UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Press, Pulpit and Public School Are Co-Workers Imri Zumwalt, Bonner Springs Chieftain. There are those who hold that ceramic collings are sacred. There are others who believe they are not. sacred callings. To my mind all callings are sa- cred. The three factors that are contributing most to the progress of the state are the press and the public school. The aim of both press and pulpit is to be teachers of the truth. The mess sage of the press and Pulpit and press each has its peculiar field. Nelther can hope to fill the other's place. The two work in together in a righteous cause shall succeed. Today in almost every community they work together for civic improvements of every sector, for cleaner schools and the schools for a just division of the fruits of toil; for purity and honesty in places high and low. Doubtless each fails as yet at teaching. The only other there is no doubt that the press often could give more space to the utterances of the pulpit and more time to present its demand for higher moral standards. It is equally true that the pulpit could enlarge its influence by using more the columns of the newspapers and could increase its usefulness by aiding the press in more of its business against the beating of the press. But everywhere the two are drawing closer in their work of service to the world. Each needs the other. With the press looking to the pulpit for inspiration and ideals, even as Joshua looked to Moses for help in holding to the press as a powerfully fighting the good fight for the practical realization of those even as Moses looked to the soldier who shall protect against them? Arther Capper Says the Press Is Doing Its Work Arthur Capper, Capper Publications I do not want to appear before you as a lawyer. I cannot represent the This decent new paper needs no apo- logist and the intro- diction. Jesus More Surely Alive Today Than Ever Before Emporia Gazette William A. White, Emporia Gazette. The world’s gods at any time will be the heart of the world; from the world of the world; from the world. tions—its hopes and fears and loves and hatreds and a d aspirations. God, only so long as the god lives in the emotions and when a god appeals only to the mind, to the memory, to the intellect, to the side of man, the god is dead. Now it so happens that in one of this world of ours today all the gods are dead— and him crucified." The story of Christ still appeals to the hearts of men, still moves their wills, still influences their conduct. Jesus is more surely alive today than ever He was before in the world. We are beginning to find a new Christ—the Christ with a social message, as well as an individual message, as well as a national religion has been taken off individual salvation and put upon social salvation. A thousand social texts now are revealing in Jesus the social activator—the heart-broken Jew who cried out against the oppression of Rome and the government of the Pharisees. Of course the social Christ who is stirring the world today with a message of brotherhood, of self-respect, of fellowship, is greater than our age's greater than our life. His being greater than the conception any age has had of Him. The era which is coming in with the new century all over the world is essentially a time of trusting more and more to the individual conscience, less and less to creed and church and authoritarianism. But now it is kindler than it ever was before. All our civilization is permeated with institutions that show we are beginners, weakers, weaker brothers' weaknesses, and their sore needs and grievances. Our children need the voice of Christ to be speaking. He has risen. He is crucified wherever there is cruelty, wherever there is injustice, wherever there is heart in heart against suffering. In a million hearts as the truth of Christ's message is born by education, we see that in this new age comes the new resurrection and the more abundant life. Whatever of good the age is the heart of Jesus will be. There is nothing else worth while. Newspapers Need Vision of Service, Says H. J. Allen Henry J. Allen, Wichita Beacon. There is one respect in which edit there are two may Compose There are two may Compare Newspapers that ten years ago did not seek to introduce moral scrutiny on political campaigning, vertising columns are now cleaning up and seeking to make their advertising, their news and their editorial content in an effort at clean journalism. broader vision of service than others. Some edeem a caesar that a newspaper has a glorious opportunity for doing good, but that it is a good thing to own for the purpose of making people having something to do in life. week to some hundreds and he must also visit them in sickness and in death and mingle with their social life. When he preaches, he preaches what makes him special. There is no problem in his mind as to what his orthodox duty really is. He has fewer temptations than the editor has to preach at a class, or build a house for a child. His call is to serve Christ. His marchers are rather clear. The editor had to begin without an program. His business was not even dignified as a profession. The newspaper began in political chaos, tempests were many, and until fifty years ago there was no unity in our efforts. The newspaper preaches daily to many thousands of people every shading of creed and belief. The preacher Now we are growing up. Colleges are helping us. Churches are giving us support. Universities have higher prices of effort and most publishers have adopted a program of use for them. The colleges have begun to introduce the appropriate tentative type of journal that lives for service, that bravely publishes its contents and supplicates not from the business office. A clean press and a clean pupil are travelling in the same direction, but the field of the press is naturally much the larger. Its obligation to serve high civilization is just as sacred as it is important. When all editors get this vision of service the pupil and the press and all good people will be working hand in hand in an effort to bring about the establishment of the Master's pro- DUNKIRK A New Barker Warranted Linen PECKHAM'S Front 2% In. Back 1% In. ANNOUNCEMENTS There will be a meeting of the Church of Christ Union, Friday evening, May 8, at 8:00 o'clock in Myers Hall. A program will be held and an outdoor promenade and a short business meeting will be held. WANT ADS WANTED-For the summer by a member of the P. S. B. and wife, a residential house in Philadelphia; a married woman; Reference-Harry Lauder, city. Inquire Kansan office. LOST—On Monday on Ohio or 9th street, a black Spanish lace scarf. Finder return to Westminster Hall, or phone 804. 148-3 Party who took flasher apparatus from Gym., Tuesday is known. Please return to Kansan office.— Adv. 148-3 The New Club, at 1016 Ohio, home cooking. Cooks, buk, manager. Adv- FOR RENT - House at 408 W. Lee street beginning in August. Proposed 12th floor. Called Carphone Misa Elizabeth Tennessee, Bell 1913. 1247 Tennessee. 150-3* A. G. ALRICH Thesis Binding Engraved Cards 744 Mass. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. STANDISH 46 Swimming Caps Swimming Suits Water Wings JUST RECEIVED A NEW SHIPMENT CARROLL'S 709 Mass. Phones 608 "THIS IS SWIMMIN' TIME" N OLUS the outside shirt and underdrawers are one garment. This means that the skirt don't work out of the trousers, that there are no shirt ties to bunch in seat, that the dresses "stay put," or maybe nothing of the countenance of any of them. You can wear a dress on the waist, down the waist, down-closed crutch, closed back. See illustration. For golf, tennis and field wear, we recommend the special attached neck OLUS with regular or short sleeves. Extra sizes for very tall or stout men. All shirt fabrics, in smart designs, including alls ~ $1.50 to $10.00. CLUS anipsea PIAAMAS for housing, seating and commercial use. A new flat with 2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom and a garden. Bookings are to string or tighten or come loose. $1.50 to $6.50. Aask your deal for CUSS. Birmingham, MI. PHILLIPS-JONES COMPANY, Makers Dept. N 1199 Broadway, N. V OLUS— The largest stock in the city JOHNSON & CARL Illustrated Lecture Arrangements have been made for a lecture by Mr. George Hough Perry, of San Francisco, on the PANAMA-PACIFIC EXPOSITION with colored and moving pictures of SAN FRANCISCO and the PACIFIC COAST. This illustrated lecture was prepared at a cost of $20,000,and, as in the case of all other lectures of the Kansas Newspaper Week, will be FREE Wednesday Evening Fraser,8 o'clock This lecture will be preceded by a concert by the University Orchestra, under the direction of Dean C. S. Skilton.