THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1927 Jayhawkers Drill on Aerial Defense for Next Battle Team Emerges From Game Without Injury; Drake Starts Four Day Practice The Jayawhacks received no serious injuries in the game with Washington and a loss, but the team's puppy protest last night. Next Saturday the Kawasaki team meets the Cincinnati Reds. Last Saturday Drake defeated Grimell 26 to 5 and the Bulldogs are anxious to turn in their second Mission. The Bulldogs defended on a 4-day practice session to so perfect their machine that they might win, even if the defense tightler defense against forward passes, and to correct the mistakes which occurred in the game with Jayhawks Pass and Punt Punting and passing was the major activity for the Jayhawk backs in yesterday's practice and the line spent their time in charging and blocking. The game next week will be the first for Jayhawks as the team will be primed for a victory. The only comparative dpose that can be gathered on the Jachawk and Buldog teams is secured from their opponents. The Jachawk team won from Grinmill in the opening game of the season by the score of 19 to 0. The Drake team won from Grinmill in the opening game of the season by 6. This shows that the teams are very nearly even. The Jawhaws possibly have a slight edge for they were coming into the game and the game was played in the mud. Cooper Stars in Offense Kansas proved that she had a real offensive team last week in the game with the Bears. The outstanding star of the game was Dan Cooper, a center who made it all around the ends and tore off tackles for many gains. He was also a consistent gainer in the Agiec battle and promised to be one of the best backs in the league. The Jayhawk linked functioned last week and the backs found an opening almost every time. They were also able to enter, but could not pierce their defensive wall. The Kauai team will probably work much on the time on building up Kauai's airfield. But it was Washington's nasty attack that permitted the Bears to the die. Germs Thrive in Tonsils Doctor Finds Way to Destroy Diphtheria Menace London, Oct. 15. - The problem the immune carriers of virulent diphtheria germs present to the community has been solved by a superintendent of Birmingham City hospital by the simple procedure of removing the tumels of the intoxicated. In a series of 99 cases only one was found responsible for a return case. In the last two cases, this method for this was open to doubt. While the method is not the ideal way to contend with this problem in public health research, it has been one of the clearest one, Doctor Harris believes. Ordinary grapping and swabbing with antiseptic and germicidal preparations have little effect on the diphtheria virus, which is transmitted by vaccine viruses have lainewith been found unlicensed. While such carriers are not common, the ones that do exist predate the 1960s, when children. Consequently, Doctor Hairy and his associates decided to try out the idea of removing their tonsils, the principal site where the deadly virus was located. Northern Earthquake Breaks Alaskan Cable Washington, Oct. 24. The Alaskan cable ship, Dellwood, will sail from Seattle tonight, to rub repairs on the boat that attacked the Tchikan and Wrangell, and between Dumon, Haima and Skagway, by an earthquake that shook south of Alaska. The center of the disturbance was 200 miles west of the island of Kodiak. The United States army radio station, Kodiak, the Kolkai airress than the dispense which told of tremors being felt in principal cities of south eastern Alaska. No damage was reported aside from the breaking of dish and radio. French Lecture Is Tomorrow M. Auguatre V. Deches, assistant director of the Office Nationales du Université Francaise at Paris will give a lecture on the auditorium of central Administration building, at (1.30) Thursday afternoon, in French, will be open to the public. The University of Indiana has broken all of its previous enrollment records this semester and it is an increase of 127 over last year's enrollment. Circular Letter Mailed to 800 Latin Teachers The Kansas Latin circular letter was mailed a few days ago to more than eight hundred Latin teachers in the state. The department of Latin at the University of Kansas co-operated to issue materials to get less material to teachers. Suggestions were made for get-acquired games for which students might be used for the first meetings of Latin clubs. The department devised a schedule in the district to be present at the round table meet in Toncken, Nov. 4. The letter asks that teachers urge the college to consider Latin in college. More students are studying Latin in high school than are studying all the other foreign languages. Sooners' Aspirants to Basketball Team Start Working Out Prospect for Winning Quinte This Year Pleases Coach McDermott Return to the double-round-boot schedule and the prospects of playing this winter in the new physical hall. The season interest in basketball at the University of Oklahoma