UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas Harry H. Morgan ... Editor-in-Chief Bald Patterson ... Senior Editor Balid Patton... Senior Editor BUSINESS STAFF SEAM STAGE Version A, Moore J. John A. Weightman J. Assistant Mr. Moore J. NEWS STAFF Wilbur Fischer Engel Dye Dorsey Marjorie Rickard E. H Kendrick Ivy Berry Paul Flagg Bob Reed Paul Flagg Alfred Hilf, ...Ruth Gardiner Subscription price $3.00 per year if advance; one term, $1.75. Entered as second-class mail malt office. Mail to: Kansan, under the Mailing Address, Mar 18, 1953 Published in, the afternoon five versaries by John Kahn from the press of Columbia University. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone. Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to pleaseniversity of Kansas; to go forher than the University of Kansas; to go further than printing the university's name on the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courageous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads in all, to help them realize the students of the University. A THRILLING "COMEBACK" MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6,1916. The Kansas team arrived—every one of the eleven—Saturday noon. And no team that "got away to a bad start" ever put on a better "comeback" performance than the Jayhawkers put on. Now for Nebraska and Missouri In two weeks the team goes to Lincoln to meet the Cornhuskers, who defeated Ames Saturday by the close score of 3 to 0. Start making your plans now to go with the team and see them humble the Nebraskans for the first time in several years. On Thanksgiving Day the Missouri Tigers invade Lawrence for the annual tangle with the Jayhawk. Write your friends now and invite them down. The Kansas camp is rightfully full of optimism as the team has "arrived" just at the time of the season when it usually started its slump. Over-confidence is an unknown factor on the squad and the prospects for the Olcott-Clark machine look good. VOTE TOMORROW! A man would surely think himself popular in his home town if he could head his obituary after the kick-off. Ex. Whachu mean "kickoff?" People today have fallen heir to a great heritage in free and equal suffrage. We are required to hold no property or be good Protestants. We don't even have to be believers in a hereafter to claim our right to vote. It's all free for the asking. As students of an institution of higher education, our state and our country expect of us an opinion upon all matters of public interest. We are supposed to be better trained in regard to the issues of the day than the masses. We are hailed as leaders and spoken of as the flower of the nation. Do we live up to our opportunities? Do we use our right of suffrage? Some do. Some do not. The majority of us are indifferent. The presidential election is impending. A large number of us have reached the required age and are entitled to vote. We have a fine arrangement whereby we can send our votes home. Why not use it? If we are to be true leaders as we should be, our vote is highly desirable, and we should register an intelligent count at the polls tomorrow. THE CROSS COUNTRY RUNNERS One of the pluckiest bunch of athletes in the University is the cross-country squad. Every afternoon finds them out on the five-mile course grinding away as hard as their endurance and physical powers will permit. In sunshine or storm, rain or snow it matters not which- you will find those thinly track-sters plugging away at their daily training. But hard work is not all for they must make sacrifices. Social events and late hours are not for the cross-countrymen. And when the waiter brings in his dessert he must shake his head and say, "no", as if he did not like such things as pies and puddings. Of all the warriors who contend on the athletic field to uphold the honor of his Alma Mater the cross-country runner earns all the praise he gets. It should be encouraging to the members of the football team and especially the captain to know that a number of ballots for president in the Kansan's straw vote were cast for Adrian Lindsey. Isn't that loyal support? A STUDENT CAFETERIA Embedded in the last report of the Alumni Association was the recommendation for the establishment of a student cafeteria on Mount Oread, and Chancellor Frank Strong in his recommendation to the Board of Administration asks for a University commons or cafeteria. Such an institution would be instrumental in furnishing good, nutritious and well-cooked food to University students at actual cost prices. To students having 1:30 classes, such an enterprise would be of intimistic value. Hurrying down the hill, and hastening back up in order to make an after-lunch class would be dispensed with by such an arrangement; and it is certain that a noodley lunch, served clean and cooked under like conditions, would be a feature liberally patronized by men and women of the University. Much success has attended the establishment of student cafeterias at the state universities of Washington, Utah and Missouri. If the plan of a student cafeteria in these schools has merited success, why wouldn't the same enthusiastic reception be recorded such an enterprise here at K. U.? WHAT CAN YOU DO? The world of today is looking for man— Just believe it is looking for you. The world