P D V N THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XVII UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 31, 1919. GOVERNMENT ENJOINS COAL MINER'S STRIKE NUMBER 35. Assistant Attorney General Obtains Restraining Order for Union Heads forbidden to Call Walk-Out Injunction Will be Argued in U. S. District Court in Indianapolis Nov. 8. The court granted the restraining order on request of C. B. Ames, assistant attorney general, who asked it under the Lever Act and under the act granting the President authority to take the railroads and to act to prevent hindering of the production of necessities. Indianapolis, Oct. 31—Federal Judge A. B. Anderson today granted a temporary order restraining Frank J. Hayes, president, and other officials of the United Mine Workers from calling the membership of more than 350,000 coal miners to strike at midnight tonight. The court set 10 a. m. November 8 as a time for bearing arguments on a petition for a permanent injunction. Bursting into the room where the executive board was in session, Frank Ream, United States deputy marshal and secretary-treasurer, John L. Lewis, president, and William Green, secretary-treasurer. The strike will be held as scheduled, Lewis said after the order had been served on him. Kansas City, Oct. 31 - Coal creation in Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas and Oklahoma will halt at midnight when 30,000 miles lay down mines. Miners of the Southwest field are one hundred per cent organized. Washington, Oct. 31—That the United Mine Workers of America hold a new convention to discuss the coal strike and postpone their walk out set for midnight tonight has been proposed to John L. Lewis, head of the union labor force of Labor Wilson announced today. Wilson posed to call the miners into convention, at the same time having the operators meet and in the same city Efforts through the office of the Governor of Kansas to isolate the Kansas miners from the National Organization and bring about a local settlement have been futile. No hope that they will be able for such a settlement. No disorder is anticipated in this district in connection with the strike, Taylor said. Denver, Oct. 31.-Four thousand miners in 28 machines operating under unexpired union agreements were officially exempted today from the strike call. These mines produced 30 per cent of Colorado normal coal output. This leaves seven thousand coal miners affected by the walkout order. Four hundred state militant equipped with rifles, machine guns, and ammunition were mobilized today at Trinidad in the heart of the South Colorado coal fields. Governor Shoup also has arranged with Major General Wool for immediate dispatch of regular troops upon his call. Washington, Oct. 31. — President Wilson today issued an executive order re-establishing the maximum prices for fuel as they existed when the fuel administration ceased to function. The President acted under authority of the Food and Fuel control act. Officials said the order will reintroduce coal in many sections of the country. Washington, Oct. 31.-Secretary of Labor Wollon today was elected permanent chairman of the international labor conference by acclamation. Wilson thus becomes an official of the League of Nations of which the conference is a part despite the绝望 of the delegates, so far to ratify the peace treaty. Dr. R. H. Golden of Kensington and G. W. Harrington of Kansas City are visiting at the Sigma Nu house. Band Members meet at 1:30 o'clock Saturday at Fraser Hall in full form. S. V. Herb, director. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, was seated in the conference immediately after it assembled today. Gompers in the first American delegate to be seated. The Chamber of Commerce of the United States has been invited to send a delegate. Labor Secretary Wilson Is Conference Chairman University students who will go to the Union Pacific station in Bend, Oregon, a team and followers will be warned by a series of whistles from the Hill, thirty or forty minutes before the train pulls. Joe Schwarz, cheerleader The train, a special with from eleven to fifteen hundred students from K. S. A. C. will arrive about 10:30 o'clock. STARTERS IN GAME NAMED BY COACHES Pringle, Lonborg, Laslett and Bunn Will All Be In Opening Lineup Lonborg Will Start Game Substitutions May Be Made To Give Some Hardworking Senior His "K" The tentative lineup, of the men who will go out on the field for the kickoff for Kansas tomorrow was given out this morning by the coaches. It was not authoritative, as the coaches have been asked to give every place, and to give some person who has worked hard through the season his "K," numerous substitutions may be made. In the line practice this week, Church at tackle and Davidson have been playing whirlwind games, and in regulars in case of any accident. In the backfield, Reid may start instead of Bunn, or Pringle may decorate the sidelines while Reid and Kelsey take