PAGE TWO TUESDAY, APRIL. 23. 1929 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansa Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-ChIEP ... MARION LEITER Associate Editor ... James S. Weich Associate Editor ... Alice Schitto Material Writers Virgil Ensign Paula Cost Katharine Brook MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD BUNSLEY Sunday Editor Lawrence Kelley Monday Editor Laura Kelly Tuesday Editors Lyle Winkler Camus Editor John Miller Wednesday Editor Glidesbaker Night Editor James Thursday Editor Glidesbaker Society Editor Betty Donner Friday Magazine Editor Willard Fearle ADVERTISING MGR. — KENNETH CAPE Advertising Merger. — Taylor Nelson Advertising Merger. — Kelly Jones District Assistant. — Mary Ryan District Assistant. — Kennett Capere Marron Chevrolet. — Marron Chevrolet William Dunberry Mark Chandeble Isabel Bandy Milind Hussein Katherine Borh Catherine Hannon Arthur Circle Rosmary Mahn Arnon Lomborg Arundel Lomborg Katherine Manu Mary Wurst Stella Brooks Mary Wurst Business Office K. I. 16 Telephone K. I. 16 Night Connection 270K K Your Korean should be delivered before you should fail to cover telephone 270K between you and your Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kenya, from the Press of the Jemaiti Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the postoffice at Lawrence Kansas; under the act of March 3, 1879. TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1929 LILAC TIME Lilime time hies come to the University. Murky gray days with moisture laden atmosphere are made less gray by the colorful blur of the lilame hedge which skirts the south edge of the campus. Sunny days are made more sunny by this gray harbinger of spring which flaunts its riotous blooms in a bunch of color and perfume. The lilie is a gay, sociable, generous shrub. It blooms profusely and lavishly—not just a few little blossoms—but a myriad of soft, fragrant flowers. It holds its head up high that people afair may admire the blush grayish blot that it anches on the landscape. Wind may whip through the lilie bush, but in its grey good nature it bends and frolics in the breezes and a downpour of rain only serves to make it more colorful and fragrant. Welcome, lilies! The National Association of Fishing Tackle Manufacturers has complained that the Waltonian propensities of presidents Coolidge and Hoover have made the American public so "fish-minded" that the supply of game fish is quickly becoming depleted. Too bad we can't find a president or two with a special proclivity for digging dandelions. GERMAN REPARATIONS "November 11 handed to them (the allies) an instrument with which they could have done what they would. They did not know how make use of it. They have destroyed what I gave them." This is General Marshal Foch's opinion of the Veranlai treaty ending the war with Germany. He believed the conquered enemy should have been dealt with in the hardest terms, to bring their defeat to them, and to eliminate any possibility of a future war rising out of the reparations payments. Because of the lenency of the treaty General Foch refused to attach his name to the document, but declared he was holding himself in readiness for another war. Germany has verified General Foch's stand in part. Far from making her live up to the payments prescribed by the treaty the allies have already granted Germany large reductions. The Dawes plan not only decreased the size of the payments but spread them out over a long term; and even these "easy payments" Germany is refusing to meet by a difference of several billion dollars. It seems unlikely that the allies will be willing to reduce the amount of reparations further. Whether, however, there is a possibility of a war arising out of the situation, as General Foch feared, is very doubtful. Germany realizes that she would again have the world against her, and she has not recovered sufficiently from the last战 to start another. If the allies persist, in their present demand there is no other course open to Germany but to meet it with as good v grace as possible. Sportmen cay fish are caught so quickly and with so little effort at Steamboat Island, Wash, that there is no sport in catching them. A perfect story had the size been mentioned. MISSISSIPPI FLOODS Again the Mississippi is on a rampage, inundating countless thousands of acres of fertile land besides dealing death to marry who live along its leaved banks. The crest of the flood waters is now in Missouri; and Arkansas, but is descending toward Mississippi and Louisiana where other swollen streams will add to the danger. Tornadoes have razed towns in several Mid-Western states, but little can be done about such disasters except to rebuild wrecked property. The Mississippi floods, however, can be averted by extensive control measures. A system of reservoirs is proposed as an effective means of relieving the trouble. Some think that the levees should be built still higher and stronger, although such a project is condemned by experts. A few engineers recommend dredging the channel of the stream, despite the tremendous cost such an operation would incur. Accessory canals to speed up the flow of part of the stream have been suggested as remedies, not to mention many variations of these plans. It is up to a quantified flood control commission to investigate the problem from all angles, and to submit a workable remedy as soon as possible. The great "father of water" is too manicual to be left unhacked any longer. Life and property are too valuable to be lost. The best plan for curling the Mississippi torrent in flood times must be determined and carried out. The headline, "Women Barred From Exchange Floor," referred to the fact that women are not allowed in the New York Stock Exchange, and not to a suicidal policy adopted by a department store. "WOLF. WOLF." "I regret to