THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MARRYING MADE EASY FOR LEGION MEMBERS Chaplain Will Do Hitching, and K. C. Jeweler to Furnish Rings APPLICATIONS COMING IN KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 10 (United Press.)—Cupid never worked faster during the days of O. D. and beans for breakfast than he will during the Ameri- tic region convention in Kansas City. Rev. John W. Inzer, national chaplain of the Legion, and a local jeweler, have announced that all ex-service men may marry here during the convention without cost. Inzer will perform the ceremony free, and the jeweler will furnish the ring, and the other expenses of the ceremonies, which will be performed in local churches, will be borne by the convention fund. Many Famous Personages From All Allied Countries to be There KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 10—United Press—Priety) thousand men and women, including many international, war heroes and political figures, will stage what is planned to be the world's biggest reunion of disbanded fighting forces here, October 21, and November 1 and 2. Inzer has received several applications. starship Foch, Admiral Beaty, Baron Jacques and General Diaz will represent France, England, Belgium and Rai respectively at the deployment of the American Legion—while General Pershing, Admiral Simmons, Admiral Countz and General Lejeune, and possibly President Harding will make speeches. Twenty-eight congressional medals of honor men and governors of twenty states have all been awarded by the convention committee. About 49,400 of the boys of "Forty Homes et eight Chevau" fame, the crow being given a companion touch by cowboys, Indians and a score of nationalities, will really put on the show that will include: More parades than the whole E. F. staged in a similar period Free marriages for ex-service men only requirement being that theyURMish the bride; Anne. Schumann-Henke singing over again the songs she sang to the soldiers during the war; Eighty-four hands and drum corps, a hauf dozen Scottish bagpipe orchestra; A rodeo, featuring a contrast between ex-service cowboys miking cows; also aspirants for riding horses trying to stay atop Headlight, Dynamite, Nut Cracker, Dixie Flyer and other notoriously rough travel horses—vicims not yet selected; A three-day flying show, featuring the coin and 35th Divisions trying to hold reunions in the same town; A three-day flying show, featuring stairs, altitude and relay races; The soul and spirit Divisions trying to hold reunions in the same town;Prominent Denver society girls and women in the "Jazzy Jazz Revue," press-agented as a spectacular affair; Dedication of Kansa$ City's $2, 500,000 Liberty Memorial to war dead. America will have her first intimate view of the generalissimo of the allied armies, in the coming of Marshal Foch. He will be accompanied only by his aide, Capt. L'Hospital. Foch, in accepting the invitation to the convention, expressed a desire to meet him. The French will mend more time visiting industries and ranches than at banquets during his stay here. The convention will be a homecoming for General Pershing, Major General Enoch H. Crowder, and Rear-Admiral R. E. Coontz, all of whom are natives of Missouri. It is entirely posited that he will be presented with a $185,000 gold bejeweled kansas City, it is true, presented this sword to the general once, but the party was such a success that plans to give it over again are being considered. At the least, special committees of welcome from towns like Edinburgh, Lakes of Lower Edinburg and Hannibal will be at the station to meet them. Lieut.-Gen. Sir William Currier, former commander of the Canadian corps in France; Vice-President Colidge; Samuel Gomphers, of the American Federation of Labor; Major-Governal Charles Marell and shellmen of the American divisions have tentatively accepted invitations to the "show." Granting of a one-cent fare rates by railroads in virtually every section of the country, the result of a long fight by Legion officials, is expected to add to the number of delegates materially. The first convention of the Women's Auxiliary of the American Legion will be an added feature this year. A permanent organization will be effected, independent of the Legion, but co-operative. Miss Pauline Curnick, national organizer, will preside over the some 40,000 delegates until permanent officers are elected. The women will take an important part in all narades, it was announced. The rodeo planned is to rival the Chevonne Frontier days celebration Star riders, bulldoggers and outlaw horses from all over the North American