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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1E XVIII
OUNCE PLACES AND E FOR ENROLLMENT
START AT 9 TUESDAY
Sign Up Courses Alphabeti
ly, With Names Shuffled
Care First Letters—Must esent Registrar's Certificate of Registration
ENROLLMENT 9 TO 5
registera's certificates of regi-
will be demanded at en-
this year, according to
one of Men's Student Council
the Women's Student Govern-
association, who are in charge
details of enrollment, these
heretofore have not been
up at the door of the gym,
we caused some confusion, as could enroll without having
ones registered.
ENROLLEY 8 y/o 10
imment will begin Tuesday
at 9 o'clock. There will be
a wait for the students, as
will be by the first
if the last names of the stu-
follows.
ay, 9 to 10:30, last names be with A and C.
lay, 1:50 to 3:0,
lay, 3 to 5, O, P, Q, R, Y.
nesday, 9 to. 10:30, I, J, K.
fnesday 1:30 to 3, M, N, U
nnesday, 10:30 to 12, D, E, F.
Tuesday, 3 to 5, B.
a sequence of enrollment is just reverse of that of last spring; the time at which the different should enroll was decided by
suring, according to
biquenue, was arrested,
therefore she began
were the first to enroll
will be the last to enroll
IN HIS SEPARATE PLACE
IN THIS SKYLINE PLACE
class will have a will
of enrolment, a confu-
cation with the board, by members
two councillors, who will act as
a during the two days. The
of enrolment are:
phomores, Juniors, Specials, and Arts Students will enter the at the end entrance. They will visit their parents, as registrars will continue in the center of over floor through Tuesday andnesday, according to Registrar r. The Fine Arts students will enter the at the beginning day and Wednesday, at the rehearsals for their classes.
oathman, west entrance to the mansion. The first year student will use the balcony for wait rooms if overcrowded.
nursers and graduate students will
be the gym at the center door
pass through to their enroll-
places.
sters and huge signs are being
d on the campus to direct the
its to the proper place for his
fication.
ELP NEW STUDENTS
I. Men's Council, and Downown Merchants Open Information Booths
to men's Student Council, the Y.
J. A. and the business man of
rence have associated in an ef-
t to make the new students feel
such at home as possible and to
n getting them located and ac-
ed with the town on their ar-
home.
formation booths are placed at railroad stations and members the boosters' combination are ing all trains and giving the students the location of the location of their rooms, of registration, location of the J. Y. M. C. A., where a list of vacant rooms is kept, etc. Cars being furnished for the work by merchants. These cars bear a saying and saying to any student and any student in all of these to take him to room, to the campus or practicify any place he desires to go.
aid Lupher, quarterback from year's variability has sent it to director of athletics Forest Williams will not return for this year.
nice in a while you hear of a house keeps "roomers," but it usually is out to be one.
"K" Books are Valuable As Guides to Students
UNIVERSITY OF KANSA S, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SEPTEMBER BER 13, 1920.
B Books are on sale at the Y. M, C, A., the Y. W, C. A. and at the office of the Dean of Women in Fraser Hall. The Y. M has had one thousand copies printed and expect them to be gone by the middle of秋天.
The books this year contain much information. The table of contents contains a section on athletics, giving information in regard to schedules, rules, etc; the school calendar for the year is another feature. Church information, class schedules, lessons, songs, Yankee yells, senate rules, and time tables of the railroads are all contained in the book.
The price has raised to 25 cents as the book can not be published for less than 35 cents, according to the Y. M. authorities, but as the state furnishes $100 to help publish the books, it was impossible to put the price considerably lower than the cost of printing.
Women entering the University or the first time will find from women of the upper classes that the student must make an excellent "date" book.
CLOSER CO-OPERATION OF ALUMNI PLANNEL
Directors of the University
Alumni Association believe that
the state alumni are not keeping
in close touch with their school,
and that in many places, there
is not a full understanding of
the service which the University
is doing for the state.
Alfred Hill, New Alumni Secre tary to Promote Understand- of University Services
It is my purpose to visit as many parts of Kansas as possible to bring about a closer connection between the school and those who have been on Mount Oread. It is important that former students as well as graduates enter associations of K. U. alumni.
Present University students will be an important aid. Letting the home folks know what the University is doing and preventing misleading impressions from going broad. Because that students can well keep in mind.
That is Alfred G. Hill's statement of what he expects to do in his new position as alumni secretary of the university to the position was announced last week.
Mr. Hill took his A. B. degree here in '17. Since then he has been engaged in newspaper work with the Capper publications, the Philadelphia Public Ledger, and the United Press feature service at the Whitman While a student at Mr. Hill was an assistant for out of town papers. During the war he was a lieutenant in the regular army. Miss Agnes Thompson, former alumn secretary, is assisting Mr. Hill for a short time.
NUMBER
The alumni board of directors at its commencement meeting this year planned a larger field of activity for the Alumni association and provided service to the state. The change in chancellors, and other faculty members, and the increased attendance last year call for more active work on the part of the unit head and vice-president. The appointment of Mr. as alumni secretary resulted.
Vocational Training Men Will Number 60
About sixty men will receive their education at the University this fall at the expense of the government, access to medical care and counselors for men receiving vocational training. About forty of the men who took the training last year will be in the University this fall, he estimates, and about twenty more are expected
Most of the men are "Section Two"
men, that is, they receive an allowance
of $80 a month in addition to
having their books and fees paid for,
but the enrollment numbers several
months after graduation disability, who receive their books and fees from the government, but no allowance for maintenance.
The student hospital has been moved again this year, and the doctors and doctorines will be dispensing throat gargia at 1406 Tennessee street, in the old building formerly occupied by the School o Fine Art.
Is Reception From Students and Faculty to Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley
BIG COMMUNITY PARTY IN GYM SATURDAY EVE
OTHER SOCIAL EVENTS OFF
Reception, "Stunts," K. U. Band,
and Mixer Will Contribute
To Jolliness
Everyone's going to that one, however, for it's the big first annual all-University Community party, given by the faculty, and student self-governing association associated with Mrs. E., Mrs. H. Lindley from the University of Kansas.
There's just one social event on the Hill next Saturday night.
Opening at 8 o'clock in the gymnasium, a short receiving line, including Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, Dr. and Ms. Frank Strong, and other members of the faculty, will await the students. The reception is in charge of the University Woman's Association, an organization of the wives of the faculty members, and will conclude with the serving of punch, and general "mixer" for faculty and students
The big entertainment, plans for which have been under way since last spring, will open with a reception, and will include music, music mixing, and community sing.
The second part of the entertainment will consist of a series of stunts, musical and otherwise entertaining, to be given, weather permitting, out-of-doors, at different places within a campground. A large attentive expected, the entire crowd could not witness any one performance at one time, so it is planned t repeat the different stunts, over and over, in its set place, before we continue the crowd moving from one start to the other, in proper sequence.
The engineering students will register at the gymnasium Monday with students from all other schools.
OR. MAYBE, IN GYM
There are 1550 seats available in Robinson Gymnasium, where the concerts will be given, and last year all but 150 of them were sold as season tickets, according to Dean Butler. In view of the increased enrollment, there may be no individual tickets available, he said, as the seating capacity is limited to that if last year.
In case the weather is inclement, the entire performance of the eight stunts will be held in the gymnasium, and a duplicate set of plans has been made to cover both exigencies so that the stunt may be in preparation and stage settings.
Shadow dancing, songs, solo, duet, and quartet singing will feature the entertainment, which, the committee in charge says, will be well prepared, as they have been working for the summer on the details of the party.
The two student self-government associations, which have been acting as a committee on the whole in this work, will hold a final meeting for finishing up details Thursday afternoon, at 4:30 o'clock, in the office of Dr. Alberta Corbin, adviser of women, in Fraser Hall
CONCERT COURSE SET
Eight musical numbers, each by individual artists or collections of artists who rank at the very top of the musical world, are included in this year's University Concert Course. Vocalists, instrumentalists, a string quartet, and an orchestra are included in the program of the artist who will be heard later. These have been very favorably received by University audiences.
Eight Musical Numbers are Scheduled for This Year's Program
"The concert course is one of the finest collections of talent which will be heard in the middle west this year." David J. Benson, director of Fine Arts, director of the course, said. "And none can rival ours for the low prices charged. For instance, the annual series of concerts in Kansas City this year will cost $12 for season and not up to the standard presented by the course."
Season tickets to the eight concert can be reserved, on the "first come, first served" principle. Orderals must be filled on them, are received.
Chancellor Lindley Begins Year at K. U.
I am proud of being a student at Oxford University. I have excelled in my studies and have been awarded many honors. My teacher, Dr. John W. Bunting, was a highly respected professor who taught me the importance of perseverance and hard work. He also taught me the value of integrity and honesty. His teachings have had a lasting impact on my life. I will be forever grateful for his guidance.
Y. M. TO HOLD TWO FROSH MIXERS SOON
First Year Mon Will Hold Pep Meetings Tuesday and Wednesday Nights
All new men in the University are urged to attend. There will be a fea- be, "Sandy" Wimor, cheerleader, be fear to lead in Kauai songs and yells.
Freshmen mixers will be held on Tuesday and Wednesday nights at 7:30 ockee in Myers Hall, according to the school's calendar, the social life of the Y. M. C. A.
GREETINGS
The Y. M. also announces the maintenance of an employment agency for those who want work during "of hours." Many jobs are available in many towns, a permitment, and others, "old" jobs. Many men have been placed already. It is impossible, however, to get jobs for everyone in the first day or two of schooling, but nothing, should not be discouraged about staying.
The University welcomes you.
It offers you entrance into a great world. The University will show you the way to the campus of the university. It is an enchanting way—it will call for the best in you.
We hope you will learn to work hard at the tasks which will give you mastery and real influence in the world.
We hope you will also learn to play. The right filling of leisure time rather than the killing time of a fine art and potent to keep you fit for work and wholesome in spirit.
Above all the University offers you the choicest friendships. Cultivate the art of felting. Build the best friends if you will.
The University is the great "House of Life." Enter it re solved to do your best and you will be enriched with power and
E. H. LINDLEY,
Chancellor.
THE KANSAN
and
YOU
When a white-ribboned solicitor for THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, approaches you and asks for your subcription—don't make the answer a negative one—but gladly give it.
The Kansan is one of K. U's most worthy institutions, eighteen years old this fall and well worthy of your support. In this day of doubled prices, three dollars and a half for 165 issues of the snappiest college daily published—is value received, indeed!
Two thousand and five hundred subscriptions must be taken to put the KANSAN on firm footing—with print paper at fifteen cents a pound.
The KANSAN is the "mouthpiece" of the student body and considers that obligation in all things.
That institution—YOUR paper—published for you by University men and women—needs your co-operation and is just as worthy of receiving it as school athletics and other school activities.
So when the solicitor says, "Subscribe for the Kansan" just show your school spirit by replying—
"YOU BET!"
I thank you.
Sincerely
incerely
HENRY B. McCURDY,
Sept. 13, 1920.
Business Manager,
The University Daily Kansan.
Prices of Textbooks No Higher This Year
Text books will not be appreciably higher this year, according to prominent Lawrence bookssellers this week. While the other commodities necessary to student life are mounting the ladder to the skies, books have also become sentient with their idealistic task, and have increased only slightly in price.
An indication of the number of students who will be in the University this year is obtained from the number of books ordered by the dealers in textbooks. Last year's orders, which accommodated an actual attendance at one time of more than 3300, with a total enrollment of about 2150, increased by about twenty per cent, which would indicate an expected attendance of around 4000 and a total enrollment of about 4800.
Plain Tales From the Hill
"Why, Dorothy, what have you got on your chest?"
As she saw one of her sisters looking rather melancholy, it was only natural that she asked her;
Dorothy blushed.
"How did you know," she queried,
"that I am wearing his fraternity pin
inside?"
One of the most enterprising of the University's alleged wits is authority for the statement that an old ballad has been given a new title, "The Sook of the School." The ancient song of which he speaks to "Merrily We Roll Along."
"Bartholomew," complained Alredra "I am troubled with a ringing headache tonight."
And Bartholomew gallantly departing from hence, cried courteously, "I is to be expected of such a belie!"
Since it takes some time to recuperate both physically and financially one Greek has gone on record as in changing the name to "rush week."
Have you seen the "form-fitting" musettes so prevalent among thore returning to school?
A grain of thought: Now that the wheat is harvested and the hay fever is nearly over, it is about time for "straw votes."
Probably one man's love for another is never so tested as when Jack forces a smile in welcoming Harry after a visit to school last spring swing him $3.50.
The youth who calls his beloved,
"Stay" was asked if the reason for such an odd term of endearment is
his desire to be loved. It is so, he said,
"Corsect is he, he replied.
Let us hope there will be no scandal attached to the Fine Arts students this year. They will enroll Tuesday in Wednesday in "Room 202" gymnasium.
FRESHMEN WILL MEET FIRST TIME TODAY
All College First-Year Students In Convocation at 4:30 This Afternoon
A pre-enrollment convoitation at which the attendance of all college freshmen is required, will be held this afternoon at 4:30 p o'clock in Praser Chapel to "wise up" all new students on the "ropes" of the University.
The meeting is called by Professor J, G. Brandt, newly-appointed dean of the College of Lineral Arts and Sciences, who will make a talk to his students, advising them on the selection of their elective courses, so as to include the broadest possible scope in their first year on Mount Oread.
The program will open with a "chorus sing" led by members of the Men's Glee Club, of the University men, "The Crimson and the Blue." Dr. Alberta Corbin , adviser of women, will talk on "Student Affairs" and "Student Admissions" of many of the customs and rules of many of the University.
A rousing "pep talk" by Sandy Winsor, cheerleader, and some "personally conducted" renditions of the K. U. yells, from the "Rock Chalk" to the "Twist the Tiger's Tall" will be the beginning of the education in K. U. Spirit that lasts through the college career.
Attendance at the convocation is required of all college freshman, both men and women.
Subscribe to The Daily Kansan from the white ribbon solicitors.
COACHES CONSIDERING FOOTBALL PROSPECTS
Must Develop New Quarterback To Fill Hole Left by Bunn
SEVEN LETTER MEN BACK
Wealth of Last Year's Freshman Material Will Build Up Team
All of the coaches will be there to meet the old men coming back and to get acquainted with the new men.
Every man in the University who plans to play football this year is asked to meet in the coaches' room in the gymnasium, Monday morning at 10 o'clock. A teacher, Freeman and Varsity material.
The 1920 football season practice will be officially begin Wednesday afternoon. Equipment will be put out next Monday and Tuesday.
With the opening of the 1920 football season on McCook field Wednesday afternoon, Kansas rosters will see the inception of one of the greatest football fighting machines under the Crimson and Blue.
The one big job for the coaches this year will be whipping into shape a new quarterback to fill the gap between the two. In the lineup, Bunn has accepted an assistant professorship in the School of Engineering and will not be eligible for the squad. However, this new reason to start voicing the blues
Seven old letter men will be back in the game to make good again. Captain George, Nettles at the tackle position and Frank Mandeville, Tad Reid, Chuck Hozer, and Pete Jones, will come up for the job. Red Hart, and Dutch Lonborg are after their old positions in the line.
Men from last year's freshman squad will provide keen competition. Fraker, Sandefur, Harris, McDonald and Ivy for the line positions, and McAdams, McAdams, McVey, and Wolf, backfired men, are among the candidates.
Dr. Forrest C. Allen, manager of athletics and head coach, will be assisted by Adrian Lindsey, and Howard "Serubby" Laslett with the Varsity, and Carl Schlademann will handle the first year men.
According to the Missouri Valley ruling the first practice will not start until Wednesday, in the meantime the men will meet with the coaching staff. In addition Equipment will be checked out, and training rules will be given out.
JAYHAWKER PLANS OUT
Editors Open Up New Headquarters for "Your K. U. Diary"
The sales campaign for the 1924 Jayhawk which begins on the hill this morning will be the means of getting the managers in, and has been done in other years if it meets with the success for which the managers are hoping. Burt Cochran is business manager of the 1924 year, and Ferd Gottlieb is editor.
The Jayhawker has opened an office at Rowland's Annex, 1237 Oread, where permanent headquarters for the year have already been established. It has always been the location to meet the annual office in the journalism building, but because of the inconvenience resulting from the out-of-the-way corner where it was last year, the office was located off the campus. It is believed the present office will more advantageous to the students.
This year's book, according to the managers, will be even better than usual, since various new features are to be incorporated. The engraving contract has been let to the Burger King for its new printing, and the printing will be done by the Hugh Stephens Printing Co., of Jefferson City, Mn. These firms have been working together on Jay-hawkers for the last six years, and have promised their co-operation in the 1921 book the best of them all.
The slogan adopted for the 1921 Jayhawker which will be used in all the advertising put out for the book is: "YOUR K. U. DIARY."
Send the Daily Kansan home.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansa.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief... Geneva Hunter.
News Editor... Walter G. Koren.
Campus Editor...
Ruth Armstrong.
Sport Editor...
A. E. Garvin.
Alumni Editor...
Exchange Editor... Lacie Cleveland.
Exchange Editor... C. C. Nicotel
BUSINESS STAFF
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry B. McCurdy ... Business Mgr.
Lloyd Ruppenthal. Asst.' Business Mgr.
Dewan W. Malott. ... Circulation Mgr.
James Aubin.
Burt E. Cochran
Fred H. Svenson
Alfred Groot
J. K. Jister
Harlow Tibbettts
Subcription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic yes; $2.00 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-clas mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, Kansas City, and
Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones K. U. 25 and 66.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students to go for their more serious training than merely print the news by standing for the ideals the class aims to teach; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charismatic; to have more serious problems to wiser heads; in all serve the universityity of the University.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 19120
CHANCELLOR LINDLEY
We went home last June with the realization that there would be a new guiding hand on the University wheel this fall. But it was a rather rattle idea of some far away man about whom we felt half timid and half curious. But this fall he is a flesh and blood person actually among us, and the great thing is that as we meet him, all timidity disappears before the kindly smile and we are friends.
Chancellor Lindley has come to us to work with us for a greater, better Kansas and University, and after talking with him we are confident of our hoped for greater success in the near future. It is also on the experiences of others who have worked with Doctor Lindley that we base our hopes, for it has been said of him that his greatest gift is that of forming vital contacts with men and affairs and that his personal soundness, trustworthiness, and wholesome character have given him the fine foundation for being a leader wherever he may be.
Last spring, worn out with final examinations, professors and aerenades, we said goodbye, invardely wondering and doubling if Lawrence again would be graced by our presence. But in the three months apart from the University and its life we have stored up a bucky supply of enthusiasm and love for it, and crabby thoughts are as much a part of the past as our freshman caps.
His sense of humor along with his kindly friendiness breaks the chill of strangeness and makes us forget our rather widely varied positions of chancellor and student.
Doctor Lindley has said that he gets much of his recreation from talking with people and it is in this way that he keeps in touch and in sympathy with his fellow men. Without this ability he could not have done such constructive work in the field of industrial relations, nor have been one of the greatest teachers of the northwest nor have attracted crowds to listen to rather deeply intellectual lectures.
Classes before us have come back in the fall, eager and fresh and it is they who have kept the University growing, and it happens that we now are holding the spotlight.
We have become acquainted and like Doctor Lindley and hope he will like us so that our work together may be a great success in this crisis year for the University of Kansas.
WE MEET AGAIN
It is up to us to work vigorously and intelligently to leave this University better than we found it, and in that way help to pay back what it is giving to us.
The fly in the University ointment this fall is the housing situation. Numbers of students have secured rooms, not without a dishearing struggle, and many are still searching.
ROOMS
Lawrence is getting more than its share of the blame in this situation, as some one or something always gets the blame in an irritating or trying circumstance. Lawrence is offering rooms, plenty of them, and good ones, in pleasant residences, but the drawback to them, the student declares, is that they are not all within a radius of two blocks of Fraser Hall. Without a dormitory system it is impossible to get all of the University's growing enrollment within the very shadow of the school.
It is mighty fine to believe we are going to like each other so well that we all want to live in the same few blocks, but let's be sensible about it.
Much of Lawrence's pleasant residence district is situated at some distance from the University, and it is in homes in this district that rooms for students are offered. What abledibed young student is going to be seriously impaired in health by a walk of six or eight blocks to school?
Since we have no dorditories and Lawrence is trying to do its part, let us be careful in fixing the blame for this unpleasant situation.
OUT OF THE MUD
Patience is rewarded: We are to have docent campus streets And while it is more or less inconvenient to go from Fraser to the Library via the Gymnasium or Marvin Hall, yet from these billowing rivers of mud which now connect one building with another, will flower forth smooth concrete streets such as the University and its students have dreamed of for many years.
In crossing the campus on our former cinder highways, a car travelled approximately two blocks forward and three blocks up and down and gave visitors a rugged and rocky impression of the University and the eminence upon which it is built. The Daily Kansan has harped for many years on the campus roads and with these few words of thanks and appreciation we will quietly subside on that subject and give our spare efforts to dodging the autoists who will be attracted by our new streets.
YOUR FRIENDS
Witnessing the arrival of almost any train into Lawrence during the few days preceding the opening of school provides a vital argument in favor of a university education. The genuine affection, shown by a warm handshake or, if the incomer be a woman, a kiss, with which each "olf" student is welcomed back, proves conclusively that there are multitudes of strong friendships formed "on the hill" which are carried forward from
There is a note of sincerity and not a little of anxiety in each, "Well, how are you, old pal? Did you spend a great summer?" that one must travel far outside of university life to find elsewhere. Certain it is that at least a part of your vacation has been spent in wondering just what "the bunch" has been doing, and hoping that the friends who declared they could not come back to school have changed their plans. With thousands of young men and young women, gloriously alive to the possibilities of the present age, constantly in close association and with the same general perspective, it is to be expected that friendships, once given seed, ripen quickly, and attain a life long growth.
one year to the next with unceasing loyalty.
WOMEN JOURNALISTS FIND ENGLAND HARD
London—The girl who wants to be a journalist doesn't stand much chance of getting a job here on a metropolitan paper nowadays unless she is a college graduate. But now against the "wiseman" type of journalist, the woman who writes on all subjects and devotes herself to what used to be called "subjects of feminine interest." And it is notorious that a great man in the best women are written by men.
A number of American girls, wishing to visit England and earn their way, have asked me about coming over. I tell them that the first requirement is a certain amount of money; not too much, but not be much; enough to pay for bed and board during the lean intervals is enough to start with; but it is admitted by the most optimistic that there are lean intervals in the early career of even the most successful paper writers, and especial women.
English women are still struggling to attain the same level as men, but in spite of the 'journaist' union and several societies and benefit associations the fact remains that women are discriminated against by employers. It is perfectly frank in saying that they have a prejudice against women reporters
The reasons given for this prejudice are that women only take up journalism as a last resort after they have failed in other work and that women do so not lovingly and ungrammatically in their writings—Margaret Walter.
FAMOUS LAST WORDS
"I wonder if it's loaded. I'll look down the barrel and see."
"Oh, listen! That's the train whistle. Step on the accessor, and you will get to accessor before it comes."
"They say these things can't possibly explode, no matter how much you throw them around."
"I wonder whether this rope will hold my weight."
“It’s not fun swimming around here. I'm going out beyond the life lines.” “Which one of these is the third rail, anyway?”
"There's only one way to manage as mule. Walk right up in back of him and surprise him."
"We Shine 'Em Up" RICE BROTHERS
"That froeracker must have gone out. I'll light it again."
HOUK'S BARBER SHOP "The Shop of the Town"
Goodyear Wingfoot Rubber Heels For Men
at
Just received a shipment of extra light leather soles For Ladies
Announcement
Electric Shoe Shop Two Shops
1017 1-2 Mass.
726 1-2 Mass.
GOOD THINGS TO EAT AT A REASONABLE PRICE
That's Our Slogan
Tucked away under the brow of the hill, at the corner of 14th Street and Ohio, you will find the "cosiest" Cafe in the student neighborhood.
All equipment new and inviting FOR SERVICE AND QUALITY FOODS
THE JAY HAWK CAFE RAY and HARRY
Hart, Schaffner
& Marx
Clothes
More value for you when you buy your clothes
IT'S going to be part of our business this fall to see that every customer who comes to us for clothes shall get more value for his money than ever before
The clothes we sell will be just as fine as ever; the best qualities are always the most economical
Hart Schaffner & Marx
make the best clothes we know of
We shall sell them at the closest margin of profit ever attempted. Maybe we'll not make very much money on them; but we shall give you some remarkable values
We intend to help in every way we can to reduce the cost of good clothes to you
The Peckham Clothing Co.
Regal Shirts
The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes
Stetson Hats
1
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FALL OPENING
of
WIEDEMANN'S
TRI SERVICE
CHOCOLATE GARDEN
TEA ROOM—Delicious food, delicately prepared and daintily served. Our menu includes all seasonable dishes, featuring salads, steaks and chops. Luncheon menus will please you. Sunday night dinners a specialty. Special dining room for private parties by reservation.
SODA GRILL—Serving light foods and all fountain confections. Dancing from 3 to 6 o'clock each afternoon on our smooth glazed tile floor-splendid orchestra. Quartette booths and tables. Just the place for a little "matinee party."
CHOCOLATE GARDEN-For those who wish only refreshments in the form of soft beverages and ice cream combinations. Candy-Wiedemann's and Whitman's. High grade confections.
WIEDEMANN'S The Pl
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
LAWRENCE STRIVES TO HOUSE STUDENTS
New Student Homes Opened to Handle Expected Record Enrollment
Kiwanis, Rotarian, C. of C. and Y.M.C.A. all Working to House K. U. People
WOMEN'S ROOMS SCARCE
The problem of housing the expected record enrollment at the University this year has been vexing the civic organizations for the entire summer months. Ways and means of meeting the shortage of rooms have been suggested from various clubs and individuals of the university, a result which has been a house-to-house carcass for the desired rooms.
Lawrence men, members of the Rotary and Kiwanis clubs together with a committee from the Chamber of Commerce made canvass. They discovered some two hundred rooms. Today students are tramping the streets of Lawrence in search of a rooftree. The rooms obtained have all been taken or have vanished into thin air.
MAY PUT MEN IN ARMORY
MAY PUT MEN IN ARMS.
Room 40 women are more scarecie. Many women have taken rooms as far as the street in New York street. The Chamber of Commerce housing committee say that no student will be forced to return to his home without finding a room. A movement was on foot last week to secure national guard equipment, the gymnasium and a temporary dorm for men. No suggestions have been offered as to how to remedy the shortage of rooms for women. Co-operative houses seem to be the most feasible plan, the housing committee says, to solve the lem of women's needs in the Early Market in meeting in the city hall went on record as favoring the formation of a housing corporation to obtain and equip fifteen houses for fifteen girls in each house. The proposition of securing a corporation which under the supervision of five cooperative houses resulted,however, from the suggestion. These will take care of seventy-five women
MANY NEW OPENS HOMEED Students arriving in Lawrence late are finding difficulty in locating the library especially are the new students having trouble. University authorities have been ca-operating with the down-town authorities in an effort to alleviate the shortage, but still
Many homes in Lawrence are being thrown open to students that have never before been used by students. A few cases where a body of students all from the same locality have rented vacant houses have been reported to them. Other students who have to a certain extent, they think, but there are few empty houses in the city that can be rented.
The only salvation, in the way of solving the problem this year, according to University authorities, seems to be for more students to get doors to student roomers. Realization by responsible people of the town, that the city cannot fail the University at this period of its development may cause houses to be opened for students that have moved out. If this is the case, University authorities say they will see to it that homes opened for accommodation to students will not be misdirected by the roomers. The fact that students "tear up the house" has made many people invite them to occupy rooms.
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
Miss Haze] Pratt, head of the women's department of physical education, and Walter Wood, A. B. '20, instructor in physical education, were married 15 in St. Louis. Mr. and Mrs. Wood left at once for college. In 1913, where he has the position of director of athletics in Shuntiff college. Mrs. Weed will act as assistant instructor in charge of the women's department.
RENTALS HAVE MOUNTED
Prices for rooms have mounted
with the increased decrease them.
In the case of renting from
$20 to $30 a month. Some cases of
profiteering are at present being
investigated by the Rotary Club housing
committee. Students are how-
ever paid, pay almost any price
to get a room.
Send the Daily Ransan home.
board, too, has advanced. "Three-squares" a day will cost the student $8 a week this year, according to boarding house keepers.
1047 Massachusetts St.
CAPITAL $100,000.00
SURPLUS $100,000.00
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
Lefax Leaf-Facts For Every Line
Classified Standard Loose Leaf, Fact-Recording and data system for professional, technical and business men everywhere. It is for YOU.
INVESTIGATE F.I.CARTER, Distributor
1025 Masst. Street
Some Things You May Need and Where to get Them
DRAWING SETS and a full line of Engineering Supplies.
PAPERS: Theme, Note, Drawing, Correspondence and Business.
TYPIPWRITER3: Underwoods, Remington, Wood-
stocks, Coronas. For Sale or RENT.
FOUNTAIN PENS, Eversharp Pencils, and about everything the student may need.
F. I. CARTER
1025 Mass.
Phone 1051
Sage Bird Emits Wisdom i
Snappy 32-Page
Issue
SOUR OWL FLIES OUT
The first Sour Owl of the season swooped down on the campus this morning in the form of a 32-piece issue of the humorous magazine, full of snappy illustrations and editorial matter. The magazine was gotten up and issued by members of the art community here during the summer. It is the official organ of the Owls, junior honorary society.
More short original matter than ever before appears in this issue of the magazine, and the lengthier articles are up to the usual standard. Chief of these is a burlesged interview with a movie "vampire." Another exceptional feature is more than a column of "advice," always in order at this time of year, but it is not "only" an article. It is rumored that this was written by a woman, but those who have read the magazine declare much of the material must have been furnished by a man.
The editors, dealing with live University affairs of the day, are handed in Owlie's usual fearless manner. Some poetry also appears in the magazine. Practically everything in the magazine has some wit, but most of its various problems, and is in its entirety very well gotten up.
The cover of this number is the most striking that has appeared on a Sou Owl for some time. It depicts a crimson owl on a blue field with black lettering, while the smoke from a dying cigarette drifts upwards. It was drawn by an artist not in school.
The magazine is being sold by the juniors who will be in the Owl society this year. Future editions of the Sour Owl, of which there probably will be one, will be edited by a board to be selected from among the new Owls.
Prentice Beasley, c22, of Guyon,
Okla., has entered the University of
Colorado. He will complete his medical
course in that institution.
Arthur E. Garvin, affectionately designated by his loving playmates as "Cap," is back on the Hill with the team to work. At least such in his threat.
"We Strive to Please"
Everything thats good to eat at reasonable prices
The College Inn
Between Tennessee and Ohio on 14th Street
TRY OUR FOUNTAIN
---
Welcome!
of course you are and if we can help you feel at home and enjoy your stay here by giving you unexcelled clothing and furnishing goods service for least possible cash we will be satisfied.
NOTE-Just keep an eye on Salesman Joe's happy smile and his little daily squib for he is appearing for your interest
SkofStadS
ELLING SYSTEM
heaven? No, dear, cower his devoted wife, "I am still with you."
—Salesman Joe
The sick man had just come out of his delirium.
"Where am I?" he said feebly. "Where am I, in heaven?"
"No, dear," coooed his devoted wife, "I am still with you."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IXTY-SEVEN NEW
FACULTY MEMBERS
School of Law Deanship is Only Important Position Yet Unfilled
K. U. GRADS PLENTIFUL
Department
Two of New Instructors Fill Vacancies in Journalism Department
**6257** With the exception of the deanship
rent of the school of law all positions of
principal importance on the University faculty
are held. First series new mem-
Theare now titled the
sibers come to fill positions in the Uni-
nique veracity of a _yek_ of whom are in-
volved in some school of the Uni-
nique veracity. Of this number twenty-five
children will act as assistant instructors, Bea-
g FUJ. J. Kelly will act as temporary头 of thief the school of education. The new
administrators appointed are;
mary M. Almack, Instructor in Pey
sachiology, M. A. Ohio State, 1916,
Sociology, m. A. O. Alkawan
large William Asendorf, Assistant In-
structor in Chemistry, B. S. Kansas,
cet 1919.
en 1919. late
part Mathematics, A. B. Kanase, 1919.
late Adolph Boese, Assistant Instructor
net of Anatomy.
cutt, in Harold Putnam Browne, Professor of Drawing and Printing. *Pupil of the Caro-Delvallal and Jean Paul Lepelle for resampling* *and Jean Paul Lepelle and F. Mina Mora, New York*
Linda Morel, H. Carpenter, Instructor Raymond H. Carpenter, Instructor in Mathematics, A. B. Washburn, 1916 A. M. Kansas, 1917.
Howard de Forest, Assistant Professor of Botany, A. B. Princeton 1856; M. F. Yale, 1911; Ph. D. Chiago, 1920.
Cora Dolbee, Instructor in Rheotic,
A. B. Kansas, 1908; A. M. Kansas,
1911.
Frank W. Dillon, Assistant Professor of Journalism, A. B. Busknell, 1898.
Hugh MacKay Fletcher, Assistant Professor of Economics and Commence, A. B. University of British Columbia, A. M. Stanford.
Columbus, M. Creola Ford, Instructor in Piano,
B. Mus, Kansas, 1911. New England
Conservatory of Music.
Conservatory Paul Samuel Fox, Assistant in Civil Engineering.
Robert Guntert, Field Assistant in Entomology.
Entomology. Lucy Hackman, Assistant Instructor in Entomology. A. B. Kansas, 1920. In Vale.
Edn Haseline, Instructor in Voice, B. S. Druy, 1909, New England Conservatory, Pupl of d'Auburn and Calve, Paris
Calvay, R. A. Haskish, Assistant Professor of the Teaching of English, A. B. 1915, Washburn, A. M. 1917, Teachers College, Columbus.
ers College, S. Heath, Instructor in Economics and Commerce, A. B. Kansas,
1920.
1920. Algo D. Henderson, Instructor in Economics (Accounting).
T. B. Henry, Instructor in Mathematics. A. B. Kansas, 1908.
matics. Ethel Huntinger, Technician, School of Medicine, A. B, Fairmount.
Albert H. Jewell, Associate Professor of Sanitary Engineering and Director of Water and sewage Laboratory, B. S. in Engineering, Michigan; 1915; M. S. in Engineering, Michigan, 1916; Aas, State Eng. Michigan, 1916; In-
When you again take up your studies and close work you may experience eye strains and headaches. Don't be alarmed if such is your case; it is probably to a man of refraction that can easily be remedied by the proper glasses.
screator in San. Eng., Kansas, and
Ask. Eng. Kasan State Board of
Health, 1916-17; Ask. State San. Eng.
Michigan, 1919-20.
Back to Work
Tell us your eye troubles, we can correct them.
Michigan, 1948-50.
Thurston L. Johnson, Bacteriologist.
Assistant. State Food Work.
Rosemary Ketcham, Professor of Design, Litt. B. Ohio Wesleyan, Instructor in Design, Syracuse U. 1985-83. Assoc. Prof. of Design, Syracuse U.
Assistant, State Food
Ethel A. Ehl, Jones, Instructor in Chemistry,
A. B. Kansas, 1913; A. M. Kansas,
1916.
1912-12
Russell S. Knappen, Assistant Professor of Geology,
Gerardine Knotter, Assistant Instructor in Spanish, A. B. Dr. Druis, 1915. Marcellus Law, Anatomy and Insectism in Chemistry, A. B. K. Kansas, 1920.
Gustafson
Frank Ise, Optometrist
Rena Lazella, Associate Professor of Voice, Pupil of Mme. Ene Varesi, Ross David, Victor Maurel, Professor of Voice, Illinois Women's College.
Helen O. Mahin, Instructor in Journals. A.B. DePau, 1909, A.M. Michigan, 1915, Ph.D. M. Michigan, 1920, Instructor in Rhetoric, DePau, 1909-13; Asst. Prof. of Rhetoric and Journalism, Carlen, 1918-20.
Odhrushima M. Mann, Instructor in Sociology, A. B, Kansas, 1920. Instructor Roberts College, Constantipole.
nopie
Nina M. McLatchey, Instructor in Mathematics. A. M. Washburn, 1911.
Alice Melvin, Instructor in Rhetoric,
A. B. McGill, A. M. Pennsylvania.
Margaret Mitchell, Instructor in
Rhetoric, A. B. Kansas, 1919.
Hearty Brown Nelson, Assistah.
Professor of Rhetoric. A. B. Michigan,
1909; A. M. Michigan, 1910; Irian-
tic in Rhetoric, Kwanase, 1912-19
structurer in Research, Kansas
Charles Heyntle Secretary to
the Director of Athletics, A. B. K
kansas, 1920.
G. B. Patrick, Assistant Professor of Physical Education, A. B. Morningside, 1916.
Ethel Peacock, Nurse, Student Hospital,
R. N. Graduate of Christ's
Hospital, Topeka.
C. J. Posey, Associate Professor of Geography.
Geography.
Philip A. Readio, Instructor in Entomology.
Katherine Reding, Instructor in Spanish. A.B.Kansas,1918,A.M.Kansas, 1920.
ansas, 1860.
Cecil Lewis Rew, Instructor in Romance Languages, Ph. D. Chicago,
1919.
University of Wisconsin, 1943-52.
Walter H. Schleifer, Assistant Professor of Geology. Instructor Geology.
Colorado School of Mines, 1919-20.
Jauques Leon Salvan, Instructor in Romance Languages, Certificat d' études accoudales, Saint Jean d' Anselm, 1914. Baccalier et une, Uri
Curt Rosenow, Assistant Professor of Psychology. B, S. Michigan, 1897.
Pb. D. Chicago, 1917.
University of Wisconsin, 1919-20.
W. Red Schrenker, Laboratory Water and Sewage Laboratory. Grace M. Sisson, Assistant Instructor in Zoology.
rely, 1914; Bachelier es lettres, Universite de Poitiers, 1916. Asst. Instr.
Colorado School of Mines, 1894
W. Red Schreiner, Bacteriologist,
Water and Sewage Laboratory.
Elvin Smith, Professor of Voice,
B. S. Oklahoma A. & M. Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music, Pupil of David
Bishop, Theodore Harrison and
Herman Deviers; Instructor Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music.
Easter Smith, Assistant in Laboratory, B. S., K. S. A. C., 1914. Guy W. Smith, Assistant or Master of Math, D. D., Illinois, in Smith, Professor of Edu-
Harry P. Smith, Professor of Edu
ation, A. B. Iowa, A. M. Iowa.
Paul Teetor, Ceremic Chemist,
State Geological Survey.
349. A. B. Kansas,
1920.
Robert M. Stimel Assistant Instructor in Chemistry, A. B. Kansas.
sa, 1925.
Robert S. Tait, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. B. S Mech. Eng. Kansas, 1916.
sistant in Chemistry. Vera G. Smith, Instructor in Zoology, A B. Kansas, 1920.
cation. A. B. Iowa, A. M. Iowa.
Howard V. Smith, Laboratory
Assistant in Chemistry.
Miguel A. Umana, Instructor in Spanish, Bachiller, Liceo de Costa Rica.
Rica.
Charles D. Van Horn, Assistant Instructor of Anatomy, A.B. Washburn,
Virginia, Assistant Profes-
Jamison Vawter, Assistant Professor of Mechanics. B. of C. E., Kansas, 1916.
sas, 1970.
N. E. Wiedemann, Instructor in Architecture, B. S. in Architecture, Illinois.
William E. Wright, Technician in Physimology.
Nellie Mary Young, Instructor in Mathematics, A. B. Karnas, 1920 Alice M. Chuong, Instructor in Mathematics, A. B. Karnas Graduate University of Kansas, Training School for Nurse-
Francis P. O'Brien, Professor of Education and Director Bureau of Education Research and Service. Ph.D. Columbia.
D. Columbus.
Louise Broker, Reference Librarian. Education Seminar. A, B. Kansas 1920.
J. G. Brandt has been appointed Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Fischer's Shoes Are Good Shoes
EDWIN CLAPP SHOES THE NEW ONES ARE HERE
The Edwin Clark
SHOP
The Fairmount
The Bar Harbor
The Poinciana
Del Monte
A
Copley Square
Five styles of Dark Brown, Russia Calf to select from-
In name, in character; in quality of material, in painstaking workmanship—there is no better men's shoes made.
FIVE DOLLARS NOW MORE IF YOU HESITATE
SEE THEM IN OUR WINDOW
OTTO FISCHER
813 Mass. Street
Have You Read JAYHAWKER TALK?
Everything on the hill has gone up except economics grades and the price of the Jayhawker. And after October 15th even the latter may begin to climb.
So we're advising all our friends to pay their $2 to a Jayhawker solicitor (the campus is full of 'em) so they'll be protected in case of a hike—and we meet lots of printers who say paper isn't coming down.
The Jayhawker this year will be better than ever,and will be true to its slogan, "YOUR K. U. DIARY." There'll be new features,new pictures,new ideas.
BURT COCHRAN Business Manager
TWO DOLLARS NOW- THREE MORE ON DELIVERY
THE 1921 JAYHAWKER
Office at Rowland's Annex Now Open for Business
Have You Read JAYHAWKER TALK?
FERDIGOTTLIEB. Editor
J. J. Wheeler has been appointed University Marshal.
Alfred Hill, A. B. Kansas, has been appointed Alumni Secretary.
Spooner Opened Today For Longing Students
Refinished, retucked, "re-metalized" a complete new surprise of a reading room awaits the assault of the University's studious ones in the Spooner library. Immediately after the second term of the summer the sessions the organizer of the lil' section began. A metal ceiling was installed, the floors refinished, walls painted, and the tables and chairs varnished.
The library was opened to students today. Library hours will be from 8 o'clock in the morning until 6 o'clock at night during the first week.
Eighteen thousand dollars was appropriated for library use by the July legislature. The money has been divided among the different departments for use in ordering books. The library numbers in its collection, 135,500 books. Next week the library will go onto the old schedule, opening at 8 o'clock in the morning and closing at 10 o'clock at night.
Are Meeting Girls at Trains.
Every new girl coming to the University will have a big sister. The Big Sister Committee of the Y. W C. A. have made plans by which they will try to make every girl feel at home. They are meeting every train, helping them enroll, and generally look after them until they are fully settled.
Clothes Called For and Delivered
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
929 Mass. St.
We press 'am while you get your hair cut at
HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
THE STUDENT CLEANERS EATON & FRAKER
Phone 499
BJT
Shake, Old Man
We're glad to see you back.
We want to meet you.
And Mr. Freshman
And you'll want to meet us
'Cause we sell the kind of clothes you like to wear.
Ober's
HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS
Clothiers to the Alert Men of K. U.
Trinity Lutheran Church
of LAWRENCE, KANSAS
OUR DOORS ARE OPEN
The hill may be crowded and you may find it hard to get rooms, but Trinity Lutheran Church wants you to know that there is a place for you in the hearts of its people and a pew for you on Sunday mornings. Come and see for yourself.
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Eleventh and New Hampshire Sts.
(One block east of courthouse)
REV. N. D. GOEHRING, Pastor
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Freshmen Overrule Reasons Which Copy-Books Give as Incentives to College Life
When the train has chugged into the home town station exactly twenty-three minutes late, having been marked "on time," and the prospective K. U. Student has taken his grip, tuck, and person into a crowded hair car, it is time that he should consider seriously the reason why he has chosen to spend the next nine months upon the slopes of Mt. Oread.
Seeking information as to the exact logic pursued in selecting this university, it was deemed advisable that a number of this year's freshmen be informally interviewed. The entertaining and prodigious scribe to whom was entrusted this task felt that it would be an easy undertaking. In the course of this work I would answer from all of them. Each when asked his reason, would hesitate and then reply judiciously, "To get in education."
This sentiment, reflected the reporter, could easily be enlarged upon and he prepared purported answers, such as:
"In order to improve my mental apabilities."
"To bring me in touch with men f my own age as well as to inculate the knowledge of my elders."
"To prepare myself for the grim
battle of life; or to put it more metaphorically, I will clone myself in the armor of Education as a foil to the sweeps of Ignorance."
Well satisfied with himself the reporter handed in his story, and returned to his boarding house. \A rather vain desire to prove his contentions overtook him. Consequently, upon spotting a freshman the hewn material thought a moment, and then said:
"The guys have put me hep to the fact that there are a lot of wicked parties thrown up here, so we know 'em how to shake nasty hoof."
The reporter, dumbfounded by what he termed an abnormal youth, soon came to another. The conversation as before, was more vivid and richer. "He still remembered still more startled. For the answer received this time was:
"Well, my dad, came up here, and to satisfy the family, I shoved off too."
Again and again came the disappointing replies. The reporter was bombarded with sentiments which were shocking.
At last, a bespectacled youth with
"Shake!"
Lou
Jim
“Doc”
Jack
“Speed”
“Jeff”
Houks' Barber Shop "The Shop of the town"
QUALITY DOMINATES OUR JEWELRY LINE
In these uncertain times it is advisable to go to the store that maintains its reputation for QUALITY JEWELRY. We offer the best.
Complete showing of White Ivory Excellent Sterling Plate Libby and Pairpont Silver Repair Department
Lander's QUALITY JEWELRY
a studious air was seen sitting limply upon a curbstone, drearily looking into what other writers call "space."
"Why are you going to go to school here?" he was asked.
school here?' he was asked.
The boy looked mournfully at his acquaintance, and drew dramatically:
"Dad's a fatalist, and wanted to die poor, so he sent me here."
OLD ESTABLISHED FIRMS
Hammer & Tongs,
Tooth & Nail:
Fuse & Fret,
Weep & Wail.
Tar & Feathers,
Hoot & Howt;
Slip & Tumble,
Snarl & Growl.
Sick & Tired,
Land & Sea;
Hired & Fired,
Happy & Sleep
Detroit News.
Quality—
1s ever the watchword of—
Squires Studio
We invite all K. U. Students to see our display of Fine Photographs, and also our beautiful line of hand carved frames—and leather goods—We do framing as it should be done.
SQUIRES STUDIO 1035 Mass.
Kodak finishing too.
Fine Photographs
A. MIGNOLLA
32
MARGARET MATZENAUER
"The World's Greatest Woman Singer."
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS EIGHTEENTH ANNUAL
University Concert Course
Eight Concerts in Robinson Gym
$5.00 and $4.00 SEASON TICKETS $5.00 and $4.00
$5.00 and $4.00 SEASON TICKETS $5.00 and $4.00
MARGARET MATZENAUER, CONTRALTO
From the Metropolitan Opera Co. N, Y. The World's greatest woman singer. Tuesday evening, Oct. 12.
SASCHA JACOBINOFF, VIOLINIST
OLGA STEEB, PIANIST
Two noted artists in joint recital.
Tuesday evening, Nov. 9
Single admission $1.25
From the Chicago Opera Co. One of the best of American singers.
Tuesday evening, Dec. 14
Saturday, Nov. 28
MYRNA SHARLOW, SOPRANO
IGANZ FRIEDMAN, PIANIST
Celebrated Polish pianist of international renown.
Thursday evening, Feb. 17
Single admission, $1.00
EMILIO DE GOGORZA, BARITONE
From the Metropolitan Opera Co., N. Y., America's greatest baritone.
Thursday evening, March 10
Single admission $1.50
FLONZALEY STRING QUARTET
THE FINEST STRING QUARTET
The finest String Quartet in the world.
Thursday evening, March 31
Single admission $1.25
In May
One of the noted Symphony Orchestras.
Admission to one concert $1.50
Admission to both concerts $2.00
TWO ORCHESTRA CONCERTS
RESERVED SEAT SEASON TICKET
Admitting to all eight concerts
$5.00 and $4.00
MAIL ORDERS NOW TO
H. L. Butler, Lawrence, Kan.
UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES
Complete stock of Text Books and Supplies for all Branches of K. U. Work.
College Engineers Fine Arts
Novelties—Party Favors—Art Goods—Fine Stationery— Fountain Pens
Fresh Martha Washington Candy
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE
Students at Last Can Buy the Protection Long Desired
Do you know that when you left home you ceased to have fire, transportation and theft insurance on your personal belongings?
Your father and mother always carried ample protection on your belongings at home. Are they worth any less now that you are in school? A Fraternity or Sorority house policy does not cover members' personal property.
By special arrangement we have a policy issued by the Springfield Fire & Marine and the Connecticut Fire Insurance Companies which will cover as follows:
It covers loss to personal property by Fire, Lightning and Transportation, while in the hands of railroad, express or transfer companies.
This form covers within the limits of the United States and Canada.
It covers loss by fire while in dwellings, hotels and other buildings except in permanent residence of assured. It also covers against loss by theft of entire trunks from rooms occupied by assured in hotels or boarding houses or while in charge of a common carrier.
The Springfield's Tourist Baggage policy is liberal as to terms and is free from burdensome conditions.
Losses under it will be paid promptly and in full without discount.
It is a necessity to travelers, vacationists, students at colleges and boarding schools, and to teachers. When the small cost is considered any one who contemplates traveling even on short trips cannot afford to be without a policy which covers personal property (excluding freight shipments) against loss or damage by Fire, Lightning, Theft and Transportation Hazards. Rates $1.00 per $100 per year.
Orders can be left with following for this coverage:
CARL SCHLADERMAN ISE. E.WELLMAN or Phone 689
The Charlton Insurance Agency
GENERAL AGENTS
Bowersock Building City
Also Ask About Our Residence and Burgary
Proposition
Halls
institution,
the
academy
and
gym
Alive
we are
happy
very much
nearly
boarded
decided
and the
letters
recent
romantic
The
they
seize
case
and
co
physics
in gui
the
ported
oricle
soils
large
velocity
cent
the
the
later
not
out
gen
the
do
tie
tl
g
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DEAN KELLY NAMED EFFICIENCY EXPERT
School of Education Head
Remain at K. U. With
New Destination
New Duties
The position of efficiency expert for the University of Kansas is the new office created for Frederick I. Kelly, former dean of the school of education, which position he will be holding in 2018 with dean and research professor of university administration. Dean Kelly had resigned from the University to go to Michigan University but with the arrival of Dr. Ernest H. Lindley, a new chancellor. Armando Deane will remain at Kansas.
The new position involves investigations of the facts, methods and principles of university administration with a view toward bringing the work of higher education to the highest efficiency. Chancellor Lindley the new position as follows:
"Among those best acquainted with higher education it is recognized that the rapid development of state universities due to the rising level of general education, and to a demand for new lines of service to the public has given rise to serious problems of internal organization and of increasing cost of maintenance. Problems can no longer be solved by the cursory attention of executives. They need systematic and thorough-going investigation by men trained for such inquiry. These studies while concerned in part with cost of service and with business efficiency are in essential respects unlike those obtaining in industrial establishments. Here the output depends upon the most effective adjustment of human relations, and studies of administration of the security have as their aim the securing of the human educational valuation of the human resources available. Such studies demand scholars trained in the spirit and aims of higher education as well as in the technique of general educational research.
"Partial surveys of university administration of the character just mentioned have been made in several of the state universities, among which are Minnesota, Iowa, and Washington. As a result of these studies we present to the public an account of stewardship and an intelligible program of development which has met with the cordial approval of their constituents."
Bradley and Hamilton Star in British Meet
London.—In a post-Olympic athletic meet held in a London Saturday, Sept. 4, American and British athletes divided the honors by each winning five of the ten events on the program. Everett L. Bradley, c22, winner of second place in the classic pentathlon event at the Olympic games in Antwerp, throw a javelin a distance of 160 feet, 10 inches. Hamilton, the second place athlete and winner, second place in the decathlon by Bradley's throw, hurling the spear 164 feet, 8 inches. Hamilton also won the broad jump with a leap of 22 feet, while Bradley was second with 21 feet 11 and 1-2 inches.
After a month's stay in Europe, Bradley is now on his way back to the United States. He will re-enter the University in a little over a week. The records and performances with which he is credited have further endeared him to the University student body, and it is certain that he will be sincerely welcomed back "on the Hill."
Schedules for the courses for the first semester in the College are printed and are available to students on application at the office of J. G. Brandt, dean of the college, in Fraser Hall.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex-
clusive Optometrist). Eyes. exam-
glasses. glasses made. Office 1025 Mass
DR. H. I. CHAMBERS. Suite 2, Jack son building. Building. General practice. Special attention to nose, throat and esk. Telephone 217.
DR H. REDING, F. A. U. BUILDing, Eye,
nose, and Head. Threat. Special
attention to fitting grasses and tonail
phone. Phone 613.
DRS. WELCH AND WELCH--PALMER GRADUATES. Offices 927 Mass. St.
Phones, Office 115, Residence 115K
DR. J R BECHTEL. Rooms 3 and 4 over McCulloch's Drug Store, Office Phone 3143. Ren Phone 1343.
DR. G. W. JONES, A. M. D. M. D.踪 of stomach, surgery and gynecology, Suite 1, F A U Bldg. Business 35, Headress 35K2, Hospital 174K.
DR. ALBRIGHT - Chirprator-Radio
Message - Results guar-
anted. 1161 St. Phone 1431.
Residence Phone 1761.
EDWARD BUMGARDSER — Dentist Room 311 Forkins Bldg. Special attention to extracting. Phone 511.
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
Dr. Ben Nicolet, A. B.'10,
Marries Pittsburgh Girl
Mikey Kashta Hasley, Pittsburgh, Penn, and Dr. B. H. Nicolet, A. B.' 10. Ph. D. Yale, 13. were married in Pittsburgh, August 28. After a short trip including Cleveland, the Mackinac islands, and Chicago, they arrived Saturday in Kansas City, the home of Dr. Nicolet's parents. Dr. Nicolet expects to visit Lawrence next week.
Dr. Nicolet is an associate professor of chemistry at the University of Chicago. He was a captain in the Chemical Warfare Service during the war. He spent the summer at the Mellen Institute of Chemical Research in Pittsburgh, engaged in research work.
The reason some people don't talk more than they do is that they can't think of anything else to say about themselves.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
All College Freshmen will attend a convoction in Fraser Hall, Monday, September 13, at 4:30, to gain pre-enrollment and other instructions.
Thursday, September 16, at regular scheduled hours, all classes will be held. All students are required to be in attendance.
Friday, September 17, at 10:30, will occur the first general assembly of students (pm) and teachers (am) Glanacollo Lindley will deliver the address.
Monday, September 13, 8 p. m.
Myers Hall, all-Freshman meeting.
The Y. M. C. A. announces that pen house will be held for all University men on Saturday and Sunday, September 11 and 12 at Myers Hall
Tuesday, September 14, 7:30 p.m., entertainment and mixer. Eats.
Wednesday, September 15, 7:30 p.
m. Myers Hall, "K. U. First Mixer."
The headquarters of the Y. W. C.
A. are in Myers Hall.
The churches of Lawrence will extend a cordial welcome to all students, especially first year students at the services on Sunday, September 19.
On Tuesday, September 21, 4:30 p.m.
m., Cancellor Lindley will give the first of a series of addresses to Freshmen, men and women. Fraser Hall. All Freshmen required to be present.
present. Monday and Tuesday, Sentenbay
It is well that the parents of University young men have not witnessed the "window washing" campaigns put forth by their prodigy preparatory to "push week."
in the late summer will be held Sept. 13, 14 and 15, in Room 802, Fraser Hall, from 10 to 11:30 a.m., and from 2 to 5 p.m., S. Z. Herb, director.
13 and 14, the Women's Student Council will be at home to new girls in the Best Room, 114 Fraser Hall.
F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist Eastman Kodaks
Typewriters for Rent
L. E. Waterman and Conkun Fountain Pens THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St.
Better get yours while our stock is complete
PROTCH
Lawrence Typewriter Exchange
737 Mass St. Phone 548
C
The College Tailor
At the Sign of Ye Jolly Little Tailor
This it but another practical demonstration of what our immense organization can do in the way of value-giving. It is the result of organized skill, plus system, plus buying power.
Samuel G. Clark
E.W. Price C.
TAILORING
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
1033 Mass. Street
Presenting the feature of the new season in
New all wool fabrics of the season's latest
Lawrence National Bank
All fresh new woolens, in the snappiest of new patterns and colorings in seasonable weights and weaves.
Forty Dollars and Upward Tailored to Individual Measure
You know the style is right when friends ask
Wilson
Muir
Tealier?
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room Coupon Booths Savings Department Bond and Trust Department
"Ye Shop of Fine Quality"
Welcomes to Lawrence
all
K. U. Students
Gustafson The College Jeweler
This store has been the real quality jewelry store of this town for the past sixteen years. Students, faculty members and townspeople who care about buying goods of standard make, carrying the guarantee of a reputable manufacturer and at a reasonable price always come to
You New Students
Follow precedent and form the habit of looking at our windows. In them you will always see displayed the latest and the best. They sell for one price—that price being the lowest consistent with good business methods.
K. U. Jewelry Our Specialty
GRUEN WATCHES
WD C
TRADE MARK
AMERICA is fast becoming a pipe smoking country. Every year more and more men are realizing the comfort, the satisfaction, and the economy of the pipe. And by natural selection, more and more men are smoking WDC Pipes. This is not chance. It is because WDC Pipes offer the utmost in pipe value. Honest French briar, seasoned by our own special process make WDC Pipes break in sweet and mellow. Coupled with that is a self-governed body of pipe makers whose sole object is to fashion pipes which are without peers in all the world. And it has been accomplished. Ask any good dealer.
---
WM. DEMUTH & CO., NEW YORK WORLD'S LARGEST MAKERS OF FINE PIPES
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUGGESTS ELECTIVES FOR FRESHMAN STUDY
Dean J. G. Brandt Favors Wide Range of Courses For First Year People
Suggestions to first-year students in their choice of electives are communicated from J. G. Brands, newly-graduated in the Department of Biology, Liberal Arts and Sciences, in a quotation from "Studies of the Freshman Year at Harvard," as follows:
LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
"Knowledge of literature," i. e. of the best which has been thought and said in the world," is inseparably sound up with language. Language itself when thoroughly studied has great power of giving precision and insight; the wealth of the great nations of the world can never be thoroughly understood in translations; the language itself is key to the spirit of the people who have spoken it."
HISTORY, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL "History and political and social knowledge of men and their thoughts, equipment for our modern life. History describes the origin and development or decay of national life and human society in general. The study of government gives a liberalizing influence on public institutions. Economics gives a solid basis for the business activity."
MATHEMATICS
"The statement of mathematics is valuable for all in forming the原则 of thought and giving vigor to the mind; it is important for students of physics, engineering, and chemistry."
MATHEMATICS
NATURAL SCIENCES
"A student who wishes to be equipped to understand the modern
Welcome Students
We Serve Good Eats at Popular Prices
among men, should become acquainted with the facts, methods, and principles of science. Culture implies such interest in science, which opens up new knowledge of nature new methods of work and of thought.
SUPREME CAFE
That's the Place
to Eat
914 Mass. St.
interests itself in psychology, ethics, sociology, science and religion, describes the development of earlier systems of such thought, investigates questions of general logic and the theory of scientific methods."
PHILOSOPHY "Philosophy deals with the fundamental questions of human thought.
Wanted—Cook; One with some Scotch in her preferred—Indianapolis News.
LOOKING OVER THE AIDS Wanted—Wowant to work for husband's board and wages—Detroit News.
Wanted—a female donkey. Apply personally—Yorkshire (Eng.) .Post. Wanted—a violinist theater piano to reserve necessary—New York Globe.
Wanted—Housekeeper; for a man and two middle aged children. Baltimore Sun.
Wanted—Fifteen girls. Apply
Young and Wilde at 10 a. m—New
New York Ewenial Mail.
the chauffeurs look out for me."
"What a funny noise that snake makes. I think I'll step on him."
"I've never driven a car in traffic before. But they say it's perfectly simple."
FAMOUS LAST WORDS
"Watch me skate out past the Danger" sign I bet I can touch it."
"These traffic policemen think they own the city. They can't stop me I'm going to cross the street now. Let
"I think I'll mix a little nitric acid with this chloride of potassium and see what happens."
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Bulletin Is Out of Date.
The big bulletin board at the entrance of the campus alleles that t School of Fine Arts is housed in C North College. The old "Directe" is a relic of before-the-war days, as it slightly outdate now, as t Fine Arts students are now housed the center wing of the new administration building.
"Wh-ew," said a sophomore in line, "this enrollment rush week and registration turmoil is getting the best of me-if it wasn't for
The Oread Cafe
"BRICKS"
and a bit of refreshment now and then—I'd just about give up."
Just a Step from the Campus
Copyright, 1919, A. B. Kirschbaum Company
—A
“tryon” before our mirrors will convince you that we have a Suit here that spells your name “all over it”—
—for 10 years
Clothes headquarters
for the University
Man—
Hickey Freeman
Fashion Park
Stafford System
Fine Clothes
Borsalino
Dubuois
Fine Hats
Arrow
Shirts
Collars
“Visitors Welcome”
A "tryon" before our mirrors will convince you that we have a Suit here that spells your name "all over it"-
for 10 years
Clothes headquarters
for the University Man—
Hickey Freeman
Fashion Park
Stafford System
Fine Clothes
Borsalino
Dubuois
Fine Hats
Arrow
Shirts
Collars
"Visitors Welcome"
WE LIVE BY ADMIRATION, HOPE AND LOVE.—WORDSWORTH
IN full accord with the spirit of the times, our exhibition of new fall fashions entirely defeats the idea that one must pay an exorbitant price in order to secure both style and quality.
Brahams
Womens Wearing Apparel and Millinery
CARL'S
GOOD CLOTHES
ADMIRATION, HOPE AND LOVE."—WORDSWORTH
WE LIVE BY ADMIRATION, HOPE AND LOVE.—WORDSWORTH
IN full accord with the spirit of the times, our exhibition of new fall fashions entirely defeats the idea that one must pay an exorbitant price in order to secure both style and quality.
Branham's
Womens Wearing Apparel and Millinery
The K. U. Student Stores
Rowland S
Two Stores
on the Hill
14th and Ohio Sts.
1237 Oread
Text Books
Supplies
Novelties and
Everything
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NUMBER 2
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCY, KANSAS, EPTEMBER, 14, 1920.
Plans For New Stadium Completed
REGISTRANTS NUMBER 2,400 IN FIRST DAY
Students Pour Into Gymnasium All Day to Fill Out Entrance Cards
MAIN ENTRANCE
ARE ENROLLING TODAY
Agents for Hill Publications are Active—Fees Greatly Hiked
FACTS ABOUT ENROLLMENT
Enrolment in Robinson Gymnastics Starts 9 o'clock this morning.
Enroll by initial letters.
Tuesday, 9 to 10:00 o'clock. A.
to C.
Tuesday, 10:30 to 12 o'clock;
G. H. and T.
O, H,
Tuesday, 1:30 to 3 o'clock; S;
Tuesday, 3 to 5 o'clock; O, P;
O, R. Y, and Z.
Wednesday, 9 to 10:30 o'clock;
I, J, K, and L.
Wednesday, 10:30 to 12 o'clock;
D, E, F, and W.
D, E, F, and W.
Wednesday; 1:30 to 3 c'clock;
M, N, U, and V.
More than 2,400 students were registered up to 4 o'clock Monday afternoon for the regular fall term of the University. Of this number, 1,188 had registered on Saturday or for hear and 2,500 registered up to noon
Wednesday, 3 to 5 o'clock; B.
audiobook.
Students lined up in front of the Gymnasium yesterday morning and all day long a constant stream of students filed through the Registrar's mull. Registration will continue in the Gymnasium until Wednesday afternoon. Late arrivals will in this way be accommodated. No fee for late registration will be assessed until after Wednesday.
Enrollment will start tomorrow morning in the Gymnasium. Further details of the enrollment will be found above.
Students registering today were given an opportunity to buy Daily Kansas subscriptions, Jayhawkers, Osoy Ooi salesmen.
Fees for upperclassmen in the College were $26; for those entering the University for the first time an additional $10 was asked as a matriculation fee. Students from out of state had to pay the haked according, as was the case in all of the University's separate schools.
TALK WITH GOVERNOR
ABOUT TEACHER GRAB
Board Says Other States Raiding Kansas Schools and Offering More Money
Topkea, Sept. 13—Members of the State Board of Administration convened with Governor Allen today over the dangers of losing a number of valuable instructors from the State University at Lawrence and the Agricultural College at Manhattan.
It had been reported to the board that other states are raiding Kansas institutions in an effort to get instructors, and in some cases, are offering teachers as much as $1,000 a year more than Kansas is paying them. Montana is among the states said to be seeking Kansas teachers. The great east demand is for agricultural teachers, it is said.
W. S. G. A. Plans Teas For Freshman Women
Tea will be served Tuesday and Wednesday from 10:30 to 12 o'clock and from 2:30 to 5 o'clock in Room 116, Fraser Hall by the Women's Student Government Association. Comfortable chairs will be provided.
"Although these teas are for everyone in the university," said Helen Olsen, president of W.S.G.A., "they are essentially for the freshmen women to become acquainted with one another. After enrollment and registration they can come over to the Rest Room, where every attempt will be made to make them congenial."
New Chancellor is Lauded For Work as an Educator
When a man who has watched the career of Dr. Ernest H. Lindley since his college days was asked to name the most striking characteristic of the new chancellor of the University of Kansas, he repaid gift cards with respect and affair." That is the way they speak of him in Indiana where his fine work as a teacher in the university of that state, and as head of its department of philosophy and psychology did not by any means measure it. That is what they say of him throughout the Northwest where as president of the University of Idaho, he achieved noteworthy success in developing that institution and, far from being the most constructive influence into the cities and towns of Washington and Oregon and into all the industrial and social groups in that part of the country. A thorough scholar, a stimulating teacher, a progressive adminstrative worker in affairs and business in all the concerns of enlightened citizenship.
LECTURES TO BUSINESS MEN
Go back four years and to Portland, Oregon. And since it happens to be Friday, visit the Lincoln high school building about 7:30 o'clock in the evening and push you way through the crowd into the large auditorium. The room is filled with businessmen as many as can get into the largest available hall in Portland. They are patiently waiting for eight o'clock. Must be a pretty lively show to attract two thousand tired business men into a hall a half hour ahead of time! Yes, a college professor is going to give a lecture but is not his first lecture in that city. There were not so many people at the first. It is one of a series running through the winter. The subject is psychology in relation to commerce and industries. And President Wendell Flood was asked to a friend: "Doctor Linder has taken Portland by storm. We have had about twenty-five invitations for him to speak, more than he could accept." That was the winter in which Doctor Linder, on leave of absence from his work in the University of Indiana, was visiting the Washington State College. Incidentally, it was that visited to the Northwest that led to his accepting a call, the following year, to the presidency
of the University of Idaho.
PRESIDENT IS "JUST FOLKS"
Or again, drop into the smoking compartment of a Pullman out of Spokane. It is well known that the smoking compartment test reveals the true attitude of men to other men. In this instance the attitude is clear; it is brisk, through soiable clouds of tobacco smoke. A tall, erect, spare man, well dressed, has just come in. His face arrests attention. It is the sort of face that people describe as strong yet kindly, serious and caring. The character of which are the lines and character of which is manifest a rare collaboration of mind and heart in the business of modeling and delineation. The man offers a remark on the subject before the meeting, then offers to help him work in the number industry. His remark provokes a question. Soon he is leading the discussion.
In the course of the afternoon, the talk turns to politics, labor questions, religion. He is at home in them all. When the more personal questions come up as to the occupations of those present, and the usual guessing context is started, they all miss it on the tail man, because they have not heard the president who was of commanding personality and yet "just folks." And an editor who was in the crowd went home and wrote a story about the incident that travelled all around the Northwest. "Doctor Lindley is a leader wherever he happens to be," was the word of it all.
(Continued on Page 4.)
