SUNDAY, MAY 8, 1927 PAGE THREE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 例 School of Religion Becomes Member of National Board V Possibility of Combination With Wichita School Is Recognized by Braden The Bible Chair of the University has recently been voted into membership of the national board of education of the Christian church. "This is the further development of this work," said Dr. Braden, of the School of Religion. The present plans call for a campaign for funder which will begin in September. This should make possible the further development of the School of Religion program sometime during the following year. If Friends University of Wichita should decide to move its educational force here, it will be accompanied by a bishop's department with the one at the University, according to Dunn Bruden. The project for the promotion of the development of the School of Religion was approved by the district conventions of the churches which closed At the recent Religious Education Association convention it was announced that at least a dozen schools have started offering religious education at state universities. Annual Banquet Planned School of Education to Feast Thursday, May 12 "Plans for the annual Education Banquet are under way for a gala affair which is to take place on Thursday, May 12, at the Thimble Tea Room," according to Miss Ruth Lichen, secretary to Dean Schwepker. The committee on arrangements are planning the program which will be announced at a later time. Attendance at the lanquer will be composed of the staff of the School of Education, and all those students who are enrolled for degrees or certificates from the school. Tickets are on sale at the office of the Dean of Education, 101 Fraser Hall, or from any member of the committee. Members of the committee in charge are B. E. Foster, John R. Kendall, Walter Freese, Mary Engle, Loi Laptad, George Knahl, Betty Steele, Margaret Patron and Clara Balwin. Plans for the evening include music, songs and toasties. The banquet is scheduled for 6 p.m. and will be followed by a party to any bill activity for the evening. Want Ads FOR SALE or will lease for a term of years: A large, almost completely furnished house in good repair, splendid location, suitable for family vacations. Call the club, Call Mrs. I., L. Garet, 1538 Tennessee, phone 2095 white, 180 LOST: Monday evening on a pair of glasses. Name is on inside of case. Call Alice Anderson, phone 1811. 175 FOR SALE: Three story house in excellent location. A fine residence or income property. Suitable also for Fraternity or club. Phone 177 LOST: Alpha Delta Pi nim. Name on back. Call Ellen Penny at 73. Reward. 178 TENNIS RACKETS $2.50 - up BALLS "Handmade" Wright & Ditson 50c Rocket Restringing Keeler's Book Store Remember what Emerson said about the better mouse trap and beaten path to the door? We do the "Better kind of Shoe Repairing" and they already have resurfaced 17 West 9th St. J. B. Lowell In Society --reporter's ornamental Chaperones were: Mrs. Margaret Perkins, Edith Miller, Mrs. Charles Koff and Mrs. argued Harmann. The annual garden party of the department of romance language was held year day afternoon at the home of Amida shionan The members of *Le Cerulean Francais*, the French play lay east, and students matriculating in the department were guests of Emmons College, Elsie Neumeyer-Schmidt, and Amélie Staina. "The program for the afternoon featured a French play especially prepared for the party. A number of vocal songs and group songs were sang." Pi Beta Phil held its formal spring 2013 party at F. A. U. half day Friday morning. The house was filled by dancing at the hall and guests were dressed in pastel colors, crystal lockets, and amulets sticks with hallow green square. During the evening, the orchestra, the Kunzler-Kraeder orchestra, the Kunzler-Kraeder orchestra. Chaterese were Mrs. Hammond, Mrs. Wil- mont and Mrs. Settee of Nashville. A "Brighten the Corner" party was given at Hyme House, Saturday from 10 to 12 p.m. A kidmate was given a private place to do so, entertainment was finished. Phu Mu Alpha entertained with a 12-vehicle house party, Friday evening. Champagne were Mr. P., M. Law and Mr. Renice Chris Out of town towns were Lou Dearve and Irene Pheasant, Saheta; Tom Law and Elainne