to a high level will be Hugh V. Mclhern vortis coach Already a number of aspirants are rocking out and plugging the ball with increasing accuracy at the iron gate. Mr. Williams is one of his first official practice with seri­mity only a couple of weeks further. The Sooners will open the season against Drake university. December brings an early encounter in the new lodge. Prospects for a winning aggregation this year are indeed pleasing to the players. The second night, lettermen four of whom played regularly on the Sooner's second place dressiou Valley team last year, are turning for another crack at the prospect. Several promising sophomores have caused McDermott's smile to broaden this season. Town Churchill, Oklahoma City, who made a sensational basketball team in school athletic circles, Greg Quinn, Tailin; Bill Noble, El Dorado, Ken.; Frank Crider, Durant; Ralp May, Oklahoma City; and Malvin Calburt Jr., Durant. Many may break into the lineup this year. On the freshman squad, Coach Claude Reilly will have Clinton Roberts, Malvin Calburt Larry Meyers, El Reno, former all-American high school forward; Fenton Taylor, center for the state champion Durant high school team last week; and Chifford Picken, Oklahoma More than 45 men are expected to report for the early practice, McDermott said. The team will out to 18 men, which number the team will carry through the heavy schedule This year, with the double round-robin against Wisconsin Valley, the Sooners will have nine home games and nine foreign encounters, playing each other valley twice. Cap, LeRoy LeCrone, Norman, all-valley basketball guard last season, is trying for his second all-valley award with the football squad and was named first in a cage call is sounded. Bruce Drake and Victor Holt, both of Oklahoma City, sensational forward and center with the first team last year, are also trying their hands at the game to report until after football season. Harry Pukerton, Durant, LeCrone's harring mate last year, and Leslie Giblack, Shawnee, two-year letter recipient. The next week is the year. His nihil. *Killbox* is captaining the cross country squad and will not return until the steeplechase season is over. Other lettermen who are returning for another season are Clarence Stevens, Okemah, forward; Granville Noveh and Earl Schweitzer, center. Four others who made the squad last year will be back They are Roy Taylor, Norman; and Ray LeCroze, Norman; forward;s and Paul Ward Miskiewicz, guards. Threatened Disruption Unseen by King Michae Vienna, Oct. 25—King Michael of umma, Columbia, canceled a summit on the occasion of the fact that there rumbled in his country a political vocabulary which threatened to disrupt the peace process. the former prime minister, Mawoilese, was arrested yesterday as he was crossing the front to Bucharest, carrying letters from his sister Crown Prince Carol. Other arrests were made throughout the night and early today, in an attempt to break up the widespread plot to return Carol to Rumania and either put him on the run or allow him the power behind his small son. Tinted Press Langdon C. Stout, B. S.'27, is employed at the Jellison Trust company in Junction City. No Fraternity Strife Among Kansas Players Doctor Allen States Director of Athletics Invites Alumni to View Situation In an interview concerning the communication from two K. U., alumni Edward M. Boddington and O. Q. Edward M. Boddington, guard to school spirit and loyalty, Dr F. C. Allen, director of athletics, again emphasized the fact that there was a need for coaching staff, and the coaching staff, that there is no nodling being done with the coaches, and that there is no fraternity stirfie between members of the team. In answer to the charge that football is being sacrificed for basketball, Doctor Allen says that it can have no basis, for some of the same men are better at defense than at this by pointing out that the same drive and fight—the ability to do the right thing at the right time, are qualifications of a good player in the sport, and the training a player receives in one sport will help him in any other. Doctor Allen pointed out that some of the greatest athletes at K. U. hesitated to play in a women's men, and that most of the great basketball stars were not stars in their high school years. Doctor Allen concluded by saying everything possible is done because the students want to be and that alumni and friends are welcome to come and look at the situation. at University With the fall season of intramurra baseball well under way, several teams have showed a marked aptitude for the game in ground ball play with the thin little bat. Baseball in Full Progress The latest standings of the divi sions are: in Division Play The different teams are still battling to decide the winner after the victory championship have been settled, the winning teams will clash in the second round. Intramural Teams Still Battle in Division Play | | Division 1 | Division 2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Team Sigma Chi | W | L | | Alpha Sigma Phi | L | 0 | | Sigma Phi Epsilon | 1 | 1 | | Alpha Upsilon | 1 | 1 | | Upsilon Delta | 1 | 2 | | Alpha Delta | 1 | 2 | | Sigma Alpha Ensoio | 0 | 0 | | | Division 1 | Division 2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Team Sigma Chi | W | L | | Alpha Sigma Phi | L | 0 | | Sigma Phi Epsilon | 1 | 1 | | Alpha Upsilon | 1 | 1 | | Upsilon Delta | 1 | 2 | | Alpha Delta | 1 | 2 | | Sigma Alpha Ensoio | 0 | 0 | | | Division 1 | Division 2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Team Sigma Chi | W | L | | Alpha Sigma Phi | L | 0 | | Sigma Phi Epsilon | 1 | 1 | | Alpha Upsilon | 1 | 1 | | Upsilon Delta | 1 | 2 | | Alpha Delta | 1 | 2 | | Sigma Alpha Ensoio | 0 | 0 | | | Division 1 | Division 2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Team Sigma Chi | W | L | | Alpha Sigma Phi | L | 0 | | Sigma Phi Epsilon | 1 | 1 | | Alpha Upsilon | 1 | 1 | | Upsilon Delta | 1 | 2 | | Alpha Delta | 1 | 2 | | Sigma Alpha Ensoio | 0 | 0 | | | Division 1 | Division 2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Team Sigma Chi | W | L | | Alpha Sigma Phi | L | 0 | | Sigma Phi Epsilon | 1 | 1 | | Alpha Upsilon | 1 | 1 | | Upsilon Delta | 1 | 2 | | Alpha Delta | 1 | 2 | | Sigma Alpha Ensoio | 0 | 0 | | | Division 1 | Division 2 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Team Sigma Chi | W | L | | Alpha Sigma Phi | L | 0 | | Sigma Phi Epsilon | 1 | 1 | | Alpha Upsilon | 1 | 1 | | Upsilon Delta | 1 | 2 | | Alpha Delta | 1 | 2 | | Sigma Alpha Ensoio | 0 | 0 | Sousa Arrives Thursday No Afternoon Classes for Al Who Attend Concert Lieut. Com, John Philip Sousa will arrive in Lawrence Thursday noon on his thirty-fifth annual tour, as head coach of the N.Y.C. team he is to be excused from their afternoon classes, by order of the Chancellor, to attend his concert beginning at 3 p.m. in the auditorium. Following his concert, the direct Mace' band in several numbers. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. This season Sonia is celebrating his golden jubilee as a conductor. April 20, 2015, only 22 years old, he made his first appearance on the director's platform, The Fountain of Milton Jones show, who had become ill. He finished the rest of the season with this organization, and travaganzas with travaganzas Company and Matt Morgan's Living Pictures. In 1880 he was one of the members of Barine Band. Twelve years later in 1892 he formed his own organization. Sonia is now part his seventy-second Because of the hazing they have received lately, the freshmen of McGill University have taken to march in numbers for protection in numbers," is their motto. The sale of ticket has been good and the prices are fifty cents, seventy-five cents and a dollar. Good seats are still available. A specializing School in Shorthand, Typewriting Accounting, Banking Secretarial Training CENTURY OLD TAVERN PURCHASED BY FORD Now in Session Ask for Catalog Clinton, Mich. — Henry Ford, who has purchased this hundred-year-old Eagle Tavern from Miss Mary Smith, daughter of an early proprietor, announces that he plans to have the building taken down and moved his estate at Deerborn, to be re-received in its original form to make the museum a historic city with which the United States belongs. He lives in New York and many of its great timbers are solid black walnut. Iroquois Weapon Acquire Carvings on War Club Revea Strange History 4. Discussion: Maintain the New York, Oct. 25—The war club of an important Indian of the old Iriquois tribes is a new nike acquired from an American Indian, Hyee Foundation, here. From marks on the weapon, he has a small shoulder pad that reconstruct a good deal of its past career, even though any records or stories attached to it have long since disappeared. The handle of the club is carved with the words, "Opobitkue le camara de Jeanne," which translated, "the handle of Johnson," according to Arthur Wesckward, of the museum staff. On the other side of the handle is an ogrerview of a sculpture by Henryyance" which is the name the Iroquois gave to Sir William Johnson, the British superintendent of Indian soldiers shortly before the American revolution. "The remainder of the cleared space on the handle is filled with a series of exotebolt marks," says Mr. Woods. "The number of times the warrior had set out upon the war trail, and the number of times he was wounded in the fall length figure depicting on the body the tattoo marks worn by an old time fronquies fighting man. There are 13 men carrying 13 men each carrying a gun." The ancient weapon rescuals that in 156, during the French and Indian War, were saved by the enemy, and Sir William Johnson's secretary recorded his death. mendachte, which very nearly approximates the name on the war club, and the knife carried by this Indian man, who could be named "that are found on the club." "It would seem that the knife and club both belonged to the same man," Mr. Woodward says, "and that the knife work and more important than the knife, was taken as spoils of war by the Indian or Frenchman who