NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAF JOHN GIBBERSEN Editor-In-Chief JOHN M. HENRY Managing Editor MARGARET E. BURTON Managing Editor REPORTORIAL STAFF LEON HARB GILBERT CLAYTON GUT SCHIVNER CHARLES SWEET ELMER ANNDT REX MILLER FRANK B. HENDERSON GLENDALE BELCHER CLAPTER WM. S. CADY HENDERSON ARON ROGERS J. W. DYMEY Business Manager Cleveland, OH CSRSTM Strategic Advertising Manager Entered an accord-class mail master Septer 2015, the account number is 74869137. Raines, under the act of March 3, Published in the afternoon, five times a week. Ramsas from the press of the department. Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Address communications to UNIVERSITY OF NASHAN RENTEE, IAKE $25 per year in H Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the life of a student in Kansas to go further than merely printing the news by standing up for her views and not jeopardizing to be clean; to be cheerful; to cherish the experiences of problems to water hearts; in all, to serve the students by ability the studding of the University. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1914 USELESS LAWS? It is not apparent by what authority those in charge of the senior play can announce that the profit made will go to the class this year when there is a rule made by the Student Council that fifty per cent of the money shall go to the Student Union treasury. Another Student Council rule not generally known is that 20 per cent of the net proceeds of the Jayhawker shall go to the Student Union treasury. WOMEN ARE ORGANIZING! If the rules are inoperative they should be repealed. Class organization of women is a good thing, so the women of K. U. have decided. The success of the senior women's mixer Thursday evening on the golf links was unqualified; the freshmen women have already had one hike and are now planning for another party for Saturday; and now the juniors are meeting to organize. Women of other universities have profited by class organization, and Kansas women will undoubtedly make it a big success. Sophomores, you are next! LATE PARTIES When the Men's Student Council has cleaned up the other weighty business on hand, the members might profitably turn their attention to the matter of closing all University parties, excepting the Prom and Hop, at midnight. The custom of starting the parties late originated in the old fallacy that it takes a woman untold hours to get ready to go anywhere. Mrs. Eustace Brown has talked this matter over with a large number of girls, and they all say that such a notion is all piffle, that they can be ready at least an hour earlier than the usual time for starting, and that they would be more than glad to go early, come home at a reasonable hour, and get a little sleep once in a while. This stand puts it up squared to the men, and unless they can show cause why parties should not begin in time to close at twelve o'clock, they ought to take action to effect a change. This thing of blaming everything on the women will probably endure as long as men are men, but in this case the women have done all they can, and it's up to the men. QUARTERS NEEDED! K. U. has frequently been the subject of unfavorable comment because no quarters are provided for the use of visiting football teams on the field between halves. K. U. has a place to go—why should not the team that is the guest of K. U.? Everybody this year is making an effort to engender a better feeling between the University and its athletic rivals. Would not the providing of quarters do much to help this? In the month that the University has been in session fewer than 30 county clubs have been organized. MORE CLUBS NEEDED. The speedy completion of the task undertaken by the Student Council is a necessity if the clubs are to accomplish the purpose for which they are formed—the creation of sentiment among the people of the state in favor of the mill tax. The legislature meets in a few weeks. Sentiment is not formed in a minute. It takes time and lots of it; first and foremost, however, it takes work. LACK OF INTEREST The women of the University did not march in a body to McCook Field Saturday, as was suggested. The reason, very likely, was that no one took enough interest in the suggestion to work and make it an actuality. The plan was a good one—anything that engenders pep is good for the University. Then, too, women do not have enough chance to display their loyalty to the school. Heard from the girl's section at the football game Saturday: "Well, Kansas may have some bad luck once in a while, but nobody is going to knock on Wood." Inter Arma Caritas Mabel T. Boardman in the Red Cross Magazine Amistad the scenes of death ane desolation; amistd the tortures of physical, mental and moral suffering now spreading over the greater part of Europe, there gleams still one ray of man's higher nature. Carve the altar of the God of War as you may with the glory of courage, the beauty of patriotism, the strength of courage, the bravery of a whited sepulchre, full of dead men's bones within. Man arrayed against his fellow man, and poor, frilh human flesh the target of the murderous force in shot and shell. It all is ally. Have we a right to sit in judgment on the nations involved in this titanic struggle? Not a score of years ago we were at war, justifying our act by the virtue of our cause. Peace has been achieved they have they, judges we dare not be. Comforters we may be, remembering, "We do pray for mercy, And that same prayer doth teach us all to render us all to render The deeds of mercy." When the tumult of the battle dies away, there shines forth the one undimmed