PAGE TWO SUNDAY, MAY 5, 1920 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Associate Editor Associate Editor Virgil Ensign Kathryn Beach MARION LEIGH James S. Welch Alice Schultz Editorial Writers MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD HUNSLEY NANADIY Editor MILLARD Lawrence Macwae CAMPAIN Editor MILLARD Lloyd Lahelia BAYLOR Editor MILLARD Wendy West Night Editor MILLARD Gladys Baker Telegraph Editor MILLARD Peter Dunn Telegram Editor MILLARD Betty Diamond Sunday Magazine Editor Nathan Miller Winter Magazine Editor Willie Ward ADVERTISING MGR. KENNETH CAPE Ace's Advertising Mgr., Ford Nelson District Assistant, Ford Nelson District Assistant, Mary Ranier District Assistant, Mary Ranier Maurice Clowver Mary Bartlett Marian Grange Mary Burtles Lake Ladbrook Gabrielle Howen J. F. McAlister Lake Ladbrook Ada Roth Hunt Adia Kosei Mane William E. Smith William E. Smith Business Office K. 11. 60 Office Space TOKKI 788 Night Connection TOKKI 788 Vice President TOKKI 788 Should you fail to receive a telephone TOKKI between by special care? Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kannan, from the Front of the Journal Entered as recount-clause mail matter September 17, 1916, at the postoffice at Lawrence Kansas, under the set of March 3, 1879. SUNDAY, MAY 5, 1929 THE WEEK The Mexican revolution has finally ended after two months of fighting, leaving the rebels without a general and waiting for the final outcome. Secretary of the Treasury Melon is under fire because of his alleged connections with the Aluminum Company. It is a question of whether or not Melon is holding office in violation of an old statute which forbids a secretary of the treasury to have commercial interests. This controversy brings the renders to the context over the debenture amendment to the farm relief bill as brought up in the senate. The vote on this plan is expected to come Monday and is likely to prove unusually close. The United States representative to the Preparatory Disarmament Commission, Hugh S. Gibson, and the French delegation have failed to agree on the latest proposal to limit war materials by indirect methods, and another fighting session is on at Paris as to how Germany shall pay her war reparations. France says that Germany shall settle the matter now, as there will be no parlay later if the Dawes plan is not agreed upon. The International Paper and Power Company revealed it had large holdings in thirteen newspapers all over the country in a statement before the Federal Trade Commission, and to top it all off, John J. Raskoh has appointed JoelTrouse House of Kansas City chairman of the Democratic national executive committee, which means that perhaps the party will come out of its stream and function properly. WELCOME, MOTHERS! The Kwanan joins students and faculty in extending a hearty welcome to the mothers and fathers attending the annual Mother's day celebration. We are glad that you have come. We are happy to have you at this University,—your University and ours,—your University because your generous efforts have made it a reality and ours because we have the privilege of attending it. Loving thought and conscientious labor have gone into the efforts to make this day so happy and pleasant that it will linger long in the minds of both mothers and students. We have done our best, May it please Welcome, mothers! NEW BOOKS The time has come when professors learn over their desks and announce sady that they feel it is necessary for their classes to purchase new texts that deal more amply with the course than do the authors being studied. And, with the semester three-fourth gone, what can the poor student do but buy? To refuse outright would be to forfeit his hours of credit in the course, the money spent for fees and books and the time spent in class and studying. There is nothing the student can do but buy. There are new books and dead books. The new books cannot be bought from friends or from the book Exchange at reasonable prices. They are new editions and being new, they cost as if printed on velum and bound in Russian leather. And then there are the dead books. For every new text adopted there is an old one abandoned. Most students buy their books with the expectation of being able to sell them at the end of the semester. Instead, where a new text is adopted the old one is entirely unavailable. They are dead on the hands of the student. Perhaps there is enough difference in the old and new books to justify the change in them, but it is not apparent to most students. Only the book-dealers profit by the adoption of new texts. Is it fair? THE GRIDIRON BANQUET If reports are to be credited, the more or less heathenish traditions of gridion dionee were adby and reacquainted maintained by Sigina Delta Chi, Friday. According to rule, the most distinguished guests were the chief sufferers—if suffering is the right word for the experience of being shot at without much danger that any "chi" will come near a vial spot. The governor of Kansas offered himself as a most obliging and general victim, apparently grateful that few crimes in the calendar were omitted from the pack left on his doorstep. Thus does Sigma Delta Chi show its affection for its friends, knowing that gridion methods of love making will be rightly interpreted. K. U.N. STAND That the University is justified in its stand on the stage hands' union disagreement is the opinion of the student body and the general public. The ultimatum of this last week issued to the University is not the crucial point of the trouble which started in the downtown theater sometime ago, but is