PAGE TWO TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1822 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor-in-Chief Rosemary T. Mabe American Editor Milard Huffman American Editor New York Editor William A. Dawberman Campus Editor Katherine Mauser Montreal Editor Sethune Editor Enthrone Editor Nate Dochborn Night Editor Catherine Raecker Graphic Editor Catherine Raecker Alan Pattin Editor Ambassador Ishara Patricia Tait Editor Mildred Elizabeth Mackenzie Michelle Sylvia Young Alison Dillimore Albena Discoverer Jason Jinklin Jason Jinklin Larry Leonard Marissa MacNeil Brittany Brush V. Gene Rowe Brown Advertising Mer. Edwin W. Murray Foreign Adv. Mer. Bennie Palmatez Antit Advertising Mer. Kenneth Cohen Antit Advertising Mer. Fred Kernan Business Office K. 17. 60 Bank of America K. 17. 58 Night Connection YearsKaren should be delivered before K. 17. 48 YouTube should be delivered before K. 17. 46 Telephone 203-878-2988 you fail to receive Telephone 203-878-2988 Entered second-class mail matter September ber 17, 1879, at the post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon, five a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Press of the Department TUESDAY, FEBRUARY, 19, 1929 MELVILLE E. STONE Melville E. Stone, for more than a quarter of a century the directing genius of the Associated Press, died at his home in New York recently. Mr. Stone had a notable career as a journalist, and as such, adopted high standards of workmanship and editorial principles. In 1833, Mr. Stone took over the general management of the Associated Press of Illinois, but when it became involved in difficulties, a new organization, the present Associated Press, was founded in 1900 under a charter from the state of New York. Mr. Stone was again available for the larger responsibility. Melville Stone was instinctively amy by training a great news man. He founded the first penny newspaper in the west, the Chicago Daily News. He was directly responsible for opening the channels of news with foreign sources. During the Russo-Japanese War he persuaded Emperor Nicholas to remove the censorship from Russian press dispatches. He went to Europe frequently, where he knew some of the greatest men of the time, who greatly influenced him in his profession. After his retirement as the general manager of the Associated Press in 1921 Mr. Stone was inactive, but retained his relationship in the capacity of counsellor. The Associated Press service as now seen, is one of the greatest in the country and keeps in touch with the progress of the world. This proved tribute will always be paid to the genius of the founder of the institution. JIM REED SPEAKS Senator Reed, of Missouri, has broken out awe. This time his attack is centered on the prohibition law and its violators. Some of his statements are pretty forceful and some are so obviously true that they hurt. His tirade is mainly against the "envieling hyphores" who vote dry and at the same time drink all the liquor they can get. He is mainly hitting the senators but this is true of a great many people throughout the country. They are bone干 in their own little community but just let them get away from home and see what happens! Reed will be severely criticized for his speech but such men are needed to open the eyes of the public to existing conditions. Although he may be partly in the wrong, there can be no doubt but that part of what he says is true and it will undoubtedly cause a lot of higher-ups to squirm and get hot under the collar. His charge that prohibition is the "breeding place and teething place of crime" might be challenged. It is true, but not in the sense he intimates. Liquor and its interests have always gone hand in hand with crime and wrong-doing. Saloons were the hangouts for criminals and many an otherwise good citizen has committed some dire act after getting a "shot" in such places. Prohibition has opened up new lines of wrong-doing such as bootlegging and "hijacking rackets" but whether conditions are worse in saloon days is doful. Reed's speech, together with the gang murder in Chicago, should start something interesting. HATS Red hats—purple hats—bright blue hats—needy green hats. Not since the times of Queen Elizabeth of England has masculine headwear flaunted such an array of brilliant hues. The grandeur that was Ronne is far out foreword by the compelling shades of those chapaux. The once-proud peacekeeper hangs his head in shame, and alinks to a corner, disgraced. He was beaten miserably by the first appearance of the colorful top piece of the modern young man. As yet possessors of the passionsmats are in the minority. Only a n few have appeared upon the campus. It is, however, only a matter of time before such an sensible sensible fashion will have fall away. Stratfing college men will pride themselves upon defeating their feminine friends in the race for style supremacy. Hardly athletes will meet, and burble over the merits of their respective choices. "What a daring hat, Bill! Red is so becoming to you." "Yes, I really think it is, Joe. Mary says she always likes to see me in red." "I'm going to get an orange one next time. I'm just wild about orange." It is only a step from gandy huts o equally brilliant boots and suits, tink topeats may be worn with aby blue suits, or lemon yellow nips with lavender topeats. Perhaps axesels will be rose, with pinks green rimmings, and business suits a con- versive turquoise. Women! Look to your