the battle against Tom's enemies. Lonborg will start the game, the knee injured last week being pronounced as in fine shape by Dr. Allen, director of athletics. Pringle, Lonborg, and Laslett were responsible for the defeat of the Agles at Manhattan in 1917, and Foster and Bunn were very largely instrumental last fall. All of these men are in the lineup against the farmers at the opening whistle, and hope to continue their past success. Kansas Aggies Howard Laslett, (c) l.e. Randle George Nettles, t.l. Guston Bronx Jupiter, Buston "Red" Hart, c. R. Wint Smith, r.g. Roda George Kampert, r.t. Gingery Arthur Lonborg, r.e. Bogue Alerter Wood, q.b. Bogue Plumley Wood, h.b. Hince Tom Pringle, r.h.b. Hince John Bunn, r.h.b. Placeck LOYALTY IS THEME AT WOMAN'S FORUM Prof. F. E. Johnson and Prof. F. E. Melvin Speak at Meeting The Woman's Forum Thursday afternoon recorded a unanimous vote in favor of the Loyalty Movement, Prof. F. Ellisa Johnson of the School of Engineering lectured for the major part of the program on "The Significance of Women in Education" which Prof. F. E. Melvin gave a brief outline of the Loyalty Movement. "The rapid advance and influence of electricity in the last century is responsible in a large degree for the growth of the nation. Professor Johnson. "By means of the million electric lights used in our cities and larger towns, the world is made so attractive and fairly like that the average man does not want to live there. He learns from him the first incandescent light, invented by Thomas A. Edison. Beginning with this time, by means of statistics and illustrations, he traced the increase in electricity down to its present extensive use on the well灯 streets of our cities. After this lecture, Professor F. E. Melvin presented the plan of the Loyalty Movement and discussed the future possibilities of the University. "The woman's place in this movement," he said, "is to cooperate and keep it safe by actions of the school alive. Put your University foreall any class or social organization." At the close of the lecture the women voted unanimously to back the Loyalty Movement in every possible way. Come in and ask for "party rates." The Aggies Hallowe'en Nightmare. RIEDA HEMPEL WINS BY VARIED SELECTONS Grand Opera and Popular Airs Bring Singer Commenda-tion for Concert By Charles S. Skilton By Charles S. Skilton The concert last night was a magnificent one, as the world's greatest singers, Miss Helen pal is richly endowed with a voice, temperament, and personality which combine to place her in the first rank of opera singers, while her success concert has been equally pronounced. -By Leach. Miss Hempel has the art of interesting her audience, because she is herself so thoroughly interested in her own work. Not the least attractive of her songs were those of her teacher, who the audience seemed to approach as any of the others in spite of the barrier of language, the art of the singer making the meaning so clear. Her bravura song with flute oboicata was a wonderful display of vocabularie, and the number selected in unfamiliar air, a grateful change from the "Mad Scare" of the same type. Miss Hempel expressed her appreciation of the Western hospitality and was well pleased by the appreciation shown by the University student who requested an appreciation for a college auditions. I was unable to tell what to expect. Miss Hempel responded graciously to encories with songs of a popular type, including such songs as "Home Sweet Home" which only the great-children to sing in public and with which she produced a deep emotional effect. Miss Hempel arrived Wednesday morning from Lawrence, Mass., and will go from here to Charlotteville, Virginia. Her concert in Lawrence is her only concert in the West on this tour. The pianist, Corrad Bos, performed his accompanies in excellent taste, and as soloist displayed remarkable lightness and grace of style, somewhat married by unnecessary features. The flutist, Mr. A. Rodeman, also gave pleasure with well-rendered selections. The audience's appreciation was shown by the prolonged and repeated applause. The concert last evening was Miss Hempel's second concert before a Kanaa audience. She then made her first private tour, as she joined with the Metropolitan Opera Company for the last seven years. This concert was the first of the University Concert Course. The second concert will be given by the Stringed Quartet, December 11. because I have never appeared before a University before," said Miss Hempel, "but they are as interesting as any other audiences." WILL SHOW AGGIES HILL SPORTSMANSHIP Sachems, Owls, "K" Men and Council Resolve Against Any Unfairness Students of K. U, will do everything in their power to welcome the Aggies when the Wildcat special unloads 1500 football enthusiasts from Manhattan at the Union Pacific station Saturday morning, according to a resolution meeting of the Suechs, Owls, "K"ers and Conference Thursday afternoon. "We