PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, SEPT. 27, 1926 Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas University Daily Kansan Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief Alice Van Mossen Associate Editor John Sheedy Assoc. Editor John Sheedy News Editor Mary Obama Flinch Associate Editor Brantley Tuttle Associate Editor Rosie Taranto Sunday Editor George Aaron Saturday Editor George Aaron Almanac Editor Lawrence Pike Almanac Editor Hardware ULAW **Business Staff** Advertising Manager, Wm. Kibson Phenom Advertising Mgr., Advertising Chance L. Mantel Advertising Admir., Advertising Hamm Foreign Admir, Mgr., Moore C. Monte Other Board Members Mary Fleamer Filkin Nadine Miller Karl Striimple Gertroff Sensen Floyd Russell John Nunnan Telephones Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning by students in the department of Journalism of the University of California Press. Prest of the lecture journal. Entered as recorded mail matter. September 17, 1910, at the post office in Las Vegas, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1927. LEARNING TO LIVE Henry Ford, America's industrial genius, has opened the gates to a new era with the announcement of a five-day week policy to be inaugurated in all branches of his industry. MONDAY, SEPT. 27, 1926 the decision for the short work week is not sudden, he says. It was made after several years of study, a comparison of the efficiency of the workmen with respect to the relative productivity between the 40 and the 48-hour week. Nor will the wages he reduced. The Ford industry now have a minimum wage scale, but Mr. Ford believes that such is a policy of yesterday. Men are paid what they actually earn, and the inclination is not to keep a man long who is not worth more than the minimum wage of $5 a day. Twelve years ago, Mr. Ford autofounded the industrial world with the announcement of the minimum wage and the 48-hour work. Since that time he believes that America has sufficiently advanced in her prosperity to call for the present announcement. What will be the result of this policy on industry as a whole is an interesting subject for speculation. The tendency in recent years has been for the shorter day and the shorter week. It is not too visionary to believe that within the next five years industries of all kinds over the country and the world will fall in line to give their workmen more leisure time. Rapidly progressing civilization] raising the standard of living of men increasing their prosperity by creating more wants and thus stimulating industry. It is another step forward from the time our prehistoric ancestors struggled continuously for the protection and the preservation of their lives. As man lives, he learns to live better. Industrial history may well take the name of Henry Ford as the one who brought men nearest to their Utopia. We know several "Campus Flirts" that are not movie actresses. THE OLD ORDER CHANGES OLD ADIDAS CHANGE The old of Adidas changed. Another change in the old order has appeared. The doors of Watson library now open outward. It's hard to believe it, but it's true. Students hastening to the library in the cold weather receive an unexpected bump as they fail to open the door with the usual push. The change is late, but the entire University welcomes it. It means considerable to the student body, and those responsible for the change deserve commendation. Students may study in Watson now in safety. No longer need danger of the doors holding back a crowd in time of a possible panic keep anyone away. The change means a saving of time for everyone who visits the library. When the door opened contrary to custom and state ruling a few students who studied there wanted several more or less valuable seconds in opening the puzzling door. No longer will there be hesitation when opening the door. The doors in their proper position in co-operation with the replaced reserve room clock Seth indicate a prosperous season for Dan Cupid and his dating agency. WHITE JADE White as sunset falling down in the whiteness of your gown. White as mist from breathless lips To your tear tiger-finger-tips, Not the faintest emerald that Here or there, No cordent knit Move your gourge and gnee, Or the wanness of your face. Little lady, quantify made. From w. mousselin bit of jade, Wit it in the crum of dream. In some fierce, Lethenus storm. That you plucked that lute there, Fretful in your chieled hair? With your tiny hands clasped on, Patient little carriage, You are like a monarch in flight A wizard of the world at jade! A crown to you in 'Granite Images' A FAIR TRIAL TO EVERY MAN Nicola Sucea and Bartolomeo Vanzetti believed in the abolition of government,—in short, anarchism,—which, at the time of Attorney General Palmer Mitchell's notorious "Red Raids" of 1920, was a dangerous policy to advocate. Andrea Salede, friend of Vanessa and editor of a New York anarchist paper, had just been arrested in one of these raids, and held incommunicado in the offices of the Department of Justice. After two months' imprisonment, his body came hurtting from the department's offices to the pavement fourteen floors below; his death has never been satisfactorily accounted for. A meeting protecting this unlawful and unwarranted incursion and subsequent homicide was planned immediately by Sacco, Vansett and other Italian radicals. But on May just two days before the meeting, Sacco and Vansett were arrested by police officers of Brocken, Mass, where they lived, and charged with the robbery and murder of a payroll passenger of a South Braintree shoe factory. In a trial surcharged with hysteria, bitterness and as has subsequently developed, false testimony, they were convicted and sentenced to die. In face of new evidence for the defense, and repudiation of a part of the evidence for the state, they have been consistently refused a new trial. Lawyers of unquestioned standing throughout the country have petitioned the Department of Justice to open its files concerning the case, without await. So for more than six years, forever failing in their attempts to gain a new hearring, Saco and Vannetti have remained in prison, durante the witweerd belief amore. Those who have lost their student enterprise tickets are requested to leave their names and the numbers of