PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 192 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor/Chief Alfreda Brennan Susan Buller John Goulden William Pimblett Bradley Hinton Bradley Hinton Night Editor Mary Mackay Almost All Carolyn Kelley Almost All Editor Leezy Ponder Other Board Member **CINEMATOGRAPHY MEMBERS** Rosacey Moore Western Watson Kevin Flynn Barry Thatcher Barry Thatcher Indeed Bady Imada Bady Michael E. Brown Milton Elfriede Michael Elfriede Clinton Pence Clinton Pence Business Start Advertising Manager ... Wayne Ashley Ann's Advertising Mer, ... Irenee Amore Ann's Advertising Mer, ... James Barrett Telephone Business Office K. U. 60 News Room K. U. 23 Night Connection 291K Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Kansas, from the Press of the Department of Kansas, for the school year, 1952-1953, for per-copy issues, and for mature matter. Entered in second-class mail matter Septem- ber 12, 1816, at the post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the art of March 3, 1875. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1921 FALLING LEAVES OF AUTUMN These are the days of falling leaves. Stately elms and tall sycamores are giving up their foliage. The more solid green is gradually changing to a multi-tint hue. Nature's autumn decorator is preparing his scene. With the aid of the pleasant haze of Indian summer he is supplying a delightful picture. With the turning of the leaves comes the falling of the leaves. Here and there, noiseless, listless, constantly, dead leaf after dead leaf detaches itself and ripples to the ground to form a carpet over the grass. With the exception of the overgrown family the trees will soon be bare and their former adornment will belong to the wind and ground. The butter of gayly colored leaves drifting to earth is a beautiful picture to one who likes to dream the dreams that are possible only in the arms of autumn. THINGS TO REMEMBER There is but little doubt as to our remembering the way we mark our first ballots. The memory of other campaigns and elections may slip from us but the first will never be forgotten. We should choose with care the recipient of our first vote. For with the memory of our choice will live the recollection of why we voted as we did. Our friends who offer advice say, "Pick a winner." In future years it may be pleasant to recall that the candidate of our choice won the election. But is that all? It is a short but sure cut to mediocrity to fall in with the mob and vote as it does merely because numbers are on that side. Would it not be better to remember that we studied the issues and candidates and then voted in accordance with our ideals and convictions? "You will always remember the first presidential candidate you vote for, Pick a winner." We who cast our first ballot in a presidential election this fall have often heard this advice. No doubt we will bear it again many times before Nov. 6. THE MAD PUBLIC When Columbus crossed the ocean on his first "non-stop voyage he had one thing in his favor, he didn't have to be hauled through howling mobs and shake the hands of the entire chamber of commerce before retiring for a few hours of rest. When the Graf Zeppelin arrived the first thing Captain Eckener had to do after the immigration officers examined him was to recant his experience to a dozen eager reporters. Columbus really should have been thankful that the Indians didn't listen to his stories. Of course the flight was a remarkable thing but the public completely lost its head about the matter. Give the crew a little consideration and rest and let the public wait for its thrills. EVEN KINGS MUST BEND Young King Mihal of Rumani who will soon be seven years old must go to school like any other little boy, his mother, Princess Helen, has decided. The young king is not t he pampered and spolled by tutor but a special school will nevertheless be created for him to which every province in the country will send a pupil. This is the Rumanian idea of teaching a young king true democracy. although we have not had special schools created for us, as students in the University of Kansas we should not rebel against a little studying when even kings must bend to the same yoke. Probably we have an equal chance with the little king to learn ideals of democracy. True, we are not being educated to rule a kingdom. But in one sense our education is like that of the young king—it is part of a democratic ideal. 