want to give the Agriess a real welcome and show them that Lawrence is glad to have them for the annual meeting," she said, president of the Student Council. "We're out to win, but we're going to win fair and square on McCook Field," he said. "it's said Cheerleader Joe Schwarz. "As many men as possible should be at the Union Pacific station to greet us." The special arrives Saturday morning." Schwartz will have charge of the big parade of Aggie supporters and K. U. Students and will be assisted in welcoming the visitors and in organizing the parade by the members of four student organizations. "The parade and the welcome of the Angios will be conducted in an outdoor arena," she says, ourselves to the visitors as real sports," said Burt Cochran, assistant cheerleader. "We will make any necessary demonstrations on McCook Field." The engineers have planned to be at the station in a body to accord the Argles a riding welcome, according to Mr. Hulme, the School of Engineering, and they will form a nucleus for Jayhawk supporters in the parade. Several blasts of the whistle at the plant will wake up the students. Wildcat special is nearing Lawrence. The Jayhawker Office in the southeast room of Journalism Building will be open from 8:30 until 4:30 o'clock Monday and from 10:30 until 4:30 o'clock Tuesday. Our work will be handled at the office, by voting. Edgar L. Hollis, Bls., Mgr. PHI BETA KAPPA SELECT TWO SENIORS Nellie McBratney, c'20, and Elsie Patterson, c'20 Given Honor Two new members, Nellie McBrattr, c'20, and Elise Patterson, c'20 were elected to the Ph Beta Kappa fraternity. A local fraternity thursday night. "The fall election to membership is normally small and the spring election is the big election," said Prof. John Ise, local secretary of the fraternity, and the membership this year is even smaller. The change was made in the system of grading. The A is higher than a I. Under the new system it is much harder to get an A than it was to get I under the old system and the par-ter institution getting A is less than half of those that got I's under the former system. Another cause of the selection to so few was the influence of the S. A. T. C. in preventing good scholastic work. In the spring election the first term grades of last year will not be counted. "There was some talk of Phi Beta Kappa holding regular meetings like those of other fraternities," Professor Ise remarked, "but this was deemed inexperient because of the extra large influx of students this year." Freshman From China To Talk at C. E. Meeting Clare Newton, a freshman in the School of Medicine, will lead the Christian Endeave, meeting at the Presbyterian Church Sunday evening, Health of China." She will be assisted by Bessie Gillis and Jessie Martindale. The meeting begins on Friday at 9:30 o'clock. There will be special music. As soon as Miss Newton finished her medical course in this country she intends to go to India as a medical missionary. She was born in Hainan, China. She is the daughter of the Rev. Clarence H. Newton who has been in the foreign field at Hainan, China, twenty-five years. In 1914 America to finish her education, and then the University at Oxford, Ohio. This is her first year at the University of Kannas. Mrs. Lee Hauhughe, of Concordia is visiting her uncle, Dean Green. Mrs. Hauhughe is a member of Pi Beta Phi. DOC YAK'S MEDICINE SHOW PRESCRIBES GRIDIRON TONIC Painted Spielers and Black Face Quartet Stir up Enthusiasm at Rally of 2,000 to Help Push Ball Across Aggie Goal Line OLD* | WARRIORS INJECT| PEP SPIRIT Doc Yak's famous pep producing medicine show arrived in front of Fraser Hall promptly at noon as advertised where two thousand students and a sprinkling of faculty members were waiting expectantly. Doc Yak, who was none other than J. R. Holmes, was ably assisted by Professor Whoe, impersonated by Cliff Carl. The other member of the medicine show, which was composed of the Booster's club from Lawrence, was Bob Rowlands. AGGIE ROOTERS LOOM BIG TO K. U. SPORTS Fight but Forbear, Says Doctor Allen in Declaration for Thorough Sportsmanship Throughout the Whole University as Well as in the Team A black-face quartet, composed of Mark Adams, Clarence Bernard, Paul K. Smith and George Gard, opened the program. After introducing the famous personages, Doc Yak set to work immediately to distribute his effective pep producing pellets, with instructions to the K. U. rooters to take one every day during the football season. Farmers Boast Fifteen Huncree Will Yell at Thundering Thousand The thunderding thousand will have competition for the first time this year when the Farmer's football team attempts to stop the hopes of a home game against 110 reservations have already been made by the Purple followers and the proud boast comes out of Manhattan that 500 move rooftops will finally swell the crowd in attempt to inundate the Jayhawkers. This would look bad, but for the fact that the "thundering thousand" has