UNDERSTANDS LABOR PROBLEM
Or step into a large convention of mine employers, held during some of our visits to war when the next step shed had not always clear to men in the great industries any more than to other men. Sense the tenseness in the atmosphere. Note the obvious drift of things towards action that may mean conflict, when it comes to the hour. Then listen to the man who has just been called on to speak. His words are weighted with judicial fairness. He puts the case tactfully but not minutely. In the timelife of his reconant voice is that quality of unshakable courteousness. In this case, agreement. Strange that he, a college president, should have been called into that meeting But Doctor Lindley is a man o
Plain Tales From the Hill
Lardy Ringer, last year's so-called conedian in the Kansas has returned to school, but it is with great glee that we announce that he will not write any more of his painful series of sporting news.
And when Geraldina and Hesekiah conversed, the latter told his beloved of some baskets of apples he had seen, then these three around the an
The parapupa pups and social hoppers are exerting their influence with the motion picture show owners in Lawrance to change their program every day so that they will be able to attend a performance every afternoon and evening without seeing any one picture twice.
"Were these bows around the apple baskets?" queried Geraldina.
"For shame! Of course not! Beaux are only around peaches."
Constant reader is hereby informed that wedding announcements, which belong in this column, have been printed and are being printed in the society column.
Egyptian cigarettes! Turkish cigarettes! But the ones passed around at the fraternity houses this week are "Russian" cigarettes.
This column refrains from listing the biggest jokes of the year—the money bright studies are claiming to have earned during the summer.
DOWN TO HER OWN PLANE
Although Lucille Cleveland is Plain
Tales editor this week, she has 'not
yet began her duties. Possibly, this is
because she is averse to being con-
nected with anything "plain."
Rainy Weather Prevents Joyrides on Oread Ave
The impassable condition of Oread avenue from the entrance to the campus at Thirteenth street to Frasar Hall is due to the rainy weather of the last thirty days, according to John M. Shea, superintendent of buildings and grounds. The roads are being cut down in preparation to the placement of a 28-foot concrete paving, from the entrance to the crossing in front of Green Hall.
The heavy rains beginning some four weeks ago, however, delayed the work of excavating, and completely prevented the authorities from setting up these large groups to work on the project. Work is progressing slowly now but when the weather dries up, Mr. Shea says, a large force of men will be put on the job for several days, and ready for the Hill joyriders inside of twenty days.
FIVE CO-OP HOUSES USED BY WOMEN NOW
Hill Organizations and Citizens Help Students to Lower Living Expenses
Because of the success of the two co-operative houses opened last year to accommodate university women, three additional houses have been opened this year at the request of the women. The houses are located at 1122 Ohio Street, 1131 Ohio Street, 1200 Tennessee Street, and 1201 Louisiana Street. Campus Cottage on the west slope of the campus, will be re-opened. The houses will accommodate from nine to twenty women each. The house management is placed in charge of those who share the responsibilities placed upon them Household expenses last year averaged twenty-three dollars for each student. This was from thirty to fifty per cent less than the cost in other houses.
The Lakota House at 1122 Ohio Street was purchased for the women this summer by the Alumni Association. The Association paid $1,000 on the purchase price; the women are to complete the payments; the men are to pay $1,500 of economies bought the house at 1131 Ohio Street, and H. E. Don Carlsen bought and furnished the house at 1200 Tennessee Street. These two houses have been rented to the woman. The house at 1213 Louisiana Street. Mrs. Catherine Burnett. Campus Cottage is owned by the University.
Various organizations have contributed to the furnishing of the houses. Among these are the Womens Student Government Association Women's Panhellenic, the association of University Women, Association of Collegiate Alumnae (Lawrence and Topeka branches), Lawrence Federation of Women's Clubs, and several individuals.
Recently appointed chaperons for the houses include Mrs. Catherine Burnett, Miss Doris Gleibrich, and Miss Sarah Krause. All rest of the houses have not been made
Van, the Animal Man, is authority for the statement that Kansas is going to have a great football year. He said, "I will not all," the way he terly put it.
Dr. H, P. Cady, Dr. R, Q. Brewater and Dr. H, C. Allen, all of the chemistry department, arrived in Lawrence last week after spending the summer with his family on a trip in his automobile and toured in Oregon and Washington, also.
Financial Campaign is Awaited For Start of Gigantic Project
New Structure Will Seat 34,340. House Two Football Fields and Provide all Latest Improvementst Toward Better College Athletics
PAMPHLET WILL BE DISTRIBUTED
InformationR egarding Erection of Huge Horshoe Will Be Sent Out at Intervals to Interest People Throughout the State
commonicated:
The playing field will be large enough, according to the plans,
to put two football fields within the bleachers. The structure will
face north and south.
Complete plans for the new Stadium—the goal of the Kansas athletic management, the hope of the student body and the vision of the University's alumni—have been made. The new athletic structure will be located on the present site of McCook and Hamilton Fields.
Hamilton KR The pans, include seating capacity for 34,340 ordinarily and in an emergency the temporary bleachers on the open end of the horse-shoe can be brought up and an additional 6,000 can be accommodated.
WILL RAZE WEST END BLEACHERS THIS YEAR
Athletic Management Will Use Lumber to Repair North and South Seats
McCook Field bleachers will be transformed soon from a three-aided horseshoe affair into a two-sided bleachers. This was the announcement Monday of Dr. F, C. Allen, director of athletics and coach of foot
The west bleachers, sodden and rotten will be torn down. What good lumber there is left in that part of the structure will be used to repair the roof or the sidewall so as to use its footboards for 2,000 seats to be erected on the cinder truck.
Payments Non Compulsory But Are Used To Further Women's Interests
W. S. G. A. DUES TODAY
Engineer's estimates show that the north and south beachers, with reinforcements will be unable to hold the load of the big homecoming game with Nebraska. Ames will also draw a big crowd, as will Drake, so it was thought that he would pack the track for the accommodation and safety of the "football bugs" that come to Lawrence to see the Jayhawk fight off invaders. This, of course, will stop track practice in the fall to a considerable extent so it was found necessary to move the board track, not the fence. Building to fifteen Field. This move will allow track men to work all winter on the boards. The track is an exact replica of the Convention Hall track, where Kansas meets Missouri in the indoor track season and where the K. C. A. C. invitation meet is held at the dinon on McCook field, the athletic management is making the best of the facilities at their command.
Membership tags to the Women's Student Government Association will be sold at the Gymnasium during enrollment tomorrow. Every woman automatically becomes a member of W. S. G. A. on entering the University and the dues are not compulsory. These dues are used to promote movements for the good of women in U.S. colleges. These proceeds have been used for co-operative houses and scholarships of the women of the University.
According to Helen Olsen, president of W. S. G. A., the council is anxious that every woman student will feel herself to be an abstrait memoirist, and that she directly support the best interests of the University.
Chemistry In $^{1}$*structors* Return Doctor Dains and Doctor Ellex of the department of Chemistry, returned Monday morning from the American Chemical Society's annual convention. Doctor Dains read a paper.
Each section will have a separate entrance. This will remedy the congestion of former years at the one or two entrances. The plans include an entry ramp and a quarter mile with only one turn. Underneath the bleachers, field offices of the coaches, rubbing rooms, 200 lockers for the Varsity and 200 for varsity track. All outdoor trakcies for indoor trace practice, is being planned for.
During the summer, Dr. F. C. Allen has been working hard on the stadium plans. He employed, at the beginning of the summer, Prof. F. L. Brown of the School of Engineering and Laforce Bailey of the architectural department to make the plans for the new athletics field. Ms. Brown many plants during the summer months. A ground plan was first made and then a prospectus show just how the structure would look when completed with the surroundings drawn. Some of the minutest details have been worked out. A six or to eight foot promade on top of the wall surrounding the bleachers, a press box, an entrance, two flag one for the Crimson and Blue and one for the opposing team, are all included.
COMPLETED IN 1921
The plans call for the completion of the structure in time for the Missouri game in 1921. Students-who are graduating this year will be able to come back to their first Missouri game and see the new stadium.
Little things, like the amount of clearance between eyes while sitting on the bleachers, has been worked out. The Kansas structure will have "seeing space" of five inches. By this means that those sitting in the bleacher seat behind you must obey above your head, thus no hat will obstruct the view, and neither will the man in front be kept from seeing the game.
The seats are the only things that will not be made of enforced concrete. They will have a plank "cushion." This, of course, will not impair the health of the spectators. Everything for the comfort and coimmunity of the spectators is being considered by the management.
GET OUT PUBLICATION
This week "The Stadium," Volume 1, Number 1, is being issued by the Kansas Athletic management. It contains cuts, statements of the needs of the University from the point of view of alumni, students, faculty and the Governor. The publication is a sixteen-page pamphlet and will be distributed free of charge that they will send them to influential friends, alumni of the school, or to parents. It is the first attempt of the athletic department to get the people of the state interested in the stadium project in a direct way.
The financing of the project, Dr. Allen says, is not worrying him. "The need is the appeal," he thinks and university committees are now working to fund a gigantic financial campaign to raise $500,000, the probable cost of the stadium.
University Orchestra try-outs on
Thursday, 7:30 to 9:30 in Fraser
Hall.
F. E. Kendrie.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief
News Editor...
Telescope Editor
Sport Editor
Alumni Editor
Exchange Editor
Geneva Hunter,
Walter G. Herer
Herrbert Little
A. E. Gavrin
Oeijjes
Litchfield
C. C. Nielsen
BUSINESS STAFF
Henry B, McCurdy...Business Mgr
Lloyd Ruppenthal. Asst' Business Mgr.
Deane W. Malott...Cleculation Mgr
BOARD MEMBERS
Catherine Oder
Grace Olsen
Gilbert Swenson
Meda Smith
Harlow Tibbett
James Austin
Burt E. Cochran
Ferd Gottlieb
Alfred Graves
J. J. Kistler
Deane Malott
Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; yes, $2.50 for one semester; 5 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Psychology, the University of Kansas, from the press of the Department of Journalism.
Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the college by building on its predecessors and then merely printing the news by standing for the ideas the students would like to see published or written to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to teach them how to wiser heads; in all to show what is important to the students of the University.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1920
DONALD E. JOSLIN
When, on July 2, Donald E. Joslin was visited by the Griet Spectre and taken into the Shadows of Death, the Kansas Board lost one of its most versatile and steadfast members, the University lost one of its most brilliant young men, and his many friends were left with an aching void in their hearts;—innerly sorrow by his untimely demise.
Called from this life at the age of twenty years by an all-powerful, yet all mournful Being, "Don." as he was called by those who knew him best, presented an admirable illustration of what a youth may accomplish with perseverance and purpose. Attaining the rank of a senior in college, the while been connected with the editor's papers of three Kanaas weekly newspapers is his enviable record so deserving of the warm praise lavished by his mourning friends.
Though taken away from his fellow-man, remembrance leaves this thought in mind:
His was the gentlest soul we ever know.
His closest associates have as their dearest memory of him, hisaptess character. Untrammlered by life's vicissitudes, he lent an aura of gentility to those with whom he came in contact. Finding pleasure in fraternity with other men, he gave pleasure, and his friendship was at all times held dearly.
NECESSITIES
Mr. Porzi, get-rich-quick artist de luxe, is still confined and incarcerated in a Boston jail at the present time, he has not started a school of promising grafters; furthermore, he has no disciples in Lawrence, as far as can be learned.
So, students who are not acquainted with the ways and wiles of K. U., be not afraid when you are approached today, tomorrow, and the rest of the week by other students who offer receipts for payments for Kansan subscriptions, Jayhawkers, or season athletic tickets; and fear not when the registrar's office urges you to part with $4 or $5 for a season ticket to the annual University Concert Course.
For all these, and more, are propositions bone fide in every particular, and necessary to the fullest enjoyment of university life. The Daily Kansan, the newspaper of the Hill, is as vital to students who wish to know what is happening both here and elsewhere as a campaign fund to a political party. The Jayawaker, the yearly publication, is a memento of everlasting usefulness to keep in mind the frivolous days of college. The University Concert Course, comprising the best artists of the country, is a rare opportunity to hear the best.
a rare opportunity to hear the best
in music—an opportunity no student
can afford to miss.
And in all these things; much time and in some cases expense can be saved by acting as soon as possible in procuring subscriptions and tickets. So, student, turn not away from the humble solicitor; he is for your benefit and convenience; and you will to well to let him aid yes.
TO FRESHMAN
Freshman, take a tip from your uncle, The University Daily Kansan and learn the gentle art of asking questions. It shows lack of head work to go around making unforgivable mistakes and proving to the student body that you are a freshman, rather than asking a few questions and only arousing their suspicions that such is the case. Even seniors forget little minor points about registering and enrolling, and have to ask rather insecure questions. You may be taken for a senior who has become more or less absent minded from over study.
University students as a whole, with the possible exception of a few evily possessed Sophomores have a kindly feeling toward Freshman, and will help you in any way that he or she can. Or if you are afraid that the jinx is with you and you may draw one of the above species of Sophomore, go to the faculty, they are ever reliable and will not see you concession tickets nor offer to take you snipe hunting.
Now don't get wild and panicky but consult and talk with your fellow attends and you will become both enlightened and acquainted.
SATURDAY NIGHT
The University shows signs of "getting into the collar" better this year than ever before. Preparation for the various events of the school year in going forward in a business-like manner, without hitch or delay, and with "everybody boosting," prospects for a successful year are exceedingly bright.
An all-University party next Saturday night, a complete compounding of all the human factors that go to make up our institution—the faculty'll be here, too—has been planned. The plans were announced the first of this week by the self-governing student councils of the men and women. Nothing of the kind has ever been mixed in the way of such a mix in an institution of like size, as far as can be learned.
If everyone turns out; if the old gym is packed from root to basement with four thousand old and new students; pep, good fellowship, and University spirit will exude from K U.'s student body in large hunks, and explode spontaneously, with a bang that
All the social organizations have given up their social affairs for that night. There will be no rush parties. Can't the rest of us, not so bothered with such things, also give up the movies, the first week of adjustment to rooms, or perhaps a date, to "get adjusted" as to our university;
If you don't, try it some time. Ads are the meat of news stories of every corner of the world's great commerce of all commodities, which have been assorted and brought right here to Lawrence to serve the students and people of the town.
Do you read the advertisements in The Daily Kansan?
"NUTHIN' BUT ADS'
The Kansan is supplying a demand of its subscribers through the advertising columns. Modish clothing, snappy service and prices as promised by the merchants in their advertisement are truthful. They couldn't afford to be otherwise, for the benefit either of the newspaper or of the merchants.
What the market pages of the big city papers is to the rarer, the advertising sections of The Daily Kansan should be to the students. The merchants who supply the many needs of the University help support a university institution when they present their wares through the advertising columns and in so presenting their goods, are asking for the attention of the student body.
Look for what you want in The Daily Kansan.
TAYHAWK-TALK
COLLEGE LIFE
IN
OUR COPIES
AND
OTHERS.
"They Mary After 52 Years."-- headline. He must have been waiting to make a living wage on a prof's salary.
Thousands of Italian children have neither texts nor copy books because of the paper shortage. What grief stricken children Italy must have.
"Boose Thefts To Grand Jury."—We trust the public may not get the wrong impression of the grand jury from this head.
Several men report seeing an Illinois field covered with snow within the last week. It takes a long time to get there and to go about absolutely dry, doesn't it?
"Bar Crooks From Wall Street"
An equally simple job to take up on the completion of this one is to bar birds from trees.
In every period and in every society there exists an understanding of the meaning of life which represents the highest level to which the men of that society have attained—an understanding defining the highest good at which that society aims. The religious perception of our time, in its widest apa-
tition, is that the human well-being, both material and spiritual, lies in the growth of brother hood among all men—in their lovin' harmony one with another—Tolstoy
Displays of paper clothing are being made in Washington. Judging from the last few weeks, weather this is no time to start anything like that.
Brotherhood Among Men
Mental Lapses
TRY THIS ONE ON THE FRESHMEN
"How in the world did you ever introduce Willie to put away that coal?" Mrs. Browne asked in astonishment as she saw her son working like a beaver, "I offered him 26 cents to do it, and he bought me a dollar—money on a Saturday afternoon."
"Oh, it was quite simple," the wise father chucked. "I merely started an argument and then bet him 10 cents in an hour."—New York American.
THESE NEW DISEASES!
Caller—What do you charge, doctor?
Doctor—Five dollars for a minimum
Caller—how much for a stomach ache?—Mineapolis Journal.
SAME WAY HERE
"Darling," he asked, "when did you first realize that, you loved me?"
"The morning I read in the paper that you father had been accused of beating the government out of a lot of money," she replied, "New York American.
Pokus —He is. He even allows his wife to select his cigars and neckties. —Minnapolis Journal.
Hokus—He seems like a man ut
terly indifferent to fate.
"I know," the delinquent replied, "but mistakes are made by the best of us. I was planning to be away, and all about it."—New York American.
HE CAN'T BE HUMAN
"You told me last week," the collector complained, "that if I would call today you'd nav this bill."
USE A DATE BOOK!
"Indade and you'll take nothing. I haven't a single piece of instalment plan furniture in the house."—Minneapolis Journal,
A NEW MUSICAL INSTRUMENT?
"Madam, I have come to take the Census."
SOCIALISM
They tell me they are owners of stores, Butchers.
(Silk shirts, soft hats, loud vests bright ties.)
I see men on the streets Dressed in the latest fashions.
Automobile mechanics. Errand boys in banks.
bright ties.)
fa sk who they are.
I see other men on the streets Who are not well dressed.
(Old shoes, shiny suits, frayed collars)
Automobile mechanics,
They tel me they are owners of stores Doctors and lawyers,
ask who they are.
From a City Window
Errand boys in banks
On moonlit nights, the towers and domes
Manufacturers of automobiles Bank presidents.
Carl Glick.
Are vellied in azure mist,
While roofs of houses far below,
Shine like ea lain water at seat,
By Silver moonbancas kissed,
And then I wonder, did I dream Of azure mist and silver sea.
on sunny mornings, when I wake,
Before the world is stirring.
The silver sea is turned to gold,
Before the world is stirred,
Wake,
With myriad sunbeams whirling.
towers and domes and roofs below?
But no! The night once more unfolds,
THE WESTERN BUSINESS MAN who says
e doesn't like the Woodworth Buildi-
g because it makes him feel small.
PEOPLE WHO SKIAGRAPH
THEIR MINDS FOR US
The same sweet moonlit mystery.
The girl who turns to the unhappy marriage serial as soon as she gets the paper.
The woman who continually fusses round, straightening up things as仕 as other people disarrange them.
The man whose sole notion of entertaining a woman involves a meal at a fashionable restaurant, with expensive theatre tickets to follow.
The youth at the movies who audibly expresses his dislike of educa 'onal films.
The committee chairman who is al-
ways saying, "I ought to have been
consulted about't hat."
The person who involuntarily backs off when approached by friendly dogs or babies.
The man who paints the front of his house in violent contrast with the rest of the solid block.
The super-stout lady in the trolley who hurls herself into a four-inch strip of seat between two passengers.
Yankee Ideas of England.
From the New York Tribune.
London — No one is so anxious an American tourist to express an opinion of England. They are uneasy among them, but many eighteen different impressions stated recently by as many different individuals on what struck them in Eng-
The average London policeman doesn't know the streets in another district than his own.
The number of middle aged men in the streets of London is greater than in New York.
The number of women compared with the number of men in the streets of London at midday is great.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H. I. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jack building. General practice. Special attention to nose, throat and ear. Telephone 217.
DR H. REDING, F. A. U. BUILDING, Eye, nose, and throat. Special attention to fitting goggles and toall wear. Phone 513.
DHS. WELCH AND WELCH-PALMER GRADUATES. Office 397 Mass., Chicagograduates.com. DR. J R BECIFER. Rooms 2 and 3 office of McLoughlin Drug Store. Office 436 McLoughlin Drug Store.
DR. ALBRIGHT - Chiropractor -Indic-
Therapy -Massage -Results guar-
tanced. 1191 Mass St. Phone 1431.
Residence Phone 1761.
EDWARD BUMGARDNER - Dentist Room 311 Perkins Bldg. Special attention to extracting. Phone 511.
Z H TIBBITS—Dentist. 927 Mass St.
Phone 183.
"Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St.
The open air forum at Hyde park is the only place in the world where anybody can speak on any subject.
The number of English women who wear woolen stockings is conspicuous.
er than in New York
London has fine materials for clothes, but poorer tailors than New York.
Men have to order coat shirts in order to get them; Englishmen don't wear them.
There are more women than men in public bars when they are open in England.
The Englishman takes more leisure than the American. A man of moderate means plays golf three times a week on Saturday and Monday as a holiday.
There are more silk hats on the business streets than one would find in America.
Your baggage always must travel with you in England.
The status on the street are all realistic, life size ones. Edith Cavell is the sole exception and even this is a strange one for her. Your baggage always must travel
English newspapers are more detailed, and present discussions of all phases of a subject.
British parliament works harder than the congress of the United States.
The king from day to day follows a schedule against which an American millionaire or the American President would revolt.
There are no stoves or radiators in London houses.
Men smoke in the subways in England.
Lastly, all join in saying England is wetter than America.
Welcome Students
We Serve Good Eats at Popular Prices
SUPREME CAFE
That's the Place
to Eat
914 Mass. St.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Craig Kennedy are the parents of a son born September 10. He has been named W. E. Craig Kennedy, Jr. Mr. Craig Kennedy
graduated from the University with the class of '17, and Mrs. Kennedy, formerly Miss Harriet Brush, graduated in 1919.
Clothes Called For and Delivered
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
THE STUDENT CLEANERS
EATON & FRAKER
We press 'em while you g't your hair cut at
HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
929 Mas.s St.
Varsity TOM MOORE in "Stop Thief"
Phone 499
TUESDAY
Also Burton Holmes Travels
Admission 11c and 28c
Five reels of gorgeous jazz, shot through and through by the sunny smile of the genial Tom Moore.
ENID BENNETT in "Hairpins"
Bowersock
A Zippy domestic romance of love, life and fashion.
ALSO FINE COMEDY Admission 11c and 28c
Wednesday at Both Theaters REX BEACH'S Great Story "The SILVER HORDE" Admission 11c and 33c
Admission 11c and 33c
Each Afternoon
Dancing
3-6 P.M.
New brogue oxford made of genuine Norwegian calf, with heavy soles. PRICE $15.00
"SODA GRILL"
Schofstals Five Piece Orchestra
805 Mass.
Wiedemann's
O
Shoes for all Men
NEWMAN'S
Some men preffer pointed toes, others the popular brogue models, some ask for the conservative broad toes and straight lasts.
Our stock is varied enough to permit every man to choose his favorite style at a reasonable price.
HOUKS' BARBER SHOP The Shop of the Town
Halle
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"DAD" WESTFALL, VETERAN KANSAN PRESSMAN, IS GONE AFTER 12 YEARS OF WORK
"Dad" Westfall is gone.
Incoming journalists who came to the Kansas plant to see the veteran press man, looked in vain. The cheery faced man, who operated the camera, was dead and the work would be back this year. He has "graduated" or withdrawn.
Long before the Kansan became the Daily Kansan, "Dad" operated the department of journalism press. When in 1911 Louis LaCoss started the Daily Kansan the pressman started with the paper. He had been on the old twice-a-week sheet for three years before that. A sum total of twelve years in the department of journalism, has newspaper and press
OBTAIN GOVERNMENT MEDALS IN 2 WEEKS
Local Legion Post Will Help Ex Service Men Get War Recognition
Opportunity for all ex-service men to obtain their Victory medals from the government, without the delay attendant upon sending in their discharge certificates will be presented by the Ell Dorsey American Legion Society within a couple of weeks, according to members of the post today.
Notaries public will be retained by the American Legion men to be stationed at the Legion rooms above the Merchants' National Bank at Eighth and Massachusetts streets, who will fill out applications, and make certification of the presentation of the certificates, and send in the application for proper authorities in Washington. Every ex-service man must bring his discharge to the Legion rooms, but it will not go out of his possession.
association men of the country. He can call them by their first names. Raymond Clapper, A. B. 15, the United Press correspondent at Marion, Ohio, and with Senior Hearing Attorneys from New York and Louis LaGros, for several years with the Associated Press at Mexico City, "Peg" Vaughn, who last week served for South America for the United Press and dozens of others knew "Had" Westfall, and had their first meeting in Washington, where they set rules about the pressroom.
The medals, which are handsome bronze devices, suspended from brightly colored ribbons, bearing service clamps for all service except domestic service, are commended by the best business, best service, and artistic medal the government has ever awarded. They will be sent to the American
"Dad," however, is not far away.
"He has accepted a job with the Lawrence Daily Gazette, as pressman, which makes the back office of that down-town paper seem familiar, somehow.
Legion post here, and distributed "all in a heat" at the big Armistice Day celebration planned by the American Legion for November 11.
The date of applying for the medals at the Legion rooms will be announced later.
Issue Booklet Telling Frosh What to do Next
"What To Do Next" is the title of an eight-page pamphlet issued especially for the benefit of first-year students by the university, and distributed free from the registration rooms in the gymnasium. The first step advised is to obtain a room permit. The second step is attendance of classes on Thursday.
The pamphlet contains a map of Lawrence and the University, locating all streets and University buildings, banks, and churches. Answers are provided and how to secure rooms are also included in the booklet.
Welsh Returns to K. U.
The announcement that Floyd Welsh is going to return to school has given an impetus to the Kansas track outcook. Mr. Welsh, who has been a graduate credited with "nifty" performances in the half,mile and quarter-mile runs.
Men's Glee Club tryouts, Thursday and Friday 4 to 6. Room 115, Central Administration Building.
BELGIUM OFFICIALLY ACCEPTS FRENCH PACT
Labor Element Prevented Earlier Ratification of Territorial Alliance Say Reports
Paris, Paris. 13—The Belgian minister today notified the French foreign office that the Franco-Belgian territorial alliance had been officially accepted by Belgium and was effective immediately.
While the terms of the Franco-Belgian alliance never have been made public they are supposed to provide for an effective and offensive strategy, and instead immediately join France if the former went to war. If such terms were accepted Belgium neutrality would be abolished and Germany would have a legal right to invade in case of another war with France.
Reports from Belgium two weeks ago, indicated the labor element had prevented the government from ratifying the treaty.
Under the provisions of the League of Nations the treaty must be made public and be acceptable to the league before it becomes effective.
First Musical Program "Million Dollar" Band
The first musical entertainment of the year will be staged next Monday evening, September 6, by the "Million Dollar" band of the 116th Engineers of the 41st Division in Robinson gymnasium under the aupides of the EI Dorsey American Legion Post of Lawrence.
The big military band of the 119th Engineers has been touring the country since their arrival on this side from overseas shortly after the termination of service, and have proved very popular everywhere they played.
according to American Legion men in charge of the event here. The band received its name from a remark of Major General Liggett, who after hearing one of their selections in France, remarked that "A hand like that was worth a million dollars to every fighting man."
To Report on National Banks
Washington, Sept. 13. --The compiler of the currency today issued a call for conditions of National Banks on Wednesday.
A reading room for the athletes and coaches has been furnished on the third floor of the gymnasium by the Athletic Department. The two rooms contain exercise machines, insnem gymnasium which have been previously used miscellaneously, will now be known as the Coaches room. It has been renovated and cleaned out, reading tables have been placed in the main room, designed for the convenience of the men.
Have Reading Rooms for Athletes and Coaches
Dr. F, C. Allen will have his training and creating room next to the reading room, which will be open at all times. Informal talks by the coaches and get-together meetings will be held here. The idea is to create a closer relationship between the coaches and men, so that they will know each other off the field as well as on.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Thursday, September 16, at regular scheduled hours, all classes will be held. All students are required to be in attendance.
Friday, September 17, at 10:30; will occur the first general assembly of students and faculty (Robinson Gymnastics) and Lindley will deliver the address.
Monday, September 13, 8 p. m., Myers Hall, all-Freshman meeting.
Tuesday, September 14, 7:30 p.
m., entertainment and mixer. Eats.
Wednesday, September 15, 7:30 p. m., Myers Hall, "K. U. First Mixer."
The headquarters of the Y.W.C. A, are in Myers Hall.
On Tuesday, September 21, 4:30 p.
m., Cancellor Lindley will give the
first of a series of addresses to
Freshmen, men and women. Fraser
Hall. All Freshmen required to be
present.
The churches of Lawrence will extend a cordial welcome to all students, especially first year students, the services on Sunday, September 19.
Monday and Tuesday, September 13 and 14, the Women's Student Council will be at home to new girls in the Rest Room, 114 Fraser Hall.
Band try-outs will be held Sep. 13, 14 and 15, in Room 502, Fraser Hall, from 10 to 11:30 a.m., and from 2 to 5 a.m., S. Z. Herc, director.
THE HYDROELECTRIC POWER PLANT. AT THE BASE OF THIS DUKE NATIONAL SCIENCE CENTER, A POWER PLANT IS Situated In A Rocky Valley With A Large Dam On A River. THE PLANT Is Capable Of Generating Electricity By Combining Water Flow And Power Generation Equipment. IT IS USED For The Transmission Of Electricity Across The Country.
At the Other End of the Wire
ATWIST of the wrist and electricity lights cities and towns, turns the wheels of industry, or affords conveniences to millions of people.
But let us follow the wire carrying this energy to its source and we find either a waterfall, a coal mine or an oil well.
Much of the supply of fuel in this country is being used up rapidly while the power of water is running to waste. For the rivers and streams of this country could, if properly harnessed, develop enough electric power to save 300-000,000 tons of coal annually.
By studying nature's forces—coal, oil and water—by applying them to machines, and finally by the perfection of apparatus to insure uninterrupted power service under varying conditions, the General Electric Company is serving to make electric power cheaper, more plentiful and reliable.
95-331D
10
GE
SALAMANDER
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
Enrollment has started Now for Your Books and Supplies
—next door to Brick's, bigger and better than ever
you can get anything you want in the way ot___
—at Rowland's Annex
SUPPLIES
Embossed Stationery Everything for the Student Except Books
ROWLANDS DOUBLE SERVICE
means just twice what it used to be. Two stores—as well as two heads—are better than one.
Our ability to meet student demands is increased by our double service—and we are able to serve you going or coming.
-at Rowland's College Book Store
—half way down the Hill from the K. U. Library—
you'll find ___
All University Text Books and Supplies
Stationery Note Books Paper Drawing Materials Fountain Pens Slide Rules Engineers Supplies Everything for the Student
You Benefit By ROWLANDS Double Service
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New Chancellor Lauded For Work as Educator
(Continued from Page 1.)
"many vital contacts with men and affairs."
Engineers of the Northwest felt, when Doctor Lindley came to Kansas that they had lost a helpful friend. The Associated Engineers of Spokane describe, in an official letter, how he "hurted the scientific and technical welfare of the Inland Empire and was always considerable of our people," and of the Association Engineers" and how his going was "an innumerable loss to the University of Idaho and to the entire North-west."
It is the same story as regards those engaged in agriculture and forestry. In three years, the farmers of Idaho came to recognize the university as not only a helpful agency in practical matters but also an aid in the solution of other problems confronting those who live on the farm—problems which the business of living, no matter where, presents to men and their families. As to forestry, it was while Doctor Lindsay of Idaho that the school of forestry was organized in the university.
To record the expressions by bankers, editors, lumbermen, lawyers, ministers, workmen, stock men, railroad officers, commercial and civic bodies, would be but repetition of the same story.
IS LEADER IN EDUCATION
With teachers, of course, Doctor Lindley's relations have been especially close. "He is the leader in the teacher profession," writes Frank W. Simmons, president of the Idaho State Teachers Association. Similar words of appreciation come from teachers in turns out new thoughts and discovers fresh relationships between other states that he has visited. "He these new thoughts and the old," is the way that the superintendent of the Louisville, Kentucky, school district discovered that his find of our meeting" declares the president of a Wisconsin Teachers Association. Yes, a man of "Many vital contacts with people and affairs."
The constructive instinct is active in most human beings but it works with varying degrees of advantage to society. When the child outgrows school, he or she may something else, but there is always a chance that the things with which
he becomes occupied may have a minimum of value to anybody but himself. The man who has the faculty of building in the interests of his fellows is none too common. Such Linden and Lindley has proved himself to be.
EARLY LIFE SHOWS STRUGGLE
In youth and early manhood, he laid broad foundations for his life work. It was not easy going. He labored hard for what he got. Busy工作。他经常 during the day he studied and recited his lessons at night. Then there was an intellectual shoemaker back in Bloomington, Indiana—a man with a Tennisonian face and the culture and conversational power to go with it—whose shop was the meeting place of a little circle of men who loved books and "high converse" and that this young Earnest Lindley found a place and learned literature by ear, and fed his ambition to go to college.
His plans for getting an education were realized with the highest credit to the young scholar. Dr. David Starr Jordan, who was one of his instructors, was one of the educators of high standing who urged Dr. Lindlöd's appointment to his present position, and in his tribute he harks back to Dr. Lindlöd's life when his "personal soundness, trust-worthiness, and wholesome character" gave promise of his later success.
IS STUDENT IN PSYCHOLOGY
After having been graduated from the University of Indiana, in 1893, he entered what may be called the second period of his career by a builder—the period in which, as a teacher, he worked on construction in the lives of students. He was first instructor in psychology, then associate professor, then in 1902, professor of philosophy and psychology, and head of that department in the University of Indiana. He remained in that position until 1917, and the testimony of his students, now scattered far and wide, give ample evidence of the wisdom and love with which he built ideas and knowledge and high ambitions. "He is one of the best teachers among American university men," testified President W. L. Bryan, of the University of Indiana.
With the wisdom of the true teacher,
he never ceased enrichment of his own
scholarship during these years in the
classroom. On leave of absence from
Indiana, he held a fellowship in Clark University in 1895-97 and completed the work for his degree of doctor of philosophy. The following year he studied at Jona, Leipzig, and Heidelberg, at the latter university doing research work in psychology under the famous Kraepelin. He studied at Clark University in 1896, three summers he taught at Clark and one at Columbia. As much of his time as he could devote to its own special studies, he used for research in the field of psychology. his report, in collaboration with Dr. W. L. Bryan, on the mathematical prodigy, Arthur G. Griffith, was presented at the International Congress of Psychology in Paris in 1904. In entire journals and lectured outside the university when he could find time, Always building and preparing for larger things.
MANAGER INDUSTRIAL PLANT
Constructive work in the neglected and difficult field of industrial relations had for many years engaged the interest of Dr. Lindley as a special student of psychology applied to business and to leadership. And when his interests are engaged, his vigorous
personality leads him at once into practical activities. For example, he devoted part of a year to humanization work and the development of personal efficiency in one of the Ford plants. Meredith Nicholson, the author, has written of Dr. Lindley's "highly successful work with several hundred employees of the Ford Motor Company" in Indianapolis. "He has the faulty of interesting people in psychological problems, and that without claptrap," says Mr. Nicholson, who is conducting engineering for the National Cash Register Company and other large organizations. His lectures in industrial centers attracted the keenest interest. Its steadily influence was felt in critical situations where the purposes of employees and employees were being faced in fairness in presentation, his personal charm, and his resolute will showing through the spoken word, win for him attention, interest, confidence, esteem. With him, love of one's fellow man is no more theory. It is a program that involves the development has done much good in the world and has won an international reputation
INSURANCE
THE
155
AGENCY
Lawrence Kansas
Fire Protection on Personal Effects
"Quality and Service"
Phone 133 now, and let us give you protection on your trunks, baggage and personal effects while they are located in a room in any building or while they are in transit to and from damage loss or damage by fire or lightning.
Our policies also cover against theft of trunks or valises while they are checked in any railway station, hotel, or boarding house.
When we say any room, we mean a room in any private residence, club-house, boarding house, hotel, school or college.
The cost is small. For protection on each $100 as follows: 9 months ···64c 6 months ···5e 12 months ···75c Minimum premium is $1.00.
Phone 133 now or talk to Craig Kennedy, O. A. R. Ameesley, Glenn V. (Hop) Banker, who is at the Kansan office, or R. L. Allen.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION AT ALL HOURS
OUR
TRADE
MARK
STANDS
FOR
QUALITY
SANITARY
Announcement
THE VICTORY LUNCH
Due to delayed shipment of materials the interior of our building is not yet completely finished.
However, we will be open to all student trade this week with our usual good service and fine meals and lunches.
among scientists as a practical psychologist.
933 Mass. Street
IS BUILDER OF UNIVERSITIES
In 1917 Dr. Lindley entered upon his work as a builder of universities and of states through their universities, for nothing is truer than that, as he expresses it, "The university is not only the intangible organ of the life of the state, but also the greatest wealth producing agency within the state. The generous support of the university by the state does not constitute a tax but a great dividend paying investment. A state can not become great without a great university."
potential to try out some of the ideas having a unified system of education as to the relation of public education according to the "Idaho plan." The to the state which he had long been state commissioner of education, E. A. formulating. He was in a new state (Continued on page 5)
Idaho offered President Lindley op-
Select Hairdressing Shop
9 West 11th St.
Now open for business.Call 1372 for appointments.
Varsity
Bowersock
Wednesday--Thursday
Wednesday Only
Rex Beach's Famous Story
"The Silver Horde"
That far flung port of adventure of hair-trigger loves and hates! No man can better picture life in the frozen silences of the Great North than Rex Beach.
"The Silver Horde" is a thundering drama of fighting fists and mighty men. And a thorough story packed with electric thrills runs a golden thread of beautiful romance.
Also Paramount Magazine
Prices: Children 11c,Adults 33c War Tax Included
7EPHYR
THE ZEPHYR BAKERY
welcomes the K. U. students, both new and old.
To assure yourself of good "eats," see that your fraternity, sorority and boarding house stewards, supply your table with ZEPHYR products.
Zephyr Bread
Zephyr Doughnuts
Zephyr Rolls
Zephyr Cross Buns
Zephyr Coffee Cakes
Zephyr Rye Bread
Zephyr Graham Bread
Zephyr Raisin Bread
Made in the whitest, cleanest, most uptodate bakery in America. You are invited to visit it at 6th and Mass. St.
Made Clean ZEPHYR BREAD Sold Clean
Hall
kitchen
office
garden
ALA
are a
labor
been
boarded
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8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New Chancellor Lauded For Work as Educator
(Continued from page 7)
Bryan, a friend in whom he had full confidence. Many prominent educators, appreciating his exceptional administrative work, had urged him to go. So he entered the larger field.
The record of his three years there will remain a brilliant chapter in the history of the state. "The situation was not an easy one when he came," writes the president of the Federation of Women's Clubs. "In fact it was so tangled a less tactful man would have made a mess of its life." He was being of the institution. President Lindley ignored politics, went straight ahead with the business of running the university—and politics ceased to bother.
LIKES TO TALK WITH PEOPLE
The people of Idaho found President Lindley human and democratic. "How do I get my recreation? Mostly by talking with people," he said to a friend. He showcased the same item that another man feels for the links or the theater, or the fishing places in vacation time. His colleagues soon felt the contagion of his enthusiasm. They learned to depend absolutely on his sympathetic consideration of matters affecting their work or themselves. Quick to praise good work was just as frank in pointing out faults in either. Shrewd in solving difficulties, firm establishing sound principles, always free from ostention, and always acted by a fine spiritual nature. "We pledge to him our earnest endeavor to maintain the University of Idaho upward," he proudly told them have been its one-time president," was the farewell message from the faculty.
APPECIATES STUDENT IDEALS
The students soon found that he appreciated student attitudes and ideals. He was not a power affair off his own back, but he had an admired and a trusted leader. His sense of humor warmed them and his readiness with illustrations and anecdote whet their interest when he spoke to them all together at the assemblies. His personal interest and sincerity won their confidence and affection which they met in college and were casually at the campus or the athletic field.
Summarized in few words, President Lindley's achievements at Idaho includes the addition to the university of a school of mines and a school of forestry; development of extension work through methods in organization that have been copied by many western institutions; the income of the university from direct research; the enrollment in saxy per cent; the vital all of, the university firmly established in the affections of the people of the state. As one educator phrased it, "He 'left for his successor a spendeli running machine".
No wonder that the Kansas Board of Administration, in its country-wide search for a successor to Chancellor Frank Strong, kept hearing interesting things about the man in Idaho. "Pronounced success in the Northwest. A scholar and gentleman." way President Washington, palate of the University of Washington, expressed "Sabarlyly, able, a good man in general," said President G. Stanley Hall of Clark University. "All right in every particular—wise, shrewd, genial, straightforward, unselfish, courageous. Has a sense of humor and a love of his fellow men that help him through any difficult situation," wrote President William T. Foster, of Reed College. "Of unwintering and honor," said President W. L. Bryan. And so on indicted. "Kansas will be lucky to get it" was the substance of all the messages.
Friends in the educational world.
Dr. Jordan, President Jepsup, of Iowa,
President Coffman, of Minnesota, and
other him to accept the call
from Kansas.
FROM PRESIDENT TO CHANCLOR So, in spite of an attractive invitation to enter a large industrial organization, attesting his standing among men of business, President Lindley became Chairman and believes, because he was a man of belief, that there is a good building to be done in University and the state and the Middle West. Kansas does not know him yet, but his welcome from many friends of the University, alumni, faculty, and students, has been cordial. Everybody's expectations are high. Before many months, Kansas *will wake up to the worth while, a man builder of worth while, a man of faith and indeftable industry, has been added to her human assets.* "A modern university is an indispensible organ of the world's work," declares the man of many vital
F. B. McCOLOCH, Druggist
Eastman Kodaks
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
contact, "an idealizing factor, a force for elevating a job to the level of an art or a profession. It must go beyond the old idea that its function is to train for the arts of leisure and realize that it is also to train for the arts of work. It exists to idealize all the work of the world."
"I predict a great future for Kansas under his administration," says President Jessun.
In seeking to understand a man, there is no more direct approach than to find out what are his admirations—the persons whose influence he gratefully acknowledges. Dr. Lindley seldom makes an address without going for illustrations to the life of Lincoln. The impression of Lincoln is in his soul. I thought, "he" could be幽默ly, "the fortunate illness that afforded me an unbroken reading of Charmwood's Life of Lincoln."
colli.
Chancellor Lindley's family consists of Lars Lindley and two boys "One of the boys was not sure that he could turtle himself away from Idaho," his father relates, "until an old K. U. Grad in Moscow told him about the big school on Mt. Oread and the football team, then gave him a sample of the famous Rock Chalk. Then he decided that he would come."
The Christian Science Monitor.
The garage stood in the heart of the city. That was not strange. A great many garages stand in the heart of a great many cities. What was strange was the builder, which stood oppose the path. This was a tumultuous building elfice, with cars and rambling back and front yard, and in the yards were old carriages.
I do not know if it was a junk shop or a repair shop. I do know that nowhere else could one see so many equipages of an ancient day. One might sit in one of Ford—or in one's Rolle-Royce—and buy gasoline and oil, and oil, and gasoline containers were being laughed away one might be sitting at leisure that mottled old-fashioned crew huddled out in the yards.
There is a buggy—the kind of a buggy that wheels softly down country lanes in the moonlight, and stops easily as the driver nights to leap down the bars. There is a buggy on a bright, smart, high-tiled, yellow dog cart, used to sowling down the fashionable avenue in the fashionable hour. The hayrick—its bright blue worn by now—carried many a wholesome brigantray hay in its day, with bare-cream sprawling on the top of the load.
Look at yonder queer old contrapartition! It was a shoe wagon, and the shoe dealer plodded along the rural road. Onegyer one feet with feet trouble at all.
no trouble at all.
That decapit vehicle was a hanson cam bob and a very bumpy one, too, in its day—quite a novelty in the community no doubt, when it made its first appearance. Now it stands
cheek by jowl with a three-wheeled dump cart, whose social station was never anything but low.
What a queer old crowd they are—these outworn, outgrown vehicles of another day. They give up their iron and bolts to the jungnick man quite willingly, for the sake of them along their wide rows. No—another new swifer method of transportation has come in—and the old wagons in the old yard tremble a little as a huge motor truck roars victoriously. But it is only that they have waited so long, standing there in all weathers, on three wheels or two, with one shaft off and their paint in disrepair. They tremble a little, but wait mostly until they move and when they away into oblivion.
NEW STUDENTS LEARN K.U. YELLS AND SONGS
Heard Talks by Dean Brandt,
Dr. Corbin, Capt. Burdick,
and Winsor
Yells and songs of the University of Kansas featured the freshmen convocation in Fraser Chapel yesterday afternoon. Sandy Winsor was there and the full force of freshmen tried their lungs out with Winsor leading them. Prof. W. B. Downing led the singing during the meeting.
Dean J. G. Brandt read a letter from Chancellor E. H. Lindley. "Be sure to be on time to enroll, to attend class daily, and to make special friends with teachers," were some of the things that Dean Brandt said.
Dr. Alberta Corbin, dean of women, made a short talk to the new students. "Co-operation between faculty and students in the class room is absolutely necessary to make the better and more real among the students of the country," said Dean Corbin. Dr. Corbin said intellectual honesty and frankness between instructor and pupil was the true honor system. "Each student is an individual not a 'member of the group.' She urged each freshman to affiliate with the department organizations and all of the department heads he could get into.
Riffle and pistol shoting for women was the proposition offered to the first year women, by Captain H. D. Burdick in his address, Captain Bardick in his address, and Captain explainer C. of the new students also.
Sandy Winsor, cheerleader, said that the "thundering thousand" of 1916 and 1917 must come back. He offered the women of the first year class, the opportunity to "thunder just as much as then."
Fearl Sparing Sterling, c16, and Allen Sterling, c16, are visiting at the home of their parents, Prof. and Mrs. M, W. Sterling, to Los Angeles to attend an convention to Los Angeles, and will continue their trip within a few days.
Ancient and Antique Art of "Rushing" Again Adds Spice to Freshman Life
When youths with their hair freshly cut and brilliantized are seen racing madly over the various roadways of the city of Lawrence in their fathers' motor cars, when the renowned "nickle nurser" of every fraternity is letting his money flow in buying "cokes" and "smokes" for the guleless freshmen, then it is time to announce to the wondering world that "rush week" has started.
For weeks past the high school, graduate has had it dummed into his canalflowers that Alfaalfa Belta, having possessed the majority of congressman and senator, is the "one and only" Greek letter organization which should be registered in the U. S. patent office. Thus it is that upon
When young and beautiful women have, consulted with hair dressers and dermatologists in a successful effort to become more beautiful, and when the "itemized statement" sent home to dad includes items by which the soft drink parlors have prospered, it is again possible to let it be known throughout the land that "rush week" has started.
arriving in the city, he is surprised that the Pie Delighta congregation even is in existence. However, when the Pie Delighta orators convince him that every Alfalfa Delta has been repatriated to their former lands are bed nightly and in abundance, he becomes bewildered. It is therefore an easy undertaking for the Washa Dishes to step in and claim the privilege of depositing a plodge button on the lapel of his president, President of this great nation once slept in a house that a Washa Dish afterwards visited.
“Rush week” is made possible only by the desire of the brethren and sisters to *dodge sleep during an entire seven days*. Last spring, when hundreds of letters were sent out to prospective victims, it was not anticipated that the “dates” made so complaekely would react into the boomerang wretch privacy, Morpheus, and pocketbooks.
First Announced Fee Increases in Spring
The doubled fees that are causing so much grief this year are not sui-
Fraternities and Clubs—
Table Linen Perfectly Laundered
Holt Bros. La d
Phone 1643 1241 Conn.
The Oread Shining Parlor "Next to Brick's"
Diamonds
Jewelry
Clocks
E. W. Parsons
JEWELER
Repairing and Engraving
They all go to "CHARLIES"
Cut Glass
FOR A SHINE Glad to welcome Our old customers
BELL'S
925-27 Mass. Street
Sheet Music? We have it
Everything in late numbers
I
QUALITY DOMINATES OUR JEWELRY LINE
In these uncertain times it is advisable to go to the store that maintains its reputation for QUALITY JEWELRY. We offer the best.
Complete showing of White Ivory, Excellent Sterling Silver and Sheffield Plate.
Libbey and Pairpion Glass
Repair Department
Lander's QUALITY JEWELRY
den and provoked assaults on the students' pocketbooks. They were announced last spring through the Daily Kansas, and the catalogs.
827 Mass. St.
appropriations inadequate to the needs of the institution.
Chancellor Strong explained at the time the increases in fees were announced that the new schedule represented a considerable increase in attendance and the increase in attendance, which made the University
"Last year's increases in enrollment required additional teachers and made it necessary to add $20,000 to the budget." Dr. Strong said at the time, "and next year we'll have another $20,000 to the budget, and the only way by which this can be raised is from an increase in fees."
STEEPER IS AT HIS OLD STAND 924 Louisiana
Phone 1434
1905-1920
University Orchestra TRYOUTS
Thursday Evening 7:30-9:30 Fraser Hall
Students at Last Can Buy the Protection Long Desired
Do you know that when you left home you ceased to have fire, transportation and theft insurance on your personal belongings?
Your father and mother always carried ample protection on your belongings at home. Are they worth any less now that you are in school? A Fraternity or Sorority house policy does not cover members' personal property.
By special arrangement we have a policy issued by the Springfield Fire & Marine and the Connecticut Fire Insurance Companies which will cover as follows:
This form covers within the limits of the United States and Canada.
It covers loss to personal property by Fire, Lightning and Transportation, while in the hands of railroad, express or transfer companies.
It covers loss by fire while in dwellings, hotels and other buildings except in permanent residence of assured. It also covers against loss by theft of entire trunks from rooms occupied by assured in hotels or boarding houses or while in charge of a common carrier.
The Springfield's Tourist Baggage policy is liberal as to terms and is free from burdensome conditions.
Losses under it will be paid promptly and in full without discount.
It is a necessity to travelers, vacationists, students at colleges and boarding schools, and to teachers. When the small cost is considered any one who contemplates traveling even on short trips cannot afford to be without a policy which covers personal property (excluding freight shipments) against loss or damage by Fire, Lightning, Theft and Transportation Hazards. Rates $1.00 per $100 per year.
Orders can be left with following for this coverage:
CARL SCHLADERMAN ISE. E. WELLMAN or Phone 689
The Charlton Insurance Agency GENERAL AGENTS
Bowersock Building City Also Ask About Our Residence and Burglar y Proposition
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE SAN BERNARD OIL COMPANY
AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $100,000
INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF TEXAS
APPROVED BY KANSAS BLUE SKY COMMISSION
Par Value of Shares, ONE DOLLAR, Fully Paid and Non-assessable Offices: Lawrence, Kansas, 737 Mass. St.; San Bernardo, Texas
OFFICERS:
GEORGE O. FOSTER, President, Lawrence, Kansas.
P. G. BURNS, Vice President, San Bernardo, Texas.
J. D. KUHN, General Superintendent, Lawrence, Kansas.
GEORGE A. ESTLERY, Secretary, Lawrence, Kansas.
WM. FRANK MARCH, Treasurer, Lawrence, Kansas.
D. COEN BYRN, Assistant Secretary, 737 Mass, St., Lawrence.
Kansas.
DIRECTORS:
George O. Foster, George A. Esterly, W. E. March, Banker; J. D. Kuhn, Chris Schaake, Lawrence, Kansas; L. G. Frisbie, Banker; Frank Alden, Banker; L. Kindred, Bonner Springs, Kansas; P. G. Burns, L. B. Billingsley, San Bernardo, Texas.
The personnel of the above management is of such high standing that every investor can rest assured that no "high finance" will be indulged in the development of this company. Every dollar put into the treasury will be used for developing the valuable acreage controlled by the corporation. The average oil company formed today with the acreage we have, would capitalize for a million, but we put our capitalization low in order to enhance the holdings of each stockholder and to furnish just sufficient capital to drill three wells thus giving three chances to win. Not a dollar or share of stock of the San Bernard Oil Company will be used for promotion. We gave eleven thousand shares of stock and one-eighth royalty for our lease, leaving eighty-nine thousand shares to be sold. One-third of this amount has already been bought by officers and other stockholders We could sell our acreage at a large bonus.
But it is not for sale. We didn't organize for any other purpose than to develop our property for the benefit of our friends and neighbors who join our company. If you want to put your money in an oil proposition that will give you a REAL RUN FOR YOUR MONEY with a REAL CHANCE OF BRINGING IN WELLS THAT PRODUCE FROM 500 TO 30,000 BARRELS managed by men of integrity, personally known to you, we venture to invite you to join us. BUT IF WE FAIL, AND YOU CANNOT STAND THE LOSS AND BE A GOOD SPORT, DO NOT INVEST WITH US. We are not selling our stock with a guarantee of fifty to one or even two to one. What we do is to invite you to join us in developing an oil proposition on one of the most promising structures in the State of Texas, pronounced so by one of the foremost geologists of the country, which report you may be by calling at the office of the Assistant Secretary, 7:17 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas.
M. Verner Wm. Roberts S.M.Williams Josian H Bell Jos. B. Boiley COLUMBIA Samuel Corter Asa Mitchen John R Cales B.C.Franklin B.L.M. Cormick Blakes Farry Stephen OUR PROPERTY Cummings Sweeney Keep Jos San Bernardo Cummings John S.M. Williams
Our Property
The lease owned and controlled by this Company consists of 220 acres, located in Brazoria County, Texas, at the south end of the West Columbia Field. The West Columbia Field is being developed at a very rapid rate, and wells are being brought in that make from four to thirty thousand barrels so frequently that they cause very little excitement. This, however, is accounted for by the fact that the field is practically under the control of the grant oil companies, such as the Humble, Crown, Gulf Refining, Texas Company, and others.
Our property has many of the visible surface indications that assist the geologists in locating the large oil pools of Texas. Practically all of the heavy producing wells of south Texas are located on mounds or on slightly elevated structures. The land which we have leased has this one big feature, being a large hill with a flat land surrounding with an elevation of 20 to 24 feet. This within itself shows a well defined mesh.
We also have four well defined fumaroles or blowouts that would indicate that at some prehistoric time there had been gas blowouts in this region, and we now know that they reached levels to the sands that are tapped by the drills.
MEET COLUMBIA OIL FIELD
LOCATE MEET PROM SEP TREE
Frm an actual photograph showing large earth tank filled with oil
Our Property Has Been Examined by the Blue Sky Commission of Kansas
and we have official permission to sell our stock in Kansas. This, in itself, is evidence that our property is considered most promising.
Our directors are serving without pay, no commissions are paid for sale of stock, and, as stated above, there is no promotion stock. The books of the company are always open to every stockholder.
We have a car load of derrick material on the ground, and will begin drilling as soon as we have sold 25000 more shares of stock. The directors reserve the right at any time to take the stock off the market or advance the price of same. Bonner Springs, De Soto, Tonganoxie and Linwood are buying large blocks of stock, and we fully expect to have it all sold in a short time.
O. M. Bloom, of Independence, one of the most experienced oil operators in Kansas, has been engaged to assist in our drilling operations.
Any director or officer will take your subscription. Call on the Assistant Secretary, 737 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas, for informaion or subscription blanks.
THE SAN BERNARD OIL COMPANY
Immense New Gusher at West Columbia Making 22,500 Barrels Daily Opens New Territory
Angleton, Brazoria County, Toxas, Friday July 13, 2020—Report from West Columbia Wednesday stated that the great gusher that came in Tuesday in new territory has been put under con- dition. The production is at the rate of 22,500 barrels per day. This is even greater than at first reported.
After many thousand barrels had gone to waste for lack of storage facilities, connection had been made to the pipe line running to Damon Mound the greater part of the production was being saved.
The coming in of this great well has brought
visions of wealth to the few people who own land.
Of course Mr. Abrams who owns the large acreage in which the well is located, has an immense farm there.
Judge A. E. Masterson of Angleton ugs 2 1-2
with Judge Todd J. Schmidt of Angleton ugs
well. The value of this little tract today is a for-
warding one.
The Allen R. Cochran estate of which Judge Masterson is executor owns five acres.
darton Owls x 2-12 acres.
Louis Goldman of Houston has a 10-acre tract.
W. R Nash of Columbia and Mr. Brooks of wharton owns 2-1-2 acres.
M. A. Weems of Columbia et al own 25 acres, JR. Benton and T. L. Smith, Jr., of Columbia own 5 acres.
The tracts make a total of 50 acres that was subdivided years ago, during the days of the early 19th century.
boom but no oil. The parties who had the nerve to hold on to these tracts during all of those intervening years, now are going to profit in a very large way.
W. C. Hogg owns a large tract of land very near the well, and a report came Wednesday that he had leased a part of it, receiving a bonus of $200,000.00. Details are lacking.
The estate of Frank Jackson own 40 acres lying at a distance of 1,200 feet from the well Jackson was a negro farmer and the land was his home. He lived many years. He died a few months ago.
C. Glesiec of Angleton owns 128 and a fraction acres a little more than a mile from the well. Other owners have land within a reasonable distance, but the several small tracts named above and the large ones in Jackson tracts cover everything that is close enough to bring exaggerated values just at this time.
We have got to take off our hats to the men who years ago picked West Columbia as an oil field. The faith was well found. They had to be a long time, but their diagnosis of the case was correct.
We have today other spots in this country which are just as promising, and which have been picked as oil fields by men who ought to know. It is also because the work of the development work is done. This may take a few months or it may require years—The Angleton Times.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
JAYHAWKER MAY PAY HOMAGE TO STADIUM
Dedication of Annual to Proposed Structure is Considered by Managers
The 1921 Jayhawker, University of Kansas annual, may be dedicated to the new stadium, according to managers, Burt Cochran and Ferd Gottlieb. Although the matter has not been decided for certain, the managers say the dedication is quite probable.
"Thus far no tip has developed on a person prominent enough on the hill to merit receiving the dedicatin," said Fred Gottlieb, editor of the annual. "A number of prominent individuals have been under consideration, but in view of the fact that publicity possible the annual will be dedicated to the plan."
"Of course dedication is not made this early in the year—on the contrary it is one of the last things decided—but since it seems now that the stadium will be the most important thing in the interest of the students this year, it is probable we will edicate the annual to it."
The managers are planning a special feature in the Jayhawk even if the annual is not dedicated to the project. Photographs of the section, which should be one of the most interesting in the volume.
BY THE WAY
Rush week is on. The sorority girls are busy dating and filling dates. Breathless vigilance over the sisters' their siblings is the watchword.
The calendar for this week includes:
Acklin; Sunday, tea; Monday,
Butterfly孝词; Tuesday, Luncheon;
Wednesday, Garden Party; and
Thursday dinner dance at the Co-
mplaint.
Alphi Chi Omega: Sunday, tea;
Monday, dinner; Tuesday, Russian
tea; Wednesday, Exclusive, from 8
to 10am; Thursday, dawnst; Friday,
cabinet dinner.
Alpha Omicron I: Pis; Sunday, reception; Monday, Theatre Party; Tuesday, Ting Toy Ten; Wednesday, essex; Thursday, Dinner, Rustle; Friday, Dinner.
Alpha Xi Delta; Sunday, College
Cox; Monday, Rose Dinner; Tuesday,
Resception; Wednesday, lunchs
at 7:30 p.m. on Friday to 7:
2 Friday, Butterfly Party.
Chi Omega; Sunday; Tea; Monday, Morning Chocolate and Dinner; Tuesday, Exclusive 3 till 7; Wednesday, Dinner; Thursday, Reception at the home of Ms. A. Henley; Friday, Theatre Party.
Kappa Alpha Theta: Sunday, Tea;
Monday, Lunchure and Cabaret;
Tuesday, Lawn Fete and Dinner;
Wednesday, Exclusive, 3 till 7;
Thursday, Theatre Party; and
Friday, Tea.
Pi Beta Phi: Sunday, Buffet Luncheon; Morlays, Tea, 3 till 6; Wednesday, Exclusive, 8 till 12; Thursday, Tea Dance.
Sigma Kappa: Sunday, Golden Rod Chocolate; Monday, Oriental Tea; Tuesday, Charmant Dansant; Wednesday, Carnival Lancheon; Thursday, Exclusive, 3 till 7; and Friday, Damee Dance and Dinner. Gamma Dance and Dinner. Monday, Lancheon; Tuesday, Muffin Dance; Wednesday, Breakfast and Matinee Dance; Thursday, Exclusive, 8 till 12; and Friday, Dinner.
Kappa Kappa Gamma: Sunday
Afternoon Teen; Monday afternoon,
Cabaret party; Monday night, dinner;
Tuesday afternoon, Garden
Party; Wednesday morning, Breakfast;
Thursday, Exclusive; Friday
afternoon, Party.
Alpha Delta Pi: Sunday, Teen
Monday afternoon, Cinema; Tuesday,
Matties Dance; Wednesday, Break-
fast; Thursday, Exhibition; Friday,
Dinner.
Boosinger-Tracy.
Miss Fryer Bossinger, of Kansas City, Mo., and John Tracy, 20, of Pittsburg, Kansas, were married Monday, September 6, at the Linwood Presbyterian church in Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Tracy will make their home in Lawrence for a visit to the University of Missouri. Mr. Tracy is president of the Men's Student Council, president of UPSplition Fraternity, and president of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, and a member of Ahloka and Sigma Tau. Mr. Tracy will reenroll as a student in Ohio, where he is attending a national convention of the Tau Beta Pi fraternity.
Cycle Cops To Halt Hill Speed Maniacs
With papa's motor cars hitting on all twelve, and grooming under new duties of making the mountain of Oradon on high, it is sad to chronicle the information that two motor policemen, or, to coin a new word, "cops," are keeping watch on the emulators of Ralph D Palma and other Knights of the Wheel. Speeding was never at such a high rate of disregard. Instructed students do their feet go to sleep in welderars, Leibow Dunborn and John Perkins, "home talent" minions of the law, are carrying on a campaign against the embryo speed kings that already have aided in filling the coffers of the city of Lawrence.
The stand-tower on Oreand north of thirteenth has received a coat of paint during the summer. The gray coat and trim of some items which have proved an eyesore.
Augusta, Maine, Sept. 13—Notwithstanding heavy rains throughout the state last night a record break. Severe storms expected in the state elections today.
Both Democrats and Republicans Predict Majorities in Maine Poll Today
RECORD VOTE EXPECTED
It was predicted at least 150,000 voters and between 80,000 and 90,000 women would visit the polls.
Republican leaders confidently predicted a majority of between 30,000 and 40,000 while the Democrats were Republican claims were exaggerated.
The state votes for governor, auditor, state legislature and county officials and four members of congress. P. H. Fennell, Republican, was defeated by C. G. McIntyre, Democrat, who was defeated two years ago by Governor Milliken.
FITS-U WINDSOR EYEGLASSES My prescription
---
Make your school work easier by giving proper attention to your eyes.
Gustatson
Frank Ise Optometrist
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
1047 Massachusetts St
SURPLUS $100,000.00
Receives Deposits, makes Loana, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
Corner Grocery
303 West 13th St.
CAPITAL $100,000.00
A complete line of eats for picnic lunches. Also a large stock of groceries.
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
To University People
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
University Book Store
"Where they are met with that Jayhawker Spirit"
Complete Line of—
Text books for all courses. Engineer Instruments and Supplies Fine Art Supplies. Fountain Pens-Eversharp Pencils.
See the Latest Novelties in Place cards-favors-candles, and candle sticks--etc.
Fresh Shipment of—
Martha Washington Candies —"Your Kind"
University Book Store
803 Mass. Street
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE FREESERVICE TESTING AND FILLING
Willard
IS IT A HEAVY DRINKER?
Battery
Absolutely! Your Battery Must Be Kept Full of Water WE DO EXPERT REPAIRING
A complete line of
Goodrich Silvertown Cords
Fisk Tires
Excellent Tire Repair Service
Call 1300
FOR ROAD SERVICE
Carter Tire and Battery Co. 1009 Mass. St.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
GRIDIRON CALL NETS FORTY K.U. WARRIORS
Return of Bell and Frank Mande ville Swells Letter Men
Total
The lure of the gridiron again is harking in the ears of the football enthusiasts, and forty candidates for positioning on this years Grison and Blue eleven lined up to the new athletic office in Robinson gymnasium yesterday afternoon for the first step towards entering K. U.'s big "fighting season." A physical examination will be held as the men report, in order to assure their entire fitness for the strenuous pastime.
Letter men who were in Lawerce last night, with the avowed intention of making football their avocation during the winter with the side-issue orientation of Columbia field, include Captain George Nettles, tackle; Frank Mandeville, half; "Tad" Reid, healf and end; and "Chuck" Heizer, half. "Arnie" Bell, who won a letter at the end position last year against the competition of two Hall of Fame players, will be so lauwence Monday and enrolled. He will report for practice Wednesday. "Dutch" Bohnberg, also signed up for his law course yesterday, and will be out to limber up with the first of the candidates. "Pete" Jones, a law student from last year's team, will be both there when Head Coach Allen calls his cohorts for the first scrimmage.
The freshman from last year's team are straining anxiously at the leash of time that holds them out of uniforms. Harley Little, yearling quarterback, returned and registered Monday. He will find strong competition awaiting him on McCook Field in "Prexy" Wilson, and several other snappy piled candid players, if it fails John Bunn, last year's quarter, may be on deck for some of the harder games later in the season.
Other back field men from the fresh team are McAdams, MVey and possibly Ivy, fast and moved to the behind the line position.
Linenen in prospect are Fraker, Sandiflor, McDonald, Harris, "Hungry" Hale, and Wolf, lanky center from the Pacific coast.
R. O. T. C. GETS MUCH EQUIPMENT THIS YEAR
University Military Has New Captain and New Materials to Work With
The R. O. T. C. unit has received a new officer and much new equipment during the summer, and is planning for a very active year according to information given out at headquarters today.
Capt. M. C. Grenata has been assigned here as assistant to the instructor of military science and tactics. Captain Grenata is a graduate of the West Point military academy of the class of '18.
Equipment to the value of one hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars has been shipped. The infantry equipment has already been received. Two hundred new rifles were a part of this equipment.
The government allowance for purchase of a uniform has been increased to thiry-six per man which almost pays for the uniform.
Capt, H. D. Burdick announced that a girls rifle team will be organized and a class held at one-thirty on Tuesday and Thursdays. Captain Burdick hopes to have a team to compete with the University of Washington.
There were nine men from the K.
U. R.O.T.C. attending summer camps
this year, eight at the basic camp and
one at the advanced camp.
Captain Burdick stated that he was expecting to follow the same course as last year but believes that with the help of these tools, it would be possible to accomplish much more.
DR. LINDLEY'S LETTER
September 14, 1920.
To Members of the Freshman Class;
I had looked forward to the opportunity of extending to you at this time a word of greeting and of welcome. Urgent business, however requires my presence in Topeka.
First of all we hope that you will enjoy your life here. There are two tests of superior quality in human development, the proper education to make the most of themselves; the second, their willingness to tolerate the second best. You will have to meet these two tests in the university in order to graduate and avoid failure. Your relative ran kameng and your relative success are dependent largely on
your desire for excellence and your persistent determination to secure it in every life relation.
In order to fulfill these requirements you should resolve to see to it that through careful preparation you will be able to assign the assignments of each school day.
You should also remember that the faculty of the University are glad to be your friends. I doubt if any of the friendships which you will form with them are more valuable than some which you will establish with your instructors.
Be friendly with your fellow students but discriminating in your choice of friends. Seek the best and in seeking the best ignore all the real and imaginary groups which exist in student groups such as ours.
We hope also that you will have a good time. The recreation of college life at their best are of great importance. Plan, however, your recreational work. Work. A balanced ration of work and play will be good for your physical and mental health. Strawberry shortcake as a diet will not keep you in the pink of condition. Get into the air each day and play some game.