laurels, Mascine culine vanity is about to overwhim von. COOLIDGE ROUTINE The President's job must not be so bad after all, one might say after reading the dismish which tells how President Coolidge rides at seven and is able to retire at nine, having completed his day's work. Have University students have to spend longer hours than that in order to finish their duties, scholastic and social, each day. The answer is—organization and routine. More than any other president, perhaps, Mr. Coolidge has followed a strict routine in his work, and the result is that he will retire from office in good health instead of crushed by the responsibilities he had to bear. He has made it a part of his job to observe abstemious habits in order that he be in fit mental and physical condition to meet the constant demands upon him. He has trained as an athlete might, and as a result it is to be hoped that the phrase "mann-killing job" will not again be applied to the president's office. The wise man follows a good leader and the American public would do well to "wize up" and follow the exegetic of his chief executive in this instance. Do your apple polishing early. One way to keep people off the grass is to cover it knee-deep with snow. One of the wrestlers is so dumb he thinks soccer is another name for boxing. We didn't know how solemn an owl was till we read the last edition of the Sour Owl. Whats teaching our dollars to have more sense, we make them lose what cents they had. Why not conserve on space in the paper, and put under the heading of weather, "Same as yesterday." Many a girl's hopes are now blasted by the announcement of Lindbergh's approaching marriage. The average "K" man doesn't know much about music, but he does know that a quartet at his church isn't a scoring combination. Consider the mulit: how he brawls? Yet he has neither a melodious voice nor a message to give to the world. He merely brawls for publicity. Washington—Though the tariff hearings now going on before the House Ways and Means Committee were allegedly called for the purpose of giving the farmers a chance to present arguments on behalf of raising the tariff on farm products, eastern manufacturing interests have presented so far that they have accused the administration of certain textiles, metal goods, bricks and cement, it is virtually certain at this time that uprevision on these latter items will take place. Manufacturing Interests Delay Revisions of Agricultural Tariffs Today's Best Editorial Activity A and Activity B as titles would sound too much like vitamines, so we'll call them tiddlywinks and croquet. One morning recently the leader in tiddlywinks gravely no-where, and we were invited an insider named Insider that croquet was getting too much spades in the Kansas and tiddlywinks not enough. On the afternoon of the same day, Insider discovered from the sponsor of croquet a little girl who would together too much room in the Kansas, and croquet too little. He, oh! In fact it may be said that these Eastern manufacturing interests, with the exception of certain professional leaders, have contented themselves with general statements, and have reiterated the old argument that it is known that the farmer buys in a protected market and sells in a free market. "Inside Stuff" JUDGE SIBLEY'S ANIOM In making an address to the stu- sent body of his alma mater, the University of Chicago, the federal admission court delivered an axiom of great importance and of strong appeal to the com- mon sense of intelligent persons With political platforms and pollinators the pulses of religious bodies thrash in a rhythm. With publicism issue politically cuts across party lines and gender electoral contests and acrimonies entirely inconsistent with religious equities and political values. "Incide Stuff" Bn: to take on the political phases of prohibition and attempt to make beacons at sea more visible, and to empower an盟军 in a truce group with a legalistic and political creed that easily knits itself into fanaticism and a house of religion divided against it. (Science Services) The preachers of the nation have never had a wider and better occasion to make their pulpits the pedestals for them to reach the virtues of romance. "I believe that discussion from our palists should be continued to temper race and abstinence rather than the imperial-political question of "civilization." --assumption of raw wool had dislodged twenty-two pairs of baskets in the last six weeks, and it was too heavy for however, for admitted that changing fashions, such as to the two-pairs and suit four-pairs, would be more convenient with it. Suits with two pairs of pants last two years as long as one pair-of-caps last three. Judge Silby, being a religious man a strict teatroder, and a Jewish man an ardent activist in law, affords a counsel which is wise and honest to the men he advises with the help of his guardians, but it will make them far more welcome and powerful as planners for the sobriety of those who are under law. Our Contemporaries Atlanta Constitution Hardly any person will deny that an amount of creative thinking stimulates me. I know that the number of men and women who are exposed to college from two to four is small. Not only in practical politics but in the field of higher education, democracy in the United States seems to have bitten off more than it can chew. Students with disabilities system is trying to train too many students with the money available. Kempt, who was 