THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1920 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE THREE Famous Musician to Dedicate Organ at Recital April 6 Former Antwerp Organist Charles M. Courboin, Chosen for Program The Austin organ recently installed in Fraser chapel will be dedicated by Charles M. Courbain, Belgian-American organist who will come to Lawrence for an evening recital Tuesday, April 6. Courinho is considered by many the world's greatest organist, according to D. M. Saurthout, of the School of Fine Arts. He was formerly organist of the Antwerp cathedral; he is a chevalier of the Order of the Crown of Belgium, and at present is guest of the great Wannaker concert organ. Courbon a Native of Antwerp Courboin will make a trip west from New York City to act as solist for the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra and has been induced to come to Lawry's studio in New Austin organ in Franche channel. Courbain is a native of Antwerp. When he was 12 years old he was made organist of Notre Dame College at Antwerp and later achieved high academic standing in the coronary under Mailly, Gavaert and Block. He won the international organ prize over eight contestants and was made organist of the Antwerp University. Courbain came to America in 1904, and after occupying a number of important posts became municipal organist of Springfield, Mass., in 1917, and served as head of the world's largest organ situated in the grand court at Wanamaker's Philadelphia, where during the first summer alone he gave 27 recitals, playing 275 different compositions from around 130,000 persons. Seating Capacity Limited Seating Capacity Limited In 1920 Courdon was decorated by the Belgian ambassador with the Order of the Crown of Belgium in recognition of his distinguished services. He is also honoured with a "With Prenger channel limited, to a few over 500 seats, tickets for the event will be at a premium," said Dean Swarthout. Only enough ticket will be sold to fill the chapel and the building. The seat is equally good. Seats will be on sale at an early date for $1,00. Financial Advertiser Here Craddick Talks to Journalists About Business "Business is sensitive. It goes where it is invited and stays where it is well treated," said Harry B. Craddick of Minneapolis, min. in quoting Mr. Craddick's experience in a speech on financial advertising at the Journalism building. Mr. Craddick who is president of a Minnesota financial advertising agency came to K- "U, as a guest of Alpha Delta Fraternity, honorary advertising fraternity. What applies to the psychology of business and sales applies to the working of advertising. Mr. Crudnick said this is a reason why advertising as well as in business. "To be able to advertise for a bank one must understand the banking process," said Mr. Cradwick. These facts are continually changing and if one's knowledge is inadequate bank confidence and loyalty can easily be lost, he said. The various ways of financial an- versing, Mr. Craddick said, are through publications, direct mail, television advertisements. After the speech a dinner was given at 7:00 o'clock at the Colonial tea room by the Alpha Delta Sigma in honor of Mr. Craddick. Prof. L. N. Brown, professor of English and members and Dr. A.J. Graves, instrue- tor in the department of journalism, and J. G. Blocker, instructor in the department of economics, who is maturely intertained in the fac- ulty, were present. Education Sorority Holds Pledge Services for 1 Pi Lambda Theta, national education society, hold bledge services last night for 17 women at Henley house at 7 o'clock. The new pledges are: Mabel Hertz, c27, Nurture Marbled Bard, c27, Eliza Bolinger, c28, Virginia Davis, c29, Joanna Seller, c30, T江a Wila maker, c. 27*, Mage Wardell, c. 29*, Resine Heinrich, c. 26*, Pauline Smith, c. 27*, Eloise Smith, c. 27*, Margaret Paint, c. 26*, Lydia Back, c. 27*, Helen Roes, c. 27*, Marianne Schuster, Galatina, c. 29*, Nellie Suhrke, c. 27*, and Inez Johnson, gr. Initiation of new pledges is planed for March 15. LOST-Green Schaffer fountain pen between Brick's and Westminster hall, Call 804. M7 PRICED for quick rent to boys. Large south-west room, seven windows, in strictly modern house, at 941 Alfred White, #83 for one. Phone 252-White. WANT ADS LOST Chi Omega pin at Varsity Feb 27. Call 261. MS MARCELLING 50c, shampooing 50c Address 1015 Ky. Phone 2775. J1 THESES, manuscripts, notebook typed by experienced stenographer Stationery embossed Free See Rowlands Add Call Miss Ritchie, 978, 6:00 to 8:00 p. m. Mo FOR RENT good single room for girl. Call 1131 Red, Address 1308 Ky. FOUND—Gray topeau, room 213 Fraser shortly after Christmas. Owner may have name by calling at business office and paying for TF Professional Cards MARCEL 75e RVEVENDAY—AB kinds of beauty work done, Powder Box Beauty Shipping, Phone 2154, 19255.Mass. B. HUTCHINGSON, M. (I)—Prairie