THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ARBUCKLE WILL FACE MURDER TRIAL TODAY Women Will be Given First Right to the Court Room San Francisco, Sept. 22—Rosece "Fatty" Arbuckle was to appear in a "women's" court at 1 p.m. today for preliminary examination on the charge of murder. His wife, Minta Durseus, and her mother were to be by Arbuckle was not to be put on the stand today. A court room crowded with women was to hear what promised to be the most sensational testimony ever heard in a San Francisco court for years. Judge Lazarum ruled that women should be first admitted and it was certain that no men outside of the judge, jury, lawyers, court attaches and newspaper men would find places. Eighteen society women from the vigilance committee which has offered District Attorney Brady financial aid were to be in the front row. District Attorney Brady placed all hope in the new evidence of Al Senachar, manager of Virginia Rappe, the movie actress Arbuckle is accused of injuring during a wild party at hotel on Labor Day. Sennacher is said to have made a statement to Los Angeles authorities in which he admitted Arbuckle told him that he might have been responsible for the injuries which resulted in Miss Rappe's death. Patterson Describes The Far North Country (Continued from Page 1.) ever, he admitted it was the only way to get across. The way lies over Broad Pass through the Alaskan range of mountains and it is here that one receives the best view of Mr. McKinley, 20-30 feet, the highest, most spandil peak in America, appropriately called by the Indian Itch. Dear Mrs. McKinley "louse" it mila from Broad Pass and the government laid established the Mr. McKinley National Park about it. Summer and winter it stands there, covered with snow from the base up, which aids in its magnification. It is a nice place to see nearby peaks, not detract from it. After passing the summit of the pass the party ran into a snowstorm and had to walk through it, but it was only snow encountered around The bridge over Hurricane Gulch is three hundred feet in the air and beginning with it the railroad is finished to the coast. Just before reaching the coast at Cordova he took a side trip up the Copper river through two glaciers, the bridge between them, the " iron Trail" of Rex Reach's novel. The steward was two days late at Anchorage and he landed at Seattle September 17, five days behind schedule time. In regard to scenery a trip through Alaska is a succession of mountains snow covered, lakes riverbed and rocky cliffs, the home of the glacier, which from the point of scenic beauty is grand. It is a river of ice easy to see and fairly easy to approach; the face of it is often three or four miles wide and one mile each, so both is one or three hundred feet. Any one of ten or twelve glaciers in Alaska has more ice than all the glaciers of the Swiss Alps put to The climate in the summer is all that one could mean by summer. The weather is warm and the short growing season of the three months June to August is compensated by twenty-two to twenty-three hours during the day. The summer day in the Arctic Circle was sixty degrees in the shade. Alaska has great natural resources in minerals, gold, silver, copper, coal and is now discovering asbestos. Flerchia seem almost inexactly salmon and harring, not give million of dollar profit annually. Agriculture centers around Fairbanks. In time Alaska will maintain all agricultural products necessary to maintain its people. Forests, chiefly spruce, are practically untouched except for fuel. The greatest are in southeastern Alaska. They are controlled by the United States which has issued only two laws to protect these forests are primus and need not be exhausted for they form a second growth in thirty years' time. Alaska's present economic outlook is very poor because of poor transportation facilities and general world conditions. The government railroad which will be built in Alaska and will creep up Alaska, and will make it one or the most prosperous and successful sections of the United States. SPHINX HOLDS INITIATION Honorary Freshman Society Takes About Thirty New Men Sphinx, honorary freshman society or men, held initiation Wednesday, september 21, at 8 o'clock at the Phi gamma Delta house. The following members of the freshman class were initiated: Sigma Nu, William Bear, baun Baum; Gamma Gamma Delta, Richmond Psi, Dave Lobdell, William Glassock; Chi Delta Theta, Walter Wilson, tichard Wentworth; Psi Uplion, Entrima, John Scoffeld; Delta Upsilon, Orville Pryse, Harry Hawkins Carolyn Redman, c24, will spend the week end at her home in Kansas City. By WILFRID FLEISHER, Auction of Stamp Collection in Paris Brings Fabulous Sum of 1,100,805 Francs One Day (United Press Staff Correspondent) Gladys Nelson-Smith, fa'18, of Minneapolis, is spending several weeks in Lawrence visiting. Sigma Phi Sigma, Donald Kendell, Don Kellerman; Tau Delta Tau, George Docking, John Wyland; Phi Kappa Alpha, Thomas Gropper, Ick Wolf, Leonard Isner; Phi Kap- cha, Jack McClain, Robert Dropper; Alpha Tau Omega, Leigh Hunt, Eric Ergenbright; Beta Theta Pt, Grant Wagner; Robert Brown; Sigma Al- many; Marshall Porridge, Don Hewitt. The Ferrari collection was conceded the finest in the world. The late Duke had inherited a large fortune from his father, an Italian financier and is said to have spent 200,000 annually in buying stamps. Ferrari was of German birth, and his collection was confiscated by the French government at 10 am. It is now being auctioned off at intervals, the proceeds being placed to the credit of the German indemnity bill. PARIS. (By Mail)—The sum of 156,000 francs has been paid for a single postage stamp, a little square of blue paper from Paris with a width of 23 cm. It was only one of the famous collection of the late Duke Ferrari de Renatite, which yielded in one volume a new edition of the fabulous sum of 