FURNITURE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CONFERENCE STARS TO MEET K. U. TEAM Best Runners of Kansas College Will Form Combination BIG EVENT IS APRIL 22 Relay Carnival is Official Opening of New Stadium Track Many good track man, the best runners in the Kansas Conference will be entered in the special relay carnival to be held as the opening of the new K. U. stadium track, on April 14th. The college team leaves from five Kansas Conference colleges will compete against the University of Kansas队. The schools from which the team will be picked are: Washburn, Kansas State Normal, Baker, College of Emporia and Ottawa University. Other schools will be entered in some events, including the Kansas City High Schools, Haskell Institute and possibly junior high schools. In the spring relays, the 440 and 880 yard, from the College of Emporia the best men will be Harold Grant, Smith and George. Wolgast and Ott from Ottawa will also be entered in these events. Wolgast and Grant has stepped the 100-yard dash in 10 seconds. The stars from the colleges who will be entered in the mile reach, each running 440 yards are: Stewart and Myer of the Normal team, Smith from the College of Emporia, Wolfgang of Washburn, Angels of Washburn. McElhaney won the quarter in the Kansas Conference meet last year, in goodtime. The 4-mile relay, each man running a mile will be made up of such men as Schueler, and Agrelio of the Army, and Rogers and Sharp of Washburn. The complete list of entries and men who will make up the combined team against K. U., will be announced later in the week. The team will be selected by the coaches of the schools as early as possible. Seven special events will be held in connection with the five relays, according to plans by Coach Schaideman, and director of athletics, Dr. F. C. Allen. They are to be: discuss high jump, pole vault, broad jump, shot put, javelin, and the 120-yard hard hurdles. THIRTEEN TO VISIT SOONERS Line-Up for Baseball Will be Chosen Tonight The line-up for the baseball team which will make the southern trip to morrow night will be announced after practice this evening, according to Coach Clark. Thirteen men will make the trip, going first to Norman for safety and then to Oklahoma for security and then to Stillwater for two with Oklahoma A. and M. College. The men who will make the trip wix not necessarily compose the squad for the entire year as there are several good men who need only to bring their batting average in order to get a place on the team. It is probable that the nine K men on this year's swill be included in the line-up. The coach will give instructions. Body will open the season on the mound from present indications. Oklahoma has already played four games this season, losing two games out of a three game series with Nebraska the first week in April and winning from the Kansas Aggies last week by a score of 15 to 7. This give the teams a slight advantage over Kansas for the games Wednesday and Thursday. SANDEFUR HELD INELIGIBLE Captain Bradley Will Succeed Him in Weight Events The first reverse of the 1922 season in track came Saturday when it was announced that Edwin Sandur, giant weight man and holder o the 16-pound shot record, had been declared ineligible or the remainder of the season. Sandur has been the mainstay of the K. U. team for the past two years in the shot put and the disc throw. He is a senior this year. Captain Bradley's performance in the Missouri Valley indoor meet when he took first place over Sandemuf in the shot put with a toss of 45 feet, 14 inches, makes the oo to the team in that event less serious than it would otherwise be. Brandy and Matthews are both doing good work in the weight events also; Matthews shot put an oo and Matthews in the disc competition. Mattheus is also looking forward to the javelin throw. Both these men will probably get an opportunity to show their worth in the relays which are scheduled for April 22. Ohio University Builds Gigantic Score Board A gigantic football scoreboard is under progress of erection at Ohio State University. It will be oval in three feet wide, and thirty feet long. Wood will be the material used, and the board will have a rectangular center of glass. Electric lights will illuminate the plays thru frosted lettering. The board will be demounted and will be ejected first in the stadium. ACACIA STILL LEADS IN TRACK AND FIELD Events in the Inter-Organization Meet Will Continue Until Thursday The Acacia fraternity is still lead- mg the inter-organization track and field meet which began on the Stadium field last week. The events will continue until Thursday afternoon of this week, four of them will be run in the morning, and one such suceeding day until the end. The scores of the various organisations are: Acacia 4283 points, Kappa