A UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Press, Pulpit and Public School. Are Co-Workers Imri Zumwalt, Bonner Springs Chiaftain There are those who hold that ceramic ceilings are sacred. There are others who don't. sacred callings. To my mind all callings are sa- cured. fill the other's place. The two work intogether in a righteous cause shall shill. The three factors that are contributing most to the progress of the press and the press and the public school. The aim of both press and pulpit is to be teachers of the truth. The message of the press is that Pulpit and press each has its peculiar field. Neither can hope to Today in almost every community they work together for civic improvements, at every sort, for cleaner spaces, for schools and for a just division of the fruits of toil, for purity and honesty in places high and low. Doubless each fails as well. There is no doubt that other. There is no doubt that the press often could give more space to the utterances of the pulpit and more active support to its demand on 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 work against the church. But everywhere the two are drawing closer together in their work of service to the world. Each needs she other. With the press looking to the pulpit for inspiration and ideals, even as Joshua looked to the prophet in the press as a powerful fighting the good fight for the practical realization of those ideals even as Moses who stood to the addict who should prevail against them? Arther Capper Says the Press Is Doing Its Work Arthur Capper, I do not want as an apologe The decent new Capper Publications to appear before you for the newspaper paper needs no apoil ogist and the indecent newspaper Jesus More Surely Alive Today Than Ever Before William A. White, Emporia Gazette. The world’s gods at any time will be found to be made from the heart of an ancient dragon. tions — its hope, and fears and dreams and d aspirations. A god is a living god, only so long as the god lives in the mind, to the mind, to the intellectual and d physical side of man, the god is happens that in the civilized part of this world of ours today all the God we saw one — God! 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. Gradually the emphasis in religion has been taken off individual salvation and put upon social salivation. A thousand social texts now are revealing in Jesus the social activator—the heart-broken Jew who cried against the oppression of Rome andghan government of the Pharisees. or 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 Him. He has been 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, less and less kindlier than it ever was before. All our civilization is permeated with institutions that show we are beginning to make the response, to respond brotherly, to weakness, and their sore needs and grievances. Through all civilization the voice of the people is heard. He is risen. He is crucified wherever there is cruelty, wherever there is injustice, wherever there is a callous heart in human beings. In a million hearts as the truth of Christ's message is born by education and clean environment, we come the new resurrection and the more abundant life. Whatever of good the age is the burden of good life. 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 edible trees and preshrubs may be compared. They are conical, fleshy and prickly. broader vision of service than others. Some use it e.g., to announce that a newspaper has a gorious opportunity for do business and recognize that it is a good thing to own for the purpose of make things better having something to do in life. week to some hundreds and he mus also visit them in sickness and in death and mingle with their social life. When he prescribes, he preaches what wants 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, moreover, that to achieve a clear cell is to serve Christ. His marching orders are rather clear. The newspaper preaches daily to representatives of every shading of creed and belief. The newspaper preaches twice a The editor had to begin without any program. His business was not even dignified as a profession. The news paper began in political chaos, tempations were many, and until fifty-one there was no unity in our efforts. Now we are growing up. Colleges are helping us. Churches are giving us kind words. We are admitted to a higher plane of effort and most publishers have adopted a program of usefulness. The people have begun to recognize and appreciate that lives for service, that bravely publishes its viewpoint from the editorial rooms and not from the business office. Newspapers that ten years ago did not seek to introduce moral scrutiny on newspapers, but vertising columns are now cleaning up and seeking to make their advertising, their news and their editorial content in an effort at clean journalism. A clean press and a clean pulpit 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 the obligation of the pulpit. When all editors grant it 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 Front 27% In. Back 17% In. A New Barker Warranted Linen PECKHAM'S 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 and an outdoor program and a small business meeting will be held. WANT ADS WANTED - Member of the summer by a member of the P. S. B. and wife, a furnished house in return for care or a small rental. 