THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25. 1928 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE THREE Engineering Mixer Tonight at Marvin Holds Attractions Program at Annual Even Will Include Stunts, Songs and Talks by Faculty The School of Engineering and Architecture will hold its annual miker for the engineering faculty and students tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of Marvin hall. The miker will take precedence ever the songfest which is also scheduled to begin this week. The planner for more than two weeks according to Charles Whitman, chairman of the committee in charge. The program at 8, according to Charles Whitmer, chairman of the committee in charge, will include a chemical stunt, "Water," in charge of Raj Kumar, a dance specialist by Narciso Cabella; a baju soo by Carlo Thompson; and a group, "Hawaiian Melodies," by Tin Loke Wong Walm and "Lefty." A strong man net is plummed featuring Kanaanao Kua, Hishiro Sugoi, man but more soo, and his importance because of Bace's recently appointed neck. From 7:30 until 8:00 the mixer will take the form of a general "get acquainted" meeting. Those attending will pass the receiving line formed of the faculty and engineering council and are asked to assist in their identification by writing their names on the cards to be found at the door and by piling them into the get-together period music will be furnished by Kermit Ryan, Roy Denk, and Oswald Brandy. The mixer is an annual event on did not take place last year because of the death of Dean Wallace. The mixer was purchased to nate the management. This year the event is being supervised by the engineering council through a com- mite consisting of Charles Whitmer chairman, C. G. Biltenshire, and B. R. Clarke. Another Old Grad Tells About Carnival Braw Recent reminiscences of an old grig regarding a University student fight with a Carnival company years ago, brought up a little discussion. F. D. O'Brien, fs.15 told a story about the students cleaning up after rotten eggs, and how they liked the tent-stick murders to a frisbee. Another person who witnessed the fight told a different tale. He said that the show was a good show, and the manager picked up one of the students in the fight by hitting the manager with an over-ripe egg. His version is that when the fight started, the manager picked up one of the students in the fight and patted out one of the student's ears. That only started it: the carrie val manager was an Elk, and all of the Elks present pitched in and helped him. They put the students to a cleaning, and chased them all to the other end of the bridge before the fight was over. The students were no victorious; they were naquished. Scientists Unearth Evidence That Prehistoric Alaskans Once Reached Level of More Advanced Civilization (Science Service) Washington, Oct. 25—Alaska, like Greece, had its golden age, when the people attained the high point of their culture and then dropped to a more admirable level. Evidence of this historic golden age in the arctic was brought back to the Smithsonian institution by Henry B. Columbrus Jr., who conducted an expedition to the Smithsonian and for the American Association for the Advancement of Science. On the narrow strip of land called St. Lawrence Island, Mr. Collins found a remarkable mount about 20 feet Indian Mound Excavation Yields Many Skeleton Joel, Illi, Oct. 25. The excavation of an Indian mound located in the Oikerdek Cemetery, Joelit, Ill., has uncovered a number of various weapons, implements and ornaments. The work was part of an archaeological survey of Illinois, or (Science Service) der the direction of Dr. Fays- Coope Cole of the University of Chicago and W. M. Krugman, director in charge of field work. Of the 100 skeletons found, 22 were of persons under 2 years of age; 32 aged 2 to 16 years; 45 aged 16 to 60 aged 60 over 60 years of age; and three were to fragmenty to classify. The predominance of females among 38 males was unwarranted. There were 50 women, as against 12 men in a ratio of 3 to 1. Tau Sigma Committee Making Plans for Year New features of this year's pre- program for Tau Sigma were outlived by Miss Elizabeth Dunkel, sponsor following a party given for active and pledges of Tau Sigma at Mis Dunkel's home Tuesday night. Although a definite program for the year has not yet been presented a committee composed of Miss Durr an Anne Luise Bouyly, c32, an Anna Ursula Bochler, c24 and will make a definite report at the next meeting. It was decided to hot regular weekly meetings this year every Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m. new features for this year's program which Miss Dunkel outlined include the formation of a "tap" chorus which will be specially trained by “The field of work this year,” Mist Dunkel said, “will be so bread that any women with particular talents or interest in any special line, will be given the opportunity to do the type of work she desires.” --high and large enough to be the site of a compact village. The mound was composed of trash, the refuse and weepings from an entire village over period of many centuries. Animal bones and broken tools, bits of ivory and whalebone, pieces of wood carved in fantasy designs, fragments of blending of earth and permanently hard and frozen from the old climate. Japanese Advertise Kansas City Fort Scott, Kana, Oct. 25—(UP) —A Fort Scott store has recently received indirect news of Kansas City, Mo. Unwrapping a crate of Japanese ware, a local hardware dealer in glancing over a Japanese newspaper found a picture of Kansas City's convention hall. The text to describe the Republican national convention or some other conference although there is no one here who can translate the figures. The most surprising moment in he digging came when the frozen ions of some of the oldest inhabitants were discovered encased in ice, six children had been buried there in a mine. They were rescued carefully in his fur and other garments. The place where ey lay happened to become filled ith water which froze, thus preserving the bodies