Don't forget that here on the hill you live in a great world full of wonders. It will pay you to become acquainted with your University in all its many lines of activity and service. I hope for each one of you that this
I hope for each one of you that this
Faithfulyy yours,
E. H. LINDLEY,
Chancellor
my personal, my mission, desire for your success and happiness in this great adventure on which you are embarking, namely: To become college men and women with all the power and satisfaction which that implies.
may be the best year of your life so far. It is a privilege to assure you of my personal interest in you and
"When the curtain goes up on the Football act this year," he phophe-
Cornhuskers Send Out Annual "Bear" Story
Lincoln, Neh—Prospects of the University of Nebraska turning out a crack football team for the approaching season are not as bright as they have been for several years, according to Assistant Coach Paul J. Sphül. The team meanwhile faces one of the hardest schedules it has ever attempted, including the game with Rutgers on the polo grounds, New York November 2.
"It's in the air!"
Old Timers See Return of Pep Galore to the Campus
"Never," commented one prominent senior, "have I seen the woods so full of the old vinegar. The 'go-and-get it' iden is prevalent everywhere, and there are many institutions adjoining a knocking attitude. And I want to tell you it's great."
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Cheerleader Sandy Winsor when asked what he thought of the new undercurrent of feeling, grew profusive.
High-voltage enthuasia, and barrage of pep are floating around on the Hill. An enervating spirit of vim and vigor is wafting around in the ozone, and everyone joins in on the gladsome chorus:
"It's going to be a good year."
In reviewing prospects, Mr. Schissler pointed out that Nebraska this year will be minus some of its mainstays of 1919. Dobson, Schellenberg, Henry, Russell, and Jobs, bkfieldmen, and Kellogg, Wilder, and Lyman, lineemen, will not be back with the squad this year.
Winsor has appointed Shirley Peters and Irvin "Curve" Glen as aids in putting the crowds through vocal callichromes. He may select two players, his teammates, games, he wants the cheering well organized even though spontaneous. George Nettles, captain of the football team, and Dr. Forrest C. Allen are both grimming with confidence whenever questioned as to "how things are going." Thus it is that placards should be from the baseball team announcing the improved oathsism, because, alas,
sied, there is going to be so much pep running loose, it will take the state militia to put a quietus on things."
"It's in the air."
TRYOUTS
MEN'S GLEE CLUB
Thursday and Friday, 4 to 6 Room 115 Central Ad. Bldg.
The New Suits
The New Dresses
The New Party Frocks—Coats, Sweaters, Blouses—Wool Clad Skirts.
Middys and Middy Dresses. You will like this Store!
F.
You will find them here! The new and smart clothes for autumn wear—
A Dry Goods Store of Highest Class.
Entire Second Floor devoted to womens and misses wear.
A charge Account for your convenience on application to the credit department.
K. U. FOLLOWERS ASK IF BUNN WILL PLAY
Innes Bullmein Hackman
Quarterback Says He's Out of It, Dr. Allen Says He is Free Agent
MAY ARRANGE MATTERS
Just whether or not John Bunn, crack quarterback on last year's Jayhawker football team will return to McCook field as a football player is the principal question with followers of the team. He now the general expression of universal desire to have him return once more to the Crimson and Blue uniform, seems to be impossible of fulfillment, as Bunn states that his action is necessary in positioning in the School of Engineering taking him out of athletics.
"I am out of it" he says, and Director of Athletics Forrest C. Allen's statement is that "Bunn is a free
His Heady Work in the Oklahoma Game Held Sooners Scoreless
The position, that of research in engineering drawing, was definitely taken. Bunn says, two weeks ago in Oklahoma when Dean P. F. Walker the School of Engineering takes him the position. Nothing is lacking now except formal confirmation of the permanent by the board of administration.
agent, and sees a big opportunity in the position accepted him that he "annot afford to lose."
Suits
Raincoats
Hats
Caps
Shirts
Several University athletes, and many of the K. U. sport fans including several downtown business men, are expressing hope that matters may be arranged so that Bunn may be able to compete for the next two months of the football season, before he begins work on his new position. No official action is being contemplated on Bunn's football status this season, according to Dr. Allen, as he sees it. So who has almost definitely decided that it will be impossible for him to gain don a football uniform. Bunn's playing last fall, while terminate
Bunn's playing last fall, while terminated in mid-season by an injury in practice, was marked by brilliant performances and a work at the pilot position in the OK.
$1 the Tax.
all ready for your choosing
Visitors Welcome
Freshmen! We have a Cap here that'll fit your head
Carls
Rankin Drug Store "Handy for students"
Guaranteed Fountain Pens
"Alwrite" Pencils
Cranes Stationery
lahoma game was one of the factors that held the Oklahoma Sooners scoreless in the annual struggle on McCook field characterized as one of the hardest-fought games of the in the Missouri Valley Conference.
Sanitary Fountain
Magazines
Kodaks and Films
Everything that's carried in a first class drug store
1101 Mass. St.
Records
Eight sweaters have been won by
PROTCH The College Tailor
Victor-- Brunswick-- Columbia--
A complete line of latest dance records
Bell's 925-927 Mass. St.
Sunn in his three years of varsity competition, two in football, three in baseball, and three in basketball. Although he has played three years of varsity football, he would have again been eligible, on account of the "waryan" ruling, counting out the fall c 1918 from official rulings.
IMPORTANT
Patrons desiring Season Reservations are kindly requested to list their names now by mail, giving the number and location of seats desired. The same seat will be marked and laid aside for every Road Show as they come.
Should patron decide not to use reservation, notice must be given at least One Day Before Date of show. Failure to take up reservation without notifyting the Bowersock Theatre will automatically cancel all future reservations.
BOWERSOCK THEATRE
Thursday, Sept. 6 "Twin Beds"
By Salisbury Field and Margaret Mayo
ZAINA CURZON and SPECIAL CAST
"Twin Beds" is a joyous bundle of hearty fun, not to be missed if you know whats good for you.
Prices 50c and $1.50
SEATS TUESDAY Direct from the Grand, Kansas City
Typewriters for Rent
Better get yours while our stock is complete
Lawrence Typewriter Exchange
737 Mass St. Phone 548
图为:王健民
W
A
A Word of Welcome
—from the house of Gustafson to the returning students, who know us—
—as well as those who are new, whose acquaint- anship and good will we hope to obtain as we have done in the past—by giving service and satisfying wants.
We like to do little jobs of repairing
Gustafson
THE COLLEGE JEWELER 911 Mass.
GRUEN
eai
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XVIII.
K. U. WARRIORS MUST TRAIN, SAYS ALLEN
FORTY MEN ON THE FIELD
Use of Tobacco Will Automati cally Baanish Man From Kansas Team
Coach Allen Expects From 75 to 100 Men Out by Friday Evening
The candidate for a position on the Jahyawk football squad who is covered with a cheek of tobacco or a lowly firestick, be it cigar or cigaret, has automatically severed his connection with K. U. athletics, for the seas-
Dr. Forrest C. Allen, director of athletics, says so... we are said so last night to a squad of forty men who checked out their football paraphernalia and "imbarred up" on Hamilton Field under the direction of Captain George Nettel, and what is more, he made them like it. Dr. Allen made a short talk to the man, and, in his customary vigorous and amphibious war, told the University that he expected every one of them to put out all that was in them for the welfare of this season's football schedule.
FIRST OFFICIAL PRACTICE TODAY
The first official practice of the season is being held this afternoon under the direction of Dr. Allen, Adrian "Ad" Lindsay, and Howard "Scribby" Laslett, captain of last year's Jayhawk team, and Kevin 'Suill Valley End', making his debut as a collegiate football coach this evening to five—twenty-five—to one hundred aspirations to the moteinic careers of the Crimson and the Bluto are expected to be out by Friday evening, although only forty-five or fifty have checked out suits so far
NUMBER 3.
Seven letter men have checked out their suits and signified their intentions of trying again to hold down a position on the eleventh. The team are Captain Geoffrey Winkler, all-Valley halfback, and 1919, Frank Manville, halfback, made the only touchdown against the Tigers on McCook Field last year, "Rid" Hart, center, in 1919, "Tad" Reed, end, and fast defensive lineman in 1918, Arnold "Arnie" Bell, who made his "K* last year in competition with Laslett and Lonborg, all-Valley ends, and "Pete" Jones, guard in 1917. Letter men in school who will reenforce practice this season, Arthur Clark, letter man in "17 and '19, and Loren simon, fast half, who won his "Ks" in "17 and '19.
"SANDY" BUOGHT FARM here
Promising material from the freshman squad of last year who have reported for duty includes Edwin "Sandy" Sandefur, massive shutputter from Oklahoma, who has purchased a farm near Lawrence and his training a la pitchfork at the Olympic trouty in New York, Hyrle Ivy, red-tailed booby in New York, Allison, Bill Harris McVey, Earl Endacott, "Kenny" Welsh, "Hungry" Hale, "Chubb" Fraker, John Wulf, Severt Hiegins, and Dick Mckee.
The pilot position vacated suddenly by the loss of John Bunn this fall, has two members for the yearling team of last year when he was about evenly matched for the position. "Prexy" Wilson and Harley Little. "Mac" McAdams, freshman quarter from last year, and M. Johnson, quarter with his burg Normal team in 2013, are also in the running for the gushing posi-
ton.
Other men who have checked out equipment with the aawed intent of making it for the "old boys" are Mahon Weed, Marker, Lanko, Cox, Crubb, Ealy, Munson, Godlove, Gould, and Darby.
SPURGON MAY RETURN
Tristan Rearman, backfield star on the Pittsburgh Normal team in 1918, played well with the freshman team here last fall and was Lawrence last night. He has been working with the trucks all summer, and fit as a fiddle. He does not yet whether he will enroll for the first semester this fall or not, but football fans are expecting his appearance in a practice jersey by he first of next week, Gordon Saunders, and Clarence Bernard are members of last year's varsity squad who report to Line Coord. this season for duty. "Andy" McNeely speedily end from last year's eleventh, is also expected to
The human football candidates will probably be called out Saturday on nod on Page t.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SEPTE MBER 15, 1920.
Richard Gelvin, LIB.'17 Marries Grinnell Grad
Miss Mildred Granger, of Nashua, Iowa, and Richard Gellin, VLB, 17, of Lawrence, were married Monday, September 6, at the home of Miss Granger's parents in Nashua. Franklin Boone, A. B. 20, acted as best man. Mr. and Mrs. Gellin will make their home in Topeka. Mrs. Gellin is a graduate of Grimnell college, while Mr. Gellin finished his law course here just before that. Mr. Gellin was a member of Delta Tau University, and Pacha- University secret political society. He took a prominent part in University affairs of all kinds before he completed his law course and joined the army. He is now in the employ of the Graham Paper Company, of St. Louis, Missouri, traveling throughout Kansas.
"JINNEGER" CAMPAIGN PLANNED FOR KUKUS
Pep and Service Organizations Will Hold First Meeting Tuesday
The first reassembling of the Ku Ku Khan, University pop and service organization, is announced for next Tuesday night, at 7:15, in Fraser Hall, Room 201, by Lloyd Young, president.
All members of the Klan who wish to participate actively in this year's intensive "junnergee" campaign for the football season are asked to attend the meeting Tuesday night, as the absentees will be dropped from the roll of the society, according to Mr Young. Plans are being mapped by the Klan officers and the University athletic management for the Klan to render their services to the University in other ways than merely leading the cheering and putting on stunts at the football games. The stunts and "Rock-Chalking," however, are the principal reasons for the existence of the Klan. Mr. young says, and I ward to you that the KuKus in out full force is the first football game, which is scheduled with the Emporia normal eleven on McCook Field, Saturday, October 2.
DR. LINDLEY TO MEET K.U. FOLKS SATURDAY
New Chancellor Will Head Receiving Line at All Uni-
ersity Party in Gym
Dr. Lindley will meet you with the "gad hand" at the reception which opens the all-University community party in the gymnasium Saturday night, according to Mary Olsen, chairman of the Town committee in charge of arrangements, which have been worked out here during the summer.
Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, Dr. and Mrs. Frank Strong, and Dr. Alberto Corbin, adviser of women, will be features of the receiving line. A student "mixer" course for men's and women's self-government courses will introduce the students each other and to the faculty members. The reception, which will not occupy more than thirty minutes or an hour, will be in charge of the University Women's Association, which is composed of the wives of the faculty members. All faculty members are expected to attend the reception, it is the plan to group them together as regards the department in which they are working, the old students to select their special friends, and the new students to make friends with members of the department in which they are most interested.
After the reception, the "stunts" and entertainment features of the evening will be staged under the direction of committees appointed from the two councils. Weather permitting the stunts will be held outdoors, and it is planned to have secrecy performances going over at the campus in different places at the campus. Musical entertainments will direct the performances from one location to the other, and the performances will be repeated for the next crowd. If the weather is bad, the performances will be in the gymnasium.
Shadow pictures, a clown dance, solo and duet dancing a special feature put on by the men of the department of physical education, will be some of the many stunt plans planned. The University Band will play several selections, and make a large part of the entertainment.
REGISTRATION COUNTS
3,009 AT NOON TODAY
Only One Hundred Signed Up
Today—Registration Cost
$1 After Today
EXPECT
TO BEAT 4,000
Summer Session Students and Medics are Yet to be Numbered—Enrollment Ends
The University went over the top on the "three thousand mark" at noon today, when the closing reports showed a total registration for the fall semester of 3,009 students.
This is an increase over the corresponding mark last year of about 160 students, according to Registrar George O. Foster, who said that he expected the increase this year to be the "customary 150 or 200."
This figure, 3,009, does not include the registration of medical students at the Roselade hospital, which is estimated at 120. The summer session registration of 961 is to be added to the enrollment this week in making up the total. Mr. Foster says, excluding the names of those summer session students who are in attendance this fall. This will cut it to about half, but a total of around 4,000 is needed when the late registration are in.
EXPECT 120 FROM ROSEDALE
Around one hundred enrollments came in this morning. Another hundred is expected for this afternoon, the last date of regular registration. All students who sign up after the gymnasium office of the Registrar's closes this afternoon will be "into" and it will cost them one dollar.
FINISH ENROLLMENT TODAY
Enrollment is finished up this afternoon, nearly all of the students having gone to school access at the schools where the students of each school assign themselves to the courses of their selection.
All enrollment after the afternoon must be made through the deans of each school, and with the consent of the staff members under which classes are desired.
The first classes will meet Thursday. All five-hour and two-hour classes will hold meetings at their regular places, which are set forth in the class schedule booklet issued by the enrollment authorities.
Olivia Dale to Pittsburg.
Olivia Dale, who received her Teacher's Certificate in Public School Music in 1917, is now an assistant in the department of Norman.
Una Allen, Fine Arts '17, was for one year instructor in piano in the Eureka High School. The followi ng year, she went as assistant professor of piano and theory to the State Normal School at Natchite ches, La., which position Miss Alle still holds.
MANY STUDY BY MAIL
Correspondence Work of Exten sion Division is Growing Says Professor Ingham
"June always sees our heaviest enrolment in the correspondence work," said Professor Ingham. "The fall months rank next, while October is the most popular month for those engaged in the extension work. Our school, if it may be termed such, has next to the largest enrolment of the University, and continues throughout the year."
A greatly enlarged enrollment over the 1572 of last year is expected in the correspondence study and extension class work of this year, according to Prof. H. G. Ingham, director of the Extension Division,
"The work of the extension division is outgrowing its instructional force and administrative resources," said Professor Ingham. "Last year were 1151 students enrolled in correspondence work alone, with 421 in the extension division classes. Eighty-six were enrolled in Kansas City in the Americanization classes. The total enrollment for the coming year will undoubtedly be greater."
The work of the extension division is divided into two parts; that for students engaged in the correspondence courses, and that finished in the different towns of the city. Two hundred courses are offered.
Cross Country Men To be Out This Week
The men will be called out sometime this week for try-outs for the team.
STADIUM MAGAZINE OUT
Already Coach Carl Schlemanen is getting his cross country men into shape for the fall season. When the football team goes to Oklahoma, a country team will accompany it for a meet to be run in connection with the game. Coach Schlemanen plans to schedule meets with every school that is included in the football schedule.
Five Thousand Pamphlets Will Be Distributed to Students and Alumni
Five thousand pamphlets have been printed by the Department of Athletics, "Stadium" pamphlets they are, to be sent to the alumni over the country, telling why the University of Kansas needs a stadium and just what the new stadium will be when completed.
The pamphlet contains sixteen pages. They cost the department twelve cents a copy, and will be sent to the alumni free gratis, and given to anyone else who buys an athletic ticket.
Governor Allen's personal indorsement of the stadium plan is contained in the pamphlet. Other athletic authorities and old K. U. grades have sent personal indorsements to be used in the book.
Three architectural perspectives showing different views of the proposed stadium also a cut of last year's home games, are contained in the book.
Surgeon of Wide Experience Will Act in Advisery Capacity at Rosedale
STATE WILL EMPLOY HOSPITAL CONSULTANT
The employment of a hospital consultant, a highly experienced surgeon and an expert on matters of hospital arrangement and supervision, will be consummated for the planning of the new Bell Memorial Hospital at Rosedale, Kansas, according to Chancellor E. H. Lindley, who attended a meeting with Governor Henry J. Allen and the Board of Administration in Toeka Monday.
Several of the greatest experts in this line in the country are being considered for the position, which is an advisory job solely, and the authorities are emphatic in their determination to secure the latest and most modern of equipment and arrangement throughout the new building, which is a part of the University of Kansas. About 120 medical students are expected to enroll at the Rosedale hospital before the end of the week. The seven or eight years' course in medicine is active practice at Rosedale. The bonds for the hospital in Rosedale were voted by the city of Rosedale late last spring.
May Endow Political Science Chairs Here
Cleveland, O.,—Campaign managers of the two major political parties are advised by Charles F. Thwing, president of Western Reserve university here, to endow chairs of political science in twenty-five or more leading colleges and universities as a contribution to the advancement of intelligent politics in the United States. He suggested aside from between $20,000 and $100,000 for each institution of learning.
"this money would bring better returns than those obtainable in valuess campaign effort." Thwing said. "The result of endowing these chairs of political science would be of permanent benefit to the country at large.
"The present campaign suggested the thought to me," he said, because of the positions of the Republican and Democratic platforms on the League of Natina. The Republicans hold strongly to American issues while the Democrats advocate international relationship. Both of these questions offer splendid opportunities for enlightenment of not only this but of future generations in political science."
Bolshevik Armies Abut to Start General Offensive Against Polano
TROTSKY IS IN COMMAND
Lithuanians Cease Fighting Poles Pending League of Nations Action
(United Press)
London, Sept. 15.—With the organization of their army complete, following a general mobilization, the bolhevki are about to start a general offensive against Poland, according to unofficial despatches received here today.
LEMBERT GENTER OF BATTLE
Fighting was reported on the entire Polish front particularly in the Lembert region. Foreign Minister Trotsky is said to have arrived in Lithuania to direct the offensive.
The objective of this campaign on a major scale is to regain Russia's shattered military proactive primal force in the capture of Warma, the deprotected ones.
Fighting between the Poles and Lithuanians in the Augusto region have ceased pending action by the league of nations and it was believed would take over line which the Lithuanians temporarily occupied.
MAY MAKE CONCESSIONS
The Bolshevki were reported prepared for a great winter campaign unless the Poles submit to "victor's peace" when meditations are resumed at Riga.
MAY MAKE CONCESSIONS
The British foreign office was offically informed the Poles were prepared to make great concessions at Riga.
Teaches Violin Here.
Miss Blanche Potts, a graduate student of violin in this year's class has been in great demand as a teacher of violin in the city. She has conducted classes in violin for the Lawrence city schools, with the greatest success. She will be attending the University Ortonville Miss Potts will make her home in Canton, Ohio, next year and will establish a violin class there.
INCREASED BACKING FROM STATE NEEDED
University Has Increased Value To State Says Chancellor Lindley
Lawrence business men have the concrete reasons why the University of Kansas must have great integrity in bucking from the state and its people.
They heard the evidence last night when Chancellor Lindley spoke at the informal dinner given by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce for the new members of University faculty and heads of schools and departments. Chancellor Lindley is in terms of the business man. The increasing industrial importance of the state makes service by the University engineering and scientific departments of rapidly growing size. Trained men are demanded more and more while the supply that can be obtained from his finishing, the chancellor pointed out. The University has the duty of meeting the requirements.
Chancellor Lindley praised the K. U. faculty men who have sacrificed as much as $2,000 annually to remain with the school with the hope that there will be a more adequate appreciation of the University.
The affair arranged by the Chamber of Commerce was a regular "get-to-gather" one. Each of the 150 men present was introduced by his neighbor and new University men made short talks. Professor Downing and Prof. Smith of the School of Fine Arts sang. The two professors were sage business leaders as "Tom" Swenew, president of the People's State Bank. President H. B. Ober and others emphasized the close relationship between Lawrence and University interests.
Marion Eastlake Married
To Practice Basketball Every Week During Fall
Marion Eastlake Married Announcements have been received in Lawrence of the marriage of Marion Eastlake, a former student at the University, to Mr. George Jones of Kansas City. The wedding took place September 8 at the bride's home in Kansas City, Mo.
Basketball practice will start with ten days, according to Captain Uhrlaub and Dr. F. C. Allen. The men will be directly in charge of the captain and Doctor Allen will coach the squad.
As soon as the enrollment is done and the gymnasium floor is cleared, basketball goals will be repaired and the floor put into shape for practice. Two or three days a week will be the limit for the present.
AHEARN LEADS AGGIES
"Only Man Who Beat K. U." Will be Athletic Director Of K. S. A. C.
When Mike Ahearn took the job as coach of the aggries in 1905, the post was a sort of a side issue to his more serious profession of teaching landscape gardening. At that time the aggries were at the bottom of Kansas athletics. By 1911 he had built up a such good reputation for K. S. A. C, that the school was taken into the Missouri Valley Conference, and Ahearn was obliged either to resign as landscape gardener or quit athletics since the job required a full time man. He decided to give up athletics.
Marshall, Kan., Sept. 15- "Mike" Abearn, from 1905 to 1911 head coach of the Kansas Aggies and, since his resignation as coach, professor of landscape gardening in the Kansas State Agricultural college, is again to head Aggie athletics. He has been appointed athletic director to succeed Z. G. Clevenger who resigned last week to head the athletic department of the University of Missouri.
Ahearn succeeded in endearing himself-to the hearts of Aeggie football fans for all time by putting out, in a football team that, defeated Kansas
The position. 4 director of athletics offers so much greater opportunity than the job of head coach proffided him in 13¹⁰, that Alburn accepted. His selection was the most important of the alumni and student body.
Install Electric Contacts.
Z. G. Cleveren leaves the Aggies after four years of highly gratifying leadership. During that time he conceived two Valley basketball championships. He also earned track one of his Aggie football eleven tickets for first honors. Never before Cleveren took over Aggie athletics had the Manhattan school won a championship. When he went to $1,500 in debt, he leaves it, after weathering two war years, $2,000 to the good.
The Reuter-Schwartz Organ Co. of Lawrence, has recently installed new electric circuits in the Fraser Hall organ. As a result, the annual commencement concert. For once no signs of a "balk" were shown.
PEP FEATURES MIXERS
Watermelons, Music and Cheers Are Planned for Tonight By "Y" Men
A wagon load of watermelons, a lipine orchestra, stunts, and a general pelp fest are promised for the second "Y" mixer at Myers Hall at 30 o'clock tonight.
Last night 160 new men attended the heir and grew more familiar with Crimson and the Blue and Rock Shalk, according to Y. M. C. A. workers. Lemonade and cookies were erved.
"The mizer gives a fine opportunity for new men to become acquainted with each other," a Y, M. C. A. man said today. "The more there are on tonight, the better we will be satisfied."
The last mixer will be held tomorrow night.
Bad Health Forces Deschanel to Resign
Paria, Sept. 15—President Deschanel is to resign this week, the French foreign office admitted today.
The President is suffering from Meurasphenia, it was said and his mental condition is worse than his physical.
RUSH WEEK RESULTS ANNOUNCED BY FRATS
Pledge Pins Sprout on Lapels Of 150 New Men
SIGMA CHIS SIGN FIFTEEN
Pi K as Low With Two; Pledging Much Lighter Than Usual
Pledging was lighter this year than in former years. Praetemones are prophetics, and the older one is more generous numbers than ever before.
About 150 freshmen were gladed last night by the addition of a new and shiny pledge button to their labels, marking the "staking out" of the men of the yearling class by the various social fraternities.
The phi Chi; F. Rising, Lawrence;
Sigma Phi; Topeke; John Lonborong,
Horten; Warren Smith, Horten; Oste-
Forest Joslyn, Topeke; Max Krauer,
Independence; Harry Blaker,
Pleasantion; Gin Olm Root; Ina
Wifeld Lew, Wichita; Harry Liggett,
Kansas Sam; Adamkinson, Lawrence;
Edmund Speck, Kansas City; Mo,
Irving Leaves, Kansas City; Mo,
J. Beeman, Great Bend; and L.
Clark, Great Bend. Total, 15.
sigma Nu; Ruel Morris, Oswego;
W. Ernest Bowman, W. Worth, Tex;
Montgomery Talcott, Hutchinson;
William Paton, Independence; Harold
Watt, Independence; Qarol Bendet,
Kansas City, Mo.; Max Buckingham,
Wichita; Roger Hackney, Wellington.
Total 9.
Phi Gamma Delta; Max Kaiser, Ottawa; Nathan Wynkoop, Atchison; Raymond Jones, Aitchison; Russell Grayball, Newton; Ernest Ackley; Concordia; James Harrison City; Mo. Cyrus Bulgenele, Lawrence Total, 8. Phi Kappa; Douglas Robertson, Leavenworth; Raymond F. Hulsesan, Kansas City, Mo.; R. Thomas Blake, Kansas City; John J. McLain, Salma; Hester H. Weber, Ellinwood; John A. Potucek, Wellington; M. Schuyler Ryan, Clinton; M. Baunan, Richard J. Bacon, Wellington, Total, 9. Alpha Tau Omega; Walter M. Goodnow, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert S. Lemon, Pittsburg; Andrew B. Wiseman, Kingston; Norton Dwitz, Wichta; David L. Berry, Independence; Howard C. Brown, Mo. A. J. McCarthy, Gould Leechen, Kansas City, Mo.; Leslie S. St. Joseph, Lawrence Total, 8.
Alpha Tau Omega; Walter M.
Goodnow, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert
S. Lemon, Pittsburg; Andrew B.
Wise, Wingman; Norton Dwich,
Wiata; David L. Berry, Independence,
Howard C. Brown, St. Joseph,
A. J. Neylon, Phoas; Gabriel B.
brecht, Kansas City, Mo.; Leila K.
Grauer, St. Kansas, Mo.; Randal
Taylor, Kansas City, Mo.; Total, 10.
Kappa Alpha; Gerald Kosek,
Topeka, W. M. Zimmerman, Troy.
Total, 2
Kappa Sigma; Harlan Carter, Lawrence; Hudson Gilbert, Lawrence; Hugo Kahl, Hays; Carl Wheeler, Wichita; Alysworth Walchman, Wichita; Kenneth Vaniam, Wichita; Scott Markley, Salina; Calin Longworth, Atchison; Virgil Sage, Salina. Total 9.
Delta Upsition; Phillip McGee, Kansas City, Mo.; Mckai Koorer, Kansas City, Mo.; Mvigl Reams, Kansas City, Goodil, Goodil, Independence, Total, 5. Delta Tau Delta; Kenneth Conklin, Abilene; Harold Fritts, Lawrence; Harry Jenicke, Washington; Kent Kinnebeck, Washington; Bert Hunt, Bernard Greasehall, Mo.; Ulmer Allen, Seneca, Total, 7.
Beta Theta Pi: Mac Houston, Wichita; Bob Griffin, Hutchinson; Kenneth Spencer, Pittsburg; Robert LaRue, Columbus; Harold Greenleaf, Greensburg; Lobdell, Great Bend; Burt Anderson, Ottawa; Edward Engle, Wellington; James Nichols, Topeka. 9.
Acacia; Clifford C. Nelson, Ellis;
W. E. Swarner, Rosecade; Fred Allon,
Marysville; John Blake, Chanute.
Total, 4.
Pi Ulpaition: Russel Hogin, Kansas City; Carl Dietrich, Kansas City; Harold Dietrich, Kansas City; Cecil Tate, Lincoln; Lee Wandling, Ellis; Joe Roadatiny, Kansas City; Aaron Furhman, Kansas City; Total, 7. Sigma Phi Sigma: Le Roy Hall, Lawrence; Harold Mahoney, Augusta; James McDougall, Augusta; Benedict Crocker, Bonner Moore; Charles Burkhardt, St. Joseph, Mo.; Robert Embleton, Topek; Virgil Gordineer, Tratt, Total, 7.
Phi Delta Theta; Harace MUJer,
Iola; Arnold Starn, Kansas City;
Langdon Sawyer, Kansas City; Joe
Davis, Kansas City; George Paige,
Iola; Rowland Berry, James
James O'Brien, Lawrence; Harold Franklin,
Washington, D. C.; Nelson Swayz,
T. Worth. Total, 10.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper. of the University of Kansas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief... Genene Hunter.
News Editor... Walt G. Heren.
Campus Editor... Herbert Little.
Sports Editor... A. E. Garvin.
Sport Editor... A. E. Garvin.
Alumni Edit... Joe Jepel.
Plain Tales Editor... Lacie Cleveland.
Press Edit... Katie Perry.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BUSINESS STAFF
BOARD_MEMBERS
Henry B. McCurdy...Business Mgr
Lloyd Ruppenthal..Ask Art Mgr
Deane W. Malott...Celebration Mgr
Catherine Oder
Grace Olsen
Gilbert Swenson
Meda Smith
Harlow Tibbetts
James Austin
Burt E. Cochran
Ferd Gottlieb
Alfred Graves
J. J. Kistler
Deane Malott
Subscription price $3.00 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 5 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1916, at the post office at Lawrence, Kanaa, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week my students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Missouri at St. Louis in the press of the Department of Journalism
Address all communications to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66.
The Daily Kamaa aims to picture the undergraduate who will go to or get to more than merely printing the news by standing for the ideas the thesis emphasizes; to be oral; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to learn to wiser heads; in all to understand the students of the University.
CHARLES S. GLEED
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 15, 1920
Kansas has lost another good friend, a graduate of the University of Kansas who was deeply interested in the welfare of his Alma Mater. Charles S. Gleed, lawyer, business man, and leader in state business, died at his home in Topoka, July 26. At his own request, he was buried in Lawrence, his earliest Kansas home. In an editorial, The Topka Daily Capital pays the following tribute to Mr. Gleed;
"Friendship was the outstanding characteristic of Charles S. Gliep, and hundreds will learn with sorrow of his death as a friend. He was one of the leading men of Kansas, with large and important business relations and wide interests, a gifted man who would have distinguished success in journalism, the law or business, in all of which professions he was at one time or another actively engaged and in all of which he was successful. He took an active interest in politics, though never for any ambition of his own. In fact he would have gone far in politics, for which he had every qualification, but he felt physically disabled for it. He was interested in education, was a friend of the University and of Col. John J. reagent. It was in no small part due to his relation as a common friend of the University and of Col. John McCook that the University obtained its fine athletic grounds, McCook field. Mr. Gliep's interest in education was not merely that of a regent or advisor and friend of the University, but without observation or general knowledge he was always aspiring deserving young men to obtain an education. To him perhaps more than to any other man a good many in Kansas owe the fact that they were able to gain a university education. He helped them generously, but in an unobtrusive, quiet way, so that few new of it. He radiated kindness cheerfulness and good will, and thought he had strong and definite views and opinions, which he expressed in a positive way, the friendship of his nature made him tolerant of the opinion of others. Frall of body, his cheerful spirit rose above physical weakness His loss to Topella will be felt as the loss of one of its best loved men."
KANSAN AND STUDENTS
The University Daily Kanan is it the student what the home town paper is to his Dad. In fact it means even more because Dad is acquainted with his home town and the paper simply keeps him in touch with it, but here to the student who is strange, The Daily Kanan is the greatest aid in "getting onto the ropes" and staying there.
The Daily Kansan is written by
group of students, mostly upper classmen who make it their business to find out in clear detail all matters of news interest to University students. This news is written in an unbiased manner. The Kansan is varied in its interests, with purely news material, editorial comment, society, and student opinion.
KANSAS DOWN THE LINE
Don't draw into your shell and depend upon rumors to keep you in touch with your school. Take The Daily Kasnan and be among the informed.
Montana has the best school system in the United States according to the latest investigation. And Montana is one of those states which we of the middle west unconsciously think of as being wild and wooly, yes even woolier perhaps than the Noo Yawkers think we are.
Kansas is not second either but instead is found down the line about twenty-seven. This sting to Kansas, who prides herself on being a noble leader, is alleviated somewhat by the fact that Missouri is almost out of sight on below us and is found way down in the thirties somewhere. Kansas schools need men and women of vision and initiative but instead finds that only seventy five per cent as many people are going out from the institutions of higher learning to teaching positions than is customary. Not only higher salaries are necessary to bring about a change but more earnest support of the schools and respect for its executives.
Who is to blame that school teaching is held in the light that it is today? No one can place the blame in any particular place perhaps, but certain it is that it should be different.
One of the biggest needs of the educational system of Kansas is a little work in the legislature. An efficient system is impossible as long as superintendents are elected instead of hired. This refers to the county superintendents and the state superintendent as well.
To the old-timers returning to Mount Oread, a rebuilt University seems to be receiving larger numbers of total strangers in a new and hearty fashion, nothing remaining of the greetings of yore except the exteriores of the buildings: even the interiors are re-varnished, re-ceilinged, and renovated.
STILL WITH US
A new faculty takes charge of classes this week, under new direction: sixty-seven new members of the teaching staff have been placed on the University payroll; no longer does "Uncle Jimmy" Green issue the clarion call of gridron battle to the molekins-inlad herds of McCook Field; and we hear even talk that the antiquated and motionless hands on the Blake Hall clock are to be quickened to follow the march of Time. "The old order changeh't and new faces, life, and movement are present on Mount Oread.
But the old spirit! Change the buildings, the names, and turn the whole institution upside down, and the spirit would live, old as the view across the valley of the Wakarausa, yet renewed and given new life each year by the infuse of loyal Jayhawkers. The old spirit is here. The loyalty and fineness of character that has made the University the most-discussed, most-feared, and most-enviwed school in the Missouri Valley is present in increased volume and quality. Buried under the multitude of things to do this week, is an unselfish and generous devotion to ama mater that a summer's vacation has only brought to the front.
Frederick was sitting on the curb, crying, when Billy came along and asked him what he matter. "Oh, I feel so bad' cause Major's dead—my old nice Collie," sobbed Frederick.
"Putting K.U. First," is a matter or honor, not of obligation, to the students of the university this year.
"Shueks," said Billy, "My grandmother's been dead a week and you don't catch me crying."
Fredrick gave his eyes and nose a swipe with his hand and, looking up at the camera, he got out an scratch for a living"—Baltimore American.
at Billy, sobbed despairingly:
"Yes, but you didn't raise your grandmother from a pup."—Harper's Magazine.
Mental Lapses
Binks, (coneating out of theater)—"Why did everybody cry during the death scene?" They must have known the actor wasn't dead."
"That antagonist of yours says he is going to leave footprints in the sands of time."
Jinks—"Yes, that was just it."— Michigan Gargoyle.
"He won't," replied Senator Sorghum. "His mind is in the clouds. He is an intellectual aviator. When he flies, you can't see him not a footprint."—Washington Star.
Patient—"I want to see doctor. Be this the place?"
"I am sure the fellow we were talking about has an itching palm."
Raymond—"What the deuce to you mean by telling Jean that I am a fool?"
Doctor—"This is where I practice." Patient—"Don't want no person for to practice on me! I want a doe to cure me," cure me—"The Bulletin (Sydney)."
FOR SALE—Remington Typewriter
Perfect condition. Call 2528 after
6 p. m. 3-5.1.
PIANO for sale. Call 2485. 70k
West 12th St. 3.5-2
George—"Heavens! I'm sorry Was it a secret? —London Mail.
ROOMS for boys. Mrs, Ingram, 1340 Kentucky. Phone 1563. 3-3.3
WANT ADS
PIANO lessons for pupils of all ages.
Musical kindergarten in connection.
Lorna Marie Reub, 1234. Ordan
Phone 2304,
3-5-4.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (EX-
portions; glasses; office 1025 Mass.
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 2; Jack
Special attention to nose, throat and
ear. Telephone 217.
DR H. REDING, F.A. A.U. Building, Eye, nose, nose, and throat. Special attention to fitting grasses and tonnell work. Phone 512.
DRS, WELCH AND WEILCH—PALMER
GRADUATES. Offices 927 Mass, St.
Phones, Office 115. Issued 115K.
Phone 499
Clothes Called For and Delivered We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
THE STUDENT CLEANERS EATON & FRAKER We press 'em while you gt your hair cut at HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
Of Course You Will Be There
The Lutheran Student "Get-to-Gether."
Where?
929 Mass. St.
Time?
Friday, Sept. 17th, 8. P. M.
Trinity Lutheran Church.
(Eleventh and New Hampshire Sts.)
Why?
To have a good time and to meet others.
Frolic
Fun
Feed
DR. J R BECHTEL. Rooms 3 and 4 over McCulloch's Drug Store. Office Phone 341. Res Phone 1543.
Phone 343. Res Phone 134. M.D.
G. W. JONES, A., M. M. K. D. Dis-
c. B. JOHNSON, A., M. M. D. Dis-
cology library F A I U Bld. Phones
Office 38. Residence K5263. Hospital 1745.
D. ALRIGHTH -Chirropractor-Radio
Telephone 112. Residence K5263. An-
ticed. 1161 Mass St. Phone 1431.
Residence Phone 1761.
B. WILLIAMS -Dentist -Dentist
Room 511 Plarning Bldg. Special at-
tention to extracting. Phone 511.
Z H TIBRUTT -Dentist. 327 Mass St.
H TIBBETS—Dentist. 927 Mass St.
Phone 183.
MEN'S GLEE CLUB
TRYOUTS
Thursday and Friday, 4 to 6 Room 115 Central Ad. Bldg.
Varsity
Bowersock
Wednesday--Thursday
Wednesday Only
Rex Beach's Famous Story
"The Silver Horde"
That far flung port of adventure of hair-trigger loves and hates! No man can better picture life in the frozen silences of the Great North than Rex Beach.
"The Silver Horde" is a thundering drama of fighting fists and mighty men. And a thorough story packed with electric thrills runs a golden thread of beautiful romance.
Also Paramount Magazine
Prices: Children 11c, Adults 33c War Tax Included
For economy's sake buy Hart Schaffner & Marx fine clothes
WE advise our customers to economize in clothes; it's honest advice, and it's just as honest when we advise you to economize by buying Hart Schaffner and Marx clothes. Because we know that their all-wool fabrics and thorough, honest tailoring will give you better wear, and more weeks of it per dollar than in any other clothes.
PECKHAMS
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BY THE WAY
raternity rushing is finished for honce; sorrison rushing goes on obed. The calendar of social ents goes on, and the contest is shuffled a flush fro. One sorority has strings to obtain the use of an airplane last of the week for a whirlwind, in-the-air" windup of the cam-
WEDNESDAY
the rushing schedule for the rest the week follows:
Beta Phi - Exclusive 8-12
Phi Alpha Theta - Exclusive 3-7
Omega - Tea dance and dinner.
Gamma - Gamma - Breakfast
and Tea.
ha Delta Pi—High Noon Break- fast.
a Phi Beta—Breakfast and Matinee Dance.
Xi Delta—Luncheon.
haa Omieron I-Exclusive 8.12
haa Kappa-Carnation Luncheon.
haa Chi Omega-Exclusive 8.12
Itss Isis and Gaia
F.A.U.
IE OLD WOODEN
MAN-OF-WAF
iewed from without, a first, sec,
or third-rate wooden man-of-
apparses ponderous and cumberbe.
A modern sailor, accustomed
the keen iron ships of the pres-
day, would have called such a
p a sea wagon, qualified or othere.
But when the great save-
set, and the hull began to move
on, the ship hulk on attributes of beauty and noty. There has been, perhaps, no
h beautiful thing on earth, the
sk of man's hands, as an old sev-
four under sail.
Fone had taken a boat and rowed to such a ship as she lay at an arm, fitted for the sea, toward the end of the eighteenth century, one old have been struck, first of all other bulk. The ships had bulging wooden sides, vast stern-works, and abvised wooden beakheads, one wounded of such children and have been wrought such curves. Till Nelson's time it was no uniformity in the panthe of the exterior of the ships. The stains used their own discretion, I followed their own tastes, in the section and application of the colors. We most general color-scheme was follows: Along the walls of the river the copper was a wide black streak, using right around the ship, and being as high as the level of the garer gun-deck. Above this the sides are yellow, of a yellow sometimes glitterin to brown, like the color of tinnainism, and sometimes of aighter tint, like the color of above a gun-deck on the upper side of the quarter-deck, were painted a vivid red or blue. It has become a very deep and may nearly black. A band of scarce or pale blue, edge of the copper and the forearm, and continued to the figurehead. The rest of the port-lands were of the color as the sides—that is, brown yellow. The stern-worses are generally elaborate with gilded iving, gilt cherubs, and the like, d with red, blue, green and gold vices, such as cornu-cornes, etc., and the steel runnels, outside the windows (we are king of a third-rate or seventy-军 gunship), ran a quarter galley or stern walk, on which the cap could take his pleasure. The boats and rails of this walk were with gold-leaf. First and second-rate ships had three and three walks respectively. At the watches, proximity of the great肝脏, was the ship's figurehead, at a shield, or some allegorical sure suggested by the name of theip. The allegorical figure was tramps, the most popular among the colors. They took great pride initting it in good repair, it on itsape and red paint on itspe and pretty blue sash, upon such appearance所 necessary. —From "Sea Life in Nelson's city" by John Masefield.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
ELAND M. SHOUT Magazine Subscriptions 925 Indiana Phones, 593 or K. U. 58
B. McCOLLOCK, Druggis
Eastman Kodaks
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
Music Department has Fine Quarters in New Building
1917 Legislature gave $75,000 to properly house Music Department. In July 1919, the music department of the School of Fine Arts moved into its beautiful quarters in the New Administration building. In addition, a band was hired and it now has ten practice rooms for the use of students. In September 1920, ten additional practice rooms will be ready. In each practice room there will be a new upright piano. This permits of students taking lessons, working with instruments, and acquiringed practice, all without leaving the building.
In 1916 the enrollment was so much larger than that of 1915, that new and more commodious quarters were built. But by 1918 we meet this demand, the 1917 session of the State Legislature added to the University building appropriation the sum of $75,000 with which to adequately house the School of Fine Arts.
In such a building and with such a fine equipment students and teachers alike take pride in their work, because of the quality of the school, the upright progress of the school.
The art department already occupies seven large top-lighted studios on the top floor of the Administration building—studios built especially for its purposes. It has a great number of casts, reliefs, drawings, copies in color of famous paintings, especially built tables—in fact, the equipment necessary for a first class school of
A LITTLE CLOUD
A little cloud passed slowly overhead. Like a white butterfly that stayed its flight
Above a bed of larkspur flowers— then spread Its elasmine wings, and drifted out
then spread Its gleaning wings, and drifted out
of sight.
-Edith Willis Linn.
William and Henry, chauffeurs,
were discussing the ill luck of a fellow
chauffeur, Clarence, who had the day before been fired for taking out his employer's car without permission.
"But how did the boss know Clarence had taken the car out?" asked Henry.
"Why," explained William. "Clarence ran over him."—Harper's Magazine.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
DAGUERRE
A centenary of photography is to be celebrated at Bry-sur-Marne, the town near Paris, where Daguerre passed his later life, not because it is yet 100 years since the first Daguerreotype, but because he had to have been the year when Daguerre began the experiments that led to $t'$.
beginning as a scene painter for Paris theaters, Daguerre had become a painter of panoramas for exhibition, and was part-inventor of the diorama, with its ingenious use of lighting to give illumination to a painted scene. One may imagine him, painting from nature with the help of a camera obscura which reflected the external scene on a white screen for the screen for the painter, and struck one by the thought and feeling a method by which the reflection could be made permanent.
The idea is believed to have first occurred to Daguerre in 1820, and with it came the beginning of photography. Had Daguerre not been an inventor as well as a painter the idea might easily have gone no further. The problem of preparing a surface that would perpetuate the reflection was a matter of chemistry, and for many years the inventor in paint made a property sensitive plate. He discovered it at last, says a writer in the Youth's Companion, by accident; a apolled plate left overnight in juxtaposition to a dish of mercury furnished the answer to the puzzle, and
in 1839 the French Academy of Sciences recognized the importance of his discovery.
How much of the process was Daguerre's invention and how much might justly be attributed to Joseph Nelpe, who worked with him, is not known. Daguerre himself designed the process, and the French century celebrates him as the man who first conceived the idea that led to photography.
Thursday, September 16, at regular scheduled hours, all classes will be held. All students are required to be in attendance.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Friday, September 17, at 10:30, will occur the first general assembly of students and faculty (Robinsss Gymnastics). At 10:30, will deliver the address,
Students enrolled in observational astronomy will meet tomorrow at 7:30 o'clock in the observatory for assignment to sections. Students will be given their choice of Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday afternoons
The headquarters of the Y. W. C. A. are in Myers Hall.
Wednesday, September 15, 7:30 p.m., Myers Hall, "K. U. First Mixer."
The churches of Lawrence will extend a cordial welcome to all students, especially first year students, for the services on Sunday, September 17th.
or evenings.—Prof. Dinsmore Alter.
Band try-out will be held Sept. 13,
14 and 15, in Room 502, Fraser Hall,
from 10 to 11:30 a. m., and from 2
to 5 p. m., S. Z. Herb, director.
Men's Glee Club trouts, Thursday and Friday 4 to 6. Room 115, Central Administration Building.
AI) interested in band trousers may meet P.S. S, Z Herb from 10 to 13:00 and on from 1:30 to 5 in Sunday or on from Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Member of last year's Women's Glee Club meet in Room 12 in the School of Fine Arts, at 4:30 Thursday.
The KuKu Klan will hold its first meeting of the year next Tuesday
night, September 21, at 7:15 o'clock to be avive members this year must in Room 201, Fraser. All who wish be present—Lloyd Young, President.
Patrons desiring Season* Reservations are kindly requested to list their names now by mail, giving the number and location of seats desired. The same seats will be marked and laid aside for every Read Show as they come.
IMPORTANT
Should patron decide not to use reservation, notice must be given at least One Day Before Date of show. Failure to take up reservation without notifying the Bowersock Theatre will automatically cancel all future reservations.
University Orchestra
TRYOUTS
Thursday Evening 7:30-9:30 Fraser Hall
Better get yours while our stock is complete
Lawrence Typewriter Exchange
737 Mass St. Phone 548
Typewriters for Rent
Announcement
Goodyear Wingfoot Rubber Heels For Men
Just received a shipment of extra light leather soles For Ladies
Electric Shoe Shop Two Shops
Has it ever occurred to you that a great saving can be made by purchasing a coupon book at
1017 1-2 Mass.
726 1-2 Mass.
Where everybody goes. If ten cents on a dollar means anything to you, try a Coupon Book.
The Oread Cafe
"BRICKS"
"A THING OF BEAUTY IS A JOY FOREVER."—KEATS
PAGE 120
BE FIRST with the latest fashions. Enjoy the happy sensation of originality and you will know that you have spent wisely and economically.
Branham'S
Women's wearing Apparel and Millinery
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Customers' Room Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room Coupon Booths Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
Halls,
studios,
or
garages
AL
have a
beoon
nearly
beamed
located
and the
rent
rooms.
The se
muse
read
con-
gregation
guide of
the porter
oricle
So large
color
choose
the part
later
not
cut
gen
the
lee
ti
t
i
g
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Professor Skilton's Music Wins Many Plaudits
Since Professor C. S. Skilton's "Indian Dances" became so well known in their versions for string quartet and symphony orchestra, and have been played by every symphony orchestra in America. These two other numbers in large form which have added much to his reputation. These are a canata "The Witch's Daughter," published by J. Fischer, New York, and directed by John R. Greek tragedy,"Electra," published by Arthur Schmidt, Boston
The cantata has been performed by the St. Louis Choral Society, the orchestral parts being played by the St. Louis Symphony orchestra. The cantata is one of the best and most interesting published during the past five years.
"Electra," with Professor Skilton's incidental orchestra music was performed at the University last winter. The principal characters were assumed by members of the K-5 chorus, which was made up of Fine Arts vocal students. The music as it was played by the University Orchestra, under the direction of Professor Skilton met with general apprehilation, and the composer received many well-received compliments on its success.
K. U. Warriors Must Train, Says Allen
(Continued from Page 1.)
or Monday by Coach Adrian Lindsey, who will be in charge of their training. Equipment has been ordered to a large number of men, who are expected to add an additional shine to the prospects of next year's football season.
Many Exhibitions For Art Students
The department of Drawing and Painting of the School of Fine Arts has had one exhibition or another on view practically the entire year.
The Brymwood Collection of Paintings has been on view in one of the studios during the entire year, while the paintings of the Thayer Art Museum have been on view in another studio nearly all of the year.
Several special exhibits have been made up of selections from the various departments of the Thayer Collection, which for lack of room, cannot be kept on permanent exhibition. The first exhibition was that of Oriental rugs, particularly fine rugs in all of these were extremely valuable and all were fine samples of rugs made by the different Oriental races.
This was followed by an exhibition of American tapestries and the old-fashioned counterpieces, in which the art of weaving reached a high state of development. With this exhibition was shown many handsily many of them examples of needlework made by children for their instruction.
Following this, a large collection of quilts was shown. These illustrated the needlework of the older women in America, and the character and meaning of the design was learned and carried over period in which this work was done
Three exhibits of outside work were shown. First, a collection of fifty water colors by Dr. John T. Moore. This was a painting hundred etchings by George Albert Burr, one of the leading western artists. Then next, Mrs. Fern Eide Knecht, a graduate of the art department in 1911, was painted with etchings of fifty paintings. These artworks are a great deal of attention.
Finally, the commencement exhibit, consisting of student work in oils, black and white, and a considerable amount of design, was shown. As the room in which the Thayer Exhibit is to be displayed will be covered by the 1920s, two exhibitions will be permanently on view during all of next year—the Thayer Exhibit and the Brywood Collection of Paintings. No doubt other exhibitions will be arranged for during the year.
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
Excellent Food Pleasant Associations THE PORTER CLUB 1403 Tenn.
Cycle Cops Fail to Catch Many Student Speed Kings
1403 Tenn.
The lack of imported Kansas City motorcycle cops in Lawrence this year is not allowed to permit the rushing fraternities of Mount Oread to bring their "costly motor cars" around the shaded streets of Lawrence in their usual happy-go-lucky, harum-scarum, bloodthirsty manner, for the municipal government has hired two "local products" who are just as efficient in the manipulation of their Harley-Davidsons as even Lieutenant Keyes, who gained much renown and hatred here last fall for "breaking into the police." The students are not so reckless this year, however, and so far this
Drawing and Painting Popular This Summer
week, only two K. U. students have been booked for hitting up past the 12-miles-an-hour speed limit of Lawrence. Lawrence high school students, however, are less mindful of the omnipresent threat they have taken in custody this week by motorcycle policemen Perkins and Dower.
More art students have come to K. U. this summer for painting Rene Fine Art drawing and painting work than ever before. Professor Griffith who has taught at the university has kept busy taking care of the students in these courses.
One Lawrence high student, arrested Tuesday night, attracted a crowd while been booked, and before the crowd had dispersed, Officer Sam Silverthorne of the Lawrence force inspected a facial insignia of office. He followed the crowd to the swimming pool, but failed to recover his bludgeon.
Mrs. Bessie Naylor Lewis, Fine Arts '02 is one of the prominent piano teachers of Yates Center. Mrs. has never lost interest in her music.
Mrs. Augusta Flinton Sample,
Fine Arts, '92, at one time instructor
of voice in the School of Fine Arts.
It is now part of the Music
Club, San Diego, Cal.
STEEPER IS AT HIS OLD STAND
Phone 1434
92: Louisiana
1905-1920
20
Daily arrivals in the Suit Room
of the Cleverest, Smartest
Suits, Coats, Dresses and Frocks that New York Ingenuity can Produce
Our Buyer of women's Ready-to-Wear is in New York now—In touch with the last word in Autumn Styles.
On the First Floor you will find everything in Dress Goods, Silks, Gloves, Hosiery, Neckwear and Notions.
Innes Bulline Hackman
C. O'Shea
There's a treat in store for you-if you haven't visited our newly equipped Restaurant
Jay Hawk Cafe RAY & HARRY Corner 14th and Ohio
Fine Arts Class This Year the Largest Eve
Fine Arts 1920 graduating class was the largest in the history of the school. It consisted of eight who were given the degree Bachelor of Music, five who were given the degree Bachelor of Painting, one who was
given the four-year Artin's Certificate in Piano, seven who were given the Teacher's Certificate in Piano, seventeen who were given the Teacher's Certificate in Public Music, and eight who were given the Teachers Certificate in Public School Art, a total of thirty-eight.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
LELAND M. SHOUT
Expert Typist
will accept a limited number of patrons. Pay by the month. Satisfaction guaranteed. Phones, K.U. 58, or 593
The Correct Cut of the Caps
Pierre Bonhomme
"Where will you live?" asked the reporter of the bridal couple, "At the Old Manse," replied the bride. This is the way the item appears on the paper a later:
"Mr. Hardup and his
bride, formerly Miss Mili-
lions, have returned.
They will live at the old man's.
Is somewhat different this fall, so drop in and try them on.
Lalemen fr.
In case you have never worn caps of the genuine Priestley's Fabrics, now is the time, for they give entire Cap Satisfaction because they are Klassy Kaps faultlessly tailored by Marks.
10
$2 to $5
SkofStadS
ELLING SYSTEM
"You receive more when buying for cash only"
Freshman Caps
especially priced this year
$1
-Better Get Yours Now While Getting's Good-
CARLS
GOOD CLOTHES
White Button College
Red Button Medic
Yellow Button Engineers
Have You Tried—
Bonvilla Massage Cream?
Houk's Barber Shop "The Shop of the Town"
3
Men-
Men —
You're invited
To see
The new Society Brand
Suits and Fall Coats
Now —
And we know
You'll be pleased
With the great
Assortment
We have ready—
Now —
Ober's
HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS
PROTCH The College Tailor
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
1047 Massachusetts St.
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
INSURANCE
THE
153
AGENCY
Lawrence Kansas
"Quality and Service"
Fire Protection on Personal Effects
Phone 133 now, and let us give you protection on your trunks, baggage and personal effects while they are located in a room in any building or office. Call 212-589-7555 to transit to and from your home, against loss or damage by fire or lightning.
Our policies also cover against theft of trunks or valises while they are checked in any railway station, hotel or boarding house.
The cost is small. For protection on each $100 as follows:
8 months 20 days 6 months $40
When we say any room, we mean a room in any private residence, clubhouse, boarding house, hotel, school or college.
the cost is smaller for protection or
3 months. 30 days. 9 months. 64
6 months. .53e 12 months. .75e
Minimum premium is $1.00.
Phone 133 now or talk to Craig
Kennedy, O. A. Ramsey, Glenn V
(Hop) Banker, who is at the Kang
office, or R. L. Allen.
BOWERSOCK THEATRE Thursday, Sept.16 "Twin Beds"
By Salisbury Field and Margaret Mayo
ZAINA CURZON and SPECIAL CAST
"Twin Beds" is a joyous bundle of hearty fun, not to be missed if you know what good for you.
Prices 50c and $1.50
SEATS TUESDAY Direct from the Grand, Kansas City
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XVIII.
W. S. G. A. ANNOUNCES DOPE ON DATE RULES
Edict Carrying Sad and Previous Tidings Goes Into Effect Tonight
LIBRARY DATES TO STAND
But no Loitering on Way Home Will be Countenanced Durin- week
The Date Rule Goes on Tonight.
HELEN OLSON,
President W. S. G.A.
Six fateful words, in the above edict of the president of the Women's Student Government Association, mean that the following rules go into effect, and that all University authorities, members of the W. S. G. A. University, and theirized women's roaming houses are vigilant on the lookout for any infractions thereof:
After 10 o'clock in the evening on week nights girls you can't even look at a man. This is straight dope, for it was obtained from a prominent member of the W.S.G.A., who pointed out several cases of sad things that happened to folks who violated this rule.
CLOSE UP AT 10:30
Of course, now, inasmuch as the library doesn't close until 10 o'clock, the women have a few minutes in which to walk home. The houses are scaled, look, bar, and shutter, at 10:36 o'clock and all out after this hour sleep in the parch swing or climb the fire-scape.
Males of the species may accompany the young women home from the library, our W.G.A. informant tells us. The path from library to rooming house must be straight and narrow one, it is made up of the path of the wary student, and there must be no loitering by the wayide, nor stopping.for refreshments. Library dates, too, are the only kind permitted, after 8 o'clock
Culprits who violate these rulings of the Women's Student Government and the university per caught assault, besides the pangs of conscience, the ordal of being "called up" before the W. S. G. A., where their case is handled, are in the hands of swimmats, swimpadders, and by denial of social privileges of attending dances and other social affairs.
Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights, however, are much different matters. Eleven o'clock is the "deadline," the "zero hour," as you might say, on Friday and Saturday nights, except in the case of dances, when 12 o'clock is the end of all merriment, and the signal for search for hatchches and enough money to taxi-driver, permission from Dr. Alberta Corbin, adviser of women, dances may be held beyond the mystique hour of midnight.
W. S. G. A. High Cost Reduce Ready for Business of Selling Books
BOOK EXCHANGE OPENS
The student's book exchange, under the direction of the W. S. G. A. opened this morning at the check stand on the first floor of Fraser Hall. Practically all books that are being used this year are available for sale, or may be turned in to be sold.
NUMBER 4.
The exchange, which is operated by members of the Women's Student Government Association - council, handles all books that are in use this year. A fee of ten per cent for operation is charged on each sold book expense. Plans for operation of the exchange, which will probably be open all next week were made at a meeting of the W. S. G. A. in Fraser Hall Tuesday night
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SEPTEMBER 16, 1920.
The exchange will be open, from 9:30 to 12 o'clock in the morning, and from 2 until 4 o'clock in the afternoon, it is announced. Only books that will be used this year will be accepted for sale.
Start a "French Table."
A French table has been started in connection with the study of French under the direction of Monsieur Salvan, an assistant in the French department. French is spoken during the meals, except on Sundays. Students who have had ten hours work in French admitted to the program and were accompanied with a French table, but the plan has proved successful at other universities.
Blue Grass Region Needs Pedagogues
Want to go to Kentucky? To the Blue Grass region of the mountainer feistier state, "where the corn is in the colonels, and the kernels in the corn." If you do, here's your opportunity. Prof. A. J. Newman, of the department of economies, has received word from that state that there is a shortage of teachers in several of the grade schools of the state and that a number of Kansans could get $100 a month jobs for the next eight months; if they wish, either an office or women can be enrolled. Either college certificate or diploma is required, as only rudimentary courses are to be taught. Interested persons are asked to apply to Prof. A. J. Newman, in the economics office in West Ad.
FIRST VARSITY CALL FINDS 40 ASPIRANTS
Light Workouts, with Conditioning Perscriptions by Dr. Allen on Hamilton
At the first official football practice of the season, forty men reported to coaches. Most of the team came from last year's freshman squad.
Quarterback candidates were given instruction in the art of good kicking by Coach Lindsay. The linemen were shown the course and the way to go through. The other backfield candidates were given some practice in running low. No strenuous work was given Wednesday day evening, as the men are not suited to the task and crawling, to limber the muscles, were run through with.
There will be no "real hard" work done at practice till the men are toughened up much more. Coach Allen told the men how to keep in form by exercise in their rooms twice daily, using the "full squat," the "full bend," and several other movements, to develop the muscles in the back, and to enable the men to get better balance.
'Baltimore Hop.' Cheek to Cheek Steps Barred
Washington, Sept. 16—The "Baltimore Hop," latest尖校舞动 to grip the capital, will be barred along with other "check to check" dance functions in schools on Public Schools; was announced today.
We feel we can make the dances more educational," said Miss Cecil B Morton, community secretary.
L. H. S. Football Team are Scrimmaging With Scrube
The Lawrence High School football squad is getting down to business. After two weeks' practice of the season, the first team went into scrimmage with the second string men.
About twenty-five men are out for the squad. Considering the fact that it was their second week of practice of the football year, the number of spectators out for the high school workout tend to for the they still have a reason to fight them in season. As many high school rooters were out watching their team as there were University students bearing the Variety over.
Aggies Get Good Athlete In Walgast, Ottawa Star
Ottawa, Sept. 16—Ottawa university is the loser and Kansas State Agricultural College, Manhattan, the gainer by the decision of Dewey Wolgast, of Alta Vista, to attend Aggieville this year. Wolgast is one of the fastest all-round athletes who ever attended the Baptist college here, starring in football and track and making the first basketball string two years. Last May he was high individual pont man in the intercollegiate track and field meet second, though represented by a small number of athletes. He is a dash and hurdle man and pole vaulter.
Ruble to Teach at W. U
Ruble to Teach us
Roland "Tiny" Ruble who graduated from the University of Engineering last spring and played guard on the Varsity ball球队的last two stopped over a few hours in Lawrence yesterday while enroute to Madison. Wis., where he will be an instructor in hydraulic engineering in the School of Engineering at the University of Wisconsin this year.
REGISTRATION NOW
IS 3,103 -- FOSTER
Late Enrollment and Changes Must be Made Next Saturday With Advisers
SETS
NEW RECORD
English and Political Science Appear Popular, Although no Rooms are Crowded
Late registrations this morning numbered 16, according to the office of Registrar George O. Foster. This brings the total of registrations for the first semester up to 3,108, a new high-water mark for the first day after regular registration.
The first classes started today. Professors and students all were very careful to appear in their classrooms, on time, and many quite a bit ahead of time.
ENROLMENT IS FIRMED.
The enrollment of the week was finalled on Monday and Tuesday, the chancellor's office announced this noon. Any other enrolments of late students, or applications of students who wish to change their courses, in any way, will be taken care of Saturday by the deans of the schools, and the heads of the various departments in which work is to be taken. Before any course is offered, the class adviser must be obtained, the chancellor's office says. The list of class advisers will be announced Friday.
ENROLLMENT IS FINISHED
NO OVERLOWING CLASSROOMS
Provision appears to have been admirably made for all possible increases in class enrollment, as no cases of over-crowded class rooms and over-flowed classes were reported. Poor class conditions in the College this semester appear to be in English and political science departments, although the enrollment is generally scattered throughout.
Call for Frosh Football Men Issued by Lindsey
Alf freshmen who are planning to enroll for freshman football are requested to report at Robinson Gymnasium, second floor, Saturday morning at 9 o'clock, to check out equipment.
Owing to the large number of freshmen out for football, it is imperative that everyone come at this time, as the equipment in shoes is
ADRIAN LINDSEY.
Freshman Coach
Freshman Coach.
K. U. BAND TO TOPEKA
University Musicians Will Play in Thirty-Fifth Division Remunion Parade
The K. U. Band will go to Topeka Tuesday to participate in the Third-fifth Division Reunion parade. The band is being rapidly organized under the direction of Bandmaster Herb and will number forty-five pieces. About twenty old members of the band have returned and tryouts are going daily in order to give any prospective band-members a chance to make the band.
Washington, Sept. 16.—Despite heavy encounters during August, the National Guard has less than one third the total number of men authorized by the new army bill, the War Department announced to-day.
The band has several other trips in view besides the ropea reunion. It will go with the football team to Manhattan for the Aiggle game and also to Columbia for the annual Missouri-Kansas football game.
National Guard But Third of Legal Strength
The material that is coming out for band this year is especially promising according to Director Herb and he expects a band that will compare favorably with the other college bands in the valley.
Several members of this year's band were members of the Trirty-ffth Division and are looking forward to the trip to the reunion.
The present strength of the guard is 2,478 officers and 50,451 enlisted men. The authorities are 193,867. Erlakiments during August were 3,431.
Thompson Choices Lead In Republican Primaries
Returns from over the state where candidates backed by Gov. Frank O. Lowden expected to overcome the challenge, far failed to give substantial gains.
Chicago, Sept., 16—Candidates backed by Mayor William H. Thompson for Republican state and national offices, again led today in latest returns from yesterday's Illinois primary. The "Thompson candidates" have largely relied from Chicago, where the state apparently won in a landslide.
ITALIAN CAPITALISTS TO COMBAT UNIONS
Rome, Sept. 16. The Italian manufacturers were in session all over the country today trying to devise some means of combating the control of their plants by labor organizations.
Manufacturers Will Attempt to Stop Seizures of Plants By Labor
Staffers representatives have announced that an ultimatum will be sent manufacturers demanding acceptance of the labor control of industry. Socialist leaders announce they will attempt to obtain laws to provide for collaboration of labor in the management of all plants.
Reports from Milan were that seizures of plants continued on a large scale. Cotton mill and jewelry work were among those put under workers' control in Italy, but the pearsony, Landloords in Sicily were driven off by the tenant farmers. Proner Glibtits arrived in Turin on his call for an immediate conference with manufacturers, which is oxciting in a quick turn in the situation.
Labor will insist on sharing in the technical and financial management of the work and assume charge of the employment bureaue for industry.
FREE HOSPITAL AID
GIVEN TO STUDENTS
Hospital and Physicians Fees Will be Charged for Preventable Diseases
If you need the following very necessary things: examinations, prescriptions, and medicines, vaccinations and inoculations for smallpox and typhoid fever, the services of an examining physician, and hospital services, except when you are afflicted with the preventable diseases of smallpox and typhoid fever will be given free. Physicians' calls outside of the hospital are charged for at the rate of one dollar for day visits, and two dollars for night visits, payments to be collected by the Un-versity authorities.
These various benefits to University students are set forth in a bulletin of the University health service, printed and passed out to the students at enrollment Tuesday and Wednesday.
Students are warned by the bulbule against gas stoves not connected with flues, to remove the poisonous gas made by the burning of the natural gas, and are asked to consult the head of the Health Service if the temperature of their rooms is not kept between 65 and 70.
The office of the Health Service has been moved from its last year's location at the corner of Louisiana and Thirteenth streets, and is now located in the former building at 1500 Avenue street, which is also used as the Student Hospital and Dispensary. The telephone number is 1610.
The report of the hospital for the last two years, given out today, is as follows:
**Physicians'** hours at the hospital are from 9 to 11 o'clock in the morning and from 2 to 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon each school day, and from 9 to 11 o'clock on Saturday. Students will be held at these hours.
1919-20 School Year.
Dispensary calls ... 3505
Typhoid Inoculations ... 150
Smallpox Vaccinations ... 21
Hospital Patients ... 197
Physicians Calls ... 115
1918-19 School Year.
Dispensary Cases ... 2500
Typhoid Inoculations ... 110
Smallpox Vaccinations ... 3
Hospital Patients ... 128
Physicians' Calls ... 200
LINDLEY WILL SPEAK TO STUDENTS FRIDAY
New Chancellor Will be Presented to Students by Doctor Frank Strong
SCHOOLS TO SIT APART
Conege, Law, Engineers, am
Meures Clans Will "Hang
Together. Not Separately"
The fifty-fifth opening exercises of the University of Kansas will be staged in Robinson Gymnasium Friday morning at 10:30 o'clock. Dr. Frank Strong will have charge of the first part of the program and will present Chancellor Ernest H. Lindley to the student body. The new cancelloer will speak. His subject has not been announced as yet but a rousing meeting is in prospect.
