PAGE FOUR MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1925 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Varsity Defeats Yannigan Squads in Shut-Out Game Pitching Staff Is Strong Four Pitchers Used in First Game of Season In its first game of the season the University baseball squad played a 12-inning game against two teams of Yunnanism Saturday morning on the field at Chengshan Stadium, defending them by a score of 8-0. The variety pitcher pitched airtight ball, and Captain David Wright good form for early season play. The early showing of some of the new men is very encouraging, according to "Potty," and a winning combination should be developed this spring. The first group, Wright, Kennedy, Childs and Swenson showed up well. Each man pitched the three innings and the yankees were held scoreless during the entire twelve innings. Curved ball pitcher John Patterson, and the pitchers are taking it easy. Box Score: Variance (8), AB H Vanity (8), 7 0 Carrigan 2b, 6 1 Swenson p-1b, 6 1 Kennedy p-ef, 6 1 Anderson H, 5 3 Childs p-rf, 3 2 Smith p-rf, 3 2 Hippe 2b, 6 2 Wright p-rf, 4 1 Hill 2b, 1 1 Total— 45 12 Yamagani (0) AB H Ogden 2b. 3 1 Hewitt f. 3 0 Bishop ff. 3 0 Hillman 1b. 2 0 Grenntam ss. 1 0 Oggen rf. 2 0 Allen c. 2 0 Phimney p. 1 0 Top p. 1 0 Wollman 2b. 3 1 Wolf cf. 3 1 Canwell lf. 3 0 Caddis ss. 2 0 Vogt ss. 1 0 Stafford p. 1 0 Lemberg p. 1 0 Totals— 34 3 State Colleges to Meet (United Press) Annual Declamation Contest to Be Held April 28 Pursano, Kam, March 9—The annual declaration contest of the Kansas Junior College conferences will be held at Coffeville April 28, with representatives from each of the seven schools in the conference expected to be present to participate. Prof. Reese Woods, chair of the school here and president of the Junior College association, has announced. Regulations for the two contests have been drawn up by the officials of the league and have been decided upon. The oration context is for an original oration, written by the student delivering it. The subject is to be, and must consist of, not to exceed 1,000 words. One expert judge is to grade upon the delivery of the con- Three judges will go over each manuscript, separately and their average percentage will determine the manuscript rating of the paper. Then the delivery judge will give his percentage grade and the two waiters a test score. The contestant receiving the highest percentage will receive first place. In the declaration context each member must not exceed 12 minutes. One per cent will deducted for each infraction thereof, over that time. All railroad expenses will be polled for the contestants and apportioned to the schools. Those in the league include Ft. Scott, Arkansas City Harden City, Parsons, Iola, Coffeyville and Kansas City. Extend Manuscript Deadline The deadline for submitting the water carnival manuscripts has been extended until March 23 instead of March 12 as was first announced, "Due to the girls being busy with their final examinations extended to extend the time," said Miss Margaret Barto, instructor in the department of physical education. W. A. A. offers a price of $5 for the best manuscript submitted for the women's annual water carnival to be held sometime in April. The 45-minute sketch may include dancing on the river and singing in the water. They are to be left at Miss Harte's office where the best will be chosen after March 25. Sport Notes The wrestling squad showed up well against Missouri Saturday night, winning seven of the eight matches. Stoklas lost the decision in the 108 pound class because of his inexperience. --the knowledge once they have it. Entrance to the fifth floor is gained by climbing up and down stairs, or climbing back to the first floor. A staircase to a room next the roof. The rough concrete floor of this room is covered with stacks of old magazine files, the more recent files being moved down in the stacks or cases. Tusten Ackerman plays his last game for Kansas tonight in Robinson gymnastium. In three years of competition against Missouri, Ackerman has never tasted defeat from the Tigers. Burker, Kansas Angie, forward, is leading the Valley scouts with a total of 164 points. Captain Ackerman is second with 157. This will have to make eight points against Pike. Pike tonight to lead the Valley. The Hillarys came out of their slump last week and cooked the Tigers from Columbia, 47 to 21. If the St. Joseph quintet can continue this year far in the national tournament which started today in Kansas City, Mo. K. U. Wrestlers Win Over Missouri Squad by Score of 23 to 3 Mat Team Expects to Leave Thursday to Enter Meet at Lincoln The Kansas wrestling team defeated the University of Missouri squad at Columbus Saturday night by a score of 23 to 2. Missouri fought gamely but the superior experience of Jagwahyers was too much for them. 1) According to Coach Patrick, Missouri has a much better team this year than those of preceding years. 