continent have been entered. For specticularism, it will be rivaled only by the three-day flying show to be participated in. The event includes several American Aces. Eddie Rickenbacher has indicated he will enter, along with other medal men. Several thousand dillars cash and trophy prizes will be awarded for winners in the air circus. In addition to the many special trains chartered to the convention, a number of box-car specials will be taken up by "La Societé des 40 Hommes et Chevaux," reproducing the rough-and-ready mode of transportation that prevailed i n France during the war. Homes are to be thrown open to the delegates, tents have been arranged for in local parks and sleeping cars will be parked at the terminals—the latter expected to provide sleeping quarters for 15,000 to 20,000 men. Newspapermen Will Enjoy All the Sports Hawaii Has to Offer Honolulu, Hawaii, Oct. 10. (United Press) -- Thrills occasioned by riding the surf boards, or standing on the rim of the continuously active volcano of Kilauea and gazing down into the roaring, tossing sea of molten lava, have an active rival in the keen excitement that accompanies the hunting of the fish in the waters beneath the coral reef that encloses the island of Oahu. THRILLS IN HONOLULU FOR PRESS DELEGATES Newspaper men who are coming to Honolulu October 10 as delegates to the Press Congress of the World will find that shark hunting goes hand in hand with other sports, and, although intensely exciting, is in no way dangerous. Te shark hunters go to sea in a launch or sankman which tows a dead white horse. When they finish fishing about to circle about, and soon the fins of sharks may be seen cutting through the water. If one is an expert, he may harpon a shark as it turns over to strike, or he may triv his luck with a high-powered rifle. The shark is a furious fighter and, once harponed or caught in the water of strength. But he finally tives and is gradually hauled board and then dispatched. There are few Hawaiians living today who care to meet a shark in the open water and fight him as his ancestors did. In the olden days a Hawaiian armored himself with a hard, wooden, double-pointed javelin, about 18 inches long, and with the center portion large enough to permit a Better get that overcoat cleaned up and repaired before the cold strikes us; and furs—we clean them, too. We're going to have a hard winter Nunnally's Southern Chocolates alway's Fresh.-City Drug Store. CALL- seven-five for the BEST. New York Cleaners 836 MASS. to the University Concert Course 800 SEASON TICKETS Where will you sit $5.00 and $4.00 Season Tickets $4.00 and $5.00 Eastman Kodak Films.—Rankin Drug Store. Mail your order today to H. L. Butler, Lawrence, Kansas Montage exclusive Stationery.— City Drug Store. Ramer's assorted Chocolates will please her.—Rankin Drug Store. good grip. He then let himself down into the water. As the shark approached and turned over to strike, its great jaws open to their full width, the Hawaiian, with a quick movement, thrust the javelin between the jaws, one point penetrating the roof of the mouth and the other the lower jaw. The shark, thus unable to close his mouth, and helpless, was Ruth Ashley, c'24, shopping in Kansas City Saturday. Autostrop and Gillette razor blades.—Rankin Drug Store. either speared or allowed to swim away as the Hawaiian chose. Watch for the K. U. Olympiad—adv —“and this morning, in the case that was operated on for deafness, the patient that had not heard for years. heard her wrist watch ticking. Isn't that fine?” Marinello Preparations.—City Drug Store. Break your cold with Nyals Likes-a Cold. Tablets.—Rankin Drug Store. Bring all your troubles to Your Osteopath, VanWinkle 2 Blocks East of Spooner Library WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cashier W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cashier C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashor, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green, J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop DIRECTORS quirets studio is making the 1922 Jayhawker Photographs. Make Your Appointments NOW! Special Rates Too In ten years you will not take $100 for your Jayhawker Vol. II HALLOWE'EN FAVORS Mount Oread CANDLE SHADES DECORATED CREPE PAPER PLACE CARDS TALLY CARDS FALSE FACES CAPS Do your shopping early while your selection is wide and our stock unbroken. When we say that Cap and Ezy got up at 6:30 A. M. on Sunday in order to get the proper lighting effect on some of the views they were taking for their view section, it would seem that they were particular cusses. It ought to be a