Shaffer, Topaika. The annual dinner rink wade was combined with the variety of food available Saturday and Sunday at Wenwood. Events, entertainment was furnished by Car and 6th Bratton, "The Personal Body" by Jeffrey Dodds. Phi Gamma Delta entertained with a 1-4 book house party Saturday evening, when the entire campus was decorated like a garden with flowers and lint. The work, Music was performed by the Kearn Orchestra. Chairman/Executive Sys. Murray Peterson Senior Vice President, Marketing Margaret Harmon Director, Marketing, Margaret Harmon Joe Reinhardt, Garden Garrett, Charles Schwab Steve Wheeler, Bill Meyer, and Jai Kavanaugh, Kevin Cain, Bill Meyer, and Jai Kavanaugh, Kevin Cain, Bill Meyer, and Jai Campbell, Robert黛勒 and Bali Kahn Campbell, Robert黛勒 and Bali Kahn Howard Kennard, Howard Kennard; Roy Couch Jonathan; Forrest Coy, Newton; Ike Kerckhaar Johnson; Jeffrey Coy, Newton; Ike Kerckhaar Johnson; Johnny Coy, Jackson; Hinkle Cain, Mifflin; Pitbishing; Ralph Cain, Louise Cook; Mifflin; Pitbashing; Ralph Cain, Louise Cook; Randall Fink and Nell Fish, Tomkins Hima Kappa entertained at their abilene home on Friday night. Lunch was served at the Thimma restaurant, were decorated with candles and white rose petals in the sunny area, with Greek bread on the savory area, with Greek eggs on the table. The decoration outlawed a growing garden effect. Flowered lintush wood, and two unevenly colored lights were played, together with sheets of down about the room, formed the wall. The light was The out of town cousins present were Mrs. Sue Stenquist, Dr. James Berry, Mary Miss Howell, Dr. Jerry Berry, and Ms. Mary Howell. Karen City, Miss Hailab Brown, Mount Vernon, and Mr. Todd Davies, Topeka, and Mr. Todd Davies, Topeka, Paul Bank's orchestra of Kansas City, Ms. fortified the music for the dancer. Cheron were: Mrs, V. A. Beechwalt, Mr. Gertrude Becker, and Mrs. Anna Young. Fai Chi entertained with its annual morning party at the chapter house, Friday evening. The dances were arranged according to procedures. The house was decorated by Ward of Lawces in environs, farnes and lattes work. Mika was furnished by Tommy Johnston on an 18-month basement patio that was served during the evening. Out of town guests were the Miles, Islande Poland, Inlande, Rathore Furnace, Idrées Guennec, Lourdes Caffiuse, Alain Douche, and Jens Lippershøn, Flansenweg, St. Joseph's Flansenweg, St. Joseph's Announcement— One Day & Bachelor Service No Extra Charge Quality Guaranteed Excelsior Laundry Phone 112 741 N.H. There is one form of Provident Mutual Insurance that will guarantee the education of your children, another that will protect you in your old age. Ask a Provident Representative to work out an individual plan for you, or write for the booklet, "Kent Blueprints His Future." Insurance to Fit Your Special Needs Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Olin K. Fearing Albert H. Fearing Special Agents Phones 1641 and 2669 Red Miss Martin Duncan, Manahkaka, Mt. Frankfort, Borough Beach, N.J., and Mount Pleasant City, New Jersey. Rookie Home, location of Saints City, New Jersey. Triumphing, the Missionary of St. Joseph, Manahkaca, N.J., and Mount Pleasant City, New Jersey. Friend of Indoachile and Ooster Junction, Borneo. Cali Delta Storm held their annual Mass on Sunday, December 14, at the Cathedral. The mass was decimated in half time and flower basket display was inaugurated by the Chancellor of Music Chapmanes were, Mrs. W. L. Haby and Mrs. Gertrude Pleasant The Khana entertained with its lovely craftsmanship, and the exquisite music of Chuk. Friday night, "Guests and Party" was held at The Four Seasons with a buffoon offer. Flowers, and little works were made for the guests. A lovely disco night, Mobil arts in the farm of cacao, had little fun. Thirty paryears will be present at the dinner of mothers and Cateen at the Kappa Malus Mater Hall. Hosted by Cathrine Catae, 6, Zimbabwe Shaw, 1477; and Laura Ravenship, A, 12, 25. Programs, Menus, Stationery Engraved Cards Amuse the crowd of town marts presents a dance with music and drama. Tuscany, Lottie Hall, Allan Beavers, Tomasia, Lolita Mall, Alannah Beavers, Timothy, Margo City, Miriam Bilbo, Milton Teddins, Maria Kanyon City, Moise Moss, Holliday Florems, Mike Marino, Harriet Florems, Humboldt, Mary