ray of man's diviner nature to light the fluttering folds of the Red Cross flag. The wounded soldier turns his weary eyes to watch, not for the flag of his own dear country, but for that flag of his flag, for the flag of the enemy it means to him succor in his distress, love even amidst arms. Under this banner we may all enlist. By international agreement we break no neutral duty when we lift our arms in service. By international agreement we fight against it. It floats triumphantly over the passions of war, the emblem of humanity, the insignia of the brotherhood of man. What have we done; what can we do, as soldiers of this wondrous standard, to carry it on? We must not lose sight of it. The pitiful cry, "Come over and help us!" arises also from the old men, the women and little children. They, too, are the victims of Moloch the refugee, the means of their homes, the means of livelihood gone, the wage-earner of the family in the fighting army or among the multitude of the wounded, or lying in death's sleep shoulder to shoulder with the thousands in the battlefield that hold the harvest the battlefield. What can we do for these also? We, too, have suffered, as has all the world, from the blight of war We, too, have our sad army of unemployed soldiers, and we need aid. Charity should begin at home; but charity that ends is not charity in truth. "Who is my neighbor?" "No alone, he at thine service," but he at thine aftar and cretto to their for aid." Oh, men and women, we are all citizens of this great world. Think of the miseries of our fellow men; picture the long, long wards of the sick and suffering; take to your own hearts the agonies of the women who have been left in the dark to grant them their aid. Help to bring love and mercy to them in their distress. Help to carry, armist and strife, the flag of the Red Cross. Send the Daily Kansan home. Inter arma caritas! (With apologies to Rudyard Kipling.) If you can punt the ball, when all around you. Are breaking in and busting up the line; "If" If you can run and not be tired by running. if you can gain a foot, when they have downed you, have downed you. Forgetting all about your chance to shine. Or, being hit hard, don't sit down to rest. and yet stick like a man and stand the test. If you can pass and not miss on your aim, If you can kick, and get your kicks off faster If you can meet with triumphs and disaster, r in a hole make use of all your waiting. disaster, But play to win and not to lose the game If you can bear to hear your signals twisted. By backs intending only good, you can match your understanding. If you can muster all your football spirit And stake it all upon the game at hand. day. And come with gusto that will show you've got the sand. And lose and come to practice next day, And come with gusto that will To stand the strain long after they are gone. To stick the pace,when they have gone their limit. And stand the weight once more of all your brawn. If you can force your weakly band- aged ankles If you can talk at feeds and keep your head clear. Or walk with girls and do not boast too much. If you can pass your subjects all without fear. And swell your heart within you. And swell your heart within your sweater and such. If you can fill the speedily passing season, A—An here-to-fore unheard of in strument of torture, utilized by professors whose livers are out of sorts. With a clean record run of glory won, You're in the school and everything Q. —What is a shot-gun quiz? Yours is the school and everything that's in it, tan next, my son. -Stanley D. Koch, in the Ohio State Lantern. Our Daily Quiz A. —No. Neither was the gun that shot little Willie's head off. Four K. U. professors were in dangerous proximity to the war zone his fall just before school began, the first professor to die there with Wm E. H. Higgins of the law school, W. H. Twenhofel, geology and M. E. Rice, physics. A. —To see what the student does n't know when unprepared. Q. ..Are these shot-gun quizzes ever loaded? Q—Where did the idea of shotgun quizzes originate? Q.-What do they usually find out, A.-That if grades were given on bluffing, there'd be no flunks. A. —It has been definitely traced back to the Spanish Inquisition. A. —None have been heard of up to the time of going to press. Q. —Does any one ever pass these quizzes? Q. What is the comparison in the hot-tun quizzes and the Kramp quiz? A. —There would be no use giving them if they did. A... the combination of the two was what caused Sherman to issue hit a reporter. The pleasure-loving old city of Baden-Baden is the subject of an entertaining article by Harrison Rhodes in October Harper's Magazine. Before the Franco-Prussian war Baden-Baden was typically French, being born in Germany and still important, since so many of the state officials spent their holidays there. After the war in which France lost her two provinces nearest Germany, Baden-Baden gradually took on more of the Burgher air. It is now deserted by "Both Guests" although only a few of them remain. Until a few weeks ago many French visited this pleasure resort, even though in German territory. The hot baths are as old as they are famigs; Charlemagne being the first to use them to any considerable extent. Other stories of the quintet are also known as proving one of the popular articles of the month among students. Browsing Around Spooner WHEN it comes to overcoats sift out the facts; aren't these the things you want: good cloth, an attractive pattern, a fashionable cut, thorough workmanship, at a fair price. Such are the kind of overcoats we have here in our These are the facts Hart Schaffner & Marx models. Plain statements but what more could any man want except a perfect fit—neither you nor we have to worry about that in these garments. FOR RENT—Several fine rooms heated and lighted; with bath These rooms are airy with south exposures, fine fraternity or club rooms. J. M. Neville, Stubbs' Bride, the Court House. Phone B31 341. Models to fit every figure at from $18 and up. Want Ads FOR RENT - Two rooms with porch in modern house; light housekeeping suite or single rooms. 