PAGE TWO FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1927 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editorial Straw BIOLOGICAL STATE Editor-in-chief Associate Editor Campus Editor Night Editor Robert Mankey George Roberts Alice Cannon Helen Tauro Renaartzaa Reporter Stanley Packard Don Riesson Williams Griffith Frank Tiffany SEMINAR Advertising Manager...Lee Unchung Ant. Advertising Mgr...Tom McKenzie Ant. Advertising Mgr...Lucille Reppert Foreign Advertising Mgr...William Clark Telephones Business Office News Room Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the University of Iowa, for journalism of the University of Iowa Press, and the Press of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the net of March 3, 1897. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1927 NO EXTRA SESSION NOW After all the necessities that the nation has turned its back on the unfortunate sufferers of the Mississippi flood, Hearbert Hoover, secretary of commerce, has issued the statement that relief funds are sufficient to last until next January with a substantial surplus. Hover, who has made an extensive survey of the situation, says the American people have responded most generously. The Red Cross, according to the cabinet member, has on hand ample funds to carry on its relief work. The men and women of our country are neither selfish nor forgetful when their fellow man is in need. Senator Reed of Missouri has made a big plea for an extra session of congress, basing has requested on the proposition that the flood victims are being shamefully neglected for want of funds. The people in the unaffected districts, he has told us, have forgotten the plight of their neighbors. A special congressional session is necessary, he therefore concludes, in order to give the much-needed succor to a stricken group. Senator Reed has made a play to the grandstand without being aware of the outcome of the case. A demand for a special session of the leisureism is always good for publicity. In a case of this type, however, it might be wise to learn the truth of the matter before requesting a needless expenditure of the long-suffering tax payers' money. THE START Enrollment was bewildering. He just couldn't understand it. It reminded one of a lot of children rushing the health officer to be vaccinated. The sooner over with the better; then there would be time maybe for a show or a talk with an co-eed. Now it is over, and yesterday classes began; that is, someone said they had begun. He couldn't find them, and his failure was likely to cause the instructor considerable concern. He remembered how the teacher used to rave about what he missed when he was out of a class back in Prairie City high school, though all he could remember was that he had missed a map. Who cared what the teacher said? He remembered how she used to quote Poe and try to draw from the fellows some remarks as to what they thought. She wanted their reading to be to them an experience. But shuckles! who wanted to gain experience through reading? That was not business. That would not make one successful. Able to met men and put the punch into a sales talk—that was the idea. And now he had signed up for some of the very same stuff he took in high school. He was glad he had missed a class. He'd do it again. Editorial of the Day Lawrence Bonds for Fraser Hall A few days ago the Atchison Globe called attention to the fact that 100,000 in bonds voted by Lawrence in 1870 to aid in the building of the state university, are still held by the state school fund. Replying to the item the Lawrence Journal.World says that the $100,000 went into the construction of Prasher hall, the first building of the University of Kauai, which has been in use ever since it completed. The city of Lawrence paid interest on the bonds until $100,000 had been paid in interest. Then the state legislature formally declared the debt cancelled by regular enactment. In view of the legislative action it would be interesting to know why the bonds are still held by the state school fund, giving rise to the report about every so often that the city of Lawrence is failing to meet an obligation which it over. The legislature which resulted the principal when the interest payments had totaled $160,000 was fully conceived with the fact that it is coming forward with the money at a time in the state's history when that sum was much larger and harder to obtain than at present. the city had performed a service to the state—Kansas City Kansas. Test Air for Deadly Gas Investigators Report Finding at Chemical Meet Detroit, Sept. 21. How great is the danger of carbon monoxide poisoning to which garage employees are exposed? We read frequent accounts from owners who have committed involuntary suicides in their small private garages by running the smores when the doors are shut. Yet some owners have been forced to close in large garages. How much of an industrial hazard are they exposed to? Dr. S. H.K. Katz of U. S. Bureau of Mines and Dr. O. W. Wright of the U.S. Department of Energy have been endowing to fund an answer to these questions, and they reported on their work recently by meeting the Association Globe. The two investigators, collected samples of the air from a large government garage in Washington and from a large building, and subjected them to chemical analysis. They found that the working grounds in the government garage, so far as the pollenometer is concerned, were in the commercial environment. During the summer working day the concentration in the government garage never exceeded 10 parts per air, while in the Pittsburgh shop the maximum was two-thirds again as much, or 1.54 parts in 10,000 in. In neither establishment did the concentration reach their upper limit; hence the carbon monoxide in the Pittsburgh garage attained a "bad smell" of 4.33 parts per 10,000 air. This, it estimated, is enough to cause discomfort. The report adds, however, that the investigations were conducted uniformly only average working conditions. In very cold winter weather, when the garage door closed, it did not confine its occupants to become more serious. Prof. and Mrs. C. H. Ashon spent their vacation in the East, visiting Mrs. Axbott's parents at Strawberry Hill, where they were at Houston and Washington. Read the Kanana want nda. Tryouts will be held Monday, Sept. 19, and Tuesday, Sept. 20, at 3:00 cms. in room 13, central Administration building. All former members are already in hands and parts to Miss Moore by Monday. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. IX Friday, September 16, 1927 N6. 6 WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB: Gilbert N. Harritt, B. S. '26, is employed with the Link Belt Company in Chicago. BERTHA ALICE PERKINS, Business Manager Troint for basses, drums, flutes, piccolos, obes, and basson will be held tonight in room 100, Administration building, at 7 o'clock. The band has basses, bass drums, piccolos, baritones horns, alto, tenor and harponeux phones to furnish successful candidates. Final troints will be held next Monday and Tuesday events at 7 o'clock at the same place. Anyone who has not tried out may do so at these troints; on any kind of an instrument. The band members receive gymnastics credit, "K" pins, and some extra rewards. J. C. McANLES, Direktor. Ladies—Now is the time to have your fur coats relied. Cloth coats and suits recomposed at BAND TRYOUTS: CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY: OPENING RECEPTION: The first meeting of the Christian Science Society of the University of will be held in Myers Hall Tuesday, Sept. 28 at 7:30 p.m., Uni- tion House 405, Nassau Street. *Innovation for faculty and students will be given in Boilermaker at 9 6:30 Saturday evening, Sept. 17. All are most con- fident to attend.* Everyone at the Alba Chi Omega house in a little aft bit dizzier than usual. This rush wreck brought into their fold two pairs of twins. Both moths look and dress exactly alike, and each other in every massage it gave. Double Set of Twins Bewilders Alpha Chi's The women have found one method of telling the Benson twins, Helen and Ethel, apart. Ethel wears a large dinner ring on the index finger of her bib hand and has a pointed cushion. The other twins, Eleonor and toquine Waste, can be told only through the ring with a pointed feather. Until further notice the girls will not be allowed to see bare headed. Schulz's Tailor Shop 917 Mass. St. It was deemed necessary to have each pair twin in the same house in order to keep them from exchangeable places and minking known to the other, with little interaction, secrets of the Aichi Chi Ognien fraternity. --at 14th & Ohio, is now open for business. Scalp and facial treatments, manicures, shampoos, marcels hair products, hairstyling operators. For appointments call 2126 white. Detroit, Sept. 15—Ralph Waldo Emerson, the great essayist, kept in close touch with the development of his own ideas about age and development of age until his old age, bee Charles Albert Browne told member of the American Chemical Society, Dr. James L. Mulligan, both essays are filled with chemical references, said Mr. Browne, while he drew freely upon his knowledge of both mankind's histories and comparisons. Emerson Interested in Chemistry Edgeworth makes your pipe "do its stuff" Our Fischer's BUTTERSTONE STORE Goldstein Recommended for Leavenworth Parole 623 Leavenworth, Sept. 16.—Warden T. B. White today announced that Nat Goldstein of St. Louis, sentenced to two years in the federal penitentiary here, has been recommended for parole. Goldstein was sentenced in connection with the Jack Daniel whisky case in St. Louis, more than a year ago. He is also charged with five other men were sentenced with Goldstein, but White did not say if they were also recommended for prison. A judge has been sitting here during the past few days. Goldstein's recommendation must be passed upon by the attorney general before he is released. States before it becomes effective. BLUE ROSE Beauty Salon The women of the Chi Omega sorcerary under the direction of Gertrude Dalton, c'28, won the large athletic cup for the second time last year. The cup has been offered for two years and the Chi Omegas have won eight of them. They are the most points in basketball, tennis, lakeball, volley ball and swimming. They also won the small cup offence in tournament for volley ball or basketball. Chi Omega Wins Cup Prof. John Lac of the department or economics will address the student forum at the Uitianarian church Sunday at 10 a.m. His subject will be "Situations." All who are interested in this subject are invited to come and take part in the discussion. Isc to Address Forum Delta Zeta announces the pledging of Faye Frick, Waterville. DOBBS HATS There is a decided inclination toward hats that are a bit smaller in the brim. Dobbs & Co, New York's leading hatters, are introducing them to their smart chientele, and Fifth Avenue has followed the Dobbs lead. We have them, exclusively. Eight Dollars Oetts Other Hats at $5, $6 and $7 Wait for the NEW FORD 1951 Unusual speed, acceleration and beauty of the new model will surprise you. The Davis & Child Co. Authorized Ford Dealers 1020 Mass. Phone 77 m m m m m Voices THE day is full of voices meaningless, insistent. They drone upon the street, chatter at parties, hurl snatches of d rone upon the street, church at parish, themselves at you from passing automobiles, rise up and down dramatically from open-air platforms, end with question marks at the office, trail after you on street cars. . . Your ears, forever open, almost have to hear. - Yet in this same room with you are voices of utmost silence, whose every word concerns you. You control them more surely than you control telephone or radio. Open a page—they talk to you quietly. Close a page—they are through. They are the voices of the advertisements. They talk direct to you. Tell of salads, delicious drinks, to gratify you. Reinforced hosiery, cooler underwear, purer soaps. You believe in these voices, for they have to be sincere. Else they would not be in these pages—could not have the nation's belief. You buy the goods they proffer, for you know already what those goods will do. And wide belief has lowered their prices. They are economical—sure! Loose products everywhere in stores are crying out, "Buy me!" But behind the voice of the advertised product is the voice of authority. The voice that tells the why, what, when, where and how of the goods you buy. Heed these courteous voices often. Read the advertisements every day