The old seating arrangement, the one that used to feature all-University convoitation will be reinstated at the conventation. The University administration favors a revival of the old time school and departmental rivalry, and to foster this plan announcement was made this morning that the seating arrangement would be as follows:
The Laws will occupy the first eight rows on the right side of the gymnasium in front. Behind them the Median is positioned, and will be backed by the Pharms, who will sit in three more rows behind the "stuff room" enthusiasts.
On the left side of the house and in front, in direct opposition to the Laws will sit the disciples of the rod and transit - the School of Engineering. Behind the Engineers, the seascape will be lit by all its alled branches, will find seats.
The assemblage will try out their lungs on the old Rock Chalk under the direction of Sandy Wang, red-headed, pep dispensing cheerleader, assistants. Shirley Peters and the corps of Glenn, on tap and the full corps of noise dispensers will make their bow to the Thundering Four Thousand.
FINE ARTS PUNKNEWS NEW
The music to be dispensed will come from the University's chief "jazz" dispensary, the State of Fine Arts. The faculty will occupy the platform and a chance is offered to first year students to see the University's forty-hand action in hand.
PUT BUTTONS ON 135
Late Announcements Include 25 Fledglings in Sig Alphs And Sigma Chis
The hearts of 125 first-year men were made glad Wednesday morning by the pinning of fraternity colors on their coat lapels. The Sigma Chis signed the largest number of men, fifteen, and the Pi Kappa Alphas the smallest, two.
fledges announced late, which did not get announced in Wednesday's Daily Kanan, of Phi Kappa Psi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon, are as follows:
Phi Kappa Psi: Dean John Wichita; Whittized Lambus, Kansas City; Donald Laithe, Kansas City; Laurel Miller, Kansas City; Jim Connelly, Bayne Lancecott, Holton; Edmund Kearney, Kansas City; Roland Thompson, Kansas City; George Hollingberry, Lawrence; Maurice Bentley, Wellington; Edwin Lewin and Garland Lichty, Wellington; Christopher Eppsilon; Lawrence Blum, Kansas City; Floyd Smith, Chanute; Wallace Daley, Kansas City; Carl Ade, Kansas City; Donald Boggs, Wichita; William Blankenbaker, Olathe; Frank Thompson, Kansas City; Chailis, Kansas City; Vigril Hutchinson; Il; Virgil Hutchinson; Ed Collins, Oxford; Roy Alvine, Kansas City, Kansas; and Narsh Smith, Kansas City, Kansas Total 13.
Vocations Shortens
Class Hours Tomorrow
On account of the 10:30 convo-
lation in Robinson Gymnasium, 10:30
classes will meet immediately after
convocation, according to the Chan-
celler's office this afternoon. The
11:30 classes will met at 12 o'clock,
and all classes will be dismissed at
the regular time, 12:20 o'clock.
Gemmed Garters and Striped Sox Vogue
New York. -Striped stockings with jeweled garters just below the knee will be worn by smart women this fall and winter, according to Miss Isabelle M. Archer, style expert, who spoke at the recent jewelers' convention at Louisville.
"Skirts for evening wear," said Miss Archer, "will fall four inches below the knee but will be lined only to the bend of the knee. The jewelled garter will flash from beneath diaphanous laces. The anatomy watch of last winter轴承. It combined with the elastic ankle band with gems, preferably diamonds. Stockings will be striped in brilliant rain hues. Striped stockings will also be fashionable for streetwear. Skirts will be slightly longer and narrower. They will reach ten or twelve inches from the ground. The shoulder cuffs afford a generous glimpse of the geographically stifled silken hose.
This column has not so far this car even favored by the yearly contribution from bright freshmen to he elect that he sat next to a sophomore, and he sophomore and he class. But, ye editor hasn't given up hope it this time; its nine months until une.
Plain Tales From the Hill
"As for men," Mills Arther added, "the scarf pin will continue in vogue, but the jewelled tail holder will form the main headail of particularly smart costumes."
We are feeling in an apologetic mood today. We realized that the length of the Plain Tales column is not what it used to be. By way of satisfying students with inquiries about the book, Wall F-Ferguson is not on the faculty this year and the Arthur Jerome Boynton is finally married.
And speaking of apologies, doesn't Pi Upson deserve an apology for not mentioning him or anything else. It would have been a good rushing argument. We are
After the costly cigars had been passed Bill Spivings of Hicksburg, sniffing slightly, said to Hank Jones of Garden Center. "Listen to that Niles Moser small." And Hank Jones, possessing a great degree of sophistication, called "John Bareeye" and "John Barefoot." I saw 'em marked down at a drug store down town "for the rushing season only," three for a dime."
With the aid of our Stuff Statistian, we have figured out the number of freshmen cap to be ordered by down town merchants. Stuff Statistician was stationed in the town information booths this week and kept track of the calls for "What to Do Next" pamphlets. He has informed Law. clerents淋衣服 that a total of 3,236 caps will be needed for the three-week man, one for the first day, one for the second day and a keepake.
It is now time for the annual plain tale. Hergi it is. One studious senior informs ye editor that he expects to finish in tip-top shape this year, "Why," remarked the s. i., "I am certainly fixed for study. Across the hall, there's a guy with a tenor saxophone, my freshman roomie has a French harp, a fellow in the next room has a flock of trap drums and a xylophone, and his roommate is band man. I will make an enjoyable research today, I find that my daughter has a daughter who is taking voice in the School of Fine Arts. There are also a music box and a piano on the first floor. I'll be able to study from midnight to morning without a hitch."
"Have you any Bibles for sale?" asked a Freshman of Harry Stewart, Y. M. C. A. employment secretary.
Several testaments were brought forth and the Freemen asked to take his choice. But none were satisfactory.
"No. I want one of those Bibles with the 'K' on it."
"Oh, yes. a Freshmen Bible," sai the secretary.
The deal was made.
Four-yer old Billie was being shown through Dyche Museum when his aunt pointed out a deer.
LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN
A Daily Kansas staff. If found,
return to office of the Daily Kansas.
"That's a reindeer," she told him.
"What makes it get out in the rain?" was the inquiry.
EXPLOSION KILLS 16 IN NEW YORK
Two Hundred Injured in a Terrific Blast Near Morgan and Company on Wall Street
WRECKS WALL STREET
Emergency Hospitals Care For Victims of Carriage; Police and Military Protect Property
New York, September 16—A bomb exploded at noon today in the offices of the J. P. Morgan and Company. Several were injured in the offices. The explosion could be heard throughout the Broadway section of New York. Buildings nearby were shaken and the windows in the market building were shattered.
It was reported that portions of the interior of the office were demolished. Debris was thrown out into Wall and Broad streets where the Morgan office are located. When the explosion hit the financial district the trading on the stock exchange was temporarily suspended. Dust from the explosion rose high in the air. Unconfirmed reports were circulated that 8 persons were killed. The same report said more than a second explosion on an automobile standing at the curent front of the Morgan office. It was stated from the Morgan offices that no members of the firm were injured.
New York, Sept. 16—A United Press reporter who was on the scene of the explosion at Broad and Wall streets, five minutes after the explosion gave the following description:
"Eight bodies mangled beyond description, lay sprawled before the white stone steps on the Broad street side of the world's greatest banking house. Of their three were those of girls in their teens. On a window behind me, the snowy body, the head snapped flat against the brownstone front of a brokerage office. Along the sidewalk were men and boys, their legs a few feet away, a foot here, a head there. Everywhere was blood."
FINANCIAL DISTRICT WREKENED New York, Sept. 16—A terrific explosion which killed 16 persons and burned or otherwise injured upward of 200, wrecked the financial district of New York today.
The explosion was almost directly in front of the office of J. P. Morgan and Company, at Broad and Wall Streets.
With the police investigation not completed, the most likely explanation advanced today was that a wagon loaded with explosives collided on a street. The explosion struck with the devastating effect of a high explosive shell. Pieces of human bodies were found on windowsills. The sides of the building collapsed much, though an additional beam had been added to showw of shell splinters.
Every policeman available, soldiers, sailors and firemen were hurried to the scene. Ambulances clanged their ways through the dense noonday throng which filled the downtown streets. Emergency hospitals were established and the injured hurried away. At the volunteer hospital, 100 injured were cared for within an 'our'.
MEN AND WOMEN IN INJURED LIST
The injured included both men and women. They were suffering from burns, severe cuts, and bruises. Most of them had been picked up by the hospital first were utterly dressed to find themselves in a hospital, when they recovered consciousness. The last they remembered, they were leaving their offices for lunch. They had stopped on the street and went back to shining flash, and then all was slunk.
J. P. Morgan is in Europe. Other members of the firm were in their offices but none were injured. Jan Berry was injured and cut on the hand by flying glits.
Three men and one woman employee of the firm were reported to have been killed. The stock market closed on Friday, within a few minutes after the explosion.
BURST OF FLAME WITH BLAST
All persons who were near Broaf and grazing had been recorded told the police of a great burst of flame that accompanied the blast. The
(Continued on Page 4. )
---
Halla's situation, on the side of a large town, is one of the most boarded and the faitest plant rooms. They the sea science group of the portico artifice. So large velop cent the part later not out gen the do the
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-In-Chief...Geneva Hunter.
News Editor...Walter G. Heren
Campus Editor...Herbert Little
Reporter...Wilfred Larson
Sport Editor...A. E. Garvin
Alumni Editor...Ove Boyle
Exchange Editor...Lachie Hook
Exchange Editor...C. C. Nicolet
BUSINESS STAFF
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry B. McCordy...Business Mgr
Lloyd Ruppenthal, Asst Business Mgr
Dane W. Malott...Ciculation Mgr
James Austin Catherine Oder
Burt E. Cochran Grace Olesn
Pard Gottlieb Gilbert Swenson
Alfred Graves Mela Smith
Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.50 for one semester; $62 n a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail mast
September 17, 1910, at the post office
at Lawrence, Kanaas, under the act of
March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism at the University of Alabama from the pages of the Department of Journalism.
Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66
The Daily Kanan aims to picture undergraduate Life of the university to the then merely printing the news by standing, for the idea the students to plan their orites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to be wiser; to learn from them to wiser heads; in all to be more students of the University.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1920
PLEASURE OF GIVING
Some interesting figures on what the United States has contributed for philanthropic purposes since 1915 have been compiled by the New York Times. The results of the compilations are rather staggering. In round numbers four billion dollars have been spent by the United States. Whatever other nations may think of us these figures ought to prove conclusively that we are not a nation of tightwads; that we dig deep and often.
Since the war has been over the impetus of patriotism has been lacking, still the gifts have increased rather than decreased. The people of the country have learned the pleas of giving and that we can often afford better to give than not to give
These donations are all the more remarkable when we consider that they were given without seriously affect-money has been given cheerfully; the people have paid their pledges and proceeded to forget about it, except for a glow of satisfaction in a duty well performed.
EDUCATIONAL CO-OPERA-TION
Europe is not only turning to the United States for help in its financial and industrial regeneration, but also for aid in new educational enterprises which have grown out of the great war.
France has asked for American cooperation in educational organization at the University of Lille and the University of Strasbourg. Denmark is now seeking to enlist the sympathetic interest of the United States in the organization of an "International People's College," near Copenhagen. The college is to be essentially an institution for working men and will attempt to gather pupils from various countries according to prominent Danish educators and professional men who have formed an organization to foster the movement.
The organizers believe that Denmark is particularly qualified to be the home of such an institution because of its neutrality during the war and because it was the first modern country to establish a peoples' high school system. The Danish Folk High School was established to provide higher education for young peasant farmers and has proved very successful. These schools have been a prominent factor in developing the cooperative movement in agriculture for which Denmark is justly famous. The organizers plan by means of the Proposed 'Peoples' College to carry this system of education still further, so that it will include not only agricultural workers but also workers in urban industries.
But they expect the new institution
to prove beneficial not alone to their own country, but to other nations as well, and it is for this reason that they have asked for the co-operation of England and the United States.
TOO MANY ALIENS
Reports come to the United States that emigrants are gathering in great numbers on the shores of Europe and will soon pour in upon our coasts.
With this report, the American em-
ployers, big and little, even the farm-
ers, emit a sigh of relief. To them it
seems a solution of the economic pro-
blem with which they are confronted.
Perhaps it means a larger living for
the employer, and in that his chief
interest is centered.
It is true that economic conditions have been the chief concern of the American for a number of years, but the time has come when he must consider political and social problems, if the United States is to remain a democratic government.
It is a question whether we can afford to assume the risk involved by the admission of millions of aliens. At the present time we are much disturbed by the "social unrest" which prevails. The I. W. W., Bolshevik and other organizations are causing much alarm. If the horde of aliens that is seizing admittance now is allowed to enter, it is probable that our troubles in that field will be vastly increased. Although it is true that increased immigration will probably relieve the economic strain which exists, we must consider to the less evident but are more important consequences.
In the words of one American who seems to be awake to the impending danger, "We have been thinking business too much and too long. Let is think again as patriots, as trustees of the Republic, for our children, as English-speaking free men, exercising elf-government, and jealous for its perpetuation."
TO HAMILTON FIELD!
Not enough men have reported to Doctor Allen for tryouts for the football team.
The universal interest that has al-
and last part of a football season is on tap this year. Even the spirit that is displayed at the beginning of the year is more than ever before. But it is not enough that.
it is not enough that every student buys a season ticket, attends rallies, and cheers himself hoarse for Kansas at the games.
There are perhaps two to three hundred men in the University who have in them the possibilities and playique, from which a good football player could be develop in the course of two months—or two years. In other case, it is the duty of such men, to the University and to themselves, to try out for the Crismon and Blue eleven. Only through a large squad can a high-class football team be made. Eleven first-string players do not make a varsity team—twenty-two is a near guess and thirty-three should be in readiness at the home games.
About forty men have signified their intention of playing football for Kanaas this year by checking out material. A squad of seventy-we should be working out every evening on Hamilton Field.
The prospects for football are excellent this year. Around thirty of the men on the team, according to sport authorities, show promise of possible development into fast, fighting football material, of the kind that Kansas needs to win games this year. But they should have competition. There is a place for every man with the ability on the squad, and spirit and ability demonstrated in practice will get him into the games.
Ever feel a football player's muscles? Hunt up somebody you know who played football last fall for Kansas, and hit him on the biceps muscles. You'll find out what the man get out of it in the clear look in his eye, and the ready response his trained mind will give to your questions.
Prospects Good at Normal
Hopes at the Empirical Moral for a victorious football eleave are soaring, as did his teammate Michael Hiland. He left the Normal two years ago to plot the Oregon Aggies, in again with the Teachers, and is assisted by Geo. Shabinger, former coach of the Ottawa University eleven.
Prospects Good at Normal
Mental Lapses
green
A loathesome puddle by the way.
No sorrier sight was ever seen.
I said, "How lost to all things"
ENVIRONMENT
I passed a sighman wailer.
That lay beneath a reeking scum o'
and clean and bright,
Those foul depths be"
I passed a hovel 'pound whose door
The signs of pewery were strenu-
I saw the grimed and littered floor
The grill and dead wood of tree trunk
hown.
I said, "How handicapped are those
These four days in
Next day from out that pond obscure
A pure, white lily laughed at me.
Omar D. Gregory, LL. B. '20, is a candidate for county attorney of Osborne County.
within that wretched pep" But, lo, from out that cabin drear,
Came one to rule the world of men
The following former students of the University who are spending the week at the Alpha Chi Omega house are; Mrs. Ralph Bennett of Kansas City, Mo., Eulalia Kaufman c'20, Kansas City, M., Katherine Milton, Tulsa Okla, Elizabeth Stevens, Kansas City Missouri.
Among former university journalism students now doing newspaper work are the following:
world of mer J. N. M.
ALUMNI NOTES
Miles "M猪" Vaughn, A. B. K., United Press correspondent in South America, Mr. Vaughn was a member of the New York Sigma Delta Chi, and Delta Upsilon.
Raymond Clapper, A. B. K., 16, United Press special correspondent with Sonator Harding. Mr. Clapper formerly was editor of the Kanan.
E. Lawson May, manager of the United Press bureau at San Antonio, Texa. Mr. May was a member of the National Sigma Delta Chi, and Pi Upsilon.
Edward "Pat" Pedroja, LL. B. "20,
s farming near Madison, Kansas.
George A. Montgomery, A.B., 20"publicity manager of the Kansas State Farm Bureau, Marshattah, Kas, Mr. Montgomery was president of the associated journalism, a member of the Delta Chi, and the Karaan Board.
Claude A. Hays will teach accounting, commercial law, and commercial arithmetic at the Topeka High School this year.
Kenneth Clark, A. B. 20., Mail Editor Associated Press at Topkea, Kana, Mr. Clark was a member of Pitbha Kappa, the Kansan Board, Sigma Delta Chi, and Quill. He also was editor of the Oread Magazine.
Ennis G. Whitehead, A. B. '20, reporter on the Topeka Daily Capital.
Adalisa Dick, A. B. 20, is continuing her work at the University of California. Miss Dick was a member of the *Thai Sigma* Phi, Alpha Chi Omega.
Jessie Lee Wyatt, A. B. 290, in the advertising department of the Copper Farm Press was a member of the 1964 All-Star Alpha Theta, and the Kannan Board.
Roger Trippett, A. B. 29, city editor of the Pittsburgh Sun was a member of Sigma Delta Chi, and the Kansan Board.
Hugh Vaughn, A. B. 229, city editor of the Ponce City ★Oklan● News, was a member of Delta Upsilon,
Basil Church, advertising manager of the Augusta Gazette, was a member of Sigma Delta Chi, Kappasigma, and Kansan Board.
Marvin H. Harms, A. B., 20, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, Edinburg, Texas, was a member of the College of Optometry, O'Shima Nu, and Kannan Board.
Mary Samson Harms, A. B. 20
city editor of the Edinburgh Review
Edinburg, Texas, was a member of
Beta Kappa Beta, Theta Sigma Phi
Torch, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and
Kansas Board.
Ormoldi P., Holl. 'A. B. 20, in charge of catalog work with the William O'Connell Business Association, was a member of Sigma Delta Chi and Kansan Board.
Edgar Hollis, A. B., 20*, managing editor of the Red Lodge (Montana) Picket-Journal, was a member of Sigma Delta Chi, Kappa Sigma, Kanan Board, and was business manager of the 1920 Jayhawk.
Roland E. Boynton, LLL, B. 16, kide for county attorney of Lyon County, former president of the Phi Delta Theta, is lighting at the Phi Delta Theta house.
Mexico City, Sept. 16. -Bertie C. Johnson, the British subject captured by the Jailhouse bandit, Dionzora Zamora, regained his liberty, as fan known.
Englishman Who Escaped Mexican Bandits Retaker
Advices from Guadalajara state that Johnson, who had escaped from Zamora, was captured by Colonel Jose overarrivaba. Zamora's chief lieutenant
One Step Toward Making Divorces Legal in Peru
---
Lima, Peru, Sept. 16—The Chamber of Deputies yesterday approved a law which would provide for the legacies of deceased former members to measure now goes to the Senate.
Baldwin, Sept. 16—Baker University opened yesterday with an enrollment promising to reach the 500 mark
Baker University Opens With Enrollment of 500
Last night was "All College Night. The old and new students and townpeople were received by the faculty and student organizations. Music by the male quartet and a "Sing" enlivened the occasion.
Manhattan C. of C. in Quest Of K.S.A.C. Rent Hogs
Dr. Grant A. Robbins, Linwoo Boulevard M. E. Church, Kansas City, delivers the opening address to day at the first chapel exercise The "grid" of studies starts Thursday.
Manhattan, Sept. 16.—In order to detect "rent heals," the Chamber of Commerce has urged all students of the K. S. A. C. which responded here with a letter of protest attempted profiteering. A few cases of exorbitant rentals have been revealed and the Chamber of Commerce feels that publicity should be given those landlords in order to save the building from being repurposed and inappropriate reputation.
FOR SALE—Remington Typewriter.
perfect condition. Call 2528 after
6 p. m. 3-5-1.
Police Take a Hand.
Birmingham, Ala., Sept. 16—Gamblers of Birmingham are liable to be subjected to nocturnal calls from the police without the formality of the their cards at the door, under the provisions of an ordinance just enacted by the city commission. Police are empowered by the ordinance to "break down doors" and gamblers are suspected to be holding forth, and it will not be necessary for the cops to carry with them a search warrant.
ROOMS for boys. Mrs. Ingram, 1340
Kentucky. Phone 1563. 3-3-3
WANT ADS
PIANO lessons for pupils of all ages.
Musical kindergarten in connection.
Lorna Marie Reub, 1234. Orend.
Phone 2304. 3-5-4.
MUSICAL KINDERGARTEN—For pumila 5 and 6 years. Games, songs, etc. Lora Maurie Rub. 1234 Orcad. Phone 2304. 4-5-4.
ROOMS—for 2 girls—very reasonable. 1314 Tenn. Call 1387 Blue.
LOST-A double brown fur choker,
down town this morning. Reward.
Call 1495. 4-2-11.
LOST—Pocketat at football field.
Return to 1516 New. Hamp, or call
1146 Black. Reward. 4-3-10.
FOR RENT—Desirable rooms for two or three men. Sleeping porch. Inquire 125 Ky. 4-2-8.
WANTED—Work by student. Can drive truck or repair any pleasure car or truck afternoons, Saturday or Sunday, 10 a.m., 12 noon, 12 3/4 p.m., H, Maston, M.
LOST-in Robinson Gym, Wed., a small white-lined gray silk rectangular coin purse containing a five-coin set in small green Reward. Call 924. 4-3-6.
LOST—Steamer trunk, rope bound,
rope wrapped around bundles.
Reward. Phone 1059. 1324 Teen.
4.5.18
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist). Eyes exam. glasses made, Office 1025 Mass
DR. H. I. CHAMBERS. Suite 2, Jack son building. General practice Special attention to nose, throat and ear. Telephone 217.
R. H. REDING, F. A. U. Building, Eye ear, nose, and throat. Special attention to fitting glasses and tonsil work. Phone 512.
DRS. WELCH AND WELCH - PALMER
Phone: 850-721-9134,
Phones, Office 115, Residence 115K,
Address 115K, Suite 226,
over McCulloch's Drug Store.
Office Phone 132. Res Phone 1342.
DR. G, W JONES, A, M, M. D. Dis-
cases of stomach, surgery and gynae
LELAND M. SHOUT
Magazine Subscriptions
925 Indiana
Phones, 593 or K. U. 58
图
V
FITS-U WINDSOR EYEGLASSES My prescription
Make your school work easier by giving proper attention to your eyes.
Gustafson
Frank Ise Optometrist
We press 'em while you get your hair cut at HQUK'S BARBER SHOP
THE STUDENT CLEANERS EATON & FRAKER
Clothes Called For and Delivered
Phone 499
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
929 Mass. St.
The Topeka Photo Supply
Today-Last Day "The Silver Horde"
Mail your films today, or send for
The Topeka Photo Supply Company
Box 427 Topeka, Kansas
cology. Suite 1, F A U Id. Phones. EDWARD BUNGARDNER — Dentist.
Office 234, Hospitals 1745, Room 313. Petit kirkdale. Special atta-
tion for children. Chiropractor — radio Therapy — Massage.
— Therapy — Massage. St. Phone 1431. F H THIRDT — Dentist. 927 Mass. St.
Residence Phone 1431. Phone 1851.
A fisherman
Varsity
Your Free Enlargement
This enlargement alone is worth more than we charge for developing your films.
If you have not already seen this, Rex Beach's Famous Story, you should not pass up this opportunity.
Also Paramount Magazine
Your Free
YOU can have a splendid enlarge-
in
Prices 11c and 28c War tax included ..
Bowersock
Also Pathe News No.71
At the Varsity Friday and Saturday Ethel Clayton in "CROOKED STREETS"
Friday and Saturday EARL WILLIAMS
must $7/2 inches printed free from each roll of film finished, if you send the roll for development to Theopke Pictures Supply Co.
We have just received a fresh shipment of Quinby's Chocolate Shop Candy (in redwood leaves)
Fresh Shipment Arrives
A thrilling story of Frisco's Chinatown
"The Purple Cipher"
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St
FREE KODAK ENLARGEMENT 5x7½ in.
A Genuine Portrait
Your Snap!
Your Free
Eastman Headquarters
I lb. to 5 lb. Boxes. $1.75 and $2.50 lb.
MEN'S GLEE CLUB
We also have a complete line of Johnston's Fine Candies
TRYOUTS
Thursday and Friday, 4 to 6 Room 115 Central Ad. Bidg.
Take her a box now. Don't let the other fellow get the jump on you.
The Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass.
SUBSCRIBENOW FOR THE
DAILY KANSAN
Solicitors Wanted Apply Kansan Business Office at once.
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
---
BY THE WAY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY
appa Kappa Gamma—Exclusive
Omega—Reception at home of Mrs. A. Henley.
Mr. Mrs, A. Henley,
appa Alpha Theta—T theater Party
Beta Phi—Te Dance
amna Ppi Beta—Exclusive 8-12.
alpha Pi Pl—Exclusive 8-12.
alpha Kappa—Exclusive 3-7.
alpha Omicron Ptl—Fall Rustle.
alpha Chi Omega—Te Dansant.
alpha Xi Delta—Exclusive 3-7.
echoth—Dinner Dance at Country Club.
aappa Alpha Theta--Tea.
phi Omega--Theater Party.
aappa Kappa Gamma-Dinner.
phi Phi Beta-Dinner.
alpha Delta Pi-Dinner.
chi Chi Omega-Cabaret Dinner
igma Kappa-Mattee and Dinner
xi Alpha XI Delta-Butterfly Party.
phi Gamma Delta-Dance at Chap-
ter House.
SATURDAY MORNING
Tedding bids, and announcements
SATURDAY EVENING
u-University Party and Reception
II-University Party and Reception at the Gymnasium.
Miss Helen Fearl, of Hutchinson,
and Mr. George Stuckey, formerly
f Formoso, but now of Hutchinson,
were married last week in Hutchin-
on. They will make their home
here where Mr. Stuckey is general
manager of the Houston-Doughty
umber Company.
Mrs. Stuckey is a graduate of the Kansas State Agricultural College of the class of 1917, and is a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Stuckey graduated from the University in 1916 and ville on the Hill won three letters in basketball, captaining the Varsity team. He served as captain of the Pih Kappa Pai fraternity. During the war, Stuckey served as captain of infantry in the 80th Division overseas.
Helen Hurst, A. B '16, of Kansas City, Mo., s visiting at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
Miss Margaret Fugel f18, 148,
R-rhall Banker, 115, were married
Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock at
the home, her brother R. G. T.
G. Fitz, 705 Ohio
Mrs. Olin Wayne Maloney, A.B.17 of Tulsa. Oklaahoma, is visiting at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
Mrs. Banker is a talented musician and a member of Pibta Beta Phi, Mr. Banker is a member of the band of the wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. Banker will be at home in Tulsa.
Prof. Potter Announces New Son
Prof. Earl Potter, of the department of journalism, announces a prospective member of the Kansan Board. He is an 8 1-2 pound boy born Saturday. Both Mrs. Potter and the boy are getting along fine with him. Potter brought to Lawrence with him today, and will probably join him here the last of this month.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Manhattan, Kan., Sept. 16—Clifford J. Stratton, a Stuttgart newspaper man, has been appointed to Fill the newly created office in charge of alumni and student relationship with the Kansas State Agricultural College. He resigned from his position as special writer for the Capper publications and assumed the duties of his new post at Manhattan immediately.
Clifford Stratten Named K. S. A. C. Alumni Head
Direction of the alumni activities with regard to keeping in touch with their alma mater, will be a large part of the work, and permanently stationed at the college.
About 25 names were considered for the position. Stratton was graduated from K. S. A. C in 1911 and since, except for the period of the war, has been in the service of the Capper publications. His latest position was on the Topeka Capital. His war record includes service in France, on the Mexican border, and in the Pittsburgh coal fields.
Bill Wells Spends Two Dollars (Cash)
Number one on the list of 2000 subcribers the 1921 Jayhawker hopes to get is none other than Bill Wills, of Junior Prom and Alpha Chi fame, who tour him every month with managers, promising to pay another two bucks on January 15, and the remaining simoleon when the book is delivered. He made his purchase bright and early Monday morning, and received his subscription campaign opened.
Bill dropped into the Jayhawker's office at Rowland's Annex before any solicitors had gone out, and dazed the managers by offering of his own accommodation. In the of the first real money was accompanied by much ceremony, but Mr. Wells waved off a photographer and stated that he desired no publicity whatsoever. But the Jayhawkers were in forget out this story.
Bill isn't the only student on the hill who has subscribed for a Jayhawker however. The solicitors, according to the managers, report good progress, and numerous subscriptions have been taken in at the office. Office hours for the year will be announced next week.
Senior Gets Married
The wedding of John Van Buarksk, ed21, and Miss Julia Davis, of City took place Sunday at 22. Mr. and Mrs. Van Buarksk sent a wife in Oklahoma, after which the bride accepted the principalship of one of the grade schools in Scott City and Mr. Van Buarksk returned to the University for his senior work.
Now that fraternity pledging is over, it might be well to hold a round table discussion between the fraternity captains as to how they did it.
Some freshmen are certainly not slow in catching on. One of them was heard to order a Palm-olive sandwich at Brick's this morning.
Evangelical Church
TENTH AND CONN. STS.
INVITES YOU
to
THE MIXER Friday 8 p.m.
We welcome all Evangelicals and their friends, and the stranger within the gates.
Rev. J. K. Young, Pastor.
COME
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
1047 Massachusetts St.
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
SURPLUS $100,000.00
CAPITAL $100,000.00
Chancellor to Topeka
Chancellor to
Chancellor E. H. Lindley left this afternoon for Topika, where he speaks tonight at the Kansas Free Fair on the subject of "New Pioneer." Tomorrow he will address the Rotary Club of Topika on the subject of "Human Engineering." He will return to Lawrence Thursday afternoon, where he will address the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce at their annual "Faculty Night."
Women Hold Places On English Juries
Bristol, England.—Women jurors have just served at the Bristol Sessions for the first time.
Counsel prosecuting in the first case paid them a warm tribute. "I congratulate you on at last taking your proper place in the jurisdiction of the country," he said, "and Iongulate the cause of justice itself."
The women jurors, however, were not quite certain how much congratulation she could give. They were apprehensive about her three children whom she had to leave unattended, and another had been obliged to close her shop to serve
This was probably their first taste of the bitter which has to be swallowed with the sweets of sex-equality.
Kappa Sigs Get Two More.
Kappa Signam announces the pledging of Floyd Dillenback of El dorado and Ralph Blake of Wichita.
Friday, September 17, at 10:30,
will occur the first general assembly
of students and faculty (Robinson
Gymnasium). Chancellor Lindley
will deliver the address.
Thursday, September 16, at regular scheduled hours, all classes will be hld. All students are required to be in attendance.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Students enrolled in observational astronomy will meet tomorrow at 7:30 o'clock in the observatory for assignment to sections. Students will meet on Thursday, Wednesday or Thursday afternoons or evenings—Prof. Dinsmore Alter.
Wednesday September 15, 7:30 p.m., Myers Hall, "K. U. First Mixer."
The headquarters of the Y. W. C.
A. are in Myers Hall.
The churches of Lawrence will extend a cordial welcome to all students, especially first year students, who service on Sunday, September 19th.
Band try-outs will be held Sept. 13,
14, and 15, in Room 502, Fraser Hall from
10 to 11:30 a.m., and from 2 to
5 p.m. S. Z. Herb. director
Men's Glee Club tryouts, Thursday and Friday 4 to 6. Room 115. Central Administration Building.
The Kuku Klu will hold its first meeting of the year next Tuesday night, September 21, at 7:15 o'clock in Room 201, Fraser. All who wish to be active members this year must be present. Lloyd Young, president.
Members of last year's Women's Glee Club meet in Room 12 in the School of Fine Arts, at 4:30 Thursday.
All, interested in band tryouts may meet Prof. S. Z. Herb from 11:30 and from 1:30 to 5 in Room 24 on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Presbyterian Mixer at Westminster Hall, 8:00 o'clock Friday evening.
All Presbyterian students and their friends are cordially invited.
One hundred and seventy-five men were on hand to take part in the games and share the watermelons at the "Y" mixer and the operation stunt and an operation stunt were features in which nearly all took part.
TEA DANCE
SATURDAY
Sept. 18-3 to 6
SAUNDERS
and five pieces featuring John Youngberg on the Clarinet.
MARSEIRO, ROMANIA. A FEW MEN FACE THE REFERENCE OF A MAN WHO HAS GOT TO MAKE A DECISION IN A MASSIVE CITY. THE MAN IS SUPPLIED WITH A BOOK OF DATA AND A PAPER OF NATURALISTIC EXPLORATION. THE CITY IS STUDIO-POPULAR, WITH A FAMILY OF ARTISTS AND A FASHION BOUTIQUE. THE MAN IS READING A TEXT ALONG A ROAD. THE CITY IS A MULTIPLE COLORS, WITH EVERYTHING FROM THE COLOUR OF THE WINDOWS TO THE BLUE SKY. THE MAN IS ENTERING A BUILDING WHICH IS FULL OF CUSTOMERS. THE MAN IS SEARCHING FOR A SHOP OR A RESTAURANT. THE MAN IS READING A TEXT ALONG A ROAD. THE CITY IS A MULTIPLE COLORS, WITH EVERTHING FROM THE COLOUR OF THE WINDOWS TO THE BLUE SKY. THE MAN IS ENTERING A BUILDING WHICH IS FULL OF CUSTOMERS.
F. A.U. HALL
Copyright 1920, Ed. V. Price & Co .
Our Store is the Gateway to the Organized Efficiency of
EM GRISE CO.
TAILORING
The good old days of tailoring has given place to a better new way.
The individual tailor who once worked at his own bench has joined our organization of two thousand individual tailors working side by side under one roof—each man specializing on the part that he can do best. The result is —
More finely finished detail, making a better complete garment. Great buying power through volume. More economical operation through unity and specialization. Better tailoring values as a natural result.
It will be interesting to every man who appreciates real quality woolens to see our offerings priced in the neighborhood of $40 up tailored to individual measurement..
We assume the responsibility of fitting you and pleasing you in every respect.
What Music Takes?
SAMUEL G. CLARKE
1033 MASS. ST.
正
Every man who
Has seen 'em
Is shouting out
Praise for
The new Society Brand
Suits and Fall Coats
They're different
This season—
New styles
With the right
Amount of "pep"
And a big variety
From which to select —
Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS
STEEPER IS AT HIS OLD STAND
9241Louisiana
Phone 1434 1905-1920
If you are looking
Things to Eat
for
Good
try
The College Inn
M
QUALITY DOMINATES OUR JEWELRY LINE
In these uncertain times it is advisable to go to the store that maintains its reputation for QUALITY JEWELRY. We offer the best.
Complete showing of White Ivory, Excellent Sterling Silver and Sheffield Plate.
Libbey and Pairpoint Glass Repair Department
Panders
QUALITY JEWELRY
827 Mass. St.
Halliburton
inc. gov.
ar. gen.
All arts a
chars a
been
located
and the
telesis a rent
rooms.
the se
use
go on
physic
gu of the
portio
out
Se large
web
cent
the part
late
get
cut
gen
the de-
th
the
tl
g
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
OREAD HIGH OPENS FOR 100 STUDENTS
Monday Morning is First Day of School for K. U. Prep School Here
H. W. NUTT IS SUPERVISOR
Many Regular High School Scholars—Some Pupils Take Part University Work
Oread High School will open Monday morning on regular University schedule, according to Prof. H. W Nutt, general supervisor. The training school is expected to have its full quota of 100 students and several on the waiting list from the beginning. No students are to be enrolled beyond the 100 limit, according to Professor Nutt.
All students at Oread will be regular high school students this year, except a few enrolled in the University in the School of Engineering and possibly a few specials in the University. This is due to the fact that all schools in the University require full high school preparation before giving admission, that is, graduation from college or fifteen credits. Engineering students are allowed to enter on thirteen hours credit with the provision that the other-two credits required be made up in high school.
Instructors in the school will consist of senior students in the School of Education, graduate students and staff in the School of Nursing. Three special supervisors besides Professor Nutt will devote their entire time to the high school. These supervisors are those in English, biological sciences and physical sciences instructors from various departments in the University who will give part time to overseeing the work of the Oread teachers in their departments.
Oread High School is not only an accredited high school in the state but also in the Northern Central Association. A complete high school course is offered for all four years. Enrollment will be held Friday and Saturday and classes will begin Monday.
New and larger shops for university repair work, a dry kiln and a garage to house four trucks will be included in the addition being built to the Repair Shops, John M. Shea, superintendent of grounds, announced today that they are now bins kept in a wood garage on the south side of the Hill.
Churches Are Open To Students Friday
Open house at all the Lawrence churches will be held at the customary Friday evening of enrollment week, tomorrow night, according to announcement of Lawrence church authorities this noon.
Last year a record attendance of 1500 became acquainted with the Lawrence people at the open house night, where the provision has been made for 2,000.
This is one of the largest social gatherings of the year, the church men say, and a cordial invitation is given to all the students of the University.
K. S. A. C. HAS TEN FOOTBALL VETERANS
Coach Bachman Frownes on "Bear" Stories—Writer "Sobs" for Him
This was how Charles W. Bachman, new Aggie head coach, said what he thought of Aggie football prospects when he arrived here early this week to take over his job. Bachman in no uncertain fashion stated his disapproval of football "bear" stories.
Manhattan, Sept. 16th.—"Let 'em win their games first, then we credit. There's plenty of time to talk them, and no reasonable excuse for blowing before they've demonstrated what they can do."
On the face of the situation Aggie football prospects are none too rosy. Only ten letter men reported back for duty. Burton, quarterback, sent word that he expected to attend Northwestern University this year. Quinlan, letter back-field man, is attending a school in Colorado. Ten years later, he joined the year's freshmen make up the raw material from which Bachman hopes to mould a winning Aggie football machine.
Aggle athletes start anew this year. With Mike Ahearn at the helm and Bachman as head coach the men come back to a system and methods with which they are wholly unfamiliar. Between the close of school last spring and the opening of the fall semester last Monday both Z. G. Clevenger and "Germany" Schults last year's mentors, accepted jobs at other schools. Even the assistant coaches and the freshman coach, Doctor Holtz, are strangers to Aggle athletes.
Largest Line of Cigars in Lawrence
The Aggie football schedule follows: Oct, 2, Hays Normal at Manhattan; Oct. 9, Camp Funston at Manhattan; Oct. 16, Emporia State Normal at Manhattan; Oct. 23, Creighton College t Omaha; Oct. 30, University of Kansas at Manhattan; Nov. 6, Missouri University at Columbia; Nov. 13, Ames at Manhattan (Homecoming); May 20, Oklahoma University at Norman; Thanksgiving, Washburn at Topcape.
Special Agents Parker Pens
CITY DRUG STORE
Down Town Headquarters for K.U. Students 715 Mass.
Lawrence Agens Nunnally's and Elmer's Chocolates
Pipes and Smokers' Supplies
"Broques"
THIS WEEKEND
It's what young women who want something snappy are going to wear. You'll be surprised how well it will look on your feet. But of course, there are brogues and brogues. For brogues that you can trust without our telling you so are Fisher's.
Never have young women taken so kindly to a single idea in Oxfords.
$11.00—$13.50
HOSIERY TOO
OTTO FISCHER
813 MASS. ST.
Y. Employment Bureau Has Jobs for Students
The Y. M. C. A. employment bureau still has a few permanent jobs open, and several old jobs for students who are dependent upon employment in order to remain in school, according to an announcement made by Harry Stewart, employment secretary, today. The e. M. C. A has been able to find employment for all students applying this year.
It may be noticed that last year's Junior prom manager is driving a new car on the Hill this fall. It has already been noticed by the Alphas Chris.
F. B. McCOLLOCH. Druggis
Eastman Kodaks
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass, SL
Explosion Kill 16 In New York
In New York
(Continued from Page 1.)
fame shot at least 100 feet in the air, they declared, and many believed there was more than one spurt of flame.
An indication of the expanse of the burst of flame, ambulance workers found three young women in the house at 42 Wall street badly burned, though they had not moved from their desks. They were at least 100 feet away from the burning building they were seated. The governing committee of the New York Stock Exchange met and decided that the delivery of all securities will be suspended, until Monday, September 20. by mutual consent.
Chem. Instructor Resigns
Floyd E. Rowland, who was applauded assistant professor of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering department of the Oregon Agricultural College in Cornwallia, Oregon.
Squires Studio Fine Photographs 1035 MASS. ST.
Chem. Instructor Resigns
LELAND M. SHOUT
Expert Typist
will accept a limited number of patrons. Pay by the month. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Phones, K.U. 58, or 593
University Orchestra
TRYOUTS
Thursday Evening 7:30-9:30 Fraser Hall
CENTRAL MUSEUM OF COMMERCE AND TRAVEL
THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH invites all Baptist students and those who have no other church affiliation to make this
YOUR CHURCH HOME
while you are at K. U.
We want to see you at our "MIXER" tomorrow night at 8. Music, games, stunts, refreshments, and every thing to insure a good time.
Watch tomorrow's Kansan for announcement of Sunday's services.
FRANK JENNINGS, Pastor
FOREST WITCRAFT, Assistant Pastor
n
m
35
Malted Milks A Specialty of
The CHOCOLATE GARDEN
Come in and let one of our jolly little mixers "Crank up" a Horlick's
for you If they were any thicker you couldn't draw 'em through a
straw
Wiedemann'S
THE PLACE WITH 5.2 YEARS OF COLLEGE EDUCATION
the sea
bound
and the
tides and
rises
round.
the sun
shines
up on
goes
through
of the
port of
the
portion
here
happens
contain
the
part
intire
get
out
gone
the
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
NUMBER
VOLUME XVIII.
SCHEDULE OF ALL-UNIVERSITY EVENTS ANNOUNCED FOR YEAR
Committee of Men's and Women's Councils Worked Since Last Spring on Calendar of K. U.'s All-School Functions
SOPH HOP TO BE HELD OCTOBER 12
All Classes to Hold Mixers in October—No Dances in Gymnasium During Basketball Season—Organization Dances Will be Arranged in Harmony
A completely planned schedule of all large University social, athletic, and musical events of the year, arranged so as to eliminate all possible conflicts, and to distribute the big parties of the year over the nine months of school in such a fashion as to prevent jamming together of the larger parties, is announced today by the calendar committee, composed of two representatives from each student self-government council, and Dr. Alberta Corbin, adviser of women.
In the planning of the schedule, according to Dr. Corbin and the other members of the committee, much difficulty was encountered because of the lack of a proper social center in the form of a community center or university commons, in which the gatherings could be held.
The members of the committee, who were appointed by the council presidents to act with the adviser of women on the planning of the schedule, upon the request of the Student Interest Committee of faculty and students, are as follows: W.S.G.A., Mary Olsen and Lucile Rargar; Minei Student Council, Chrance Gorrill, chairman of the school zell Ray. The appointment was approved a month before school but last June, and met several times with different people in "sounding-out" members of all organizations possible on the convenience to them of the new arrangement.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SEPTEMBER 17, 1920
FRESHMAN MIXER, Oct. 2
October is especially stressed by the calendar committee as "Mixer Month," during which each of the classes is scheduled for a get-together entertainment, for the purpose of tightening the tie of loyalty. Beginning with the Freshman月, beginning every Saturday will see one of the class loyalty and fellowship meetings, ending up with the Senior Class Mixer Saturday night, October 23.
A new feature of the calendar as arranged is the placing of the Sophomore Hop on Friday night, October 12. This date, the day before the Homecoming game with Nebraska on McCook Field, is the earliest that one of the more pretentious of the school's parties has been put on, but is considered an admirable plan by many of the students, in light of the entertainment that will be afforded many grand state visits of recent years for the homecoming for the Homecoming Day celebration here Saturday, and for the various fraternity and sorority homecoming days through the week.
the week HOLD ELECTIONS EARLIER
HOLD TEXT OF.
The manager of the Sophomore Hop, who is in charge of all details of giving the second biggest party of the year, and who is selected by popular vote of the class at the elections, will be held this month. The party will probably be held about the second week in October, two to four weeks ahead of the usual time. Even so, the party manager not will be given more than two weeks to prepare at the details, considered "nightly short notice."
The first five programs of the University Concert Course are placed in the program to the best advantage possible, both in response to the concert events, and to attendance. Two more programs, by celebrated symphony orchestras, will probably be staged in May, according to Dean Harold Olson. The programs, but the libraries of the musical organizations have not yet been definitely fixed.
O L L U E S TO BE IN F A L L
The K. U. Follies have always been given in the spring, but are scheduled for November 20 this year. The committee in charge has already been appointed by the program and did some work on the program. Many of the numbers have already been decided on and arranged for, it is announced.
No dances or other social events will be given in the gymnasium during the basketball season, a survey of the years program shows. Last spring several bad conflicts of society and athletic league narrowly took the taking up and replacing of the gymnasium basketball seats involves much trouble to the dance authorities and athletic management.
WHAT HAPPENS THIS YEAR
sept. 18—All-University community party.
sept. 25—Freshman Blowout.
let. 2—Freshman Mixer.
ct. 2—Football, Emporia at Law rence.
Oct. 9—Football, Washburn at Law rence.
Oct 12—University Concert Course
Margaret Mantzenauer.
Oct 13—Melanie, Miner.
Oct. 16—Football, Drake at Law
*rence.
Oct. 23—Senior Mixer.
Oct. 23-Football, Ames Aggies at Lawrence
Oct. 30—Football, K. S. A. C., at Manhattan.
Oct. 30—All-University Hallowe'en
Partv.
Nov. 6—Football, Oklahoma at Norman
Nov. 9—University Concert Course
Olga Steeb and Jasha Jacobinoff
Nov. 18—Soumena Houre
Nov. 13—Football, Nebraska at Law-
wright (Homecoming Day.)
Nov. 25—Football, Missouri, at Columbia
Jan. 7-8—Basketball, Drake at Lawrence.
Dec. 14—University Concert Course.
Myrna Sharley
Agnes Laplaime
Jan. 14-15—Basketball, Ames Aggies
Ames
Jan. 11—University Concert Course, Agnes Lapham.
Jan 28, 29—Basketball, Missouri at Columbia
Jan. 21-22-Basketball, Grinnell at Lawrence.
Feb. 4-5—Basketball, K. S. A. C.
At Lewisville.
Feb. 9-10—Basketball, Washington
Louisville
Feb. 18-19—Basketball, K. S. A. C., at Manhattan.
at Manhattan.
Feb. 25-26—Basketball, Missouri at
Lawrence.
Mar. 1-6—Religious Campaign.
Mar. 4-5—Basketball, Oklahoma a Norman.
Mar. 10—University Concert Course Emilio de Gorgoza.
Mar. 11-39-W. W.
Mar. 17-19-High School Basketball
Tournament.
Student, Bit by Dog, is Given Serum Treatmen
Mar. 31—University Concert Course Flonzaley Quartet.
Apr. 8—Junior Prom.
16 K. H. Karmelii.
May 7- High School Interscholastic
Meet
Apr. 16—K. U. Karnival.
Apr. 29—Journalism Jazz,
May 21—Invitation High School
March 20 Master
Every large organization in the school, including the Women's Athletic Association, the W. Y. C. A., the Women's Student Government Association, the Men's $tStudent Council$, the Men's Pal-Hellenic, and the Women's Pan-Hellenic, will be in the consultation with the members in their decision on the placing of the different functions, according to Doctor Corbin,
Track Meet.
May 14, May Fete
Track Meet.
The parties not included in this schedule are various functions of the different schools, organizations, and the different departments, such as the Journalism Jazz, the Jay Push Ballboard Bill, the Jay Push Push. Herman was still tentative with the managers, most of whom have not yet been elected. This year, however, with the crush of a larger number of social events, it is thought that the dates and hall rentals for the dances will be arranged. Further, there are previous years. Anyway, this schedule is expected to be of much aid in helping the girls
Lastly, this schedule is expected o be of much aid in helping the girls ill their date books.
A University student from Kanaa City is now under treatment at the University Hospital for a suspected case of rabies. The Kanaa City No alarming symptoms have been manifested as yet according to the University physical ass, who have been administering the vaccine up from Kanaa City hospitalals.
The head of the dog was analyzed at the Rosedale hospital and a report declared that the dog showed pronounced symptoms of hydrophobia.
The University authorities refuse to make public the name of the attent under treatment.
CONCERT MONDAY IS UNDER LEGION HEAD
Date Rule is Called Off Only For Those Attending the Concert
TWO PERFORMANCES A DAY
The date rule will be suspended, set aside and shelved for two hours next Monday night, September 20, when the Bachman "Million Dollar" Bind gives the league its first annual Ell Dorsey Post of the American Legion, in Robinson Gymnastics. The
Organization Was Official Music
—Maker for National Convention of Legion
10867324
CONDUCTOR HAROLD BACHMAN Of the Million Dollar Bond
Edwin Taylor, A.B.20, has gone to Pittsburg, Pa., to study medicine at Pittsburg University.
evening concert will begin at 8 o'clock so as not to interfere with fraternity meetings, it is announced. The rule is annulled, however, only for those attending the concert, according to W. S. G. A. authorities.
The afternoon concert staged especially for students, at just half the evening admission of one dollar, will consist of an entirely different program from the evening's entertainment.
The Bachman band had one of the greatest honors that has been given to returned soldiers conferred upon them. The band was at the National Convention of the American Legion in Minneapolis. This band was the only official band at the convention, and its music officially closed each session of the convention.
A meeting of the University Assembly is announced for toat 2:30 in Fraser School E. H. LINDLEY, E. H. LINDLEY,
Many students, according to the managers, were unable to obtain copies of the Enrollment issue of the book. A week later, a few extra copies are left, and may be obtained at the Jayhawker office at Rowland's Annex. Many inquiries for additional copies of the book come in, according to the managers.
The band made an eight month tour of the central states last year, and made such a fine impression, it is said, that they are now scheduled for engagements through the winter months. Tennessee state fairs, the cotton show at Waco, Texas, and a ten weeks engagement at Palm Beach, Florida.
Chancellor
Still Get a Sour Owl
...
START TEARING DOWN
WEST McCOOK SEATS
End Bleachers and Grandstand
Sacrificed to Strengthen
Rest of Stands
IS FIRST STADIUM STEP
Allen
"Kansas Beat Back Year" Is Name Bestowed by
At eight o'clock Saturday morning when forty men start touring out the west, bleachers and the grandstand on McCool. Field, actual work will have started on the new $400,000 concrete stadium to be built on the present site of the athletic field. The contractor who will have charge of the work, told Doctor Allen Thursday that he would have his men there at that time to raze the old wreck. When that time comes, they are levelling the old structure, nearly ready to tumble at a mere touch, then will the first material blow be struck for the construction of the magnificent structure that will replace the old pile of boards that has well served its time.
Some of the old grades will no double regret to see those old bleachers, go bleachers that have served to the thundering thousands through many years of Kansas victories and defeats. They may be reluctant to watch the seemingly heartless contractor with his men wreck the old monument with seemingly careless abandon. But they will rely it is for purpose or because the Crimi Blue like that the work is being done, and anything that may put Kansas farther up the ladder of success is justified by any old K. U man or any good citizen of this great state of Kansas.
Dr. F. C. Allen, Director of Athletics at the University, has fitted given the slogan of "This is Kansas back heat year," for not only is Kansas expected to heat back to the upper primacy but also the beating back is being done, it seems not at all out of order for her to erect something to mark that year when she "beat back"; something to house that wonderful group of men who took active part in the game, and could not that they also helped in the noble work by their support.
The owl alceshers have been on McCock Field for so long that even though the students and townpeople know what to expect, as they come into full view of McCock Field, they will blink in amazement at the magnificent new structure, and admit to them that they needed to be anyone who has helped in the great accomplishment will be latticed in saying just that.
But giving the credit to no one man in particular seems to be slighting someone in a way. While no one man is responsible for the entire affair, there seems to be little to hide the others as the man who has given much of his valuable time, and not a few years of his life, that Kansas might have such a building. So when the credit is distributed, it should be the Director of Athletics and coach of football and basketball, will go the greatest share.
Barnby is Chosen Head Of Chemical Engineers
Following are the new officers:
President, H. A. Barbry; vice president, Coy Patterson; secretary-treasurer, Todd Sullivan; and the four Kansas Engineer delegates elected, one will be chosen to be associate editor of the magazine. The delegates are Nathan Mnookin, Mark Bass, John Irwin and Norman A. Mobachner.
This is the first school election of the year at the University, and took place this year because of the chem- gels get started on the magazine.
Chemical engineering officers were elected at a meeting of the school Thursday. The election was held early in order to prepare for the issue of the chemical number of the Kansas Engineer, which is scheduled to appear the last of November. The engineer will chosen from among four delegates, and the officers also will co-operate in the work.
Ray Gaffney, F.A.,20, is teaching music in the Herington High School.
Thetas Get Theirs--
Please Tell Us Why
Richard Evans, LLB.04, visited friends at the University recently.
Locals*Panhellenic finds it necessary to penalize Kapna Alpha Theta for breaking Rule 6 in Special Rules of the Panhellenic Association of the University of Kansas, equally: 'Panhellenic discourages men using their influence with the rushes for or against a fraternity, and the fraternity for or against them' be held the rule broken is as follows: 'For breaking any rules not otherwise provided for, the birds of the offending fraternity shall
Kappa Alpha Theta concurs with the decision.
Signed: Marguerite Adams, President of Panhellenic.
ALL HE-STUDENTS TO BE AT JAZZ LUNCHEON
"Thundering Thousand" Dinner
Chrissy, September 23, in Gym Will Loosen Rafters
EVERYONE IS ELIGIBLE
hannebor Lindley Will Speak- differently Neum Meals Called Off for Fep Function
All he students in the University will eat together next Thursday noon September 23, at Robinson gymnasium, in the first of a series o "Thundering Thousand Limestone even under the watchful o "Thunderding Thou sound" represented by Cheerleader Winsor, Glenn, and Peters.
Every student on the hill, freshman, sophomore, junior, senior and graduate is expected to attend this informal, eat-fat, which, as staged by the Y. M. C. A. in Myers Hall last spring, proved so popular. A good hearty, man-sized lunch, for the modest sum of twenty-five cents, two bits, the quarter of a dollar, is promised by the management.
FRAT MEALS CALLED OFF
Every fraternity of the sixteen on
and around Mount Oread has called
off its Thursday lunch hour and will
send their members to the gymnasium
to participate in the feast of
pep, and food, and the flow of buil-licent cheer.
cent cheering and good black coffee.
Announcement will be made of the plans for the "Thundering Thousand" which by the way, is the sky-rendering student body en mase, which is expected to number nearer three thousand than one thousand—by the cheerleader "Sandy" Winson.
FIRST GAME TEN DAY: LATER "Jazz" in preparation for the opening game of the season, on October 2, with Emporia Normals, just ten days away. The game will be at the meeting under the generalaid of the cheerleaders.
Announcement of the first shirt-tail parade, which is going to be in its proper place, which is just after a glorious fighting game, say, after the start of the second luncheon. Then too, there are to be several shirt-tail parades this year.
The night rallies will be discussed, and settled in some details at the noonday luncheon. These have heretofore been left to the cheerleaders and some of the more efferent spirit of the school but everyone will have a chance to hear about them in advance this year.
Chancellor Lindley will talk. Seven other men will assist as advance publicity agents for a grand and glorious football) season for the Crismon and Blue. and a hilarious and joyful time is expected by the entire outfit of "old-timers" and anticipated by the freshmen.
NOTICE TO STUDENTS OF COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES
Late enrollment and necessary changes in class schedules may be made Saturday, September 18th from 9 to 12 a.m. at placing place . . . . .
J. G. BRANDT, Acting Dean
Acting Dean
Harry H. Morgan, A.B.18, is employed on the El Paso (Texas) Morning Herald.
CHANCELLOR LINDLEY ADVISES 3,000 AT FIRST CONVOCATION
Opening Exercises of Fifty-Fifth Year of the University Marked Attendance of Large Number 500 Stood Up
MASTERY OF WORK
"DON'T WASTE HEALTH OR MONEY"
CAN BURN UP VITALITY
The conversation opened with the Doxology, and a responsive reading of Psalm 23, "The Lord Is My Shepherd," which has opened the year at the University from time immemorial.
New Executive Head, Introduced by Dr. Strong, Emphasized Need of Mental Activity and Interest To Obtain "Education"
At the first all-University convocation this morning, opening officially the fifty-fifth year of the University of Kansas, more than three thousand members of the student and faculty were addressed by the new chancellor, Dr. Ernest H. Lindley, who brought out vigorously the part universities have played in the building up of a greater civilization.
The new executive head of the Umi university was introduced to the assam by which enriched old Robbinson audition to the door, oor. Dr. Frank Wendelman and his staff from 1092 to July 1, 1920. The first organized cheering of the year came from the caer throats of the students in two series or roseming cheer led by the new cheerleaders. Winston, for "Strong" and for "Lindley."
The Loul's prayer was given, an,
Professor Elvin Smith sang a song
of sacred music from Mendel
and Gabriel, by a chorus of
the whole gathering.
MASTER OF WORK
"My advice is commonplace," continued the Chancellor, "and I give it as your parents would. You are in a town on an island in Hell that the estimation has achieved. It gives us a chance to enrich our resources. I promise you that if, for every day for thirty days, you master your work, you need not worry about your future in the University."
"I wish especially to speak to the freshmen because I, myself, am of this class. It is up to the upper class to shoulder the responsibilities of informing the freshmen of their duties and privileges."
Dr. Lindley's "Advice" to the students consisted of pointers in regard to their general attitude toward University life. "He economical of your problems," she said. But Kansas are ruthily endowed with vitality, it can be harmed up."
"Dementia proxex," a disease of some extent in the east, which is a form of preocious old age resulting from lack of interest, was pointed out and explained by Dr. Lindley, who declared that the mind was governed by the same law of exercise that governed the biceps muscles of the arms for activity, and only by such do we keep from dying in the mad-house. We must keep up our interest in everything" he declared.
MUST EXERCISE MIND
Care as to expenditures was advised by the new executive in money matters and by the senior executive and mind according to the chancellor.
AVERAGE MIND ILL-TRAINED
The average American mind, according to the speaker, is "an immense attic filled mostly with junk and shoddy furniture," which are characterized by clutter, noise and the day, which are now popular. The "mental furniture" of real quality, the chancellor thinks, must be gotten from good training of the mind. Association "with the man who sits next to you" is also a great factor in education, and "intellectual setting up exercises to keep the mind sharp." These are essential to an "educated" person, he stated.
Dr. Lindsay spoke of his connection with fraternal organizations in college, but characterized the "greater loyalty" not, that for an organization, but that to the school, both during the college career and in alumni days. The remark of former President Taft, a Yale graduate, that "I love Yale as I love my mother" was quoted by the speaker.
"NEED TO KNOW PEOPLE"
Knowledge of the human qualities was declared by Dr. Lindley to be essential to all college men, engineers, laws, and everyone. The ability to distinguish between "very good" and "excellent" is a valuable acquisition, he declared.
In conclusion, Dr. Lindley stated his intentions of calling as many of the get-together convoctions of the day as possible. He said and that he hone to have one every
week. Attendance will be voluntary, no said, and he wanted to get the students and faculty to meet together, bring them together, and blog together. Co-operation of students and faculty was required, and the humanity was mentioned by the chancellor, who stated that if the crowded classrooms, and inadequate conditions of housing were handled right, the wants would be heard by the proper authorities. In the meantime, the resources of the University must be utilized to tolerate the essentials that are disagreeable at present.
The song of "America," "The Crismon and the Blue," and a triple condition of the "Rock Chalk" ended the meeting.
BIG PARTY SATURDAY TO MAKE THINGS HUM
Snappy Handling of Events Expected to Eliminate Customary Boredom
Nobody's going to get tired in the all-University Community Party in the gymnasium Saturday evening. There are going to be so many things to see, and also many people to meet, and such a general good time to be had that it will be over before anyone has time to be bored.
The reception line, consisting of only five people, Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, Dr. and Mrs. Strong, and Doctor Corbin, will be on hand at the door promptly at 8 o'clock. The reception committee will take over the students after they have met the receiving line and they will be steered around the hall in all directions, meeting the faculties of the different schools, who will be grouped apart, so that the students may become better acquainted in the special courses in which they are interested.
The University Women's Association, an organization of the wives of the faculty members, is in charge of the reception. Mrs. H. I. W. Hamble is chairman of the society and Mrs. F. J. Kelly is in charge of the "mixer" committee, which will attend to the distribution of acquaintanceship throughout the students and faculty. The reception will end promptly at 9 o'clock. The Band will hit it up on "The Orpmion and the Blue" and
All of the nine or ten stunts scheduled will be held on a big platform erected today and tomorrow near Fowler Shops.
A duet-dance, "Playfulness," a clown dance, a stories of shadow pictures. "The Ballad of the Oysterman," staged by the "A" girls, a spectacle, "Pyramis and Thesbe." from "Midsummer Night's Dream," are some of the prominent features of the musical education department will frame an exhibition stunt, and the Filipino orchestra will play.
Wandy Winston, cheerleader, will be master of ceremonies, all except the Prince Albert coat, customary with such officials. The crowds will have something to do all the time, and a large attendance is expected by the committees from the two councils in charge of the entertainment.
Now 3.126 Registrations
A total of 3,126 registrations were recorded at 3 o'clock this afternoon at the Registrars office. Registrars are appointed as late until after Saturday.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Editor-In-Chief ... Geneva Hunter,
*Nowa Editor* ... Walter G. Woren
Campus Editor ... Ruth Armstrong
Sport Editor ... A. E. Garvin
Alumni Editor ... Joe Bowye
Editorial Manager ... Lucille Cloete
Exchange Editor ... C. C. Nicolet
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry B. McCurdy...Business Mgr
Lloyd Ruppenthal. Asst. Business Mgr
Diane W. Malott...Ciculation Mgr
James Austin Catherine Oder
Burt E. Cochran Grace Olen
Ford Gottlieb Gilbert Swenson
Alfred Graves Media Smith
Subscription price $2.40 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.40 for one semester; 62 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-clasel mail malt
September 17, 1916, at the post office
at Lawrence, Kansas, unde the act of
March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Wisconsin Press or press of the Department of Journalism.
Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, Kansas
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the students in the university than merely printing the news by standing for the Ideas the University has to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to learn to water heads; in all to teach the students of the University.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1920
WISER FRESHMEN
The upperclassman with chapel tickets to sill and the trusting freshman who used to buy them are both extinct types of campus life. Not only because chapel at this University has also become extinct, but chiefly because such things aren't being done any more.
Of practical jokes it is the most disreputable because it, relieved needy students of their money and caused them to be distrustful of fellow students, this ancient college custom has fallen into disuse. No more are passes to the campus peddled among the yearlings, on no more do saloons go out seeking to sell permits to traverse the hill's sidewalks.
And why? Public opinion, the reason for most social changes, has had much to do with establishing this new order of things. The upper-classman who is apprehended obtaining money under false pretence would be punished both by the school authorities and by the student governing organizations. What was once regarded as a good joke is now considered otherwise.
The war had much to do with the broadening of world fellowship, and the establishment of the sort of feeling that causes organizations and individuals to meet trains during enrollment week and before to show new students where to go and what to do. This same feeling works just as effectively in protecting them from whatever unscrupulous persons there may be in the student body.
Neither could the freshmen of this day be so easily trapped as their predecessors were—another example of the broadening influence of war. They are better able to take care of them themselves, and the campus confidence man would have little success in renting them a room in Frasier Hall.
TIPS
All have heard the motto "He serves most who serves best," it is often quoted and occasionally heeded.
In the more remote times, men thought of service chiefly—they had little use for the cash rewards. Later things became reversed and men were thinking chiefly of the pay, while they had but little use for their jobs. The spirit of service was gradually decaying.
At about this time a desperate and disasterous effort was made to resuscitate the spirit that was then dying. Men were offered extra money besides their usual pay, with the hope that the spirit of service might be revived. In the coffee-houses and inns were placed boxes into which the quests were supposed to drop coins to bribe the employees to give attention to their duties, for which they were already and otherwise paid. The
ooses thus used bore three words which were significant—“To Insure Promptness.” In other words, it might have read: “Give me something in addition to my regular pay or I will give you poor service,”—bribe me or I will make it disagreeable for you.” Incidentally it will be noted that the initials of the three words quoted spell our present and most abominable “tit.” This was the beginning.
We take the beginning. On and on went this depolarate evolution, until the notion of service was almost a lost art. Men were devoting much thought to the idea of getting, while the notion of giving had been practically lost. Employees were failing almost entirely to take an interest in their work. Having no serious interest, they soon became deficient. They reached a stage where they wouldn't if they could, and couldn't if they would. The cost of production was running high and the cost of living ran parallel with it. To secure greater compensation only relieved the situation temporarily. At first there were no employers. The idea of service existed long before employees were born. Today ninety-nine per cent of all employees are men who were formerly employees. When the idea of service was forsaken by employees, this negligence was inevitably passed on to the employers. The position held by men has made absolutely no difference. Very many commercial houses look upon their business as a "game" through which to separate the public from its money. Too often that is the chief aim or
It must be admitted that there seems to be a close relation between a failure "to render service" and a failure "to make good." The chief difficulty is the fact that so many delude themselves into thinking that they are giving real service, when as a matter of fact they are not. And this is the source of many failures; people either do not think correctly else do not think at all.
To prove this, one needs only to realise that all successes are the result of thought. In the beginning of every legitimate enterprise that we see progressing today, we find someone who saw a need and who unselflessly proceeded to supply it—in other words, to help, to aid, or to assist humanity. George Stephenson, inventor of the steam engine, did not dream of immediate rewards and substantial returns, but was intent upon producing a vehicle that would make the world move faster. Samuel F. B. Moore struggled twelve years in his attempt to perfect a system of telegraph, but he was not thinking of the net cash profits forthcoming. The same may be said of Fulton who introduced the first watercraft to be driven by steam. Among our greatest schools of learning are Cornell, Harvard and Yale universities. What prompted Ezra Corna, John Harvard and Eliza Yale to found those great institutions that bear their names. Surely they did not view their work from a money-making standpoint alone.
But all efforts should not be made with philanthropy alone in mind. That would be absurd, as well as impractical. The correct idea is that we are to do full justice to others and more particularly to ourselves. But if we put the spirit of service into our work, the financial and other rewards will be greater than they other_
wise would have been. The world is not asking favors from any of us,—it is simply a question as to what is advisable and best for ourselves. The motto quoted at the beginning of this editorial might well be modified to read: "He serves himself most who serves others best."
And still the superintendent of buildings and grounds puts up his "Keep Off the Grass" signal. And still the students disregard them! With the result that the campus is covered with grass, some grass and numerous paths.
Campus Opinions
To the Daily Kansan:
But if you'll notice, most of those paths are the shortest distance between two points. That's how they came into being. Probably a busy bus route or a train from Fraser Hall one day instead of coming ceremonially around by the walk. Another reporter followed in his trail, and later a student saw the possibilities. Since that time many of these routes have its marked out in the crass for keenza.
The gentleman who laid out this campus had a very acute sense of the beautiful and the conventional. He put down his walks in sweeping curves and in ornate butterfly designs. But he forget that most people would be using those walks for the purpose of walking around. Didn't find walks where they wanted to go they'd go anyhow. Hence we have the camouflage paths.
