SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1928 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN . PAGE THREE Debaters in Second Meet Kansas to Oppose Washington and Missouri and Missouri Kansas debaters will meet opportunities for the second time this year in a triangular debate held Toddsville, near Kansas, Missouri, post Warhols. The Kansas team, consisting of Paul Aiken, c 29, and Joseph McDowell, c 32, will meet the Missouri firmative side of the question: Resolved that the proposal for modification of the Volunteer law and the eightth amendment, approved by accounting creeks, should be adopted. Garvey Bowers, m'31, and Copeland Bowers, m'31, the Kansas negative team, will oppose Charles Mosley and Robert Haltzone, the Washington State defense, in question in central administration midtown, at 8:00, Tuesday evening. dice to vote on the merits of the teams has proved its popularity with Kansas audience and evidence will be give a chance to vote on the question but before and after the debate, the showing any influence the debater may have on the opinions of most here on campus is limited in ability of the individual debaters w probably be taken also. be said. --that an appropriate ring lends an air of distinction? Let us show our selection of stones and crests. The Fellowship Banquet of its Baptist Young Society is been postponed because of the loss of a member. The semester, Leslie Burry, President Announcements —Marcin Chadwick, president. The League of Women Volunteer meeting scheduled for Monday, Dec 10, has been postponed to Monday, Dec. 17. Important. Y, M, C, A. Cabin meeting, Sunday night, it dickens the houses of Tet Shinto, 701 Bri- dale. And the Church of God, 1701 Lorraine. Love Lompery, 1701 A mistake in the placement amounts ing the exhibition of pictures by Susan Ricketts. The exhibit would not be open to the public Sunday. The exhibit will be open Sunday after the 9th and the 19th of this month. The university Christmas for Committee will hold a public meeting tomorrow at 3:29 p.m. in central Ad. auditorium. Arthur King for 12 years a student secretary and Mr. Kemp for foreign students and the way that a student loan fund might do foreign countries. Six women have enrolled in the reservation course offered at the University of Nevada regarding of the k and no promise of airplane flights. Have You Noticed --from 1504 Iodunan, Rewurd, Call 2424 I. K Provide through Provident The Providem Thrift Policy What It Will Do for Ye If you live it will pay y $10,000 at age 65. If you die before age 65 it w pay your beneficiary $10,000, cash, or in monthly installment as long as he or she lives. If you become totally and p manently disabled it will p you $100 a month. Now—while you are in a roe health and can spare the moon—let us show you how small you are in the universe in force. Send the course Austin, Texas, Dec. 8—Students are not allowed to take their autos upon the University of Texas camps. Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia Texas Students Drive No Autos on Campus O. K. FEARING Telephone 1615 408 West 6th St. B. I. Nonson, gate keeper, says that our years at the stores have been great. He tells them to carry into the grounds. He says that sickness and injuries head the of excesses, while urgent calls to the doctors, or one of the dooms, are next in line. Around Mt. Oread Bernice McClure, fa'20, is visiting at the Kaopa Alpha Thata house. George Stillwitz, 128, who is now practicing law at Wichita, is here this weekend visiting friends. Dedham Plains property will receive the above tax allowance. However, Dedham Plains property must also be included in a joint tenancy with the descendant plan or estate to qualify for the deferred income relief on the sale of the property that was given to the descendent plan in the sale of the property. Tony Dee, Managing Director, UK Sarah Hancock, Chief Executive, UK Mary J. McNeill, DBS, Chartered Medicine, UK David Mackay, DBS, Chartered Medicine, UK Stephen Fry, DBS, Chartered Medicine, UK Drew Harvey, Business Research and EDT Research, UK Liz Wright, Legal, UK Christine Webb, Human Resources, UK Joseph Rowe, Human Resources, UK Wendy Martin, Human Resources, UK Patrick Murphy, Business Research and EDT Research, UK Maria Tomaszewski, Business Research and EDT Research, UK Phillips Cotton Delph, Grantham and palisades awards won by classics Phyllis Miller, the wife of musician Jerry Miller. The dress was brought into the dancing room by the dance house, which opened in 1987. The blouse will be for the second to fifth year. The blower can be used for the room or the conservatory, and then by the museum staff. The tutus were documented with a variety of yellow and white rock wool and silk creations, and were worn in the theater, on stage, and during the dance hall were decorated with flowers. Chair, Genesis country sales a career addition to the team. Utilize relationships with the change leader. Carry out sales for the entire country and lead the change leader. Carry out sales for the entire country and lead the change leader. Coordinate marketing and Mrs. Mary A. Walker, chair member, and Mrs. Mary A. Walker, chair member. Supervise A. Johnson Cly, Mp; Mary W. Smith (children's mum) B. Gayle Hood Cly, Mp; Jennifer L. King (girl's mum) C. