THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the Universit EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Newsp Editor Commercial Sport Editor Plain Table Editor Journal Editor Exchange Editor Raymond Dyer Catherine Studios Johnson Johnson Glick Johntown Giick Schlitzs Charles Schieser Jason Jones Keith Harris John Harris BOARD MEMBERS Business Manager...Lloyd Ruppenthal Am't, Bus, Mgr...John Montgomery, Jr. Ben Hibbs Ruth Carter Larry Coffey Marc Fiori Lievede White Mary Iriar Mary Hickman Direcelis Direcelis Laura Cowardy Frank Cotter Perry John Charley Shaw DeValera Devil's Eye 17, 1910 as recounted mail matter September 17, 1910 at the post office at Lawrence, Kanusa, under the set of March 3, 1879 Subscription price, $3.50 in advance for the first month of the season (year-end), $2.00 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Published in the afternoon, five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kaanan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University of Florida by giving students the news by standing for the ideas and actions; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be勇敢; to be serious about their needs; to more serious problems to widen heads; to know more about the ability of the students of the University. MONDAY, NOV 20, 1922. NOW THAT IT IS OVER Our embry Kannas journalists have gone back to their respective high school filled with ideas of the University. Let us hope they are such that advertise us for the best. The department of journalism put forth its most constructive effort to assist those delegates toward a more comprehensive view of what journalism is and what it should be. To the competent speakers who have won high places in the journalistic profession and who temporarily forgot personal business that they might help make the conference a success, the department extends sincere thanks. We, also, appreciate the hearty cooperation of the organized houses for their hospitality extended the visiting delegates and their sponsors. News headline: "Auto Bandits Foiled by Kansas Mud." So are n whole lot of honest people. The department of journalism can but feel that the fourth conference of high school editors has been made a success by the combined work of all those giving their time and services. HIGH PRICED MUSIC Traveling with the speed of a prairie-fire, a sentiment against the charging of high prices for dancewear is traveling over the east. And now it has hit Kansas, and the impact has been rather sickening, a pretty good job, as it were. Representatives of organized nurses on the Hill have met once, twice, and are likely to meet again soon. Arguments for and against the more-or-less standardized price of a musician's services have been put to forth. And so far it seems as though the nays have它. At one well-known college, not more than a thousand miles away, representatives of organized houses have succeeded in bringing down the prince-porter-to $2.50. Which isn't so bad, considering the benefit derived. The United States isn't so big; there is no reason why music at K. U. should be noticeably higher than at other institutions. The argument has been raised: some of the students are working their way through college by playing for dances. Lowering the price per hour would probably make them leave school. Even so, why should the average K. U. student, who hasn't any more than enough to pay his way through, philanthropically contribute to the income of another student on the Hill no better than be? Dance musicians command too high a price. Players in the University band—who are every whit as good as many an axophone "artist"—do not receive a penny for their services. True, they get to take a few trips with the football squad, and also got to wear band-me-down suits, incidentally. ally. But you don't hear them kicking. Cheaper dance music will result in cheaper Soph Hops, Law Serma, and Junior Proms. It will result in cheaper varieties, and the fellow who has only six kites to his name will be able to handle his lady fair for a date to same. Cheaper dance music will be beneficial all around. Organization has turned the trick at other institutions and there is no reason to believe that it would fail to do so here. "SPREAD EAGLE" TYPE OF AMERICANS Recently a distinguished man, in addressing an assemblage of University students and Lawrence people, closed his speech by quoting that famous remark of Stephen Decatur: "My country, may she ever be right; but right or wrong, my country." The quotation is one that is often given by orators in the fervor of patriotic appeal; it has about it the atmosphere of the heroic. But it is dangerous. The remark is typical of the "spread eagle" sort of Americanism that has been demonstrated in this country from *time to time*—the spirit that dominated the government during the Mexican War of 1848 and again in certain phases of the Spanish-American War fifty years later. The quotation has popular appeal; so much that one of the influential papers of the Mid-West serves to its readers each day at the top of its editorial column. "But right or wrong, my country." It has an ominous sound—like the roll of drums. Suppose we step inside for a moment and look at ourselves and this question with impartial eyes. Let us consider what our feelings might be if we should hear a