a last feeble attempt on the part of the union to obtain a little extra money for men who do not depend on stage work for a livelihood. The affairs of the downtown theater are not the concern of the University and there is no legitimate reason why the school should be dragged into each difficulty. Interviews with the union men indicate that they are attempting to shift the responsibility to the international in the hope that they may evade their own part in the affair of last week. It is unthinkable that the local union is not in close harmony with the International and that it was not the starting point for the "nafun" referral of the K. U. auditorium. That the local union has gone no far is evident. The University overtox to taxpayers who are its loyal supporters allegiance to an open shop policy. The administration is justified in its stand that these productions are educational and on a non-profit basis and should not come under ordinary union ratifications. RAIL RATES Millers and men in the grain trade are expressing doubt as to the effect the new rate will have on export shipments. They say that Canadian and Argentine wheat on the foreign markets is still selling below American wheat in spite of a 20 cent break within the last few weeks. They believe that a mere 7 cents a bushel will make little or no change. Heeding the request of Senator Archer Capper for a reduction of freight rates to the gulf, the Kansas City Southern has announced a cut of 7 cents per 100 pounds from Kansas City. The new rate has been filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission for approval. The rate cut was made in an attempt to get rid of the 40 million bushels of wheat in the elevators now. It is only a few weeks until the new crop will start coming in and with such a congestion in the elevators the bottom will fall out of the market. The Southern has taken the leadership in the matter and now it all depends on how the L.C.C. acts. If the commission acts favorably, other roads probably will follow suit. The Kansas City Southern has taken a step in the right direction. In these days of boyish figures the fat girl's loss is a real gain. Farmers' Products Must Have Proper Mineral Supply if Race Is to Exist Columbia, Ohio. "If the human race is to continue healthy, the animals on whose meat they feed must be in the best condition. And to achieve this, the food they eat must contain the proper supply of minerals and vitamins—a condition to which the farmer must see. This was the motive for this model. The Chemical Society is the major buyer by Mail. Chicago, Illinois chemical. Ms. Macauley sold of the farm as a consumer of chemical products." 4. What is the surface area of a rectangular prism with a length of 6 cm, a width of 3 cm, and a height of 4 cm? Campus Opinion "The farm is a great bio-chemical factory," said Mr. MacDowall. "The farmer must concern himself with capital, labor, instruments of produce." --their primary storehouse for raw materials. However, the supplies therein are seldom balanced or complete, and never illuminate. They must be made in large areas with large areas of large areas not only of the more common supply not only of the more common than food elements such as nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, mucilage, but also of the raver tibbts such as iodine, magnesium and manganese. The effect of the raver tibbts on food is often as a solicitude and far-reaching as a poor supply and far-reaching as a poor supply there are no crops are deficient there are no crops are deficient here on be丰 farm, milk lacking in vital minerals and vitamins, and so indirectly if health and deficiency diseases in Editor Daily Kansan: **change hands' Union Cares University Authority to make change** The university followed by an account of the way in which the union took advantage of the position of the university as a political contract. The union declared the stage of the audition "unfair" and accused the Napoliapolis Orchestra until their contract was signed, even though the University had sold tickets for a Fall Concert. It was very unpleasant for the University of Kansas to have such a break in the Music Week program because of interference from a labor action. We admit that the labor unions are a recessity, and have a worthy purpose, but this particular union seems to have none of the characteristics of an institution normally associated with academics at the University of Kansas so much admire. Are the University authorities going to submit to the demands of the union after the result they gave yessay, to the degree that you would I rather finish my school and never bear an outside program than to pay one cent that found its way to the university. The university would be justified in forcing to make contracts with companies under contract with such a company as the student, a teacher and topos puppey beckett, making the appearance final, impossible, would also be justifiable. --their primary storehouse for raw materials. However, the supplies therein are seldom balanced or complete, and never illuminate. They must be made in large areas with large areas of large areas not only of the more common supply not only of the more common than food elements such as nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, mucilage, but also of the raver tibbts such as iodine, magnesium and manganese. The effect of the raver tibbts on food is often as a solicitude and far-reaching as a poor supply and far-reaching as a poor supply there are no crops are deficient there are no crops are deficient here on be丰 farm, milk lacking in vital