WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1927 PAGE THREE C Big Game Hunting Is Lecture Topic in Fraser Tonight Sutton Illustrates African and Asiatic Trips With Trophies and Slides THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Dr. Richard L. Sutton, of the faculty at Rosedale, who will lecture on "Big Game Hunting" in Fraser Hall tonight at S will be accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Haskell of the editorial staff of the Kansas City Star. Before the lecture, Mr. and Mrs. Haskell and Dr. and Mrs. Sutton will talk about the home of Dr. and Mrs. P. H. Lindley, chancellor of the University. The lecture given by Doctor Sutton, which will be open to the public not admission charge, will not only teach students about skin with a number of huge tiger skins, snake skins and other big game trophies which the doctor brought especially to make the recitation of his lecture. U. students as graphic as possible. Sutton Writes Books Doctor Satton has always been intensely interested in the hurting of big game, according to Chancellor Lindley, and his passion for the sport is easily detected in the manner in which he talks of his experiences. He seems to live over each adventure he re-tells it before an audience. Two trips, one from the coast to the interior of Africa, and another through Asia, are the main ones of Doctor Sutton's experience. OF these, he has called "An African Holiday," and has described his trip through Asia in a book entitled "Tiger Trails in Southern Arabia." Both books are supported by himself. Both of them have received the acclaim of many reviewers Doctor Forgets Hardships Although Doctor Sutton has experienced the grief of losing his son he says that 'all these are soon forgetten. The memories of the painful and disagreeable incidents quickly fade and one only remembers the kindness and hospitality of a simple and loving mother'. The quiet peace of the everlasting billa.' A great friendship exists between Doctor Sutton and Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, and each visit Doctor Sutton takes her new gifts; the results of his latest ventures into the wilds of primitive countries. Mrs Lindley has laurely received a leopard skin and the skin of a tiger in her hands. She has many little trinkets from foreign countries, and other trophies of huna Miss Seaman Employed as Organist at Varsity Miss Sybil Seaman, who assisted Harold Loring in his organ recital Sunday afternoon at the Varsity Theater, has accepted a position as organist at the Varsity Theater for the coming six weeks. Miss Scannan has studied at Northwestern University and under private teachers. She has attained a reputation as an accompanist and by her program broadcast from Arkansas City. After the completion of her engagement here Miss Seman will go to the Artist's Colony at Indian Hills, Boca Raton. After attending and study under Mr. Loring. Read the Kansan want-ads. Announcement— One Day & Bachelor Service No Extra Charge The senior class of the School of Pharmacy will make its annual trip to Kansas City, Mo., Friday, May 6, to visit wholesale drug homes, agencies, and the hospital of the School of Pharmacy. About thirty will be in the party. Quality Guaranteed Pharmacy Seniors Tour Drug Houses Friday Excelsior Laundry Phone 112 741 N. H. The titerary will include visits to Park-Davis Drug Company, where most of the time will be spent; Faxon-Gallagher Drug Company; MeiPike Drug Company and the firm of Dobler, which demonstrate methods of storing drugs, the filling of orders and methods of shipping drugs. Esperanto Advocated as Introductory Work to Foreign Languages Experiments Show Dialect Aid as Preparatory Study to Translation Learning Esperanto or some other artificial language is a good introduction to foreign language study for students, according to Prof. H., Lane of the department of zoology, who was a teacher of Esperanto at the University of Oklahoma before coming here. Successful experiments in teaching this international language to school children and University students have been made in New York, and in England, Switzerland, and other European countries, he says. According to a bulletin of the Science Service quoting Miss Helen S. Eaton of the International Auxiliary School, many foreign students who have no ability to learn Latin, French or other foreign languages, though normal in other subjects, may be spotted and encouraged and helped to become proficient of some simple artificial language. Esperanto, the most widely known of the languages invented for international communication, has only sixteen grammatical rules and there are absolutely no exceptions to the rules. The exception is that all parts of speech are built up from root words by adding suffixes, so that all nouns end in "o", adjectives in "a", and so on. With these rules for construction the students can easily learn to take a language apart and put it together, and this helps them form their real foreign languages are formed. Professor Kane explained. Esperanto is not intended to supplant all of the native languages but to