1. ___ 2. ___ 3. ___ 4. ___ 5. ___ 6. ___ 7. ___ 8. ___ 9. ___ BRITAIN'S TARiff POLIC From present indentations the next three years will witness a great change in the tariff of Great Britain and the policy of the government toward it. The present unemployment situation in the country has already begun to be blamed on the tariff policy. For years Great Britain has been an advocate of free trade and has had few tariff regulations. Since the World War a few infant industries have been protected, and these now total nine in number. Many of the British still favor free trade It seems that likes and dislikes for any tariff are guided purely by self interest. Great Britain led the world for many years in manufacturing. Other countries have had to have her goods and the absence of duties in her ports enabled them to buy the manufactured goods in exchange for raw material. But today many other countries are manufacturing to almost as great an extent, and are protecting their home industry by duties on imports. British manufacturers in many instances must pay revenue on their goods which go into foreign ports, and foreign goods come into their own country free of duty. Few, if any, economics question that free trade is the ideal condition if it is practiced by all countries. But universally such a situation is out of the question. Instead of socialism, constitutionalism, and individualism playing the major roles in the next election, the tariff will probably become the leader known in Great Britain. A good ghost story ended when a man, who lives in Kansas City, found a screech owl in the furniture in the basement of his house. This was a good news story. Screech owls are not usually what one finds in the celar- Mrs. Mix denies she is getting a divorce from her husband "at present". Tom can surely deduce that it is coming sooner or later. Hickman has admitted committing other crimes as the day for his death is nearing. One wonders whether his sentence will be prolonged now until the truth of his new statements is wrestigated. "Inside Stuff" About that story that got left out: You can avoid it often by telephoning in an announcement to the chancellor's office for the bulletin, before 11 a. m. Then give your story to a reporter. If the story fails to get into the paper, the announcement will still be sure of seeing print. Because the deadline for the chancellor's bulletin is 11 a. m., the Kansan's announcement column has been established. A telephone call to the office before 2 p. m. gives almost certain assurance that the item will appear that evening. By the way, the NEWS phone num ber of the Kansan is K. U. 25. Our Contemporaries Given good health a student will find that his next best asset is an intangible thing—that is, faith in himself. The working students in any school will especially need to encourage within himself a great faith in him in his future, set his handicap at times as insurmountable. It took faith in himself to make Hudson Maxim walk barefoot through FAITH There will be a regular meeting of the Rhonddhams Poetry Society on Saturday, at 2pm, in Green hall. All are welcome. VIALLE IROLL, Secretary OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Thursday, October 18, 1925 No. 31 RHADAMANTHI: Kapna Phi will meet at the Methosil Church at 7:15 p. m. Thursday Oct. 18. All Methosil women are invited to participate at this time. КАРРА РНІ: CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY There will be a regular meeting of the Christian Science Society of the University of Kansas at 7:30 p.m. to Thursday evening, in dress room, floor B. SENIOR ENGINEERS: There will be an important meeting of all senior engineers, Monday Oct. 22, at 10:30 a.m. in room 263 Marvin hall. snow to attend school. It took vision of faith to make Linecoln, tired from rail splitting, study at night by the light of pine knots. A Thomas Edison lamp was used to illuminate a smarty podder that he might attend school. Rosewell had faith that success was worth the effort it took to battle ill health and poor eyesight. Joan of Arc, without money, lacking education, and having no social or economic means, such faith in herself and her work that she sold her vision to a nation. The discouraged student will do well to take stock of the men who have been a success in many lines. He will find that they have been sustained through grueling work and with in-tenacity when life offered them little else upon which to build. -Oklahoma Daily As Others See It In ordering an inquiry into the proceedings Governor Smith acted in the MANLEY J. HOOD, President. New York Times --interest of the State. The light east on the subject has an appreciable educational value. Persons who might have caught up the old falsehood with all the acet of ignorance and prejudice will be put on their guard. It is discouraging to realize, and not to believe, that you can find a rootbod in New York soil. But the same sort of thing happens in many civilized portions of the world. One hears of witchbaiting and the use of charms and incantations in other countries with a high literacy rate. Publicity for such evidences of backwardness does more than anything else to alienate the ancient illusions. The corn borer, says State Entomologist Wallace, is in Indiana to stay, but so are potato bugs and pollinators. We we manage to get down somehow. 