through so many centuries. This is the only time that humans have been in such position. Mei Colin states. Ruins of houses made of driftwood and whalehead were in the top layer f the great mound, Mr. Collins said, i describing his excavation of the digging to the bottom of the sound, he found the ruins of the omes of the oldest inhabitants. To such the most deeply buried deposit, here the oldest layer of ruins lay, Ir. Collins had to dig six feet below he recov'd the ruins. In the ruins, he explains, the land has unk since those houses were built on beach, and this in itself indicates he message of considerable time. This object layer of houses dates back to pre-Russian days, the ethnogroups declares. They are surely 2000 pure old, and more likely are nearer *o* being eight centuries old. The will is much more ancient. Erikokin settlement ever excavated. Many harpops and other tools and epops were brought back to the mithsonian collection. Objects dislaying the finest art in carving and sign were taken from the lowest of oldest level of the mount. These are made in the museum by the precision of the nets and the fine designs used incate that these inhabitants were in more clever with their hands and a kleener sense of beauty than any of their descendants in the arctic. Whether they were some of the first "Americans", some pioneer statists who brought knowledge and kill to the new world, cannot yet be tasted, Mr. Collins says. The number of historians have lost a baggage of finer hinges, as the simpler carvings in the top layers of the mound show. Present day Eskimos, possibly direct leconders of the artists, came to the island and helped the scientist excavate. In some cases they were called as to the use of the peculiar articles discovered in the desert village. Radio's Five Best WEAF Network # (CST)-NB Concert Bureau Hour. WJZ Network 8 (CST)—Wright Review. WEAF Network 7 (CST)—Clinic Service Hour DEVELOPMENT WOR Network 9 (CST)—Plotow Opern, "Martha." Taxi Phone 12 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Police Organize Party for Hallow'e'en Phone 4 GOOD YEAR TIRES Tire & Battery Service Fritz Co. Red Crown Gasoline Iso-Vis Oil Webster Groves, Mo. Oct. 25. (UP) The traditional friction between boys and property owners on Halloween has been eliminated here in recent years, arranged a party for the youngsters Oct. 31 in which 1,500 children are expected to participate in a toilethorse parade and eat apples and doughnuts washed down by sweet allergy to the music of a brass "Gasoline Corner" The affair was inaugurated last year as a surprise party, Chief McDonnel's force arrested all the youngsters found on the streets and took them to police headquarters where the 400 children who were collected found plenty to eat and a bend to play for them. Obviously the property owners as well as the children voted the affair a great success. Miss Lillian Elizabeth Guy, ex '30, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hinkle Maucek Guy, of Topkea, and Milton Wayde Grinard, A. B.27, of Battlesville, Okla, will be married Sunday, October, Oct. 23. Former K. U. Students to Be Married Saturday Miss Guy belongs to the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, and was on the Dean's honor roll. Mr. Grinstead is the son of the late judge and Mrs. Virgil Grinstead, of Liberal. He was assistant editor of the Graduate Magazine, editor of the Sour Owl, and was connected with other student publications. He is a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. ANNOUNCEMENT For all Parties with Pep-See Bill Pennell and His Orchestra (5-Piece Colored Colllegians) The couple will make their home in Bartlesville. Use Kansan Want Ads. Phone 678 The Music that puts the "H" in Hot For particulars: Phone 2342. Call at 1301 Pennsylvania. Special Saturday at 75c Fitch's.Shampoo — $1.50 Bath Spray all for $1.19 "Handy for Students" Rankin's Drug Store 11th & Mass Want Ads WANTED—Boy to work for board. 1126 Ohio, Phone 1572 M. —30 LOST:—A Webster's fountain pen between 408 West 13th and Library. Call 2975 R. 38. Send the Daily Kansan home. LOST---Pair of tortoise shell rimmed Tuesday near Fraser Hall between 2:50 and 2:40 p.m. Call 721. Bill Smith. 40 Specialist eye, ear, nose and throat. Special attention to fitting glasses. Over Crown Drug Store. Phone 445. C. E. Orelup, M. D. Beauty Shoppe WANTED:—Students for part time work. J. F. McAllister. 1321 Vt. HESS DRUG STORE Marcel 75c 712 Mass. St. Phone 537 Wichita Sunday Papers PEACOCK SHOES ART IN FOOTWEAR EAGOCK Hi-Arch, Snug-Heel Shoes are noted for women who consider beauty of line, smartness of style, correctness of fit, and long, enjoyable wear of more importance than merely cheapness of price. Otto Ascher's HOTEL AU LAUDERDIN The best of the now THAT man with the watch chain—is he wearing the best watch chain for his needs? That girl with the clever bit of rouge laid over a finishing cream on her cheeks—has she selected the finest finishing cream for her delicate skin? That woman with the new leather oxfords—does she find them wonderfully tireless as well as enviably smart? Each is going home to dinner. Each will enact a little ritual of soap, towels, table linen, silver, glassware, candles or electric light—bread from the baker's, butter chilled in a refrigerator. . . Advertised goods—things that have reached them somehow. Yet the degree of pleasure each gets out of the soap, towels, table linen, glassware, candles—depends upon how recently advertisements have been put to use. Is it the choicest soap? Is it nickless and beautiful glassware? Is it linen with a lustre? Is it most deliciously prepared food? Advertisements tell only the Now news, and the best of the now. You have to know today's advertisements in order to enjoy the now. You may be doing daily rituals with yesterday's habits—not making quite the most of yourself, your comfort, your home. READ the advertisements regularly so as to profit by their news They help you enjoy the best of the now NOW. --- Advertisements give you a healthy appetite for the good things proved to be best .