supplement them. It now ranks among the first five of the languages most used internationally. Many people speak Esperanto as the native language and in Esperanto. Thousands of people the world over have learned to speak Esperanto and one who is acquainted with it can converse with them and be at home in any country. The elements of the language may be learned through a course on the root of a word is once learned, the addition of prefixes and suffixes allows one to make at least ten other words out of it. Classes are now held in the language since 2013, including college, including Boston University, Columbia University and the University of Oklahoma, Professor Clark of the University of Minnesota is giving a course over the course of time when those being given each Monday night. Give her the best "Miss Saylor's Chocolates" The Green Owl 723 Mass. St. Phone 44 Seniors to receive Privilege Seniors who make A grades in the School of Business for this semester will be exempt from examinations. For two years this privilege has been extended, and that destroys the Straw may be taken in the future to exempt students from exams if they make B grades, that is if the students themselves petition for this change and the board agrees. Your Mother is your best friend The Cornell dramatic club of thueb New York presented Shakspore's "A Midumera Night's Dream," in a nec- tral performance. The Wesley Foundation May Day party for all Methodist students and friends will be hold at the church Friday, May 6, at 8 o'clock. There will be a meeting of the women's intramural board Thursday afternoon at 4:30. All members are required to attend. The officer of officers—Miss Hoover. STAR CARS Kansas Outing Club will have a breakfast bike Sunday morning May 5. New officers will be installed at that time. All members who wish to go must sign their names on the bulletin board at the gym, who signs up will meet at South Park at 6 a.m. Monday and bring 25 cents. Announcements Seniors to Receive Privilege CHANDLERS Mother's Day May8 Bullock Printing Co. 2 East 7th St. Cards and Framed Mottos at Victory Garage R. L. Allen, Prop. Tow-in Service, Expert Repair Work Storage and Auto Parts 622-24 MASSACHUSETTS LAWREN PHONE 88 KANS CHANDLERS DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Shimmons Bros. 836 Mass. Plumbing Heating Wiring "The Modern Iceman" Frigidaire dealer A-MARKS The Sift Shop JEWELRY The press stand in Bartlett gymnasium at the University of Chicago has been nirged due to the demand for the intercollegiate Intercollegiate basketball meets. Final results of the annual clean up week at Columbia, Mo., shows a total cost of $241,70 and 2208 hooks of trash removed. The total cost into a war on the canns. When Planning --- Enjoy the satisfaction of traveling economically and conveniently. Luxurious, modern coaches every hour for— Week-Ends-- Kansas City Topeka Levenworth Round Trip: Kansas City, $1.80 Toppea, $1.15 Student Special Leaves Leavenworth for Lawrence 6:45 p. m. every Sunday The Interstate Stage Lines Phone 363 Bowersock Bld. For Your Spring Party Invitations — Programs We have in stock a nice selection of leather and paper coverstock. Let us help you plan your programs. Store No.1 1401 Ohio Rowlands THE CHOICE OF MILLIONS OF WOMEN IT is because COTY FACE POWDERS are so perfect in quality, so satisfying in the loveliness they give, so luxurious in their intense, lasting perfume. They are favoured throughout the world. LES POUDRES COTY L'ORIGAN PARIS EMERAUDE CHYPRE LA ROSE JACQUEMINOT L'AMERE ANTIQUE STYX JASMIN DE CORSE L'OR MUGUET "LA 'ERSKINE SIX' EST CONFORTABLE AU SUPRÉME DEGRÉ"-L'AUTO, PARIS "Still setting the style paces, aren't you? Glad. I'm not the parent who pays and pays and pays." "Ah, that's the point. It's an Erkunik Six and economy is its secret passion, Don't judge its cost by its appearance." SPEAKING frankly, who cares a fig for bore and stroke, cubic displacement and all of that. The car of today is the one that ships through traffic like an All-American halfback wriggles through a broken field; turns on a dime with nine cents change and pops into a parking space with a hair's breadth clearance front and rear. To match the spirit of American youth a motor car must have "It. It." "It" is the ability to chase the horizon all day without panting; smart good looks that do credit to the intelligence of its owner and riding comfort that wins a sigh of complete ease. That's why the Erskine City Custom Coupe is taking America's youth by storm. Style conceived in Paris—design by Dietrich, the master designer—speed that lets you decide whether or not the car behind will pass. And, it will stand up? Studebaker builds it—Q.E.D. Take possession of an Erskine Six today. Drive it over roads other cars fear. Forget the gearshift lever. Revise all your notions of motorizing. You're riding in a car that has set a new pace for others to try and follow. The Prokken Virtue Carousel, as illustrated, tells for $595 f b f a. battery, complete with fruit and root ice bucket and self-watering gasket tuber. $795 ERSKINE SIX THE LITTLE ARISTOCRAT