say," declared President Hoover, "that some of the farm organizations are again used on measure of farm relief." "The farm organization," L. J. Taber, master of the Grange assorted, "are more together than ever before in our history." What can a farmer believe? Is he divided or together? Is he or against the debenture subsidy? Are there divisions in his ranks or is he united and fighting for every hit of legal aid possible? If he reads the papers and believes what he reads is probably developing into a Doctor Jekyll as a compliment to Mr. Hylde. Most likely he accepts, what he reads with a large proportion of salt as he hins in the past and does not believe his future prosperity or economic downfall depends upon what he on in Washington. He will plant his corn this year the same as he did last and cuss the luck the same way when he sees his crops wither for lack of moisture. Washington, with its bitter debates over social and legal intricacies, he has come to regard with synical indifference. Little aid has ever come to him from his legislators. Why should he expect any now? The relative morits of high and low tariff are only subjects for corn-cri and kitchen debates, something with which to be amused, not aided. Debentures he does not fool him. He will not believe he is going to get something for nothing. He has grown wise beyond his understanding. Would-be agricultural legislators have cried "Wolf" before. A crying need: handkerchief. How 'hout the absent-minded lady professor who rouged her nose? *Referee Hoover has given the deburture plan the ten count. A common remark was that the Re lays had nice weather—for ducks—if the ducks weren't too particular. *Jerry the shell tried to join five fraternities at once so he would have enough pins to go round. Unearthed Mexican Pyramid Yields Treasures Used in Old Aztec Burials Mexico City — Earthwarden pots containing charred human bones, together with ornaments of gold, cosmos, and nobilized stone, and dozens of fine obidian arrow heads and knives, have just been unearthed on the west or main side of the Aztec pyramid at Tequila, near Mexico City. Science Service Correspondent The pyramid proper has been completely excavated by the Mexican direction and archaeology and restoration has been carried as far as knowledge permits, but in clearing the platform at the foot of the west pyramid where great double stairways ascend the structure, three additional steps were discovered leading down to a still lower level. It was in the earth at the bottom of these new stairs that the funeral pots were found. Today's Best Editorial Residential Aid to Study They are three in number. The first is of plain red ware, about nine inches in height and diameter with a handle half way down on each side. In giving Columbia University $2,000,000 for a residence hall for medical students, Edward S. Harness has greatly extended his benecence in the recent gift of more than $11,000,000 to Harvard to create there a system of small residential student groups in each building, field. The two donations, taken together, mark him as one with positive views on the value in student life of that form of association that comes from personal contact outside the lecture room. It deserves notice that the present gift will furnish quarters not only for our students but also for the injured junior军官 offices. This group presumably includes internets the men engaged in implementing a curriculum, a practical experience provided by hospital work. Bringing young men from the hospital staff together with students from other institutions, the ability of an association between the two groups that should broaden the outset of the students and prepare them for transition from school to practice. After all, the student supplies the motive power in the work of education; the teacher supplies only the material for it; and the teacher it for granted that in the case of so serious a branch of learning as medicine, the student must work firm intention to master his subject. This granted, anything that improves his working conditions, any improvement in the minds engaged on the same problems or recently having struggled with them would be more effective. The higher schools already spend much more on buildings and laboratories for instruction than they may well try a SaaS plan with regard to promoting residential conditions likely to unite student energy and productivity. Brooklyn Eagle Minnesota Daily BOOVER ATTACKS UNEMPLOYMENT Our Contemporaries An attack on unemployment has been one of the first program annealed to address. It has been served as chairman of President Harding's committee on unemployment and who is greatly concerned with increasing complexity of the problem. PRACTICAL IDEALISM Now that the Kellogg Peace Pact lacks, only two ratifications to make its original fifteen signatures effective have been ratified, war outlined by the distinguished peace leader, Kirby Page, in his recent address, on the Minnesota current affairs committee, building a will to peace, the removal of war from the province of things legally sanctioned, further disruption to war-making and institution of arbitration for force, were named by Mr. Page as the great essentials in achieving the ultimate goal. The creation of a Department of Peace, with the proper organization for the dissemination of peace propaganda, is a suggestion deerving of the commitment to secure commitments have branded war as a vestige of barbarism. Mr. Page's suggestion gives our leaders a chance to prove their sincerity. Unless hypocrisy is to mould our national policies, we must well out our actuary to our words. His plan is to loosen unemployment not by providing a breadline or by buying food, but by supplying enough work. He would do that by following a plan of employment. Mr. Page is a clear thinking idealist who presents his views in a concise