Let's leave the paths that are widely used on the campus—of course the desultory meandering over various patches of grass aren't at all necessary or useful. But when the superintendent of buildings and grounds notice that the students are going, he may use some of his money in building sidewalks there. Then the grass will grow without danger of being crushed under the heel of the wheelbarrow. It'll be rendered useless, and those pangs of conscience which come with a "cut across" will be avoided.
Announcement
Let's trade those "Keep Off the Grass" signs for some new walks! Pena Roa Public
Goodyear Wingfoot Rubber Heels For Men
WANT. ADS
FOR RENT—Good southeast room for two men, two boots from hill, near McCook Field. 741 McCook Phone 1718 Black. 5-2-15.
FOR RENT—Young man student wants room mate. Desirable location, Price $650. Telephone 1269 Hightower. 1728 Kentucky St. 5-2-16.
SPECIAL Dancing Lessions. Every evening. 7:30 to 8:30 over Dick Broderick Private lessons at appointment. Phone 2236 Witte. 5-5-9
MUSICAL KINDERGARTEN—pupil5 and 6 years up. Games, songs, etc. Lorna Marie Ruben. 1234 Orend. Phone 2304. 4-5-4.
DOOMS—for 2 girls; very reasonable. 1314 Tenn. Call 1387 Blue. FOR SALE—Remington Typewriter. Perfect condition. Call 2528 after 6 p.m. 3-5-1.
Just received a shipment of extra light leather soles or Ladies
Electric Shoe Shop Two Shops
ROOMS for boys. Mrs. Ingram, 1340
Kentucky. Phone 1563. 3-3-3
FOR RENT—Desirable rooms for two or three men. Sleeping parch. Inquire 1225 Ky. 4-2-8
PIANO lessons for pupils of all ages
Musical kindergarten in connection
Lorna Marie Reub, 1234. Orena
Phone 2304. 3-5-4
726 1-2 Mass
LOST-A double brown fur choker down town this morning. Reward Call 1495. 4-2-11
LOST—Pocketbook at football field
B-turn to 1516 New. Hamp, or
calib 1146 Black. Reward. 4-3-10
1017 1-2 Mass.
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jackson Building, General practice, Special attention to nose, throat and ear. Telephone 217.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist).
Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass.
WANTED—Work by student. Can drive truck or repair any pleasure car or truck afterwards, Saturday or Sunday. Call 1385, 1025 Mo. St. D, H. Maston. 4-2-7.
LOST—In Robinson Gym, Wed., a small white-lined gray silk rectangular coin purse containing a five dollar bill and some small change. Reward. Call 924. 4-3-6.
SOCIAL Dancing Class every Tuesday night, 7:30 to 8:30 over Dick Bro.'s. Private lessons by appointment. Call 2236 White. 4-5-9.
PIANO for sale. Call 2485. 706- West 12th St.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DRIES WELCH AND WELCH - PAMER
Phone: 516-270-4831 Office: Mass. Mass.
Phone: 516-270-4831 Office: Mass.
DR J R BECHETT. Rooms 3 and 4
Citrus Drug & Culinary Store. Office
Phone: 516-270-4831
DR H. REDING, F.A. U. BUILDING, Eye,
ear, nose, and throat. Special attention
to fitting grasses and tosail work.
Phone 513.
DR. B. G. JONES, A. M. M. D. Disease of stomach, surgery and gynecology 25, Residence 342, Hospital 1754, Office 35, Residence 342, Hospital 1754.
**DR. ALBIGHTH-Chironomidae-Radio**
PROTCH
The College Tailor
"I'm certainly glad the week end's here," said a Frost today, "for now I can take time to enjoy my meals at
The Oread Cafe
Where I've found the best service in town." A date for the All University party Sat, night includes refreshments at "Brick's"
INSURANCE
THE
133
AGENCY
Lawrence Kansas
"BRICKS"
Fire Protection on Personal Effects
Phone 133 now, and let us give you protection on your trunks, baggage and personal effects while they are located in a room in any building or in transit to and from your home, against loss or damage by fire or lightning.
Our policies also cover against theft of trunks or valises while they are checked in any railway station, hotel, or boarding house.
When we say any room, we mean a room in any private residence, clubhouse, boarding house, hotel, school or college.
"Quality and Service"
The cost is small. For protection on each $100 as follows:
3 months ... 30c, 9 months ... 64c
3 months ... 53c, 12 months ... 75c
6 months...53c 12 months...75c
Minimum premium is $1.00
Minimum premium is $1.00.
Phone 133 now or talk to Craig Kennedy, O. A. R. Ameesger, Glenn V. (Hop) Banker, who is at the Kansan office, or R. L. Allen.
Varsity
- Therapy - Massage,Results guars-
ainted. 1161 Mass St. Phone 1431.
Residence Phone 1761.
Z H TIBBTS — Dentist. 927 Mass St.
EDWARD BUMGARNER — Dentist. Phone 152.
Friday-Saturday
Ethel Clayton in
"Crooked Streets"
Vivid with mystery.
Flushed with love.
Cast in the spell of the Orient and
2 Reel Sennet Comedy
"You Wouldn't Believe It."
Also Pathe News No.71
A wierd story of adventure in Frisco's unsolved and mysterious Chinatown.
Prices 11c and 28c
Two Best Places To Beat HOME and at CHURCH
Even if you are away from HOME, you do not need to be away from CHURCH. Spend the first Sunday of the school year ni the right way—by going to church.
Trinity Lutheran Church
Friday-Saturday Earl Williams in "The Purple Cipher"
Bowersock
Student "Get-to-gether at the church tonight
Eleventh and New Hampshire Sts.
(One block east of court house)
N. D. GOEHRING, Pastor
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK 1047 Massachusetts St.
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
YOU can have a splendid enlarge
FREE KODAK ENLARGEMENT 5x7½ in.
A Genuine Portrait
Your Signed
Your Free
Your Free Enlargement
- splendid changes
manufacture 5x7%印模 printed free from
the roller, finished, if you
send the roll for development to
The Toroka Foos Supply Co.
A man is fishing from a boat in a river.
This enlargement alone is worth more than we charge for developing your films.
Mail your films today, or send for
Mail your films to:
particulars. Eight hour service.
The Topka Photo Supply
company.
Box 427 Topka, Kanns
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BY THE WAY
Phi Kappa announces the pliding of Steve Sherridan of Paola and Raymond J. Dyer, of Chanute.
Kappa Sigma entertains with a Pledge Dance Friday evening at the chapter house.
The Calendar for Autumn
Sept. 1. Commutation rates go up to
Sept. 2. Commuters give up to
Sept. 2. Commuters give up to tobacco aand newspapers.
Sept. 3. Government heaves sympathetic sigh.
Sept. 15. Coal prices boosted.
Oct. 1. Householders abandon fur
races.
Oct. 7. Department of Justice deprecates profiteering.
Oct. 9. Kerosene and wood leap in price.
Oct. 10. Public gives up motoring and movies.
Oct. 17. Department of Justice frowns darkly.
Oct. 21. Cost of woolen clothing
soars.
Oct. 22. Public goes without hats, shoes, and gloves.
shoes, and gloves.
Oct. 30. Department of Justice
twits profiteers.
Nov. 1. Meat prices leap skyward
Nov. 4. Consumers quit using butte-
t and telephones.
Nov 18, Department of Justice hints it may start probe.
Nov. 23. Bread takes a big jump in price.
Nov. 24. Consumers give up electric lights and collars.
Nov. 30, Department of Justice official raises warning finger, slightly. —N. H. in the Brooklyn Eagle.
TEADANCE
SATURDAY
Sept. 18-3 to 6
SAUNDERS
SAUDERS and five pieces featuring John Youngberg on the Clarinet.
F. A.U. HALL
A Bit Complicated
It is necessary now and then to remind city dwellers what season it is, in spite of its existence, it is now September, in spite of the fact that it is mid-summer in the clothing sales, early spring in the movies, and the dead of winter in the millinery shops.
—Kansas City Star.
Basil Church, A.B.20, advertising manager of the Augusta Gazette, has been employed to coach football and an injured in the Augusta High School.
The Sunday School classes of the First Presbyterian Church for University students will meet at Westminster Hall Sunday morning at 10 a.m. The Sunday School class is being redecorated and will not be completed until September 26, when
services in the church will be resumed as usual. J.W.Boyer, University Pastor.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Old members of the Women's Glee Club who wish to try out for the club will meet in Room 12, Administration Building, Monday at 4:30 o'clock, where who wish to try out for Tuesday and Wednesday at the same time.
Entomology Club will meet Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in the office of Prof. S. J. Hunter, in Dyche Museum. Fred of D. Butcher, Press.
University women needing financial assistance can learn of good living accommodations at a nominal price by applying to Dr. Alberta Corbin's office.
The headquarters of the Y. W. C A. are in Myers.Hall.
The churches of Lawrence will extend a cordial welcome to all students, especially first year students, at the services on Sunday, September 19th.
Jay Hawk Cafe
RAY & HARRY
Corner 14th and Ohio
IN THE MIDDLE OF THE RAIN.
Our big new fountain is equipped to serve you quickly
Men's Glee Club tryouts, Thursday and Friday 4 to 6. Room 115. Central Administration Building.
All interested in band tryouts may meet Prof. S. Z. Herb from 10 to 11:30 and from 1:30 to 5 in Room
502 Fraser Hall on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Members of last year's Women's Glee Club meet in Room 12 in the School of Fine Arts, at 4:30 Thursday.
Presbyterian Mixer at Westminster Hall, 8:00 o'clock Friday evening. All Presbyterian students and their friends are cordially invited.
The Kuku Kian will hold its first in Room 201, Fraser. All who wish meeting of the year next Tuesday to be active members this year must night, September 21, at 7:15 o'clock be present. Lloyd Young, president.
STEEPER IS AT HIS OLD STAND 924 Louisiana
Phone 1434
1905-1920
O
PARTY DRESSES
THE BEAUTY THAT THEY POSSESS AND GIVE TO THE WEARER ISBEYONDEXPRESSION.
COME IN NOW AND SELECT YOURS WHILE OUR STOCK IS COMPLETE.
THESE CHARMING AND DAINTY DRESSES CONVEY THE LATEST AND NEWEST EFFECTS OF THE SEASON.
WEAVER'S
UNIVERSITY STUDENTS COME TO CHURCH SUNDAY!
THE CHURCHES OF LAWRENCE BID YOU WELCOME
FIND YOUR CHURCH AND ATTEND ITS SERVICES REGULARLY
Morning Services 11 a. m. Evening 8 p. m.
Except Catholic and Episcopal
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ... Corner Eighth and Kentucky
Rey, Frank Jennings, Pastor
NINTH ST. BAPTIST CHURCH...Corner Ninth and Ohio
(Colored) Rev. G, N. Jackson, Pastor
PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH ... 925 Vermont
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Corner Tenth and Kentucky Rev. M. Lee Sorey, Pastor
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Corner Tenth and Vermont Chaplain Evan A. Edwards, Pastor
EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION ... Corner Tenth and Conn.
Rey, J. K. Young. Pastor
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH ... Corner Eleventh and New Hamp.
Rev. N. D. Goehring, Pastor
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Corner Tenth and Vermont Rev. S. S. Kline, Pastor
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ... Corner Ninth and Vermont
Dr. F. A. Bleck, Pastor
SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Corner Sixth and Maine
Rev, P. B. Lawson, Pastor
ST. LUKES AFRICAN METHODIST CHURCH... Corner Ninth and New York Rev, Smith, Pastor
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH...Corner Seventh st.
Rev. McCufferty, Pastor.
ST. JOHN's CATHOLIC CHURCH 1220
Father James Woolsey
UNITARIAN CHURCH ... Corner Twelfth and Vermont
Mark Mohler, Pastor
"DON'T BREAK THE HOME TIES"
Halls
structured,
not in
the office
A
area of
large
beam
nearly
board
located
and the
letters
in the
rooms.
They
the se
ouse
need
con
pages
of the
portex
orile
So
large
below
the
part
later
not
cut
gen
the
de
th
i
g
---
KANSAS STOCK RISES WITH NEW MATERIAL
Last Year Squad Men and 2 Letter Men Show Up For Work
EMPHASIZING CONDITION
Stock in the Kansas football team rose materially Thursday afternoon when included in the fifty men out for practice, were some of the stars of last year, out for the first time this season. Wint Smith who starred at guard last season, was out for work. Bill Davidson, one of the men who helped make the Varsity last year, although he did not make his letter, appeared for the afternoon work out. Loren Simons one of last year's halfbacks, checked on his gear and looked forward to Erwin Stugard, end on last season's squad, also made his initial appearance of the season.
More Men Expected Out—Hard Work From Now on is Program
With these addition, and more to come out yet, it will not be an entirely green team that goes up against Emporia Normal in the first game of the season to be played on McCook field, October 2.
The men were given a much harder workout Thursday evening, in running down under pants, falling on the ball and some practice on the lateral forward pass. With fifteen men out working all afternoon and every afternoon, competition for the coveted berths on the first squad will be keen, and grow even keener as the season advances.
In a talk to the men while they were resting a bit and getting their wind back, Coach Allen told them that those who were planning to have a good time while out for the variegated grass equipment at once, for as he said, "Any man who is not doing as the coaches are that is giving all he has for Knausa, does not deserve a place on this team, and furthermore, the first man seen smoking automatically check in his suit."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
More work in setting up exercises was given, as a finishing touch to the afternoon, candidates were admonished to keep in the best physical shape possible, and not to take the training season lightly.
Men who will-probably be counted on to do the punting for Kansas this year were being worked in conjunction with the pumps. Harley Little, of last year's freshman squad, Tad Reid from the 1919 varsity back-field, were doing most of the kicking, uninvolved direction of Coach Adrian Lindsey.
With four and possibly six men out for the center position, all of whom have had considerable experience mean that this spot will be filled.
Football Activities Have Started at Iowa University
Iowa City, Ia., Sept. 14—The 1920 gridiron activities at Iowa University will be opened tomorrow, when Coaches Howard Jones, Roland Leed, a former Iowa captain; James Ashmore, an old Illinois star, and Capt. Bill Kelly begin operations with a dozen or more experts of last season. Kelly, who was hurled unconscious into the road when his auto was smashed in a collision a fortnight ago, has recovered. The prospects for the season here are deemed exceptionally good. The
Oct. 2-Indiana at Bloomington.
Oct. 9-Cornell at Iowa City.
Oct. 16-Illinois at Urbana.
Oct. 23-Chicago at Chicago.
Oct. 30-Open.
Nov. 6-Northwestern at Iowa City
Nov. 13-Minnesota at Iowa City
Nov. 20-Ames at Ames.
Lorraine Wooster Stirs
Up Hornet's Nest at Fair
Topeka, Sept. 16. -Miss Lorraine Elizabeth Wooster, state superintendent of public instruction cannot even go to the Kannas fair without running into a horse's nest.
While Miss Wooster was presiding over a spelling her, someone stirred up a nest of horrors just back of the pavilion. The spelling beel continued while Miss Wooster devoted her time to fighting off the horrors.
Naomi Yeakley, of Hoyt, won first prize in the written contest and Lloyd Rice, Topeka, won first honors in the oral contest.
You may find the need of pretty draperies or furnishings for the room you are to occupy this school year.
A Rug, Drapery Material for Window or Box Covering, Chintzes, Cretanne or Figured Terry Cloth—all this on the third floor.
The Third Floor at Innes'
You don't have to wait a thousand years for your watch left at
Pander's
QUALITY JEWELRY
Our repair department has been enlarged to insure prompt attention for all work. 827 Mass, Street
Expert Repair Service
o
m
ar
yean
The Trunks and Bags are Here Too
Blankets, Comforts and Pillows May Also be Found on This Floor
INNES, BULLENE & HACKMAN
Wichtihk, the Sept' 15—Following a command by the speaker representing the sophomores, the campus of Fairmount blossomed with the greenery of freshmen caps today, thus continuing the tradition inaugurated last year that all freshman boys wear caps until Turkey Day.
Freshies Grin and Bear It
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
FOUND—Near South Park, a purse
containing money. Geraldine Bep
ROOM—to let. Boy's room, one block from campus. 1228 La. Phone 1556. 5-3-14.
LOST-Pockettbook containing money and owner's card on Hill Friday morning. Reward. Return to 734 Indiana. Mary Hanna.
pet. Phone 573.
ROOM FOR RENT-Double or single for girls. One block from campus. Phone 2500. 249 Ohio, Mrs.
5-5-19.
. | Garrett.
LOST- Eversharp, Pencil with
1126 Ky. and Oread High Friday.
Notify Mary F. Evans, 1126 Ky.
Phone 1949 Red. 5-21-7.
F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
Clothes Called For and Delivered
THE STUDENT CLEANERS EATON & FRAKER
We press 'em while you g-t your hair cut at HOUK'S BARBER SHOP.
L. E. Waterman and Conklin Fountain PenS THE REXAL STORE 847 Mass. St.
Suit Style Satisfaction
929 Mass. St. Phone 499
C
Patient: "You told me to put my tongue out, but you haven't looked at it, doctor."
Patient: "No, madam. I want time to write your prescription!"
as well as fabric and tailoring
satisfaction, is guaranteed to the
wearers of clothes with
.
TUXEDO
SkofStad SYSTEM
ELLING SYSTEM
Guaranteed
"Clothes of Merit" label in them.
Our Cash Prices Only are
$35 $40 $45
$60
You should see the new fall suits
$50 $55
You should see the new INI suits here, for they are second to none in quality.
"You get more where buying for cash only"
Brenhan'S
The Home Supermarket Since 1903
737 Mass St. Phone 548
Wonderful Hats at a Very Special Price
Lawrence Typewriter Exchange
TOWNSEND
SATURDAY—A new group of Ultra-Smart Models are offered.
WONDERFUL $10 Hats
We are teaching hundreds of women to ask for these wonderful hats, because they know that our utmost efforts and energy are concentrated in giving superior Hats that ordinarily cannot be found at this price.
Many off the face, rolling brims, crushers, lace and small bats; the trimming includes ostrich, metal threads and ornaments, embroidery and fancy ornamentals. The hats feature shades of pleasant, Hunter's green, negre, Copen, navy, Quaker gray and black.
IN TOMORROW'S GROUP
Typewriters for Rent
Better get yours while our stock is complete
HAROLD BACHMAN and His MILLION DOLLAR BAND
BAND
Will Appear at ROBINSON GYMNASIUM
Afternoon 3:30 p.m.
Admission 50c
Monday, Sept. 20
Evening 8 p. m.
Admission $1.00
Dance After Night Show--Bachman's Jazz Orchestra DATE RULE OFF
MEN'S TAILORING SUIT.
Your Clothes Question—
Can be best solved by visiting us today—
A remarkable showing here for your choosing—
Every garment carries our guarantee of satisfaction—
Freshman Caps Ready, $1
Suits $35 up
O'Coats $35 up
at
CARL'S
GOOD CLOTHES
"Wiedie's"
Tea Room
will be opened to the public for the rest of the season
Saturday Noon Sept.18th
Make Reservations for Sunday Night Dinner
Dancing 3-6 p.m.
Soda Grill
Schofstal's Orchestra
Tomorrow
Wiedemann'S
The Place With 52 YEARS OF COLLEGE EDUCATION
Italia
sturcio
no mi
la see
gut
Alma a
mara a
Eccon
board
located
and the
lettes
vent rooms.
They
the muse
need
col physica
in gu
of the porte
orthe
large velio
cent
the part
later
not
out
from
the de
thie
g
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XVIII
REGISTRAR ANNOUNCES ENROLLMENT RETURNS
Men Greatly Outnumber Women by Latest Figures Given by Enumerators
COLLEGE LARGEST SCHOOL
Fine Arts
Engineers, Laws, and Medics Out Of Luck for Dates—Go to Fine Arts
Notes have been counted. Registrar George O. Foster completed the job of enumerating all students in the various schools of the University of Kansas Friday. The number of blondes and brunettes have not yet been determined, but the figures have been given out.
There are 3,125 students in classes in the University. That is the number given by Registrar Foster. Of course, some more have been added since Friday, into enrollments and, then, by Registrar Foster known to be an undergraduate, the "independent" figures have been given him for mastication.
NUMBER
MORE MEN THAN WOMEN
In the College there are 1,930 enrolled. As has been the case for a number of years the College takes all the enrollment prices from the concrete sheartests down. The biggest school in the University has 498 students and 1986 staff statistician is still working out the ratio and will be ready to report just how many men in the college must go dateless this year by next Friday night.
college men do have some chance, however, if they resort to dates from the School of Fine Arts where the ratio is eighty to eleven-six in favor of the women. The "noisy" school last year had 388. This year's total is much under last year's with only 166 but after new enrollments for the second semester are counted in and the summer begins this year. This year's books the total this year will almost reach that of last year.
OCTOBER WOMEN ENGINEERS Engineers seem out of luck this year, as well as in years past. They have the second largest enrollment in the University with a total of 628 of which only fifteen are women. The program is designed for the disciples of the rod and transit reached 741. Scattering returns from Marvin Hall indicate that of the 626 total, 406 are freshmen. Most of these reports come from upper-classen, however.
LAWS ENROLL LESS
The School of Pharmacy, the mecca for chem sharks, has sixty seven enrolled. Their compatriots, the Medicies, are twelve behind the Pharmics with fifty-five. The Men in the School of Pharmacy have the most members of the fair sex, how. Medical two-thirds of Medicine two. The enrollment from Roselade has not been received yet by Registrar Foster, consequently it is not included in the list. Probably 120 men will enroll at Roselade.
The School of Law is still forty-four behind their enrollment for last year with 151 men and seven women enrolled. More women have decided to become lawyers this year than ever before in the history of the University. The Laws have the fourth largest enrollment in the University.
Those members of the "permanent student body" namely, the Graduate school, number fifty-two. Last year's total amended to 190 but summer session have not yet been counted in the Graduate School total. Twenty-nine A. M. chasers are men and twenty-three are women.
The School of Education has but eleven students so far this year—four men and seven women. Summer camp and summer consisted mostly of education students will bring this total higher than last year's 337, which included College students who were expected to work in the School of Education.
The University as a whole has 1986 men and 1139 women. The women are mainly taking College work but not a single school has escaped the invasion of the ladies. Enrollment This Year.
M W T L Y
The College 1062 898 1960
Engineering 611 15 626 741
Fine Arts 161 16 196 741
Law 151 15 196 741
Medicine 50 17 67 66
Medicine 53 2 67 161
Graduate 4 2 52 120
Education 2 9 71 137
1986 1139 3125 4402
Duplikates ... 882
Net Attendance ... 3580
Would Make Ladies Still More Deadly
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SEPTEMBER 20, 1920.
"The female of the species is more deadly than the male."
Ott Kipling sang this song. All men concede the truth of his plaint.
Now comes the progressive military department of the University, with a proposal to increase the danger of the fairer sex by training in marksmanship. The girls and women met the fighters at the entrance in a course in Rifle and Pistol Practice, offered by the Military department. Classes will meet every Tuesday at 1:30 and 3:30 in the afternoon The first class will be held in Room 108, Wet wing, Administration building Pencil and notebook is required for entrants. No enrollment is necessary.
THIRTY-NINE SINGERS MAKE MEN'S GLEE CLUB
prof. Downing, Leader, Calls First Rehearsal for Next Wednesday
Thirty-nine members of the K. U. Glee Club were passed upon by W. G. Downing, director of the Glee Club, and Professor of Voice in the School of Fine Arts. This composes the total membership of the Glee Club this year, until more tryouts are held.
A call is issued for the thirty-nine men to report for the first rehearsal at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday evening in Room 10, Center Ad.
he personnel is as follows—First tenors; F, B. Firesak, P, N. Darby, G. Grauer, C. T. Shifflet, T. Snyder; Second tenors; J, L. Bennett, H. L. Blake, C. L. Blew, E. F. Dillenstein, J. Dyer, J. C. Fox, M. Hall, Clyde E. Tucker, M. L. Shout, J. R. Wahlstedt.
First bass: J. W, Anderson, S.
W, Bihr; B, Riake, Wolly Bugle
L, W, Crone, S, A. Gard, R, E. Grief
Miller, G, F, McIntire, M.
Miller, G, F, McIntire, F, Senum
T, E, Wright; second bass; W,
Brehm, P, L, Bush, O, W, Cobl
W, T, Cheese, M, Damm, E, M. Miller
W, Cheese, M, Damm, E, M. L, Sorey,
B, W. Wirth.
STUDENTS CROWDED GYM FOR BIG PARTY
Three Thousand Shook Hands With New Chancellor and With the Old One
The student body adjourned to Robbinsa Gymnasium Saturday night to attend the all-University event. The students to the new Chancellor, E. H. Lindley.
Probably 3,000 students and faculty men shook hands with Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, Dr. and Mrs. Hawkins, Dr. and Mrs. H. W. Humble of the receiving line. A long line of students waited for two hours outside the gymnasium door while reception was going on. Every student had his name and address, together with his high school and everybody met everybody else.
After the reception a program was staged just north of Nower Shops and the crowd thoroughly enjoyed hypothetic staff, community singing and classic dancing. Chancellor Winters, which he told the students that "What happened from 6 p. m and 6 a. m was just as important to the University as what happened during the day in the classroom." Sandy Winnor, cheerleader, was master of the skills needed to some ear splitting, roof-lifting Rock Chalks and yells for Chancellor Lindley.
Paris, Sept. 17.—The Echo of Par- day said that the French Government had instructed its representatives to the League of Nations that France will withdraw from the League if Germany a admitted to the conference as Geneva.
Kappa Phi will hold the first meeting for the year Wednesday night in Fraser Rest Room at 7:00. All members are urged to be present for the report of the summer meeting of the Grand Council.
France May Quit League
Barton County students are asked to meet Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 in Room 110, Fraser hall, for the re-enrollment of the Barton County Club.
SORORITIES PLEDGE 132 YOUNG DAMSELS
ACHOTHS TAKE BUT SEVEN
Kappas, Thetas, and Pi Phis Each Get Sixteen Sweet Young Things
With pledge buttons accordeing the dress-fronts of 132 young women, "crush week" of the sororites has ended. It was a glorious finish! Saturday, when "bids" were being received and contents were be "carefully noted," and many a thrill was brought the fortunate recipients, as well as a touch of anxiety to the sorority members.
"Bid Wagon" Made the Rounds Saturday Morn, and Again Sunday
Kappa KappaGamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Pia BetaPi each took sixteen new pledges. Achoh, with but seven, was low. Kappa Alpha Theta, penalized by Women Pan-Hellenic, put out its bids Sunday.
Aechtoh: Mildred Cornelius, El Reno, Kohl; Lillian Yell, Clay Center; Dorothea Cavamaugh, Dighton; Hope Selig, Lawrence; Katherine Bell, Sharon Springs; Louise Reil; Kevin Fern, Lawson, Marton. Total, 7.
Kappa Kappa Gamma; Fredericke Priestmeyer, Moberly, Mary; Mary Teelbe, Katherine Ainsworth, Dorothy McFhenney, Wichita; Edna Root Twilma Stlower, Kansas City; Marie Jones, Council Grove; Rose Solidani Ponca City, Oklan; Mosely Campbell, Hutchison; Georgia Haynes Parsons; Margaret Brown and Ellen Sarah Jane Hindman; Bartvillesville Okla.; Dorothy Higgins, Lawrence Total. 16.
Sigma Kappa; Marguerite Cox and Elizabeth Shepherd of Lawrence; Josephine McLain and Margaret Meilani Loi; Patty Goss, Pawkusha Oka; Eleonor Hackney, Olatha Phyllis Pdow, Howard; Helen Rock Kansas City, Mo. Jane Harris, Hattia Alman, Mike Jesken, Preston Total, 10
Alpha Chi Omega; Dorothy Engb and Loline Engb, Abilene; Leesh Gaskall, Lawrence; Leta Mary Jackson, St. Joseph, Mo.; Helen Montgomery, Cushing, Ohio; Vivian Reagan, Kauley Woods; Jerry Duncan, wood Falls; Berrice Cook, Lawrences Margaret Smith, Newton; Doris Collins, Winfield, Total. 10.
Chi Omega; Beth Smith, Independence; Mildred Wland, Wichita; Itaigen Garrison, Wichita; Mariam Funny, Oklahoma City, Midtown San Francisco Laura Caudrey, Neodesha; Mary Hays, Belleville; Marmel Gaurt and Annie McLennie, Lawrence; Margaret Rector, El Reno, Okla.; D Dorothy Don, Kansas City, Mo., Marcelona Total, Emile Moeller, Coura, Total, 14.
Alpha Xi Delta; Gertrude Gardenhire, Burden; Marguerite Senior Waverley; Ruth Terry; Winfield; Paul, Holliday, Lawrence; Bernice Bonneymer, Salina; Irene Peabody, Springfield, Mo.; Margaret Heakey Leavenworth; Gladys Mabry, Marq McQuirk, Lamont, Loka; Total, 9.
Alpha Delta Pi: Dori Van Noy, Wichita; Maude Reardon, Solomon; Lilian Tillen Concordia; Frances Thelmata Smith, Charlotte Ehrhardt; Thelma Smith, Charlotte Ehrhardt; Kansas City, Mo.; Corrine Cormee; Kansas City; Louis Noll, Whitae; Lucile Ermattger, Fort Scot; Dorsey Ermattger, Lilian Johnson, Salma. Total 18.
Pi Beta Phi: Helen Friend, Dorothy Blackmar and Vivian Stanley. Lawrence; Peggy Jane Levenes, Nevada; Mo.; Marguerite Tracy, Wichita; Dorsis Martin, Chicago; Dorothy Kirk, Neosho, Mo.; Jennette Phillips, Springfield, Mo.; Elizabeth Mitchell, Creedmoor, Co.; Brandmonlitz, Kansas City; Pauline Doer, Larsen; Elizabeth Heryer and Esther Montenekt, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Helen Hamilton, Indiana. Total, 16.
Gamma Phi Beta; Celta Johnson and Ethel Dick, Lawrence; Caroline Harkrader, Pratt; Elise Frisbe, Marian Lamar, Louse Holdman, and Louise Saltmarch, Kansas City; Brian Wheatley, Garfield House, Pittsburg; Ruth Davis, Minneapolis; Lois Sharppe, Atchison. Total, 12.
Kappa Alpha Theta; Virginia Pittainne, Jeanette Wagauff, Susanna Moody, Margaret Wargarten and Carolie Smart, Lawrence; Iris Arnold, Virginia Haynes, Emporia; Margaret Wagauff, Kirsten Vanfield; Virginia Thorp, Marion; Clara Furgeson, Wellington; Willka Kirkwood, Wichita; Dorothy Craig,
MacSwiney Still Alive On Thirty-Ninth Fast Day
London, Seupt. 20.—Clarence Mac Swinney, Lord Mary of Cork, is reported to be packed in hot water bottles today. Eminent scientists called by the Government, said life could be prolonged if his bedily heat could be maintained. Mac Swinney was revered for his patience of fifteel sleeping. This marked the beginning of his ninth day of fasting.
BACHMAN'S BAND WON
RENOWN DURING WAR
The performance is being given under the auspices of the Lawrence Ell Dorsoy Post of the American Legion.
Concert in Gym Tonight is Under
Auspices of Lawrence
American Legion
Harold Bachman's Million Dollar Band will play in Robinson Gymnastium tonight at eight o'clock. Conductor Bachman announces as a special feature, Robe Brueb, the world's greatest Indian cornetist, who is now playing under Mr. Bachman's bater for the fourth consecutive season.
During the past year with The Million Dollar Dandi, Bruce has made a tremendous hit all over the country and is as present looked upon as one of America's finest solos. It is said that he does several stunts on the correct than no other cornetist has been known to perform.
Bachman's band won its name during the *war*, when it was the "116th Engineer" band, at Christmas concert at which General Hunter J. Liggert was a guest of honor. General Hunter paid very close attention to him and was present as he general Liggert turned to Colonel came to the stand and after presenting the complements of the general to the director said: "General Liggert wishes me to inform you that in his forty-one years experience he has never heard a better band in the American Army. This compliment evidently in spred the band members to even greater efforts, for after the next num-General Liggert to Colonel Wallace Gleimens, and gleaned, and excused; "Colonel, that band is WORTH A MILLION DOLLARS to the United States Army."
Osage City; Dorothy Gage, Minneapolis; Harriet Patterson, Marian Patterson, Abilene. Total, 16.
K. U. PEOPLE ARE WED
Alice Bowlby, and "Swede" Neil son Married in Chicago
The wedding of Miss Alice Bowly, A. B. '18, and M. Nielson, A. B. '18, was held in Chicago, September 10, it was announced in University circles this week. Miss Bowley was from Fairport, Kas, and Mr. Nielson's home was in Natama, Kas.
Alpha Omicron Ip; Opal Wells, Sabina; Mary Rose Barrons, Kansas City; Mo; Evelyn Purkate, Neodasha; Ruth Rader, Dorothy Crane, Howard; Gladya DeVore, Bertha Durall, Chanute; Alda Broker, Humbart; Edna King, Wichita. Total 9.
Mr. Neilson after attending the Hays Normal entered the University at Lawrence specializing in geology. He became famous in athletic circles and was known to the college world as "Swede" Neilsen. He was captain of the K.U. school in 1917-18 and was the only man who crossed the Nebraska University goal line to reach the goalpost of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. After graduation he saw service with the Aviation corps, and upon receiving his discharge he accepted the position of geologist with an oil company operating in Old Mexico and has since been stationed there.
This is the culmination of a romance which started while both students at K. U. M. Miss Bowley specialized in journalism work and was editor of The Daily Kansas during the year of 1971.78. She is a member of the sorority and also of Thea Stigma Phi, honorary journalistic organization. After graduation she accepted the position of assistant circulation manager of "The Nations Business" magazine, published in Washington, D. C., and was with this publication until the beginning of this year when she began agricultural journalist for the "Agritourist" magazine, of Chicago.
Thundering Thousand will see first scrimmage on McCook Tuesday.
Kansas City, Kansas C. of C Will Hear K. U. Noise Demons
THUNDERING THOUSAND WILL MEET BOOSTERS
CHANCELLOR WILL TALK
All Students Expected to Attend First Football-Scrimmage of Season
And since it is on the tongues and lips of every loyal student that the Thundering Thousand has been wholly rejuvenated, tomorrow afternoon has set apart as a Day of Proof.
THE EIGHT CARS IN YOUR VEHICLE OF eighty cars full of Kansas City Giants. The club of the Chamber of Commerce in that city, is the occasion for the first organization of the howling, ungoverable, screeching mob which is going to chase K. U. to countless, well-victories! At 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, the address addressed by Chancellor Ernest H. Lindley at Fowler Shops. After this ceremony, the visitors will be escorted to McCook Field, where every red-blooded man or woman in the University is expected to be on hand to watch a 1920 football season, and to test their football cords to the straining point.
MUST BEAT THE AGGIE:
"We have to accommodate the men from the 'show-me' state," declared Cheerleaders Natalie and Kelsey after arrangements for the shout-fest had been completed. "After the Kansas Citians leave here, they will go to Manhattan where an extensive program has been planned. We've just simply got tl let ti" know that troops and dooms from thousands of Husky other schools will ever visit."
Efforts are being made to have the K. U. Band present in full force to add pre, jazz, song and harmony to the trip of a nighly inspection,
Chancellor May be Toastmaster at Seventh Annual Banquet Saturday
The Seventh Annual Freshman Blowout will be held in Myers Hall Saturday, September 25, at 6 o'clock. The Y. M. C. A. has held a Freshman Blowout soon after the opening of school for the past six years. A guest-dinner will be served at 6 o'clock and toasts and music will be part of the attractions. It is hoped by the Y. M. C. A. men in charge it will be possible for Chancellor Lindley to act as tostmaster.
An active ticket sales campaign has been started. The number of tickets has been limited to 300. They will be sold at the Freshman Convocation Center, where homes and offices of the Y. M. C. A. office. The campaign will close Thursday.
Sophomore Hop is Slated November 12
The date of the Sophomore Hop,
all-University party given by the
Sophomore class, through a manager
elected next month, was erroneously
reported in Friday's Daily Kansan
as October 12.
The Hop this year will be held on November 12, according to the calendar committee, and is listed at this date on the official calendar. This event will be held before the Homecoming football game with Nebraska, November 13 on McCook Feld, and will add special entertainment for the benefit of the alumni and former students of University connections.
Register Change of Address
Corrections of addresses of students for the student directory should be turned in to the Registrar's office at once, according to Registrar George O. Ooster, as the names are entered. Students who have changed their rooms since registration are asked to record them at the Registrar's office this week.
Rooters' Rave Tuesday at 4 o'clock on McCook Field. "Sandy" Winsor
Kappas are Modern "Rush" with Plane
...
At last, the sororities have reached the "ultra" stage in rushing
Announcement was made by the Kappa Kappa Gamma young ladies from the south side of the Hill, that six of the "sweet young things" padded their trust to the golden key sisterhood, after the delightful diversion of being taken up in a big Hallway-Page biplane.
The girls who made the delight!
trip through the skies last week, and
then were pledged to Kappa Kappa
Gamma, are: Katherine Ainsworth,
Edna Ioost, and Virginia Stewers, of
Kansas City, Kansas; Elizabeth Martin,
Bernard Sawyer, Olak Iyindim, Jandi
Bartlesiew, Okla; Frances
Eaton, Wichita.
CLASSES IN MILITARY SCIENCE OPEN A WEEI
. ___ .
Would Give First-Year Men Chance to Learn of R. O.
T.C Advantages
Many students do not know that the government has increased its allowance to students taking the courses offered in the Reserve Officers Training Corps very materially. This is of interest to freshmen and sophomores.
In order to give the new men coming to K. U, this fall a chance to investigate the course offered by the Military department the classes in Military Science will not be closed until Saturday, September 25th.
Drill will be held but one hour per seek according to a statement made by Captain Harold Burdick. This will be every Wednesday afternoon at our thirty. At this hour the entire attnition will meet as a complete unit.
MANY UPPER-CASSEMEN BUCK
About eighty percent of the men
this year. There are at least ten men
successfully are back with the unit
who enrolled and completed last year
who have had former training in other
Captain Burdick hopes that the freshman class this year will equal the record made by the class of 1923. Last year the enrollment was closed at 187. "We hope that at least 300 men will try out the Military courses offered this year!" You understand that the course does not bind you to the government, but it is simply enrolled in Military Science the same as in any other class of the University," said the head of the department.
MADE GOOD RECORD IN CAMP
General Frank Coo, chief of Coast
Artillery upon his inspection of the
summer camp held at Fort Lewis.
The men were very warm in his praise of the work done by the men from the K. U. unit at the camp this summer. The men from the Kansas Unit were members of the company which won the Recol Trophy Cup for the best drill organization. Many other features entered into this contest beside drill-general Robert Hale and rider range work were considered in judging the best organization.
Basketball Men Out!
MIDDLETON
AllVarsity basketball candidates
all Attend basketball by Dr. Forrest C, Allen, coach of basketball, to meet in the athletic office in Robinson Gymnasium, Thursday night at 7 o'clock.
ERNEST UHKLAUB,
Captain, 1921
Former Daily Kansan Man in Effete East
Albert W. Keeffe, who was a student in the department of journalism during 1916-17, is trying to convince the East that the West is not as wild and woolly as it would believe. To do this, he has sent his subscription for the Daily Kansas which he calls "the model college paper."
Mr. Koepff has been attending the New York University and also reporting for the New York Globe. At the present time he is working for a private company, N.J.'s Record of Long Branch. N.J., a fashionable sea side resort.
First scrimmage Tuesday after noon on McCook Field, 4 o'clock.
Registration Now 3220
Registration Now 3220
Registration was boosted by late enrolments up to noon today to the figure of 3220, according to figures given out by Registrar George O. Foster.
Rock Chalk practice on McCook Field at 4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon.
SPEED, NOT WEIGHT IS AIM OF COACHES
Nineteen Linemes Average 17©
Pounds Only—Heavyweights
Fight to Keep Up
BACKFIELD IS LIGHT, TO
sixty-five Candidates for Gridiron Honors are "Digging" In Earnest Now
Work—which includes training, practice, coaching, developed football instincts, and a number of other environmental factors in the handling of a football squad, determines the success of the team. You spend squash through the year. Some say it's just the las 50 per cent. The first 10, or 50 per cent, however is the material the beef, brawn, muscle and hereditary quickness of mind from which the coaches摸 the speedy engine of gridiron conflict.
The sixty-five men on the Jay-hawker varsity football squad are working harder this year than they ever did before. The coaches declare they must, the molekin enthusiasm of previous campaigns declare they must have been harder than "there can't be any harder work than we are doing."
PLAY AFTER PHOTOGRAPE GAME
But it's look at the human clay with it. There's clay, Lindey, and Captain Nettels are working so hard and earnestly.
Speed, hardhitting compactness of bodies moving so swiftly and machine-like, as to overemphasis the opposing team's ability. Valley teams, is to be the fundament of the Jayhawker eleven this year, according to Head Coach Dr. Forrest C. Allen, "Aight, charging back-field, replace two or three times in a game, lines with a fast, unified line playing a fighting game of short passes, forward passes, and open field running, is the hope of Kampai," he says.
HEAWDWIGHT; WORK HARD.
By the speed of the team in shown
by the spurs at the tackling
of the work of the squads at the tackling
dummies and signal practice.
The lightness is demonstrated at the dressing-sheets by a cursory inspection of the weighting-in and weighting-out sheet, on which every man records his true weight, stripes of his weight, and after placing the exception of Wint Smith, Chubb Fraker, and Sandofur, tackle, and guard candidates who have been working their heads off, in trying to develop the speed necessary to keep up with the rest of the linemen, thirteen of the leading candidates, from one wing position to the other. There are many examples of A variety of size such size would be the lightest Kansas had ever faced a season with.
LINEMEN ARE LIGHT
the nineteen most promising linemen are: ends, ky, 181; Stugard, 138; "Tad" Reid, 152; "Arnie" Bell, 171; Morrison, 115; Lamb, 149; McDonald, 158. Tackles: Captain Netts, lightest of all-Valley tackles, tips the beam this fall at 163; Higgins, 14; Hale 174; Cox, 158; Fracker and Sandeuf, "heavyweights" of around 200, are dropping rapidly in weight under the strenuous practice, Gordon Sanders, 163, and "Pete" Jones, 164; Sanders, 165, and Dennis, 158, 178, and Smith, 195, while the two most promising men for the center, position, are "Red," 186, and "Long John" Wulf, 170.
The backfield candidates, too, show promise of much speed, although the lack of veteran material is working Coach Ali four to five hours a day in practice. Coach Kirk, at the ice hockey venue, Harley Little, weighing 156, Prexy Wilson, at 147, and Mahon Weed, 132, who held down the quarterback positions on the first three eleven picked Friday by the coach for preliminary work in signal practice. Coach Ralph, at 148 for heavy line-plunging, while the other seven field candidates are on the same level. Frank Mandeville, two letter man at half, weighs 170 in fighting condition, and Loren Simon, the other veteran of Jayhawk campaigns, tips off his college at College of Emporia, weighs in at 134, while McAdams, who is receiving special kicking instruction from Lindsey, is only putting 152 pounds behind the pikein. Ellis Allison and Harrison, both from last year freshmen, line from the half-back's positions with around 160 pounds of brawn.
Fighting spirit can't be measured by a system of weights and counterbalances, and cannot mathematically be represented with diprotips (Continued on Page 1).
0
Hall and
Armoury
AR
are there
nowhere
behind
the ladies
and the
tenure
for his
priests.
That
they
have
no
power
over
the
port-
erial
army.
So
they
hold
the
part
hate
to
get
the
dee.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kangas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief ... Geneva Hunter.
News Editor...Walter G. Haren
Campus Editor...Michael
Sport Editor...Ruth Armstrong
Sport Editor...A. E. Grinvig
Alumni Editor...Louis
Editor...Lacie Cleveland
Exchange Editor...C. C. Nicolet
BUSINESS STAFF
Henry B. McCurdy...Business Mgr.
Lloyd Ruppenthal..Asst. Business Mgr.
Deane W. Malott..Cyclulation Mgr.
BOARD MEMBERS
James Austin Catherine Oder
Burt E. Cochran Grace Owen
Ford Gottlieb Gilbert Swenson
Alfred Graves Media Smith
Subscription price $2.50 in advance for first nine months of the academic year; $2.50 for one semester; 52 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1819, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon, five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism from the press of the Department of Journalism.
Address all communications to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66.
The Daily Kaanan aims to picture the undergraduate students at UCI so they go farer than merely printing the news by standing for the ideas the University has created; be clean; be cheerful; be charitable
MONDAY, SEPT., 20, 1920
CONVOCATIONS
Friday's convoitation was the big start-off of the year and it was a bit more formal than any of our following convolutions will be, because it was an introduction between Chancellor Lindley and the crowd of us. And if an introduction between friends can have that much peep and interest, think what the acquaintance will be.
Convocations are going to help hold the University together and bring it upward. So let's all get to gether and pull.
Carpenters had best begin work on reinforcing the Gymnastium, and especially the roof, for the season of the football rally is near at hand, and with the spirit that Kansas has this year it is going to be a terrible strain on any building to hold it. The "Oh Me, Oh My," given Friday morning had a wicked note to it that would have paired the lips of a Missourian.
Chancellor Lindley hopes for a weekly conversation, which will be a wonderful thing for the university and its students. We cannot pull together when we are unfamiliar with one another, and what strange and lonely feeling could back against a weekly meeting and pep talk with one's fellow students.
APPRECIATION
In the University of Kansas sixty men come out for football every night and less than one hundred other students show their appreciation for the work they are doing. After almost a week of practice, a mere handful of students turn out to watch the team.
Come out and help Kansas "Beat Back" into the top list in Valley athletic circles!
This season has been fittingly named, "Kansas Beat Back year." She will attempt to capture a few trophies for the long neglected trophy room in the gymnasium. She will attempt to bring the Jayhawk out of his hibernation and set him to preening his feathers for the inspection of the sporting world.
Football is a college sport. It is in fact, the college sport. If you are not interested in football get interested in it. Your roommate may be a fan, let him tell you about Crimson and Blue victories of the past and something of the classic game itself.
Beware of a "Dementia procox."
Football fills that need in the life of every person for recreation. A few hours a week, watching the Kansas football team will bring that old feeling of hilarity and pap back to it, you will make you more fit to study at night, and best of all it will show
that you appreciate what those sixty "huskies" are doing for Kansas. Turn out and help Kansas "beat back!"
DEMENTIA PRAECOX
Probably every student in the University heard Chancellor Lindley in his talk before the opening convocation refer to "dementia praecox" as a disease prevalent in the East, which mapped the vitality of the culture of classic education to the extent that many young people of the leisure class were endangered in mind.
"Dementia praecox," precious old age, indifference, mental laziness, and a series of other names of like character, are all attempts at an analysis of a very real danger that is actually endangering our university, and many others.
A very gifted class of students find themels able to make fair grades in classes by subtle methods of ingratiating themselves with their instructors, rather than devote their time to a real effort to master their subjects.
Students bury themselves in their work, and forget how to play. Music, social life, college athletics and devotion to alma mater thrums no responsive chord in their souls; ergo they apply their noses to the grindstone, and exclude from their lives a majority of the extra-classroom diversions that make so large a part of real university training.
A student comes to K. U. to attain "polish." He takes a "general" course, dillies in one subject, dallies
course, in others, and makes out a major card in the department that most appeals him at the time. He faces no crisis in life; decisions are made on the easiest way, when he finishes school, he has, not a general education, but a scattered smattering of information.
A professor, with six to ten years of specialized training, gets $3000 a year. He goes to class, and lectures on the theory of erudite subjects to young men, who, after two years of such training, can enter any business house at $2000 a year, work with moderate diligence for five years, and be receiving $5000 a year. The professor thinks he is altruistic, while the back of his coat is shiny, and his children are wearing made-for clothes.
Extreme cases, these, and probably less frequently present in our great University than in the older institutions of the East, but nevertheless, the conditions pictured are present, and are a danger, in many phases of our University life.
"Dementia praecox?" Nothing
else.
WHY SUPPORT THE RED CROSS?
When America went into the war there was an immediate rush of college men to take their places on the firing line. By fall 150 institutions recounted that 13,520 students were in the army or navy, and 1,650 had gone into non-military activities. Whereas the undergraduates for the most part went into active service, the alumni, or those who for one reason or another were unfitted for army or navy, went into the service of the relief organizations. Hundreds of college men and women went into the Red Cross. In fact, this organization was largely made up of college personnel. They went into it because it was constructive, because it gave them a chance to apply practically those ideals which are the ideals of America, and which the training they have received in colleges and universities has taught them to honor and cherish.
And then the war ended. A good
many people thought that the Red
Cross would end too. But disease
and suffering did not end with the war. Health, good citizenship are as important today as they were two years ago. And so the Red Cross work goes on. It still stands for the ideals of America—the ideals which it is the privilege and the duty of every university man and woman to further and cherish.
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
It is the duty and privilege, therefore, of every college student to stand back of the Red Cross, to aid it in every way possible in its after-war campaign for a healthier and happier America. The Annual Red Cross Cell will be held November 11.
NUMBER, PLEASE
Call will be held November 11-
25. Ten million Americans joined or
renewed their memberships last year.
The Red Cross counts on its college
friends to join, again, this year.
Is there any other 3-word sentence in the English language quite so enraining? Perhaps it comes when there is that all-important date to be made which will not be, if the opportunity time is passed. Or perhaps there is a communication to some professor concerning a paper which is to be the stepping stone from the depths of failure to the high road to a passing grade. Or maybe some other question of consuming importance is hanging fire, and;
"The line's busy!"
1047 Massachusetts St.
"The line's busy!"
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
It is delightful enough the first time, but when you are told the second and third and even the fourth time that the line is too pre-occupied to attend to your wants, you either feel like lauding central as a strict adherent to B. Franklin's best policy, or, if she sounds like she could not be accused of such principles, you feel a great love and brother-kindness welling up in your inner being for the unseen gossiper who is keeping the line occupied.
Telephone offers other blissful moments, not least among them being that which comes after you have jiggled the receiver nook six times without hearing any pleasant "What number, please", come over the wire. And another comes when, in the midst of an important sentence you realize you are talking into a soulless transmitter--your party has been cut off.
There is really only one thing wrong with the telephone service—or two, perhaps. The second one is the price paid for it, which is entirely to low. The first is the fact that such a large amount of patience is developed by its age. It is feared that, after a few years of the present people, the people of Lawrence and University students will have become so used to quietly suffering in the face of adversity that they will settle themselves to accept life as it comes and will no longer be a progressive people.
JAYHAWK-TALK
OF
COLLEGE LIFE
IN
OUR CAMPUS
AND
OTHERS.
Cox is哭ing his voice on the advice of a specialist. Could the specialist be a Republican?
Receives Deposits, makes Loane, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
"New York Wants Change." We can often use a little out here in the West.
Sawdust is being developed as a cattle food. The only thing which stands in the way of its becoming a great food is that the cattle may die.
"Women to Have Equal Voice." Why restrict them like this?
FOR RENT—Comfortable room on first floor with private entrance.
WANT ADS
Suitable for one man. Price, $10.00.
1320 Vermont. 6-5-22
LOST-A pocketbook containing
$12.00 bills and blank check on
Ottawa, Kans. Bank between Victory
Cafe and 1200 Key. Call 711-63-21
FOR RENT - Good southeast room for two - men, two blocks from hill, near McCook Field. 714 McCook.
Phone 1718 Black. 5-2-15.
FOR RENT - Young man student wants room mate. Desirable location, Price $6.50. Telephone 1269 White. 1728 Kentucky K. 5-2-16
MUSICAL KINDERGARTEN—For pupil 5 and 6 years up. Games, songs, etc. Lora Marie Rubie. 1234 Oread. Phone 2304. 4-5-4.
FOR SALE—Remington Typewriter.
Perfect condition. Call 2528 after
6 p. m.
3-5-1.
ROOMS—for 2 girls—very reasonable. 1314 Tenn. Call 1387 Blue.
PIANO lessons for pupils of all areas.
Musical kindergarten in connection.
Lorna Marie Reub, 1234 Orland
Phone 2304. 3-5-4
LOST—A double brown fur choker,
down town this morning. Reward.
Call 1495. 4-2-11
LOST—Pocketbook at football field.
Received to 1516 New. Hamp, or call
146 Black. Reward. 4-3-10
WANTED—Work by student. Can drive truck or repair any pleasure car or truck aftertowers, Saturday at 11 a.m. Call 1885. 1023, Mo. 4-2-7 H, Masson
FOR RENT—Desirable rooms for two or three men. Sleeping porch. Inquire 1252 Ky. 4-2-8.
LOST—in Robinson Gym, Wed.,
Biff!
Bang!
Boom!
He's Here
Again
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS
THE MOLLYCODDLE"
Scenario by Tom Geraghty Story by Harald MageGrath Directed by Victor Fleming
ix Reels of Fairbanks Humor
Wills - Love - Speed - Action
small white-lined gray silk rectangular coin purse contain a five dollar bill and some small change. Seward. Call 924. 4-3-6.
ROOM—to let. Boy's room, one block from campus. 1228 La. Phone 1556, 5-3-14.
VARSITY—BOWERSOCK
At Both Theaters
Wednesday and Thursday
PRICES: 11c and 33c War
Tax Included
Don't think is an ordinary picture—its "Doug" Super-fied in a United Artists' Production
SOCIAL Dancing Class every Tuesday night, 7:30 to 8:30 over Dick Bro's. Private lessons by appointment. Call 2236 White. 4-5-9. PIANO for sale. Call 2485. 70-6 West 12th St. 3.52
LOST—Pocketbook containing money and owner's card on Hill Friday morning. Reward. Return to 734 Indiana. Mary Hanna.
ROOM FOR RENT - Double or sin-
gle for girls. One block from
campus, Phone 2509. 249 Ohio, M-5-
15. Tarrett.
LOST1 - Everashp Pencil between
1126 Ky, and Oread High Friday.
Notify Mary F. Evans, 1126 Ky.
Phone 1949 Red. 5-2-17.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex-
clusive Optometrist). Eyes exam.
glasses made, office 1025 Mason
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jackson Building. Building Special attention to nose, throat and ear. Telephone 217.
Tax Included
DRS. WELCH AND WELCH - PALMER
GRADUATES. Offices 235 N. 116th St.
DR. J R BECIFEL. Rooms 4 and 3
over McCulldy's Drug Store. Office
1802, 702-729-3555.
R H D. REHING, F.A. U. Building, Eve,
ear, nose, and throat. Special
attention to fitting glasses and tonsil
work. Phone 613.
DR. G. W. JONES, A. M., M. D. Diseases of atomics, surgery and gynecology. Suite 1, F. A U Bld. Phones Office 35, Residence 35K2, Hospital 1745.
Z. H TIBBETS—Dentiat, 927 Mass St.
Phone 183.
DR. ALRIGHT-Chiropractor-radio
Therapy-Massage. Results guar-
anted. 1161 Mast St. Phone 1431,
Insidence Phone 1761.
Squires Studio Fine Photographs 1035 MASS. ST.
Room 311 Perkins Bldg. Special attention to extracting. Phone 511.
Today—Tuesday
Four Shows Daily 2:30,4:00,7:30,9:00
:DWARD BUMGARDNER — Dentist.
Madge Kennedy in
"Help Yourself"
Varsity - Bowersock
Saturday Evening Post Story
Also Burton Holmes' Travels
Child. 11c Adults 28c
By George Broadhurst
Also Mutt and Jeff
Comedy
Bryant Washburn in
"What Happened to Jones"
Child. 11c Adults 28c
Both Theatres Wednesday and Thursday Douglas Fairbanks in "The Mollycoddle"
PROTCH
The College Tailor
HAROLD BACHMAN and His MILLION DOLLAR BAND
ROBINSON GYMNASIUM Monday, Sept. 20
Evening 8:00 p.m.
Dance After the Show at Fraternal Aid Ha Bachman's Jazz Orchestra
Will Appear at
DATE RULE OFF
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
Admission $1.00
BACHMAN
FREE KODAK ENLARGEMENT 5x7½ in.
A Genuine Portrait
Your Snaps
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YOU can have a splendid enlarge
- splendid enlargement*
$67\%$印制的 printed free from each sheet, if you need it, if you roll for development to the Topkapi Photo Supply Co.
This enlargement alone is worth more than we charge for developing your films.
Mail your films today, or send for particulors. Eight hour services.
The Toppera Photo Supply Company
Box 427 Toppea, Kansas
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Customers Room Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hall's museum
of art
AUG. 20
the sea
is a place
to go
and see
great things
of the
portions
of the
sea
So
we
go
to
the
party
cent
not
out
gun
the
sea
PINE ARTS CONCERTS PROVED VERY POPULAR
٢٠١٥
pen With Matzenauer Recita October 12—Working on New Background
The University Concert Course is going 'over the top' with a rush, according to Dean Harold L. Butler this morning. Already more than 500 son tickets have been given to the seating capacity of Robinson gymnasium. The students, however, according to Dan Butler are not sending in their orders early enough. The faculty and townseparate are sending in first-ers first, and the first-ers are getting the pick of the seats to the course.
October 12 will be the opening date of the course, when Margaret Matzenauer, the famous contralto, will favor the University with a call to the world's greatest singers, a woman who has made her reputation by marked successes in all the musical centers of the world," said Dean Butter, music director.
Seven other concerts of like merit will follow through the school year.
will follow, through the season. Dean Hutter is working on a new position placed at the back of the temporary stage used in Robinson gymnasium. The design will be made by Prof. Rosemary Ketcham, the new head of the department of Fine Arts. Dean Butler expects to have finished in time for the Matzenaer recital.
What Do You Mean by Bad?
Judge Lindsey, founder in Denver of the new methods of dealing with young offenders, has put into practice tests to find out among the juvenile misdeeds which are bad. We are not just appearance bad, and which are not badness. We are not sure Judge Lindsey's laboratory will always be right in spite of its science, but we know it will be more right than the old blind, ignorant武人 young children by asking "Well, you call me. This child is just 'bad'."
What Do You Mean by Bad?
Many grandmothers have corrected the fake notion that a very young baby is "bad" by stating that which is nearly 100 per cent true in the sentence: "There are not good and bad babies; there are only sick and well babies."
**ada**
Judge Lindsay says, for instance,
the investigation may show that a girl of twelve may have the physical development of a girl of seventeen.
That girl has a woman's vitality and only a child's capacity to handle it. Is she any more "bad" than a luckier girl who gets a woman's judgment long before her physical vitality has to be put in check?
Ludge Judney is going to open his laboratory not only to test offenders; he is going to let Dewey enter his own children analyzed—Collarsi.
Industries and Schools Should Help Each Other
More effective co-operation between education institutions and industries was urged by Prof. Henry P. Tailow of the Massachusetts University Technology College before the establishment Chemical Society at Northwestern University recently.
"Colleges are attacked," he said, on the ground of failure to provide their graduates with a proper knowledge or appropriate relations problems of so-called human engineering, and also for their failure to supply men with readily available scientific knowledge, which is the same and often the reason that the trainee must be academic.
"The systematic efforts so far made in co-operation with the industries have taken the form of such co-operative courses as those in operation at the University of Cincinnati, the University of Pittsburgh, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology elsewhere, or serving an absolute purpose and are training a high type of engineer. They dispel the too academic atmosphere of the classroom, they bring the student face to face with the applications of the rules which he has learned the classic shades, and in co-training which he has been in teachers and to tons of material and to control of massive machinery.
In spite of free predictions to the contrary, these co-operative courses are not a hindrance to the regular production work, and forensm and workmen have unfamiliarity with their jobs, so students to get out of their work when they recognized they were in earnest." Christian Science Monitor.
In order to get the greatest efficiency out of his truck, a Nebraska merchant has divided the body box into sections and in this manner he carries several different commodities for delivery at different places.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Oxford Receives Women More Hospitably Now
An Oxonian writing to The London Times recently remarked that Oxford during the last few months has been occupied in unlocking its degrees, its convocation and its congregation, its boards and its delegates, in favor of women students and women who It has been doing so the fact that it will not be able to admit the male students sent up to it for entrance from the lower schools. Hereofore only certain restricted privileges, and these only in recent years, have been open to the ever-increasing number of women applicants; now the gates are almost literally thrown wide open at Oxford (the girls will soon be able to abridge also, and then they are all most familiar with the lessons of learning, whose privileges, opportunities, distinctions and honors have been exclusively reserved for men, will place them before women also—N, Y. Times).
Many Damage Suits
Independence, Kan., Sept. 9—(Special)—Thirteen damage suits have been filed in the district court of Montgomery county against the American Nitro-glycerine Co., as a result of the explosion of a hyperpine wagon at Liberty Law School, which resulted in the death of the driver of the car and children and serious injury to several others and the destruction of considerable property. Actual and punitive damages amounting to $3,615.05 are asked by the plaintiffs. Settlement was made with several parties suffering property loss but the larger number refused to accept the amounts offered by the company.
Trace Pedigree for Centuries Speaking of old families and family trees, English and Americans who pride themselves on ancestry have reason to envy the Arabs, many of whom can trace their line back through many centuries by means of authentic documents. Williams, an American who was born and spent his youth Turkey and has been sent to Israel in the oriental countries, say the descendants of Mohammed are numerous all over the Moslem world—in Arabia Somaliand and East Africa and that they prove their line by these records, which they value highly. There are also many descendants of Abu Bkur, the immediate successor of Mohammed. The leading Mohammed family in Jerusalem are the Khalilii descendants of Kakah and conquered Syria 1300 and whose descendants have kept their genealogical records intact for all that period.—Republican Regis.
The Prune Returns
**The Prune Returns**
The prune, brought to the United States from France about a century ago, has returned, great volume and has been reiterated in greater figures since, according to figures compiled by the National City Bank of New York.
During the fiscal year of 1920 the United States has exported 114,000 one pounds as compared with 59,000. 59,000,000 in 1919. 33,000,000 in 1918. France to 18,000 pounds last year exceeding 9,000,000 the previous and less than 300,000 before and more than 300,000 have long availed from the importing lists of the United States and the value of the 1920 exports is far in excess of any earlier year and three times the annual average of the last decade—Christian Science Monitor.
CANADA POLICE HOLD BOMB CASE SUSPECT
Former Employee of French High Commission Wanted By N. Y. Police
Hamilton, Oct. Sept. 6-Edward T. Fisher, suspected of knowledge of the bomb outrage in Wall Street yesterday, was arrested in the Bank of Hamilton building here this morning by Hamilton police, on charges of insanity.
New York investigation of the explosion in Wall Street which cost 33 lives yesterday centered on a search for Edward Fischer, former employee of the French high commission in New York.
Attention was directed to Fischer because of warning he gave his friends to keep out of Wall Street on September 15.
Thomas Delahunty, caretaker of a New York Tennis Club, declared today Fischer warned him two weeks ago that Wall Street would be blown up on the 15th. Delahunty said Fischer had previously made revolutionary utterances. He said that Fischer was a star tennis player.
Morris Castenade, the French high commission ioner, said the commission was warned from a former employer because of a danger in Wall Street about the 15th.
George Kutchelbon, a baker boy and old friend of Fischer said he received a postal card from Fischer, mailed to Toronto, Can., warning him to get out of Wall Street as soon as the gun struck at 3 o'clock Wednesday.
A Student told us today that
The New York police, who were searching for Fischer, and they had been informed Fischer was in trouble in Toronto. A man who rewarned him to leave Toronto left suddenly, Sept. 14. A tennis racket was found in his room. The man attracted attention by his violent talk. On one occasion he told a member of the criminal families out there, and I am worth more than all of them."
Hotel servants, it was said, reported he predicted to them there would be an upheaval in New York on Thursday. This man was described as being well-built, of ruddy complexion, and clothed in a light coat.
Now that practically every one in the United States appears to agree that the profiteer should not be tolerated, it is about time to define a profiteer, legally and otherwise, so that all may know what the rascal looks like, for of course it is obvious how that woman joined the purpose of owning one trade periodical objects to the profiteer, yet in the same breath decries efforts to lower prices. While not saying that there has been any profiteering in sugar, it is fair to ask if anyone believes that some of the sugar men, for instance, are being abused or hurt by others to lower their prices, or 60 or 60 per cent or even more from the war figures—Christian Science Monitor.
Plans for regulating the water of the Upper Nile for irrigation are intended to provide the water necessary to enable both Egypt and the Soudan to develop their agricultural possibilities to the utmost.
The colleges all need to be enlarged. That is better than if the jails needed to be—K. C. Post.
Our "Egg-Olives Are Just Right"
The same applies to any eats you get at
The Jayhawk Cafe Ray and Harry COR. 14th AND OHIO
St. Paul Girl Chief Spooner Miss Grace Ferry, until recently of St. Paul, Mim., has taken charge of the work for women and girls which is to be carried in connection with the enlarged program at the Union Methodist church Forty-eighth st., just west of Broadway.
One feature of Miss Ferry's work will be the chaperoneation of a "spooping parlor," which has been fitted up in the basement and is called the Gray room. Its dark walls have been repainted a very bright gray, and it has been furnished in colonial style and gas logs installed. An young woman can bring him inside, and sit in front of the room. The "spooning parlor" is gifted for young women who have no homes in or to entertain their friends. It will be open until 11 o'clock, and Miss Ferry will always be there. The parlor opens in the fall—New York Times.
The Life Story of a Graduate
Batin Belfry had graduated; one could have seen that by the sheepskin coat which he wore on the Great Day.
A frog's leg ornamented his diploma for that was the insignia of the Life Department. Let us follow the life-wanderings of this man Batin.
Ten years later Batsin was granted a full Mismatch in the Department of Zoology. He began the study of butterflies, interrupted only by the correction of blue-books. Soon after he published his notable work: Relations Between the Markings on Butterfly-Wings and in Blue-Books.
But his greatest achievement was yet to come; while studying the notes of various flies while singing at their work, he discovered one which was especially low and harsh. A flash of intuition told him this hearsome hoarse cry of unstoppable stupidity and discovery utterly confounded the scientific world; and Batsim was immediately recognized as the leading authority on bugs. In fact, he spent
the rest of his life in a bug-house.
A statue commemorates the great work of Batsin Belryf. With one hand he is feeding laughing-gas to a muskrat, which is gradually swelling up under the influence; in the other he holds a muskmelon; an exultant look is on his face, and his lips are seen to mutter the single word: "Evolution."—Hardvard Lampoon.
Pay Alimon yor Serve Time Says Judge Wall
Wichita, Sept. 16.—Men delinquent in paying their alimony will have to make their payments promptly or be sentenced by judge Dense. NJ announced today.
Plaus of divorced wives and their children in destitute condition because divorced husbands are failing to make payments of alimony, led to an order made by Judge Wall today to enforce such payments.
Dortmouth Man Admits Killing Woodville, N. H. Sept. 16–Robert T. Meads of LaGrange, III, the Dortmouth junior indicted for the murder of Henry Marion, a man who killed him guilty to a mainslaughter charge in court here Wednesday afternoon. Meeds was promptly sentenced to a term of from 15 to 20 years in state's prison. The trial of Meeds, which was exonerated after he was running at Dortmouth, had been set for next Monday morning.
It is a strange coincidence that at the same time our registration fees *g* up the Registrar should be connected with oil stock.
F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist
Fastman Kodaks
Bastian
L. E. Wainman and Cankin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
Ye Shop of Fine Quality
A JEWELRY SHOP where quality comes before price and service comes before profit.
THIS IS WHAT MAKES us the best known establishment of its kind in Lawrence.
WE WILL APPRECIATE your business. Join the Quality class and trade with us.
SHAFFER PEN
Korea was the "Hermit Kingdom." Some would like to make the United States a hermit republic. We all know what happened to Korean.