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly D. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly E. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly F. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly G. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly H. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly I. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly J. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly K. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly L. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly M. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly N. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly O. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly P. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly Q. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly R. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly S. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly T. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly U. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly V. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly W. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly X. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly Y. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly Z. Mary J. A. Murphy of Garfield, Cly There are a number of injured children and adults in Portsmouth, Quirk West viewing a film about English course, they were mistaken by sophomores for first year men, and treated as such. Mare were forced to take medical care for a trainee冲车 and song book. GRATITORY JENELYL JOB: Bankruptcy, representing the L. G. P. Browne Group in a division of the Fidelity Bank, has a division at the Fidelity Bank monitor A. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday to 9 p.m., or call for appointment. Christmas delivery on all orders. LOST—Eastman Kodak. Call Green berg, phone 1307, 1135 Tennessee. Pipes. Tobacco Pouches. Cigarette Lighters and Ash Trays Barber's Drug Store 909 Mass. St. We Invite Comparison Quality - Finish The fiery, bounding Romance of an iron-willed, gypsy beauty in love with her worst enemy. A cool stirring drama of a tempestuous people. THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, December 9, 1928 PAGE TWO In a Forest Fire bu Arthur S. Graudon Few people living in the midwestern states have ever seen a forest fire, or realize the terrible significance of such a conflagration. It was two years ago last fall, while I was employed as a file clerk in one of the numerous lumber-camps which the western slopes of the Cascades, that I chanced to see a real forest fire; one that threatened my very life as well as the lives of several men in our camp. One early mid-November afternoon of that fall, I received a telephone call from a rangers' look-out station, which was situated a few miles to the west of the ranger's house. We were at three or three miles north of that place. The ranger on duty informed me that he would need all available aid from our camp, as well as that of all those in the region. They were needed to hive a back-fire, the growing flame before it could do much harm. I was the only one in the office at the time I received the call, and since I felt it my duty to remain by the telephone, I was unable to call the men of our camp until a log-train came to be checked at the office. After making sure of all the ranger was able to tell me about the progress of the fire, I went to another logging camps that were working in the distress of the fire, and all of them about the newly reported blaze. By that time a log train pulled up by the office, and I spread the news of the fire to the crew. Two hours later, a large body of lumber-jacks from our camp had assembled all the fire-fighting paraphernalia at hand and were departing for a point directly in the path of the advancing flames, which I learned were now spreading rapidly over the hour. The fire-patrol station with which I was communicating, figured that a hack-five could be laid safely within five or six hours of the time the blaze was first observed. Just as the first detachment of our outfit left to assist in halting the blaze, I received another call from the ranger station, in which the look-out in charge said he was preparing to locate the outfall. Lodge tower which was located ovalen miles from the fire-station he calculated the flames were within a half-mile of his watch-塔. I dispatched this news to the men leaving the camp, and proceeded to make connections with the Look-Out Lodge station, from which I henceforward received my reports concerning the headway of the fire. Look-Out Lodge station was built upon a high hedge or rock, and was being barren and stunned with booby-tails and creams. At nightfall, the Look-Out Ledge operator called me, saying that the men of our camp and from two others had arrived, and were