101 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29. 1928 PAGE FOUR (1) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Junior Women Lead in Basketball Meet; Winning Three Games Harper Ranks First, Filkin Next in Holding High Individual Scoring Honors The juniors are leading in the interclass basketball games with three games won and more lost after winning from the freshmen by a score of 46 to 14 last night in the last game. The seniors also led the entire basketball tournament. Charlotte Harper of the junior team was again high scorer in this game with 12 field goals for a total of 24 points, more than half of her team's scores. Miss Harper has held scoring honors all during the tournament so far with 26 counterins in the first and 28 in the second of the series. Emma Coons, the freshman captain, was high scorer for her team with five field goals and two free throws. She also forwarded, scored one field goal. Helen Fiklen was second in the scoring honors with eight field goals and two free throws to bag credit. Elfinger scored forward, scored two field goals. Both teams used the same lines, throughout the game. The freshman forward was Darius McKenzie and wizard; Doris Duckemaker and Farn Swynder; forwards; Ruth Bresdentalh, Dorothy Bolinger and Moore, Daniel Klim, Kim, center and forward; Charlotte Herper and Elizabeth Duckemker; forwards; Alice Gaskith, Finkel Keller and herper. The high scorer for this game was Robt Martin, senior forward, who made seven field goals and one free throw. He scored twice. Kiseerse, sophomore forward, was second with four field goals and one three-point shot. He also scored worse: Thelma Stevenson, senior, three field goals; Jane Simpson, senior, two field goals; Stephene, sophomore, one field emitter. The seniors downed the sophomores 23 to 13 in the second game last night. This gives the seniors second games win and one lost. The sophomores were leading at the half 11 to 8, in the second half Florence Kleeseer, high scorer for the sophomore field counter, not connect for a single field counter. The senior line-up: Jennifer Herman, center and forward; Jodi Simpson and Thelma Stevenson, forward; Jean Stevenson, Gretin Fink and Marz WOMEN'S RIFLE TEAM CAPTAIN Louise Ridgway, fa 28, in a prose shot. Miss Ridgway was recently elected captain of the women's title team. She has ranked high in seeding in the matches fired recently with the University of South Dakota and Gettysburg College and in matches last week with the University of Missouri, Oklahoma Agricultural College and the University of Michigan. Because of her high scores last week she will be a member of ten that will meet the University court and the Draxel Institute of Philadelphia. Miss Ridgway lives in Denver, Colo. gave Kennedy, guards, Substitutions. Ruth Martin for Jole Stapleton and Jole Stapleton for Gretta Funk. The sojourn line-up: Florence Kisner, center and forward; Helen Stevens, left and forward; Katherine Kehr, Thelma Theilman; Ethele Abel, guards; Substitutions: Josephine McMillan for Thelma Malone and Tielma Malone for Katie Referrer: Miss Ruth Howey, secerer, Miss Irma Kevens. The officials were the same for both games. New England Rugs Shown Spooner-Thayer Museum Scene of Unusual Exhibit A collection of hooked rugs was put on display Monday in the basement of the Spooner-Thayer museum and will remain for about two weeks. The rugs are from New England, and they are in excellent condition. Moele, curator of the museum, said, and are probably all of the nineteenth century. A stair-carpet made by the sister of John Greenleaf Whittier is displayed in the lower part of the three adjacent rooms. The exhibition of Japanese prints taken off display Monday called forth a good deal of interest. Miss Miodo Kobayashi, an artist who had never seen Japanese prints be fore•visited the collection and that students of design were particularly interested in them. THE saxophones mean. The trumpets trump. The cornets corn. And the fellow who plays the piano should have been an aerobat! That's the kind of an aggregation which gets real music out of dumb animals at a dance. And real music makes even the best dancer thirsty. All right! Go over in the corner by the palm trees and quends your thirst with "Canada Dry." This ginger ale has a delightful flavor . . . tang to it . . . dryness . . . sparkle. It has a subtle ginger flavor because it is made from pure Jamaica ginger. It contains no capsium (red pepper), and nota bone it blends well with other beverages. The next exhibition will prelude to the quitting work in the Thunder Valley, where the quitters are working on hookups and quilts who often come to back over their lives. "CANADA DRY" "The Champagne of Ginger Ale" Expatriate invited from Canada and hosted in the P. S. A. Inc. Canada Grand Bazaar, Montreal, 26 West Ave., New York, N.Y. Hot trumpet— Sock it! work for the name Canada dot'z" on the atric cap. That shows we know our trivet. "Dogmatism is a thing