not looking for men who c'mon 'c'mon But is looking for men who can do The question today is not who you are Who your grandparents were nor Who your parents were But the question today is "What can you do?" And the man who can do things will spin. And the man who can do things will win. The world will not ask how much money you are worth You're all right if you don't have as sou. If you throw out your chest and an answer 'em right "What can you "What can you when they ask you, "What can you do?" What can you do?, is the question today They are sure to ask it of you When you leave this old school and go out in the world Behold a beautiful world G. M. V. COLLEGE RIFF RAFF "Wanted—A Million Hushands." Headline in the Daily Illini. Matrimonial agencies and papers take notice! The co-eds at the State Normal have decided that it is undignified to root at football games. They will sing their team to victory." Mr. Weinhandler of the Columbia Spectator staff last year has graduated and Mr. Profiff is now on the job. The students dazzle just can't stick to one policy. He—“What is the difference between life and love?” Who, inquires the McGill Daily of its readers, is the freshman medic who had to go home because he disliked orders about going in swimming. According to the University News, the old fashioned co-ed who used to borrow your pencil, now carries a fountain pen and never has any ink. Charlie—"That co-eed is making a fool out of that freshman." Tobacco Bill—"Impossible, nature seat her to it."—Ex. Errata! Onlooker-What method are you using in learning to swim? Swimmer (between glubs)—The trial and error—mostly error! She-"Life is one fool thing after another. Love is two fool things after another." FRIENDSHIP Did you ever stop to think how important friendships are? They are the most essential thing in a college education, it has been said. Students all over the country are coming to realize this more every day. How would you like to go through this institution without making a single friend? What would the classes for you take when you learn them to work along with you? How would this college run without friendships? The business world today runs on credit. Credit is based or friendship, in the last analysis. There are dozens of organizations on the campus now which have as their principal excuse for existence, the friendships to them, that give them a place in W. C. A. College societies, departmental clubs, classmeetings—all of them revert back to friendship, and he who denies himself the privileges of these organizations will find himself minus many at the close of his college days. Friendships are the best investment you can make in college—Iowa State University. CAMPUS OPINION Communications must be signed as evidence of good faith but names will not be published without the writer's consent. DOMESTIC SCIENCE Since it is the ambition of most women to marry, it would be a very good thing for women to learn the tactics used to hold a man after he is captured. One of these ways is very well expressed by the old saying "The road to a man's heart is by way of his stomach." Many of the first quarrels of the newlyweds are caused by tough roasts, burned pies and hard biscuits. Much time, energy and money is used by the wife, who is not a scientific cook. Often much love is lost when the tired, hungry husband serves her resilient desirie appertizing, healthy meal and finds, to his disgust, and "impossible" dinner and a fretful wife. Can you bake a cake, cook meat properly and prepare "dishes" appetisingly? Do you know food values? Do you know how to buy foods economically which may be prepared appetisingly and healthfully and which will add strength and energy to mind and body? Every woman who expects to marry should know how to answer these questions. If she cannot answer them she should take advantage of the courses offered in the department of domestic science. This department occupies nine rooms in Fraser Hall and it's laboratories are equipped both for general class work and for research work. GET BUSY! "Take time by the forelock" is an adage, old, but nevertheless as true now as the day it was first written. Like a diamond, the setting and times may change, but the thing itself retains its intrinsic brilliance and sparkles as it did when first polished off. A Woman. The words of an author studied in most Latin courses. Seneca by name, is as applicable to present conditions that those existing two thousand years ago have been able to maintain mates the value of a day?24. And, continuing, he exhorts us to "strive, then, to utilize every moment and never put off until tomorrow what we are today. The present is our only property; all else belongs not to us." The above words are worthy of notice by the students of any educational center. The time-table of a college man—we are not using the expression of "time-table" as ordinarily spoken of—may be divided roughly into four parts. First, the time devoted to lectures. This is the amount of material actually calculated so as to give the student the best possible training for the sphere he intends to occupy in after life. The last division is the time which is allowed to glide by unnoticed—the time we waste. College students with an average of three hours of lectures a day, are apt to fall into