minerals and vitamins, and so indirectly if health and deficiency diseases in —R. R. Our Contemporaries --their primary storehouse for raw materials. However, the supplies therein are seldom balanced or complete, and never illuminate. They must be made in large areas with large areas of large areas not only of the more common supply not only of the more common than food elements such as nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, mucilage, but also of the raver tibbts such as iodine, magnesium and manganese. The effect of the raver tibbts on food is often as a solicitude and far-reaching as a poor supply and far-reaching as a poor supply there are no crops are deficient there are no crops are deficient here on be丰 farm, milk lacking in vital minerals and vitamins, and so indirectly if health and deficiency diseases in TOP HEAVY SPORTS The student publications of one of our smaller Canadian Universities has had recently a little sport of controversy over a matter which seems to keep up perennially. Our national sports have been the subject of dissention, and the right of the intercollegiate teams to fatten at the expense of the intercollege sports in which everyone may take part, has been, rather surprisingly, unheld. An resources are somewhat limited at this particular University the objection of a correspondent to the "Inquiry" is made in the statement (pressamable representative) that "There is neither time, nor space to conduct an interpersonal sport a greater place without accustomly hampering our reputation for excellence. Intercollegiate sports at all, it is only a matter of pride that every school will do its intent to make it a success." The facilities and places need every bit of its limited supply of the facilities and the money McGill Daily According to a recent statement in the Yale newspaper, the death knell of the small college has sounded, what with junior college pressing on from the top. There is, or soon will be, said article no, three other factors that can prepare professional schools hearing down on them from the top. There is, or soon will be, said article no, three other factors that can appear true, but there are other factors to consider. A thousand indictments like the one above would not erase the undeniable importance of believing in seeing their children to colleges like Allegheny. Every year our registrar is forced to turn away from a desire to keep students of a desire to keep the enrollment down to a comfortable but no overwhelming figure. Witness also our physical expulsion in the shape of a decree to keep the school created, not to enlarge the school, but to better equip the student body that we already have. Another factor is that the small college forget to consider we the matter of individuality. A school of the size Yale can never hope to direct and control or even supervise all of its small college school can. To show what Har THE SMALL COLLEGE Opinion in Cannin has been tending away from this point of view very considerably, and we cannot but think that this is a somewhat backward approach. Our students cannot be supported, then the logical thing is to let the majority of students get the benefit of wholesome exercise, and to leave the bigger interests out. This is the competition which they can afford. A tophay institution that balances an intercollegiate ambition on a preicarious state of what is really athletic, will be able to reward truly trained athletes, and face increasing indifference in its own rank. "Ner can the native supply of any of these elements in the soil be drawn on individually, independently, for its stability and financial security are to be maintained on the farm. Infectiously with depletion of these elements in both quality and quantity of yield, it doesn't rain minerals, and therefore water is counteracted from outside sources. "Fertilize undoubtedly comprise far the largest tomato of prepared chemicals used on the farm, and that is why plant health, Plant life and animal life are subject to pests and parasites as well to disease and epidemiology. The farmer, in contrast to the farmer, they are taught and controlled by chemicals, both inorganic and organic, to grow crops well, furnish their quote in fighting the farmer's foes." It is getting the proper mineral content into the food for the farmer, in his responsibility, the speaker stated. "Agriculture must concern itself most definitely with the potential for only adequate in quantity but so supplied with minerals and vitamins that the animals feed on them," he declared. "Only in this card thinks of the small college they are planning to speed over eight million dollars to divide the university into smaller colleges, similar to the Oxford type of organization. The college that is not over reached high morn. The Campus "A bunch of the boys were wheooping it up," and so the poem runs along, but it must not have been a college man who wrote this little bit of sentimentalism, since he interviewed the interview in the president's office after he "whoooping it up" was finished. This, according to a number of产编 students, is one of the "former students," is a very vital part of any such piece of literary nonsense. And why shouldn't it be? The answer is that a college man's debauch and shouldn't the after effects be mentioned also? And just what should be the sense of this piece of writing in such manner unless one could "rate" an interview with the officials afterward? Of course we realize that this little piece of writing would render the little escape juices colorless; in fact, the party would be just another night, not