German citizen make such a remark as Stephen Descatur's, about his fatherland. We would shake our heads wisely, and say that Prussianism still lives. And, in its final significance, what is the quotation except an expression of that spirit of unyielding and reasonless pride which made Germany so well hated a few short years ago? Please do not misunderstand. This is not a brief for the conscientious objector or the "peace at any price" advocate. When America has a 'just cause, or when she has once engaged in war, that is not the time for dissension or quibbling. But "spread eagle" Americanism is the sort of thing that produces unjust war. Our government sometimes makes mistakes in dealing with other nations; that is admitted by all. And yet there are some who would stand by these mistakes unreservedly and without attempt to rectify. That is what Stephen Decatur's remark means—a haughty sense of power a stifter pride. Imagine, if you can, the chaotic condition of this world if every nation should accept and carry out, in all its dealings with other countries, the essence of the quotation in question. No nation would admit wrong; none would be willing to compromise; every international blunder would mean war. Patriotism is a magnificent thing, but "spread eagle" Americanism is not patriotism in its truest and finest sense. A man's willingness to admit wrong indicates a nobleness of spirit. And so it is with a nation. We hold no argument for an attitude of groveling humility. Our plea is simply one for fair play. There exists upon this campus of ours something altogether unique. Other universities and colleges have tried to promote the same idea but none have succeeded to the extent that Kanana has. This novel institution, the only one of its kind in existence, is a home, a real home in every sense of the word, for the women of the University. This home is Henley House. Everybody has a superficial knowledge of the existence of such a place, but only the very few know the true nature of it and all it offers. A HAVEN IN OUR MIDST Heiley House, to begin with, is equipped not as a Y. W. C. A. house, the sort that other universities host $f$, but as a place of comfort and rest and fun. Easy chairs, a piano, and a big coco fireplace well. COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING Vol. II. Official Daily University Bulletin The regular November meeting of the Faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will be held at 4:30p Tuesday afternoon in Halse Hall. Register at [www.library.washington.edu](http://www.library.washington.edu). Nov. 20,1922 Ski hosiery and note book paper are being sold by the residents of Martha Cook Building at the University of Michigan. The proceeds of the sales will be contributed to The Women's League Campaign building funds. Both the hosiery and note book paper are sold at reduced prices, and students of both sexes are laying in a winter's supply. All College Freshmen may obtain their mid-semester grades by seeing their advisers next week. As some rearrangement has been necessary, it would be well to consult the lists posted on the bulletin board near the library; these are as well as the names of students whom they are to advise can be found there. Dr Lynn Horsley, M. D'22, is in charge of the Wise G. Robinson Sanitarium of Kansas City, Mo. Jayhawks Flown Richard Edwards, A. B.'19, is whi thq Edwards, Ludwig, Fuller Company, of Kansas City, Mo. Barton Stevenson, fc29, is not a manager for the Stevenson 74 Car Company, of Kawan City, Mo. Three Syracuse University students have won a Marathon in playing pinchie for five days and five nights in succession. For the 120 hours of playing, 134,000 is the high score against the next highest count of 112,000. This is claimed as the record in long-distance pinchie playing. Missouri University students have a variety of ambitions. Some aspire to be like such men as Woodrow Wilson, Irvin Cobb, and other celebrities. "Anyone who wants an education can be in the M. U. student, accounting for the fact that they in college when so many other men and women are not. ORCHESTRA REHEARSAL: GRADES FOR COLLEGE FRESHMEN: IRREGULAR PAY ROLL CLOSES TUESDAY NIGHT! All signatures must be on the irregularity card a 'clock Tuesday' at 10am (9AM) or 'clock Wednesday' at 10am (10AM). Chef Clerk. Emmet Schoolkey, B. S.'15 is in a apartment hotel business in Kangsa City, Mo. He is at present in chap- le of the Bliss Hotel there. Katherine Challis, A. B.22, is now at her home in Atchison, Kan. George Washington University, Washington, D. C., announces that the junior class will receive the fresh with the hand of fellowship, love and "classmateship." That last highballs sound suspicious. Robert Campbell, A. B. IRLA, is aassistant treasurer of the Fidelity Savings Trust Company in Kansas City Mo. Ernest Clark, A. B.'21) is developing a real estate addition in Kansas City for the Harry E. Clark Investment Company. The regular weekly rehearsal of the University Orchestra will be held at 8 o'clock Tuesday in Fraser Chapel. ALICE WINSTON, PAUL B. LAWSON, Chairman of Freshman Advisors come you and your friends at any hour of the day. But this is not the most alluring feature of Henley, a kitchen, fully equipped, as it your disposal, a perpetual invitation for you to make fudge when the landlady objects; and the only condition