940 Ind Bell 1823. Emerging clear, however, above the mass of conflicting theories, one fact is dominant: these immense amphitheatres stand as monuments to the importance of organized athletics, and a recognition of this by the college authorities—Atlantic Monthly. LOST—At game Saturday, a Gaberde raincoat with tan gloves in pocket. Call Bell 1834. Geo. Fair. Reward $5.00. 36.3* The university stadium has many meanings to many sorts of university men. The athlete, whose interest lies wholly in the playing of the game unquestionably is a spectacular environment, has his own idea of it, just as the athletic manager, with interests largely financial, has his view-point; while the faculty member, with classical tendencies, succeeded in business, and the loyal if sedately minded graduate, trustee, or other (uneasy at the thought of giving outdoor sports prominence as spectacles out of proportion to their vital importance) apply to it their active trends of thought and ideals. Mail your want ad with 25 encres to enclosed by the Daily Kansan-want ads are payable in advance. Private telephone booths at Griggs. Both phones...-Adv. Two of the important games of the current Eastern football season will be played within the walls of vast amphitheatres, erected within the past twelve months, at Princeton and Ohio State University, with growth of the modern tendency to establish intercollegiate contests in an environment permanent in character, great in capacity, and beautiful in outline. Stadia now exist at Princeton and at Columbia, and the College of the City of New York, and at Tacoma; are in course of construction, or are projected, at the University of Michigan, Columbia, Cornell, and the University of Washington at Seattle; are in course of building all the underlying elements involved, sets forth a condition at once interesting and complex. Peckham's A young woman student waits two or three hours work every day during meal hours at 16c an hour. Department, University Daily Kansas. Rooms for Rent The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx good clothes Student Help Colleae Stadiums Copyright Image: Schaffner & Nic. CONKLIN SELF-FILLING FOUNTAIN PENS Are now on Sale at McColloch's Drug Store GO TO THE HOME BAKERY For Good Things To Eat M. Williamson Prices from $2 to $12.50 Gossard Corsets Professional Cards The corset that is becoming the favorite with every well-dressed woman you know. If you never have worn the Gossard Corset, come in and let our corsetiere fit you in the next corset you buy. C. M. C. CONNELLA, Physician and Median Residence. 140 Temp. 806, House 273, Residence. 140 Temp. 806, House 273, Residence. J. F. BROCK Optometry and Specialist Writing office 802 Mass M. phone 606-734-9125 phone 606-734-9125 They Lace in Front HARRY REDING M. D. Eye, ear, nose Biplex. Bell, 514. Home 512. A Biplex. Bell, 514. Home 512. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye our and Satisfaction guaranteed. Dick Bldg. SOLE AGENTS DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Ks. Mrs. Brown, Ladies' Emma Jones Tailoring. Suite Tailoring. home. Bell 114 113 home. Bell 114 109 home. Anderson's J. W O'BRYAN, Dentist, Over Wilson's Drug Store. Phone 5107. Drug Seller (Bank Deposit Only) O 1038 Miss Miles Stripe ID Phone, office and residence. MRS. ELLISON, Dreammaking and Ladies 1032 vermont. Room 618. Bell I. 11 West. 1034 vermont. Room 618. Bell I. 11 West. street. Both phones, office and residence. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynecology G. W. JONES, Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones. 35. Classified A. J. ANDERSON, M. D., Office 715 Vt. 86, Phone 124. Ladies Tailor. S. T GILLISPEE, M. D. Office corner S. T GILLISPEE, M. D. Residence 728 & Warren 728 DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Teen, Phones, 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Sojourn's Studio. Both phones. RALPH E. BARNES, M. D., phone 83. 7-09. Perkins Building. Meat Market DRESSMAKING. Tallored skirts. Ehiel A. Duff. 1204 R. I. Mrs. M. Brocklesby-Wilson, Kiester College Missouri University, making over 1000 Mass. St., Bell 2109 WEST END MEAT MARKET Bath Phones 321 Jewelers CORA REY NOLDS will receive special补贴 NORTH College P昂克 U. 104—2 rings. P昂克 U. 104—2 rings. ED. W PARSONS . Engraver, Watch- shiner and Jewelry, Ballet Book 7 147 717 Mass Music Studios Plumbers JSON. BROS., Plumbers, Electric and las Goods. PHONE K E N NEDY PLUMBING CO. Phone: 605.739.8274; Maidra lights 937 Mass Phones. 605.739.8274 Barber Shops where they J. C. HOUC 913 Mass. Go where they all go J. C. HQUCK, GO WHERE you get the Best, Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Mass. St. Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you CAFE. Room 1. Perkins Building. Millinerv VANTED D. - Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormor inspect an new line of hats. 81 St. Mary's Blvd. Shoe Shop FORNEY SHOE HOSE 1017 Mass. St. don't make a mistake. All work guaranteed. Insurance FIRE INSU RANCE LOANS and abstracts. People's Bank Building, Bell 185; Home 2 '202 FRANK E. BANKS, Ins., and abstracts of Title. Room 3. F. A. A. Building.