Limited to a diseases of the eye, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Room 2 and 3. House Holiday, Building, 153s. 171s. 174s. Macdonald Hospital EYES EXAMINED. Classes made. Lawrence Optical Co., 1625 Mass. Another Big Fresh Reese, Druggist 929 Mass. Shipment of Those Delicious Chocolates Just in 39c the pound Martha Washington Candy 70 cts. a pound A fresh shipment every week University Book Store Harl M. Bronson, Prop. 803 Massachusetts ...ROYAL BROWN Famous for his Short Stories in COSMOPOLITAN Tells How to Write for the Magazines RAY LONG, Editor of Cosmopolitan, has published an unusually interesting and helpful anthology of short stories entitled "My Story That I Like Best." At his suggestion, six great fiction masters selected their best stories for this volume and told how they came to write them. In his foreword to this book Ray Long tells what constitutes successful writing. The two books are not for sale; they can not be bought in the stores or found in public libraries, but each may be obtained with a separate year's subscription to Cosmopolitan, or both may be had with a 2-year subscription. The success of "My Story that I Like Best" led Mr. Long to issue this year another book entitled "As I Look at Life." To this volume 14 Cosmopolitan authors have contributed intimate first-person stories of deep emotional experiences. In his introduction Mr. Long tells—informingly for the student—the story of his own career as writer and editor. ROYAL BROWN'S ADVICE CONCERNING these remarkable books Royal Brown writes to Royal Long. "Together they give me a new answer to those who are forever asking how we set about writing for the magazines. And I am asking you." "It is perhaps only natural that the foreword to 'AS I LOOK at MICHAEL' was that equally true about the foreword of 'MY STORY THAT' is MICHAEL." *Take two separate subscriptions to the Cosmopolitan. With one put in a request for 'MY STORY THAT I LIKE BEEST and with the other a request for 'AS I LOOK AT LIFE.' This will cost you six dollars. You would pay at least five dollars for any "For six dollars, you will get the two years of Cosmopolitan, which you cannot read without profit. You will get more money than which you can not get in any other way. run-of-the-mill criticism on any single short story and know no more about what writing as a whole calls for than when you started. "They will give you a better start for the philosophy that should be yours as a writer than anything I have ever come across in print—and I read widely." You may obtain both of these books at a price less than the one Royal Brown suggests $4.50 brings you a 2-year subscription to Cosmopolitan, a $3.90 saving on the single copy price—and you get— Royal Brown in his study at Humerock, Mass. 6 Both Books Mr. Long's Gift To You The Boston Harbor Says of "As I Look at Life": The "volume makes lively reading and is a not inconsiderable contribution to the biography of contemporary author." The amazing thing about it is that *As I Look at Life* is that it is not for sale. COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE 119 West 40th Street, New York Dept. D. - I consider 14-N/Send my Communication Course for 16 months. I am to receive cost without the two volume: "A Look at Life," and "My Story" - I consider 15-N/Send my Communication Course for 1 year, with Gb Copy of "A Look at Life," and "My Story that I Like Best." **Adobe** Carmagnol, small copy page (2) vat issued multilayer paper $15.00 print You've never seen checks like these by SOCIETY BRAND They're a new idea. Checks of unusual shapes in every possible blend of rich colorings—browns with tans, grays with browns, blues with grays. Stripes of single thread running through for contrast. And all of them distinctive! They're to be had only in Society Brand—nowhere else. $50 Decorate yourself with the degree of P.A. THAT means "Pipa Amoroso" in the Latin, or "pipe-lover" in plain campus English. P. A. has certainly endeared a pipe to more men than any other letters in the smoke-alphabet. Because Prince Albert lets a fellow smoke all he wants to—and makes him want to! Cool as the stare of a marble Venus. Sweet as the approach of vacation. Fragrant as spring blossoms. Think up your own similes, Fellows. You will when you pick P. A. and a jimmy-pipe for permanent roommates. Prince Albert is great tobacco, and that's not blah. Get yourself a tidy tin of Prince Albert today. Fill the bowl of that old jimmy-pipe to the brim and borrow a match. Then you're set for some great smoke-sessions, as sure as you're a foot high. PRINGE ALBERT —no other tobacco is like it! B. A. is told everyone in the house to wear black pants, brown hats, and brown shoes. In addition, they wear sponge-mounted t-shirts with blue and white bibs and pierced earrings by bicep © 1924, R. J. Reynolds Tahawai Company, Whitman Salem, N. C.