1,100,805 francs. The Duke was completely absorbed in his collection. Such was his passion for stamps, that it is said, that although a confirmed bachelor, he would have been willing to serve for a wife on condition that she bring him a one penny Mauritus The entire collection was valued by experts at丛30,000,000 to 50,000,000 francs. Stamp collectors are well equipped with their corners of the globe for the sale. The lot that david the highest bid was a pair of stamps from English Guiana, the vertical 2 cents black on pink, dated 1850 and postmarked. These went to an Alasstan tobacco dealer for 210,000 francs. This bid for two little bits of tarnished paper on which even the picture was in farnish under the post mark, is the most ever recorded at a public sale. 1847. He had willed his collection to the German government. A lot of 2,000 Uruguayan stamps valued at 40,000 francs, brought 111,000 francs. The $2 piece蓝牙耳机; the $500 francs; the 4 cent black on blue from English Guiana with the letters E, D, W, went to Mr. Casperry, the American collector for 44,500 francs; the 10 cent black on blue from English Guiana to 12,000 francs each. The highest bid for a single stamp heretofore recorded was 99,000 frames for the 2 pence blue indigo Martins, bid at a sale here by May 19. Leaders among men are leaders because they know values—in men and in everything else. They wear tailored—not manufactured—clothes, so that they will look like leaders. That's the look you have when you Wear Clothes Individually Tailored by Inexpensive but not cheap! "You Know Him" S. G. CLARKE 1933 Moss 1033 Mass. Do You Want Help? Use the Kansan Classified Columns Have You Lost Anything A Daily Kansan Lost Ad Will Find It Have You Anything to Rent or Sell? A Daily Kansan for Sale or Rent Ad will accomplish Your Purpose A Daily Kansan Want Ad Brings Forth Intelligent Job Seekers Who Want Work Call at Daily Kansan Business Office or send check with copy SOTHERN-MARLOWE WILL PERFORM HERE Noted Shakespeare Players Will Make Only One-Night Stand in Lawrence E. H. Sothern and Julia Marlowe will mate, their only one-night appearance at Lawrence this year, an event the manager of the Bowersock theatre. They will begin their American tour at the Boston Opera House on friday night, October 3; after a rest in Washington and abroad. For their present tour which will embrace the more important cities east of the Mississippi and a few west of it, William Marlowe and Marlowe will produce Shakespeare's "Hamlet," "Twelfth Night," "Taming of the Shrew," and "Merchant of Venice" the latter comedy for his first three players, for the frat time in seven years. Mr. Sothebry and Miss Marlowe have secured what they feel to be a company representative of the best Shakespearean players in America. The plays are to be entirely reconstumed. Presbyterian Party At Westminster Hall The first party of the year for Presbyterian students will be given Friday night at Westminster Hall by the Westminster Student Guild, an organization of all Presbyterian Students in the University. Rev. Albert J. Murphy, new Pressbysterian University pastor, will be formally introduced to the students at this party. Plans for one party each month during the school year are being made by the officers of the Guild. Barton County Club meeting in Room 210 Frasier Hall, Friday, Sept. 4 at 4:30. Every Barton County student is invited to the Elmer Isern, Isern-Press. ANNOUNCEMENTS The first annual Educational Day Excercises of Lawrence Chapter No. 2, Order of De Molay, will be held in the Masonic Temple, Friday, September 23, Supt. H P Smith will discuss "The Functions of Public Education?" The functions of public education standing. The University are invited to attend J. H. Korth, Advisor. Items You Need First meeting of the Mining Seminar will be Monday, at 4:30 o'clock, Lecture Room, Haworth building. Freshman and upperclassman in the department should be there. New business and election for one office will take up part of time, the remainder of the work will be a get-acquainted meeting. Quill Club will meet Thursday, Sept 22, at 7:30 in Fraser Rest Room. All members urged to be present — Goe, G Struble. Regulation Gym Bloomers and Middies...$2.69 & $2.00 A second try-out for the Women's Glee Club will be held Thursday at 4:30 o'clock in Room 10, Middle Ad. Pen and Scroll will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock in Room 110 Fraser. It is of essential importance that every member be present. Wanted at the Book Exchange—Hunter's Psychology, Cleiand's Geology; Greever and Jones' Handbook of Writing; Brice's Chemistry; Gaiamex's Materiology; Sherman's Food Products; Wells and Algebra's Ramsey's Spanish Grammar; Fuentes and Francois Spanish Grammar; Young's Astronomy, Manual of Extremes Arthur Ma Murray; Wellington's Logic. Futurist Athletic Union Suits, white and flesh Nainsook. Now 12 price $1.25 & $1.50 Middy-Ties in Navy, Red and Black. We tie them in the regulation sailor knot. Each ... $2.00 All-Linen Handkerchiefs in all the wanted shades, nicely hemstitched; each. 25e Knit Underwear in light weight. vests and union suits. Broken sizes, plenty of small sizes. All One Half Price. WEAVERS University Club Smoker, Friday, September 23 at eight o'clock. You are cordially invited to be present and to bring as guests of the Club new members of the Faculty and new residents of Lawrence—Entertainment Committee. Pay Your Stadium Pledge Now. COMBS BEADS BARRETTS HAIR PINS An elegant assortment to show you, and priced right. Come in and try them on. THE COLLEGE JEWELER We Maintain a Modern Laundry & Dry Cleaning Plant OUR AIM To give you the last word in Laundry and Dry Cleaning service. One trial will convince you. Lawrence Steam Laundry Phone 383 ANNOUNCING---of the year The First Varsity Dance To be Given by the Men's Student Council at F. A. U. Hall Saturday Night, Sept. 24 "CHUCK'S" ORCHESTRA FOUR PIECES