rapidly cleaning a path to check the advance of the fire. He believed there was little danger because the air was calm, and the water was still clear. The position was perhaps logical enough under temporary conditions, but as soon as the sun slipped behind the distant mountains, a bristle brush sprang up, soon gaining the velocity of a small gale. I personally learned from the Look-Out Ledge operator that the strong wind was sure to carry the now moving blaze across the back-fire laid by the crew, causing the budding abundant their efforts. A few minutes before landing from the scene of the fire burst into my office and ordered all those in the camp to fire at once to the nearest body of water, since the late wind was driving the fire out of control. I told this news to Look-Out Ledge station, and in turn learned that all the farst patrol and the lumberman were seeking safe paths around the bareen crags of Lock-Out Ledge. The onlooker no serious confugiation, since the timber-line ended less than twenty miles south of that point. I hastily gathered all the important papers of the office into a small strong-box, picked up what belongings I could, and ran from the office just in time to board the 'dunkey engine' which was heading through the cutting season was deposited until the spring thaw. While I had been in the office I had paid no attention to the fire, which was now nearing the camp with astounding rapidity. Sparks crackled all branches as the faithful little animal to Mountain Crest Lake, which lay some ten miles beyond the summit of the ridge. A deafening roar filled my ears, and the forest was illuminated with a molten-red glow. It was only a half mile up the mountain, but it was still ten-mile stretch to safety; but the run over that half-measure seemed to take an eternity. The red glow became more brilliant as the fire swept nearer our laboring train. The crackling of the branches beating cannonade of sharp explosions and falling five-breakers on two little flat cars hooked next to the engine, and we were continually engaged in extinguishing the WEARY THOUGHTS I'm tired tonight; I’m tired tonight; My body feels with weariness, Almost a deep, dull pair. I’m tired tonight; But I cannot rest, For the thousand tangled thoughts That rattle through my brain Give me no peace. I’m tired tonight; But I can be happy. For I’ve won the great reward of earth A perfect satisfaction In a day’s work squarely done. —James S. Welch, Campus Tale by Betty Millard A girl and a man were in the slim grey roader that climbed insolently to the highest ridge of the road and stopped there, above the campus, above the darkening grove, above the will-wiight lights of carly evening in the houses below. It was nearly 6 o'clock and there had been sandwiches and chocolate malts at the Joint, and a ride, and now the marked car at this highest ridge of the road. They sat still, wrapped in fur, and silence; thinking not at all, but thrilling unceriously to it, for they were unaceustomed to silences of such vastness. They watched the stringing clouds in the west scatter and deepen to purple under the earth's shadow. They had never watched clouds before. Tonight though, was different. (It always is). There was sweet significance in all of Nature tonight; and for the first time they felt the pulse of light. The wind that touched their cheeks with rude chick fingers was beautiful; the black tangles of branches against the dusky glaming snow were beautiful; the yellow sensibility of the lights below, Ad's somber reflection in Porter lake, the twitter of hungry sparrows, the faint smoil of gasoline and the nungent odor of cigar smoke mingling with the cold fresh air—all were beautiful, beautiful! This kind of make life's边界 fascinating. Oh, this had never happened so, before. 'It never has.' There was a delicious mood flung down about them like a garment. A cobweb thing which they felt with apprehension would vanish too soon. They were silent, waiting –waiting –silent . . . as one is silent whose eyes follow a bubble's wandering until it bursts . . . by the gloom of mirrored colors, until it bursts . . . which slowly contemplates blown smoke rings, perfect –until they waver, spread, and fade away. So they were still again for a long time and looked on the world with sympathetic eyes. ... his hand cupped her chin, tipping up a face filled with starry eyes that laughed back at his, and the adoration he saw behind their mocheyk filled him with a swift flame. Their lips met; warm velvet against warm velvet. His hand was inside her coat now, feeling for the pin newly fastened above her heart. Her lips carressed the top of his head and bent to kiss his bandwork of a few hours before she opened her eyes to their souls were wild with a new emotion. Again their lips met—warm velvet on warm velvet. Going home. Fast. Speed to keep the rhythm of the song their hearts were singing. Speed! It was very dark now and the campus with its joys and its quizzes, its ambitions and its failures was left far, far behind, in the racing of the motor and the pulsing of their hearts. "S'a damn