PAGE TWO TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1929 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE. KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR IN CHIEF MARION LEIGH Associate Editor James S. Welch Associate Minister Alice Schlegel LITERARY WRITERS Virgil Hossein Paula Cost MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD HURLEY Nancy Editor Lawncare Manager Cassius Editor Linda Edah Nursey Nancy Editor Wendy Night Editor Gladby Baker Teresa Keene Mary World Teresa Magicke Nathan Miller Bridget Magicke Editor Willie Welch ADVERTISING MGR. KENNESH CAPE Advertising Merge Mar. Flood Nelson Marketing Assistant Mar. Mary Carey Marketing Assistant Mary Carey Marketing Assistant Mary Carey Marketing Assistant Mary Carey Marine Chevron Mark Kansan Board Members William Doubray Benjamin Brewster John Emery Matthew Emerson Kathleen Horne Katherine Horne Catherine Hammond Robert Hammond Rosemary Maker Arthur Circle Bernard Schoenberg Attigel Diedhong Katharine Mann Katherine Mann Stella Brooksway Walter Ywet Michael Young **TIMBRE** Business Office U. K. 62 SUNNYVILLE Night Connection Your Kaplan should be delivered before the clinic for appointment. You will have to pay for the bathroom (SKIRK) before you face the clinician by booking online. Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kabul, from the Press of the Depart Extended as second class mail matter September 17, 1810, at the postoffice at Lawrence Kansas, under the letter of March 2, 1879. TUESDAY. APRIL 9, 1929 HILL ROBBERIES The old crop of petty campus thefts seems to have taken a new start for the spring with losses reported from three organized houses. Last fat several houses were involved in suc robberies, the trouble seemed to die down until the recent outbreak Why is it that these recurring thefts cannot be stopped once for all? For the past two years they have been giving the campus a bad reputation. Small robberies at parties have come to be almost a matter of expectation. Now they extend to entering homes and robbing the students living there. In any city community, measures would be taken to trace the robbers and stop the disgrace. Why should a college community put up with such procedure and more than a city organization? FARM RELIEF SUGGESTIONS Since taking office last month, Arthur M. Hyle, secretary of agriculture, has received about five hundred letters, each giving suggested plans for relieving the farmer. One Missouri farmer believed congresso should enact a law fixing the minimum price of wheat at $1.75 a bushel and a maximum price at $2.25. A Kansas farmer wrote the secretary that by a loan of $750 he would be able to refinance his farm and effect a substantial saving to himself. It is logical to think that plans for the much talked of farm relief should come directly from the farmer, for it is to be supposed that he knows the existing farm conditions better than anyone else. From the suggestions received by Secretary Hyde, however, this does not seem to be the case. The farmer, beset with his own personal problems and difficulties, does not have an inclusive view of the situation. He sees what would help him, but leaves out of account what his neighbor needs. Farm relief will not be forthcoming until the farmer is willing to accept a plan which will be for the good of farming areas as a whole. BUSINESS MORALS The moral standards of business have been advanced during the last thirty years, or so Owen D. Young remarks in the American Review of Reviews. He attributes the improvement, as least in part, to the growth of big business, which must indorse honesty and uprightness as a matter of expediency, if nothing else. Even though such a gloomy view be taken of the reasons behind the change for the better, it is encouraging to note that business as a whole has definitely discarded some非裔 customs of the past. True, there are still places which could be remedied evilly to efface, and shady or difficult practices to overcome. However, when compared to the business world of forty years ago, present conditions are extremely satisfactory. It CHUG - A - RUM! If spring waits for a buffalo chorus to escort her into Brookfield, Mo., this season she will probably never come, since the sorems of the frogs are about to be prohibited by state order. The frogs really are not at fault, either. They started their spring rehearsals in a lovely, modified street which awaits paying and they practiced so long and hustily that the residents of the town could hardly sleep and in cheer desperation the weary ones have appealed for state help. The deep chug-a-rum of a frog chorus, croaking in union and then in discard, has long been a harbinger of spring, just as fleece clouds, bright patches of blue sky and banking geese prelaim the passing of the cold. There is something encouraging about the sturdy rumble of the unseen orchvis bracing from the hidden depths of an old pond. It seems to bind at babby, breedy days, brilliantly colored crocuses, green grass and piemes; it people are deprived of their rest at night so that they are "poppyed" the next day it might be wise to definitely silence the spring broadcasting station, F-R-O-G. It takes considerable self-respect for a scientist to think religion doomed because he doesn't approve of Butler Collegian An then there is the one about the college professor who never called on his students to study hard. They yawned so much that the teacher thought he had his hand up to re-verify it. Other towels are as bright as the hen, but she is the young intellectual of her kind. She caches in attimude when she achieves something. Nowadays one never knows whether the pedestrians along the highways are merely hitch hikers or bunion derby runners. The talkie people are naturally trying to sell stock on the ground that it is a sound investment Butler Collegian Today's Best Editorial THE TALKIES AND THE DEAF THE TALKIES AND THE DEAF When the first railroad came across one coneveible, beautiful plumes of steam, and a fine belfleaching of sparks as the iron horse landed his load through the cut. What they did not notice coaches gathering that in big stables all over the country, the wayides in going to seed, and the various stock drivers, drivers, heaters and incinerators who were here by the new invention, Perhaps, indeed, that is one measure of the importance of a new invention, the need for great numbers of people. If so, the talkies are one of the most important recent inventions we have seen. Not only have they thrown fire but still other thousand of writers, directors and technicians who training fitted them only for silent pilots, stars, as the leading actors call themselfs, who shone so brightly that it seemed nothing could ever quench their glow, but who are now out of town or because they are foreigners and speak with accents, or because they are so accustomed to the old way of speaking that they cannot adjust themselves to the new. But even that is not the whole story. Now comes the most curious aspect of the tale. The deaf person all over the country are making ready to protect against the new dispensation, on the ground that they are being created. And a moment of reflection is enough to show that this is true. You know, a deaf son must have been a godsend, because every value in it he could apprehend with his eyes, and his lack of understanding. And all but a talkie must be quite an unsatisfactory to him as a stage prop for the tale. The talksie begins to unfold. It seems queer, somehow, that an industry which two decades ago was nothing more than a kind of affect the lives of so many people. New York World Following 160 Concerts in Europe. Elman Again Will Charm America a wave of unearthly sound vibrates the air and caresses all with its coarse charm as Michela Baum, greatest vocal genius of his day, electrifies the air. His return to the American recital stage after two years absence arrives at the attention of public and critics alike. Following 160 concerts in 4 European countries this great virtuoso takes up his bow again to charm he ears of a nation that has adopted him and acclaims with enthusiasm his superb art. He will play in the University Auditorium Wednesday evening t. 8:20 p. m. Elman's concerts have fulfilled the prophecies of great masters who card him as the supreme boy prodigy of Europe. Leopold Aner held the right-year old boy up in his arms and exclaimed, "Look at this small anatole! inside it is the most extraordinary force. At his age had I watched all!" "Inside Stuff" The Hill's recent epidemic of petty robberies brings up the old topic of crime news and the newspapers. Off-hand judges assume that newspapers print such items solely because they want to read it. That is partly true. But every news story wears two faces. One is its interest to render the other is its public value. The public value is that the police that are readers are asked to step for their own protection. The police can do nothing before a crime is committed. The public value of the public their task is lessened because proper preventative steps are taken. And the public cannot co-operate with all publicity is given to police news. Our Contemporaries At all universities certain campus organizations believe themselves immune to criticism. They maintain that in their membership there is a right to form an independent approach. While admitting that certain facts are true, it is often their nature to deny a publication the right to be directed toward them is termed destructive. The attitude of such or other organizations is based in a democratic community. Minnesota Dai SACRED COWS AND SUCH It isn't charity, however, if you give a quarter and demand fifty cents worth of erratum. Butler Collegian A thought from the East-West Rev: Music on Chinese in a Chinese vin louns like the ultimate refinement of jazz. FEATURING A NEW LADIES HOSE by Vassar In the New Sun Tan Shades $1.95 HOUK AND GREEN CLOTHING CO. $\textcircled{1}$ should be the greatest virtuoso alive. $\textcircled{2}$ should be ten Airs, not 97! $\textcircled{3}$ Sarcasticness of the continent. And at the age of 12 Jachau pronounced him "a funnier character." The