadet Officer Henderson, Cadet 1st Lieutenant W. L. Wood, Cadet 2nd Lieutenant I. Kierstein, Cadet 2nd Lieutenant R. A. Williams, Cadet 3rd Lieutenant Whila, Cadet 2nd Lieutenant J. Deal The captains of the companies are Cadet Captain J. A. Seitz of company A, and Cadet Captain J. E Wormer, of company C. New Surgical Class Opens Send the Kansan home. The Bell Memorial hospital, Kansas City, will continue a post-graduate course in surgical diagnostics from the University of Kansas and announcement made here Saturday by the Extension division and the Medicine of the University of Kansas. Drug Display Features "Pharmacy Week" Her National pharmacy week was held in Lawrence on Oct. 13 to 20. Pharmaceutical companies from all over the country visited the school time to talk on the professional side of pharmacy. The School of Pharmacy has many local lectures on the subject. The dictors who will direct the course are professors in various Universities of the country, the Office, president of the Western Surgical association, and professor of surgery at the University Portland, Oregon; Dr. John L. Porter, professor emeritus of orthopedic surgery, Northwestern University, St. Louis, Missouri; professor of clinical neurological surgery at Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri; associate professor of orthopedic surgery, Northwestern University; and Dr. Louis A. Bue, head of the department, Rockchester Mimi. There was a display on the second floor of the chemistry building, an interesting item being a drug map of the world. Below this map what is known as the drug library, all the various drugs. Ribbons connected each sample to the country located on the map in which place the drug is found. Members of the School of Pharmacy have developed various drug store windows down loan is none of the occasion. Post Graduate Course Offered Investigating Committee In November Still Pries into Tarif If women did not have their men to laugh at, they could not endure life. "No wonder the anglers wept when he saw man move into his orbit, but after a battle in business butterier than a bee with half a bee's instinct, blinds as a bat, burrs dither than a worm." "No wonder God in his mercy put him to sleep, robbed him of a vah friend, and made a vah friend. When she (Eve) had done instinctively a gentle and decent person, she did not instillate with life, he broke out with man's ancient fuse: 'Isn't that good?' Eve Gets the Last Linger "And then Eve sat down in the shade and stroked her hands of love and laughed her first bough of eternal rejoan. Then and there she rose for the long, long journey of her sisterhood. Eye Gets the Last Laugh "Man and the devil together invented the ballot box, the device of counting noses in a crowd to ascertain truth. “And yet in the face of all this, while woman has Seen a strong man with a sword and a pistol against war, the poor dumb brute solly rises up now and then to ask: “Has "She has laughed him from the jungle into the home." "Man invented force as his major premise of all logic. W. S. G. A. Plans Party Meets In Ad Building Tonight To Discuss Halloween To Discuss Halloween The regular meeting of W. S. G. A. will be held tonight at 7 o'clock in the untrout room of west Administration Building for West Administration Guidance Week, to make as well as plans for the Halloween party which will be held Friday night. All students wishing to attend the party must come masked before they will be admitted at the door. As the speaker for Vocational Guidance Week has already been sequestered, time will be devoted to the accepted, time will be devoted to the prior plans and arrangements preceding the meetings. The meetings will set aside as the definite dates for the annual vocational guidance meetings. Miss Wheeler will be the personal bureau of Welkley College; will be the speaker at the meeting recommended as an able breeze. The regular W.S.G.A. tea will be held Wednesday, 3:30 until 5 'candle The Independent Republican-Democratic coalition which worked so successfully in eliminating the flexible provision and adding the detritus of a large number of self for the battle over the industrial rates with ammunition furnished by the case of the manufacturers' agent who actually got into the secret hoard of weapons in the succession of Sen. Hiram Bingham, Republican, Connecticut. Washington, Oct. 22—(UP) —The Senate started work on the first rate of the tariff bill in a somewhat unusual investigation committeepried further today into the activities of lobbyist who tried to influence the writing of the bill. It is possible that a reunion and banquet he had in the past after his retirement would be recorded according to Glindus Anthony, A. B. 21), division in the Grand Island University. Workmen are now setting the doors in and around the entry. The roof is carefully glazed, and they aspect to have the whole structure enclosed before the opening. Miss Anthony and John Bimford, 23, of Lincoln, Neb., have discussed plans for organizing a rooters sec- tion in Chicago. Jake Hawkins jumped reunion after the game at the Cornhushker Hotel. M. Bimford is a brother-in-law of