knock-out; that view section. And with Suiqsaking takes the pictures, it looks like a mean section. '22 ANNYAL TALK University Book Store Make your dates now for your pictures. Squires is the official photographer. Monday, October 10, 1921 803 Mass. St. Each year has seen an improvement in engravings and printing, but undoubtedly the annual of 1912 set the high mark of achievement up until 1918. From one color printing, to two colors, since that time have used two, three or even four colors on a page and today the Jayhawker represents the best that the engraver and the printer can turn out. VIEW SECTION Brief History of Other Jayhawkers The 1922 Jayhawker will be the outgrowth of annual publications at K. U., since 1873-74 when the first annual called "The Herophanes" appeared. Not until 1882 was there a second annual; then the "Kansas Kikabke" appeared, and in 1888 the "Cyclone" appeared appuring that the art of Terpinecar was badly neglected at the University of Kansas during the last year." Since then the "Jawhaker" has been dressed in many colors, dark red, light green, light purple, even (in 1907) in pure white. Last year, the Jayhawker set a high record in the excellence of printing and engraving, and this year Cap Garvin and Elmer Isern, have under way, projects for beautiful work that will allow equal the volume of 1921. Regardless of the constant improvement in printing and engraving of the succeeding volume over its predecessor, it has been difficult to pick out any year in which the editor failed to sing the glorious praises of old K. U. 1922 Jayhawker Will Be Worth Ten Times Its Cost From this time up to 1901 annual publications appeared more or less irregularly and in 1901 appeared the first annual to be called the Jay-hawker. PERSONEL OF STAFF Bay boyey, just take a look at this staff! The room of the University. Ted Hudson, Associate Editor, Journalism, Junior on the Hill. Get out his book at Dressed for a year. Leroy Hughes, Advertising Manager, Journalism major, Senior, Soil acts for the Kansan, Gazette, and Kansas City publications. Leroy Hughes, Senior n Marion Collins, Junior Editor, Journalism major, Junior, Kansan Board, and active member of the staff, as Campus and News Editor. Karl Rugh, Sophomore Editor College, Sophomore. Was Freshman editor last year, that speaks for itself. Gilbert Tuekeper, Sports Editor, Law and Journalism, Middle Law. Experience—Sports Editor, Okmulgee and Coffeey paperils. mournman major, Senior, as Ruth Miller, Senior Editor, sited by Helen Bossell. Tortoise in senior those two don't know. Stella Dutton, Women's Athletics, Journalism major, Senior. Knows her athletics, and knows how to write about them. Known as a valedictorian, Sophomore, her assistant, an ardent sportswoman. Addison Massey, Organiza- tions Editor, Journalism major, Editor-in-Chief of Kansan, Campus Editor, Editor of the best two-miler in the Yale levy hy-the-way. John Old, Student Government, Journalism major, Senior. Parsons Daily Republic. Oldly Okahoman. Pep harelst Joe Turner, Humor Editor, Journalism major, Junior. Wrote Plain 'Tales for the Kansan, and has reams of funny stuff already for the Yaj Hawkeye. His assistant Doris Fleeson, Journalism major, is wit itself. Clare Ferguson, Sororities, Journalism major, Senior. Knows all the sororites is a real lady journalist. Louis Kendall, Art Editor, Journalism major, Senior. also takes lots of work in the School f Fine Arts. His assistant, Keneth Alexander of the Oread Art Shop is a Fine Arts student exclusively. Be sure to include the 1922 Jayhawker in your Xmas Budget Charles Puffer, R. O. T. C. Editor, Journalism major, Senior. What Chuck don't know? ROT, C7 (ADV.) ROT, C7 (ADV.) Can and Ezv Mount Oread Cap and Ezy Ed and Bus Mgr Cap Garvin, editor and Elmer Inser, business-manager of the 1922 Jayhawker have been working all summer and expect to work all winter to put a Jayhawker that will surpass all previous Jayhawkers in excellence of material, clever handling and quantity of illustrations. Cap Garvin, the editor, is a senior in the college and hails from Erie. Last year Cap was editor of the Sour Owl, sports editor on the Kansas and humor editor for the 1921 Jayhawk. Just take a look at your last year's Jayhawker if you want to see a product of Cap's brain. SNAP SHOTS Elmer Ilsern—everybody knows him as Ezy—is a senior chemical engineer and anybody knows that what a senior chemist does is not worth knowing. Ezy, admits that he is from Ellinwood. Incidently Ezy has taken sweepstakes among the honorary engineering societies on the SNAP SHOTS And Snap sots, well, they are way short of real