UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSIY DAILY KANSAN The official student paper of the University Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF HERRBERT FLIE - - - - Editor-in-Chief GLENSON ALLYNVE - - - Associate Editor JONN C. MADDEN - - - Managing Editor LARSON LAUDIN - - - High School Editor High School Editor BUSINESS STAFF EAST BAY LORING...Circulation Manager JOHN BISHOP...Advertising REPORTIAL STAFF RANDOLPH KENNEDY R. D. PLEASANT Entered as second-blass mail matter lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Phone, Bolt K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students farther than merely printing the news by standing up for their opinions and giving no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be positive; to be more serious problems to usher heads; to be more aware of our ability the students of the University. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1913 Editorial assistants for today's paper, Frank O'Sullivan, Jack Greenies. News Editor, John Gielsen; assistants, Frank O'Sullivan, John Henry. Exchange editor, John M. Henry. Exchange editor, John M. Henry, Society reporter, Lucile Hildinger Agreeable advice is seldom useful advice —MASSILON. LOYALTY AND SELF-CONTROL TOURY The trip to Missouri is going to test something besides the loyalty of Kansas students to their team. It is going to test their manliness and self-control. We may as well speak frankly about this matter, because it comes up every time a team accompanied by a number of students, large or small, leaves the University for an outside town. The excitement of the trip and the holiday tend to make students "turn loose" or "throw the lid off". "We're in a strange town where no one knows us; let's have a time," is the feeling. Such will the Kansas roots face in going to Columbia Saturday, and it is going to take the courage of manly convictions to come back without some of us having broken over the bounds of propriety. Let's go to Missouri with self-control as well as loyalty. Yes, there are a few who will not behave; there always are. But their example should not encourage others to do the same; rather, it should serve as an incentive for the rest to act like University students twenty-one years old, able to vote and able to think. How shiftless that Missouri game will be, anyway, if Coach Frank doesn't use his famous system. K. U. SPIRIT AT COLUMBIA K. U. SPIRIT AT COLUMBIA Real Kansas spirit won the Missouri game last year. It is going to take that same spirit of confidence and strength to win it again this year, for the team and the Minnesota Shift are useless unless they have that real Kansas support back of them. Get out and root. You don't need to blush when you rise and take your hat off to your Alma Mater. You don't need to be quiet in the Rock Chalk, for fear some one will think your poor, little, croaked voice is out of harmony. If you're that kind of a rooter, get out. Kansas doesn't want you. Stand back of the team. Don't knock, because a few Nebraska men outplayed themselves and defeated us. And if there's any possible way for you to go to Columbia, go. A little sacrilege shows real spirit, and real spirit will win that game. The University of Missouri has now installed a chair of butchering, a story says. Better get shaved before you go. GOES ON FOREVER Not all of the University professors are optimists. Dean Olin Templin declares that there will be as many flunks for the same period of time, twenty years from now as there have been this semester. Or to express it in the words of a former K. U. post: As long as the grass keeps growing. ing. And as long as the rivers run The freshman will keep on flunking As freshmen have ever done. But the "Winners" will stay in the fight Till the battle of life is won. It is announced that there will be no training trip for the football men. Chances are that anybody who takes the steam cars to Columbia will think he has had "training" enough USE THAT SEAT The empty seats which wawn before the speaker who has been secured as an attraction at either the Tuesday or Friday morning chapel cannot be strictly designated as the student section, for a certain portion of them are at some time or another occupied by members of the faculty. It is agreed that members of the faculty should set the example for the student body. When the instructors absent themselves from the chapel exercises how can the undergraduates be expected to be promptly on hand for the bi-weekly assembles. The Tuesday and Friday morning chapel should not be regarded as long-faced affairs. They are the best get-together occasions. University Council favors changing hour of beginning of afternoon classes from 1:30 to 