Marino, Harriet Florems, Humboldt, Marie Thesis Binding Rubber Stamps A. C. ALRICH Office_Supplies 736 Mass. We Will Buy Your Second Hand Clothing Abe Wolfson 637 Mass. Suiting You-Th Business Students 1 Gallon Gasoline SCHULZ THE 917 Mass, St We invite comp Quality — Finish Prices no high J. B. Lowell Sho 17 West 91 To users of L We are authori- to accept your ocl- cost in payment man pen, provide PROFESSIONAL CARDS Eddie delivers A story writt edian, himself. "Kid Boots" DR. H. K. RUNTAGE Dr. H. K. RUNTAGE Osteopathic physician, clinic or examplings institute. Rt. 1400 Moe Phone 466 Square 517 Moe Phone 834 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Reissalvery 1025 Mass. DR. H. REDING Protect, Lori McCarthy, Ronald Ford, and Maurice Wynn. Dr. Brian Kidd, Donna Tepfer, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. Kraft, Jennifer Duncan, and C. C. DR. B.H. READING Oculite. Fitting glauca in a specialty. Tests the eye, ear, nose and throat. Phone 612 F. A. U. Building Comedy DR. H. F. FUSTAGE V. MAKES THE FOQT VARSITY LOCAL WEATHER FORECAST It won't be raining cats and dogs,but laughs and thrills. Comedy News Sportlight Shows 2.7.0 A-MARKS The Sift Shop JEWELRY Tommy Johnson and his K. U. Serenaders Play Every Sunday evening at the Thimble Theater Tea Room 1021-23 Mass. Blue Mill Sandwich Shop 1009 Massachusetts Special Sunday Evening Salad Luncheon THE KANSAN MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Volume XXIV Lawrence, Kansas. Sunday. May 8. 1927 Ingalls, a Wizard of Words Kansas Senator Known for His Long Service to the State and for Oratory, Poems, and Descriptive Articles of the West John James Ingalls achieved for his state a fame that has not yet grown dim. This man, prominent in the early history of Kansas gave the world for the first time to understand that a western state might arise four other things than calamity and strife. He created the sentiment that since his day has been attached to Kansas. He was born in New England in 1833, was of Puritan parentage and as a boy was a fine student with a remarkable memory. He attended Williams College graduating in 1855 and it was two years later that he was admitted to the bar and made his journey astute to the heart a poet, a illiterate orator and has often been spoken of as a "Wizard of Words." Museum Doorway The small town of Lawrence founded by earlier settlers had not yet entered on its period of greatest history other than it was the center of free state thought and struggle. Atchison, Ingalls' later home, was then a camp for a steamboot landing in the Missouri river. He was a member of the state senate of Kansas from Atchison County in 1862; was major, lieutenant-colonel, and judge-advocate, Kansas Volunteers, from 1863 to 1865, and was editor of the Atchison Champion 1863 to 1865. He was elected to the United States Senate in 1871 and being twice re-elected served as Senator from March 4, 1873 to March 3, 1891 when he retired. For eightteen years John J. Ingalls had been one of the greatest figures in public life. He had a most remarkable command of the English language and his writing was brilliant with a rich imagination that turned old themes into the richest of passions. He was an active member of theATIVE of western life and adventure and the style used in these won him a national reputation. He was a delegate to the Wyandotte constitutional convention in 1859, secretary of the Territorial Council in 1860, Secretary of the state senate in 1861, the first session after the admission of the territory as a state in the Union. It was during this time that the question of a seal for a new state was suggested and the suggestion which with some addition was later adopted. It was a single star rising from the clouds at the base of a field with the constellation (representing the number of states then in the union) above, accompanied by the motto, "Ad astra per aspera." The clouds at the base were intended to represent the perils and troubles of the territory history; the star emerging therefrom the sky like a cloud, like that of the flag, the Union, to which after a attorney struggle it had been admitted. John J. Ingalls had the power of quick percep- tion and instant understanding. There were OPPORTUNITY Master of human destiny am !! Fame, love and fortune on