Gustafson
The College Jeweler 911 MASS.
Safety razors and blades at Rankins Drug Store.—Adv. 6-2
Expert Repair Service-
You don't have to wait a thousand years for your watch left at
Panders QUALITY JEWELRY
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Our repair department has been enlarged to insure prompt attention for all work. 827 Mass. Street
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The W. S, G. A. Book Exchange in Fraser Hall finds more calls for Freshmen Rhetoric Books, English Literature, Language and can supply. If you have any of these old books, bring them in.
Any girl interested in playing the piano for gymnastium classes, please call Miss Steger, K. U. 95, or 1783 Bue.
Old members of the Women's Glee Club who wish to try out for the club
will meet in Room 12. Administration
Building, Monday at 4:30 o'clock.
Others who wish to try out will meet
with Wednesday at the same time.
Entomology Club will meet Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in the office of Prof. S. J. Hunter, in Dyche Museum. Fred D. Butcher, Pres.
The churches of Lawrence will ev-
The headquarters of the Y. W. C.
A. are in Myers Hall.
University women needing financial assistance can own of good living accommodations at a nominal price by applying to Dr. Alberta Corbina of the University.
The Kuku Kian will hold its first meeting of the year next Tuesday night, September 21, at 7:15 o'clock in Room 201, Fraser. All who wish to be active members this year must be present. Lloyd Young, president.
A PIPES the thing with men. Under the spell of A WD C pipes men tele, fagged brain are relieved. The specially seasoned genuine French briar boakes in sweet and mellow. It will not crack or burn through. The WD C Triangle on the bowl is your guarantee. Ask any good dealer.
WD C
TRADE MARK
WM. DEMUTH & CO.. NEW YORK
WORLD'S LARGEST MARKERS OF FINE PIPES
Clothes Called For and Delivered
THE STUDENT CLEANERS
EATON & FRAKER
We press 'em while you 't your hair cut at
HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
929 Mass. St.
Phone 499
MARIE SCHWEDER
MARGARET MATZENAUER "World's Greatest Woman Singer"
"Expose yourself to it If you wish to enjoy good music Chancellor Lindley.
Buy a season ticket to the University Concert Course. Eight great concerts of famous artists. You cannot afford to stay away. Over 500 season tickets already sold.
WHERE WILL YOU SIT?
Season Tickets $5.00 or $4.00
Mail your order today, enclosing self-addressed, stamped envelope to H. L. Butler, Lawrence, Kansas.
Hall's artillery co. and artillery
department of the boo-
ne nearly boarded and the
letters sent to rooms.
The seo cause co. co.
physics de olth porbory orilit So larges velocent the part he pot out gen the de- the g
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FOOTBALL MEN TOOK FIRST SIGNAL WORK
Practice Friday was Divided Into
Four Elevens—Simple
Formations Run
IN FINE CONDITION NOW
Sixty-Five Expected Out Today
—Make Six Elevens—Capt.
Burdick Coaching
The nth degree of hard work in preliminary gridiron practice was reached last week by the Jayhawk football squad under the direction of Coaches Allen, Lindsay and Laslett. Starting the first practice Wednesday with a strenuous two hours of limbering up, falling on the ball, and other muscle-tiring factors sixty-five minutes after afternoon to eight pounds lighter in weight, and immeasurably better in condition.
Men who had worked in the harvest during the summer, and boasted of their biceps development, found from Dr. Allen's setting-up exercises that some leg muscles were mired in their inner conditioning of the foot. The team was confronted with the eight letter men who are trying for positions, dug in with a will, and worked vehemently to gain the approval of the coaches.
LITTLE PLUGGED FIRST ELIMINATES
The candidates were divided into four eleven Friday afternoon and run practice, two in the regular practice. Hardy Little hold the quarter position on the first eleven, "Prux" Wilson plotted the second, and Mary Wood the third. Doctor Allen; Coaches Lindsey and Lawslett, and Coach Terry have shaped material through the simpler life: formations and plays.
MORE PRACTICE STUNT:
The first eleven was composed of ends, Iry and McDonald; tackles Saunders and Jones; guards, Smith and Fricker; center, Hart; quarter Little, halves, Mandeville and MeAdams, fulback, Simons. The second eleven, slightly lighter, was fully as fast as the vambur, and was comical. He was a tackler, tackles, Hinkle and Hurgus, center Arthur and Davidson, guard, Wulf quarter, Wilson, halves, Harrison and Allison, fulback, Webb.
Earl Endicott, lineman from last year's freshman team, applauded a muscle by injurious tackling to end an elbow hit that will be back in practice this week.
MORE PRACTICE STUDY!
Victoria onaglouts against a training tandem in naval training since Thursday, and Cox Allen has developed a system of "broken-field boots" a foot in height, and six or eight feet apart, through which the men run, stepping first through a box on side of the path, and then in one on the other side. A charging machine will be the attention of its backfield men.
WILL SCRIMMAGE SOON
The squands last week averaged forty-five each day, but more than sixty-five have checked out suits and all will be out every day this week, according to Dr. Allen, who said Saturday that, with the addition of Captain Harold L. Burdick, as a voluntary assistant to the coach staff, that five or six eleven would be practicing on and Hamilton fields every night.
Candidates for the freshman check out equipment Saturday, and will take the field for the first time this afternoon, under the tutoring of Coach Lindsey. Their first struggle in scrimmage will probably come Wednesday or Thursday, against the Varsity.
Speed, Not Weight Is Aim of Coaches
(Continued from Page 1.1)
pounds, rams point out the glorious
career of "Tommy" Johnson, who
looked like a paleological student,
who loved intelligence and
brains and spirit, ending up with
FitzAlmsham famous slogan;
"The bigger they are, the harder they fall!"
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
Scientists used to talk of a trip to the moon. But that was before the Interstate Commerce Commission raised the rates.
WANTED—Furnished room for professor and wife for three weeks starting Sept. 23. Notify F. W. Dillon. Phone K. U. 143, Journalism.
61F F-23
LOST—Goodyear 32 by 4 tire on rim
North on the Topeka-Lawrence
road. Phone 565. 6-2-24
FOR RENT - For boys. One large double room, well furnished. Twenty-Dollars per month. Call 1601 Rhode Island St. Phone 1909.
A ROOM for two boys. 1340 Vt.
Phone 1361 Black. Mrs. C. L. Wall.
6.5-26.
Dialects in English
Dialects in English
A survey just completed shows that 33 languages are in daily use in New York, not including three or more of the eight highbrow English, lowbrow English and the R-less variety, besides the strange, inexplicable cockney kind which gives all "er" sounds the sound of "ol." We say inexplicable, for we have never seen explained why in certain New York vernacular bird is a "bodd" and curse is "coise."
Sometimes, somewhere, that emulation must have begun—whether on the Bowyer or in Harlem or even on Broadway, nobody seems to know. Was it in existence in 1860? The New York literature of that era does not seem to so indicate. The converse of the boottails and juvenile street sweepers of the mild and indolent children of those days almost a Sunshine school diction. The "coise" has swept over Manhattan since then. It came with the melting pot, and may be par of it, for all we know.
The United States is large enough to contain a number of dialects, and thereby it loses contain them, so that one's genesis is pretty well distinguished by his speech. We know New England by its "loffing" haugh and they know us by our "lafffing" one. "Akk" in southern are about the "a" in "hake", while still remaining "ok" in Massachusetts.
Our e pluribus unum language is truly that kind, and like to become more pluribus as the country grows older. St. Louis Globe Democrat.
Action Better Than Talk
Toronto, Out. is showing initiative in the housing problem. Not only is she appointing a commission to study the question, in approved cabins, but she is planning to build 500 houses for sale or rent, and give bona up to 50 per cent to those who wish to build. Her scheme is funded by private investors who have been bona fide residents of the city for the last two years.
It is apparent that the Toronto is not satisfied with the handling of the problem by private interests and her dissatisfaction is echoed practically all over the world. Profitering landlords have waxed rich, during the housing shortage, at the expense of the rent payer. To allow them to continue to do so would be a encourage injustice. Toronto has taken note of this condition, and intends to put it up against it. In effect they will be appointed by other municipalities, who may new look to her for a way out of one of the most perplexing tangles—Christian Science Monitor.
Hot Stff
A preacher was describing the "bad place" to a congregation or metal cadets.
"Friends," he said, "you've seen them coming out of a furnace haven't. you're hot, sizzling and hissing. Well—" the掩acher pointed a long lean arm.
"Well," he continued, "they use that stuff for ice cream in the place I have just been speaking of."—New York Central Magazine.
Ohio and Good Night
Most of the shipping of the port of London has been loaded and discharged at Tilbury, twenty-six miles down the Thames but London has been made an important harbor for the construction of an enormous concrete dock in the very heart of the metropolis.
"Ohio" is "good morning" in Japanese, and Ohio it will be whoever candidate is victor. But for either New York or Massachusetts the election of a Vice President will mean 'good night!'
Have you looked over the line of
lagazines at Rankin's Drug Store—
dry, 6-2.
STUDENTS WELCOME AT SOUAD PRACTICE
sulk of Responsibility Will Fall On Captains—Not the
Athletics, this year in the University will be conducted on a different basis than ever before. The captains of the different sports will be held at the university, and the coaches will be more than a mere figurehead. In football the results may already be seen. It is sometimes difficult to determine which is the captain and which is the coach; they are all workhorses for the coaches merely are there for advice.
In basketball, where the squad is much smaller than the major sport, the captain will be more responsible for the team, its condition and equipment, than in any other of the four University sports. The men will report to the captain on coming out for practice. They will be requested to bring their trouble to him, *and* he will be required of their equipment is in good shape.
with the captain on matters which were formerly taken up with the coach. The captain will see that the men are ready for their respective events during the meets and the coach will merely oversee the work outs and offer advice from time to time.
In baseball the captain will also have charge of the practices, working the men at positions where they seem to be best fitted, using the pitcher's he thinks will work best and, in general, is best suited to work from the shoulders of the coach.
Dr. C, F. Allen, director of athletics mid this morning, "I can see that no students who are not able to make the squads of the different branches of athletics, can help to make that t sport successful by giving it their support in the practices as well as at the games. Students are always well come at the workouts, if they do not get in the way of practice."
Coaches have expressed the belief but if the whole University can come up to game principles without interruption, work of the men, they welcome.
Pretense.
—There never 'as human swelling that did not have its end in ridiculous collapse.
Dignity never sprawls on its nose unless it tries to run along beside Pretenae.
Pretend to know something that you don't and get caught at it—like a great statesman with a fine theory and no fonts; and they feel the hurt!
IVORY
PYRALIN
Pretend to be something you are not—for instance, a member of a fine old family—and down you come away with an unjustious pieces of a smashed灵敏ly.
Coaches
Pretend to be able to afford more than you can wickly afford—and bang goes pride.
New York City is full of persons who have considerable skill in pretense. Some of them have come from all over the country—to find a place to set up pretense. They fool each other with their show of money and position; they know and knowledge and power, and then—Bloop and everyone laughs.
VOGUE BEAUTY PARLOR FOR
If we want to have dignity that will stand it is necessary to have the brand that simple men have—Abraham Lincoln, for instance. The dignity that stands it in the legs is the dignity of no pretense at all—Oliver's Magazine.
The Allies appear to have difficulty in getting the Germans to deliver coal. Well, coal dealers sometimes warn that their promises in our own country.
Facial Massage Manicuring
Over Gustafsons
MRS NELLIE BEAL
OPEN EVENINGS
Phone 346
Caitment Shampooing
711 1-2 Mass.
In "As You Like It" R Shakespeare, speaking through dacues, tells of the "seven ages of man." Of course the category is complete and truthful, but we think that more modern times have suggested an eighth age, that might be inserted between the whining schoolboy and the soldier, bearded like a pard, and that is the "Age of the Soft Snake," when the whole one wants to kiss another for nothing. A boy generally reaches that stage when he is just out of school with a smattering of Latin and algebra, and imagines that the world owes him a living, and all he has to do is pick it off when the world swings in his way, observes a writer in Ohio State Journal. Nothing will do him but a soft snake, and all he has to do is pick it off when the world society, with motor rides and dressing for dinner. There are many such young men, or rather boys, just stepping on the stage of life, to whom the soft snake seems to be the blossom of their years. They spend the beauty and strength of their lives trying to get hold of it. How many a noble youth is utterly spared by waiting in line for food, while the wait the less fitted they are for any kind of real business. They are to-day the chief apostles of the high cost of living and are looked upon as by the people. No person can be a soft snapper if he possesses any real pride. He will take the first work that comes to hand and depend upon his merit and worth for his procreation. The sweet damals, let us say a word—steer clear of the soft snappers, until they show some disposition to work out their own salvation—Minneapolis Betterway.
Age of the Soft Snap.
Mental Lapses
What untold suffering is caused by the outrageous price of silk skirts and cord tires!—Newark St. Eagle.
Magistrate. "Do you mean to say that such a physical wreck as your husband gave you that black eye?" Printish? "Your Washup, 'e wasn't a physical wreck until e' gave me the black eye." London Opinion.
"How wonderful it is to see the sun sink down to rest upon the sea!"
"Yes, not! (t) A fellow could哎哎 it all night." — Le Matin (Paris).
“Happiness” and the Jud Tunkins,
“has to be cranked up, but trouble allows has a self-starter.”—Washington Star.
"I know I could do Ophelia in your Shakespeare revival."
"No, sir; I am not trained, I am simply gifted."—Life (New York).
"It'll'm-- have you ever been on the stage? Have you any training?" No, sir; I am not trained, I am
"Have we everything here? What is in the small box?"
"hardrobe."
"And in the large one?"
"Our paper money!" —Lustige Blatter (Berlin).
"And what is that lad of yours going to be when he grows up?" "I rather fancy he'll be a golf caddy."
"The wardrobe."
"Really!"
"Yes. The last tanning I gave him, he turned round and told me I wasn't holding the stick the right way."—London Opinion,
Dr. Lyman P. Powell gives some examples of the lengths to which petty bitterness between men will sometimes carry men, "A visitor in a place where you are not adequately supported none asked a pillar of one poor, dying church, 'How your church getting on?' Not very well', was the reply, 'but thank the Lord, the others are not doing any more.' The Christian Register (Boston).
Frend—"I've seen a tall man going to your studio very day for a week. Is he sitting for you?"
Impecunious Artist—"No, he's laying for me."—Boston Transcript.
The new chaplain very much wanted to anume as well as instruct his men, and accordingly, on one occasion, arranged for an illustrated lecture on
One seaman who possessed a photograph was detailed to discourse appropriate music between pictures. The first of these represented Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. The sailor cudged his brains and ran through his list, but he could think of the picture exactly appropriate to the picture.
"Please play up!" whispered the chaplain.
Then an inspiration came to the seaman, and, to the constation of the chaplain and the delight of the audience, the photograph ground out, "There's only one girl in this world for me!" - Harper's Magazine.
How to Enjoy Prohibition.
1. Take n case of empty bottles, fill them with water and tint the water with varicolored fruit juices.
2. Paste on to each bottle a label bearing the name of some expensive item.
3. Take a drink with every precaution of secrecy whenever you are feeling wicked—The Independent.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Welcome Students
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Fire insurance is one of the main considerations in your home today. especially in fraternity, security or club houses, where numerous persons congregate, and where it is impossible to by on the look-out at all times.
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Phone 133 now, or talk to Craig Kennedy, O. A. Rammeyer, R. L. Allen or Glenn V. (Hop) Banker, who is at the Kansan office.
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
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DAILY KANSAN
SUBSCRIBENOW FOR THE
Solicitors Wanted Apply Kansan Business Office at once.
OVER SHOE
New brogue oxford made of genuine Norwegian calf,
with heavy soles. Price $15.00.
Shoes for All Men
Some men prefer pointed toes, others the popular brogue models, some ask for the conservative broad toes and straight lasts. Our stock is varied enough to permit every man to choose his favorite style at a reasonable price.
NEWMAN'S
805 Mass.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NUMBER
VOLUME XVIII.
ALL FRESHMEN MUST
ATTEND CHAPEL MEET
First-Year Students, Men an Women Will Hear Chancelor Thursday Afternoon
LINDLEY WILL SPEAK
New University Head Will Try to "Give Students Right Attitude"
Every freshman in the University is required to attend a meeting in Fraser chair Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, according to announcement from the office of the chancellor this morning.
Chancellor Lindley will address the first-year students in a short talk in which he will attempt to give the new students the right attitude toward University life, and to help them in adjustment to the new routine.
This talk is to be the first of a series which the Chancellor hopes to continue through the year at intervals of not more than a week.
No announcement has been made of what measures will be taken to "check up" on the attendance of freshman has been made, but it is thought that a return to the old chapel system will be brought about, with both the first-year men and women checked up under the direction of older students.
KUKUS MEET TONIGHT TO FORM PEP DRIVE
Jazz Organization Will Boost all Athletes Hard, Says President Young
Tentative plans for promoting school spirit will be made by the KuKu Klan in a meeting this evening in room 201, Fraser Hall. Definite plans will be made in regards to the members of the KuKu Klan accompanying the football team on several occasions during the tournament of the KuKu Klan, who has been working in connection with cheerleader "Sandy" Windsor said this afternoon that it would be absolutely necessary for all of the old KuKu's to be present at this meeting if they intended to keep their membership in this organization. It is the intention of this organization to limit the membership to live wives, who are willing to sacrifice a life for the sport of university athletics.
The KukU Klan will try to secure concessions from director of Athletics, Forrest C. Allen, from which they will be able to raise the money to promote this organized support of athletics. Dr. Forrest C. Allen, was unable to give up any definite informa-
tion about his plans, but would be granted the Kuku's, but he offered assurance that he will do everything he can to help the Klan
The KuKl Klan, it will be remembered, is an organization that was formed last fall for the purpose of organizing support for all athletics in which the University participates. Now that the football season is in the making they are exerting all efforts to boost the "college pastime."
Federation of Labor
Perdicts Allen's Defeat
Washington, Sept. 20. "The American Federation of labor organization is being centered in Kansas to defeat Henry J. Allen and other candidates who support the Industrial Revolution according to an unconformed report."
Samuel Gompers, head of the American Federation of Labor, it is said, predicts that Allen's defeat will be accomplished.
Dr. Nicolet in Lawrence For First Time Since '10
Dr. B, H. Nicole, A, B, '10, Ph. D. Yale, 13, was in Lawrence today for the first time since he took his degree. The town and the Hill both look about the same as he remembered them, he said, except of course, the new Administration building and the Observatory. Ground was being broken for the east wing of the Administration building the year he left.
Dr. Nicole visited faculty friends He is an assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Chicago.
Howard Cress, 72, has resigned his position with the state geological survey to take a position with a commission firm in Kanas City, Mo.
Send the Daily Kansan,home.
Ford Cuts Prices
Of Flivvers $142
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SEPTEMBER 31, 1920
Detroit, Sept. 21—Henry Ford today announced that prices on all models of his automobiles have been reduced on an average of $142 a car. The company has also laid off pre-war cars. The Ford Company now has 146,000 unfulfilled orders. The new prices are effective immediately. Ford declared that it is time to go back to a pre-warr basis. The company said it would do so down, he said. Wages at the Ford plant will not be affected by the new car prices.
SUFFICIENT ROOMS OPEN TO STUDENTS
Y. M. C. A. Bulletin Board Announces Opening of Many New Rooms
Mothers and fathers of K. U. students will be relieved to know that none of their sons and daughters will be forced to leave the University on account of the lack of a place to sleep. A complete survey of the situation has revealed that the rooming facilities of Lawrence are sufficient to meet all present demands, according to authoritative sources today.
Twenty vacant rooms were reported to the Y, M. C. A. in the past week. Of this number a few places as close in as the eleven hundred block on Tennessee street were turned in. The remaining 864 $ a month and all are reported to be modern and in first class shape. This condition may also be assumed to apply to the women of the University as well as the men, from the fact that the majority of rooms now known to be vacant are ones that were originally held for women exclusively, but which have been thrown open to men.
Men who are now occupying single rooms but who wish to find roommates may be able to adjust them to the conditions of the Board. The Bulletin Board which is maintained for the purpose of supplying such information.
BAND WELL RECEIVED
Bachman's Soloists Please Crowd at Legion Concert
A small crowd but a good band, is the story of the concert given Monday afternoon and night by Bachman's band in Robinson gymnasium. The band was well received but there were some questions. The musicians included some of the best talent that will come to the University this year, according to musical critics who attended the concert. Besides regular band music, the band carried some soloists of rare ability. Walter Kelley, the boy soprano, pleased the audience to the delight that he was recalled three times.
Robert Bruce, former Haskell Institute student, gave a cornet solo, King Carinval, by Kryl, that won the audience. Erling Sodahl, violinist with the band was well received by the audience and was given a good hand for his rendition of Rehfield's Spanish Dance.
After the night concert, the band's orchestra of ten pieces furnished music for a Varsity Dance at F. A. U. hall.
Portrait of Dr. Strong Wins State Fair Prize
Homer Eagle, '20, president of the Engineering School last year, has left a position with the state geological survey and left Friday for New York. He is also in the position in the office of a consulting geologist engineer in New York.
Dr. Hokking, of the Fine Arts Department, who has completed a portrait of former Chancellor Strong, after working on it the greater part of the summer months, exhibited it at Tokyo at Tokyo, where it won the portrait prize.
It next will be exhibited ten days in Finley Hall, 2019 E. 11th St, Kansas City, Mo., after which it will be brought back to Lawrence and probably exhibited here in Spooner Library.
Dr. Hekking has taken this opportunity to pay tribute to Chancellor Strong for his eighteen years of service here at the University.
Mons Student Council will meet in Fraser rest room, Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. JOHN TRACY, president
ENTERPRISE TICKETS ADMIT TO 37 EVENTS
Student Books Good for Athletic Contests, Concerts, Etc.
ON SALE TODAY FOR $8.00
An intensive campaign was started by the Athletic Association today for the sale of student enterprise books and football season tickets. The books and tickets were on sale today at the athletic business office, Room 203, Robinson gymnasium, the Registrar's office, and the Round Corner Drug Store.
Football Tickets Also Sold at $4.50; Seats Will be Reserved
Student enterprise tickets admit to all football and basketball games, track meets, and baseball games, besides University Band, Glee Club, and orchestra concerts, and debate—37 events in all. Total single admission charges will amount to more than $20.00. The football games alone amount to $7.00. The price of the student enterprise books is $8.00 for the year and $4.50 for the football season tickets.
All seats will be reserved for the home football games and season ticket checks and enterprise slips may be exchanged for these reserved seats without extra charge. Reserved seats for a game will be on sale a week before it is to be played. Arrangements will be made so that the reserved seats will be available at the Antelope office for the first four home games at the same time.
RESERVE FOOTBALL SEATS
Applications for reservations for the Kansas-Nebraska game, to be played on McCook field, November 13, will be received at the Athletic office after October 16, and will be filled in by Oct. 16.
For children under 12 years of age, half rate tickets may be obtained at Athletic office.
Plain Tales From the Hill
"Ju" Holmes, well-known University character, was introduced to a young follow in front of the gymnasium Saturday night. The introduction run something like this, "Mr. Holmes, meet Mr. Lindley." Seemingly afraid that the boys were taking advantage of her, Holmes fumed last month, "Just promptly fled. He came back later, and discovered that the man he men was really "Mr. Lindley"—the chancellor's son.
Over two thousand boys in school, and only 119 girls this year, so the registrar's report of enrollment says, "Prewar kids" again, and pretty much is true. That reminds us, we've got a date, and from now on we'll be on time.
More Books Needed At Booth in Fraser
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Held Club Smoker
A smoker was held for the members of the cooperative Club for men Monday evening. A short musical program was given, and the new men were given an opportunity to get acquainted.
The following books are in particular demand: Freshmen Rhetoric books, English Literature, Elementary Logic, Jewish; Psychology, Denton; Trigonometry, Ashton; Algebra, Klebna; Geography, Blunt; Economics, Blunt and Northup; Economics, Eley; Sociology, Blackman and Gillan, and Spanish Grammar.
The W, S, G. A. Book Exchange found a great shortage in many of text books called for by the students. The book exchange will be open each day this week from 9:30 to 12:00 and from 2 to 4, and probably next week having goals to should bring them to the exchange immediately.
Held Club Smoker
Methodist's Hear Prof. E, F, Engel
Prof. E, F. Engel was in Kansas
City this afternoon reading a paper to the assembled Methodian Church workers of eastern Kansas on the opioid crisis and work in the 'iniversity of Kansas.
Student Volunteers to Meet
Student Volunteers will meet on
evening a 7:00 o'clock in Myer,
Hall. Every volunteer will be
to present especially those who are new in the University this year.
Card Says Customs Will Rise Sky High
New York, Sept. 21. - W. H.
Eiwardes, collector of internal
in revenue, today received a postal
card warning him that the customs
house would be blown up
uponorrow. The card was signed
"A Citizen." Edwards notified
the department of justice and the
customs house after it at once examined the card and an effort will be made to trace it. Extra guards were placed about
the customs house.
QUILL CLUB TRYOUTS OPEN UNTIL TUESDAY
material Will be Used in First Issue of Oread Magazine
Quill Club, national literary fraternity, takes in a limited number of new members each fail and each spring. Pledges must qualify with the membership and be on board composed of Quill members and English instructors.
Tou-outs for the Quill Club, available matter to be used in the next is one of the Oread Magazine, were announced this morning by Deane Mallett, Quill chancellor. The next copy of the Oread Magazine will appear October 16, at the Drake football game.
Manuscripts submitted need not be written especially for the try-out, according to Mr. Mallott. They may take the form of short stories, essays, and other works for publication. Members of any class of school are eligible to compete.
The fall try-out is being held earlier this year than usual because the Oral Health staff desire to obtain all necessary materials as possible for the publication. Since the magazine is to appear a three weeks, material for try-outs must be turned in at the Kansas Office more once of Tuesday, September 28.
"Members of Quill having material suitable for the magazine are urged to turn it in at this time," said Maltott. "We hope to make this is sue of the Oread up to the ussa standard in interest and variety, and we will need material, and we will need material for that." Magazine may be left in the
Manuscripts may be left in th Daily Kansan office.
STORMMAYHITTEXAS
Tropical Hurricane Expected to Sweep Up From Mexico
Gowie announced yesterday that the storm was over Yucatan. The text of the report made up at 10 a.m. today reads: "Changed to hurricane warnings at 10 a.m. on west Louisiana coast and on the Texas coast from Port Arthur to Corpus Christi. Tropical storms advancing northwest ward are accompanied by dangerous winds."
Washington, Sept. 21 — Hurricane warnings were ordered up the line along the Texas and Louisiana coasts today by weather forecaster Gowie, Attended by violent winds, a tropical storm is sweeping northwest over the state of Mexico and it probably will hit the United States within thirty-six hours.
New Orleans, Sept. 21. Stainbanks were rushing to isolated gulf coast points today with urgent reports of the approaching hurricane. It is exotic and dangerous, it mills up the Mississippi Valley. The storm is approaching the coasts of Louisiana and Mississippi and up by Corpus Christi. All points have been notified by telephone and telegraphic reports; others were advised by wireless.
Galveston, Sept. 21. The Galveston Interurban today was making arrangements to move people out of the so-called storm area of the city because of the tropical storm sweeping toward the Texas coast. The weather bureau reported swelling tails all along the Gulf coast. The burst of rain was of any point. The greatest drop was reported at Mobile, but the barometer was still reported the highest of any on the Gulf.
Poles Claim Success in Galicia
Poles Claim Success in Galicia
Washington, Sept. 21—Smashing successes in Galicia were claimed by the Polish Commission today. Dudno, a member of the team, said after hard fighting, the report said. The Poles claimed to have a line in Galicia running through Hustsulain to Tremolda, Olsow and Taintolot.
FOOTBALL CHANCES GROWING BRIGHTER
Candidates Now Enrolled in Art of Chasing Pigskin Number 120
MANY FRESHMEN ARE OUT
Work in Conditioning Players
Continues; Soon to Hold
Seismology
Scrimmage
If the number of candidates has anything to do with *w* winning football team, Kansas should have that team, for 120 men are out for football. For the Variety, sixy ninja reporters reported that they were equally as many Frush suited up and worked out for the first time. More than thirty men applied at the Variety sued for equipment, and were told there was none. In other words, no one was suited up at the University to take care of the men who want to play football.
The work in conditioning the men was continued Monday, and there will be no scrimpage before the last of the week. Broken field running, the stiff arm, and apiking were given most attention. The team worked with the line dummy.
Practices in signal work was given, but more to get the men used to running together than for the plays. A man with a woman with men left over, were picked out.
Road and Iy, ends, Sandurel and Fraker, tackles, Smith and Davidson, guards, Hart, center, composed the line in one squad. In the back field were Mandevelle and McAdamas, half-backs, Little, quarter, and Simons, fullback. This squad seemed to be working good and fast. Another team picked by the coaches was Lamb and McBennan, middle-backs, McKee and Arthur's, guards, Wolfe, center McVey and Allison, halfbacks, Wilson, quarter, and Spurgeon, fullback.
In a talk to the men while they were parting with Dr. Allen said "You men are taking the training and conditioning rules wonderfully and I know the work is hard, but I mean for it to be. This is only a 'patching' to what you will have, if you stick ground here."
Sunday afternoon, the entire squad will walk to the Country Club. They will talk football, but the real idea for the hike, is to enable them to get acquainted. "You follow ought to know every other man on the squad, and you don't want to be afraid of the community spirit, don't be afraid to tell the coach your troubles, if you have them, maybe he can help you. Another thing I want to impress upon your minds as this: I want every man to get out here on the trail, because he doesn't mean the coach is any more excusable than you follows. If I am late, you should hold me accountable just as I am going to hold you."
Presbyterian Students Held Annual Mixer
The Presbyterian Students held their annual mixer Friday evening. Approximately five hundred students and their families attended the mixers during the evening. Mise Hazleton, who is one of the new vocal instructors in the School of Fine Arts, sang during the evening. Miss Hazleton was accompanied by Professor Solderlund. Music was furnished by the Filipino orchestra.
Light refreshments of ice cream, cake, and punch were served throughout the evening.
Most Vocational Men Prefer Engineering
Former soldiers disabled to a varying degree who are at studying at the University under the direction of the Federal Board for Vocational Training choose the professional schools almost without exception.
Sixty-six ex-service men have enrolled for work, according to Prof. A. T. Walker, director for A. T. Bear, an engineering expected later in the year. Engineering has been selected by the largest number of the men, with law and medicine next in line. Pharmacy and Fine Arts take in the rest of the students, as does the man responsible their school expensives and an additional allowance.
Delta Upson announces the pledging of Oliver Kuhl and Lloyd Roberts, both of Winfield.
E. L. BRADLEY, GREATEST TRACK ATHLETE, BACK FROM OLYMPIAD
Returned This Morning and Was Carried Across Campuses On Shoulders of Laws—Attended Reception on McCook Today
COLD STOPPED HIM IN DEKATHLON
V. M. Cabinet Plans This Year's Campaign
Is The Same Old "Brad"—Competed in Other Meets in France and England—Won Second in Slassic Pentathlon Event
Everett L. Bradley, "America's premier athlete" and K. U.'s own who has returned from the Olympic games at Antwerp, Belgium, received a big ovation here this morning at 11:30 o'clock when the laws, who were the first to see the blond hero, dismissed their classes and marched down the campus, carrying Bradley on their shoulders.
Members of the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet went on a retreat to Cameron's Blue Sunday evening, where they spent several hours in a meeting to consider the work and to make plans for the coming year's work.
The principal question confronting the cabinet was the means of making the Y, M. C. A, a student movement. It was decided that the noon-day lunchmen was an important factor in this movement. And they were required to have a responsibility among the faculty and student body for the foreign mission work as has been done at some other universities including Harvard, Princeton, Nebraska, K. S. A. C., another point would be gained. Extension work goes around them men out to vartition to do boy work will all materially in their work.
It is hoped that this will make the students feel that the Y. M. C. J is a student movement in New York. A New York at Chicago office, Y. M. men declare.
N. Y. Assembly Committee Would Oust Socialists
Albany, Sept. 21.——The Assembly Judiciary committee today by a vote of 76 supported the Gillette Resolution which provided for the ousting of the five socialist members who were barred from the Legislature last spring but re-elected in a special election without recommendation and passing the responsibility on to the Assembly as a whole.
Irish Trouble Makers Are Being Driven Away
"In case of a general revolt," said McReady, "we are ready, perfectly ready. A small band of known terrorists is causing all the trouble and the day may come when we will have to make a definite clearance of them.
Dublin, Sept. 21. - Major General McReady commanding British forces intimated today that the Government was driving out of Ireland the known troublemakers. McReady's statement followed two days of skirmishing and embubbing which resulted in the death of several loyalists.
Packing Company Appeals For Help to Quiet Riot
Chicago, Sept. 21—Packing companies employing both white and colored help, today appealed to the police for additional guard to prevent outbreak caused by race feeling following last night's race rioting on the south side. Although no race outbreaks were reported today, Chicago has prepared preparations to cope with a renewal of the troubles after dark tonight.
U. S. Cruisers Haiti's Charges.
Washington, Sept. 20.-The United States has informed Haiti that the salaries of her President and other officials have been recalled because the island republic failed to abide by treaties made with this government, it was said at the state department, today. Haiti's protest came when the American Army that the American forces occupying Haiti and San Domingo were treating the natives roughly and the National City Bank of New York was financial arbiter to Haiti.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Again at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon Bridley received further welcome when all of the University assembled on McCook Field to see him once more, and to welcome the K. G. boosters.
Everett Bradley, man of the hour, at K. U., who participated in the classis pentathlon in the Olympiad and won second place by scoring twenty-five points. S. Lobeton, Finn, first over Bradley. Bradley still maintains his lead as he has not been defeated by any American. Bradley won the right to the title at the official American pentathlon of the Penn Relay Games, which were held at Philadelphia late last year. Bradley was scheduled to enter the decathlon, in which Brutus Hamilton won to the first that he caught a very severe cold after he had participated in the pentathlon, the coaches in charge refused to let him enter.
FINN BEAT U. S. IN JAVELIN
The only superiority shown by any foreigner over American athletes was javelin throw which we saw in "Battle for the Wall" (202 feet) Bradley said. Bradley threw the javelin 162 feet for eighth place. Is the broad jump, Bradley made 21 foot. In the 200 meter race he tied for first place in 23 seconds flat. In 1500 meter race Bradley placed fifth.
Bradley also competed in a triangular meet between Sweden, France and America, in which America outpointed her competitors by eight points. Bradley was entered in the broad jump. He got four jumps that averaged 22 feet and 11 inches, beating out Peterson who won the broad jump (23 feet) but not Bradley (24 feet) also competed in a dual meet between England and America, which resulted in a tie, each nation winning five events.
All was not work, however, for Bradley was royally entertained while aboard. He was banqueted in Lokal on his way to an awe-inspiring walk on a sight-seeing trip over the battlefields. Bradley stated to a Kansan reporter this morning that he had never had a better time in his life than he did every minute of his extended trip.
Bradley stated that he had considerable fun in engaging in verbal combat with Roy Watson, who is also captain of the truck team from his school, Kansas State Agricultural College, at Manhattan. The old rivalry between Missouri and Iowa was brutal. Brutus Hamilton of Missouri won second place in the debkathon, in which Bradley was unable to participate.
The only kick that was expressed by Bradley in regards to his trip was in regard to the poor accommodations given the athletes while enroute to Antwerp. They were stowed in the inship the hold beneath the water lines, which was anything but comfortable he said. They were stowed in the members of the American Olympic team as satisfied with the marchant and the training quarters. "America's premier athlete" will be in school this year to captain the track team to the greatest season in its history.
Too much praise cannot be given Everett Bradley as there has never before in the history of the University of Kansas biology department that he mounted for Mount Oread that have been accorded the University through Bradley.
A few copies of "Clay's Economics for General Readers" are desired by students taking that course this year. All students who have copies of this book are deemed of selling ability and are required to leave them in 344 West Ad.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief.
News Editor..
Campus Editor..
Sports Editor.
Sport Editor.
Alumni Editor
Editor-in-Chief
Exchange Editor.
BUSINESS STAFF
Henry H. McCurdy...Business Mgr.
Lloyd Ruppentinal...Business Mgr.
Dane Weir. W. Malott...Circulation Mgr.
BOARD MEMBERS
Catherine Oder
Grace Olsen
Gilbert Swenson
Meda Smith
James Autin
Burt E. Cochrane
Ferd Gottlieb
Alfred Graves
J. J. Klistter
Subscriptions price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.50 for one semester; 30 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the Embassy of France, press office of the department of Journalism.
Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas.
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students to go for greater than merely printing the news by standing for the ideas the students write; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to be wise; to learn to wiser heads; in all to teach the students of the University.
DECIDE FOR YOURSELF
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21, 1920
Unable to work out a schedule composed of those courses which he engrossly desires, the average student will ask for information concerning studies of the so-called "snap" variety. Friends, thus solicited, quickly respond.
Brown, who has been working in the oil fields, will tell his questioner that geology is a "dinch," and that all one needs in order to get a good grade is a text-book and a smile. Jones, whose summer vacation is newspaper reporting, extols the many virtues of journalism; and Smith, naturally adept at commercial undertakings, will command economies as the best possible stylist in which to easily obtain credits.
Dazed, but with the understanding that enrollment in any one of these entails but little work, geography, journalism and economics will be chosen. From then on, weeks slip by with the student only half-heartily doing his assignments until, at the end of the semester, he finds that he was too gruel, that performance of duties is imperative, and that there is great likelihood of failure.
At times, then, the student realizes too late that his adoption of the word "credo" was perilous. He comes to know that minds can not be measured similarly; and in time he is led to the true belief that only in one's own mental capabilities is there any basic foundation for decisions as to outlined study.
COCOA—THE NATIONAL DRINK
Though dezenis of the White Way may sing "Wont You Bring Back Those Wonderful Days," and the "Alcoholic Blues," yet it looks rather dour for the Words, even should the honorable governor of New Jersey have been put in the White House.
While prohibitionists and wets are fighting, another king has usurped the throne of Old Taylor, and Rock and Rye. Cocoa has become the national drink of the United States. In 1918 this country consumed, about one-half of the world production of cocoa (cruda) which was some $38,000 pounds. for the last year the total fell off some, yet then there was re-exported nearly $33,000,000 pounds, at a value of over $5,500,000. The net amount of crude cocoa retained in this country is some $280,000,000 pounds. The value of Europe's purchase of American made cacao and chocolate is seen by the jump from $32,485 to $8,071,347.
The once terrible example of run must now give way to the more horrible example of a cocoa flour. The innocent fudge of the college girl in Ladice Home Journal stories, has become a potent factor in American economics.
HAGUE TRIBUNAL?
What has become of the Hague Tribunal? This permanent judicial tribunal which was regarded as one of the most important achievements of the Nineteenth Century, has apparently been overshadowed by President Wilson's insistence on a political League of Nations.
The Hague Tribunal was established as a court of arbitration for international disputes and was accessible to all countries. A million dollar Temple of Peace was erected to house it. This court of arbitration successfully adjusted the Pious Fund claim between the United States and Mexico, a dispute with Venezuela and a dozen other controversies which might have proved serious. The Hague Tribunal was founded upon a judicial method of procedure, and seemed to be well adapted to present needs. It might have been utilized to serve further purposes, but the Versailles Conference completely disregarded this machinery of arbitration which had repeatedly proved its value. In place of a successful judicial method it substituted the diplomatic method that had in many cases been found a failure.
The Versailles Conference provided for a council composed of diplomats, and made no provision for a judicial Court of Appeals. Each member is concerned chiefly with the interests of his own country and the result is a series of unsatisfactory compromises. Now the League has undertaken to correct this mistake by taking steps toward the creation of an entirely new international court under its own supervision.
But many agree that it would have been much better if they had built upon the foundation laid by the Veranalles Conference which was already audited and tested. All that the Hague Tribunalacked to be effective was the power to enforce its own decrees. Such power should undoubtedly be given to a judicial tribunal which has control of world affairs.
Ellhu Root, who has had wide experience in affairs of state gives his ideas of the needs of the present time, in the following: "What we need is the substitution of judicial action for diplomatic action, the substitution of judicial sense of responsibility for diplomatic same or responsability."
Campus Opinions
Editor Daily Kansan:
"The big staplelower, north of Myer's Hall on Oread Avo., has been renamed"
This quotation, from a recent Kansan news story, should be pleasantly received by most of the student body. For year, the tower has proved an eyesee, and its present rejuvenation is indeed good to look upon. Class emblems and political slogans, as well a exhortations in the interests of the University, have been erased. In addition, the more the structure is free from unspeakable hieroglyphics resembling animal crackers.
Now that this improvement has been completed, it is time that preparations be made to prevent a recurrence of the revised disgraceful condition. Force or threats of force, and fear of death from defaecation from the fainting. Only on reasoning, coupled with a sense of pride in its improved condition, will ingrate permanency of the present condition. Students, made to realize that painting signs on public property is sheer destruction and is a vile act, should be made to refrain from the wanton hawke so often wrought by careless hands.
P. B. PUBLICO,
The Question Box in Japan
Japanese newspapers are called upon to answer a variety of questions that might well stamp a lawyer. The Yamato came up against the follow-
"Last month I married a certain man, but he has now divorced me. His unreasonable excuse is that my eyebrows are a pale color and that I must therefore be a leaper. Can I sue him for the damage he is causing to my reputation? A Subcriber." The answer was breaking off the marriage, as he cannot use a pale-colored eyebrow as a cause for divorce."
More of a poser was submitted to the wisdom of the Yomiuri in the following: "I am a woman of 20 years. I was born with a round face and my friends make fun of it. Please tell me some way that I can change the shape
of my face, for the persecution to which I am subjected is more that 1 bean bear. A Subscriber.'
The editor deserves credit both for the truth and sympathy of his answer: "I am very sorry, but I do not know of anyone whose face you have. Before you, be encouraged full-faced lady, as you are the personification of the health of human beings."
connection to the health of humanity."—The Japanese Advertiser.
The Lady and the Toucan
inside the bird store, the lady looked at the toenail. The toucan looked back at the lady, cooked his head on one side and remarked,
"Good," thought the toast; "she's not half stupid. I'll try her on another one. Gurk!" he exclaimed.
"Gark!" reinstated the lady. "Aren't you a funny-looking thing?" she con, timed in a conversation tone.
"Wok-wok!" replied the lady, play fully.
"Possibly I am," said the bird, "but how about yourself? Your feet were never made for French shoes, and as for your- or skirts?" The bird hopped frantically from one perch to another in costate glacie. It was fortunate that the lady could not understand him.
Mercy! What a beak!" said she "Al least," answered the bird, "as nature gave it to me. Look at your own beak. It has a layer of powder on it that's an inch thick," I bet. It looks like a frosted bunn. Wok! Wok! His merriment increased.
"I look at the way that bird is be having," exclaimed the lady. "You won't take his eyes from me. I do want you to see." She added in whimsical amusement.
"Bless your heart, dear; I am."
the said bird. "You and creatures like you can come in here all day long.
You can always laugh over your ridiculous figures and the clothes you put on them, and at your aits and grunces.
Powder and paint, lace and silk, ribbons and bracelets, furors, feathers—what a bag of silly tricks you are! . . . Wok! Wok! Wok!
Wok! Girk!"—Life.
Uncle Sam's Payroll Million
More than a million persons, or about one civilian out of every hundred in the United States, are on the payroll of the Federal Government
society in the federal government, or more than one-half that. If the present strength of our military and naval forces be counted in, says Ashman Brown, in Minnesot'a about thirteen persons in every thousand of population subsist on federal funds—that is on the taxes paid by the producers of food and other commodities qualification "about" is used because, we read, no one in or out of the official service knows exactly how many persons are employed by Uncle Sam, who is probably the only employer of labor in the United States whose accounting force is unable to state accurately the number of employees in the House Committee on Appropriations made an effort to get complete statistics. It failed. No officer of the Government handed before the committee could supply them; but from the information obtained the estimate made is said to be conservative."Cur
"Can you give me an outside room?"
"I can give you a hammock in the alley or a cot in the yard," said the tel proprietor.
Just So.
"I see. All outside rooms."
—Democratic Opinion
Mental Lapses
Theologiaans used to say that the Golden Age was before the Fall; today many think it was before the rise—in prices!
Revised Version
Both parties have spoken severely about the High Cost of Living. Of course you have noticed the sudden slump in prices. ...
Are you still wearing the overalls you bought this Spring?
Or Have You?
Mexican Metric System.
Re the Way
MEXICAN METROPOLITAN SYSTEM.
Ten bandits make one revolution.
Ten bandits make government.
One government makes ten revolutions.
—Boston Transcript.
"How did you manage those Soviets?"
Willum—“Yes; an’ remember, Maria, ye only see what’s on top.”- Punch (London).
“Easily enough,” replied the Russian politician. “I encouraged them to talk at once till everybody was in a fighting mood and then I put them into the army”—Washington Star.
Countrywoman (her first glimpse of the sea) — 'Ahn't it astonish', 'William?' Who'd 'ave thought they could be as much water as that?'
LOST - Goodyear 32 by 4 die on rim
North on the Topeka-Lawrence
and. phone 565.
6-2-24
Ryer—"What you might call nipt in the bud."—Judge.
Customer—'Why do you keep telling me all these horrible murder stories?'
A ROOM for two boys. 1340 Vt Phone 1361 Black. Mrs.C, L.Wall 6-5-26
FOR RENT - For boys. One large
double room, well furnished. Twenty-
Dollars per month. Call 1601 Rhode
Land St. Phone 1909.
WANT ADS
Barber—"Well, you see, sir, I find they help me a lot by making your hair stand on end."—Passing Show (London).
Dyer—Miss Gray was married the year she came out."
FOR RENT - Comfortable room on first floor with private entrance Suitable for one man. Price. $10.00.
1320 Vermont. 6-5-22
Don, Phone K. U., 143, Journalism.
61F F-23
LOST—A pocketbook containing $12.00 bills and blank check on Ottawa. Kans. Bank between Victory
FOR RENT - good southeast room for two-men, two stocks from hill, near McCoack Field. 714 McCook Phone 1718 Black. 5-2-15.
Cafe and 1200 Ky. Call 711.6-3-2
FOR RENT-Young man student wants room mate. Desirable location, Price $65. Telephone 1289 White. 1728 Kentucky. S-5-21.
It requires a little time to do good work. We refuse to let out a job unless absolutely correct.
Attention to the requirements of a watch—the cleaning, offling, and regulating—is essential to absolute accuracy.
ROOMS—for 2 girls—very reasonable. 1314 Tenn. Call 1387 Blue.
Your watch in the hands of our expert watchmakers will receive the necessary repairing and renewing, and at a very nominal cost.
UISICAL KINDERGARTEN--For pupila 5 and 6 years up. Games, orgs, etc. Lora Muria Rabie. 1234 read. Book 2304. 4-5-4.
LOST—A double brown fur choker,
down town this morning. Reward.
Call 1495. 4-2-11.
PIANO lessons for pupils of all ages.
Musical kindergarten in connection.
Lorna Marie Reub, 1234. Orena
Phoné 2304.
3-5-4
Keeping the Watch in Order
FOR SALE—Remingham Typewriter.
Perfect condition. Call 2528 after
5 p. m. . . . .
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
LOST—Pocketbook at football field;
Return to 1516 New Hamp, or call
1146 Black. Reward. 4-3-10
SOCIAL Dancing Class every Tuesday night, 7:30 to 8:30 over Dick Poe's. Private lessons by appointment. Call 2236 White. 4-5-9. PIANO for sale. Call 2485. 706. West 12th St. 3-5-2
WANTED—Work by student. Can drive truck or repair any pleasure car or truck afternoons, Saturday or call Haston, 1826, M05, 34-2, H1, Haston, M
LOST-in Robinson Gym, Wed,
a small white-lined gray silk rectan-
pal coin purse containing a five
dime, a small charm, a small
chair, and Reward. Call 924.
FOR RENT—Desirable rooms for two or three men. Sleeping porch. Inquire 1252 Ky. 4-2-8
ROOM—to let. Boy's room, one block from campus. 1228 La. Phone 1556.
5-3-14.
LOST—Pocketbook containing money and owner's card on Hill Friday morning. Reward. Return to 734 Indiana. Mary Hanna.
ROOM FOR RENT - Double or sin-
gle for girls. One block from
campus, Phone 2509. 249 Ohio, Mrs.
Garrett.
Gustafson
OST- Eversharp Pencil between 1126 Ky. and Oread High Friday Notify Mary F. Evans, 1126 Ky. St Phone 1949 Id 5-2-17
"We like to do little Jobs of Repairing"
DR H. BEMING, F.A. A. U. Building, Eye, nose, ear, nose and throat. Special attention to fitting glasses and tinted lens. Phone 5123.
R. H. J. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jackson Building. General practice, special attention to none, throat and ar. Telephone 217.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist). Eye exames: glasses made, Office 1025 Mason
DWS. WELCH AND WELCH - PALMER
Pictures, Office 115. Insurance 11K.
DR. J R BECHUTT. Rooms 3 and 4
over BECHUTT's Drug Store. Office
115. Insurance 11K.
DR. G, W JONES, A, M, M, D. Diseases of stomach, surgery and gynae
F. B. McCOLLOCH. Druggist Fastman Kodaka
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
colony. Suite 1, F A U Eld. Phones 520-683-1090. Hospital Westchester ALBIRHTO - Shrimprotor - Larder - Therapy - Masseau. Phone 131. Residence Phone 131. St. Mary's
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
EWARD BUMGARDIN - Dartst.
Room 211 Perkins Uldg. Special
attention to extracting. Phone 511.
Z H TIBETBES-Dentiat, 927 Mass St Phone 183.
Varsity - Bowersock
Four Shows Daily 2:30,4:00,7:30,9:00
-Tuesday
Madge Kennedy in "Help Yourself"
Saturday Evening Post Story Also Burton Holmes' Travels
Bryant Washburn in
Child. 11c Adults 28c
"What Happened to Jones"
Child. 11c Adults 28c
By George Broadhurst
Also Mutt and Jeff
Comedy
Both Theatres Wednesday and Thursday Douglas Fairbanks in "The Mollycoddle"
Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes save you money
GOOD clothes cost a fair price these days; but good clothes save money for you. They do it by saving themselves; they keep on looking well long after cheap stuff "isn't fit to be seen."
It doesn't take much thought to figure out how longer service saves your money: youll find it a simple proposition.
We guarantee that you'll get all the wear, style and value you think you ought to get in Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes. If you don't get it—money back.
PECKHAM'S
The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
Halla's situation is so great that Al was a warrior. Econ nearly beamed eloquently and the letters rent his rooms. Then the nurse used physics to guide of the patient's large volume centrally, the patient later not out gen the lie not out gen the lie the
BY THE WAY
Hollis Ferguson, c'24, spent Sunday at his home in Olathe.
Mary Ewing, c'22, spent Sunday at her home in Oathe.
Gladys Sweargart, A. B., who is teaching English in the High School of Perry, Kansas, spent the week-and visiting her mother in Lawrence.
Elizabeth Haysilip and Dora Stern went to Kansas City Saturday morning. They also visited the Jewish Museum, which is managed by Miss Haysilip's father.
The condition of Mrs. B. N. Wilmot, the Phi Kappa Alpha house mother, who was run down by an automobile at Twelfth and Louisiana Streets a week ago, is greatly improved.
Mr. and Mrs, A. H, Bennett of Toaka visited their sons, Harry and Fay, at the P1 Kappa Alpha house sunday.
Harry Bennett was called to his home in Topeka because of the illness of his father.
Pi Kappa Alpha announces the pledging of Harold Dennis, c'24, of Sedan.
- Parker Brockway, c'23, William Blackbecker, c'24, arn Burton Burdett, c'24, spent Sunday in Olathe.
Louis Rodgers left yesterday for his home in Kansas City, Kansas, having spent the week in Lawrence.
Allie Cowell, A. B., 18, left yesterday for Akron, Ohio, having spent a week or so in Lawrence visiting his parents.
Professor W. P. Haynes of the geology department went to Fort Worth Texas, on a business trip. He is expected back in Lawrence this afternoon.
"Bat" Murphy, B. S., 19" was married to Earline Allen, A. B., 20" this summer. Mr. Murphy is doing geological work at Oklahoma City. While in school he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epidaurus, Mrs. Theta Sigma Phi, and a member of Gamma Phi Beta, Theta Sigma Phi, and the Kansan Board.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Mrs. F, D. Carman, Miss Julia Carman. M, S. 20, and Lothar Carman who have been visiting at the home of J. Neale Carman, instructor in the department of French and with Miss Genevieve Carman returned to their home in Hertington, Kansas, Monday morning.
More Reasons For Colleges
Dr. R. C. Moore, State Geologist returned to his office this morning after an absence of three months in Colorado, Utah, and Nevada. Dr. Moore was accompanied by Allen Tester of the geology survey. Valuable additions to the University's already extensive collection are added by the trip to the department's economic geography.
Moore Returns From Geology Trip.
logy museum.
The Boy Scouts of America have 375,000 boys and 90,000 adult leaders at the end of their first decade of work.
LEAGUE BLOCKS WAR
Polish-Lithuanian Dispute Has Has Been Settled Peaceably
Paris, Sept. 20. — Dramatically clapping hands on the counsellors of the League of Nations today, Igneuse Pudorewski and A. Valdemar had their hand over the Dutch-Lithuanian dispute over which war had threatened.
Both Paterwesenki and Valdemar said only three weeks ago that they believed the dispute between the two countries could have been resolved if the findings make the League's first success in blocking threatening war.
Success and Resource
there are some men who can obey orders; and there are some men who can get things done.
It is well to be obedient, it is better to be resourceful.
When Alexander could not untie the Gordian knot he cut it with his sword.
A resourceful man is one who, when he cannot do a thing one way, does it another.
He keeps trying.
When it's time to quit, he begins.
When he is licked, he begins fight
on again.
There are three rules for success,
the first is: Go on. The second is:
go on. And the third is: Go on.—
current Opinion.
.
Only a Glance
Over steaming teacups the two damselflys sat and talked. The conversation turned upon an unfortunate indifference to the disavowal of one of them.
"No, I never did like him," sheaid. "Why, when he used towrite ne glowing love letters I would onlydance over them once."
"Well—er—sometimes when I couldn't make out his abominable scrawl I would glance over them the second time."
"Indeed!" said the other maiden
"and was that all?"
"Except, sometimes at night, I would take them from under my pillow, and read them just to killilline," I said, but the end?2"
"Yes," was the reply; "only to rainy days. I used to look over them again just to see how silly a man can be when he starts writing love letters. But I only like him when I am alone. I never did like him." "Hi-Tite."
A Senior in Kentucky University has invented an ob透电ically illuminated walking cane. Now it only requires a pair of eyeglasses and a bellaire equipped with a alarm blare.
The refusal of Russia to rally to any of the hurried movements which have been started within and without the country to overthrow the Bolshoi reminds one of the drowning foreigner who never could quite master his English auxiliary verbs and calls for help in these terms: I will drown, nobody shall help me—The Independent.
Let's Put "Kick"
and "Pep"
into
the
Sept. 25—Freshman Blowout.
Oct. 2—Freshman Mixer.
Oct. 2-Football, Emporia at Lawwrence.
Oct. 9—Sophomore Mizer,
Oct. 9—Football, Washburn at Law-
LOYALTY BALL
F.A.U. HALL
Five Piece Orchestra
FRIDAY NIGHT, SEPTEMBER 25
"Phog" Allen will make speech
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
WHAT HAPPENS THIS YEAR
Oct. 9—Sophomore Mixer,
Oct 12—University Concert Course Margaret Matzenauer.
Oct. 10 — Sports, basketball
Oct. 16 — Football, Drake at Law
rence
THE STUDENT CLEANERS
EATON & FRAKER
Oct. 23-Football, Ames Aggies at Lawrence
Clothes Called For and Delivered
Oct. 30—Football, K. S. A. C., al Manhattan.
We press 'em while you get your hair cut at HQUK'S BARBER SHOP
Phone 499
Nov. 9—University Concert Course,
Olga Steeb and Jasha Jacobinoff
Nov. 18-24, Hoon
Party.
Nov. 6—Football, Oklahoma at Norman
Oct. 23—Senior Mixer.
Dec. 14—University Concert Course
Myrna Sharlow
Jan. 7-8—Basketball, Drake at Law reince
Munich.
Oct. 30—All-University Hallowe'en
Party.
Nov. 13 — Football, Nebraska at Lawrence (Homecoming Day.)
Jan. 14-15—Basketball, Ames Aggies at Ames.
Jan. 11—University Concert Course Agnes Lapham.
at Ames.
Jan. 21-22—Basketball, Grinnell at Lawrence.
Feb. 4-5-Basketball, K. S. A. C., at Lawrence.
Feb. 17- University Concert Course, Juvenile Friedman
Feb. 9-10—Basketball, Washington,
at Lawrence.
rence (Homecoming Day).
Nov. 20 - The K. U. Follies.
Nov. 25—Football, Missouri, at Col umbia.
929 Mass. St.
Feb. 18-19-Basketball, K. S. A. C.
et. Manhattan
Jan, 28-29-Basketball, Missouri at Columbia.
Mar. 1-6—Religious Campaign.
Feb. 25-26—Basketball, Missouri a Lawrence.
Mar. 10—University Concert Course Emilio de Gorgoza.
Mar. 4-5—Basketball, Oklahoma at Norman.
2—Law Scrim.
Mar. 11—Sky War.
Mar. 17-19—High School Basketball
Tournament.
Mar. 31-University Concert Coun.
Flonzaley Quartet.
Apr. 8—Junior Prom.
Apr. 16—K. U. Karnival.
Apr. 16—K
Apr. 29—Journalism Jazz.
May 7—High School Interscholastic Track Meet.
Study Your Penmanship
May 14—May Fete.
May 21—Invitation High Schoo
Track Meet.
The study of the pemmanahhip of your friends will reveal some interesting things. Women are usually better at the pen than men -perhaps because their sense of beauty is higher and their thoughtfulness greater. The age of a person, his tidiness, carefulness, determination, nervousness, condition of health and various traits of character are all more or less clearly revealed by pemmanahhip and sons write exactly with the greatest rarity of words are F, S, T, H, I, M, t, s, o, e, d, p and n.
Safety razors and blades at Ran-ins Drug Store.—Adv. 6-2.
Everyone enjoys well-written letters. No objects to be a good penman, but many persons seem to feel that, like poets, good penman are born not made. Hence many are ready with excuses when their penmanship is criticized. "Taking lecture nobras ruins my penmanhip." "Great people are always poor writers," "I never studied it." Of my teachers gave me one method of penmanship, and then another gave us entirely different one, and the result is that I have neither." Thus the generations of allymen go on apologizing for themselves—Youth's Companion.
Ochino announces the pledging of Guy Boyer, e21, of Kansas City.
STUDENT VOLUNTEERS: There will be a very important meeting of
A. G. ALRICH
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Printing , Engraving , Binding
Printing , Engraving , Binding
Office Supplies , Rubber Stamps
Stationery , Seals , Stencils
202 Moe , Street
the Student Volunteers Wednesday evening at 7:00 o'clock in the W. Y. C. A. office of Myers Hall. If you are a Student Volunteer and not a member of the K. U. band you are specially urged to be present.
736 Mass. Street
The following books are wanted at the W. S, G. A, book exchange, and students possessing copies are asked to sell them:
Economics, Ely; Sociology, Blackmar and Gillan; Modern English Grammar, Blount and Northup; Algebra, Fite; Trigonometry, Ashton; Handbook for English Writers; Oldssey; Elementary Logic, Jevens, Psychology, Botany; Spanish Grammar; Calculus; Language dictionary, and freshman rhetoric books.
K Club meets Thursday at 7 o'clock in Green Hall. Very Important. John Bunn, vice-president.
What your Teller?
Suits and Overcoats for College Men
There have been a number of calls
What your Teacher?
AUTHORIZED BY
MARK B. MEYER
with superior workmanship and best of material
$40 up
Samuel G. Clarke
1033 MASS. STREET
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
1047 Massachusetts St.
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities, Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
"Simplicity of the "long is the hardest to be copied." — STEELR
W
SOME WOMEN ARE BORN BEAUTIFUL
OTHERS achieve beauty by making the most of their charms. No woman, how ever, is smarter than her clothes
Tms advances the problem where to obtain apparel that is at once distinctive and individual. We should say that any place which specializes in such apparel is a good place; and we might add that we spacialize.
Brenham'S
for Jevona's Introduction to logic. Will persons who have this book and wish to sell it bring it to the student book exchange in Fraser.
All Gymnasium regulatin gymnasium suits for women left in lock-
eras last spring that have not been called for by Wednesday noon will be sold. ADELADE STEGER.
Alpha Omicron Pl announces the pledging of Iida Lawson, Nowata, Okla.
News for the Student
Do you know that VANITY FAIR glove silk underwear is the finest made in this country?
A new shipment just opened consisting of Pettibockers, Stepins, Bloomers, Teddybears, Camisoles, Corset Covers, Union Suits, and Bodice Top and Round Neck Vest. Silk underwear is much cheaper than it was.
REGULATION BLOOMERS Middies and Ties
We have them in all sizes. Bloomers $3.50.Middies $3.00-$3.50, and hand made Windsor Ties in heavy Satin and Taffeta. Long Ties $1.25. Three corner ties $1.75.
WEAVERS
GIRLS!
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
1017 1-2 MASS. Also 726 1-2 MASS.
We have silk Oxford Laces at 35c
A man jumping off a cliff.
Want a thrill?
Enjoy Action?
Something brazy, full of two-fisted, red-blooded manhood?
Lots of action, heart interest and suspense?
We have it for you! It's
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS
in "THE MOLLYCODDLE"
MIS NEWEST AND GREATEST PICTURE.
VARSITY
Wednesday — Thursday
Paramount Magazine
PRICES: 11c and
BOWERSOCK Wednesday—Only Comedy—"She Me"
PRICES: 11c and 33c war tax included
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gem
the
de-
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COACH ISSUES CALL TO TRACK ATHLETES
To Stress Cross Country Run ning; Three Contests Scheduled
Track man of K, U will start practice unusually early this season. Next Wednesday, September 22, from 1 to 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Track Coach Carl Schlademan is asking every man to call at the athletics office in Robinson gymnasium the first work-up will be soon after.
Cross-country running, of course will be chiefly stressed, but all other men will also be given equipment anal- vise and encouragement in his try-out.
A squad numbering about 40 is expected out for cross-country by Coach Schlademan. Although not so well known as the more popular sports, letters are given for varsity competitors, the team makes several good plays. The second team entered in the Missouri Valley meet, which is to be hold this fall at Grinnell about the second week in November. The winner of the Missouri Valley meet is sent to the "Big Ten" meet. K, U., with seven men out for cross-country last season, finished fifth in the Big Ten Valley meet last fall, after which Ames entered, and won the "Big Ten" meet.
Promising runners who will be out for the long distance races this fall are Massey, MacMurphy, and Fitzgerald, from last year's team, and Wilson and Schuh, freshman runners, who showed up well last year.
The cross-country race is five miles in length, and is entered by a team of six men from each school. The order of the finishing of each of the first five from each team is added up, the lowest score winning.
Meets will be scheduled with Ames, Oklahoma, and Nebraska, and may be held with Missouri Thanks-giving Day. The squad will be dressed and handed out of the variegated dressing room in the basement of the gym for the first few weeks, when the twenty men has been picked, the outfitters will be moved to McCook Field.
"I see," remarked a gentleman as he paid a small newborn for his paper, "that you are putting up a new new building in your town."
"That is the only kind we put ui here, sir," replied the little fellow with a touch of civile pride —Judge.
Fourteen hundred girls in the University of Vienna are still wearing their 1914 clothing.
There were enough Smiths in the American Army during the war to make up fifteen complete regiments.
Scholarship is Open To Colored Women Here
Owing to the fact that the colored women students, to whom the scholarship offered by the Prince Hull Chapter of the Eastern Star was as录取, this university is Kansas University this year the scholarship is again open for applications.
This scholarship is awarded to colored women students of the University of Kansas who have above freshman standing. Applications will be considered until October 1, when the applications will be considered and the scholarship awarded to the most worthy applicant. The committee who will award the scholarship is composed of Wilson, Winston and Oliver.
Lutheran Church Has Student Entertainmen
Young men and women of the University who are members of the Lutheran Church, gathered in Trinity Lutheran Church parlors at eleventh and New Hampshire streets last Friday evening, and hold their acquaintance mixer. Forty of them gave their "first impressions" of one another in an opening game followed by other games and refreshments and music. Professor Frank W. Dillon, the officers of the young people's organizations welcomed the newcomers, Professor Frank W. Dillon was among those attending.
Pastor Geohring has recently come to Lawrence from three years at the head of student work in the University of Wisconsin. He has inaugurated the social refreshment hour for students at 6 p.m., Sunday evenings. He
believes that advertising pays and has made use of the advertising columns of the Kanman in displaying the ways 'in which Trinity Church invited' the interest of more than 10 million people and friends attending K. U, this year.
Guard Prohibition, Bryan Cries in "The Commoner"
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 20—Warning of the efforts to repeal the Prohibition enforcement law, William Jenners Bryan, in the current issue of his publication, The Commoner, argues against the proposed federal political affiliations in the context between wet and dry candidates for Congress. Every friend of prohibition should stand guard until the poll close and prevent the election of a wet congress, the article says. The two candidates, Mr. Hardling and Ms. Bryan, are out of their way to invite the wets to elect congress, Mr. Bryan says.
During 1019, 35,000 persons in New York State moved from country to city and only 11,000 from city to country.
The first county club to organize this fall will be the Barton county organization, according to an announcement of Guy Daniels, president of the club last year, calling on all Barton county students to meet Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 in Room 116, Fraser Hall.
Barton County Club First to Reorganize
The organization last year was composed of forty members, although Barton county is located "in the state" where wheat is grown in the grass region of the country. President Daniels expects a much larger club this year, as Barton county, which produced the largest wheat crop in the United States, has many new students to the University.
Students' Wives Will Organize. "K. U. Dames"
The "K. U. Dames" will organize again this year at the home of Mrs. Ralph Clayton, 2110 Barker, Wednesday afternoon at 3:00 o'clock. No invitations have been sent out, but all wives of graduate and undergraduate students are asked to come. The purpose this year will be purely educational.
In previous years the club has studied domestic science, art and literature. The "Damage" were organized in 1910 by Mrs. U. G. Mitchell, the "Aimee" at Princeton, and last year the "Organization had fifty members."
The Man—"To drown the cries of complaints of the diners when they see their bills"—London Opinion,
The Girl—"Why on earth does the orchestra always make that din in this restaurant?"
In the Latin tinthe the Senate meant "the old men"; in the American tongue it means "the Old guard."
DANCING SCHOOL
Opening Saturday Morning September 25 I.O.O.F. HALL
CLASS 9-10 a. m.
SOCIAL DANCING
10-12 p. m.
Mrs.J.L. Newhouse
Probably no phase of the amusement business has undergone a more remarkable development within the last year or so that that concerned with the sale of plays to the motion-picture industry. The motion-picture producers paid about $1,000 for the film rights to a successful lay-if, indeed, they bought it at all—and all hands were more than satisfied. Then, with the increased realization of the value of the play advertising to the pictures, the movie industry was happy ago they had reached the stage when $50,000 was being offered for some of the most successful of the season's plays, but today $50,000 is anything but an exceptional price. Recently, reports the New York Times $110,000 was refrained for the motion-picture industry because half a dozen or more instances where even that figure has been beaten—Current Opinion.
