PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editorial Staff Katherine in Chief George B. Bosse Katherine in Chief Terry Paulson Ross Ribbon Cameron Editor Michael Pignon Alan Mueller Michael Kidder Alan Mueller Patrick Miller Plain Jane Editor Frank Kidd Bassoonist Ross Ribbon Larry Finnley Gertrude Jacomt Henon Taymur Jadson Bradley Carmichael Alicia Gaskill Ed Solomon R伯特罗 Mizen Paul Pewr Jack Knoblerberg Lalisa Culver Business Staff Advertising Manager. Loulie Reports Asst. Advertising Mer. William Clark Asst. Advertising Mer. R. W. Herzing Telephones Business Office K, U, 6, 10 News Room K, U, 29 Night Connection 291K3 Polluted in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the front of the building. Department of Jurisprudence. Entered an ousted cabinet after major September 17, 1910, at the end of World War I; attained honor at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1967. PRAISE BE- MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1927 This Thanksgiving holiday should be a true period of rejoicing. The football game with Mizzou has been won, mid-semester examinations have been completed, and we are ready to enjoy a few days of results before the long drag until Christmas holiday time. Praise be to the football team for making this holiday one to be long remembered. Too much honor cannot be given to a team that showed the spirit and fight that was so necessary to win an unabused victory from her most ancient athletic rival. Praise be to the student body that supported their fighting team with a spirit that would consider nothing less than complete victory. Their hopes have been sustained. Praise be to all things and everything that makes toward our happiness. With thankfulness we go to our hams this Thanksgiving holiday The people from out of town who came and saw the drunks might be interested to know that a large majority of the drunks were also from out of town. THE ROLE OF THE CROWD A long pass hurrying down the field is snatched by a Kansas and who races across the double line and stands them unattacked. Twelve thousand Tiger roosters coloring east stadium stand up to great a sweeping defeat, motionless and speechless, and remain that way until the final gun. Fourth thousand and loyal Jayhawkers in west stadium realizes in fighting censure that the Tiger is crushed. Eleven solemn, stooping Tiger warriors with the stern lines of determination on their faces broken by surprise, line up to receive the kickoff. These were the impressions of an observer last Saturday at one of the best possible displays of the working of a wholesome mob psychology. Actions and reactions of this nature are the salvation of America's great sport merging out of the pale of amateur collegiate activities. Without a unified fighting school spirit such a demonstration would have been imminent, and we would be unable to say once again that dope counts for nothing in a traditional contest. You can't tell a freshman after Thanksgiving because he won't have his cap on—but this is nothing lost. You never could tell him anyway, because he wouldn't listen. PLAYTIME FOR THE GRAI PLAYTIME FOR THE GRADS Homecoming is over, and my, what a Homecoming it was. Leaving out the story of what happened Saturday afternoon, one might think that it was the first time the grads had left the wife and children since graduation. At least, the actions of many of them led us to believe that. What a wet time they did have. And visitors at Lawrence really had no way of telling whether they were grads or students. They stayed at the fraternity houses. They accompanied the students to the games. In fact, the only means of actual identification of the grad was his protruding hip and pockets. If the student took a drink, of course he would be held accountable if caught. Perhaps the alumni would be held too, but what is a ten dollar fine compared to the possible suspension from the University? Anyway, they were expected to run free because it was their day. The numerous liquor violations on Homecoming day is not due so much to the increased activities of the local bootleggers as to the supply furnished by the old grass who come back to show the boys what hellions they were in their day with and that they can still keep up with the gang. The most pathetic figure on the horizon today is the K. U. alumna from Topka who went to Manhattan Saturday convinced that that was the only place where he had a chance to see a Kansas team win. THE RETURN OF THE HORSE With the roads filled with slick, shiny roadsters, and others not so slick and shiny, with large rich-looking lourines, and heavy massive trucks, almost everyone believes that the horse is a thing of the past, for now only those who are too poor to own their own car or confined to persons keeping a few fine animals for show and exhibition purposes. Trucks are being made in all sizes and for all purposes. Big, heavy trucks for the heavy hauling, lighter and opener ones for lighter work, and the very light ones are more useful. The drivers on ordinary cars. With such a variety of trucks it would soon that the horse would soon be an animal which we would be able to see only in the scoe or perhaps at the horse exhibit, if they continued to exist. What a big surprise it was, then, to bear several of the biggest breeders of draft animals in the country, declare at the American Royal Livestock show in Kansas City, that the heavy draft horse business was better during the past 18 months than on any new period since the World War. These breeders contend that in the eastern part of the country the firms which have much heavy hauling to do are turning more and more to the big horses only using trucks on longer distances. It supposedly being much more economical to use horses on short hauls who do not require speed. So the horse may again become an old familiar sight and the hitching racks may once more take their old place in the public square. Fifteen hundred of Friday's hobes became beggars Sunday morning when they called at the Chancellor's home pleading for an extra day in which to consume the appropriated tiger meat. BUT WHAT OF THAT? In the windows of the restaurants of Lawrence Saturday were signs welcoming the old grads and visitors. On entering some of the restaurants one was welcomed with the smiles of OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. 