and measured manner. While he is a man of vision this pointed suggestion have none of the impracticability of the visionary's ideas, and even if he was in one of his addresses, that of spending one-sixth as much in this country on education for peace as it is expended in other countries cannot be made more than just a lofty idea. With America committed for the future to protect our nation about eight million dollars annually for the upkeep of its armed forces, it would certainly not be an impossible task in such documents as the Kellogg Pact if this country were to devote about a hundred million a year to the war. *The second is of the same shape an style, but his ornate black line draw ings on its upper half. The third is the most interesting of all, for it is in the shape of a grim reaper, with horns, bamboes, which the infants of Tenayuca recognize as a female fox. Her cheerful grin nails all the side teeth, and her small jaws show which fangs, between which hunges the tongue. There is a look of perverted gaze on her face if she were highly intelligent; there are scars on her distended stomach. The opening of the vessel is in the top of the animal's body, built up by skin that covers its mass of human bones, jaws cover its muses of human bones, amnesc, charcoal, and a variety of articles which were preserved in the jars within during his lifetime. Of the jars contains wads of half-burned cloth, black from carbon but many of these have been rounded ashes. Such finds of genicine pre-columbian fabrics are rare. The material is quite light woven of wool, a fine texture and interwoven one way of the goods by a single thread the other way, making an attractive vision. The material is The dead men in the jaws were buried with a large number of obadian arrow heads and other weapons as needles. There is also a good supply of obadian krisps or irozas. Other treasures in the jars include a half-baled scaffold, a few cutlery dishes, a small fine made three-legged dish, covered on the inside and out with carefully applied drawings in black lines. The dish may have been an artifact. The pyramid of Temujuca, so near Mexico City where most of the Atoztecas are located, by the Commissioners, is an exception in its line, for it has yielded very important documents. Today it is most complete Atozteca site known, with details of architecture and decoration that have not been documented before. Restoration here have been conducted by the Mexican government, under the direction of the architect Bernal Olaya, of Cortez* soldiers who deserved the荣誉 title *Atozteca*, in now known. feet at the first stage of a general business; depression This construction would be made possible by a public fund provided by federal, state, and local governments through the government system. It would necessitate $ expenditure which was to go be made anyway, but would make it at the most reasonable. His plan is concerned only with the general decline in the country's economy. His payment is due to defects in the social system such as 10 unemployment from old age, inventions, and elasticity of wages; lack of education; mediatedly relieved. Although it cannot directly prevent industries from feeling, at the same time, depression among them. The president believes that ifile factory workers in New England might be helped by building a dam in the region, construction would require machinery which could be purchased in New England. Also, more money would be put into circulation generally because the wage carriers would soon invict The president's first step has been to appoint a committee to investigate the issues of bias and security. HEI construction program would operate only when the economy is in good shape, and the other hand less capital would be used when business was hindered to grow. Without vision was the Kansas farmer who committed suicide because he thought the importance of a life-insurance solicitor. If he had taken out a non-profit insurer, killing himself he might have had vengeance as well as rest in the Nirr. His plan sounds like a good business proposition and is in keeping with the theory which favors social justice rather than charity. Columbia Missourian. Brooklyn Eagle. The Hawk's Nest About all the average college-parents have to feel happy about is that their offering isn't just a degree, but even have that correlation. A college study is something that mother prays for and that pays for --problem would be solved for me, me." She (complimenting herself): Three boys are just crazy about me. He (Not putting out any bonquette today)-thank you! They must be. 1st Gay: A woman can make a too out of you in ten minutes. 2nd Gay: Maybe, but think of those ten minutes. I am passing on that 'pale, which was piffered from the Sour Owl, be cause I know a girl who can make up of any man in no time at all. The disadvantage of a man's have ing a reputation for ability is that people keepoping a list of work on him to see that he lives up to his rep La tinière pour la bour : As exelted as a (ten-year-old) boy on circus day. What is more enjoyable than trying out the old line on a brand new flavise? Vile Verse "I wish that it would rain come more." The way it stops sure makes me cry. For every time the rain does stop I 'won't' lower my auto ton. And when it starts to rain encore I have to raise my top once more. If only it rained steadily. Hugh Bently As Others See It --is given in planning so each may find well balanced meals in choosing foods on our counter. A LACK OF LEADERSHIP The modern American education system, according to Dr. Charles M. Andrews, professor of American history at the University of Chicago, can be a job of giving first rate training to second rate men, but his little ability to offer the benefits of higher education would wait until all of his powers. Doctor Andrew, in company with a number of other