years have brought the proof of these utterances to all the world, Petrograf, Berlin, this week. It was the order of the triumphal march along which Ellman breathed the breadth and depth of his life. In addition, there he has chattered precedents. In Berlin he unnoticed Von Vetich, idiot f Germany, and considered the greatest man in history. In his field. In London with Caruso and Dellà at a gain concert where "no necure" was the rule, he alone was known in the world. In Paris he was the first to speak the tradition that prohibited ols at Wagnerian orchestral concerts. Prior to his advent in the world of music the violin recital was unknown. Violinsist always had been assisting or joint artists. In America the concerts of this great master in territory off the seaten highways of touring artists have placed scores of cities on their map. Elmur has been one of very few proven that a prent soluble can blend well with a prent sweet. Our quartet a few soums ago played with perfect equality and amalgamation. The Elman program is a model for properly proportionate display of he standard styles of violinistic art. He plays the most monumental art. The Best Food Cleanliness surpasses all other aims . is none too good for our customers polyphonic works with authority, breadth, and insight, and then in a价位 betweens the understates of popular music as "Sentient" popular and "Humoresque." The New Cafeteria "Nothing is good enough but the best." The Hawk's Nest Harold, the permanent owner, desire can be big or low if Haitao's expenditures will always manage to exceed that amount by just fifteen percent. --jokes. But all that's 'out the social pale, I work, and thus keep out of jail.' And then there was the guy who was so tough he could cut the crust of restaurant pie! Justa year ago Kansas University as the "companion marriage" antil of the universe. Now look at he dump. Summer Complaint "I'd love to sit and rest at ease, To loaf and drink the summer breeze, To thumb my note at bury folks, And live, and laugh, and crack my A pupil was recently vaccinated by a preacher who weighed about 135 pounds, and the congregation filled with jealousy. By adding 300. Now I wonder , , , , . If the young lady who did the spirited gum popping at the Varsity theater last Tuesday night will make herself known, we will present her any kind of gum and a one-way ticket to any island street she will pick out. Simile for today. As lifeless as a three-toed sloth with anaemia. Hugh Bently VARSITY Tonight - Tomorrow John Gilbert "Desert Nights" with MARY NOLAN and ERNEST TORRENCE A girl—and two men—alone at the mercy of primitive passives and the merciless desert! John Gilbert shows you, in this hotbing romance that it is probably thrilling. It is his most thrilling film! Coming Thursday - Friday The "CHARLATAN" All Star Cast Coming Monday. April 15 Richard Barthlemm in "Weary River" OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Tuesday, April 9, 1929 No. 145 RHADAMANTHI: Rhadamathi will meet in the Little Theater of Green hall tonight at 7:30 c'clock. AVIS METCALFE, President. The Botany Club will meet at 7:30 Tuesday evening, April 9, at 112 antonina. EVELYN STONEER, President. BOTANY CLUB: ten and Scroll will meet at 7:30 Tuesday evening in the rest room of central Administration building. ALBERT PRESFON, President. PEN AND SCROLL: MEN'S GLEE CLUB: E CERCLE FRANCAIS; The Men's Glee Club will have an important rehearsal Wednesday night at 7:30 in Marvin hall. A full attendance is required. The Haskell Concert will be held at the University of Missouri in St. Louis on Saturday. LECTURE TO ENGLISH-MAJORS: Le Coeur Français se remaine qui le dix yyel, a quatre heures et demie, salle 306 Presner Hall. Tous ceux qui parent fronds sont invités. La Fête des Saisons est sur le 25 juillet. Prof. L, E. Sicon will speak to majors of the English department, and others interested, Thursday, April 11 at 430 p. m. in 265 Fraser hall, on Shakespeare's London. The lecture will be illustrated by intern slides. W. S. JOHNSON, Chairman of Department. POSTPONEMENT OF LECTURE: J. F. WEIMER, Chairman of Committee. Because of Professor Shannon's lecture to the English majors on Thursday, April 11, Mrs. Wilson's lecture on Joseph Corrid has been postponed. SAVE On all your Laundry and Dry Cleaning Work TENPERCENT $7.50 Use Our Cash and Carry It's Worth While Lawrence Steam Laundry 10th & New Hampshire Phone 383 CLOTHES DO HELP YOU WIN . . . ... DRY CLEAN THEM OFTENER have just arrived —a raw edge snap brim and a welt edge Homburg in silver color with black band Two New Styles in FLANUL FELT HATS University Concert Course Mischa Elman---Violinist One of the World's Greatest Artists in Recital Wednesday Evening, April 10th, 8:20 O'clock University Auditorium Elman played his recent New York recital in Carnegie Hall to a capacity audience. 275 on the stage and hundred stands. Probably the greatest violinist ever to play in Lawrence. Don't miss this unerb artist. Seats Now Selling at $2.00 - $1.50 - $1.00 Round Corner Drug Store Bell's Music Store School of Fine Arts Office