French Premier Accepts Nomination.
Paris, Paris 20. —Premier Millerand has decided to accept the nomination of Mr. Millerand, here it was stated authoritatively here.
Whitehead Gets Commission.
Emma G. Whitehead, A. B., '20, who has been a reporter on the Topeka Daily Capital this summer, has accepted a commission in the U. S. aviation corps. He will report at Camp Funston this week to await further orders.
Amusements Change
LOST—Pair gold rimmed, tortoise shells镊ed. Between Snow Hall and John M. Shea's office. Return to Kansan office. 7-3-29.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished rooms
4 blocks from University, $10
and $15 per month. Telephone 2743
White.
7-3-30.
Delta Tau Delta announces the pledging of Russell Davis of Athinson, Elmer Garson of Wichita, and Arthur Wolf of Wichita.
LOST—between Brick's and 16th Street last. Friday, bottom part of Waterman pen. Call 2381 Blue. 7.92
Two solicitors needed.
OR ETNT or Sale—New Remington typewriter in perfect condition. Call Adams, Phone 1361 White. 7-3-28.
"You look awfully tired, young man," said the elderly woman to the young man. "She looks under his arm.
"Yes, I'm studying for a doctor," replied the student.
Subscribe at the Daily Kansan Office Phone K. U. 66
O
Registering Shirt Satisfaction
"It's a shame! Why don't you let the doctor study for himself?"
And notices the snug set of the shoulders, the room yet fine fitting body, the well turned-back cuffs, and the liberal length.
I
When we win friends for our shirts, is when a man puts them on—
And all this in shirtings of a finely woven or printed kind, in patterns and colors that measure up to the particular ideas particular men favor.
The new shirts are here in all the newest fall styles—just ask to see the very, very latest.
$3 upward, others down to $1.65
SkofStadS
ELLING SYSTEM
United Press News Service gives the touch of world topics every student wants.
YOUR Daily Kansan $3.50 a year
"You get more when buying for cash only"
As essential as a collar button. For the Daily Kansan is a Carbon Copy of What
K. U. Does
THE TEA CARRIER
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Where You Will Find
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A beautiful mounting for your glasses, servicable too, adds the final pleasing note of distinction that means so much to the well dressed person. May we show them to you?
"Ye Shop of Quality"
Gustafson
FRANK ISE, Optomerist
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XVIII.
THOUSAND STUDENTS AT FIRST BIG RALLY
K. C. TRIPPERS CAME LATE
Everett Bradley, America's Premier Athlete, Given Ovation—Carried Around Field
180 K. C, K. Men in Thirty Cars Arrived Late and Saw End Of Practice
For this is "Kansas Year."
For this is "Russia"
At the first official rally on McCook
Flood Avenue, a thousand,
and about twenty-five women
were out practicing with Sandy Windsor and his assistants for the coming season.
Len by the University band, forty strong, the crowd marched around the field. Directly behind the band at the head of the marching students, half a dozen men carried Everett Bradley on their shoulders. After marching around the gridiron several times, Bradley was carried out in front of the gang, and he received applause when he appreciated their support, and that he would try to doze it during the entire season, by heading a winning track team.
NUMBER 8
SLOWED ON or POPED UP
Anistie by Curve Teum, and
Shekery Winderol the throng in some new yells and songs to be used this season. From the real "Thundering Thousand" students at the rally, came more enthiasm and pop shenanigans than at any time during last season. "This mob is just like the team, they are going to be the raggent," she said. "Uk has ever seen," says Sandy. "I want to see both the south and north bleacher fills Wednesday evening, and then next Tuesday afternoon at four o'clock. I would like to have to turn raving students away from the field. We need 'em out here at the practices as much as at the practice as that this year you will be here."
BOOSTERS CAME LATE
At 5:30 o'clock, the Kansas City
boosters arrived on the scene thirty
cars strong, 180 men strong. The pep
meeting, what was left of it, turned
loose with some rousing Rock Chalks,
and the boosters returned with some
of their own music and pep.
ELKS WILL BE HOSTS
Chancellor and Faculty to be Entertained This Evening
A reception will be held tonight at the Elks Club for Chancellor Lindley and other members of the University faculty. George L. Kreeck, mayor of Lawrence, will be tennantman, and another will be will be tennantman by Chancellor Lindley and other lead, elks Preceding the reception, there will be a business meeting of the Elks to which all students who are members of the Elks Club are invited. Those among them will be Chancellor Lindley, Dean F. J, Kelly, Dean F. W, Blackmar, Dean J. G, Brandt, Dean P. F, Walker, Dean Harold L, Butier, Dram Strong, Prof. A, J. Boynton, Prof. W. J. Baumgartner, of E.F. Ferguson, Prof. M. B. Houser, Prof. J. Whilter, Prof. William L, Burdick.
Members of the coaching staff and athletic department who will also be there are Coach Allen, "Ad" Lind-say, "S稼题" Stilusett, Coach Schlademan, Capt. George Nettels and Everett L. Bradley.
Several Fellowships in Graduate School Open
There are several vacancies in Graduate Fellowships to be filled. Graduate students desire to become candidates please apply at the Graduate School, Soboo; for application blanks. These fellowships pay $500 per annum. Graduate students of K. "7" or of other universities and colleges may become candidates. Please visit Blackman's office not later than Saturday noon, October 2.
Architects Hunt Watermelons Members of the department of architecture were entertained Tuesday evening at the country home of Miss Ora Nicholson, a student made up the entertainment of the evening, and refreshments of home-grown watermelons were obliged to hunt for them. Miss den about the yard, and the guests wert obliged to hunt for watermelon is one of the few women who are taking courses in architecture.
Liberal Arts Officers Elected for School Year
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1920.
The first meeting of the faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences this semester was called to order Tuesday afternoon by the Chancellor, Prof. W. S. Johnson of the department of Mathematics. Kester of the department of physics were nominated by a letter ballot for the administration committee of the College. The election will be held by letter ballot. Prof. U. G. Mitchell of the department of mathematics is the prefect secretary of the assembly.
The following named persons were reported as having completed the requirements for graduation established by the College Faculty;
nursed next spring.
Adolph Beese.
Mary Louise Branson.
Helen Louise Chambers.
Julius Edgar Cook.
Lloyd Frank Cooper.
Lillian Virginia Fish.
Addie Adlaide Freible.
Orna Frye.
Joseph Russel Garrison.
Margaret Groschenbacher.
Jean Rathburn Haines.
Marcus Albert Hannon.
Helen Hart.
Fenneman F. Hill.
Bannl L. Mitchell.
Mildred Rife.
Olive Reynolds.
Fern Louise Schick.
Margaret Ann Stewart.
George Emmanuel.
Ernesto Vaughan.
Winifred Emily Ward.
MILLION IS SUFFICIENT
Gerard Says Democrats Won't Need More Than $1,000,000
Washington, Sept. 22 — Democrats will be satisfied with a million dollar campaign fund, James W. Gerard, chairman of the Democratic finance committees, told the expenditure the administration committee of the Senate, office.
Two million dollars would be an exclusive fund, according to Gerard, the first witness before the committee today. He added he would turn back the money if he got as much as 85%. He said he would have retired. Gerard said that Bernard N. Larach would serve to on the committee but declined, and that efforts were being made to form Democratic fund-raising organizations all over the country. Kenyon asked about Tammany's activities. Gerard said it was because his raising money but has not yet contributed to the national fund."
Gerard said he had placed no limits on individual contributions and named contributors who gave $5,000 each. They included Bernard M. Baruch, August Belmont, C. T. Alexander, Robert DeBord, David Willard, embassador to Japan. William G. McAdoe gave $1,000 and secretary of War Baker gave fifty dollars, Gerard said, but it did not appear in the statement. Federal officeheld, will be asked for money today. Gerard said he was giving a spent on publicity and the Governor Cox's special train is costing $100,000.
SPOKE TO ENGINEERS
Chancellor Lindley and Captain Burdick Made Talks
Chancellor Ernest H. Lindley spoke to an assembler of engineering students at Marvin Hall at 10:30 o'clock this morning.
He particularly stressed the need of technical training, the necessity of clear English, the problem of getting acquainted with the best types of men on the campus and the value of training the last point he gave an illustration of the complaint of a great eastern university that many of its graduates went forth with their degrees to fill their own pockets instead of having the idea to serve mankind. The state spends $300 a year in college for university, he said, and naturally expects some return for the money spent.
Announcements were made con- cerning the various engineering societies open to the students of the de- apartment after the Chancellor's talk. After the meeting the freshmen were told of the advantages of the Reserve Officer Training Corp by Capt. H. L. Burdick; and a sora- neal recognition addition of the R. O. T. further said to Governor Henry Allen. He further said that unless 92 men en- rolled before Saturday the three u- nets, infantry, engineers and coast artillery, would not be possible at the University.
"Heavy Men Out for Kansas Does Not Mean Heavy Eleven"—Allen
SPEED AND CRIPPLES CLOUD K.U. FOOTBALL
NO REGULAR QUARTER YET
Director of Athletics Advises Fans to Wait Until End of Season to Get Total
"There are some heavy men out for the Kansas football squad this year, but that does not mean that Kansas will put a heavy team in the field. If the light men can get away, they are the man who will make the team. The new green men will be used in the earlier games rather than risk the old men who made good last season. Some of the old men have must win invaluable play by previous opponents that can be saved for the conference games, where the old fight must be present."
Part of Dr. Forrest C. Allen's football policy is embodied in the above declaration. All of the things that have to be watched are not covered, but many points of interest to fans should be added to the team's policy are shown.
NETTLE'S HAS BAD KNEE
Sixth candidates for the Varsity squad reported for practice Monday evening, and more would have been out if it had been possible to suit them up.
cripples are plentiful, too numerous, on the squash this year. Seven old letter men are out, and three are almost unplayable for play at this stage of the game. Wint Smith, 200-pound guard, was held out of scripimage Tuesday by the defending champion "Dustu" Lonberg, who has been sick at his home in Horton with a pair of bad knees, made his first appearance in a uniform Monday; but no one knows just how long he will remain in shape, as his knee kept him out of several games inst year. Captain Nettie is also bothered with her arm, which he kept him out of several games inst year. Captain Nettie is also bothered with her arm, which he kept him out of several games inst year. He will very probably not be used until late in the season.
Pep at Convocation
STILL SEARCH FOR PILOT
The quarterback position is still up in the air. John Bunn (Arizona) has Harley Little, most experienced of the men trying out for the pilot position, is ported to be troubled with indigestion and heart trouble. Other men are trying out for the directing position, but they are for the most part green, and one eye in shape to handle the Varsity in a big game, say the coaches.
Questioned as to the total number of points that Kansas might score during the year, Dr. Allen advised the fans to take the number after each game and total them at once. "After the game is over we will talk about how good a team we have."
Cosmopolitan Club to Be Reorganized Soon
The Cosmopolitan Club will be re-organized this year, it was learned this morning. The constitution has already been obtained and the work of reorganization is already under way.
Conductor F. E. Kendri of the University Orchestra announces a rehearsal of the following string players in Fraser Hall Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock. J. Dworkvit, C. Oakes, A. M. Drake, A. Armstrong, P. A. Readio, D. Scafe, J. Suidin, Mary Chase, and all Fine Arts violin students who have been requested to come.
Dr Lindley will preside at an all-University Convocation to be held Friday at 10:30 o'clock. Student organizations, religious and athletic activities will be discussed and talks made by prominent members of the faculty and of the student body.
"There is no reason why this movement for better feeling among foreign students who are away from home and friends should not prove a success in the school," the organization is very strong. "The University of Illinois and in eastern schools, and we plan to make it so in K. U."
Pete Jones, Gridiron
Anyone of foreign birth is eligible to membership. In some places, students of American birth, who intend to participate in a service work abroad are admitted.
Why did Pete Jones, all-valley guard in 1917, leave school?
Hope, Out of School
The athletic circles of the University are buzzing over the perplexing problem of the missing guard who returned to a blue practice jersey for the first time in three years, last week.
autumnite, his fraternity brothers in Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and his mate on the varsity square and "K" rub; he are frantically endeavoring to get him to return. Nothing is known of him. He gives no reason for leaving, but merely packed up and left.
COAST STORM TAKES 191 IN NEW ORLEANS
Hurricane Wipes Out Telegraph and Rail Service in Two States
Jones' home is in Council Grove.
New Orleans, Sept. 22. One hundred and ninety-one persons were killed in New Orleans and heavy damage done along the Louisiana and Mississippi coast by a hurricane of considerable intensity which struck midnight and swiped intoward Mobile, Ala. Lines are down in all directions out of New Orleans and it was impossible to get accurate data on the amount of damage and fatality.
A loaded train on the Louisville and Nashville railroad was marooned near Chessminton and nothing has been heard from it. The big Louisville and Nashville bridge at Ridgwayouts was reported running over the system between here and Mobile. The wind reached a velocity of 98 miles an hour, Wires, fences, trees and small buildings were blown down. One man was caught in a live wire dangling loosely and electromuted Louisville and Nashville, which damaged to their road east of New Orleans, Mobile reported rising tides this morning and a wind of 36 miles an hour.
DISCUSS ENDOWMENT?
University Endowment Association Here October 2
The University of Kansas Endow-
ment Association will hold a meeting
October 2, in the office of Chancellor
E. H. Lindley in Fraser Hall, accord-
ing to an announcement by Dr.
Frank Strong, president of the ori-
ganization. No word as to what
would be discussed at the meeting
was given out by the chancellor's of-
ice.
Prominent members of the Endow-
ment Association are: Chancellor
Lindley, J. W. Gleed, St. Louis, Mo;
Irvine Hill, of Lawrence; William
Allen White, of Emporia, W. Y. Mor-
gan, of Hutchinson; Mrs. John A.
Edwards, of Eureka; Thornton Cooke
of Kansas City, Md.; Thomas C.
Ullahill of Atchison; Clyde Miller, of Topeka; Prof.W.
H. Carruth, of Landstorf University;
and Prof. Olm Templin of
the University of Kansas.
The home economics department like the other departments and schools, has been benefited by the increase in student enrollment and have enlarged their department of food and nutrition into two sections.
They also include two men in their enrollment. One is taking a correspondence course in food and nutrition, while the leading classes in interior decorating.
E. H. LINDLEY.
Chancellor
Men Break Into Home Economics
Quill Club will meet Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock in Fraser Rest Room. All student and faculty members are asked to be present.
The recent violation of the date rule in connection with the dance of the American Legion was doubled due to a misstep, and the count however on the full cooperation of students and citizens of Lawrence in the whole-hearted maintenance of regulations which are placed upon them by both school and efficiency of our students?
FIGHTIN' KANSAS MEN IN FIRST SCRIMMAGE
First Team Under Harley Little Smashes Practice Squad In First Scrimmage
MORRISON KNOCKED OUT
Emporia Normal to be Team's First Victim—McCook Field The Seene
The Kansas football squad is a fighter's bunch. Ask unbelly, for more than a thousand roots worsened the first stratification of the Jayhawks grudron squad last night in a preseason game against eleven "taking on" the third team for a period of more than half an hour late in the afternoon.
Being members of the same squad did not abate the fury of the first attack one whit, for the first team, piloted by Harley Little, with Mandelveil, the Simon *p* #1. Lonborg made up in the rest of the backfield, smashed again, went through, and ran around, the lighter line with remarkable speed and power. The excellent condition of the team with which the men held up, only one man "Rod" Morrison, third team back being knocked out. Morrison received a smashing that ended his work for the afternoon, but the full extent of his injury is not yet known.
Could GO THROUGH SANDFEUR
The fast third team held the first eleven to small gains, however, exerted great pressure. They passed on. A later attempt at passing, "Arnie", Bell, right end on the third team ripped the ball from the air, slipped through the first-team backs, and got away for a 'touchdown' in Wood as quartback, carried the ball during the remainder of the scrimmage, and van their formations against the heavy line with remarkable smoothness and speed. Several efforts to slip a runner, with interception, allowed to tackle. Sanfeur, failed 'nugoriously', on the scrimmage line, however.
Three other elevenes practiced on the field, and sixty freshman labored on Hamilton Field getting in shape to tackle the varsity men in scrimmage the last of this week, or the first of next week, under the direction of Coach Limsey. Captain Harold D. Burdick, of the military department, has volunteered his skills when he busy directing the movements of the fourth squaw through its signal practice.
:PURGEON OUT NOW
New men on the field during the practices of Monday and Tuesday, who have been eagerly awaited by the football fans, are Triastin Spurgeon, heavy half from last year's freshman team, and former Pittsburgh Bulls player, Riley Borg, two letter man at end, and Valley right wing man last fall with "Scrubby" Laaslett, Roy Pringle, "Andy" McDonald and several others from last year's freshman squad, who have just this week arranged for the games.
Practice early in the afternoon included more than an hour of warming up signal practice, peep talks, and work on the charging machine quadrupled. The team under the direction of Line Coach Lassett threatened destruction of a new pneumatic dummy by their vicious tackling, while the backfield was deprived of practice after the imagined Missouri Tigers in fierce manner.
MAY SCRIMIMAGE INDIAN
hard practice, with short scrimages,
will continue through the week. The Haskell Indians are try-
ing to win against the team with the dayhawk squad sometime
next week, but nothing definite has yet been settled. The first game,
with the Emporia Presnals, on MeCook field, a week from next Saturday,
is expected to be the first "definite" line that fans will get on the
work of their favorites. Coach Allen is expected to put into practice his
team's strong defense, expected to see the theory of a replaceable backfield,
and fans are expected to see eight or ten of the first string backs used for
at least a few minutes, in the initial conflict.
Debaters to Come
There will be a meeting of all those enrolled in debating I, tonight at 7:30 p. m., in the Public Speaking Office in Green Hall. This meeting will be held on Saturday morning, and training of the classes this semester, and to outline the work to be done.
Send The Daily Kansan home.
Time Limit for Quill Extended Until October
The time limit for Quill Club try out, which in last night's Kansan was stated to close next Tuesday has been extended until some time the latter part of October. However, the club desires that all wishing to enter man uscripts do so as early as possible, in order that the committee which is to pass on the papers may begin its work at once.
Manuscripts may be left at boxes in the English office in Fraser or at the Kansas office. Any type of literary endevour will be accepted. Papers on a page will be accepted on one side of the paper only, and must be signed by the author.
Plain Tales Fron the Hill
It is rather strange why all of the girls who have accepted pins from the Hill men always lose them or else give them back. Anyway, something happens to them before many weeks of the new school year have slipped by. Already many of the fair damsels who have prided themselves on "his pin" laid it on the shelf and are now ready to entertain any motions or emotions, that might come before the house.
A Certain Professor who prides himself on being able to sleep late in the morning and still make his first class on time was very much angered this morning. He says that it is all right for his next door neighbor to up bring and early and mow the lawn but when his next door neighbor arouses him from his peaceful slumber at four-thirty in the morning, he asks why he thinks that that is carrying things too far. This Professor is contemplating a consultation with some one versed in the "morning" customs.
it is rumored about the Campus that the rather short fellow who was pinned for speeding during rush week is mourning the loss of a valuble fountain pen. In fact the fountain pen in question represents more than the average pen because that was the only change that this particular fellow received when the judge pronounced the sentence.
Already the old girls on the Hill, especially the last year Freshmen have felt the gradual decline in the number of telephone calls for which they were so accustomed in years gone by. We will all have to learn by experience that our best year is the yearling year.
MORE LAW STUDENTS
School Has Record Enrollment Of 125 Now
Late enrollments, and second semester newcomers, are expected to bring the total enrollment for the year to beyond the 250 mark.
Enrollment in the School of Law at the present time number 215, according to the office of the Dean. This enrollment is the largest since the founding of the school more than forty years ago.
Pick Rhodes Scholar For Kansas Thursday
The Rhodes scholar for Kansas for this year will be picked Thursday, by the selection committee in the office of Chancellor Lindley. The names of ten Kansas are invited, of the selection, however, not to be made public until late in October, when the news is sent out from Boston. The selection committee is composed of Dr. Frank Strong, chairman, R. E. Blake, S. Leahy, A. Pice, F. Johnson, and the Salina Daily Journal, Salina, Kansas.
The five K. U. men being considered for the scholarship, are A. O. Grief of Pittsburgh, Luther Hanger, of Wellington, Warren Watches, of Wichita, Curtis Nottels, Topoka, and K. C. Washburn, one from Fairmount, one from the College of Emporia are also in the race.
Four members of the faculty of the School of Medicine attended a meeting in Rosedale Monday. Those present were Dean L. E. Sayre, and Professors Sherwood, Coghill, and Nelson.
Owing to error in announcement of date, the Chancellor's First Lecture to Freshmen has been postponed until next fall. 4300 in Fraser Chapel. All Freshmen are required to be present.
LUNCHEON TICKETS
SOLD BY KUKU KLAN
Religion in University Subject Subject of Lindley's Talk at Pep Luncheon Thursday
EXPECT ONE THOUSAND
KuKu's Sold Many Tickets Last Night and Thursd day
Tickets for the big "Thunderning Thousand" Noonday luncheon to be held in Robinson gymnasium Thursday noon were sold last night and through the day today by a corps of fifty enthusiastic KuKu Klanners, who disposed of a large number of the pasteboards admitting to the jazz and pop function of the student body in Robinson gymnasium.
At a Kuki Klu Khan meeting last night, plans were completed for the attendance of the KuWu's at the lunchroom manse. They will sit together at a separate table, and lead the cheerring, under the direct supervision of "Sandy" Winper. A house-to-house convass of several sections of the student district was conducted by the KuKus, and many tickets sold.
Chancellor Lindsey, Dr. Forrest C. Allen, and the presence of the "Thriving Thousand" itself will be the focus of factors at interest at the meeting.
"The Relation of Religion to University Life," will be the subject of Chancellor Lindley's talk, which will be about 15 minutes in length.
Provision is being made for an attendance of more than one thousand men students at the luncheon. All fraternity lunches Thursday noon have been called off, and the fraternity men will all attend the pop meeting.
NEW EQUIPMENT NOW READY FOR R. O.T.C.
K. U. Rifle Team to be Developed in Military Department
4-New Equipment now Ready Men who enrolled in military courses this year will no longer have to drill with wooden wands and dummy guns. The infantry equipment, which failed to arrive last year, is now available at the University was not acceptable to the government has been corrected and within the last week all the infantry equipment has arrived. This includes haversacks and pack carriers, canteens, cups, knives, forks and spoons, meat cans, rifles and bayonets. The rifles are of the latest Springfield type, the same as the conventional Shoot was won. The military department has enough of these rifles to equip all men who enroll.
The head of the military department expects to be able to instruct actual work on an out-deer range some time next week. If possible, a K.U. rifle team will be designated as students. Trucks from the artillery department will be used to carry the students to and from the firing range. Most of this work will be held on Saturday mornings. It may be so arranged that small camping parties can go to the range on Friday afternoon and camp on the morning of Saturday before the rifle practice at an early hour Saturday morning. This work will be entirely voluntary and will be offered exclusively to R. O. T. C. members.
Old-Fashioned Burglar Didn't Have Flashlight
Early Wednesday morning a burglary attempted to rob the home of Mrs. Lava Kinney at 1708 Louisiana Street, but was so poisoned that he could not walk. The screened and spread the alarm, frightening the intruder away.
The mawrer entered by the front door which had accidently been left open during the night. Unable to find the door, she stumbled and started to light matches. The flare of light and the unusual noise awoke Miss Ramsey, and she, thorny frightened, called for help, awakening her grandmother and aunt in distress. She was then heard. Neighbors were called in but the visitor was not to be found.
Claude Kelsey, c23, Kansas City, Mo. enrolled Tuesday in the School of Fine Arts. Mr. Kelsey had previously gone to the University of Missouri but was unable to get the courses he wanted.
---
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Editor-in-Chief... Genva Hunter.
News Editor... Walter G. Haren
Telegraph Editor... Ruth Armstrong
Telegraph Editor... A, E, G Arvine
Sport Editor... A, E, G Arvine
Alumun Editor... Bong Hoag
Lacoche Editor... Lacoche
Exchange Editor... C, C, Nicolet
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry P, McCary...Business Mgr.
Lloyd Ruppenthal. *Not Business Mgr.
Deane W, Malott. ...Circulation Mgr.
Catherine Oder
Grace Olsen
Gilbert Sweanon
Media, Smith
James Austin
Burt E. Cochran
Ferd Gottlieb
Alfred Graves
J. J. Kistler
Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail mast
September 17, 1916, at the post office
at Lawrence, Kannas, unde the act of
March 3, 1879.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism at the University of Kansas, the press or the Department of Journalism
Address all communications to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66
The Daily Kansan aims to picture a undergraduate of four or more years of education than the merely printing the news by attending for the ideas the thesaurus of the art critic or the critics to be clean; to be cheerful; so be charitable; to be courageous; to embody the items to wiser heads; in all to make friends with the students of the University.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1920
ARE YOU INTERESTED?
A rumor has reached the Kansas office that the University of Kansas may lose one of its R. O. T. C. units. We believe that this would be a very important thing for the University. Not only from the fact that this report would go broad-cast throughout the country and that other institutions would know that the University of Kansas had failed to make good in this line, but it would also show that the Pacifist Spirit was once more creeping back into our midst. If this report is true, it is due to the fact that out of our 2,000 men there are not 200 who have interest in developing a strong protection policy. Is there any man in the University who cannot firmly say, not only with his lips but also in his heart the following?
"I believe in the United States of America as a government of the people by the people, for the people; when just powers re derived from the consent of the governed; a democracy in a republic; a sovereign nation of many sovereign states; a perfect union, one and inasparable; established upon those principles of freedom, justice, equality, and humanity, for which American patriots sacrificed their lives and fortunes! therefore believe it is my duty to my country to love it, to support its constitution; to oceans its flag; to respect its flag; and to defend it against all enemies."
We believe that every man and woman here believes the truths set forth in this paragraph. If you do believe the truths therein stated, are you willing to stand aside and see this privilege offered to us by the Government taken away? We are informed that in order to insure the three units now established at the University, it will require 100 more men. Are there not 100 men who will willingly subscribe to this cause in order that the units which are now established may be maintained. We believe in this movement toward keeping operation in a position of preparedness and believe in its support.
PLEA
The Daily Kansan is the medium through which the news and opinion of the University are expressed. It is one of the greatest means the University possesses for creating loyalty and support to the school and to student endeavor. There is not a student on the Hill who does not look and expect the Kansan each day. It is a recognized force by the entire school. But supporters of the school paper are forced to admit that the daily paper and its department has the poorest and most inadequate building accommodations of any department or institution on the Hill. The Kansan has taken the "leavings," although it has long since outgrown such. When old grades come back to the
When old grads come back to the
Hill, they cannot but notice that the Kanan is in the "same old building." When visitors are on the Hill, you visit the Kanan, its poor housing facilities are certain to detract from its force and influence as a part of the institution. Yet the Kanan is the medium of student opinion. If improvements of any kind are forthcoming about K. U. we feel that a Journalism Building should come near the head of the list.
SAFE IN THE RANKS
"Where O where are the verdant freshmen." They are here, stronger than ever before, but they have "passed on," as it were, after their first initiation into the University, which occurred last Friday at Convention. The young neophytes were fathered into the new fold by Chancellor Lindley. They received their first mouthful of the code of eiquette which will make them University men and women.
"Master your work from the start," was the Chancellor's advice. Preserve your health, save your money, exercise your mind, as a means of avoiding "dementia praecox," know people, and attend the University convocations. These make up the master keys for the freshman who would succeed.
With this advice from the University's head, the froth has passed through the first portal of higher learning.
"Where O where are the verden
Safe now in the K. U. fold!
Campus Opinions
Editor Daily Kansan:—
M plea is for the pedestrian. Now that the road along our Mountain Ordead is to be fixed to gladen the heart of every joy rider it is time to think what should be done in order to prevent any serious accidents. Strictly speaking, automobiles should not be allowed on the Hill at all. But that seems to be in the question. And yet it is done at the schools so why not ours? At the University of Calgary students with cars there is one piece set aside for the parking of the cars and no infringement allowed.
The polestrian has no chance when a string of cars come along of getting across the road until it has passed by. This same decennial feature also includes the polestrian themselves. It is to be considered of course that the first week every body stops to say "hello" and "what have you been doing all summer," but now that the first week is passed let us not hurry, but instead may block it for you some day and you wouldn't like that. Pedestrian.
Editor, Daily Kansas:—
Editor, Daty Kawansi:
Of singular note at the Convocation hold insist Friday was the譬言 of the Engineer, force men, making themselves known with their yells and songs.
The College has a good yell, and there is no logical reason why it should not be known and voiced at convention, especially when the different students are required to no effort was made last year to get the students of the College together for the purpose of rehearsing their battle-ery. There is no 'exuse' why the biggest school of the University should go silent at student gatherings so that the conversations in getting to quelch and learning a few simple yells.
Ever faithful, near at hand
Like sentry on my desk you stand.
ever giving without quibbling
Color enough for all my scribbling.
To an Inkstand
Let's get busy. A College Student
Yet when I've drawn your fluid clear
and naught but dregs in you remain
I cast you out, like trash forgot,
For causing just one old age blot.
"I am sorry your little boy is sick He was so delighted with the water-molon that I let him have an unusually large portion of it."
"Well, he is no longer delighted; he is melon-colic."—Baltimore American.
A very important meeting of Aboku will be hold Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in Room 106 Green Hall All members please be present.
i cringe! This is much the way,
I go at all close of some hard day.
hey boy! Give this a renovation.
"You'll work all right with a good u
Twilight work all right with a good vibration.—H. D. Thompson in the New York Sun.
Mental Lapses
Bacon: "They say when a man's on sare red that somebody's talking about him."
Egert—"Yes; and he can just bet that somebody is talking about him if his nose is red." —Yonkers Statesman.
There is an elevator bim in a New York office building who is among a large number of public servants who present needless questions.
One day there entered his car a rather fussy old lady and garrulous as well.
"Don't you ever feel sick going up and down in this elevator all day?" he asked.
"Yes, ma'am!" said the boy.
"It is the motion going down?" No, it wasn't.
"The motion going up?" No, it wasn't.
Is it the stopping that does it? No, ma'am.
Then, what is it?
"Then, what questions, ma'am?"—verybody's Magazine.
Recess
After three days in the whale's interior, Jonah was proudly kneeling to give thanks to God for his escape, when his eyes and ears were assuilied.
Whereupon he rose from his knees, swore softly and fluently, and—signed for another whale—Life.
Six campaign orators,
A free-verse magazine,
A notice of twenty-five per cent
advance in the rent of his apartment,
Seven newspapers with headlines
promising "probes," "grills",
"drives" and "wars on high prices";
Advertisements of fourteen access-
ories guaranteed to double the mileage
of his charlot and his charlot tires.
Whereupon he rose from his skies,
swee softly and fluently, and—sig-
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Educational Jolts
For years we Americans have adopted an attitude of complacent satisfaction toward our schools. We know that we believe in an educational opportunity for all; and we have incorporated this belief in compulsory educational laws. We know that we have many fine school buildings, many fine college buildings—perhaps the best districts, we have a traditional faith in the efficacy of "the little red school house."
Use the Kansan Classified Columns
We all know that many of our big men- in politics, in business, in the professions—are products of those humble institutions.
Have You Lost Anything?
A Daily Kansan Lost Ad Will Find It.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
But a few years ago that complaint satisfaction gave a rude jolt. That jolt would have awakened us to the truth, had not so many other momentous things crowded fast upon our attention. With the coming of the World War and the draft, a big cross-section of a cross section that represented all classes, city and country, North, East, South, West—and given a literacy test such as no mammoth cross-section had ever been given. Unlike the censuses-takers, the Army boards did not ask a man: "can you read and write?" They subjected him to a questionnaire, could read a newspaper intelligently, to see if he could write an intelligent book. No ambitions tests. Literacy could hardly ask less. But practically one man out of every four (24.9 per cent.) failed. That cross-section was representative of our nation. Its showing means that one fourth of our population is illiterate. It was often hard to explain so many others, it is the glamor of tradition that has us astray, for it is the much-cherished "little red school house" that is the chief sinner. — Extract "The Crisis in Our Schools" by George MacDaniel in Our Work's
Do You Want Help?
Or call at Daily Kansan Business Office
Have You Anything to Rent or Sell?
A Daily Kansan for Sale or Rent Ad will accomplish Your Purpose
A Daily Kansan Want Ad Brings Forth Intelligent Job Seekers Who Want Work
Telephone K. U. 66
VOLY
PYRALIN
VOGUE BEAUTY PARLOR FOR
Over Gustafsons
Scalp Treatment Facial Massage
Shampooing Manicuring
OPEN EVENINGS
MRS NELLIE BEAL
711 1-2 Mass.
Phone 346
FOR RENT - For boys. One large double room, well furnished. Twenty Dollar per month. Call 1610 Rhode Island St., Phone 10020. 6-5-25.
A ROOM for two boys. 1340 Vf.
Phone 1361 Black. Mrs. C. L. Wall.
6-5-25
'OR RENT=Comfortable, room on first floor with private entrance. suitable for one man. Price. $10.00.
320 Vermont. 6-5-22.
WANT ADS
LOST—A pocketbook containing
$12.00 bills and blank check on Ottawa, Kans. Bank between Victory Ciffe and 1200 Ky. Call 711-63-21.
MUSICAL KINDERGARTEN-For pupils 5 and 6 years up. Games, songs, etc. Lora Maria Rub. 1234 Orcad. Phone 2304. 4-5-4.
SOCIAL Dancing Class every Tuesday night, 7:30 to 8:30 over Dick Bro's. Private lessons by appointment. Call 2216 White. 4-5-9.
ROOM FOR RENT - Double or sin-
gle for girls. One block from
campus. Phone 2506. 249 Ohio. Mrs.
Garrett. 5-15-9
LOST—Pair gold rimmed, tortoise
shelled glasses. Between Snow Hall
and John M. Shea's office. Return to
Kansan office. 7-3.29
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished rooms
four blocks from University, $10
and $15 per month. Telephone 2743
White. 7-3-30.
LOST—between Brick's and 16th Street last Friday, bottom part of Waterman pen. Call 2381 Blue. 7.0.00
FOR RENT or Sale—New Remington typewriter in perfect condition. Call Adams, Phone 1351 White. 7-3-28.
LOST-Elgrin bracelet watch, initials
J. M. M. in back. On Campus south
or tennis courts Tuesday morning
Jesus Miure, 814 Alyssa
Red. 8:3-31
7-3-27.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex-
clave Optomatrata). Eyes exam-
glasses; made office. 1025 Mas.
*
DR H. REDING, F.A. U. Building, Eye,
ear, nose, and mouth. Special attention to fitting grasses and tonsil
work. Phone 313.
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jack son building. General practice. Special attention to nose, throat and ear. Telephone 217.
DRS, WELCH AND WELCH - PANEER
Office 128, Suite 305, Huntington,
Phoenix, Office 115, Inc. MISSING
DR J R BECHTEF, Rooms 2 and
over McKinney's Drug Store. Office
109, Suite 456, Huntington,
Phoenix, Office 115, Inc.
DR, G. W, JONES, A. M, M. D, Diageo of stomach, surgery and gynecology. Suite 1, R. F A U Blg. Phones 35, Residence 35K2, Hospital 1745
DRI. ALBRIGHT - Chiropractor - Radio-
Therapy - Massage - Results guar-
nanted 1191 Mast St. Phone 1431,
Residence Phone 1761.
EDWARD HUMGARDNER — Dentist
Room 511 Perkins Hldg. Special attention to extracting. Phone 511.
Z. H. TIBBETS — Dentist. 927 Mass St.
Phone 185.
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
Welcome Students
We Serve
CREAM WAVLES
with creamy butter and pure
maple syrup and a cup of good
coffee all for.
15c
SUPREME CAFE
914 Mass. St.
Want a thrill Enjoy Act
We have it for you! It's
Something breezy, full of two-fisted, red-blooded manhood?
Lots of action, heart interest and suspense?
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS in "THE MOLLYCODDLE"
HIS NEWEST AND GREATEST PICTURE.
VARSITY Wednesday Thursday Paramount Magazine
PRICES: 11c and 33c war tax included
BOWERSOCK Wednesday—Only Comedy—"She Me"
At the
At the
BOWERSOCK—THURSDAY
GEORGE WALSH
×
"SINK OR SWIM"
for EVERY LINE
LEFAX LEAF-FACTS
Classified Standard Loose Leaf, Fact Recording and data system for professional. technical and business men everywhere. It is for you.
LEFAX will save you both time and money.
Don't fail to investigate.
F. I. CARTER Distributor
1025 MASS. PHONE 1051
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
Halle
sturtus
on the
board
are
Al.
wars a
Karas a
Seen
the
board
located
and the
titles a
brent
romely
They the
science
need
con
physics
have
of the
portions
orteir
So
large
velocity
cent
the
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.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
.C.K. PLEDGES ITS SUPPORT TO LINDLEY
Goodfellows" From Kansas City Witness Varsity Practice On Metook Field
The Kansas City, Kansas "Good.low Boosters" came; they saw, andy pledged their support to a big-er program for the University of
The K. C. Goodfellows were escorted into town by a committee of men from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. They were brought to the university first, where Chancellor Indley spoke to them from the platform in front of Fowler shops. He said the men from Kansas' largest college just what the University is doing and what it expects to do in future. "This is your institution" he said "and you can either feed it and keep it growing or you can starve it. It is my judgment that at present are from five to ten years behind the times but none of us is too old to arm."
A. J. Stanley of the Kansas City number of Commerce responded to a Chancellor's address by pledging to support a larger oram for K. U.
The procession of more than thirty era was then escorted to McCookield where Dr. Allen was working at 120 football men. The cars drove on the field where several hundred udents were waiting for them. The well-known crowd in Kansas City responded to every one.
Boasts A Real
"Plane" Reporter
Because of its late arrival the army was forced to spend only a few minutes here. It was due in Topek's supper.
Baltimore, Md., Sept. 22--The Aerobike reporter" is here. He is member of the staff of the Baltimore Evening Sun and he flies a plane, recently purchased by Airbus, to its news-athering equipment. The "air reporter" is Lieutenant William D. Tippon, former United States Army aviator, who shot down seven German lanes and one boche balloon on therench fighting front. He was also sent to the prisoner for a time in the Germans.
The Evening Sun purchased the Jane to test out its practicability for nicely covering important news events at points in Maryland and lightly covering the light of byram from usual automobile, and for taking unusual pictures.
Leiteman Tipton on September 4, ew thirty-five miles to sea off Deauville coast in an effort to photograph the coast of France between 55 and 90 miles off and Tipton has positive instructions not to go more than 20 miles out, because of the inability of a airplane to "land" on water.
One of the important uses for which we plane is intended is the covering news events on the Eastern shore Maryland. The grouping in relation to jibs on the Eastern shore make a gathering of news there by stafflers slow because of the time reeled to reach any of the towns by brief means of travel. With the one in office at the Eastern shore by flying me is within an hour or so of Baltimore.
Aerial photographs of all sections Baltimore have been taken from plane and printer in the photovacreation section of the Sunday Sun, among other photographs made was one of a train wreck and another of a battleship fleet in the Anaulis harbor.
Vill Continue Giving Aid to All Railroads
Washington, Sept. 21—Approximately $82,000,000 has been paid by a Government to the railroads under the Gech-Cummings Act. Payment must continue until the roads receive approximately $600,000,000, it was estimated. The exact amount may not known yet, the Examiner said today.
The Guaranty clause provides that the Government must pay the roads sum sufficient to insure a standard turn by the end of the war, and give owners ownership. The annual return is the average return of the roads for pre-war years.
Gamma Phi Beta announces the riding of three girls whose nanes are omitted from Monday's list; use Holdman, Kansas City, Mo.; Charvant, Phillipsburg, Ga.; Georgia France, Cheyenne, ins.
WHAT HAPPENS THIS YEAR
Sept. 25—Freshman Blowout.
Oct. 2-Freshman Mixer.
Oct. 2—Football, Emporia at Lawrence.
Oct. 9 - Sophomore Miss.
Oct. 9 - Football, Washburn at Law-
rence.
Oct 12—University Concert Course Margaret Matzenauer.
Oct. 16—Football, Drake at Law-
Oct. 23—Senior Mixer.
Oct. 23 - Football, Ames Aggies at Lawrence
Oct. 30—All-University Hallowe'en Party.
Oct. 30-Football, K. S. A. C., a Manhattan.
Nov. 6—Football, Oklahoma at Nor-
Nov. 9—University Concert Course.
Oiga Steeb and Jasha Jacobinoff.
Nov. 12—Symphonies-Horns.
Nov. 13—Football, Nebraska at Lawrence (Homecoming Day.)
Nov. 25-Football, Missouri, at Col umbia.
Dec. 3—Law Scrim.
Dec. 8—Law Schrm.
Dec. 14—University Concert Course,
Myrna Sharlow.
Jan. 7-8—Basketball, Drake at Law.
Jan. 11—University Concert Course Agnes Lapham.
Jan. 14-15—Basketball, Ames Aggles
at Ames
Jan. 21-22 -Basketball, Grinnell at Lawrence.
Jana. 28-29—Basketball, Missouri at Columbia
eb. 4-5—Basketball, K. S. A. C. at Lawrence.
tb. 17- University Concert Course,
Ijnats Friedman.
'eb. 9-10—Basketball, Washington,
at Lawrence.
Ignate Piccman.
Feb. 18-19—Basketball, K. S. A. C.
at Manhattan
Feb, 25.26-Basketball, Missouri at Lawrence.
Mar. 1-6—Religious Campaign.
Mar. 4-5—Basketball, Oklahoma at Norman.
Mar. 10-University Concert Course Emilio de Gorgoza.
Mar. 17-19—High School Basketball Tournament.
Mar. 31—University Concert Course
Flonzaley Quartet.
May 7—High School Interscholastic Track Meet.
Apr. 29—Journalism Jazz.
Apr. 18—K. U. Karnival
Apr. 29—Journalism Jazz
Apr. 8—Junior Prom.
Apr. 16—K U Kernival
Flonzaley Quartet.
Apr. 8-Junior Prom.
May 21—Invitation High School Track Meet.
Senate Investigates German Propaganda
Hawkins, Sept. 21.—Alleged German propaganda in the United States will be investigated in the Senate committee inquiry into the two campaign funds, which will resume sessions here today. A lead concerning alleged use of money in connection with the campaigns by some agencies which during the war handled Teuton propaganda, has been furnished the committee.
Too Few Trained Teachers
Too Few Trained 'Teachers'
A. O. Neal of the Bureau's division of rural education, has prepared the following summary as to the country's book for its high school teachers:
The total number of high school teachers reported is 84,988. One fifth of this number, required annually, is 16,887. The supply of adequately prepared high school teachers must count in the total number of courses. The total number of graduates receiving the A. B., and B. S. and Education, was 21,497. It is estimated that one third of the total number of graduates will enter teaching. This indicates a supply of 7,163 teachers from this source and another 9,834 teachers to be supplied this year by teachers below his successor. He was a representation—World's Work.
A number of students from the School of Medicine, who are enrolled in a Bio-Chemistry class for Saturday morning sent in a signed petition asking that time at meeting be changed to some regular school day. The faculty found it impossible to
Lately, here and there about the campus, we have noticed any number of canes; and in each and every case it is worthy of note to mention that to each and every cane we have seen attached a senior law student.
What's in a Cane Is Big Question
Usually when a man wears a cane it is because he is crippled some place or other. But that's the old way to be capped, and covers their respective students. They don't seem to be crippled—the students, we mean. At least if they are it isn't apparent. Funny,n't you know? The covers that cover it up, but we don't know.
Surely the study of law doesn't weaken one's understanding. At least not to the extent of rendering one dependent upon a case.
Vanity? Not after all these years, we hope.
Is it protection? But that's absurd. From whom might a senior law need protection?
Lander's
QUALITY JEWELRY
Now there's dignity. But shucks,
there never was any use in wearing
two vests.
Brock Pemberton, A.B.'08, has made his initial appearance in the theatrical world as a producer with "Enter Madame," at the Garrick Theater, New York. The play has proved one of the "hits" of the current season.
THE confidence reposed by customers in our ability to faithfully discharge their every wise in the tailoring of their clothes and the faithful performance by us in expressing their desires is
There's no getting away from it It's really perplexing.
K. U. Graduate Produces Popular New York Play
M
Mr. Pemberton began his career as a reporter on the Emporia Gazette, later moving to New York. His first metropolitan position was with the Evening Mail, doing ship news. Later he became dramatic editor, who won the People's World where he beam an assistant in the dramatic department. From that time on his rise in the dramatic profession has been rapid.
Our repair department has been enlarged to insure prompt attention for all work. 827 Mass. Street
You don't have to wait a thousand years for your watch left at
The K. U, Society of Biological Research will meet at 4:38 o'clock Friday afternoon in the library of Snow Hall.
All B. P, O. E, Students are invited to attend the reception and banquet to Chancellor Lindley Wednesday evening at eight o'clock at the local Elks Lodge, 725 Vermont Street.
Meeting of Kappa Phil is called for Wednesday afternoon in the Women's Rest Room in Fraser Hall.
John U. Highbenthear, touring from Detroit to Los Angeles, stopped over in Lawrence for Rush week. He stayed at the Phi Gamma Delta house.
Regular meeting of Women's Glee Club at 7:30 tonight, Administration Building.
TEXAS CLUB will have a short meeting in Fraser rest room Friday afternoon at 4:30. All students from the club get acquainted and get acquainted - PRESIDENT.
STUDENT VOLUNTEERS. There will be a very important meeting of the Student Volunteers Wednesday evening at 7:00 o'clock in the W. Y. C. A. office of Myers Hall. If you are a Student Volunteer and not a member of the K. U. band you are specially urged to be present.
K Club meets Thursday at 7 o'clock in Green Hall. Very Important, John
ANNOUNCEMENTS
-Expert Repair Service-
Sigma Phi Sigma announces the pledging of James Rees of Smith Center, Kansas.
B. McCOLLOCH, Druggsge
Mccollom Kodaks
L E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mora St.
THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St.
712 MASS. ST.
GIRLS!
Our Guarantee of Satisfaction
We have silk Oxford Laces at 35c
W. E. WILSON
1017 1-2 MASS.
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
For Quality, Style and Workmanship
Also 7261-2MASS
LAMM
THE BOOK OR FINE ALBUM
Bunn, vice-president.
The following books are wanted at the W. S. G. A, book exchange, and students possessing copies are asked to sell them:
Economics, Ely; Sociology, Blackman and Gillan; Modern English Grammar, Blount and Northup; Algebra, Fite; Trigonometry, Ashton; Handbook for English Writers; Oddyssey; Elementary Logic, Jevens, Psychology, Hunter; Botany; Spanish Grammar; Calculus; Language
LELAND M. SHOUT Magazine Subscriptions
925 Indiana
AFTERNOON, and the
dictionaries, and freshman rhetoric books.
There have been a number of calls for Jevav's Introduction to logic. Will persons who have this book and wish to use it exchange the student book xchange in Fraser.
All Gymnasium regulatg gymnasium suits for women left in lockers last spring that have not been sold. They are be so be sold. ADELAIDE STEGER.
Phones, 593 or K. U. 58
SOL MARKS
A Front Porch Speech
Phone 499
CLASSY looking chap
WHO was making a
817 Mass. St.
Students wants our specialty
The Home of Rookwood Pottery
S
FRONT porch speech to a
Clothes Called For and Delivered
INDULGED in small talk and
DISCUSSED impending dates.
HE seemed to be
We press 'em while you get your hair cut at HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
When in want of "JEWELRY" why not trade with the house which affords you the largest and best selection, we say it, not boastfully, that no where in Lawrence can a stock compare to ours. A mere look and you will cease to wonder why they all trade at
WINNING the favor of
HIS small but select
AUDIENCE. "O," she interrupted,
POINTING to the Robert E.
HOUSE label on his cout,
"I ALWAYS knew you had
GOOD judgment, and that
PROVES it."
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
THE STUDENT CLEANERS
EATON & FRAKER
"I CLAIM," he drawled,
I CLAIM, he drained,
"THAT my judgment on
CLOTHIES is as good
AS my judgment on
GIRLS and you'll
HAVE to admit that's
FIRST class."
The Students Store
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
1047 Massachusetts St.
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty
Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic
Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in
multiples of $10.00.
Robert E.
HOUSE
"Quality and Service"
INSURANCE
THE
155
AGENCY
Lawrence Katsas
"Insurance agents are not generally appraised at their true value to the communities which they serve.
The Insurance Agent
No class of salesmen must work harder to sell their goods; few labor more persistently to land a customer, calling on him at night at his home, if they can't corner him in his office in the day time.
"A man will give patient ear to an oil stock salesman of a get-rich-quick concern because the average imagination submits readily to suggestions of fabulous wealth. Most men love to dream.
"But the insurance agent peddles no dreams. He makes law-proof guarantees. He is able to tell you that at the end of a certain period your policy will be worth so much. True, he does not promise that you will roll in automobiles, but he does pledge that your family will be provided for when their bread-winner has departed." -Cincinnati Post,
The One Double Three Agency is giving the public service on anykind of insurance. Phone 133 now and a re-entry fee at all at any convenient time for you.
Mrs. Johnson's Shop Now located in the Stubbs building
Shampooing Marcelling Manicuring
SPECIAL TREATMENT OF THE HAIR
Sale of first quality hair-nets at $1.00 the dozen
Hallam,
vitrine of the
ancient city.
Al-
cina a
carara
been
nearby
located
and the
lattices
rent in
rooms. They
the house
need
a con-
physic in
gu of the
portes
ortle
large
velop
cent
the
later
not
cut
gen
the
de-
the
the
g
the
g
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CONDITION OF CITY WATER IS UNCERTAIN
City Officials and Newspaper Continue to Wrangle Over Water Tests
The exact condition of the Law-
rence city water, in regard to its re-
lation to the public health, in the
public interest, by both regular
newspapers and on the part of
city officials this week. The Law-
rence city water is used direct from
the mains in all student homes and
residential areas, as well as in
Lawrence homes.
City officials have refused to make any announcement as to the use of the water. Late last week, however, Dr. A. W. Clark, city health officer, wrote a notice for publication, warning water consumers to boil all city water and not use it. The city water department prevented its publication, on the grounds that full confirmatory results had not been gotten.
Miss Martha Bayas, Lawrence city bacteriologist, announced the press, of B. colo organisms in the water which she regarded as evidence of a bacterial attack made by her of the water taken from the tap, on last Saturday and Sunday. The general bacterial count was well within the safety码, she said, and but for the absence of large numbers, would have been safe.
Directly opposing the finding. Miss Hays, is the tests made Monday, day of this week by the University water laboratory. Water in the University mugs last Saturday. The laboratory explained that the coefficients in findings might be due to the fact that the University was using so small an amount of water that the unfavorable incubation might occur and not admit it, it said, that the supply of alum which used in treatment of the water, had run low, but declares that a half ton was received, and that a shipment of several tons is now at the plumbing with alum and chlorine has not been stopped at any time, the officials declare.
MANY "SAXS" MISSED
Instruments Disappeared a Mysteriously as They Sound
A saxophone thief is abroad in the land. Four of the pipeshaped jazz instruments have been pilfered from University students. Five complaints received in the sheriff's office in lawrence, A young man giving his name as Harold York, who purported to be a student in the University, obtained a $10,000 reward that he wanted to use them on a boarding house dinner dance.
Just what the musical young son wanted with the saxophone has not been enough for him to force, but they claim to have found out his real name and place of residence, and say that they are not yet ready to take action against him.
The first "sax" reported missing was that of Edwin Archer. Then came a report from Kansas City,
telling of the theft of another instrum-
ment from L. E. Peter, offset at city,
which it was thought, had been
brought to Lawrence by the man who
gave his name as York. The other
thefts, which were reported to the
police last late week, were from
Early L. Miller, 1127 Alahama,
and Carroll C. Miller, 941 Alabama
street.
Another change for the better in the rules is forbidding the practice of clipping or spiking a man, whether or not the ball is dead, if done to a man obviously out of the play. Roughing the forward passer is considered unnecessary roughness if committed after the pass has been made. Both referee and lineman are charged with the watching of men in motion before the ball is put into play, and the player making a shift, must have both feet stationary (if he has). Time on completed forward passes will be taken up until play starts again. In case of a purposefully false starring signal the referee may depend that play be made over again.
An interesting little anecdote is of Mr. Lloyd George by Holden Spend in his newly published work on the career of the British Prime Minister. Young Lloyd George went up to London in 1884 to pass his final examinations, and found time to attend a debate in the House of Commons. He was fortunate to be present at a lively skirmish between Lord Randolph Churchill (father of Winston S. Churchill, the present War Minister) and Mr. Gladstone." "It was a clever piece of comedy," the future premier is quoted as saying, a little later. "I thought Churchill an impudent, apathetic, ill-tempered man and I thoroughly enjoyed his speech. Although politically Mr. Lloyd George is generally regarded as following in the footsteps of the former statesman it is doubtful whether he hasn't, on occasion, shown himself an accomplished master of parliamentary 'impudence' Lord Randolph Churchill admired courage, no matter how, or from what quarter of the political arena it came——Christian Science Monitor.
One Harold York, who lives in Kansas City, was investigated by the police here, but was found not to be the man who visited Lawrence.
NEW FOOTBALL RULES
Vary Only Slightly From Last Year's Rules
Why waste steps? Buy your official Gymnasium BLOOMERS and MIDDIES at ROWLAND'S ANNEX Next door to Brick
PROTCH The College Tailor
Some changes have been made in the football rules for the coming season, and among the more important is the abolishing of the punt out, that is after a touchdown, the side making the touchdown in any part of the field, may bring the ball out straight in front of the goal for the try at goal. The object in doing away with the old punt out is obviously, to lessen the chance of two field goals, from a drop kick, resulting in a tied score where the opposing side has scored a legitimate touchdown. The rules committee in making this change, felt, that a touchdown was earned more than the six points given for two drop kicks.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Yes, Ladies, They Are Here
Those new patent leather pumps we have been promising for several days made with Baby Louis heels—pretty plain toes—light flexible turn soles.
See them in our window.
With the new short skirts, they will be unusually appealing.
$9.00
OTTO FISCHER
813 Mass. St.
First Meeting Of Male Solons Tonight Will Start Government "Of Students, and By Students"
On the meeting of the Men's Student Council this evening in Fraser rest room depends the start of the student body back to self-government, through the year. The governing body is to review the students, with a representation of five officers, and one representative to every two hundred students, or major fraction thereof, has a total membership this year of sixteen. One member of the council elected last spring, Hartzel Ray, will be the next president of the council meeting tonight will make provision for the election of his successor. He was representative from the College.
Council committees announced by John Tracey, president of the Coun-
Kendriy Holds Glee Club
The Daily Kansan wishes to make a correction to a statement that appears in columns of that night's issue which said that Prof. W. B. Downing was in charge of the University Glee Club. The correction is that Prof. F, E Kendriy has charge of the club.
national convention of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, in 'leland, are:
Kendrie Holds Glee Club
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Student Affairs: Herbert Olson, George Nettels, John Tracey, chairman.
Calendar; Bobby Chandier, chairman, Bobby Lynn, Clarence Gerrill. Social in charge of Varnity data; Bobby Chandier, chairman Bobby Lynn, John Porter.
Joint Council meets with representatives of the Women's Student Government Association; Kelvin Porter, Clark Goss, and Loren Dewall.
Whitehead Back in Army
Emni C. Whitehead, A, B. '20 has resigned his position as reporter on the Topcape Daily Capital to accept a renewal of his commission as first vice president of the company Mr. Whitehead was formerly a pilot-instrument and was stationed overseas for a number of months. .
Send the Daily Kansan home.
New Students: Claude Veerhees Clarence Gorill.
Whitehead Back in Army
"Clothesmay
Make the man"
But
they've got to be the right kind of Clothes
-A Special Showing
right now - the right kind of Suits and Over-coats here for your choosing
of
Hickory Freeman
Fashion Park
Stratford System
Kirschbaum Clothes
at
$50.
The Best Values we have ever offered
CARLS
GOOD CLOTHES
When you want a bite to eat at home
rob the Family Larder.
But at School
the logical place to get a "Snack" is
The Jayhawk Cafe
Ray and Harry COR. 14th AND OHIO
Twenty-Five K. U. Women Would Learn to Shoot
Twenty-five women enrolled in the Women's Rifle Corps of K. U. met Tuesday under the direction of Capt. M. C. Grenata, and were instructed regarding the composition of the bullet, and the fine art of loosening name. Instructions will be given in the preliminaries of shooting and in three weeks the actual practice will begin.
Classes are held at 1:30 and 3:30 each Tuesday.
A. G. ALRICH
Printing . Engraving. Binding
Office Supplies. Rubber Stamps
Stationery, Seals, Stencils
736 Mass. Street
BESTOWE
Where your Tellal?
SCHOOL AND EXAMINATION
Suits and Overcoats for College Men
with superior workmanship and best of material
$40 up
Samuel G. Clarke
1033 MASS. STREET
DANCING SCHOOL
Opening Saturday Morning September 25 I.O.O.F. HALL CLASS 9-10 a.m. SOCIAL DANCING 10-12 p.m.
Mrs.J.L. Newhouse
Send the Daily Kansan home.
LE
Th' early words
Are all
Picking
On the new
Narrow, rolled brim
Hats
Somebody must have
Flown in
From Fifth Avenue
Cause they're about
All you see
On the heads of
Well-drest men
Back East
Our assortment
Will please you
Ober's HEADTOFOOT OUTFITTERS
needs your co-operati and a Fine Photograph "Squire's Studio" will be pleased to make you this Photograph
The 1921 Jayhawker
Squire's Studio 1035 Mass. Fine Photographs
Photographs for K. U. Students for Many Years
C
If you wish to make an impression with "her" just mention
"The Soda Grill"
and your intention to spend the afternoon there
Matinee Dance 3-6 p. m.
TUESDAY—THURSDAY—SATURDAY
Schofstal's Orchestra
Wiedemann'S
THE PLACE WITH 52 YEARS OF COLLEGE EDUCATION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XVIII
FOOTBALL PRACTICE NOT STOPPED BY RAIN
Four Full Teams of Varsity Material Trying Out for Places
FEW INJURIES THIS YEAR
Morale of Candidates Best in Many Years Say Coaches and Observers
A steady rain and a muddy field did not stop the Varsity football squad yesterday afternoon in their regular practice. The practice was somewhat hindered but as usual, having worked out a sudden afternoon work-out was held with added pep.
Four full teams of Varsity material were in evidence with plenty of pep, each trying to do his best to show the coaches that he deserved a tryout in the coming games. The training for the afternoon was largely taken up by tackling him running hand and field candle valleys, receiving and returning them while the line men were running them down.
The sound has been very fortunate so far this season in the number of injuries that have been received in prestine. So far no serious injuries have been encountered. Capt. Geo Netties is carrying a pailed face which he got a few days ago and it is expected that this minor injury will be entirely healed within a few days.
According to spectators the big outstanding feature of yesterday's practice was the fight that the candidates put into their work. The morale of this year's team is considerable coaches and staff of former champions of the best that has been shown in many years by candidates for the Varsity. Competition is great and every man is fighting like a mad man for a place on the team. It is this kind of spirit, according to votes of the team, is going to be the year this year's team one of the scrappiest teams that K. U. has ever turned out. The only drawback that is forecasted for this year's Varsity is its weight for it is conceded that this year's team will be out that has always turned out in the year. Coach Allen is expecting to offer this fact by developing speed.
Display Design Work Of Syracuse Student
Home Economics Classes May Sell Cookies Again
A collection of commercial design work is now on display in the galleries of the Department of Painting. The collection is one belonging to Miss Rose Ketcham, the new International department, and is the work of her students in Syracuse University. It consists of designs for printed silks, chinzes, creatones, and other materials, as well as designs for trays, borders, posters, and magazine covers. Although only a few of the primary uses and use of the materials outside visitors are welcomed, the exhibit will be changed from time to time.
The department of home economics is silent as regards their plans for the coming year. The unsettled condition always accompanying the beginning of the school year, accounts for the indefinite plans.
Rumors have been current to the effect that the department will make and sell cookies. When questioned as to the truth of this story, Miss Ora Webb instructor in the department, smiled and repeated her previous statement that she was undeclared as to her plans.
NUMBER $
"It will depend a good deal upon the proficiency and kindheartness of our women this year," she said. "I can't say more now, I'm too busy."
New Masonic Order Planned
A chapter of De Moly, an organization of the Masonic Order, for boys between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one, will be established in Lawrence, Saturday, September 25. Two hundred and fifty active members from Kentucky will take part in preparation which will continue through the day. Many University men are planning to join the new order.
Ray Henry of Burlington visited here last Wednesday. Mr. Henry was enroute to the University of Illinois where he is studying commerce and law.
Methodist Women Adopt Foster Mother Movemen
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1920.
The women of the Methodist church have arranged a plan for making the Methodist women who are attending the University from other towns feel at home while in Lawrence. The plan resembles the "big sister" movement, each having been assigned four women from the freshman, sophomore, junior and senior to act as a faster, mother. A tea for these women will be given at the Methodist church on Oct. 2 from 3 to 4 o'clock.
MAKESURVEYS FOR OII
It is understood that the other hurches will follow the same plan.
Geological Students Do Work In Southern Korea
The workers of the state geological survey were sent out by the state last summer into the western section of Cowley county to obtain gas and oil reports. Chief among those was a team sent to a place near Arkansas City. E. R. ELLage, c18, and L. C. Hey, c21, composed the team.
Near Wintfield, at the School for the Foeble Minded, special surveys were made of the rock and most of the reports will be from that locality. After the maps are drawn and literature is in shape to print, a bulletin will be published on Oil and Gas reports.
This bulletin will be out the first of the year. About ten weeks were spent in gathering the material. The city commissioners of Arkansas City asked to have the work done, the State agreeing to pay the salaries of
T. S. Smith, c²¹, and Howard R. Cross, c²², worked in the neighborhood of Junction City, in Geary County, where it will not be made of Mets Indings.
DELAYS PAVING WORK
Concrete Road From Library to Green Hall, Lacks Material
Construction Work on the new concrete roadway extending from Spooner Library to the east end of Green Hall is progressing rather slowly. There are ten men at work on the job, but frequent rains and difficulty in procuring materials have delayed construction.
Even should weather conditions rejoin favorable, several weeks must elapse before the work nears completion. The supply of cement on hand practically is exhausted, and if new materials do not supply the required delay. The contract calls for approximately 2100 feet of concrete.
Although many of the cinder driveways on the hill are in need of repair, no more construction or repair work is planned this fall. The appropriations of the recent legislation require an update to provide for the work needed.
It is hoped that the next legislature will give an appropriation large enough to permit the construction of concrete roads throughout the entire University grounds. Such roads would be built with no intersections, is slight, whereas the present cinder roads require continual upkeep expenditure.
High School Teachers And Substitutes Needed
W. H. Johnson, secretary of the Appointment Committee on Teachers, announces that a number of teachers are needed in several Kansas high schools for immediate service. Any students who find work should inform in regard to these vacancies by calling at this office, he says.
Any students owning the following books will find a ready sale for them at the Book Exchange, as the demand for them is great. They are: Rolf's edition of Hamlet, Hunter's Psychology, and Homer's Odyssey.
The extension bureau also receives many requests for substitute teachers in science, English, history, and home economics. Graduate or advanced students who have time and would be willing to substitute in high schools for short periods are addressed at the office. Requests come not only from Lawrence schools but from the schools in nearby cities.
Books in Demand
Leland Myers, c23, spent the week end with his parents at Winchester.
Will Emphasize Importance of Student Organizations in University
CONVOCATION FRIDAY CALLED BY LINDLEY
iN GYM, 10:30 TO 11:20
Athletic Activities Will Take Up Biggest Part of Meet-
The all-University Convention for Friday, September 24,
will be held at 10:30 in Robinson
Gymnasium. It will close at
11:20. The 10:30 classes will
extend from 11:30 to 11:55 and
the 11:30 classes from 12:00 to
12:25
E. H. LINDLEY,
Chancellor
Set aside the 10:30 hour Friday morning, Chancellor Lindsey has named that hour for the next all-University Convocation in Robinson Gymnasium. The purpose of the event is to introduce the Student Organizations of the University and to discuss their interests as concerned in building up student spirit and to gain better unity among these organizations in improving the spirit of the entire student body.
The Men's Student Council, the W.S. G, A, the Y. M, C, A, and Y. W.C. A, cabinets will sit as bodies on the platform. Short talks will be made by the heads of these organizations and also by representatives of the various churches. The rest of the time will be devoted to athletic activities entirely. During this period Doctor Allen will tell about the value of athletics in relation to student organization among the students. George Nettels, captain of football, will also probably be called upon to "specify."
STUDENTS ON PLATFORM
BAND ON HAND, 700
These plans give prominence, to the three major divisions of student organization, and Religion, to the field of athletic endeavor and its importance in securing the best school spirit. The student government phase with its present possibilities will be discussed. Dr. Lindley will preside and comment on the speakers. Songs will be sung, some new ones, some old ones, and some new ones. Everything is arranged to make it the best convoitation yet held in old Robinson.
Khoku Plan to Launch Season Ticket Drive
Ahoku is planning to live up to its name more than ever this year. The name stands for Atletic Helpers of K. U. It is composed of good students, who are especially interested in athletics. The primary purpose of Ahoku is to help the athletes keep up in their scholastic work.
Jayhawk Freshman Reported Exiled
It is not alone in congested cities that mysterious disappearances occur; from our midst a freshman student has absolutely sunk from sight! Cheerful, no less vague than others of his class-happy, he was last seen in a first-year rhetoric class. No traces indicating foul play have, as yet, been discovered, but grave frogs for his welfare are entertained. Only a single cule to aid in solving the mystery, has been apparently written in cipher and liberally revised and adorned with red-inked numbers and queer symbols may throw some light on this dark affair.
This year they will also conduct a season ticket drive in the down town district and attempt to stimulate interest among the business men of Lawrence. The officers for this year are: Pres., Charles Nettles; Vice Pres., George Lynn; See., Don Blair; Treas., Greas, Bill Reinhart.
Some of his sympathizing and discerning friends hint that he may be found in one of those unmentionable underworlds—the sub-freshman rhetoric classes! It is to be hoped that no such answer to the baffling mystery will be forthcoming. Some time. And some time. And some time to time by the raucity. Now, personal safety can only be assured by your alertness for the agents of this underworld—the comma splice, "I seen," subjectless sentences and others not so famous in select circles if rhetoric cold. Freshmen, beware!
Whadye Mean—"Hard Boiled?"
B. W. Wells paid a fine of 2$
Tuesday night for speeding. He asked to be allowed to pay his last night to avoid police court this morning, that being the professor of history and professor this morning, as he told Chief Fisher.
WORKERS ARE SCARCE
Was it the Kansas wheat crop? Either that or some equally good reason has caused a decrease in the number of students, both men and women who are working their way through school.
Fewer Students Working Wa Through School
"This decrease may be due to the fact that a number of the men whom we supplied with work last year are back again and have their duties resumed." Of perna-
"Up to the present time," said Harry M. Stewart, Associate-Secretary of the Y. M. C. A. this morning, "we have had 258 men applied for work. Last year there were 380 applicants. Of this 258 we have supplied 100 men with permanent positions and about 125 with partial-time work.
"We have had only about 50 women apply here for work up to this time. Last year this office supplied about 150 women with permanent and partial-time positions. I have more women who will do geotechnical work than I can supply wiht hipsothes; but on the other hand I have a number of calls for women to do general housework that have been unable to fill most of them.
next positions on of Tommas had "This same thing is true of the women," said Karthyn Gum, General Secretary of the Y. W. C. A.