1:00. Has it forgotten that it takes the ordinary boarding house "fodder" an hour or more to digest? WEARING YOUR HAT? A number of students appear to think that their hats should be kept continuously upon their heads whether they are on the inside or outside of the University buildings. Ignoring for the moment the great danger of premature baldness arising out of this practice, it may yet be safely said that the practice is bad. University training does not stop with the mastering of a few catalogue subjects and the gaining of a sheepskin, but should cloth the finished scholar with the niceties of social etiquette so as to help him to meet situations arising in his future career. Habits unconsciously acquired and permitted undue license, in time prove difficult to overcome. It is the little things that count in a man's life. Should not a gentleman doff his hat in the presence of a lady, his superior, instructor, or chief, and at the entrance of the home, place of business and college hall? Is it a safe bet that the student who wrote to the Daily Kansan knocking the smokers takes a little chew of pepsin gum on the side once in a while. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself LANGUAGE Philology? There are many hundreds, but certain groups of them are so like one another, that the members of each group may use that variety of names for a variety of one of them.3 What is meant by *a* "patiot?" "Patois" is a French term for the corrupt dialect spoken by the illiterate class, which is rarely seen in literature. 4 - What is meant by the Aperephpha? In 1535, by Miles Coverdale; but the New Testament and a part of the Old had been executed a few years previous to Tyndale. It is the science which treats of the nature and relations of languages. 2- How many languages are there in the world? It was a preparation of the system of the papyrus, an Egyptian plant, used as a writing instrument; the word paper is derived from the papyrus. The video is Video 2. The Apoerpyra is from a Greek word, which means that which is hidden, but latterly anything which is spurious, or false, or without authority; it is not applied to certain persons which have the power to the canon of Scripture as being of doubtful authenticity, or not worthy to be included in the Holy Bible. They are the most ancient and most authoritative Hindu books on religious subjects. They are in Sanscript. What is an Ode? Ode is from the Greek, and signifies literally a song, but it is applied specially to verses or songs which consist of personal addresses to persons or things. 5- When was the first English version of the whole Bible executed? 9- What is the libretto of an opera? It is the words of the piece which is one word in the libretto on; another word the libretto is Italian for "a little book." 10— I rhume ancien? the papyrus. 7—What are the Vedas? It has been known from the earliest times; but the systematic use of final rhymes, was first introduced in the Latin hymns of the Middle Ages. IF I SHOULD DIE TONIGHT I'll should die tonight. And you should come to my cold corpse and say, you should come in deepest grief And we all are waves of white orchid Weeping and heartstick over my lifeless clay ove. I might arise in my large white cavat And say "What's that?" If I should die tonight And you should come to my cold corpse Clasping my bier to show the grief你 feel me, I say, if I should die tonight And you should come to me and then, and there Just you knit 'bout paying me that ten, I might arise the white, But I'd drop dead again. BEN KING. RE-DISCOVERING SCOTT By Richard Le Gallienne The man who is his own worst enemy seldom buries the hatchet,—N. Y. Times. I suppose that to be caught red-handed with Scott is most incriminating of al. Dickens and Thackeray a man may still read and escape the suspicion of secondhand blood. But Scott's support in suppose that when we period when we felt like that. Probably it was what we might call our Meredith period—generally our formative, fermenting period, when we were busy finding ourselves spiritually and mentally, impatiently shattering the world, which we had been reared, and feverishly rebuilding another, nearer to the heart's desire. Scott is not for such periods. He is for the boy, and the grown man. For the intermediate evolution and revolution adolescent, he seems wingless, filamentless, lacking in sidal fire. The romanticism which charmed the boy seems a plaything and the humanity which holds the man seems earth-born. ed. Here, says the young impatient, draws as if natural; and flies off somewhere in search of the thrill, the ache, the rapture of life. He reads the fashionable doctors of the soul, inevitably fascinated by sunny brilliant quacks of the