THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7. 1928 PAGE FOUR Y. M. Cabinet Flans for Special Prayer Services Next Week World Peace Dinner Scheduler for Friday Night, Foreign Students Guests Plains have been made for a world peace dinner to be held Friday, Nov. 9, at 6 p. m., in the University cafeteria with foreign students invited as guests. The event is called evening which was held Sunday in the home of Sam Carter, mountaintower secretary a program of prayer well was also discussed. Following the opening devolutionals which were led by Arthur Gluck, c390, Mr. Pike was appointed man of the committee to plan for prerecess work, was read and approved. From 8 to 8:26 each morning of next week, I Y. M. C., A. members are invited to participate in special prayer services, which will be held in Little Theater, Franer hall, Mr. Carrot, will lend the discussions, while the leader is set to be chosen to preside over the more formal worship. Bill Newman, gr, is to have charge of the international phase of the world peace dinner Friday. All who attended will be bringing a foreign guest with him or special guest. Also men and their dates are asked to be present. Tickets may be obtained at the Y, M, Hall or hall or from members of the cabinet. The culled group Sunday night accepted the resignation of Phil Power—p-£2.50; community service chair to choose a successor in his two weeks. Prior plans for the coming financial campaign were also discussed. The $4 million budgeted budge$ made mode. The II present planned $350 towards the work of the firm. Light refreshments were served later in the evening by Mrs. Carter. Arctic Explorer to Speak Vilhjalmur Stefansson Will Tal in Auditorium Nov. 13 Villainah Stefanonoff, noted the explorer, author and lecturer, who will speak here in the Auditorium Tuesday evening. Nov. 13, will be one of five speakers attending off the Kansas State Teachers Association in Topeka. Nov. 7 and 8. He is schulted to make several other addresses in Kangsa also, coming here Nov. 13, and appearing in Chengqi the next day. The reservation block for his address here will be placed in Robinson gymnasium during the convocation Wednesday morning, the gridramp at Monmouth University, Monday evening. Nov. 12, during the concert by Paul Whiteman and his orchestra. Reservations for the community lecture course, featuring Valerie Stokey, will be held on Nov. 13 have reached the 1500 mark. Several rumored tickets which barracks and but have not yet been received will boost the reservations. Reservations may be made at 10am or from gymnasium building, or by calling 7U 28. Northeastern's million dollar project for providing a retiring allowance for elderly professors received a broadly in a gift of $85,000. The plan is to operate in such a way that an aging figure, about 65, a professor will begin to receive an income which will approximate one-half of the retirement benefits received during the five years immediately preceding retirement. The Lawrence Hospital and Training School Our Doctors limit their work to "disases of the Stomach and Surgery X-Rays and Quartz lamp used where indicated. Mary L. Glesemann, R. N. Mgr. WATER Why Take a Chance? For Health's Sake Drink McNish's Acrated Distilled Water Your Neighbor Drinks It Do You? Order a bottle today Call City Noted in "Aeneid" Interests Archeologists Rome, New. $\textcircled{1}$ (Science Service — Ruins of Bartino, scene of incidents in Virgil's "Aeneid," have been dug into by the Italian archaeologist intimately associated with the west coast of the Greek perinuum oppose the heel of Italy. In the "Aeneid," Hellenus, son of Prinn, and his wife Andromache, became rubers of this part of the country and built a house in the pattern after the famous Pray. McNish Bottling Works 886 Vermont Phone 198 Dr. Luigi Ugiolini, head of the mission, has reported recent discoveries of five beautiful sites of Greek origin at Butrutto, one site possibly built by ancient Greeks. Remains of the different civilizations that occupied the site were found; bone knives of the probistic stone age, buckles from the bronze age, ruins of the Greek and Roman town, burial tombs of the fifth century A.D. Movies Taken of Planets Scientists Applaud As Jupiter Crosses Screen (Science Service) Washington, Nov. 7- S scientists attending the meeting of the American Optical Society at the Bureau of Standards, passed from listening to papers on research to see a movie. The star of this movie was a heavenly Jupiter. Junior Jupiter, appearing on the screen for the first time in America. These motion pictures, the first of their kind ever made, are the work of Prof. W. H. Wright, of the Lick Observer, and Meer, director of the research laboratory of the Eastman Kodak Company. Every minute or so during the filming process, the make photo after photograph of Jupiter with the observatory's great 38-inch telescope. Jupiter turns complex as it approaches the results could only be obtained when the planet was fairly high in the sky, it was necessary to repeat this on several other nights. Thus every assignment left its record on the sensitive plates. Jupiter came into view, slowly and steadily turning as if driven by an electric motor. The great red spot, and other details of its surface familiar to astronomers passed across Jupiter's surface. Its crescent came on to the screen from the side, rapidly approached the planet, then its shadow appeared on the planet's surface. Finally, the pryched dice of the moon