100000 WATER 1 GALLON A lady from Chicago advised a recent convention of Indiana "hello girl" how to improve their voices. To correct hardness and monotone they must practise curling the tongue, flapping the lips and dropping the lower jaw. This last exercise consists of repeating the same pattern over and over dummy. It must be repeated many times in rapid succession at the same time saying "yah, yah, yah." Perhaps some of the girls complained that their faces were not built or lip-flapping. At any rate a subtraction exercise was suggested. They were told to close the teeth and then rapidly alternate the shape of the lips from a movie actress kissing to a boy in a superhero suit. It has been discovered that anyone attribly following these directions will develop a voice with a smile. Science enters into so many matters which used to get themselves done by rule of thumb that it is not surprising to find that special exercises have been developed. It is not blemishes that say so, the improvement of the scientific method over older ones is not always perceptible. But in this case the precise directions are amusing whether instructive or VOICE WITH A SMILE Boston Transcript THE MIDDLE AGES IN 1928 Compared with the ritual murder yarn, the tale of the Spanish prisoner, ancient as it is, has all the charm of novelty. In the days when books were written with a quill pen, the stories of the young prisoners if zalous Klimanes of the time had some excuse for credibility in believing that when a child disappeared the Jews had kidnapped him for sacrificial purposes. In the present time of fairly widespread reading, it must cause surprise that the ritual murder was not state community. The Mayor of Massena, who thought it well to have a rabbi questioned about his possible share in the responsibility for the disappearance of a youngster of the locality, proves that though he may have been behind the times, he has never been the victim. He has made a very complete apology for what he did. Brooklyn Eagle GREEN KATY These downsize eyes and slimbrune nights are utilized to the fall by mercial parties inside in a dispute that includes "Katy" dill. She told. Constant in incontinence, the sartlenit item goes on and on as it has gone on since the first pair of MHF inserts was installed. HMIF inserts quare some milky long urine. The notational evening is vibrant with this insistent song, accompanied by insect orchestration complex varied, infinites. The leaves are falling, falling in encoders of breadcrumbs than leap onward, the chill days are coming when they fall. If you only crack the crusty, pervicious lightness days, may churn from some warm waviness point of dubious security, challenging the kettle on the hob and the crockets of the flutes that keep the dough moist. But for a fortunate Green Katy with Jasie cherr cartamnets and all the night will be filled with the insistent urgency of onurious insect song. One, listening, wonders what Katie may have done in some far day and why endlessly she should deny. "She is wrong," she says, persuading persistent emphasis, only to hear, "Katy did — Katie did!" volume through the night with stridell airlift. Regardless of labor conditions generally throughout the country, there is no unemployment problem so far as the Osage Indians are concerned, nor is there likely to be until the last drop of oil has been extracted from their lands. A great majority of the Osage tribe, we are told, do not de- Maybe the hunter's moon knows what it is about—all one does else. The ninja wear on and we sink to dreams, dreams in which the calling of the katyldis makes soothing music; the voice of an angel, or we refuse to believe that Katy did, no matter what her suspicious spouse has to say about it. The birds may sing their miseries and the mathematical spiders may wage their wired demonstrations in dewy webs, but the song of Katy will go on and on until the faintness of frost has huddled their pointed muzzle. Sample Barber Shop AN OIL BONANZA Haircut Shave -Cincinnati Enguirer announces change in prices Same Quality of Service and Workmanship Guaranteed 20c 924 Massachusetts St Omaha Hat Shop 717% Mass. St. We clean your hat, repair your shoes, shine them and deliver them to your address. Phone 255 se employment, and would not re-respond to any offer, no matter how tempting. Small wonder, however. The business is fourteen years their land bonuses, and oil and gas royalties have afforded the stipendium sum of $87,400,000. There are 2292 accredited members of the tax , who have shared equally in the distribution of tribal funds, as supervived by the government. The amount collected by Indian received more than $50,600 as his share of the money distributed. The day may arrive, however, when the Orage Indian will face the necessity of entering the ranks of the employed. Quarterly distribution of government funds is required for the support of livestock from the Indian lands. In 1926 the per capita distribution was $13,500, while