imposed is to leave it almost as insincere as you found it. Here is the place just waiting for you to enlist a few of your friends as you would doubtless do were you in your own home. All there is to do is sign up for the hours you want; the home is yours for the asking. New students frequently find difficulty in getting acquainted on a campus the size of ours. It is up to the older ones, the initiated, to lead the way. Henley offers an ideal opportunity for every student to make of her more speaking acquaintances close friends by a little unselfish effort as a hostess. On Other Hills The Purdue University charter of Sigma Delta Chi are planning a "Hard Times Dance" to be given December 8. The proceeds will fiance the trip of the freshman variety football team to the Northwestern game. The between-dance features will be distinctly of a journalistic flavor to correspond with the nature of the organization staging the affair. Joseph P. Groh, B. S. 21, is cashier of the State Bank of Lancaster, at Lancaster, Kans. Benjamin E. Mintur, fs'17, is with the Paul H. Davis & Company', in Chicago, Ill. John D. Elliott, A. B. '16, is with he Southern California Rubber Stamp Company, in Los Angeles, Cal. Sanuavel A. Johnson, A.B. '16, is teaching in the high school at Hutchinson. I. H. Mohier, A. B. 18$, is assistant cashier of the St. Joseph Stockyards Bank in St. Joseph, Mo. Mr. Mohier is the Sigma Phi Sigma house last week. Roy Cassity, fe17, is with the Southern California Edison Company, at Big Creek, Cal. Jayhawk Jargon Some freshman on the IEU are so unsophisticated that they think the "dove-tails" are the stern appendages of turtle doves. A. placed in Fraser reads: "Pay Y, W. Y, C. a. cledges here." When did he lay the Y. W. begin to "crush" its members? The bootleggers of the wood-alcohol stuff have organized. Presumably to raise the price of biers. Learn to dance in from 5 to 10 lessons MODERN DANCING Phone 2762 Ione DeWatteville "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St. WELCOME STUDENTS From Constantinople comes the cry, "Kernal wants this! Kernal demands that! Kernel insists!" And still they call him the "unspakeable Turk." WELCOME STUDENTS Army Goods Army Goods Visit the United Army Stores Co 706 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Distributors of Surplus Army Merchandise Army Goods Army Goods Use "Bikes" for Exercise Wellsley college students are using bicycles as a means of quick convergence. Several hundred of them may be seen parked outside the minibus building every day during class periods. It is thought that a few of the freshman girls who live away from the campus, caused the wide adoption of the "bikes" by bringing them from home. Wire baskets are used as book carriers. Cuts Not Allowed with an GIFT BOOKS Standar and Popular. No Book Store Price Consult 1597 Ingersoll Redipoint Co. Inc. Wm. H, Ingersoll, Press. 461 Fourth Ave., New York City See this and other models at your stationery or cooperative store. This handshake, efficient writing implement is always on the job. It never takes any cuts. Works so simply that there is nothing to get out of order — the leads will not clog at the point. Ingersoll Packaging Pencil The INGERSOLL DOLLAR—shown here—of Rolled Silver $1.00. EATON'S CLEANING PRESSING REPAIRING Garments Called for and Delivered Located at Hook's Barber Shop 929 Mass. Street Phone 499 929 Mass. St Phone 499 929 Mass. St. Phone 499 The Flavor Lasts "GIFTS THAT LAST" THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashler, L. V. Miffer, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop It keeps our cleansing fluid clean all of the time, and so. your cleaner uses naphtha that is kept clean at all times. It keeps our cleansing fluid clean all of the time, and so, immeasurably improves the quality of our work. est advance in dry cleaning methods made in the past decade. Continuous Clarification is generally considered the great- We always have done good work, and when we now say we can do better work——well it means something, but it's true. Phone 75 a trial will convince you. NEW YORK CLEANERS Published in the interest of Electrical Development by an Institution that will be helped by what ever helps the Industry. Shoes. Which kind gets you there the quickest? Two college men were walking down the road, when a classmate whizzed by in his car. "Pretty soft!" sighed one. Said the other, "I'll show him. Some day I'll own a car that's got his stopped thirty ways" The more some men want a thing, the harder they work to get it. And the time to start working—such men at college know—is right now. All question of classroom honors aside, men would make college count for more if they realized this fact: You can buy a text book for two or three dollars, but you can sell it for as many thousand—once you have digested the contents. This is worth remembering, should you be inclined to the self-pity which social comparisons sometimes cause. And anyway, these distinctions are bound to be felt, even though your college authorities bar certain luxuries as democratic—as perhaps they are. The philosophy that will carry you through is this: "My day will come—and the more work I crowd into these four years, the quicker I'll make good." Western Electric Company Since 1869 makers and distributors of electrical equipments Number 23 of a series.