an event of the school year for those com- "A RUNCH OF BOYS" At any rate, and perhaps not quite appropriate, but included nevertheless, the lessons we have been realizing to the fullest extent, the pleasures, if any of such experiences and the ability to describe them will be able to describe the actions of certain of our learned, or learning, young men in their swift fallows down this happy value of tears. way can burnen health be guarded, great degree in health can be greatest degree in health continued health of man. Entire civilizations have deteriorated and passed out, larger The Bulletin "Man's basically dependent on bio food supply. The soil is its primal environment. It provides nutrients for its benign bacterial inhabitants and for simple plant health and production, the crop sufferers. Man also plants plant crops to insure their well being, and they will in turn directly benefit from our proper food supply," he said. The Hawk's Nest Date: Mothers' Day I can't help wondering. Does the annual spring student house-cleaning have anything to do with Mothers' Day? The date I had with my mother last night was a lot more interesting than some I've been having with the campus kids. Another for Mothers' Day "I've got a toe in the hole of my stocking." "You mean you have a hole in the toe of your stocking." "I want what I said." "No! I meant what I said." After listening to some of the clothes I rave about the new clothes they are going to get when their mothers come I begin to wonder whether Mothers' day is arranged for them or for (or the daughter)'s wardrobes. It does come at the right time o the year. Psychological season to speak it in big words. Special simile for today: As welcome as mother on Mothers' day. I'll probably get mobbed for that one. Wonder why church attendance always picks up just about Mothers day? Hugh Bently As Others See It COUNTRY TOWN CHANCES I have always been impressed with the fact that plenty of smart people live in the country, Ned Beck, managing editor of the Chicago Tribune, lately called on me to write a book about him from town in Kansas much smaller than the one in which I live. One of his reporters is Kathleen Maughan, who recently joined Mr. Beck said that for years the prizum woman reporter in Chicago was Genevieve Forbes; but Genevieve married it. And now it is said around the Tribune office that Kathleen is just as good. Let country town boys and girls be around them day they will be taken a trial, and, while waiting, let them During these last rushing days why not eat at the most convenient place The Cafeteria The New Cafeteria "Nothing is good enough but the very best!" There Is Still Time---carefully prepare to be pretty good, when their chance comes. Ned Beck will join Roy Roberts and a little too large to suit him; he likes to try out reporters still in smaller places. Roy Roberts, long Wandering Star, and now managing editor, comes from Muscatoab, Kuwait, a town of many stars A person promising better Kodak finishing work than we do cannot fallill that promise. To make an appointment for your Mother's Day group picture. But whatever you do, call us up before we have all the periods taken up for the day. Our Kodak finishing service — In by 8 tonight — Out at 2 tomorrow. D'Ambra Photo Service (Opposite Court House) 1115 Mass. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Sunday, 5月 12, 1927 No. 167 SCHOLARSHIPS: Additional scholarships for 1025-50 are available for women students Applicants must submit a resume and apply to the Room 316 Power Hall from 11:38 am to 17:48 pm every day or by appointment. -EUGENIE GALLOO, chairman. DEUTSCHER VEREIN; EUGENE HARTMUTH MUELLER, vorstlizender Am Mootag, den 6. Mai wird um 5 Uhr 39 machtissen die machete Versammlung des deutschen Vervisa abgehalten werden. Interessenes Programm! Lichtbilderwortzug! Erfruchtenung! Alle, die für Deutsche Intense integrees herzählt eingladen. — E. W. Howe's Monthly A SQUARE DEAL Secretary Stimson did a good deal of work when he appeared before the Republican members of the Ways and Means committee, which promulgated the existing free trade relations with the Philippines. The committee has board precious little from anybody opposed to the raising of the sugar tax. The Republican majority has been reported as favorable to an increase of the sugar duty to 3 cents a pound from the Philippines, and with Hawaii and Porto Rica placed for tariff purge. possess in the category of foreign countries. Mr. Stimson insisted that any restriction on our trade with the Philippines would create serious economic and political difficulties almost certainly would follow. He is opposed naturally to resources which allow the Philippines to achieve its uncompromised toward recognizing the Filipino to American administration. If the committee acquires the necessary information, the Philippines' abandonment of any intention to discriminate against our other island possessions must follow as a logical step. It cannot go ahead without considering the dependency and force of another. -N. Y.World The fact that we do not run a Minnesota newspaper nor work on one probably makes us more complacent than we are. We should do contend the Minnesota haw is exactly the sort of thing for which the so-called great American people have felt. Philadelphia Public Ledger Good Taste Tastes Good A box of Johnston's Candy is a sweet symbol of your affection for Mother. In a variety of kinds to suit her especial taste, she invites for Mother's Day. The Candy she likes! For Mother's Day Rankin's Drug Store Handy for Students" "Handy for Students" 11th & Mass. Pphone 678 I