the habit of considering the remainder of their course as an opportunity to attend the various theatres or pool rooms in the city. Second, the time devoted to individual study. The third division, is that portion of one's time devoted to physical activity, exercise, athletics or recreation. Let us resolve to devote the time at our disposal to the acquisition of that palm of victory, Knowledge; and those of us who would fain shrink the duty we would address Proctor's famour lines: "Rise for the day is passing, And you lie dreaming on: And forth to the fight have gone: A place in the ranks awaits you, . A WELL-GROUNDED FEAR McGill Daily. Each man has some part to play; The past and the future are nothing similar. And hope I'll never see one, But just the same I'd srured dread And you he is bleaching his arm. The others have buckled their armour being caught on the hill without one A place in the ranks awards you, Each man has some part to play; play Vote For A K. U. Graduate ELSIE DERSHEM K. U.—A.M. Democratic Candidate for COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT. R. H. SPOTTS K. U. A.B., LL.B. Democratic Candidate for REPRESENTATIVE Eleventh District. When you give your next PARTY call and let us figure on the flowers. That's what one Fraternity did last week, and we got the order. Why do we give the best prices? Because we raise practically all of our flowers. We sell them to you direct thus insuring freshness and cutting out the middleman's profit. Buy your flowers in retail quantities at wholesale prices. Lawrence Floral Company 1447 Mass. St. Bell Phone 55. Keep a Type-written Note Book Nearness plays a big part in the grading of any notebook. This can best be obtained using a typewriter for your work. It's a whole lot The cost is low--you can rent a machine from us very reasonably by the month. Drop in and let us explain terms, etc. MORRISON & BLEISNER Phones 164 701 Mass. DICK BROS.. DRUGGISTS A trade so large that our stock is always pure and fresh. We want to know K. U. men and women better. Where the cars stop-8th and Mass. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus $100,000 Careful Attention Given to All Business. C. E. Orelup, M. D. Specialist—Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. 90 percent of all headaches are due to eye strain, curbed by properly wrestling. Bell phone 1700, Dick Building. Successor to Dr. Hammond.—Adv. WANT ADS WANTED—Steward for mixed club. Mrs. Garrett, 1116 Tenn. Phone 1190W. 38-4 LOST - Nu Sigma Nu pin. Call 628 Bell. Reward. 40-2. LOST—Rimless glasses with bows at McCook Field Saturday. Please call 1419 Bell. 40-2* LOST—Waterman Ideal fountain pen with two gold bands, initial M on one band, Friday morning. Reward, call 1742W. 40-8* PROFESSIONAL CARDS G, W. JONSEN, A, M, M, D. Diseases of cystitis. New York, N.Y., 1908. Devil's St. Both, phone 1-730- 8254. Devil's St. Both, phone 1-730- 8254. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, General Proc- dent, M. 6099; Mobil Home and office phone M. 8099; Mobil Home and office phone DR H. REDING F. A. U. Building. mitted. Hours 9 to both Phone 513. CLASSIFIED Lawrence Pantatorium Tailors, Cleaners, and Dyers of Badgers and Gent's Fine Clothing. Ladies' and Gent's Fine Wear St. St. Louis. Shoe Shon Printing Printing B. H. DALE, job printing Both phones 228, 1027 Mass. KEELERS BOOK STORE . 289 Mass Museum and school supplies. Paper by Henry B. Cronk. FORNEY SHOP SHOP. 1017 Mass. St. guarded. a mistake. All work guaranteed. Lawrence Pantatorium WE MAKE OLD SHOES INTO NEW SHoes to help older people in the place to make results. 1245 Ohio St. Hats Cleaned and Blocked. CONKLIN PENS are sold at McCulloch's Drug Store 847 Mass. A good place to eat Johnson and Tuttle 715 Mass. St. COAL COAL COAL We are Lawrence's Coaling Station GIBSON'S MILL Phones 23 The Brunswick-Balke Bowling Alleys for KANSAS MEN Across From Carroll's. Mrs. Ednah Morrison ATHLETIC SUPPLIES 826 Mass. St. Phones 341 Kennedy & Ernst HARDWARE and ATHLETIC SUPPLIES Mass. St. Phone 3 Gowns and Fancy Tailoring I cater especially to the trade of University women. Prices reasonable. 1146 Tenn. St. Bell 1145J. MRS. EMMA D. SCHULZ Fancy dresses of all descriptions also tafled suits and remoteling 917 Mass. St. Between Kress' and Woolworth's. WILSON'S The Popular Drug Store Toilet Articles Good Things to Eat and Drink Citizens State Bank Deposits Guaranteed The University Bank Why Not Carry Your Account Here? Established 1865 A. MARKS & SON Jewellery Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Silver- ware and Cut Glass our specialties. We do repairing and guarantee our work. 735 Mass St. work. 735 Mass. St Kennedy Plumbing Co. Kennedy Plumbing Co. All kinds of electrical shades Student Lamps, National Mazda Lamps, Cord, Plugs, Sockets, Etc. Phones 658 937 Mass. Peoples State Bank Capital and Surplus $88,000.00. "EVERY BANKING SERVICE" COAL Now is the time to order your winter's coal. A full line kept in stock. W. D. GWIN Phones 370 A. G. ALRICH Printing, Binding, Engraving Kraftboards and Multilines Fountain Pins, Inks, Typewriter Papers, Rubber Stamps 744 Mass, St. PARKER LUCKY CURVE FOUNTAIN PENS at the Hess Drug Store 742 Mass. MARLEY 2 1/2 IN. DEVON 2 1/4 IN. ARROW COLLARS 15 cts. each, 6 for 90 cts. CLUETT, PEABODY & CO., INC. MAKERS