for the current fiscal year, it is announced, the amount will fall to a beggarly $8,500 each. Some of the Indians problem with land and property, and investing part of this hawkfall in security and property, others no doubt, following the easier course of spend-and-go go, are looking forward to each quarterly pay day with empty purses. At least however, they will have had their payments, if the oil royalty family disappear. You can now have your br akes tested, adjusted and relined and see the results of the work before you leave our shop. work before you leave our shop. —New Orleans Times-Picayune China is continuing to work for the reincubation of Manchuria as an integral part of the nation. In theory, the territory lying north of the Great East China Sea has not been divorced from the remainder of the country. Practically the region has been governed smart, local chiefs being allied with Japanese and Chinese forces. The Sino-Japanese conflict for supremacy has become important since the Nationalistss, as a result of a revolution, overthrew the old regime in China proper. This has put much emphasis on the re-establishment of sovereignty in Manchuria. The Japanese average to the surrender of what approximates an overblooded three, have been acted upon to negotiate to consolidate their position. Come in and watch us operate the new COWDREY BRAKE TESTING machine. Take No Chances THE CONTROL OF MANCHURIA With the recent election of Chang Kai-Shek as president of China has come a gesture of some significance from Mukelen, capital of the outstanding Minchurian province, Chang Kai-Shek. The president, officially his adherence to the Nationalist government and his intention to obey any orders that issue from its headquarters at Nanking. He has also accepted membership in the Nationalist council the central administration, and has stated that the situation is a report that Chinese merchants in Mukelen unfurried national flags on the day Chang Kai-Shek was made head of the republic, although a careful watch as to what happened is difficult. Japanese troops stationed in the city for the announced purpose of safe- It is a lot of satisfaction to know your brakes are right. CARTER SERVICE Zane Grey Our favorite writer of Western stories begins one, "The Shepherd of Guadaloupe," in Collier's for October 27. On sale tomorrow. Five Cents. University Book Store tion of Gov. Smith, which has insisted us on the conclusion that he favors the election of Mr. Hewer in his own characteristic way, which does not lend itself to enthusiastic phraseless. When he gets ready to speak, if he ever does, he will speak, but before - New Haven Journal-Courier. guarding Japanese interests. They did not interfere. Harl H. Bronson, Prop 803 Massachusetts How affairs will ultimately adjust themselves nobody is prophesying. The complete answer may not be but for years. What is obvious is that political influence can only surging an extension of Japanese political influence, but of diminishing its sway. Each side seems anxious to avert an open clash. A series of compromises are not improbable. The Nationalist are not strong enough to avoid the appearance of moral reasons, will wish to avoid the appearance of too much dominion. Her claim is that a special position in Manchuria was her due has not been conceived by outside powers, and has nevertheless, a broad import in gauging possible happenings in the orient. —Indianapolis News TITLE MYSTERIOUS COOLEIDGE It is a curious fact, of which there is abundant evidence, that Coulde is reachless less understood than in his previous book. Stuart, confessed the other day that one knows three minutes ahead of what he will do in given cases. His career in the White House shows that he does things in his own way, and having done them, goes about his business with them. "the shooting" to run for the presidency has never been wholly understood. The failure to understand it made the Connecticut delegation at Kansas City look and act silly even with "the shooting" to run for the presidency, the leader, which by the way, was broken without his knowledge until too late to complain. We may be quite sure that the President is not in favor of the elce. One reason why people do not register is found in the fact that they would thereafter feel it necessary to decide how to feel. -Cincinnati Enquirer See Jayhawk The New Cafeteria Cleaner Ad, page 4 "Nothing is good enough but the best" Friday Special Clam Chowder Fillet of Haddock Shrimp Salad Delicious Pastry To You Hill People— Black and Brown Oxfordx $5 to $10 If you really want quality footwear — if you really want a pair of shoes that will climb Mt. Oread four times a day and yet not make your feet complain — then get in the habit of trading with us. Newman Shoe Co 805 Mass. As long as one must wear hosiery, it is well to wear the best at the most reasonable price obtainable. All silk to the four inch mercerized hem. --- CASE 12.2