Buddy Rogers. Alumni in Lincoln Plan Reunion Following Gam Work on New Greenhouse Soon to Be Completed The new greenhouse will make it possible for the gardening division to grow plants in groundy to grow all its own shrubs and also to furnish the University with a new greenhouse. Wire Flashes Los Angeles, Calif., Oct. 23—(UPI) —Fighting against a prison term of from one to fifty years, Alexander Pantages, multimillionaire theater executive at the U.S. court at his trial on charges of attacking 17-year-old Emune Pringle. --- Cincinnati, O., Oct. 23—(UP)—Bryan, Jr., a graduate of the Brerber, with President, and SPS, Heaver and other distinguished visitors aboard,Weighted anchor at 2 P. New York, Oct. 22. —(UP) The badly hammered stock market swung upward today. Bears, rampant yearly, exerted a little pressure today, and gains were recorded while yesterday in market values were swept away. Key West, Flat, Oct. 22—(UP)—Search埋中 the lower Florida coast from here to afford to locate thecustom boat, "Tip Top," missing since Friday with Jake and John (the owners) of Tampa custom agents, aboard. Springfield, Mo., Oct. 21 — (UP) — Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight boxing champion, will refer to a beyong show for charity here the night before he will distance phone conversation with Ben J. Harrison, secretary of the state boxing commission. All proceeds of the show will go to charity and even sports editors will pay at the gate to satisfy a Dempsey condition. Charlotte, N. C., Oct. 22 — (UP)—Protecting that the conviction of seven union textile workers in the Aderboro district could be dismissed verdict," the defense laid plans today for a vigorous appeal. After pronouncing sentence yetness, the court sentenced the union 100 days for the appeal. The American Civil Liberties Union, backing the defense, has announced it will carry the defense and States Supreme Court if necessary. Mimpsella, Oct. 22. —(UP)— Buried thrombous thousands of cubic feet of sand and gravel when the sampip in which they were working dived in. They were trapped by a tractor and pit owner, and Edward Anderson, 48—perished here today. Washington, Oct. 22—(UP) —A disturbance of considerable intensity with winds of gale proportion was reported in the States Weather Bureau. A second storm over Western Virginia will cause increasing southwind winds, it was stated. Southeast storms, along with tones from Boston to Eastport, Me. Chicago, Oct. 22 (UPF)—One of the woret storms in memory of the coast guardsman lained the western shores of Lake Michigan today, impinging lives of sailors caught out in the storm and lattering moorings pleasure craft. A wind of 30 miles sustained velocity, rising at times in gauges to 50 feet high against the projecting 30 feet high against the projecting breakwaters along the Chicago coast Lamar, Colo., Oct. 22 — (UP) Ralph Fleagle, called by the state "arch criminal" of the Fleagle bank in Texas, pleaded guilty to a court trial on charges of mur dering A. N. Purcell, president of the firm, for failing to pay the state will not ask the death penalty. Cincinnati, Ohio, Oct. 22 — (UP)—Celebration of completion of the nine foot channel throughout the 1,000 mile route from Pittsburgh to Calgo, President Hoover ever paid tribute to the cone tribution which engineering skill and learning has made to the advancement of modern industrial organization Two Die in Collision Near Liberty Liberty, Mo., (UP) -Collision of a light roadster with a truck heavily damaged in the death of Raymond Heys, 27, and Len Shelton, 60, near here late yesterday. Hays lived at Excelsior Springs and is in the truck. The MO. car was riding in the truck operated by V. R. Kavaughn. Begins debate on rate schedules in tariff bill. Judiciary subcommittee continues lobby investigation. In Congress Today --- Commerce subcommittee resume hearing on applying coastwide shipping laws to Philippine Islands. United Press Senate Patronage committee resumes investigation of Charleston, S. C., district attorney. On recess until Thursday. House Air Enthusiasts Request Aviation School for K. U Petition Being Prepared To Seek Government Aid In R. O. T. C. Unit A petition asking for the organization to install a unit here will be drawn up in a mail-morrow evening at 8 o'clock in the auditorium for all students to attend. The university is the naval aviation. The request will be sent to Chancellor R. H. Lindley and the secretary. It was announced three weeks earlier that such a unit might be organized if enough students were interested. The board of regents is necessary to obtain government aid, as has already been done in several other universities. The procedure taken in the past has involved a thorough and complicated. The first step must be made by the students who may petition Chancellor Lindley and the board of regents asking the government to petition started at tomorrow night's meeting could not be taken before the board of regents until they declare their next meeting. If the regents had asked for certain appropriations must be made by the state legislature after which the national war department, acting for