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 FOR RENT—House at 408 W. Lee street beginning in August. Processor: David Caldwell. Call phone: Ms Elizabeth Bennett, Bell 1913. 1247 Tennessee. 150-3* The New Club, at 1016 Ohio, home cooks. Mrs. Buck, manager—Ady. A. G. ALRICH Thesis Binding Engraved Cards 744 Masa. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. Swimming Caps Swimming Suits Water Wings JUST RECEIVED A NEW SHIPMENT STANDISHY CARROLL'S 709 Mass. Phones 608 "THIS IS SWIMMIN' TIME" 21 OLUS the outside shirt and underdrawers are one garment. This means that the shirt can't work out of the trousers, that there are no shirts tails to bunch in seat, that the dresses "stay put," to say nothing of the comfort and economy of saving a permanent UUJ's cost on your way down—close shoes, cloth, socks. See illustration. For golf, tennis and field wear, we recommend the special attached cailor OLUS with regular or short sleeves. Extra sizes for very tall or stout men. All shirt fabrics, in smart designs, include silks - $1.50 to $10.00. OLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lounging and casual sleep. Available in two sizes (large, small). Good for light to tighten or come loose. $1.59 to $8.50. NOT available in a box. Ask your dealer for OLUS. Books on request. PHILLIPS-JONES COMPANY, Makers Dept. N. 1199 Broadway, N. Y. OLUS The largest stock in the city JOHNSON & CARL JAMES MELVIN LEE New York Formerly editor of *Dudge*, now at the head of the school of journalism of New York University. Speaks on advertising and editorial subjects with wit and wisdom. E. ST. ELMO LEWIS Detroit Advertising manager Burroughs Adding Machine Co., a director of the Associated Advertising Clubs of America, and a leader in the development of modern advertising. over their readers? How do good will, prestige, and financial prosperity follow the efforts of the editor who is skillful in the selection and writing of news matter? These and other similar questions form the basis of the News Course. FIRST SESSION System in News Gathering The Human Element in Local News Dragging in names. Recognizing the value of the commonplace. Human interest stories on the way to the office. Glimpets of town's history and personages. Developing the town "characters," and using them on the staff. Making the paper good on dull days with matter not strictly news. RALPH TENNAL Kansas City Efficiency methods. Trips with the country reporter. Classifying new sources. The country correspondent, as news-gatherer and business gettie FRANK LEROY BLANCHARD, New York THIRD SESSION MR. TENNAL Community Service PRINTING COST COURSE How can a paper afford to be a leader in civic improvements? Ways by which a paper can increase its power as an agent of social service. The editor as the unofficial town manager. That the editor may be able to return home and install a cost system in his printing plant, whether that plant is a one man-shop or a ten-man shop is the FRANK LeROY BLANCJARD New York Editor of the *Editor and Publisher*. A man whose view is as broad as the newspaper world and whose opinions are of interest to editors everywhere, big and little. WILBUR D. NESBIT Chicago Formly a humorist, poet, and writer of newspaper verse, and now an advertising man connected with a national advertising agency. purpose of this course. Mr. Sheasgreen is not the sort of cost expert who rushes through the explanation of a lot of complicated charts and leaves his hearers in a maze of doubts. Simplicity, thoroughness, adaptability to everyday needs are the tools which he employs. Besides the lecture hours on each of the conference days, there are two hours each day set aside for practice in the actual operation of cost finding. Blanks and forms will be furnished by the Department of Journalism to enable any editor to start the cost system in his own office. The Department stands ready to assist through correspondence or by personal visits if necessary. Mr. Sheasgreen will have the assistance of Mr. Charles Browne, editor of the Horton Headlight-Commercial, who became an active exponent of cost systems after he had proved their value by years of experience in his own plant. FIRST SESSION Principles Underlying All Cost Systems ED. E. SHEASGREEN, Chicago Cost a great law of nature. Made up of her laws of Balance, Decomposition, Increase, Distribution and Co-operation. How these laws have not been properly applied to business—to the using of labor and capital. Invented Land, Labor and Capital the true forces of production. Invested capital divided into four general groups—Human machines, Land and Buildings, Tools and Machinery Equipments and Commercial Investments. The First and Second Steps SECOND SESSION MR. SHEASGREEN Two great commodities only in any product. Stock and Labor. Labor