fell away when it came into contact with the bright planetary background, though not as dark as the shadow. Rent-A-Ford Rent Your Car from 916 Mass. Phone 653 Painting Display Planned Facsimile Color Prints Will Be Exhibited Here "The Department of Painting is planning on exhibition of faceless paintings that will be the great masters of painting from the earliest times down to the present day." The exhibition will occupy the two galleries of the Department, rooms 325 and 327, east Administration Building. A public until the end of November. The exhibition will include reproductions of masteries of some of the greatest artists of all times. Beside the works on display, a group of Pompii the exhibition will attempt to present a fairly chronological survey of the development of painting from the Renaissance to the twentieth century. There will be reproductions in full color shown (a mixture from the cathedral of the Vatican, Rome, and the shadow of the early Ryzantine master, frescoes and aliparpees by the early Italian primitives, works of the Renaissance, and the same paintings by many of the monsters of Flander, Germany and France and hardly a collection of pictures by some of the painters of the last sixty years. This exhibition of prints comprise only a small part of the very extensive collection which the department has shown during the past few years. It is hoped that the exhibition soon be an comprehensive as any collection of the kind in the country. Wisconsin Coach Says Collegians Grow Smaller Madison, Wis., Nov. 7. — UPI College men are growing small and more muscular, said Todd Lomb, cochair at the University of Wisconsin in a speech here These men are pumped come to school in large care, and consequently are in weak mental and physical condition. They do not engage in the sports offered to them and use easier methods of recreation on the wolf links or tennis courts. Personal and Fraternity Crested Christmas Cards BULLOCK Printing Company Bowervock Theater Bldg. "Where good printing is a habit." Quilted Robes $10.00 A special purchase from our New York office and we're selling them now. A beautiful Xmas present for a friend. A necessary garment for yourself. Just twenty-five in all and values from $15 to $18 DECIDEDLY NEW BEAUTIFULLY DIFFERENT STRIKINGLY COLORFUL FOR THIS WEEK $10.00 Senator Curtis Gratified With Election Return Chicago, Nov. 7. —(UP)—"I am gratified with the returns," Senator Charles Cortiz of Kansas said today, in the first public haa made since his election to the presidency. Mr. Hoover made a won- dorable candidi- tion. Curius hally I am grateful to Charles Curtis the American people for the splendid endorsement given the Republican ticket." Curtis shook hands with everyone including the steward. He said he would be there between trains but that he would have to hurry on to Washington "to get the train." Organization of the Classical Club was completed at its first meeting Wednesday, Oct. 30. The officers of the club are: president, Ruth Warrington; '20c secretary, Logone Knecht; '20c program chairman, Logone Knecht; '04 ctl, chairman, Constitutional committee, Elizabeth Fryer; '29c. Five University of Oklahoma students will represent their schools in the final competition for the Rhodes scholarships from a list of fifteen applicants. For Punk's ambulance Phone 119. —Adv. Home Service Laundry Free Bachelor Service Dry Cleaning Work called for and delivered Phone 1329 1245 Conn. A legal battle was waged in Seattle on October 25, when the necessity was tried recently for illegal riding. If the fraternity is found guilty the fine may be as high. Included with Chancellor E. H. Lillibridge, party attending the Konzert for the Nobel Prize in Literature and Mrs Bea F. Pawson of Tofoten and W. J. Meyer of Gottharden. C. E. Orelup, M. D. Special eye, ear, nose and throat. Special attention to glazes. Over Crown Drug Store. Phone 445. HEN: "What day'y hear about Googus?" HEN: "Oh hard heels, mostly." MANY a man has and better place to advertise than or the heels of his shoes. The cliché* backs, "here I come," "there I go" none of the cowhide heels are on but reasons why rubber heels have thicker padded And the growing popularity rubber heels is a growing on opportunity for Goodyear. Abigail opportunity because to people walk on Goodyear When foot heels than on any other. Have you ever stepped out on Good-year Wingfoot Heels? If you have, you know they cushion away all the shocks and jars of walking. They wear like a "frat" pin. And their trim, close-seating design makes them good style anywhere. Takes your shoe repairman only a minute to put them on. How about new Goodyear Wingfoot Heels today? Sightseers returning from the Alps never fail to babble of the marvelous echoes that reverberate so obligingly from peak to peak. But no such phenomenon matches a certain echo that keeps circling this whole mundane sphere. It is the best-known cigarette slogan ever coined — the Chesterfield phrase "They Satisfy." Originated to describe a unique coupling of qualities seemingly opposed —"they're mild, and yet they satisfy" its descriptive accuracy was instantly perceived. Today it echoes and rechews wherever cigarettes are smoked: *$satisfacen...itsisfistfont...THEY SATISFY!"* And rightly enough, for Chesterfields are mild —and they DO satisfy . . . and what more can any cigarette offer? CHESTERFIELD MILD enough for anybody...and yet...THEY SATISFY LIGGSTT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.