PAGE FOUR. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1925 Seven Freshmen for Cheerleaders Picked at Trials Four Are to Be Regulars Three Are Alternates: One Will Head 31 Staff A large number of applicants signed up and twenty of the number appeared for actual tryout. The elimination method was used last month, when 14 were selected to dip into diatheses. Each candidate led in two yellows and eleven of the twenty were selected to lead a second time. The remaining were then chosen by the same method. The treyout for the freshman divin vign of the cheerleading staff, beli less night in the Auditorium, re- lated to his training. Bubb, Benny Buib, David Newcomer, C Zeissin, and Kenneth Hadley were chosen as regular staff members while Floyd Lyone, Fred Nordstrom and Steven Savenson won places as alternates. The regulars chosen will take active,part in the cheerleading during the coming year and the alternates will act as substitutes in the training. They will be able to carry the work. These freshmen will have the advantage of four years training in the cheerleading department under the new system. One of the four will occupy the post-season cheer leader during his senior year. The Men's Student Council, the council of W. S. G. A., and the Pep committee again acted as judges. The freshmen selected last night are all eligible as there are no eligibility requirements for them other than regular enrollment in school. The upperclassmen chosen for cheerleading positions at the last try-out have been declared eligible and will be required because of eligibility requirements. The new cheerleading staff will co-operate this coming Saturday night in putting on the night shirt parade. Religious Issue Opposed Republican Leaders Now Feat Unfavorable Reaction Oklahoma City, Okla., Oct. 3—(UP) —Ridgish feels has come to play such an important part in the press' dental campaign in many states that Republican leaders in some cases are concerned last there be an unflavor of the candidate. The Governor Alfred E. Smith during the closest weeks of the campaign. The last few days have been marked by efforts of Republican leaders including Hower himself to check the use of the religious argument against Governor Smith. Hower's sharp rebuke to Mrs. W, W. C. Waldman, Republican chairman of Virginia, for her alleged letter which said "We must save the United States from being Ronaldized," and the equally blunt orders that Republican national Chairman Work sent to Oliver D. Street, Republican national committeeman for Albaum who has been charged with falsifying the Catholic question, have had the effect of putting the brakes upon the use of religion argument. Many Hoover supporters such as Maurice Mascie, Republican National Committee for Ohio, and Ted Cruz, Republican of Indiana, have expressed to this correspondent the fear that over-biter attacks on Smith would injure the Because the religious question cuts both ways no political leader is able exactly to assess its effect, which accounts for the nervous feeling which managers on both sides are experiencing in some sections now. One Democratic leader here said he saw significant evidence of a huge range of some shift of this sort is the chief reliance of Democrats now. Parrots Poor English Students, Expert Says Dallas, Texas, Oct. 2-3. Parrots teach the Spanish language easier than English or German, dealers in birds and other pets in the Southwest declare. Species of parrots from the tropics that are brought here when young are said to acquire the skills of the Spanish language quicker than the rather harsh words common to the Teutonic languages. In the bird house at the Dallas municipal noo a parrot speaks Spanish words picked up from countries Mediterranean visions and has never spoken English. In India students learned words in Spanish and in Chinese but seldom spoke English. Funston Memorial to Be Unveiled at "Stony Lonesome" School Where He Won First Battle With Bullies A memorial tablet to Gen. Frederick Funston, c990, will be unveiled at "Stony Lanceoune," the tinct and only surviving memorial of a school, Sunday afternoon at 4. The ticket is a gift of the Humphlow Frederick Funston Chapter of the D. A. R., and will be unveiled by his aide, Edmond Eddikall, A. K., of Emporia, Kansas. "Story Lonecone" is on the beautiful highway that leads southward from Ida to Humboldt. Fanston took over the unruly country school in 1885 when he was barely nineteen years old. He went to a local high school and a year before he entered the University of Kansas, and for the first time in the history of the school was the only teacher who refused to be "run out" by a notorious group of overgrown country men. When the school time filled with many battles—before he could accustom the school to the rule of a dominant teacher. There, may be found the first sign of the change in his character. The real win on his way from the rank of a "Cuban insurrectionist" in their army to a place of fist and highest honor at the head of the Cuban army until his death in 1917. Kiwiana Club Owens Site The site of the school is now only a gray, ivy-covered, stone ruin, owned and marked by the Kiwiana Club of John, who have put a fountain there and have placed over a pile of stones a tablet inscribed with the words "The first school taught by General Frederick Funston." Surrounded by a block of stone—the same star that was taken