honest-to-goodness snap shots. We mean snap shots that make them say "Oh" and "Ah" and "OOoO". Those little pictures of the local color. Showing that the students do not work and study all of the time as the popular notion would have it on the Hill. The many problems that Ezy has to face as business-manager of the Jayhawker will make him think getting a degree in chemical engineering is not an option. All he has to do is to get enough money to permit Cap to break a few records in turning out a real annual—and believe us it takes a world of money to turn out a book that will surpass the previous year. But the big point is that Ezy will do it. Neither Cap or Ezzy will bite and anybody who gets an microbe that should incubate in the Jayhawk should stop one or both of them and get rid of the germ. Ted Hudson, Associate Editor, knows more about the practical end of the case than Ben F. did himself. No.1 The engravers and the printers are going to wave their wands over a bunch of snapshots and views and typewritten copy and print them on the Hill a volume that will be better than even its proud parents hoped for. PRINTERS AND ENGRAV ERS Every bit of this years Jayhawkier is going to be under the supervision of some K. U. man. The contract for the engraving has been let to the Southwestern Co. Worth Texas. This is Jigs Bomar's home town Roy Beard, a former Kansas man will have charge of the Jayhawkier's engravings for his company. R. H. Montgomery is another Kansas man will have charge of the engravings for the Southwestern. Neither man has ever turned out any failures in annual work. We now call your attention to the Hugh Stephens Co., Jefferson City, Mo. This company printed last year's annual and the year before that and before that. Hugh Stephens Co. is pretty nearly ready to get an A.B. from K. U. The personal services of John Sewar, head of their college department, and excellence of their typography and printing has had a whole lot to do with their getting the contract for the printing every time. If either the engraver or the printer were new to K. U. people, we should have to bring a new one. We often talk about their merits but both of them are familiar to everybody on the Hill. If there is anything new in their line you may be sure that it will be included in this year's Jayhawker. Little four page inserts, with four color process work, for the eight main divisions or sections, sounds like some real color scheme. No, not loud screeching colors, but soft whispers of toasted tomatoes that blend and melt into one another in a real artistic effort, hard to equal. Those division pages have been in the planning and making since last April. DIVISION PAGES Come in and see us. Room 110 Fraser. The Alumni Office. (ADV.) Staff Working On This Basis No, Cap and Ezy are not the most talented gentlemen in the world and neither are they geniuses. They are just plain students, doing their best to put out an annual that not only the student body will be proud of, but one that the people over the state will also like. The 1922 Jayahawkier just coming into being, in the form of publicity is by no means just in the anmoeba stage of development*. Your annual has been in the making or embryo stage for at least six months. Cap and Ezy feel that about the best or worst publicity, that any institution of learning can get is the kind of annual publication that institution produces. So, being loyal sons of the Sunflower state, they are doing their durdest to give K. U. some real publicity. So the baby Jayhawker, that is just coming out into broad daylight, should continue to grow stronger and stronger each day, until next June when it will fly off into this great commonwealth of ours and proclaim to the world the wares and worth of old K. U. Ain't she a wonderful state and a glorious University! HILL DONATES OFFICE "Scoop" Hill the accom- modating alumni secretary, has permitted the 1922 Jayhawk annual staff to take over part of his office space in Room 110, Fraser and has offered the staff every assistance in putting the Jayhawker in shape. Cap and Ezy have a desk next to Scoop's desk that is big enough for both of them to get under in case anybody gets on a rampage in the Jayhawker office. If anybody doesn't know where Fraser is located we are not going to give away this secret, but we are going to diagram the location of the Alumni office in Fraser. Room 110 is in the south wing and that is one comes in the west entrance on the south wing he can be guided by several signs that will all point to the location of the office. Don't be afraid to drop around but leave your dice and shooting irons outside.