slew its owner. Later, the club may have been named after it, so it found its way to England as a curiosity. It would seem that the club belonged to some important man of the frouquois who stood in well with the Frenchman, then the autorat of Indian affairs." Many of the early colonists sent back to their homes in England, Holland, France, or Spain numbers of these new immigrants whose these souvenirs are among the most valuable of all American ethnological specimens, because they represent the culture of the American Indian at the time. These souvenirs are associated with the old world civilization. The Chinese Students' Club of the University of Missouri held the sixteenth annual celebration of the mission of China on the evening of Oct. 8. Professor Arthur Corbin Given Important Hono Prof. Arthur L, Curbin of the Yale Law school has been appointed by the president as the first Sterling Research professor in law. This position requires Professor Carolin of all teaching during the coming year and he can devote all his time to investigation and writing. Professor Corkin received his degree from the University of Kansas in 1894. He is a brother of Prof. Albert Corkin and Professor of German at the University. Jonita Kirchman, 128, was presented with a cense by the law students Monday morning. The ceremony was held on the Law School steps after the 10:30 class, and was attended by many laws and others. The result was an outburst of resentment, the only senior woman law. After making a short speech, which was followed by many cheers, she gave a large box of candy kisses to the laws. Zolory Club to Initiate The Geology club will have its annual Halloween initiation in room 304 by 11am. A meeting will start with a show at 2:50 p.m. About thirty new openings. A society riding's contest content will be a feature of the "Little International", a stock show held annually at Iowa State. A representative from Iowa State will participate in the documentary will parade the choice hores of the military department, Alvin T. Gaulle, 65, Kawasaki City, Ohio, was in Laverne, Saturday night. The Dollar Sign Lamda chapter of the American Electronics in Kansas City, Mo. Well dressed people never run down lace or worn an outfit. The same goes for a dress code. You can give you the in, in鞋 representation, dying and shining. 1017 Masse No Red Tape RENT A CAR Drive It Yourself Big, 6-cylinder private cars. Part of the Hertz Drivurself System System Allen's Drivurself System Phone 88 624 Mass. For Your Hallowe'en Party Place Cards, Nut Cups, Orange and Black Crepe Paper, Candles, Confetti, Assortment of Hallowe'en noise makers Also—"The Mystiscope Fortune Teller" exclusive at Rowland stores Store No. 1 Rowlands Book Store Double Service Store No. 2 Rowlands Annex Frank Strong on Yale Honor List Frank Rampong Strong, son of Dr. Frank Strong of the University, has been enrolled on the honor list at Yale University. He was one of the eleven winners of the rank of philosophical oration based on a general average of 85.4, first two years of the college course. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Harms announce the birth of a son, Robert Summon, on Oct. 21. Mr. Harms, A.B. K., has established an advertising business in Kansas City. Announcements --- Linda Lamda Sigra, the Prebey- terian senior will hold a meeting tnight at Westminster hall at 8—Anne- te Carter, president. The Home Economics club will have a cook, roast Wednesday, October 26 at the home economics office for coins and are asked to sign in the home economics office before tomorrow. The meeting of the inter-racial committee of the Y. M. C. A. was postponed yesterday from 4:30 PM afternoon to 4:50 PM Thursday— Smartness in Dress is emphasized by Costume Jewelry Those who wish to confer further with Miss Tyzia Dzusak, Y. W. C. A. representative from Santiago, Chile, will have the opportunity to do no Wednesday afternoon at 4:20 at Helen house. Questions may be asked of her work or the life in South America may be discussed at this time. Miss Virginia Hoover, 647 West Fifty-eight Street Terrace, Kansas City, will be a guest at the Pt Beta Phi house this week-end. Perfect team work It is team work that makes Walk-Overs the outstanding shoes of the world. No matter how small a part each workman plays in their constituency, the difference is that the result is a perfect score for Walk-Overs. That's what counts in football. The man who receives the ball and makes a long, brilliant run, may get the cheers, but the fellow who passed it perfectly is deserving of equal success. New Beauty for Your Home The new standard Edition Mason Lamps offer you a nearness to further beautify your home. These lamps, in five also only, are different in construction, more beautiful in appearance, more colorful than the background, automatically harmonize with your decorative scheme. Being framed on the inside they are snail on the eye, and less than prey framed lamp and give more light. [ Ask In See Tham Demonstrated ] The Kansas Electric Power Company