78 year old when he died, was a freshman at Columbia university in New York City in 1885 and a graduate of the vil war. He continued in college the rest of his life because a relative left him $2,500 a year. He had three B. degrees, M.D., A.B., A.M., L.L.M., M.A., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees, and had one degree not listed in the catalogue D.P.M. (Doctor of Perpetual Motion.) Here is a case of carry college education to the extreme. The average graduate's earnings are not in danger of carrying his education to the extreme. Could you be a student of your university for sixty years? Do you believe you could derive enough value from your college education to warren-forward? The world is full of eccentric people, but William Cullen Bryant Rempt, who died recently, boasted of sounding almost three-fourths of his voice. ENACGERATED EDUCATION WHEN A DEMOCRACY BITS OF MORE THAN IT CAN CHEW Incidentally, it is a stupendous undertaking to even irritate the minds of boys and girls in the high school grades to the extent it is tried in—where, half of the world's high school total of 5,700,000 is cared for. Indiana Daily Student According to the Federal Bureau of Education there are, in round number, about 200 students in colleges and universities. The significance of this is evident when we consider that the University enrolls in all the other similar institutions throughout the rest of the country. - However, the agricultural items are slated for general revision upward, though the increases may not be so large as those asked. Peach Get More Protection All fruits and vegetables can be exposed to the sugar tariff will be given a boost! likewise probably milk and milk products are better believed unlikely that the tariff on wood will be raised. Hides are doubled. Certain opposition to increasing duties on some of the farm products has been presented to the committee, which opposes more turf on wool; paper manufacturers do not want higher duties on cured; manufacturers do not want higher duties on blesse; soap manufactures declare that higher duties on palm oil and coconut oil will raise the cost of soap and insulating it with fifty tax. The whole range of economic thought, always opened up when the intric is under discussion, has furnished the basis for many arguments. Indirect protection is the main trait. Indirect protection the theory that the people of a desert have evolved more naked and pourable, but est more naked and pourable, if tropical fauna like humans are kept The extreme free-trade wing of the Democratic party, which still was a few尔德ians, holds the belief that shuttling off foreign a market by buying in countries where it has foreign trade for every dollar gained by high domestic prices or through a large domestic market made possible by tariffs which shut out foreign markets. Such virtual embargoes, it is estimated by this schizophrenia research paper, the natural resistance of this situation they argue, is higher takes for the criticism of the United States. No one to date, however, has had the temperty to attempt to umset just much more than necessary and would increase the cost of living, if there would be inerrances. too many factors enter into consideration, however, that the consumer may make any goods along this line. Clothing manufactures, however, have declared to the committee that the sales of these products to the consumer in an extra four dollars on every unit of man's clothes purchased, of thirty-one dollars on each element or amply allied on all the line, they claim Farmers Pay Heavy Duties William Goldman, of New York, representing thirty clothing manufacturers, gave his opinion that Alongher, one third of America's population of about 118,900,000 men, women and children, is engaged in the process of follow-up formal education. We wonder if this insures a higher type of citizenship? Is intellectual life more vigorous? Strange as it may seem, the bulk of this colossal undertaking in large scale education is wasted. Too little training is given to students who figures poured into the consciousness of the student multidishes is neither assimilated or digested. Memorias are often burdened in the process, energy reduced from application to teaching and intelligent solution of problems. The size of enrollment does not indicate the amount of thinking power developed. If it did, or if it can be made to correlate, most of the differences in student performance and multi-practices of life on this earth would be alleviated. Does the taxayer's money produce a greater interest in public life? Are the standards of the press higher? —Oregon Emerald Certain agricultural leaders have estimated that the average duty on schedule representing goods over 40 cents per pound, over forty per cent, per valence. To reach the average of forty per cent, their tariff increased from 12 to 14 cents per pound; corn from 15 cents per pound to 35 cents potatoes from 60 cents potatoes from 60 cents sheep from $2.99 a head to $2.99; derid pollutty from 6 cents per pound to 12 cents per pound; and oranges from 6 cents per pound to 2 cents per pound. The Hawk's Nest --for that Spring Party. We have Gentlemen Instructors for the Ladies and Lady Instructors for the Gentlemen. Private lessons any time by appointment. Well what a business? Here just about the time a young man's fancy turns, it suffers in a trivial reversal. Not we ever goins have spring? But they say it's so cold in War-saw that