officers, reveals his views in a letter to the American Philosophical Society at Philadelphia which is taking symposium on the state of the country's schools and col His letter expressed the fear that America is providing its if wf about everything it needs exert leaders. "All the learned professions are seeking men of the first rank to fill the positions that call for men of science and engineering standards in scholarship," he wrote; "There are plenty of second rate man, but where are the men of outstanding promise to become leaders in the intellectual and early life of the com-munication." This constitutes a rather serious is it diction. It was a long time ago that we said there is no vision, the poor person. And vision—immanent vision and brings great achievements, an great advance—depends nearly on vision. We are never any better than our leaders induce us to be. A nation that lacks gifted leadership lacks everything. El Dorado Times. SERIOUS NOVELISTS Mr. Arnold Bennett is a member of the editorial board of the latest London monthly, The Realist. He writes the first article of the first number in *The Times*. He condescends to look at only a few of the "serious," that is, "important," people in the business. One of these, he says, may write another "gravily or" person. Mr. Bennett pours libations of molasses on Wells. He is a pioneer, a phenomenon. He had no predecessor but another amount to a row of pine. Balasz was "the first big sociologist." Herbert ate up Honore. "His fiction has a more tremendous sweep than any other," said the author of fust. Jane Austen whee- Special Attention The "Nothing is good enough but the very best." New Cafeteria the very best" OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Tuesday, April 23, 1928. No. 157 OTANN CLUB BOTANY CLUB: The Botany Club will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock at 1221 Louisiana street. There will be election of officers. EVELYN STONER, President. PEN AND SCROLL: Pen and Scroll will meet this evening at 7:30 in the rest room of central Administration building. ALBERT PRESTON, JR. PHL LAMBDA SIGMA; So hopefully "middle class" is M. Bennett, after all, what could be more appropriate than his eliphine and deceny? D. H. Lawrence another noble savage, has "genius and style." He "has treated sexism and femininity," even that of any "Povernon." Virginia Woolf's psychology isn't original and her form is absence of form. Yet the same quantity of precursors." One envies porturity. To that highly cultivated woman, Mr. Bennett gives a fellow board, a fellow-member of the editorial board, Mr. Bennett gives a good deal of spice. As become an editor of *The New Yorker*, he settles the place of "Point Counter-Point" in the three group of categories, and few critics are more Aldeo) is almost always amusing. So we refuse to see him sitting in the categories. It is enough to know that "Point Counter Point" is "not a word" (a term of fiction), in both a spiritual and a technical service." Yet Mr. Huxley, in the cleverest of the youngsters, is in the progress of the English novel regressive? That isn't a bad sign. Let me look at the first line. Like it, "The Old Wife' Vale" take. Phi Lambda Sigma will have a meeting this evening at 5:20 in Westminster hall. There will be installation of the new officers. 1. Y. Times. fined herself to something she knew about. The phenomenal Welles is a diffuser of universal acclaim, and the author is a man who wrote "Kipper" and "Tomo Bunga" and also "Mike Polly." Now, it seems that he is writing for the children he will be forever holding toy houses, "Amelieen," in Shinlee Lewis and Theodore Drennan, possesses a pair of wigs. The mystery of the retirement of Marion Talley, after so brief a stage career in music, is explained by Jack Harris of the Chantecute Tribute. While he sang for his own voice "yet he does not deplore her going," "Even if she were ex- ELIZABETH FYFFE, Secretary. Keep time with the times— The Elgin slap and pocket watches are only $20 and up possessed to life for years," he says, "she would never develop enough breath, vocal or otherwise, to ignite a pan of gasoline." A great singer is more Topeka Capital —Boston Transcript Arkansas Traveller Springfield Republican "Fire Wagon Wrecks Car, Hurries Five," Headline. We look forward to the diplomatic triumphantian will let this breathless world know whether fire wagons save or kill people. A college diploma is sure to mean success in life, boys, if you also pass the examination. "Life," wrote the sages, "is the highroad along which all that lives must pass toward the reward of being, death." The Sandlepian It is found that the trillion cubic feet of the atmosphere of the city in California, which is 2100 tons of dirt. Some visitors may feel that they are seeing it on one day. Utica, N. Y. Aug. 30, 1928 Larus & Bro. Co. Richmond, Va. Gentlemen; With best wishes for your continued success in the manufacture of this high grade tobacco. I am, I have been smoldering Edgeworth for the past ten years, in fact, since I was 15. We had it all now; we have given other stories, like Edgeworth. During that time I have had costly pies and some not to be eaten. I've never not the pie but what is in it that 1017 Mass. Electric Shoe Shop Edgeworth Extra High Grade Smoking Tobacco Just a line to let you know where some of your tobacco has been going for the last ten years. Sincerely, (Signed) N. A. Vaeth Just as the beginning and ending of stories are considered most important so are hats and shoes considered the all important parts of dress. But hats are no longer worn to any great extent and supreme. Let as help them keep in perfect condition. Two Stores 11 W. 9th Tennis Rackets Restrung Is a vase of flowers the only way you show that Spring is here? A new Jayhawk Suit from Obers will put you in tune with the season! $43 Knickers to match $7