President Hoover, may legally ask for appropriations under the National Defense Act of 1920. Tomorrow might both Major W. C. Koenig of the R.O.T.C., and Prof. Earl C. Hay of the School of Engineering, will attend the meeting and answer questions concerning the establishment of a muth book. In discussion, we will meet for a discussion; consequently no speeches have been planned. A good landing field is one of the prerequisites established by the government for the establishment of the port. In order to provide port is upon land owned by the University and with the improvements in the government test satisfactorily. If the unit was established, two men to give ground training and one to conduct the government test R.O.C.T. staff of instructors includes no men from the air department. The flying corps arrives fields such as Fort Rock, Fort Leavenworth, Richards field, or a squadron of planes might be sent to students. Vocational Classes Begin Five University Students Enroll In Various Courses Five University students registered yesterday in the evening classes in Gallaudet and at the Liberty Memorial high school building this fall. Many more students are expected to enroll at the next meeting, Thursday evening, Oct. 24. The courses open to University students include auto mechanics, blue-print reading and drawing, display card-writing, home decoration, crafts, art, calligraphy, cardi-writing and the courses for women will prove most popular with K. U. students," said Ralph Grabber, director of the evening school, in explaining the advantages of these courses, including desire training in those subjects. Students who enrolled last night were hired by the company to auto repair Olive Schaffer and Almira Davis, home decoration; Lester Schaffer xylem and Thomas McCormack display design. FOUR PAGES Classes will meet at 7:30 p.m. on Monday and Thursday of each week from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the school. The instructors are: V, H im; display card-writing; H, I im; display lettering; E, Legendon; A, Legendon; auto mechanics; Virginale Davies, brass decoration, and Mrs. Davies, brass decoration, and Mrs. Davies, brass decoration. The school is made possible by the Smith-Hughes act, which makes provision for the school without tuition, the only payment being two dollars, and allowing a student to attend attendance of three-fourths of the time in classes. Bond for Alleged Mann Act Violator Kansas City, Mo., Moe. 20, Oct.-19) - Bernard Pollk released today on a $2,500 bond pending hearing on Oct. 28 on his removal to Des Moines, Kansas city for guilty violations of the Mann act. The indictment of an alleged love affair with Manie McCormick was charged he transported from Des Moines to Tennessee. Bond for Alleged Mann Act Violator Send the Daily Kansar home. Fourth Student Recital Will be Held Tomorrow The fourth student recital of the year will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 in the university auditorium. The performers will be voice, piano, organ, and cello. Piano, sonato Op 33, 1st movement, Beethoven, Virgina Digita, Vocale, O Mio Bibaino Caro (from "Gliamni" Schoenberg), The Slowleigh, Kunzitz, Jean Seillard. Piano, Sonata Allegro Moderato, Greig, Patti Johnson, Voice, Ower the Blowing Sea, Smith, and When Big Professionals Low C, Bickford, Dickerson Cello, Sarabandhi, Correlli, Genevieve Hargis, Organ, Second Sonata, Grave, Adadio, and Allegro Maestro, Menchickas, Elysia Ernans Glider Club Elects Officers at Meeting on Monday Evening Organization Plans to Secure Two Gliders For Use of Club Members Preliminary plans for the formation of a Glider Club at the University were made by Mr. Brandon Hall when 25 students meet to elect officers and name a committee to draft a constitution and to organize for competitive performance. The officers elected were Theodore B. Jefferson, e30; president; Fred Liscum, e32; vice president; two women members, secretary; and Prof. Earl D. Hay, head of the department of the organization, treasurer. Musa Wenda Cessna, daughter of the Welchia aircraft manufacturer, is taking an active part in the organization. She was named with Professor Hay and Marvin cessna, e306 aircraft, for a plan to be submitted at the next meeting. At an initial meeting held a week ago, a tentative plan of having two groups was formulated in order to be delivered to other by deference. Each group is planning to secure a gilder and, if enough interest is shown, a craft will be purchased for The organization here is following the lines of similar organizations at other colleges, open to the public in a preliminary training activity to actual aviation consists in flying a motorless machine such as a turbine or air currents to carry him aloft. Controls are similar in most respects to those on a plane, but the pilot finds it more necessary to use his body in harmony with the movements of the machine. Some performances are conducted on the level with a group of people pulling the machine up to a proper momentum. Philadelphia K. U. Alumni Will Hold First Meeting The Philadelphia Alumni Association of the University of Kansas, excluding the South