fine world!" he told her. "S'a damn fine world!" she agreed. flames from each other's clothes, and in drenching ourselves with water from the tank which sat at the end of the flat-car next to the engine. The heat scorned almost unbelievable and I swaked and cried from the torrify fury, even while soaked with water. Just when the main-line of the fire was taking hold we were still paddling out into the riverridge and began to put on speed. I thought we should never out-distance that fire, it leaped along so rapidly, lapping hungrily at the dry branches of the trees; but the little 'donkey' engine sped down the track with unbelievable speed, with the recording fire-line in rapid pursuit. We were hardly free down along the stile by Mountain, the train showed down along the stile by Mountain, the crisis had passed, and we settled ourselves on the log-rafts floating in the lake, to watch the blaze spend itself along the shore. Uncle Jimmie Green bu Lida Eckdall To some students the name of "Ucle Jimmy" Green may bring memories—to others it probably means a statue in front of the School of Law building. Traditions change with the passing years even as the poignancy of vivid moments fades with the coming of present thoughts. Yet some vestige of memories still remains as the basis of the better present. Such a tradition is "Ucle Jimmy" Green. "Uncle Jimmy!" true name was James Wood Green, but he won the more affectionate title by right of conquest over the hearts of the Hill. For years Jimmy's friends called U.S. School of Law and a valued friend and adviser. Although Dean Green was a native of New York he came to Kansas in 1892 and began practising law at Kane. He came to Lawrence in 1878 as the first doctor of Kansas and was then the attorney of Douglas County. Here it was that the greatest work of his lifetime took place. He was a central figure in football rallied where he was the captain of the team, and attendant at all athletic contests, where he had a front-line sent always reserved for the season. Ulysses Crane, LL. B., 87, says of "Uncle Jimmy." And yet it was not "uncle Jimmy's work as a teacher," he recalls. "He was the one who has had many teachers and superior to Uncle Jimmy as an instructor. It was because he was a man of heart, because he took a friendly interest in every student who came into touch with him, that he would take them at K. U. He had no children of his own but had them out to students and they were always his friends." He never forget any of his friend or students and one day when asked why he was able to remember them all he said, "Why because they're my boys." A California man wrote at the time of Geen's death and told how "Uncle Jimmy" had kept him from being expelled from the University in disgrace because of a thoughtless act he had committed. This young man went on and finished his degree to the School of Law, went out, and became one of the first jurors of the country. He was later elected chief justice of the supreme court in the state where he lived. In Green's will he left a $5,000 bequest known as the May Stephens Green loan fund, in memory of his wife who died in 1916, to be used to help worthy students in the School of Law. During the war Green kept a complete list of all his former students in the army and navy. He was interested in each boy and rejoiced at any honor or distinction that came to him. In 1905 the law students had a banquet to celebrate the completion of the new School of Law building, the occasion being the deam of the school. Since the occupation fell away, an anniversary of Green, the event was made an annual one. For fifteen years the "Uncle Jimmy" campuses were events for scores of Kansas lawyers. Dean Green did not belong to the motor age, Horseas appealed to him and one time he owned a fine team of them, behind which he and Mrs. Green used to drive about Lawrence. Troubadors Experts say that Daniel Chester French, the renowned sculptor who designed the bronze statue in front of Green hill has caught the spirit of "Uncle Jimmy" Green and made it into a great work of art. SATISFACTION There's silence in the house tonight, Except one clock a ticking. There's darkness, too—no bit of light, Except the grate-free flickering. I'm sitting with my toes outstretched Close to the grateful flames, And listening to the rain that drips All down the window panes. A book of poems in my hand, A tiny thought of you, The freight, the raindrop band— A night for dreams come true. —Agnes Taylor —Rhadamatki I hear a rustle near the trees I hear the wind n-sighing I hear a million falling tears And crackling coristalite crying, walk around to crunch the leaves Trees fall and blow away And wonder with the whispering wind Why all the world is dying, —Violet Bell. Viola Bell. Rhadamanthi. on the stage ND DERRY Radio Artists a. "ADORATION" . ressed" in that lovely dinner it at the Phi Sigma sick. for I thought it did it without a trace anners This ELECTRIC POP CORN POPPER is constructed of steel, beautiful nickel finish. Handle and cords come in assorted colors. Red, Blue or Green. Unconditionally Guaranteed 4 .