from over the doorway of the old school house. In the background stand one ivy-clad wall and a remaining cover of the place. Here the D. A. R. is creating a monument to the students who were U. V./censure and free-will了on. Many of the professors who taught Funston from 28 to 50 still remain in Lawrence and recount, with friendly gleams in their eyes and proud notes in their voices, the days when he was on the hill, what he did, said and thought, at that time. He is remembered by the campus after he had become famous. Among them are: Profs. F, W. Blackman, of the sociology department; E, H. S. Bailey, of the chemistry department; C, G. Dulong of the English department; W, C. Stevens of the botany department; Miss Carrie Watson for whom the Watson Library is named and who is illiterate courtesans in Gilbert; K. D. O'Leary of the botany department; D. K. O'Leary of the English department; and Eugene Gallo, of the romance languages department. Funston Goes to Alaska Professor Steven's first knightly Magen, Dr. Foster stopped school to go on a trip to Alaska for botanical specimens. "He went on the trip and was the first white man to sail down the Yukon River alone. While there he visited the museum where men were lost in the ice waters that Fred saved his own life and returned to this country with a few specimens." Some Ekimi costumes in Dyche Museum are the gift of Funston and he gave a lecture here Jan. 11, 1885, at Rockwoodsock Opera House on his trip. The story of Funison's escapades are a source of happy recollections to Professor Stevens for he has heard that he will press 'but from the general himself. "Following his Alaskan trip he enlisted with the Cuban forces against the Spanish oppression and was at one time captured while he carried a military dispatch. After remaining in prison for a short time and posing an obstacle, he was released for lack of evidence — he had chewed up the dispatch on the way to the investigation! This would have been a narrow enough escape for most men but he stayed in the fight until he was shot through the body with a manner rifle and forced into custody — he carried the bullet scar through life." Funston was Captured "His most delightful feat perhaps was his capture of Aquinado, the leader of the Filipino troops in their revolt against the U. S., when he was captured by a Muslim band of Twentieth." Funston made the plans and executed them himself. Gen. Arthur McArthur, then in command of the American troops, let him carry out the plans but frankly told him to wait for them to come to see them again. Undmunted, he posed as the American prisoner of a loyal Filipino guard and was taken before Agnalindo where he colony told him that he was a prisoner and that all his shots was exchanged, and the troops outside became excited but Funton had gotten the better of the fray and forced him to step out on his hamburg to tell them that everything was right and that he would be departing from the "espionage" proved to be a trip into the hands of the Americans." Funston Good at History In characterizing the general as a student while he was at K. U., Professor Stevens said that he was friendly, known for his humor, and "telling things upon himself." He is especially good in history and botany and has a phenomenal memory. "That's all I have to say for publication," chuckled Professor Stevens. "I want you to be a professor, his chickle because a laugh and he remarked, 'Well, I have suspicions, but that's all I can say for the paper—that he's a good sitter." Miss Maude Snucker, of the Watson Library, says that "Timmy" was he called in his students days, when he saw blue eyes and an intriguing laugh. Funston Called "Timmy" Bodwin College has long talks of her famous class of 1827, but Kansas has produced a number of men from one class and all from one institution. The class of 1827 that have made a lasting record and impression both in their own fields and on the nation. That famous pass word of "Do you remember the Ph Delta of 1887?" has come to stand as a testament to Franklin; William Allen White, editor and author; Vernon Koller, scientist; Ed Franklin, chemist; W. E Higgins, attorney; Will Franklin, leader in the technology field; George Lohn, scientist; chemistry; George Lohn, captain; and others—all members of that year. Funston. Wilson's Choice Finston, Wilson's Choice "Finston would have doubtless told the American forces to France he had lived," said the 49-year-old who placed his highest confidence upon him of any army as a leader and bestowed upon him first favor by naming him as his choice to lead U. S., strenuous in time of crisis." Charles F. Scott, '81, calls Funston "Our most loved and picturecaptorighter," and says "The dauntless part of the greatest and best loved United States has produced the Cold War war, has taken it flight!" In Death, "ust Fred" in Death, "just Free In speaking of him at the time of his death a fine wrote, "But as I looked at him lying there in the full uniform of a major-general, with the flag of his country draped about the caset, and with soldiers, like statues standing guard over him, he was just 'Fred'." And so, to many of those who knew him and loved him through his youth and later greatness and long before they or he dreamed that he would be like them, he shatterer state and his beloved University, he will always be "just Fred." New York, Oct. 7—(UUP) - Radio