1X Monday, November 21, 1927 No. 62 There will be an all- university convention at 19 oclock Tuesday, Nov. 22, in the auditorium. E. H. LINDLEY. CONVOCATION: Bie Bill Thompson's lion hunt took the inside columns when K, U, attested on its Tiger hunt. THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY Beginning of the Thanksgiving holiday has been advanced to the closing of classes Tuesday, instead of on Wednesday. E. H. LINDLEY. MEN'S GLEE CLUB: Members phase turn in would thither and money from advance rates to Lawn Means at the Delta Upton bureau before green hour for vacation. The man who bet twenty-five dollars against five on live Maryland, certainly will have a job telling his wife why he be made such a bad mistake. "Season Ends in Blaze of Glory" is what one might call a colorful headline. Homecoming only comes once a year. The Defenders of the Christian Faith at Lindsboro have planned a "monkey sight," which will be our next big animal hunt. Next rehearsal Wednesday evening, Nov. 30. Quartet practice as usual, beginning week of Nov. 28, working on the "Eroper Molody." ENGLISH DEPARTMENT: T. A. LARREMORE, Director. the proprietors and immediately shown to the table, and the day's menu very cordially handed to him. On glazing down the menu one saw the regular appetizing entrees casting only sixty-five cents. Cheap enough to the old grade and visits, but the students of the University who eat at these restaurants regularly immediately realized that the same entrees on other days are forty cents. There will be a meeting of the department of English on Tuesday, Nov 22. at 4:30 p.m. in 205 Friar hall. But what of that? The old grads and whiters only come to Lawrence once a year, and it was Homecoming day and they don't mind paying extra cents for the ordinary forty-cent meals, and the students—they don't wind paying slaty-five cents, for the regular forty-cent meals on Homecoming day. They paid it Dad's day and never said a word. Why, the 30,000 whiters clamped the restaurant owner's to hire more waiters and the cook had to work over time in preparing these regular forty-cent meals which did at sixty-five cents. The provided image is not clearly readable, so I will use plain text as an input. We rather imagine that Migranger's decision to keep silent in a matter of a threat infection. Such an aliment can be obtained very easily. W. S. JOHNSON, Chairman. Miss Victory The college of pharmacy at Minnesota University is harvesting drug plants. After the plants have been harvested they are dried with boon on the ground, and when they are autumnically dry will be milled by the seniors in the college. --in "We ask you confidentially ain't she sweet?" Our sincere congratulations to the team and the coaches upon the greatest victory ever won on Stadium field! Many happy returns of the day! At the Concert By Charlotte Thompson Those who uttered the first all-embracing vaudeville given by the faculty of the School of Fine Arts which was held in the auditorium yesterday afterterm, enjoyed a quiet hour of music by the band, and was filled by the openness of the auditorium. The program included a two-piano number, a contralto solo, "Ave Maman," the second solo in obligato nearly drew out Mrs. Monerin's voice; numbers by the string quartet, the last of which were reinforced by the harp and the fater; and a violin number, the two-collin number, "Adagio from Voracere in G Minor." Played by Professors Geich and Kuesterstein, was planning for its sweetness and harpiness. A crawl, which made a very creditable showing even in the auditorium, heard the music. Send the Daily Kansan home. BOWERSOCK Today, Tuesday, Wednesday Dolores Costelo in OLD SAN FRANCISCO Shows: 3-7-9 VARSITY Today, Tuesday, Wednesday Wallace Beery Raymond Hatton "Now We're in the Air with Louise Brook 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 - A Buying Guide BEFORE you order dinner at a restaurant, you consult the bill-of-fare. Before you take a long trip by motor-car, you pore over road maps. Before you start out on a shopping trip, you should consult the advertisements in this paper. For the same reasons! The advertising columns are a buying guide to you in the purchase of everything you need—including amusements! A guide that saves your time and conserves your energy; that saves useless steps and guards against false ones; that puts the s-t-r-e-t-c-h in your budget. The advertisements in this paper are so interesting, it is difficult to see how anyone could overlook them . . . fail to profit by them. Just check with yourself and be sure that you are reading the advertisements regularly—the big ones and the little ones. It is time well spent ... always. Avoid time-wasting, money-wasting detours on the road to merchandise value. Read the advertising "road maps"