Sigma, second with 309, and Delta U third with 2597. The Delta U's scored an additional 1000 points when Fisher broke the K. U. record in the 220-yard dash. The Phi Psi's have 2605. Phi Psi 2255. Aclarius 2170. Sig Alphs 2019, and the Sigma Ph Sigma's. 1058. Only one event was run off Saturday, because of the heavy rains and muddy field, and it was impossible to have any thing on the field Fri. night. There was a team which were held Saturday, "Ee Kearney, Phi Psl, won the first heat, in 6.02 seconds, the event being held on a soft track, Dillenbeck, Kappa Sigma, won the second heat in the same time as made by Kearney, both at the same place. Norton won third place when he placed second in the first heat. The meet is being continued Monday afternoon. The 440-yard run, pole vault, javelin and the high jump have been completed. The events were canceled. ock Friday. Tuesday the broadroom and two-mile run will be held. Wednesday the 50-yard dash and 220 yard low hurdles, and Thursday the last events, 55-pound weight and one mile relay. Coach Schademann announced that Fisher, K. U. freshman, who broke the 220-yard dash record, previously held by Woestemeyer when he ran the distance in 21 4-5 seconds, would receive his letter providing he returned to school next fall, and is eligible for the varsity team. Norton received a letter from the letter for breaking the K. U. high jump record in the K. C. A. C. meet in Convention Hall this year, under the same conditions. Just Say "Charette" C'est Tres Bien Students of the department of architecture are becoming French since they have been submitting their work to the Art Institute of Design in New York. When asked by a reporter if they had any returns from the institute, they said that the "charité" was named after her. She is institute, the term, charité, which mans the wind up or finish of a problem at a certain definite and set time, is being used here due to the condition of the Récole de Beau Arts in Paris. In Paris, the students work on what they call a "charette" until the time for its return is up, they then immediately drop their work and drink to the health of the workers. After this, they place their work on a charrette that runs along the street through the street of Paris to the Ecole de Paris, where it is indied. Evidently the students of the department h re are accustoming themselves to French terms in preparedness for a trip abroad. Friends of Slain Officer Ask Further Investigation Oklahoma City, April 10—Search for additional evidence in the shooting of Lieutenant-C colonel Paul Ward Beck by Judge judge Day after an alleged attempt to attack Mrs. Day, was under way by army officers. Comrades of the dead idol of the determination for further action although County Attorney Hughes and the army board of inquiry had decided that the evidence would not justify charges against Day. Lieutenant John Beck, nephew of the slain officer, led a group of officers who are firm in the belief that all the facts are not known. They are not satisfied with the verdict of the jury which found that Day was justified in his act, and recommended that no charges be filed. SAYS SOUTH AMERICA HAS MISSING LINKS Chicago Man Believes They Exist in Spite of William Jennings Bryan Chicago, April 10. (United Press). "Definite proof of the Darwinian theory of evolution—that man evolved from lower animals —lies hidden in accordance to Elmer S. Riggs, curator of the Field Museum at the Fie d Museum of Natural History." Riggs today proposed an expedition to take the trail of prehistoric fossils in South America. That missing links in the long line of descent from the small single cellled amoeba to the twentieth century "superman" are to be found in the Manipal remains, in the belief of Riggs and his scientific associates. The repedition, one of five being sent to remote places of the earth by the museum, will seek to establish the relation between ancient animal life in South America and present life in the United States. "The one confusing thing about the evolutionary theory," Riggs said, "is that there was an interchange of South American and European and North American animal life which almost destroyed possibility of连接 all the link in the evolutionary chain." Original animal life in South America was quite distinct from life on any other continent, Riggs said. "It is an established fact," he said, "that the contents of North and South America were once separated where we now have the Isthmus of Panama. But during that separation animals crossed plains (now the Atlantic Ocean) from the Eastern Hemisphere to the Western Hemisphere." followed. The horse and the sabre toothed tiper in this country according to Rigg, are results of this interchange of life. "I have received fossils of the giant sloth, a native of South America, from