swollen to a "thundering four thousand." The entire south bleachers have been sold to K. U. supporters and the game will be frowned with a yelling contest that has never been experienced before. Very few seats are left in the Kansas rooting section and only two sections remain on the north bleachers, after the reservations made by the company. The ground bleaches and the grand stand seats also remain for the late comers. The Engineers, having been installed with pep by numerous rallies, have ordered three whole sections of the bleachers and 200 tickets were sold Thursday. The A. E. F. will have a section of 100 rosters at the game and expect to make up for last time in yelling the Aggries to defeat. The Agngies are expected to begin filtering into town Friday afternoon as well as Saturday morning and the entire week. They will be at Saturday afternoon. Missouri "U" to Open Neff Hall in January Columbia, Mo., Oct. 31. — Neff Hall, the new $80,000 of the University of Missouri's School of Journalism, will open early in January. The building is the gift of Ward A. Nef of Kansas City, Mo. The mechanical equipment will include a press, three typesetting machines, a stenotyping outfit, type in glass and other equipment. The composing and press rooms will be enclosed in glass, affording a view of the mechanical production of a newspaper. On the mailroom, room will also be the mailing room, room for newsbows, a photo-engraving laboratory and a store room. On the first floor will be the offices of members of the journalism faculty and offices of the student managers. Besides the business office of the Missourian, there will be a city room, with a telegraph and telephone alcove, a conference room, the room, library, morgue, and wash room. The other departments of the school is to be quartered on the third floor. The remainder of this floor will be used as an auditorium. Musical Program to be Given A music program, consisting of voice, organ and violin solos, and a reading by ma. Florence H. Butler, and the Congregational Church Sunday from 2 to number 2 at 7:45 o'clock. Free to all. Why do all big organization managers advertise in the Daily Kansan? "Cusinia Tom" Smith, one of the living testimonials to the effectiveness of the pep producing pellets, gave a vivid illustration of the Kanaa team is going to meet the Farmers. We will plow deep into their fields and turn them under. We will disc them and when they think they are beginning to grow we are going to cut them back, tuck them, tie them, and then give them Dr. F. C. Allen made a plan for 24 hour, 24-air sportmanship throughout all K. U. every day of the year. "I heard a student say," declared Doctor Alen "that the Aggies were coming down here looking for trouble and that they would get it. That is not the right, the far spirit. The Aggies are coming here as our guests. They are coming to the hospital and need the treatment due to our guests. If there is any fighting leave to it the team on the field. They are there to fight the alma mater's battles. Fight, but forear." As a safeguard against wainting pep, before Doe a fugue and his company of employees away, several extra packages of pep were thrown among the railroads. Dr. Bert Kewenny, former coach of the K. U. team in a short talk admitted that once during his coachship at the University the Aggies were successful. Dr. Bert Kewenny from under his coat one of the wild cats that he captured while squirting at Manhattan recently to demonstrate how tame and hardless the Manhattans are after they have been subdued by the firm hand of a Juhyawkener. RED CROSS DUES SPLIT Coach Leon McCarty and Tony James, former football captain, were produced as living examples of pep. Along with them they brought the K. Ramsdale fields areas Doe Yalka wagon amid the thundering cheers of the throng. Membership Fund Will Be Divided Between Local and National Chapters Prof. W. F. Davis in a talk before the A. E. F. Club Wednesday night said that fifty cents on every dollar subscribed to the Red Cross would be turned over to the Douglas County Red Cross organization and would be distributed by the part of it going to the hospitals and part to other Red Cross work. The other fifty cents, Mr. Davis said, will be sent to National Red Cross headquarters to be used to satie up our hospital obligations in Europe, which amount to $30,000,000, and to provide food for the people of Central Europe who are threatened with famine and starvation. "Salts" Will Have Club Similar to "Doughboys" An organization similar to the A.E. F, will be formed by all K. U. men who were in the navy or naval reserve, at a meeting to be held at 7:30 o'clock Monday night in Fraer Chapel. Officers will be elected, a constitution drawn up, and plans discussed for the winter at this meeting. The meeting is being called by H. J. Ailach, e22; and C. J. K. Jinkbarg, e22. Sigma Nu entertained the Alpha Delta Pi freshmen at dinner Thursday night.