ergs trotse ten minutes after they're exposed. Even the class-room safety for 'em, "voices safe for em". The simple for today. As dumb as a fresh whisk that thinks a cinema role is served with coffee. Pam? Truax to Pollie Marie Tahchellie: So, they're sending envelopes to poor Bill now. Because he would have never been able to should have never better than to give his barber there will in Patrograd. "I hear Mac flunked his lab course, chem., because he couldn't make beardwax." "On the contrary, old cog. He was thrown out because he made it," Haddl help Siconer." Den dør war de guy vot smoked so man siggar dot be got nagarlette favor All he knew, I all wreaked my mind on them, and all you do I laugh in the face of it. My confidence, I would like to have a little from course person who has been through it. Address all mail to Hugh Bently, University Dallas Kentan. I'll be crazy. -Hugh Rently As Others See It WHITE WINGS THAT ARE BROKEN Sambody once called the street cleaner, a White Water Figure, for whom he now presents show that they are white wings often broken, not infrequently with fatal injuries. He is associated with the calling of the mariner, although the man on the high庐 is safer than he who walks down the street or the humble street cleaner as one who faces violent deaths in his court and whose death is entitled to his share of fame as one who takes his life in his hand along with the tool of his trade when he is ill. The figures published in New York show that of a total of 11,099 workers in the street cleaning department 2142 Learn to Dance Now The Marion Rice Dance Studio Over Bell's Music Store Phone 953 If You MUST Take Notes ...try this amazing new idea SIMPLY hold a soft, smooth, black-written hand and handlances practically write themselves. The Black look on your face the most out of everything come out O.K. Blue Bound VELVET Pencils AVENUE XNEK FACTORS PROJECTS OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXIJ Tuesday, February 19, 1920 No. 168 --were injured last year "in the line of duty." Six of them died. The Whits Wings account for sixty-five per cent of the workman's compensation for which the city is responsible. A New York law requires that to the fact that the accident rate in the department means that in the course of a year one man in five is injured, or on the average every cm two men are entitled to an injury over five years. Rhadnachton will meet at 7:30 this evening in the sky parker of the curilium building. AVIS MPTCALFE. RHADAMANTHI: Le Carré Francais me accrue, il va flying avec, à quatre heures d tomie, au siècle 30 Fraser ball. Tous ceux, our parport français sont battus, sans pépins. QUILL CLUB: Quill Club will meet Wednesday evening at 7:39 in the rest room of the Administration building. NAOMI DAESCHNER, Champion. NEWCOMER'S CLUB: The Newscomer's Club will be entertained Thursday, Feb 21, at the home © Wm. J. P. Jones, 600 Cannock street. MRS, S. A., QUEEN, Secretary. "I will confine my remarks to aviation." Boston Transcript. He might have said; WHY THE WORLD LOVES LIND When Lindbergh was asked to newsman men about his engagement to Miss Morrow, he said: Conditions which make the White Wings poor risks for accident insurance are, of course, easily accounted for. The youngest who are exposed to the motor car. His work makes it impossible for him to maintain that degree of vigoriness which is required while on foot, must be brewed on the roadway. So treat the street cleaner with respect. Overcome the tendency to make his a squatter in the back yard and occupy counted among the multitude who day by day meet muenche to life and limb in order that the rest of us may live in such an environment in the city of the twentieth century. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY "You may tell my public that this is the supremely happy moment of my life. Our betrothal is the culmination of a romance that began when it was a mere half of ten and she was in a mournful lodge for months, recreated in aviation and she used to mend COSTUME JEWELRY The new styles are here—come in and try them on—all colors—and WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Friday, Feb. 22, is a holiday. No classes will be held at the University. E. H. UNOLEY But he did not say that. Not that, why the world loves Lindy. my toy phones. You ask me whether our marriage will interfere with my flying. You may tell me public that my art—for one may refer to flying as an art, maybe a hobby—will plot on board. Except to repeat that I count myself the happiest and luckiest man in the world today, that is all that I can say at this time. I wish to thank my public for the kindness and good faith that Ando said. by the world loves Bing, —Washington Evening Star A Murdle kid has a letter from King George, but he probably would be producer of one from Hoot Gibson or Tom Mix. Send the Daily Kansan homo. SUITING YOU that's my business SCHULZ the TAILOR 917 Massachusetts St. Wednesday Special The Fillet of Haddock Roast Lamb Home-made Rolls Crispy Cherry Cherie Pie The New Cafeteria Nothing is good enough but the best Style Correctness is More Than Just New Style Styles must first be suited to the wearer then, they must be suited to each other. That is where our Ensemble Service comes in. It blends hat, clothes, shirt, tie, hose, shoes and accessories into a perfectly balanced ensemble with well harmonized with the wearer's presence. That means customers are so admirable well dressed. -