2) After the first year, composed mostly of first year men. The Kansas team is now looking forward to the Valley meet at Lincoln this week and the squall will leave Thursday evening for that place to compete in the team; and individual championships of the Valley. ) The bouts are as follows: 108- pound class, Goodwin of Missouri won a decision over Stoklas of Kansas, and the 157- pound class was won a fall from Brown, Missouri, with a deep Nelson and a body lock. 115- pound weight, Skinner, Kansas, won a full over Tiffin, of Missouri, with a depth of 122 feet. This fall required an extra period. in the 145- pound class, Rielel of Kansas, won a decision over Schettler, of Missouri; 148- pound class, Stoklas of Missouri; 175- pound class, Boyel of Missouri; 175- pound class, Hill, Kansas, won fall over Walk, Missouri, with a body scissors and a bar arm heavyweight, Smith, Missouri, with an over Gilbon in an extra period. Few Students Realize Library Has Fifth Floor Watson Library is a fifth floor although few students realize this fact or will ever have cause to use the knowledge once they have it. These old files go back more than twenty years, and must be kept so that persons asking, for instance, for the geographic magazines of October 1975 can access them. They are not often used, according to E. N. Manchester, director of libraries, but students and faculty members in preparing reports or articles sometimes search through many of these files to find what they need. "Slowly, but surely, the library is being literally flooded by the masses of magazines that are pouring into Mr. Manchester. Those magazines have some monthly and some even offer, are steadily increasing in the number of each type and in order to fill the ordinary wants of the varied departments of the University, the Iliad is designed to as many of them as are helpful. The binding of the magazines into volumes and placing them in the stacks downstairs has been unable to keep up with one monthly increase. Many of them have been made of 20 years, according to Mr. Mannehance. Hence the piles of unbound magazines, some of them yellow with age, on the fifth floor. All binding for the library must be done by the library manager, according to Kansas law, and it is almost always busy with other state printing of a more pressing nature. Equipment has been issued to 67 football candidates at Nebraska England to Coax Gold From Its Hiding Place London, March 9—The United States has the great bulk of the gold that is in actual circulation, but this is only a small part of the gold known to be in existence. And before Great Britain resumes the gold standard—that is, before she promises to produce a gold sovereign or半 sovereign for that much paper currency, and to definitely how much of the world's gold she can drag from its builing place. (United Press) Experts of the United States mint assert that since Christopher Columbus discovered America in 1492 the world has dug up gold to the value of $2,955,000,000 or $20,000,000,000. They say that they can trace an actual circulation in the various contiguous states of the United States in traction we learn that some $10,915,000,000 in pure gold has disappeared from view. No wonder everybody feels poor! About $5,000,000,00 of it has been converted into gold ornaments of various sorts. This leaves about $5,015,000,00 which has completely dismembered from view. Joseph F. McCoy of the United States Treasury that foreign born citizens of the United States have sequestered at least $225,000,000 in gold, while farmers, suspicious of their local banking resources, have concealed another $125,000,000 and the "mismisers" of the towns and cities "who live in squares and glottes" of the world where coffee pots or juice jar or hurried to the foot of trees, have concealed another $44,000,000. All this gold is far, far beyond the roach of Great Britain, struggling to get back to the old time gold standard. But of course there is India—and when it comes to boarding gold, the United States cannot hold a candle to India. India is