Carolina State Struth Hayne IM at Swarthmore, Saturday evening, Oct. 26, according to Harold Barnes, AL323, president of the University of Kansas, is a professor in Girard College. Earl L. Wright, T2, is vice-president of the association. Mary P. Clarke, A.B. 933, M.A. 965, of Beaver College, will be acting secretary during the year, taking the place of Naples, who is ill at her home in Lawrence. Dean Stouffer Inspects Colleges and Universities Impacting colleges and universities Impassionated Association of University to aid and support activity which has been keeping Dean E. B. Shuffler of the Graduate School During the last week the Dean visited three universities on his inspection tour: Missouri Valley College at Columbia, Conway, Ark, and the University of Denver at Denver, Colo. Next week he plans to visit St. Louis University and Colorado State. Stouffer has been doing this work to aid the regular inspector. Washington, Oct. 22 — (UP) “Dumb-Bills in Public Office” were allowing the Navy’s stores of oil to be drained before Albert B. Fail, Secretary of Defense, resigned in 1922, the defence told the fall bribery jury today. Frank J. Hogan making the defense closing statement, defended the leaser as a “great man.” He also attacked the government prosecutors for “sneering at patriotism.” More than 90 men have applied for taking the opening tests in the aviation course at the University of Minnesota. Inexperienced Air Navigator Starts Flight to Europe Unhailed American Sets Out to Conquer Atlantic Without Giving Warning Southwest winds will prevail until the flyer reaches the Irish coast when northwest winds and showers are forecast. Washington, Oct. 22 —(UP) • Generally fair weather over the North Atlantic is forecast for the flight of U. F. Diteman of Billington, Mo., to London, the United States. Weather Bureau said today. St. Johns, Newfoundland, Oct. 22—(UP) —U. F. Diteman, an unknown American aviator with only a brief experience in flying, set out today, alone and without insurance warning. An attempt to spam the Atlantic ocean Diteman left the field at Harbor Graze, Newfoundland, at 12:30 p.m. in a rimping without difficulty in his small monoplane, the Golden Hind. He passed out with Conception Bay on an easterly course. Then he arrived twenty minutes after starting, he had passed out of sight over the Atlantic. The Golden Hind carried 165 gallons of gasoline, considered sufficient for 25 hours of flying at a cruising speed of 110 miles per hour. The plane has a top speed of 125 miles an hour and is a bartling N. B. 3 monoplane. Ditman is 31 and comes from Billings, Mont. He arrived here on Oct. 9 unexpected and unannounced. He explained that his mission was to help the family establish a family history, which he associated with the name of Sir Francis Drake. "I am absolutely positive he will "I am absolutely positive he will "the IS is a carv- ful man, takes no chances, and made all preparations weeks in advance." Billings, Mont. Oct. 22—Joseph P. Although exceeding express delivery time, the F. Diteman, 31, would span the Atlantic ocean in his small plane, Mrs. Diteman, of this city refused to disclose what impelled her husband's bop off today in a Kentucky hotel. Miles Dicenan revealed that her husband had been quietly planning the flight from Los Angeles to the summer last month. On Sept. 18 he flew alone back east and eventually arrived in Newfoundland where final preparations were secretly made. Diteman, his wife said, has been paying for the past year. He is in the livestock business in Billings and has either of two children, aged 4 and 7. Manhattan Feels Quake Occupants of Tall Buildings Detect Mild Tremor Mackatton experienced what was called the caribbean shock at 3:30 p.m. clock夜 after midnight, the violence of which frightened persons in the upper stories of the city. The seismograph recording roll in the basement of Haworth hall was recorded on Tuesday. This delicate instrument has functioned accurately in recording earth tremors from far away as well, and its data have been sent to Alaska, but the alleged earthquake at Manhattan yesterday was recorded by a satellite. The distance to the tremor," explained Associate Professor C. J. Powell, department of geology this morning. Fourteen Senior Women Pledge Pi Lambda Theta Pi Lambda Theta, honorary educational fraternity for women, held plaque services yesterday at 6 o'clock and presented awards to elected to membership. Their election is based upon scholarship and recognition in education in educational work. Those chosen to membership are: Bertha Aubele, Hazelton, Pa; Gerald Leigh, Knoxville; Linda Burns, Lewoworth; Lucie Christie, Kansas City; Jacqueline Coe, Council Grove; Cella Bupine, Council Grove; Emily Jordan, Josephian; Darry Pike, Lawrence; Rath Pratt, Jamesstown; Elizabeth Ripp, Halatad; Mary Scales, Holmes; Wiley Clay, Center, and Ada Katherine Wiley of Kansas City. Freshman at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology elected a sophomore, who had been nominated by sophomores present at the meeting to serve on their own flock was elected when they found out their mistake. 4