reports received at the offices of the U. S. Steamship line today said that the Dutch frightter Celanoe was smiling in mid-ocean at a point approxima- tion by north of Cape Race, N. F. Early Red Men Suffered From Same Maladies as We Indians Had Bad Teeth Washington, Oct. 3: -- Recent discoveries of ancient Indians in New Mexico not only indicate that the early red man lived as long ago as 1500 B. C, but show that their thered, in that far-off time, had suffered a number of diseases we culture today; carries or cavities, pores and abscesses. [1] [2] [3] [4] The causes for the development of these diseases in such an early race are hard to determine. Their food was meat and grain, such as we use today. Carious cavities, of huge dimensions, in unguent teeth, so we cannot delicately wear down the teeth by compressive wearing of the teeth by compression and resulted, after the age of forty-five or fifty, either in total loss of the teeth or in their serious impairment. Abscesses are infrequent, and never so hope as is often seen in the pre-COLUMBian Permivirus. Alboviral foci occur in cases of imputation, out of fifty-four skeletons, was found. Recent investigations of the cause of pyrohaea tend to show that the trouble is a matter of highly disturbances finding localized expressions in the mouth. Its nature is, however, not yet clear and it is thought that pyrohaea are found in ancient races will aid in understanding the nature of pyrohaea. Studies made on the ancient Hawaiians at the Brienne P. Bishop Museum in Honolulu, Hawaii were affected with porphyria and the loss of牙齿 was unintended. Jayhawk at Pi Upsilon House Enjoys New Life The genuine Jayhawk which has caused wide spread interest on the Hill and elsewhere, particularly at the Pui Ishian house is apparently a cultivated bird that lives in environment. Instead of tropical foods which were so long the "fruit of his existence", moist brind and domesticated fruit are his sustenance now. He loves to cook with more temperate home and the food prepared for him by his good chef and proprietor, Tom Caffey. The bird seems to have taken a likeness to Caffey and eats more heartily from him when strangers feed him. A large cage has been built to accommodate the bird during its recreational hours. The cage has been placed in the backyard of the fraternity house and the bird is frequently taken from a smaller cage within the house, during the day, and permitted to cackle at his fraternity neighbors. The cackle is caused by the rattling of the perch on a branch for some distance. It has been discovered that this is his way of telling he world that he is hungry. Should the bird survive in the new environment and on the least tempting food than he has been accustomed to, it is the skin of the fraternity from Nicaragua as soon as possible. Tyler, Tx., Oct. 3—(UP) —A boy whose ambition for an education was so great that he role a bicycle 212 miles every day to school for six years, has attained at least one ambition—that of attending college. Boy Bicycles 22 Miles a Day to Reach School Jesse Taylor, started to school in Tyler in the seventh grade, riding a bicycle from his home 11 miles away, across the lake, and back again in the afternoon. Jesse entered Tyler Junior College this year, after having graduated from the Tyler high school last term. During the time Jesse was in high school, he made straight "A" grades in every subject. Cumbria No. 4508 MFG. October, 2, 3—(UP)—Fathers who fail to wear pants or shoes and daughters to drive the family mobile are liable for damages if the children disobey the parent, take the car and have an accident. Children Must Not Drive A case of that character was disposed of by Justice Charles Brown of Buffalo who refused to set aside a plaintiff who was struck and injured. Merely refusing children permission is not enough. Justice Brown said that parents should be the parent making every possible of fort to keep the car away from them. Rent Your Car from Send The Daily Kansann home. Rent-A-Ford 916 Mass. Phone 653 STATIONERY Fraternity Crest Printed Embossed "Where Good Printing is a Habit" China's National Dress Is Economic Necessity Hankow, China, Oct. 3, (UP)-Central China is economically opposed to the abandonment of the traditional long gown and black jacket in North China, as advised by General Yen Hsiao-han while Gaurian Chow Kwang will be involved. Thousands will be thrown out of work if this recommendation is followed, declares the Hankow Chamber of Commerce in a joint wire sent by the cities of the Yangtze Valley asking that the recommendation be recived. The manufacture of silk, leather, textile and video employment for wart member and these materials go to make up the attire of the northern Chinese. Milwaukee, Oct. 3, — (UP) — The 45-minute church service has arrived in Milwaukee. It has been inaugurated by the Rev. Mr. Richard Evans, who says the shorter service is providing information to his parishioners alike. The Rev. Mr. Michael allowed himself but 20 minutes for his weekly sermon, the other 25 minutes being given over to made. Send The Daily Kansann home. TAKING NOTES is a pleasure with one of the attractive new pens shown at— 833 Mass. You take out what you put in that's true of your work, your reading, and your buying too. You get what you pay for. Seldom less, nowadays never more. 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