my footsteps. Cities and fields I walk; I persevere, In places where I must press by Hood and mart fort and palace, soon or I kneak upon each one at the gate. If sleeping, wake if; if feasting, rise I turn away. It is the hour of fate, and they who follow me reach every state Mortal desires, and conquer every for- ture, and recover every healtie, Condemned to failure, penury and woe, Seek we in vain and useless implore, I answer not, and I return no more. John James Ingalls. many who misunderstood this during his life time and it is true that he was more or less isolated from his fellows. Yet at a crisis in the politics of Kansas these were the policies which brought him forward and placed him in the Senate. This man took delight in Kansas. He loved the great expanse of the state that for forty years had shaped his life. He knew Kansas and it was whose making he had been a great factor. Of Kansas the Senator said, "Kansas exercises a fascination all over who have yielded to her spell. As there are some women whom to love, they may be in need of love again. As the 'gray and melancholy main' to the sailor, the desert to the Bedouin, the Alpe to the mountaineer so is Kansas to her." Not long after his retirement John Ingalls' health began to fail and he left for New Mexico in hope of recovery, but died on August 16, 1900. It was late in life that Ingalls wrote his "Opportunity" called one of the greatest sonnets and which alone would give him fame. Of "Opportunity," E. W. Newman said, "This sonnet is as immortal as the imagination and the heart of man." In 1905 a status of John J. Ingalls of Kansas was erected in Statuary Hall of the Capitol Building. Number 174 Old Books Held to Be Best Dr. Otto Vollbehr is Proud of His Experiences of Fifteenth Century Printing: One Gutenberg Bible Cost Him $100,000 "The fifteenth century was the best age of printing. Since then, it has been getting worse and worse." Dr. Otto H. F. Vollbahr of Berlin, the publisher of books and manuscripts in existence, declared during his recent visit here with a part of his collection of 5,000 volumes of rare editions. "The books of that age were artistic and they cannot compare with those of today." Doctor Volllheir has in his collection 250 volumes of unique books of which there are no other known copies in existence. His collection also includes 55 different Bibles, 60 of which were printed on vellum and 15 of Savonarola, 20 of Aristotle, 15 of Ovid, 10 of Petrarch, 6 of Aesop, and 6 of Dante. All of these works are genuine fifteenth century editions although some of them have later bindings. His Gutenberg Bible, the first printed on vellum and is valued at 3900.000. "The Gailmight sale in 1769 the Gutenberg Bible for about $400. Since that time the value has been increasing so that I believe the next time it will be sold it will bring over a million dollars," Doctor Vollherr said. "The Bible may be appreciated." They may be obtained for about $500." Doctor Volleibre enjoys answering questions asked by those who inspect his collection. One of the most well-known men in the man insisted, Benjamin Franklin invented printing and Franklin lived during the Revolutionary War, not in the fifteenth century, when he invented the authors of the books were still living. "Albert Eyb," one of the interesting books in the collection, is a quaint old German treamence on the joy of matrimony. "The book has sixty pages discussing whether a young man should be married to a woman so you think the author came to after sixty pages?" Doctor Vollbehr asked in his excitable German accent. "He said, 'It depends upon the circumstances!'" The copy of "Albert Eyb" belonging to the Doctor was printed 25 and it is the only copy in the United States. The collector recently gave the University a copy of the famous Nuremberg Chronicle. This book has 1800 remarkable wood cuts in it depicting the history of the world. The Nuremberg Chronicle is now lived in the garden of Eden. The biblical story of creation, the stories of the Bible, an account of the Trojan war, and other historical tales are incorporated into this huge volume. Some of the same wood cuts used in the early pages of the volume were again used in the later volumes, thanks because of the amount of money and labor required in producing the cuts.