that ought never characterize an enclosed noun" was a statement made recently by Dr. K, H. Wolett, chairman of the department of zoology of the University of Nebraska, in an interview, where he thought it ought to develop a tolerant attitude." Doctor Wollett said. Send the Daily Kangan home Youth on a lark... to Europe Dancing, swimming, playing Go over with the Summer Generation in the publicity movement of the sport, money to spend abroad. S193.50 (Round Trip) In Canard Confort Go on the economical way with adventures of your own age—people who are determined that they will see, and get all the advantages of having them. Europe but who spend speed while traveling there and who enjoy a trip on the ocean for its own sake. Do you realize how very inexpensively this can be done on big Canary ships such as the CARONA, CHANDRA, LANCASHIRE and TESACAN? You are herberted in a comfortable, clean cabin, you have good food, nicely served, with ample deck space and you enjoy the adventures call of traveling Tourist Third Cabin. You will dance on moondash decks to the rhythm of a college orchestra no feet apart. You swim in salt water in an improvised deck tank. You'll play the delightful deck games that youth-on-a-lark deviates. And you will bridge—and conversation breaks. Sleep But of course you have your choice between missing sleep and fim. CUNARD LINE 346 N. Mich. Ave., Chicago Phoenician Miners. Employed byEgyptian Pharaohs, Believed to Have Originated Alphabe 1890 1920 EIGHTY · EIGHT · YEARS · OP · SERVICE Rent-A-Ford Co. Showing the New Spring Woolens Egyptian, were not oppressed, and Professor Burton says that very likely sat Egyptian official added some. Satuite foreigner to enlist the set of signs on the keyboard could be scoured out, sounds could be scoured out. The working model for the alphabet signs is traced to the Egyptian picture writing found on monuments in the same region. Egyptian warriors are reproduced in some of the alphabet signs. Schulz The Tailor 917 Mass. Rent-A-Ford Co. 916 Mass. Phone 653 We Appreciate Your Business The miners used this alphabet system chiefly to set an commemorative tablets with meditions to the Egyptian history. Hardy, Goodest of Tarquise, Punicus inscriptions on the monuments and artifacts of Egypt, seven of these were brought to Carne last summer by the Harvari-Michigan expedition, on that schedule might simply them at first hand. It was in 1892 that Harvari and Benjamin began his work of translation, which is now completed. The Harvari-Michigan expedition has announced that it will return to the region of the Nile mines in 1929, to begin a series of excavations and build some ancient samples of the alphabet. Washington, Feb. 29 - *Phoenician miners*, digging for turquoise to block some Egyptian pharaohs are believed to have been the first ones discovered in our western alphabet. Inscriptions found in the wilderness of Sinai near the ancient turquoise mines have been translated by Proof. Ronnie Cobb, a linguist at the Institute of Creation, is the oldest known written inscription in the Phoenician alphabet. The inscriptions were carried about 1909 B. C., Proof. Brit冉 concludes in recording his translations in the forthcoming edition of the Harvard Theoscope. There Semites, who came from Phoenixin and Syria to work for the The Phoenicians must have made their great contribution to the world's civilization even before this early date, be says, because the first artifact they found was much more like pictures than those of the Sinaitic tablets. It is believed, however, that the invention took place in this remote region for the use of the Hebrew alphabet who could and did not differentiate Egyptian hieroglyphs. An Extraordinary Value! Boyer's cold, cleansing and vanishing cream. Imported from France Leaves the face in a wonderful condition for a powder base. Special Price 50 cents Rankin's Drug Store 11th & Mass. Phone 678 "Lucky Strikes Never Affect Our Wind" say Moss and Fontana "In our word International Dancers stress importance of wind condition "It's toasted" No Throat Irritation-No Cough. "In our work as international dancers we have discovered a wonderful new point about Lucky Strikes of which we are very happy to tell you. As can readily be realized, wind and physical condition are of the utmost importance to ballroom dancers. Our work is hard and taxes the wind to the unmost. We both have smoked Lucky Strikes for a number of years and can safely say that these cigarettes in addition to furnishing us much pleasure in our hours of relaxation, have never affected our wind or physical fitness in any way."2 "Foryears I have watched The American Tobacco Company's buyers purchase for their brand of LUCKY STRIKE. They buy 'The Cream of the Coop' in the fine Tobacco Districts. They use it in LUCKY STRIKE. I have no hesitation in testifying to this fact which is known throughout the Southland by every Farmer growing Tobacco." Bow Payne Photographer / Director Tobacco Grower