the lost tickets at the business office before a clerk Tuesday morning, so that they may be included in the list for which a credit card number will be issued. JOHN R. YORK, DIRECTOR, CHRISTIAN Student Enterprise Committee. LOST STUDENT ENTERPRISE TICKETS: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN VOL. VIII Monday, September 27, 1926 No. 14 The first meeting of the MacDowell club will be held Tuesday, Sept. 29, at 7:00 p. m. MACDOWELL CLUB: UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA: PEN AND SCROLL: PLAY BANJO Pen and Sooll will hold its first meeting of the year in the rest room of central Administration building at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, Sept. 28. HUGH R, SMITH, President. UNIVERSITY ORGANISATION museum, rehabs will be held in France and torture at 3 p. m., beginning of 3:59. KAROL K. KEFFERENDE DIRECTOR The ignorance of a group of University of Missouri sophomores to paddle freshmen cost a total of $31.25 the persons who have investigated the ease, that they are innocent. The department of journalism at the University of Arkansas was given a class "A" rating in a recent issue of The Publishers' Auxiliary, a national trade paper for the Sigma Delta Chi fraternity, by Lawrence W. Murphy, director of journalism at the University of Illinois. The story consisted of the results of a survey of journalism schools of the United States based upon his personal experience. INDEPENDENT PARTY: It is imperative that all members of the independent party be present Tuesday evening, Sept. 28, at 7:30 p.m. in the basement of Ferguson Hall, as a radical change in the policy of our organization is to be discussed. RICE LARUNER. Securities On Other Hills The fact that radical organizations all over the world have attested for him, he was called to their American against them. Rather, with his heralded and traditional love for justice, the intelligent American should be shamed into asking for these men, a new hearing in the calmer atmosphere of 1926. Pleasure and Profit for You Whether these two men are guilty or not, the state of Massachusetts can best afford to grant them a second trial. Two human lives are involved, and should the state be in error, the opprobrium of having murdered political prisoners would not easily be lived down. Pleasure and Profit for You Complete Course Solo and Orchestra Playing Also Violin, Ukulele and Hawaiian Guitar Ensemble Classes for Pupils ASTETSON looks smart every day of its unusually long life—in hats the best is real economy. EUGENIA ROOT Information Bell Music Co. STETSON HATS Styled for young men other day when five of the sophomores were fired in police court for disturbing the peace. The upper classmen "raned" a theater in a vain effort to capture some first-year men. Three hundred and sixty one students consist of the present enrollment in the school of journalism at the University of Missouri. This is the largest enrolment of any student in the history of the school. Of this number 219 are men and 142 are women. Dr. Will D. Pittman, M. De, 25, is practicing in Westphalia, Kun, his wife was formerly Miss Marjorie Whitman, ed. 25. Lawrence, Kansas. School of Commerce, Commercial training, Housing, Accounting and Auditing. Send resume to: Business College Our Specialties Sandwiches—Chill- Home-made Pies GEORGE'S LUNCH First Door North Varsity Theater THE KANSAN GIVES YOU— Complete Campus News Sport News Official Chancellor's Bulletin United Press Service Full Science Service State and National News Official Student Paper Delivered to Your Door Six Days a Week A Necessity for the up-to-the-minute Student. $4.00 for the year Fashions come and fashions go but figures prove that Coca-Cola is still the most popular of all beverages. The Glass of Fashion IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE IT 15 = 7 MILLION A DAY Hi, Lads Gels, Too WALLY'S BACK And sharp! Well, Eversharp! Whole book of lecture notes, dance dates, phone numbers—all up his little sleeve. Just saw the old kid over at the Eversharp counter. Had a great summer, Looks like a million. Mere new style than the Prince of Wales. Scamper on over and give him the grip! Any price you买—[see the new Utility Unit, $1.50 worth of everything for $1.00]. Seniors, juniors, sophomores, freshmen—Evershard is the pencil in your class. Always sharp, but never sharpened. No whittle, no smoke, no clog, no jam; just an even trail of high-grade marks from the point of that rilled tip. Any size you like—from the shy little "Tux," for the workkit pocket, to the extreme "Oxford bag." Any color you like—red, mottled, or black in hard rubber barrels, silver or gold, solid or filled. Any lead you like—hard, medium, soft—regular, checking or heavy duty thickness—and also in all colors. From 50 cents to a month's allowance EVERSHARP The Name is on the Pencil EVERSHARP'S WRITE HAND PAL MARK MY WORDS MARK MY WORDS Here yare, classmates. Ive brought you a souvenir. The Wally Bookmark. Handy. Good-looking. Free. Ask for it at the Eversharp and Wahl Pen counter. —WALLY, the Eversharp Kid Tell you why you'll like a Wahl Pen better than any other. Right here, too, is your fountain pen. The popular pen on every campus, and we might say the best one in the world. Wahl Pen. It's durable. Built to last. You won't be breaking it every other day or running in to replace it every now and then. All the Wahl—hurrel, cap and point—and is durable. It's individual. You make your own choice of a Wahl Pen from a complete line of sizes, points and styles. You can get a super-hundinger, thick as a wrestler, or a neat little cylinder, slim as a girl. You can get a Wahl in solid gold or sterling silver, gold-filled or silver-billed, red, black, or mottled rubber. You can get exactly the point you want—stuff or flexible, line, medium, stub, or oblique, or Wahl Standard Signature. It is cefable. A good point and a steady flow. The Wahl Pen巾 is made of tiumdip-tipped solid gold. The ink sack in a Wahl Pen holds more ink than you can get in any pen of equal size—more even than the bulky pens that carry all their bigness in their look. And any Wahl you buy is the finest writing instrument you ever used, at any price. $3 to $7 for the silver or rubber $6 upward for the gold WAHL PEN Eversharp's Write Hand Pal © 1926, The Wahl Co.; Chicago$