where the gold is. From royt to rajah the Indians know gold, like it, get it, and keep it. South Africa, too, is known to have a great board of gold. A South Afri can bank recently estimated that the Kafiras alone had concealed $90,000,000 worth of gold. As for China—she exports gold into India at the price of $137 per ton—the boards show no sign of exhaustion. But it is one thing to know where the gold is and quite another to know how to coax it back into the world of affairs. This is one of the big roundmounds facing those countries—Great Britain is only one who wish to get back on the gold standard. K. U. Rifle Team Loses to Maryland in Match The E. O. T. C. rife team lost its match with the Western Maryland College with the scores of 2506 to 1903, a loss of 10 highest scores counted. The Kansas men who counted were Fairchild; 300; Hinton; 300; Harriss; 353; McDermott; 300; Sheets; 300; Kerr; 444; Fooring (C); 358, Heftoff; 300, total; 5053. Tries of the opposing team fired a perfect score from the prom post- There will be no matches this week but members of the teams will fire a score in a competitive test among themselves. "The members have improved and are now making better records than heretofore," Sergent E. M. Palmer said, "The scores this week probably will not count on the final standing." Send the Daily Kansan home Basketball Squads for Women's Class Teams Are Chosen Junior, Second Square Will Play Series of Tournament Games for Points The women's basketball squads have been chosen and the classes are represented as follows: Freshman first squad: Forwards; Rust Martin, Audrey Bradley, Career Lear, Dola Bever and Dorothy Eynia, Ghariele | Gorizque Dalton, Donn The sophomore first squad: Forwards; Ivan Davidson, Mary Elmore for Nilfirk, Margaret Curray, Ann Bettford, Gladys Hitt and Gladys Eckert. Second squad: Rice, Marie Joerna, Linnia Mase Winslow and Sahar Smith. Second squad: Forwards; Louise Bryant, Junita Kirkham and Frances Millard. Guards: Trellis Showminton, Kemp, Mary Smart and Betty Kellert. Junior first squad; Captain, Virginia Davis, Barbara Barbara, Funnel, Neiman, Betty Bolinger, Mary Bertusen, Hilda Kohler, Chaucheau, Inger, Florene Hutcnich, Helen Silverwood and Irina McCollough. Second league: Leah Ullampel, Janet McEhlinny, Lillian Bridgeman, Christie Angell, Frances Patterson, Alice Chappuls, Marjorie Roderick and Frances Smith. The second squad plays against games and those girls who do not play in half of these will not receive second squad points. The senior team chair is as follows: Captain, Marin Welof, Edith Mary Martin, Forne Crocks, Jeanette Strickler, Michele Messe, Lubalden, Mom Fouk, Lela Cunar, Mary Blair and Audrey Carr. Insist on WIEDEMANN'S ICE CREAM The Cream Supreme Brick Specials for this week- Fruit Ice and Chocolate Black Walnut and Vanilla H-Life and Strawberry Coconut and Orange Caramel Nut and Orange Pieceable Strawberry and Vanilla Cherry Almond and Chocolate Any other flavors you want in brick or bulk Sherbetts— Fruit Pineapple Lime Cherry Our customers are satisfied WIEDEMANN'S PHONE 182 They're Here! The New Thompson Bros. Oxfords for Spring! First Time in History of Kansas University INTERCOLLEGIATE BOXING MEET Kansas vs. Manhattan Robinson Gymnasium Wednesday Night 7:45 p. m. March 11 There were thrill, action and very good entertainment at the last Boxing Show, and it was very good. This one will be extra good—don't miss it. Everybody welcome. Come and help cheer our boys to victory. - OUR ENTRIES - 118-lb.—Jess Miller 125-lb.—Charles Einbinder 135-lb.—John Montgomery Heavyweight—Ken Spencer 145-lb.—Merrill Price 158-lb.—Leon Seelig 175-lb.—"Tiny" Smith Coach - - - - Tommy Dixon Referee - - Rev, Earl Blackman AMARKS The Sift Shop JEWELRY Two years older than K. U. Established 1865 Quality and Service 735 MARS, St. ALL VALLEY CONTEST Closes Tuesday Evening at 6 p.m. Get Your Guess In Now Somebody is going to wear a new Spring $45 Hart Schaffner & Marx Suit-Free BOWERSOCK "Janice Meredith" Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday Marion Davies Friday - Saturday "The Dixie Handicap With Lloyd Hughes and Claire Windsor VARSITY Tonight - Tomorrow BETTY COMPSON in "New Lives for Old" Wednesday - Thursday Anna Q. Nilsson and James Kirkwood in "The Top of the World" Friday - Saturday LOIS WILSON and NOAH BERRY in "CONTRABAND" ORPHEUM Friday-Saturday EVA NOVAK and HARRY MYERS in "Listen Lester" - APPROPRIATE SHORT REELS TO ALL FEATURES Coming Soon RICHARD BARTHELMESS in "New Toys" A30