as far north as Minneapolis," he stated. "Williams Jennings Bryan to the "contrary," the scientist said, "we believe the missing links exist and that we can find them." The Field curator is a widely trav. Rigs said he expected to spend four years working along the Patagonian coast. As much of the expedition as possible will be made in motor cars shipped from the United States, while the more direct trails will be followed with horses and mules. led scientist. His work began by the University of Kansas in 1894. Later he made expeditions for the American Museum of New York. All fossils picked up on the trip will be brought to the Field museum here. ISMS? He'll Arrest the Parents Instead of the Childre Youngstown, Ohio, April 10 (United Press)—Arrest of parents who permit children to remain on the steets after 8 p.m. is the latest wrinkle in Mayor L. Oles' attempt to "modernize" Youngstown. "I'd rather arrest the parents than the kids," Oles declared. "Fathers and mothers who have so little regard for their children that they permit them to run the streets at night are more confident than the children, in my opinion." "When we take the children home and find the parents away, skylarking and having a good time, we'll use the patrol wagon to bring parents in. And we'll put them in the lockup and keep them there until morning." "The time to趴 outcropings of criminalism and bad citizenship." Oles continued, "is in the short pants stage, I was going to say, the short skirt stage, too, but I remember now that some ladies of advanced years wear skirts quite as short as those worn by 10-year-olds." Oles first attracted notice when he installed a cash register in city hall. Since then he has enforced strict curfew laws, terrorized bootleggers and criminals and reorganized the police force. Kappa Phi will have a picnic saucer, Wednesday at six o'clock, at Myers Hall. Each girl bring a quarter. The regular meeting will be held immediately after the supper.-Helen Dayhoff, Pres. Wiedemann's Tea Room Service The Dining Service Supreme Order Easter Flowers NOW! To be Delivered at Home FOR EASTER Bells Flower Shop Phone 139 8251/2 Mass. Easter Easter Gifts Easter Favors Easter Cards Easter Eggs in the famous Martha Washington Chocolates University Book Store K. U. Branch Inter-School Swimmers Will Meet Wednesday Much enthusiasm is being shown among the swimmers for the interschool swimming meet which is to be held in Robinson Olympic Park, G. B. Patrick, who is in charge of the meet, is receiving entries daily, and he believes that the event will be very entertaining of the unusual character of the races. The meet will be conducted on a regular point basis, five for first place, three for second, and one for third. The officials are being chosen from the class in coaching and officiating. The events, in order, are: one length, free style, preliminaries; 50-yard back stroke, preliminaries; 50-yard free style, preliminaries; candle race; fancy diving; 55-yard breast stroke, finals; obstacle race; plunge for distance; one length, free style, finals; back stroke, finals; potato race; 440-yard swim, free style, finals; 50-yard, free style, finals. Viscera Here for Analysis? the viscera of L. T. Remblain, father of the ax murder victim, has been sent to the Chemistry Department for analysis, according to the Associated Press. Coreren E. E. Doy of Connellsville wrote a statement as to the result of the autopsy performed than that he believed that Tremblain had swallowed a good deal of poison. Dramatic Club Elects Two Phyllis Reynolds, c24, normaline O'Brien, c23 and Frank DeWeese, c25, were elected to membership in the club on Friday night. The concensus of opinion among Dramatic Club members was that this tryout play showed a desired improvement over the first presentation. There were five members in the club, two of whom were admitted on Robert," the two who were not admitted into the club will be given another opportunity to try out. Fred Angle, c'25, has returned to school after an illness of two weeks. The Sour Owl will be out the latter part of next week, according to the *Horns*, Paulaen Burke and Joe Turner. We are very anxious for more contributions as we hope to make this a big number* they said this morning. The authors say it would ready in, but copy may be handed to either of the editors or left in the contribution box in the Kansas office between now and April 18. Send the Daily Kansan home. WE SPECIALIZE IN HATS as we do in suits Two prices only, sell for cash and save you money. SkofStadS FELLING SYSTEM The best and the newest That's all you will find here. The new suits are especially good looking;very lively Norfolks,4 button suits;new sack suits;plenty of new ideas for young men.Society Brand Clothes are a special feature at Other Clothes $24.50 up