mind, drawn as if natural, by flashing novelty in utterance, which he fondly takes for newly sounded profundities. All is so new, so amazing. Because he is living life for the first time, it never occurs, because that it is lived in almost precisely the same manner by that old fogy, who, in a world of radium and airplanes, not to speak of "eugenics," is discovered in the criminal enjoyment of Scott. But I must not sound too superior. It is comparatively only the other day that I re-discovered Scott for myself. I had come to the end of Dumas for the third or fourth time, and, happening to take themselves, I had asked myself—"Is it possible to read Scott nowadays?" I determined to try, and, for the good fortune of my experiment, I lighted on the "Fortunes of Niegel." It was, indeed, a fortunate movement. What a vivid, real world I found myself in! What character, what movement, what effect? I tried "Quentin Durward," then "Rob Roy." We are supposed to have improved on the historical novel since Scott's day. In certain minor matters of artistry, doubtless, we have. Yet, I should like to know what we have to match those three full-blooded, high-mettled, wise-hearted people, myself, Mr Maurie Hewlett's willing slave. But, after all, whatever class of book we are dealing with, it is the man behind the book that counts, that finally decides its relative caller.-Harper's Weekly. RISIBLE REMARKS FOR THE SOMBRE STUDENT Poetry, it is declared, is about the worst-paid form of writing. That may be true regarded from a standpoint of dollars and cents, but the man who can get a poem out of his system should feel that he is pretty well paid for his efforts—Toledo Blade. Why She Sang Ministerial Friend (on a visit)—wonder what makes your mamma so happy today? She is singing all over the house. Little Mary; I dess she's thought of something to do. "Happy Birthday," Happer's Magazine. "Jest as he am, Pahson," said the muscuar, colored scrub-lady, "j Jest as he am. Ef he gits any betah Abll know de good Lawd's a-gwine that “Susannah,” said the preacher, when it came her turn to answer the questions. “does you take dis man to be yawning; wedded husband, for better marriage.” "All right dear, remind me of it again; this is only Tuesday. I am here on Post." "Papa, I want an ice-cream sun-nd Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx YOU know what's coming: the annual feast-day is almost here; the bird is prepared to do his part. You can probably manage it successfully, but we suggest that you leave the "dressing" to us. We'll dress you in our special Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes; you'll be dressed right, too. If you need full dress, or Tuxedo, or frock suit, we'll see that you have the right thing. If you prefer to be in "everyday" attire, or if you want a good overcoat, here's the place to get what you need. Dress or Tuxedo suits, $35 and up. Sack suits, $18 and up. Overcoats, $18 and up. Six styles special $15 Serge Suits, silk lined. PECKHAM'S This store is the home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes, Emery Shirts Regal Shoes BOWERSOCK THEATRE Monday and Tuesday Nights, Nov. 24-25 The GENUINE EDISON TALKING PICTURES THOMAS A. EDISON "Their Majesties expressed great delight."—London Daily Chronicle Prices Parquet, 50c 1st 3 rows Balcony, 50c Next rows balcony, 35c All 2nd Balcony, 25c SEATS ON SALE AT WOODWARD & CO. One performance nightly beginning 8:15 p. m. Presented on the Edison Kinetophone by Edison Kinetophone Company Exhibited July 10, 1913 before the King and Queen of England Notice Students O. P. Leonard's Pantatorium is on the job again this year. Best of work, quick service, and lowest prices. If agent misses you call Bell 501, Home 180 We Give Club Rates 841 Mass. St. Upstairs. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium W. Warner Bath Place 500 1120 Grand Ave. Kansas City, Mo. Send for our Catalogue. for everybody is the "Spalding Policy." We guarantee eachbuyer of an article bearing the Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. SPALDING & BROS A "Square Deal" Mister Dooley Says: "Whiniver annybody offers to give ye somethin' fr nawthin' or somethin' fr less thin it's worth, or more fr somethin' thin it's worth, don't take any chances-yell fr a policeman." Remember this when arranging for your pantatorium work. Our prices are not the cheapest but our work will please you. Punch ticket, 10 pieces, $1.50. Orders taken for International clothes. CLARK LEANS LOTHES Phone Your Order 730 Mass. St. Pies at the lunch room in Fraser. -Adv. 50-3 Coffee at the lunch rom in Fraser. -Adv. 50-3 Senior laws—I have a number of Willistons账务 on Bankruptcy to be used next quarter. J. D. R. Miler, 1041 Vt., Phone 2511 B-.