This office has been quite successful this year in finding women the kind of work they want and although we only receive two hundred dollars from the State while K. S. A. C. receives five hundred dollars, we feel we are doing quite the same work without much assistance.
"We hope to receive more money next year and believe we are really entitled to more."
K. Book Adjudged Best Hand-Book in Kansas
"The K Book is the best hand book in the state in the judgment of the state committee," said Warren Cook, sey, vice-president of the Y. M. C. A, who has just returned from the meeting of the State Council, which all colleagues in Kansas, was held in Topeka last Sun, day.
This committee is composed of representatives from the eight larger schools of the state. They met to consider problems confronting the various schools. Mr. Cooksey is the representative for the University, elected at the Estes Park Conference last summer.
Story of Buffalo Hunt Written by Armstrong
"My First Buffalo Hunt" is the title of an account of early days on the Kansas plains, written by T. R. Armstrong, who is in Lawrence in Ohio and is very strong, accompanied by a young college friend from Kentucky, went on this hunt in 1874. Ten years later the two young men met and had their pictures taken. These pictures are kept on the book with the account of his experiences.
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce has the exclusive right of publication for the football programs for this sea-son. No other publication will be sold on the football field.
The story is written in the same meter as "The Lady of the Lake," and is said to be interesting. The author wrote this book for the Sioux and Pawnee Indians and the book contains his story of that. Mr. Armstrong will read his story for whoever is interested enough to ask to hear it. The book also contains in it stories of other Native chiefs, among them Sitting Bull, Spotted Tail and Red Cloud.
FORREST C. ALLEN,
Director of Athletics
Madelaine Emmert, '23, has been elected as Soph. representative by the members of the Women's Student Government Association to fill the vacancy left by Margaret Beakley who did not return to school this semester.
PRIVATE DANCES GET SEVERE ARRAIGNMENT
Joint Committee on Student Aff
fairs Protests Against Graft
Practise
MIXER PLANS COMPLETED
Other Events on University Cal endar are Given Official Approval
Approval
Condemnation of the practice of students in giving dances as private enterprises was made last night at a meeting of the joint committee on student affairs from the Men's Student Council, the Women's Student Government Association, and faculty representatives. The joint committee by agreement authorized the authentication of the dance by the government student heads, pointing out the following section of the constitution of the Men's Student Council:
"The Associated Men of the University of Kansas are opposed to all graft, and the giving of dances for profit among the students of the Ui-
The committee also recommended that the joint student council, composed of the men's and women's governors councils, undertake the management of the Freshman Mixer, which will be held the first Saturday of every month. The mixer will be held in this month, according to the University calendar.
The calendar was approved, and the committee which fixed it during the summer was continued for the purpose of properly scheduling other events. The joint committee went on record as favoring all-University community party, such as was held last Saturday night, and in favor of making it an annual function in the summer. The committee committee desires any suggestions that may be made in regard to the entertainment be sent to them.
The next meeting of the joint committee will be hold next Monday afternoon, at 4:40 o'clock in Room 114, Fraser. Subjects for discussion will include enrollment at the University and some entertainment, and a relationship of student organizations to the University community."
MAY POST AIR SIGNALS
Movement Started to Use Fraser to Fly Flags for Avintors
The removal of the large crimson and blue Chancellor's Penant from the flagstaff on Fraser Hall has given birth to a movement to have a regulation United States air service banner placed on the staff for the convenience and guidance of both visiting aviators and local flayers.
The movement had its start in the suggestions of the exservice men of the University that it would be a good thing if they would leave the big banner up as a wind and field guide to their students. There is attention enough to indicate that such a guide may flow from Fraser Hall. The value of such signals lies that an avian may know at a glance two important facts: that there is a landing field within the radius of a mile, and the direction from whichever point it is no more suitable place in this section than top of Fraser Hall, the highest point in the country and central point o possible landing fields of this section.
Big Sale of Reading Lamps.
B big Sale of Reading Lamps.
Four hundred University students have bought the school shop on Massachusetts Street within the last two weeks, according to the *pFoprinter*, and as many more have been supplied with light cords and sockets *t* be used for the same purpose. Although there is always a challenge in getting the beginning off of the fall term, the sale this year is unusual, he said.
Boston's Mayor Receives Warning?
Boston, Sept. 23—Mayor Peters today turned over a letter to the police he said he had received this week threatening his life. The letter referred to the Wall Street Ex. building and asked, "A bachelor will be done in Boston." Men of Boford and Sail River have received the threat, ening letters, according to word received here.
Dorothy Matticks, c.21, who was in school last year, has a position in a Kansas City bank and will not return to K. U. until next semester.
Put K. U. First.
Chanute Woman Gives Rare Specimens to School
Seven shipments of snakes and lizards from Eastland County, Texas, have been added to the Dyce Museum collection this summer. This addition includes three Diamond Back rattles, three Cochairfish snakes, and one Bird Skin, species entirely new to the previous collection.
This collection is the gift of Mrs. Grace O. Wiley of Chanute, who is enrolled in the entomology department of the correspondence school. While visiting the Museum last summer Mrs. Wiley became interested in the collections and chose to make this contribution. She has also promised a very rare collection of insects to be shipped at an early date.
Y. W. RUSH PROGRAM FOR MEMBER STARTS
Extensive Campaign Including Teens and Entertainment Being Staged
One of the big "rush" events of the year for University women is taking place at the Y. W. C. A. head, quarters in Myer's Hall, where the new general secretary, Miss Katharine Gunn, is putting into effect an extensive program of membership and activities.
The "rush" started last Tuesday, when the first meeting of the year was held in Myer's Hall, with one hundred and sixty girls present. In spite of many conflicting events, the students had a great success. Among the numbers on the program was a song by Miss Hazleton, new voice instructor, which was much enjoyed. Miss Laura Jackman, a student entertained with a violin solo. Next fol. lown on the program was a talk by his teacher, who said speech was mostly taken up with ad- vices to new students.
The weekly Y. W.C. A. meetings will be held every Tuesday afternoon at 4:30. Tea will be served beckon. The guest list is announced at daily time according to Mess Gunn.
Next Friday, from 3 to 5 o'clock the first of a series of "big sister" or Friendship Teas, at the home of faculty members will be held. The places of meeting will be announced later. All girls are invited to the teas. It is planned that the Big Sis 'ers shall take the Little Sisters.
Next Saturday, the annual Freshman Frolic will be held in Robinson gym, followed by a old time "Lantern Parade."
A meeting of the second cabinet will be held in Myer's Hall next Thursday evening.
For all new girls who want to join the Y, W, Z. C. A, the membership eam, will be within the next two weeks under the new personal basis of membership.
Plain Tales From the Hill
Woman, speaking to a painting student; "I should think you'd get dreadfully mussy dobbing around with paints. Do you have a colored junior to clean up? I saw one leave the painting room awhile ago." Paint slinger: "Colored man, nothing. What you saw was a stude who'd just finished cleaning up around his last picture."
George Nettles, football captain, evidently is not known to all freshmen, for as he passed the Law building Tuesday at heat six of them stopped him and urged him to be present at the "Thundering Thousand" pop meeting held on McCook Field Tuesday afternoon.
"Take Psychology in Fine Arts building, Journalism in the Physics house, Physiology in Journalism structure, and Dramatic Art in Law Building! How's a feller Art t know, buh?"
A NATURAL COMPLAINT:
A psychology professor was calling the roll, and as many of the names were somewhat liebbley written on the enrollment cards he was uncertain as to the titles Mr. and Mies. "Blank." He called no response.
"Miss Blank?" he read emphatically.
"The Mr. Blank or Miss Blank?"
he responded, "Yes."
He mediate response laid the card on the "absent" pile.
Just then an uncertain voice answered, "I think so."
WINSOR TELLS PLANS FOR PRODUCING.PEP
On Reserve Board
Washington, Sept. 23 --Ed Wills of Cleveland today was named a member of the Federal Reserve Board by President Wilson.
Renewed and Enlarged "Thunder dering Thousand" Planned at Y. M. Lunch
INE HUNDRED ATTEND
hancellor Lindley Urges More Interest in the Churches
"Sand?" Winston, cheer-leader, carried the "old-timers" to pre-war days with his plans for a "thundering thousand" composed of "several" thousand students, and an audience at Missouri University, be made to "entail his words" for the shur he cast on Kansas before the Thanksgiving game with the Tigers last year when he told Kansas City high school students that K. U. rooters were prone to "dive down on their job" when the football team was
Nice hundred men turned out today or the combination neon-day lunch-on and pep raily staged in Robinson Lymmansium under the direction of
"A FIGHTING ROCK CHALK"
"Make it a fighting Rock Chalk, men," he said. "Not a weak yell, but one like this," and he gave part of the yell that sounded like the old days when "Uncle Jimmy" Green used to lead the railers. "We're going to have a real bunch of routers this year, you'leh" he continued. Every Tuesday at 4 o'clock, we're going to meet on the team to practice the team and practise wells. Will you all promise to come, and bring it least one other follow?"
"Yea, boy," was the answer, carried by nine hundred voices.
Chancellor E. H. Lindley, speaking in "The Religion of Religion and the college Student," urged interest in the [M. C. A., and in church work.
"SUNDEY ON CHRISTIANITY"
"There may be some Sunday Schools where you pay the money for your penny in the box and don't get nothin' in return; but we haven't any of that kind here. They are all worth your support. Remember, your Christianity isn't a matter of believing that the whale swallowed Jonah, the whale swallowed the owl, the Christianity isn't a matter of theological beliefs."
"Do you remember the story of the London 'rowdies' in the trenches, who were questioned firs to whether they were Christians, to which they replied, No; and second, as to what qualities they admired in the man next to them? They answered, Honesty, courage and good cheer?" Those men, courage and good cheer, and for the man who admires them and stands for the is a Christian."
John Bunn, toastmaster, announced the Freshman blowout Saturday night at 6 o'clock, in Myers Hal.
Enrollment in Languages Greater Except German
Enrollment in the department of languages exceeds the enrollment of the first semester of last year in all departments. The enrollment in German this year is sixty percent less than it was in pre-war days. This department has been obliged to drop several classes because Miss Corp. went back to the office of Advisor Mrs.
Enrollment in Spanish classes greatly exceeds the enrollment at this time last year, or any previous years. The enrolment passed the previous high mark several days ago when it reached seven hundred. The drop cannot be because there are many new enrollments each day.
French classes also show an increase over the number enrolled in the $th$ department last year. Owing to the decrease in numbers, the reclass in the cappel of Fraser Hall.
"In fall in to draw blankets, costs,
and mess gear." This will be one of the reminders of old times which will help to bring back memories of what happened two years ago, to men of the 35th Division who attend the union to be held in Topeka Septem-
mer 26, 27, and 28.
There are between one hundred and one hundred fifty former members of the 35th Division now attending the University, and they are all expecting to have a big time at the reunion.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
total student paper of the University of Kansas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief... Geneva Hunter.
News Editor... Walter G. Herer.
Togeschrift Editor... Bath Arstromtang.
Sport Editor... A, E. B Garvin.
Alumni Editor... Joe Jayo
Letters Editor... Lachlan Reid.
Exchange Editor... C, C Nicole
HUSINESS STAFF
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry B. McCurdy...Business Mgr.
Lloyd Rupenhalp, A&S' business Mgr.
Beane W. Malott...Ciculation Mgr.
Jamas Austin Catherine Oder
Burt E. Cochran Grace Olaen
Gottlieb Gilbert Swenson
Alfred Graves Media Smith
Fred Graves
Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year, $2.90 for one semester, $6.00 a month, or 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail master September 11, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, unde the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism at the University Press, the press of the Department of Journalism.
Address all communications to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the students in the then merely printing the news by stand-up actors, young performers; to play the stories; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous and to solve problems to wiser heads; in all to encourage the students of the University.
UNIVERSITY AND BOMBS
THURSDAY, SEPT. 23, 1920.
The accusation is current that there is no connecting link between college students and the outer world in regard to the serious problems that confront and harass society in general. College students, many allure, are prone to concentrate their interest on their immediate college life and activities, and to exhibit credulity and indifference to the national and international social and political crises. This condition perhaps exists to some extent in the University of Kansas. We folks on Mount Oread are a susceptible lot, and it might be that we nourish our susceptibility too strongly with local atmosphere.
An explosion occurred in Wall Street the other day, and it is apparent that it was the result of systematic efforts on the part of critical plaques. The shock was not felt here in Lawrence. The daily routine on the University campus continued without interference. New York itself suffered no damage outside the confines of Wall Street. But the common American citizen, interested in his country's welfare, recognizes in the catastrophe a problem that is a perplexing one; because the growing element of discontent, expanding into anarchy, it at the bottom of such destructive tragedies.
Perhaps it is true that no better way of conducting the acquisition of an education is to work with the idea in mind of some day being of service to the world and humanity in the solution of this great problem, whose voice was heard the other day in Wall Street.
THE SURE METHOD
If you want to gain the undying support of a University professor cut his classes regularly. It is something new to him and will amuse and please him. Make a practice of attending about one out of every three of his classes. This will make him appreciate the fact that you are not trying to bore him by thriving yourself upon him. If he should suggest your more frequent attendance, tell him that your other courses demand so much more of your time. This is always a strong point in argument. Or let him know that your society affairs are many, and leave little time for study. This will lead him to believe that you are a social success and he will try to gain favor with you hoping that you will help him to your high social plane.
Doze lightly or write letters in class and he will realize that you are an individual, used to leisure and one whose every inclination must be respected. Conversation with your neighbor often helps to make the class period pass more quickly.
Follow this course of action and the professor will no doubt keep you with aim for another semester in the some course that he may become better acquainted with you.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DO YOU KNOW IT?
On our campus, not one-hundred feet from the walk we use every morning as we go to our classes, west of Green Hall, is one of the prettiest spots in the country. Marvin Grove it is called, and possibly half of the students, would ask where it was if referred to it.
A small grove of beautiful trees covering probably four acres, up in the closed end of the horseshoe formed by Mount Oread we find the restful spot. In the summer, when the foliage is thick, it is a thicket, in the winter, when covered with snow, it resembles the pictures we have seen painted in the art museums.
Winding paths take the student down through the cooling shades of the large trees, in the summer, through the luxurient blue grass, and out on McCook Field.
At the Northwest corner, two rows of evergreen trees have been cultivated, in the years gone by, and the path that leads between this shadyook, is called the lovers lane of the University.
A small brooklet has its origin in Marvin Grove, and takes its course winding down through the trees, out into the bright sunlight, onto the northern flats of the campus.
If asked to point out *Marthin Grove* about fifty per cent of the students body would probably be at sea after reading a brief description of it.
THE PIONEER
"The pioneers into the West fought their way as far as Kansas, then with failing courage turned back toward the East for inspiration in the difficult task to which they had set themselves. The compelling call which had bought them thus far, suddenly lost all significance for them and weakening hearts went back to homes and friends, forsaken." Such is the message of failure that K. U.'s good pioneer of bronze might subtly suggest to all Jayhawkers who pass him, tolling, but with face to the East.
Indeed, what more truly appropriate place for him than at the extreme West end of our campus? But, let us assure him that we would pardon his back, and turn him about to forever be the real representative of his kind and greet even the comparatively few of us who come in at the West entrance of the grounds with the spirit of introspection and perservance of the true pioneer.
ALARMS
Editor University Daily Kansan:
The School year of 1920—1921 has started with success under the leadership of one in whom the student body places all confidence. His move for a new school was good, but he cannot carry it out if the student body does not crowd the hall to its full capacity.
My alarm has a justy ring, while he one in the next room is shrill. I jump when I bear mine ring. When the other rings I just lie still. My alarm is intermittent. The one on the floor above is steady. Mine rings and hostiles pollyly, to see if I am ready. There is also an alarm across street that sounds low and bracing. There is another alarm far away, just when one is doing. My alarm is by far the most polite, but never-the-less it is queer. I do not mind when the others ring. It is mine that dread to hear.
Campus Opinions
Freshman at the University of Ohio are being required to be able to sing or recite at four Ohio State Song and football game.
Let's go back to the old custom, and make it possible that conversation hour once a week become a gathering place for every student in K. U.
Before we can do this we ought to invite the State Board of Administration to one meeting to show them how badly we need a large hall to hold the "thundering thousand," and to prove to them that we can fill any hall that they are willing to furnish.
Yours for weekly convocations and an adequate place to hold them.
A Student.
At the University of Ohio, ren rates are being reduced on rooms because of the abundance of accommodations lately thrown on the market.
Editor University Daily Kansan:—
The golf tournament for the championship of the Country Club will be begin September 30.
O Ancient Pines
Mute, sombre, knowing not the sunlight's gold.
Growing 'mid icy vapors gray and dull
Pines of the North, ye too are beautiful!
When in my wanderings the Golden Isle
On dreamy mountains vast-pines of the night,
Gave me a place of refuge on he shore
To dream my dreams, there too I me the pines—
The pines my heart holds dear for evermore.
O ancient pines, which by the epics wind
Were swayed, of which the glowing sun was fain!
Their arms acolian by the winds are stirred.
O lyric pine trees of the Renaissance,
And of the gardens in the land of
Spain!
Tossed by the gusts that wake there as they roam.
-Ruben Dario.
From Christian Science Monitor
Sounds of soft plumage, sounds t satin robes,
Sounds of the water and the ocean
the Law of Economy in Writin
bounds of the water and the ocean foam
The Law of Economy in the Younger years may learn something about by careful revision of their own compositions, and by careful dissection of passages selected both from good and bad writers. They have simply to strike out every word, every clause, and every sentence, the removal of which will not carry away any of the constituent elements of the thought. In the revised form, the removed is revised with the unrevised passages, and where the revisions has improved, and where it has injured, the effect. For Economy, although a primal law, is not the only law of Style. It is subject to various limitations from the pressure of other rules; and thus the removal of a trifle of words or sentences would cause unease economy if that entails a dissonance, or prevents a climax, or robs the expression of its ease and variety. Perhaps the very redundancy which he loses away might have aided the reader to see the message more clearly, because it would have kept the thought a little longer before his mind, so that it could be turned on to the next while this one was imperfectly conceived.
FOR RENT - For boys. One large
double room, well furnished. Twenty
Dollars per month. Call 1601 Rhode
Island St. Phone 10900. 6-5-25.
As a general rule, redundancy is injurious; and the reason of the rule will enable us to discriminate when redundancy is injurious and when beneficial. It is injurious when it amplifies the rapid movement of the reader's mind, diverting his attention to some collateral detail. But redundancy influences is such as only to detain the mind longer on the thought, and thus to secure the fuller effect of the thought. For rapid reading is often imperfect reading. The mind is satisfied with a gimpa of that which it ought to be steadily contemplated; and any artifact by which the thought can be kept long enough before the mind, may indeed be a redundancy as regards the meaning, but is an economy of perplexity. The clause which we might be tempted to top away because it threw no light upon the proposition, would be retained by a skilful writer because it added power. You will divert the attention, or simply retract it? The former is always a loss of power; the latter is sometimes a gain of power; the latter consists in rejecting all redundancies that do not含递力 to it, also adds restraint. The labor of expanding a tense sentence to its full meaning is often greater than the labor of picking out the meaning. Tactius is more tiresome than Cicero. The reader's pleasure must not be forgotten; and he cannot be pleased by it. Redundancy does not flow. A harsh, abrupt, and dislaced manner irritates and perplexes him by its sudden jitters. It is easier to write short sentences than to read them. An easy, fluent and harmonious phrase steals unobtrusively upon the mind, and allows the thought to expand quietly like an opening flower. But the very suasiveness of harmonious writing needs to be varied lest it be dreadful. In many dogs, the sharp, short, sentences which are indolent when abundant, when used parliingly act like a trumpet-call to be drooping attention. — George Henry Lewis, in Christian Science monitor.
WANT ADS
A ROOM for two boys. 1340 Vt.
Phone 1361 Black. Mrs. C. L. Wall.
6.59
MUSICAL KINDERGARTEN--For
punils 5 and 6 years up. Games,
songs, etc. Lorna Marie Raub. 1234
Oread. Phone 2304. 4-5-4
FOR RENT - Comfortable room at first floor with private entrance. Suitable for one man. Price $10.00.
1320 Vermont. 6-5-22.
McWitsey's Condition Unchanged.
London, Sept. 23rd. Little change was apparent in the condition of Clarence McWitsey today. The hunger striking Lord Mayor of Cork entered the forty-second day of his fast. He is reported to be suffering severe head pains.
SOCIAL Dancing Class every Tues
day night, 7:30 to 8:30 over Dick
Droir. Private lessons by appointment.
Call 2226 White. 4-5-9
ROOM FOR RENT--Double or sin-
gle for girls. One block from
campus. Phone 2569. 249 Ohio
Mrs.
Garrett. 5-10. 5-19.
LOST—between Brick's and 16th
LOST—Pair gold rimmed, or tortoise
shell glasses. Between Snow Hall
and John M. Shen's office. Return to
Kansan office.
7-3-29.
FOR RENT — Nearly furnished rooms
fourly from University. $10
and $15 per month. Telephone 2743
White.
7-3-20.
Street last Friday, bottom part of Waterman pen. Call 2381 Blue. 7.6.67
FOR RTNT or Sale—New Remington typewriter in perfect condition. Call Adams, Phone 1381 White. 7-3-28.
LOST- Elgin bracelet watch, initials J. M. m. in back. On Campus south of tennis courts Tuesday morning. Jesue Muriel, 814 AArch, Red. 8.3-3.1.
LAWRENCE ORTIGUE COMPANY
ATTORNEY, F.A.
lawrence.ortigue.com
examined; glasses made, Office 1025 Mass.
DR. H. I. CHAMBERS. Suite 2 Jack
King. Attention: lawrence.ortigue.com
Special attention to nose, throat and
mouth. Attention: lawrence.ortigue.com
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive, Optometrist(s)). Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass.
DR H. BEDING, P.A. U. Building, Eye, ear, nose, and throat. Special attention to fitting grasses and tonal nail. Phone 513.
DR, G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Dise-
sion of stomach炎, surgery and ginec-
logy. Suite 1, P A U Bldg. Phones
Residence 35, Residency 3K2K, Hospital 1745.
DR. ALIRIGHT - Chirropractor - Radio- Therapy - Massage, Results gun- warranted. 1181 Mass St. 1431, Residence Phone 1761.
DRS, WELCH AND WELCH - PALMER
GRADUATES. Office of
Drs. Welch and WELCH,
115K. DR. J R RECEHF. Room 3 and 4
over McCullough Drug Store.
Office of Drs. Welch and WELCH,
115K. DR. J R RECEHF. Room 3 and 4
over McCullough Drug Store.
Office of Drs. Welch and WELCH,
115K. DR. J R RECEHF. Room 3 and 4
DR. FLORENCE J. BARRONS-Osteopathic Physician, Office hours 8:26-12:00; 1:36-5:30; Phone 2327, 939 Mass Street.
EDWARD BUMGARDNER — Dentist Room 311 Perkins Bldg. Special attention to extracting. Phone 511.
Z H THBETS—Dentist 927 Mass St.
Council, 137
Four Shows Daily; 2:30, 4:00, 7:30, 9:00
Varsity Bowersock
TODAY ONLY
Douglas Fairbanks
George Walsh
'The MOLLYCODDLE'
'SINK OR SWIM'
Also Paramount Magazine
11c and 33c War Tax Included
Also Comedy 'She Me'
11c and 28c War Tax Included
FRIDAY—SATURDAY
'OUT OF THE STORM'
GIRLS!
We have silk Oxford Laces at 35c
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
1017 1-2 MASS. Also 726 1-2 MASS
'THE WHITE CIRCLE'
Clothes Called For and Delivered
THE STUDENT CLEANERS EATON & FRAKER
929 Mass. St.
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
We press 'em while you g't your hair cut at
HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
We'll see that prices are as low as they can be.
Phone 499
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK 1047 Massachusetts St.
PECKHAM
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes
1047 Massachusetts St.
You can't be extravagant if you buy here
YOUNG MEN are apt to forget about economy in buying clothes; they want style, snap. "go" and let the economy take care of itself. In
clothes, the economy does take care of itself. That's the great point for these clothes. They have the style you want; but you get all-wool fabrics, fine tailoring, correct fit, the things that make clothes serve well.
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty
Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic
Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in
multiples of $10.00.
CORINNE HOWARD
MARGARET MATZENAUER, Contralto "The World's Greatest Woman Singer"
811 Season Tickets Already sold for the
Eight great concerts by world famous artists
University Concert Course
Where Will You Sit?
GET BUSY
and mail that order NOW to H. L. Butler, Lawrence, Kansas
Season Tickets $5.00 and $4.00
Hall's
diction
I am
great
am a
marie
been
nearly
boarded
located
and the
device is
rent in
rooms.
Then
the se
nausee
need
so
physical
of the
portite
orite
So
larger
velocity
centre
the
part
had
not
out
gen
the
de-
ti
o
t
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ANGER SEEN IN CUBAN ELECTIONS
America is Waiting Result of Her Electoral Laws Drafted by U. S.
coalition of Two Parties Formed
Into Liberal Party
Into Fight
ANY INTRIGUING PARTIES
Washington, Sept. 22. —The State department, here is, awaiting the residential elections next November in Cuba with an interest prob- ibly second only to the Presidential and the United States, the month one.
While the choosing of an American resident will decide the future form policy of the United States, the elections in Cuba will determine whether the Cuban electoral laws as issued by the United Nations abused and ousted in the selection of a Chief executive of Cuba.
Although requested to do so by the tent has decided not actually to liberal Party, the American Governmentelevates the elections in Cuba. It stated officially, however, that the act that "the United States may gain be called upon by the Cuban copie for a decision regarding the vicinity of the election, makes it imbure an additional burden on all United States to use all available means to observe the conduct of the electoral procedure in Cuba."
As is usual in Latin-American poli-
cies, intriguing interest of romance and adventure attachetus the mpend-
ation selection of a President of Cuba to elect a new Cuban elections are General Jose Liguegone, of the Liberal Party, and Alfredo Zayas, candidate of the coalition Legue; while General afcalf Montalvo is trying to estab- lish a new selection of an Conservative Party.
The Conservative Party in Cuba, on August 27, formed a coalition with followers of Zayas, who was the candidate of the Liberal Party for the Presidency in 1916. By accepting the nomination, General Montalvo, who already and been proclaimed as the Conservative candidate for President, General
Montalve now claims that he was ousted from the candidacy through fraud and intrigue and that he still considers himself the Conservative candidate. He has taken his case be-fore the Central Elections Board and says that if necessary he will bring it before the Supreme Court of Cuba.
This complicated political situation is made more bizarre by the following "line.up." President Monica is supporting the candidacy of Zayas; in the election of 1916, Zayas as the Liberal candidate opposed the present Cuban Executive; the present Liberal candidate, General Gomez, led the armed revolution against President Monac after the 1916 election insupport of the candidacy of Zayas; General Gomtz is now opposing Zayas, at present the canidate date of the Coalition Leader.
Heavy solicitors that there be no
The United States Government is
repetition after the impending elec-
tion, and the repudiation following
the election of 1916.
The Cuban election laws drafted by Major General Enoch H. Crowder, Judge Advocate General of the United States Army, and who mobilized in the World War, were brought into use in the elections of 1912 and 1916. In March of last year, at the inception of the Cuban Government, General Crawler again went to Cuba to make a final draft of the laws, which required a recurrence of certain abuses which had been practiced in the previous elections. The work was completed and the completed electoral laws enacted by the Cuban Courts, in August 1917, to constitute the first real test of the American-written electoral law for Cuba.
Harding to Speak in K. C, Oct. 8
Mariion, Ohio. Sept. 23—On his
middle-West speaking tour, Senator
Harding will speak at his speaking
literary as follows:
"This trip starts from Des Moines, Iowa, in the morning of October 7 following which are, Omaha, Neb. evening of Oct. 7; Kansas City, evening of Oct. 8; Oklahoma City, evening of Oct. 9.
"The second trip begins at Chattanooga the evening of Oct. 13; Louisiana, evening of Oct. 14; Indianaapolis, evening of Oct. 15; St. Louis, evening of Oct. 16."
The Dunakin Club entertained with a dance Tuesday evening.
WOMEN WILL RECEIVE PRIZES FOR GRADES
Houses
W. S. G. A. Offers Two Reward To Womens' Rooming
Two prizes are offered this year by the Woman's Student Government Association for the highest scholars' standards in women's rooming houses at the end of the first semes. tev.
Twenty-five dollars is offered to the house whose members' grades average the highest of any of those enetered in the contest, and a second prize of $15 will be given to the house with the second best grades.
Any organized house containing three or more women University students is eligible to enter the content for high standing. Any house destroys to enter must make its intentions to the W, S, G, A. by October 15.
Sororites which enter the contest shall be allowed to average only the grades of those girls living in single house in fixing their average at the end of the semester. Annexes may enter the contest independently and the grades of any girl entering the contest may be greater than their chapter house will be averaged in with the grades of the house in which they live if it is entered in the contest.
Similar prizes were received for the W. S. G. A. last year and much interest was shown in the contest. Muhi Epison was the winner of the $25 prize and a house containing but one girl was the winner of the second.
Colorado Women Follow K. U. Lead
Women from the Colorado State
College of Agriculture have planned
a mixer very similar to the one which
the Y. W. C. A. girls of the University
of Kansas will hold Friday evening.
The same idea of "big sisters" will be
carried out, each "old" girl it to come
and bring some assigned girl as he
"little sister."
Boxing Major Sport at U. of C.
Colorado State College of Agriculture and Mechanics has issued a call for all young men who are interested in the arts of boxing and wrestling. These were made two of the major sports for the conference last year, but it remains to be determined that the same plan will be continued this year.
Announce New Books At Spooner Library
The arrival of new books at Spooner's library is announced by Miss Carrie Watson, librarian. All the cases and boxes containing them have not as yet been opened. The books co-insfets of works of all kinds, many of the volumes being devoted to art, history, chemistry, and foreign languages.
Who's Who in America" is among the new books. It is a biographical dictionary of notable living men and women of the United States, and edited and written by Albert Nelson Marquis.
Lindley to Talk in Wichita.
Chancellor Lindley will speak in Wichita in the near future. Ar. rangements to this effect were made by the student body who visited his son, Elmer, at the Delta Tau Delta house Tuesday.
Concert Course Tickets Sold.
Season ticket sale for the University. Concert Course up to Wednesday evening was 811, more than one-half of the total seating capacity of Robinson Gymnasium.
James Crawford of Harrisonville,
Mo., a student in the School of Engi-
neering last year, visited the campus
Tuesday afternoon.
FREE KODAK ENLARGEMENT 5x7½ in.
A Genuine Portrait
Your Snap Your Free
**spidlenil entarge**
5x2½ inches printed fee from each phone in order, if you want to roll for development to the Topkapi Phone Supply Co.
This enlargement alone is worth more than we charge for developing your films.
Mail your films today, or send for particulars. Right hour services.
The Topka Photo Supply
Company
Boe 427 Topka, Kansas
This Little Ad
图
in the
DAILY KANSAN
cost only 25c but just the same
it
found the pocketbook
and money
Kansan Ads Pay
LOST—A pocketbook containing $12.00 bills and blank check on Ottawa, Kansas bank, between Victory Cafe and 1200 Ky—6-3.21.
*LPolish Troops Advance into Russia.* Warawar, Sept. 23. *Polish troops have passed over the Russian boun- dary line in Galicia, according to the Communicate issued today. The statement said: Polish forces occu- pied Rovnò several miles beyond the line of demarcation.
LPolish Troops Advance into Russia.
TEXAS CLUB will have a short meeting in Praiser rest room Friday afternoon at 4:30. All students from this school and get acquainted.-PRESIDENT.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The K. U. Society of Biological Research will meet at 4:39 o'clock Friday afternoon in the library of Snow Hall.
All Congregational students and their friends are invited to attend a mixer at the Congregational Parish House Friday night at 8:15 o'clock.
K Club meets Thursday at 7 o'clock in Green Hall. Very Important. John Bunn, vice-president.
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
F. B. McCOCLOCH, Druggis
Eastman Kodaks
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
A. G. ALRICH
Printing, Engraving, Binding
Office Supplies, Rubber Stamps
Stationery, Seals, Stencils
736 Mass. Street
Bishop of Dublin
Wiss
What Your Tullor?
Where your Tailor?
Suits and Overcoats for College Men
with superior workmanship and best of material
$40 up
Samuel G. Clarke 1033 MASS. STREET
Opening Saturday Morning September 25
I.O.O.F. HALL
CLASS 9-10 a.m.
SOCIAL DANCING
10-12 p.m.
Mrs.J.L. Newhouse
the w. S. G. A. book exchange, and
The following books are wanted at students possessing copies are asked to sell them;
Economics, Ely; Sociology, Blackmar and Gillan; Modern English Grammar, Blount and Northp; Algebra, Fite; Trigonometry, Ashton; Handbook for English Writers; Oddyssies; Elementary Logic, Jevens.
Psychology, Hunter; Botany; Spanish Grammar; Calculus; Language dictionaries, and freshman rhetoric books.
There have been a number of calls for Jevona's Introduction to logic. Will people who have this book and wish to learn the student book exchange in Fraser.
G
LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas
A Specializing School in
SHORTHAND
TYPEWRITING
BOOKKEEPING
BANKING, ETC.
Now in Session—Ask for Catalog
Get
Wise
To___
The Oread Cafe
"BRICKS"
—It's the niftiest place on the hill to eat, drink, and be merry!
Mrs. Johnson's Shop Now located in the Stubbs building
Shampooing Marcelling Manicuring
SPECIAL TREATMENT OF THE HAIR
Sale of first quality hair-nets at $1.00 the dozen
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
Halla,
stucco one of
his
guns.
Al
a gra a
chara a.
Been
searily
located
and the
letters o' rent
rooms.
They
these
need
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TRACK MEN STRIVE TO REGAIN PRESTIGE
"Must Make Good Boast to Aggies and Tigers," Says Bradley
Hard Training Starts Immediately Says Coach Schlademan
HAS LEARNED IN OLYMPICS
The University of Kansas is out after her lost prestige on the track. With the return of Everett L. Bradley, K. U.'s Olympic representative and captain of the Jayhawk tracete team for this year prospects are looking up. Bradley says he has learned a whole lot about the game, that he is going to put that knowledge into practice when the training season opens.
And the training season starts immediately, according to Track Coach Karl Schlademan. Every Kansas track aspirant who is in earnest in his aspirations will be on the field every coach, Coach Schlademan are announced.
The Kansas team this year, Captain Bradley says, must win from the Kansas Aggies and Missouri to make good the bonus he has made to Ray Watson, on Olympic teammate and captain of the K. S. A., C. track team, of the University of Missouri, rival for Bradley's goal of America's premier athlete.
"We will be especially strong in field athletes." Bradley said, "but unless something harms or somebody develops we will not have such a wonderful aggregation of track artists. Haddock, spinner, Massey and Wilson long distance men, and Paul O'Leary, quarter meter, represent about all Kansas has in the way of runners."
Coach Schadman pointed out that there was a great chance for a relay team at the University this year. On the field events, besides Bradley, he constitutes a field team in himself, Kansas has Edwin Sandelhof, holder of the 50-meter dash. He will be trained in both the javelin and discus for the next season. Bradley says that Sandefor also should be trained in the 56 pound weight. Kansas has a pole-vapiter in Heizer of last year, and Chandler a freshman of two years ago who has returned to track. Sandefor can be placed in the high jump, the javelin, the broad jump, and probably the 220-yard dash.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Ford Cut Brings Drop In Mail Order Prices
Chicago, Sept. 23. —Price cuts from 10 to 20 per cent in merchandise are shown in the new catalog of Sears Roebuck & Company and Montgomery Ward & Co., the reduction effective immediately after the announcement by Henry Ford that he had low, ered prices on his clothing and dress goods reduced in price will not go back to the high level, officials of the companies said. Upwards of 35 per cent in furniture was announced.
Mary Tudor, fa'20, who won the scholarship offered by the New York Art League last spring, will leave October first for New York to begin
Former K. U. Student Wins Art Scholarship
Miss Tudor is one of ten in the United States to be given a scholarship. The honor came to her after some of her work both in painting and charcoal drawing had been submitted to the Art League. This was the first time this scholation was awarded to a student in the University. Kemana Miss Tudor is a member of the Gamma Phi Beta sorority.
Jury Has Scaut Evidence Of Wall Street Explosion
New York, Sept. 23. The grand Jury was expected to complete its investigation of last week's bomb explosion in Wall Street today. The examination of scores of witness has failed to produce any new evidence A bomb warning was received at Gardner, Collector of Internal Revenue by the Brokerage publicly. R. M. did that although the card evidenced was a letter of a box, every precaution will be taken to guard the building.
Engineers Lose Two Profs.
The School of Engineering lost only two professors this year. Mr. Hunt, who taught students go into commercial practice with the firm of Black and Veatch, of Kunan City, Mo., and Mr. F. H. Sibley has accepted the position of mechanical engineer at the University of Oklahoma.
At I R Again
Washington, Sept. 23—Poleland and Lithuania have broken the peace negotiations and fighting has been resumed between the two countries despite intervention of the League of Nations, the State Department was advised today.
Let's Put "Kick"
and "Pep"
into
the
LOYALTY BALL
F.A.U. HALL
Five Piece Orchestra
FRIDAY NIGHT, SEPTEMBER 24
"Phog" Allen will make speech
BALLET SLIPPERS
Made of black kid stock with turn soles. We have two styles.
$2.50 and $3.00
The bathroom is very modern. The sink has a large mirror above it, and the walls are made of glass. There are also two stools in front of the sink.
We have just received another large shipment of WHITE Gymnasium Shoes, our assort is complete.
NEWMAN'S 805 Mass.
Indians and Methodists Will Open Lawrence Football Season
HASKELL AND BAKER TO CLASH SATURDAY
The first football game of the season will be played Saturday after, noon, on Haskell Field, at 3:00 o'clock, when the Haskell Indians go up against the Baker University team. The Indians work harder than ever before, and with the material in hand, it will be difficult to pick a first team. Twenty-four men on the first and second team is working out in its first team form.
in the back field for the half-back positions are Chubbie, Tony Anderson, son, Bates, Wofford, and old Carlilea star, who is said to have beaten Yale with a 90 yard run, when playing there. Campbell, a likely likelibback candidate, played for Haskell in his last game. A good man, can hold down either end or fullback. Captain McLemore, is by far the best quarterback on the
sound. The backfield is easily the speediest that Haskell has turned out in some years.
in some years.
The line will be lighter than usual, and hard-hitting. Of the last year's men out are Nick Lasa, Killback, Meeks, Nori and Byington. New material or men who formerly played with Haskell are Nanomutaby, King, Eagle, McBurney, Brown and McGeisay.
The probaible line for Satur, day after that has not been decided.
Head Coach Bell comes from Centre College, Kentucky, where he was all-Southern end, and played with the famous Centre College team last year when they beat West Virginia, which previously beat North Carolina, assistant coach coming from Baker, where started on last year's football and basketball teams.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
VIOLIN
Case and Bow, for Sale very Cheap. See Homer Armstrong, 1301 Tenn. St.
I
THE CALL FOR FALL
Clothing is in the air and the FALL CLOTHING
of Quality Second to None is here awaiting your inspection.
We know your verdict will be an O. K. for every detail for our entire interest is centered on having here for you, the very best clothing obtainable, and also for the very least possible cash.
$55, $50, $45, $40, $35
SkofStadS
ELLING SYSTEM
Ye Shop of Fine Quality
A JEWELRY SHOP where quality comes before price and service comes before profit.
SHEAFFER PENS
THIS IS WHAT MAKES us the best known establishment of its kind in Lawrence. WE WILL APPRECIATE your business. Join the Quality class and trade with us.
Everhardt/Pencils
Gillette Razors
Atari
Grün Watches
Lafayette
Paintball Point
Gorham Sterling
Your-ez Plate
Community Plate
Sierra Thomas Clocks
Sever-Hot Bottles
Gustafson
Gustafson
The College Jeweler
911 Mass.
GRUEN
Tillers
Every Gar-
ment
Perfectly
Fitted
Only
65 Suits
in this
Lot
A special purchase by us, of 65 Suits, from—
Hickey Freeman— Fashion Park Stratford System Kirschbaum-
—enables us, to offer you these Suits which were made, by the above firms to retail at—
$75,$65,$60 FOR
—we know, that these suits, are the Biggest Values, offered by any Clothing Store, in the United States today.
$50
—this is not a sale, we made a lucky purchase and we are "handing" you the chance, to buy the finest tailored clothes in America, for the above Price.
—Models for Men and Young Men tailored in Blues, Greys, Browns Fancy fabrics - Domestic a nd Foreign woolens.
-every garment carrys, our guarantee of satisfaction.
We Start Selling Friday Morning 8 O'clock
CARLS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hull's
historic
building
with
Al
art in
architecture
Boein
nearly
boarded
located
and the
width of
the rooms.
They
the se
use
name
physics
in
gu
of the
ports
article
So
learn
develop
cent
the
part
later
not
out
from
the
de-
th
th
th
NUMBER 10.
VOLUME XVIII.
K. U. BAND MAY JOIN UNIVERSITY R. O. T. C
Student Military Organization Wants to Absorb University Forty-Piece Band
2 HOURS CREDIT A YEAR
Action on Proposal Will be Taken At Rehearsal Meeting Saturday
The K. U. Band may be a part of the local R, O. T. C. unit. The proposition is being considered by the fifty bandmen, and a decision will be reached not later than Sat. urday.
At band rehearsal Saturday night, the matter was presented. Follow, in a brief introductory talk by Dean H. L. Butler, Capt. H. D. Burdick pointed out various ways in which he believed the band would be benefited by joining the Reserve Officers' Training Corps.
WOULD GET NEW INSTRUMENT:
The musicians would receive a complete set of new instruments from the government. Each would hire thirty-aids dollars from the government to purchase a new uniform. The usual R. O. T. C. credit of two hours each year would be given to each bandman, and during the final two years of R. O. T. C. work, ration money (about sixteen dollars per month) would be paid to them. The band would be obliged to study the theoretical work, and would play for dress parade in lieu of drill.
The K. U. band has not yet taken action on the proposal. The memb- ners, are discussing the matter, the mayor, is also allot- ing at the rehearsal Saturday.
WOULD STRENGTHEN B. 0, T. C.
Capt. Burkard said the R. O. T. was an important factor in the University, and the addition of the band would add灵敏ly to the strength of the unit. He mentioned other universities where bands had been absorbed by R. O. T. C. to the advantage of both.
WOMEN WILL FROLIC
IN ROBINSON SATURDAY
Many Events Promised for Annual Get-Together Meeting By Y, W. C. A.
All day suckers, ice cream cones,
a bolshevski orchestra, and a good time,
are among the attractions of
feder for the Freshman Frolic. Sat
Saturday is eight o'clock in Rob-
inson Gymnasium for all women
at the University.
This is an annual event planned by the W.Y.C.A. as a maker and get?acquainted affair for both the old and new women of the University, and offers excellent opportunity for a rousing good time. The frolic this year promises to be the biggest and best yet, according to the chairman of the social committee and every member of the team must be responsible for seeing that no new woman misses this opportunity to get acquainted.
Dramatic Students Rehearse for Playlets
The students in Professor Mac, Murray's in drama in Dramatic Art are given the first class and be given this fall, the first to be October 11. The class schedule is arranged that each student will take part in at least two of these one, act
The casts of the several plays are being directed by student coaches, experienced in Dramatics; and there is an existing rivalry between the coaches as well as between the differ. The most striking which play will be the best presented.
The public will be invited to at tend the presentation of these plays in the Little Theatre of Green Hall with a date and hour to be published later.
Students interested in trying out for the Dramatic Club may apply to Professor MacMurray, or Joe Schwarz.
No Hypnosis This Year.
The department of psychology will not undertake any extensive experiments in hypnosis this year on acclimation. Students should complete elementary physiology, according to W. S. Hunter, professor of psychology. A large number of students are taking this course.
Send the Daily Kansan home
First Kansas Engineer To Appear Next Week
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCHE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1920.
The Kansas Engineer Board held its first meeting of the year yesterday in Marvin Hall. The first issue this year will come out next week and will be The Municipal Number. The second issue will appear in No. 80, the following week. The number. Tom Mott, editor, will have Nathan Mookin, M. G. Dane, John Irwin, Norman MBrauchbeer of the chemistry department to assist him on the chemical number. Of, F., Michael Roehrig, of failing to return to school were filled as follows: Business Manager, Art Penticillum; Assistant Business Manager, Coy Patterson; Vice_Pres. L. Remers; Circulation Manager, Joe Weiss; devaroring to increase the circulation of their quarterly publication both in the student body and in the alumni of the engineering School.
ELIGIBILITY DEFINED
Thornau Says Full Work Must Be Carried
The eligibility rules, as announced this morning by Prof. H. C. Thurman, Chairman of University Organizations other than Athletic, are in effect the same as those of last year. The main change in the rules will be in the enforcement, as this year it is planned to carry them out "to the letter." According to Professor Thurman, students who do not have time to carry full work in the Uni. Unit, may leave for college or pate in athletics, and this part of the ruling will be that which will receive the most attention.
Anyone who wishes to see Professor Thurnaus in regard to the following rules, which are published for the information of the student body, may see him at Room 301, Fraser Hall, Tuesday and Thursday at 10:30 o'clock, and Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 11:30 o'clock.
Pharmaceutical Society Elects Annual Officers
The following officers were elected at the annual meeting of the Pharmaceutical Society held this morning at 10:30. Louis F. Miller; Vice President, Miss Jance Morrison; Secretary, Mrs Katherine Sorry; Treasurer, Ms. Teresa Coburn. The Senior class officers were elected at the same time and are as follows: President, J. A. Binford; Vice President, Arch Kerr; Secretary and Treasurer, Miss Elise Coons. Junior class officers are: President, Miss Vivie Pressent, Ian Farans; Secretary and Treasurer, Bob Forney.
Next regular meeting of the Phar, maceutical society will be held Oct 4 in Pharmacy lecture room.
Dread High School Has Ninety-Two Students
At present the total enrollment in Dread high school is ninety-two. Of this number all but four are regular students. The total enrollment will be limited to one hundred this year. Prof. H. W. Nutt has already received two years of study and some of the applicants will have to be placed on the waiting list.
The enrollment in Oread high school is increasing every year. With the exception of last year this is the first year that the total enrollment has reached the one hundred mark. The number of students on the large number or ex-service men who were preparing to enter the university
Cox's Special Wrecked Near Maricopa Arizona
Mariopa, Ariz., Sept. 23—Gov. James M. Cox's stumping campaign was back on the right of way early today headed for Albuquerque, N. M., after a serious shake-up near here yesterday when the Governor's special train was derailed. Gov. Cox escaped uninjured. Members of the governor's party crawled within windows of the conches to safety. The Governor and aides through Mariopa and Demine. Cox was expected to reach Albuquerque at noon today where he will receive his schedule.
Lutherans on Hike
Lutherans on link.
Lutheranism will go on a bike and steak跑 east of town Friday evening. They will leave the Lutheran Church, one block east of the court house, at 5300 N. 76th Street. The community are welcome and urged to come.
CLASS ELECTIONS TO BE HELD OCTOBER
Student Council Begins Its Organization in First Meeting
VARSITY DANCES PLANNED
All class elections in the University will be held Friday, October 8. it was announced this morning by John Tracy, president of the Men's Student Council, which took final action in picking the date at its first meeting of the season Wednesday night in Fraser Hall. Four class officers, president, vice president, sec. retary, and treasurer, are elected in each class by popular vote of both the men and women students, and the treasurer. They select two "juniper Prom" managers, and two jayhawk managers, while the sophomores also pick a manager for the Soph Hop.
University Women are Urged to Co-Operate in Boosting Athletics
TWO VACancies IN COUNCIL
Two vacancies in the Council, one in the College representatives, and one in the Pharmacy representative will be filled by a vote of the remaining members of the Council at their next meeting, next Wednesday night. The vacancies for the pharmacy must be signed by twenty-five students of the school in which they are enrolled, to Herbert Olson, secretary of the Council, by 6 o'clock next Wednesday, September 29.
TWO VACANCIES IN COUNCIL
"Pete" Jones, "lost" guard on the Kansas football squad, will return to school Saturday from his home in Concordia, according to members of his fraternity, who received a telephone call from him yesterday.
Plans for the first Varsity dance, to be held in F. A. U. hall, down town next Saturday were arranged. The affair will be better than is usual, as the five, piece orchestra of the affairs has been obtained for the affair.
Organization of *h* representative body, from all male students, to act between the Men's Student Council and the associated men, which includes all the men in the University, as set forth in the new student constitution adopted by the students last spring, was held, Chau Veloreh, Charles Harrell, and Howard were appointed as a committee to se organize the student body.
“Pete” Jones Returning To K. U. Gridiron Tog
All women were urged to, in a resolution unanimously passed by the Council, to come out to watch the football practice in the afternoons, particularly on the Tuesday afternoons, when the cheerleaders asked for aid in cheering practice, and in supporting the players, the later more strenuous vocal selections from the "Thundering Thousand."
A proposal of a Council honor list, on which would be put the name of every student who put in a maximum of twenty hours a semester, was discussed, and will probably be adopted. The list, which would be compiled by Council officials, would be published at the end of each semester.
P AN NEW BODY
He will be out again for the position on the Kansas eleven at guard, at which he won a place on the all-Missouri Valley team in the season of 1917. Business is ascribed to have been an avid golfer; the heyriden gridron worker took without advising any of the follow-players or coaches. "
Under the provisions of the condit-
tion, every organized body of fifteen or more men students are entitled to a representative in the "rep,
sensitive body" which, it is said, is supposed to act as a check, and as a help in originating new proposals with the Student Council.
The question of students passing bad, or "snow" checks, was taken up by the Council, which considered several means of stopping the evil, but took no final action in the matter. Five hundred worthless checks were passed last year by K. U. students, according to members of the Council.
The date of the first "night,abit" parade was set for Saturday night; October 2, after the game on McCoole Field with the Emporia Normal elev.
Claude Vorhes, vice-president of the Council, was elected a member of the auditing committee, which over, received money received by the Council.
NIGHT SHIRT PARADE DATE SET
Van, Animal Man, Foretells K. U. Glory
"Every year, Van, Keeper of the animal house, prophesies the extent of success of K U.'s football team for the season. He seldom guesses wrong. This morning, as he stood in front of the animal house smoking his pipe, he talked of the coming football season with his customary optimism.
"Kansas is going to have the best team in the United States," Van said. "Harvard, Yale or any other college can't get a team that will come up to you in this class." Kelley teams in the world. Of course the whole school has to back the squad, every student, every instructor. And say, these rallies are great. You can count on me being on McCook Field after afternoon to encourage the boys."
"Aat night I lay awake thinking about the way K. U.'s football team is going to be missouri or Thanksgiving everybody in Kansas will boost them. Last year, when the football men responded to the call for workers in the Kansas coal mines, people all over the state said, 'God bless K. U.' His team will win."
"See you at the next rally," this football enthusiast said as he went about his noonday duties.
Van turned to feed some hungry rabbits.
KUKUS PLAN FORMING OF WOMEN'S AUXILIARY
Many Concessions are Secured and Rooting Costumes
Planned
The Ku Kun Kiun, promoting organized support of all University athletics, are considering the possibilities of organizing a girls' auxiliary, the membership to be limited to a bout twenty-five members. The Ku Kun Kiun is considering new proposition at their next meeting, which is to be held in Fraser Hall in Room 205 at 7:15 o'clock Tuesday evening.
Few Practice-Teachers
At Oread High School
The Ku Ku Klan has secured a number of concessions, one of which is the concession privilege at all of the football games. This will also include selling the programs. They have also agreed to sell the football tickets and student ac tivity tickets. Other concessions by which the Klan will raise money for sending their members to all of the away.from_home games to root for the team, will be announced later. We are also planning on giving fancies.
The Ku Klu Klan, in order to make their organization more effective and a greater help to the athletes of Kan, must be strong enough to limit their manship by fifty men.
The Klan is also considering different costumes for their members which will be worn at all games. Definite action will be taken at the next meeting. Many committees have been appointed by the president, Lloyd M. Young. The costume committee is Peter Lyle, Reid Coquan, Jack Smith, Bob Mason and C. C. Carl. The Concession Committee is Pete Lytle, Roy Ziesness, Virgil Willis and Guy Daniels. Entertainment Committee, Bob Smith, Bob Lemon, Earl Johnson, Chink Blair and John Old. Publicity Committee, Herb Little, Bert Cochran, Bob Mason and John Cooper, Bill Gauss, Bill Wells, Chick Blair, Leffy Farrell and the two assistant cheer leaders.
A rather unusual situation exists in the English department at Oread High School in view of the fact that only three seniors have enrolled for practice-teaching in this subject. Usually the department is crowded with English majors applying for this work. The conditions this year were met, and we are well-divided with a practice teacher. This class is at per centented by Miss Haskell, supervisor of practice-teaching in English.
Professor H. W. Nutt, of the School of Education, supervisor at Oread, attributes the scarcity to several causes. The enrollment in the School of Education this year is unusually small, and most of the Engl. majors who are prepared for the work are waiting until the Spring semester when students in the School of Education have been excused from work in this department because of previous experience in actual teaching.
LINDLEY SPEAKS ON "HUMAN ENGINEERING"
Made Three Talks in Kansas City Thursday—Even Busier Than Usual
$QUARE DEAL TO EMPLOYE
Scientific Management Must Secure Devoted Workers in Future, Says Chancellor
Three different talks made by Chancellor E. H, Lindley in Kansas City yesterday filled his day with more than the usual amount of activity.
The Chancellor spoke before the officers of the Rotary Club of Kansas City, Mo., Thursday noon at the Balminton Hotel, then at the dinner given by the Kansas City Association of Credit Man and men and the closing of the American Life Convention Banquet held at the Mule Mesh. bach.
"Human Engineering" was the sub. subject of the address given by Dr. Lindley to the Kansas City Association of Engineers for its involvement in business and industrial activity have failed to eliminate much of the waste; it is being superceded by sci. entile management to obtain a de- mand from employee, according to Dr. Lindley.
"The problem is one that calls for a new type of management of men," Lindsey declared. "There has been the effort to get the whole man on the job."
"AUTOCRACY IS DEAD"
"The old type, the automatic type of man who knew it all and whose word was law, is as dead as Moses.
"You cannot get loyal service by giving him turkey at Christmas time and patting him on the back. We are coming to see now that the only way out of it is frankly to find the truth," she said, as they will be willing and eager to go to the day's work with their full strength and devotion."
RESPONSIBILITY AND A SQUARE DEAL
Dr. Lindsay has defended answers to
the question of how efficient human co-operation.
He briefs them in these suggestions;
Place responsibility on the man.
Assure a square deal in compensation.
Offer a prospect of promotion.
Give to the man a vision of the social service in the task he is doing.
SCHOOLS HAVE BIG DUTIES
He emphasized the rapid expansion of activities in Kansas and Missouri Valley states, together with the duty of the University of Kansas and other in-state universities, to develop industrial and business problems.
"Preliminary reports received from Dean P. F. Walker of the Kansas En-engineering School concerning his important industrial survey of the state reveal industrial development which very few Kanans realize," be said.
"The overtaking of transportation facilities makes production near the source of consumption of more im-portance. With transmission of elec-tric power, machines are published to advantage, when previou-ly, manufacturing took place near the source of stream, hence large factory units."
Art Student Returns From Eastern School
"On to Paris!" is the slogan of "the little group of women in the De. department of Painting who represented the University of Kansas at university, Massachusetts this summer. The girls are Athol Brophy, F. A, 21; Essie B. Pumphrey, F. A, 23; Iain Stevens, F. A, 21; Katherine Larkin, F. Marion Hargett, Mildred Shield, F. A, 20; and Oual Grifold, F. A, 20.
"Our work in Provincetown con- sisted of both figure and landscape painting," said one of the women this morning, "but in the aftermoons we spent our time fishing, swimming, and hiking." They plan to revive the Provincetown spirit this summer by teaching us the banks of the Kaw, where they will discuss their plans for Paris and talk over the good times in Provin- town. Mrs. W. B. Thayer of Kansas City was their chaperon.
Edwin Lupton, I'16, has returned to Lawrence for a few weeks visit with his parents.
Miss Doris Hogeobem of Pittsburg, a former student of the University will return to her home on Saturday. She will visit Hasel Cook for the past week.
BIG CONVOCATION TAUGHT STUDENTS OF UNIVERSITY ORGANIZATION WORK
Big Get-Together of K. U. Folks Was Filled With Jazz Pep, and Enthusiasm—Athletics Made Up Parts of the Program
OUTLINED ACTIVITIES FOR THE YEAR
Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. Rev. Jennings, Dr. Forrest
C. Allen, John Tracy, Helen Olson, Were Speak-
ers—All Brought Message of Work
Courses in economics and com-
mmerce, in education, psychology, his-
tory, history, sociology, journalism,
languages—in fact anything that is
desired may be taken, and competent
instructors sent out to cover the
THREE KANSAS TOWNS ADOPT K. U. EXTENSION
Leavenworth, Abilene and Juncti City Organize Classes For Credit Work
Last year 507 students were en-
rolled in various towns. This year
Mr. Sullivan the enrollment to reach over 1,000 active students.
BUY FOOTBALL SUITS
W. W. Sullivan of the University Extension department has announced that three new towns, Leavenworth, Abilene, and Junction City have adopted the University Extension school work. Already in Topeka, Parsons, Kansas City, Kansas, and Ottawa, there have been schools for two years past carrying on prof. teaching and efficient work with the students. In Kansas City, Ivan's desk this morning were four telegrams requesting consideration for other new schools which wish to be organized.
The work is carried on in this manner: fifteen or more men or women desiring organized and accredited work, make application to the Uni. versity Extension department stating that they have received this application is accompanied by fees on the basis of $2.50 for each hour credit. There are to be fifteen classes meeting once a week for a two hour session. Two university hours of credit are given for this work. Classes may be arranged to meet at one location and the receive a proportionally greater amount of credit.
Will Have Equipment For Two Hundred Men
University Loyalty was the keynote of the big convoction held in Robinson Gymnasium this morning at 10:30 o'clock. Chancellor Lindley introduced the heads of the different school organizations and the activities of the entire school year were outlined by these representatives of the University.
Members of the Men's Student Council, the W. S. G. A., the Y. W. C. A, and Y. M. C. A. cabinets sat on the platform. The gymnasium was crowded almost to bursting, although no cases of fainting were reported, as in the first convocation of the year.
Great enthusiasm was displayed throughout the meeting. The very mention of the name of Everett Bradley, "America's premier athlete," Olympic contestant, and Captain of the Kansas track team, brought a hearty ovation.
Shell Found Near Wife Of Former French Head
Fine Art Enrollment. 283.
"One hundred new football outs have been ordered by the athletic department," Coach Forest C. Allen anounced this morning. "This equipment has been slow getting here, coming in by degrees, as it were. However, we have received enough new equipment to completely fit out two varsity teams and two freshman teams. This, together with our old team, will allow us to suit forty-eight varsity men and a like number of freshmen. We plan to have two hundred men in football suits this fall."
Paris, Sept. 23—An unexploded shell with fuse attached was found lying on the sidewall in front of the hotel Luggage by the police today, just after the arrival of Madam Des. A life of the former parsimonian of France.
The Art Enrollment, 283.
Enrollment in the School of Fine Arts is now 283 and special students from the school are enrolled in the University are still enrolling. Dean Butler expects the semester's enrollment to total 325.
TRACY SPOKE OF COUNCIL John Tracy, president of the Men's Student Council made an address to students on the importance hearty co-operation of all in backing the Council and the new constitution. Tracy asked for the individual support of all in athletes. In his closing remarks Tracy said, "We want to live history this year and everybody must hest with their whole-hearted support.
BIG WINDUP ON ATHL-PTICS
Roy, Frank Jennings of the Baptist Church represented the churches of Lawrence. The keynote of his address was that it was "up to the intelligent and educated class of people to get the message of the church to strong support of all school religious activities was urged in his talk.
Captain George Nettels spoke for the football team and made a plea for more big men to report for practice. "We are working hard down there on Monday," he said. "We have the fightin' football team you ever saw in this school. But the one big thing is the support of the students and we've just got to have that. Let's everybody come out and put the Tigers on their feet and they belong on Thanksgiving day."
Dr. Forrest C. "Pho" Allen, director of athletics was the last to talk. He spoke on "understanding Loyalty." Every year we have fine prospects that are tough to win, and the battle is cleared away we have a lot of disappointment.
Helen Eilen, president of the W. S. G. A. outlined the program of that body for the year. "Our big purpose," said Miss Olsen, is to promote a feel, the spirit and the pride of women of the University and to stil- late the loyalty of everyone."
Y, M. AND Y, W. OUTLINED
Miss Katrina Gunn, secretary of the Y. W, C. A, introduced the plans and purposes of the Y. W, C. A. "We want to advance the spiritual attitude of the women," said Miss Gunn, "and to promote clear thinking"
Warren Bloedt, secretary of the Y. M. told of the organization's plans and explained the new student work. Bloedt urged everyone to come to the noon-day Luncheons held every Thursday and announced that Earl "Fighting Parson" of Chanute would speak next Thursday at Myers Hall.
“What is our answer? We have to get under loyalty better. It doesn't mean just betting on your team but it does mean your unfaltering support at all times and going to the last ditch if to defeat.” Chancellor Lindley closed the concession and a Rock Chalk burst forth that shook the very walls of the gymnasium.
New Member Elected to Kansan Board Yesterday
Paul White, c23, was elected to the Kansas Board at their meeting in 1978. The following officers were elected at that time: Walter Herder, Editor in chief; Bruce Olsen, new editor; Paul Flagg, campus editor; Chas M. Alam, vice president; the following reelected, Alumni editor; Jim Austin, exchange editor.
Charlotte Cutter, c'23, left Wednesday to spend the winter in San Diego, California.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief... Geneva Hunter
News Editor... Walt G. Herre
Campus Editor... Herbert Lerlson
University Editor... Robert L.
Sport Editor... A. E. Garvius
Alumni Editor... Joe Boyt
Leadership... Lachie
Exchange Editor... C. C. Nicole
BUSINESS STAFF
Henry B. McCurdy ...Business Mgr
Lloyd Ruppenthal. Aas't Business Mgr
Deane W. Malotts ...Culculation Mgr
BOARD MEMBERS
James Austin
Burt A. Cochran
Burd Gottlieb
Alfred Graves
J. J. Klster
Catherine Oder
Grace Olson
Gilbert Swenson
Meda Smith
Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 52 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansai and a press of the Department of Journalism.
Address all communications to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas
Phones K. 155 and 66
The Daily Kansan aims to picte-
nature, educate and give the
University of Kansas, to go fur-
ther. The Kansan is standing for the ideals the
artists are seeking; to be clean; to be cheerful;
to leave more serious problems out;
to help the rest of its ability to
develop the best of its ability in
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66.
FRIDAY,SEPT.24,1920
THE BAND
Is the University Band in its proper sphere? If not, should it be placed and under what department? It will be conceded by everyone that the band should be placed in the department where the greater part of its work lie, and where it can devote the best efforts to the institution which it serves.
Last year a change was noticeable in the band's playing at athlete contexts, especially during the latter part of the school year. Many uncomplimentary remarks were heard on account of this condition, which by the way, was no fault of the bandsmens themselves, who in many cases attended baseball games entirely upon their own initiative without any other incentive than loyalty to the university.
Without a doubt the band's best service is performed in connection with the Athletic Department. Without the band, parades, rallies, football games and all other athletic functions would be like a circle with elephants. The band, which is so vital to the success of athletics has no connection with that particular department what-soever.
Can the university afford to let this important part of its school spirit lag behind.
THERE'S A REASON
John Sbea has been one of the most bared and generally "cussed out" men on the bill this fall. When we were worn out with enrollment rushing and other nerve trying processes, we worked out some of our disposition on the condition of the campus roads. Raving about them has become more or less of a habit this fail and it is time that we either quit it or use our brains and rave intelligently.
Mr. Shea could not start work on the roads until after the first of the fiscal year, June 30, because of lack of funds. Weather conditions all through the summer and fall have been most unfavorable to work of this kind. For the great part of the time the turn up roads have been a sea of mud. Ordinarily they would not work on the roads in the condition they are in now.
Now the next time you feel yourself becoming wrought up over the University roads, just remember that there are two sides to every question, and John Shea is no doubt doing better under the circumstances than you would
FOLLOW THE FLIVVER
Now that Henry Ford has thrown a monkey wrench in the ever mounting high prices by reducing the price of the fliver 10 to 20 per cent, perhaps the expense account of the K. U. student can eventually be pared down to half-way meet the estimate of the
cost statistician of the University catalog.
The sore spot among the students at present is the $7.50 a week for board. The argument of the loquacious steward in presenting his card has frequently been that while food prices now are lower they may soon skyward again. It is certain that food prices now are lower than they were last spring and yet the Lawrence landlaws generally have added 50 cents.
The biggest hike of course has been in room rent, jumping from an average of $12 to $15 to an average of $18 to $25 a month. The big item in the room rent on the second and third floor of course is the increased cost of the coal in the basement. But one item that cannot be overlooked is the propaganda that has been sent out from Lawrence all summer concerning the shortage of rooms. And yet in the Kansan each day are advertised a number of rooms, all of which can be classified in the student district. The increased cost of education in Lawrence has been partly psychological as in every other part of the country. And so while Detroit is a long ways from Lawrence and the Fliver is not the accepted car for rush week at the University, the decline already started and now accentuated by Mr. Ford, will have its reaction in Lawrence.
ARE YOU THE EXTREMIST?
There are several ways of getting an education at the University. There are usually three types of people who are trying each of the several ways. The first type is the person who has the art of merely getting by. He goes to class for a week at a time without opening a book. He writes just enough papers to get by, and all he knows at quiz time is what he has absorbed in class.
The second type is the other extreme. He studies from the wee small hours to the wee small hours. He scarcely has time to stop to eat and has no use for such frivolities as the Y, M, C, I. A meetings or conventions. In his opinion people are fools who take time for parties, hikes, or anything which is not found in the two covers of a book.
But luckily there is a type which strikes a happy medium. They study, and learn concentration to keep from becoming a book worm. They have their papers all up on time, and yet manage to attend Y meetings, convocations, dances, hikes and other entertainments.
There is much more to education than that which is found in the two covers of a book.
Campus Opinions
Editor of the Kansan:—
Why is the campus still littered with board walls? a year ago students were led to believe before spring came again a regular walk was a thing of beauty and a joy forever.
Spring has passed and summer is all that a regular walk will the students have to rush across old narrow board walls that will soon be slippery and dangerous All over the campus are signs that warn the student to keep off the grass but during the rush between classes the grass will trample and till the grass in order to avoid collisions and blockades.
When will this congestion be relieved? When can the students go upon the campus and have no fear of wet and muddy feet? And how can you avoid them without seeing board walls wide and der to avoid collissions and blockades?
view? O. J.
Typophylum Inoculation to He Give.
Inoculation for typophyll will be given at the University Hospital on the following days at these hours:
Women: Monday, 9-11 o'clock in the morning; Wednesday, 2.4 o'clock in the afternoon.
noday, 2.4 m.p.
Men: Tuesday, 8.11 o'clock in the morning; Thursday, 2.4 o'clock in the afternoon.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The above womb will be used each week for the inoculation. The averg emurancy is from two to three years. Every student is urged to safeguard himself by being innoculated. Miss Peacock.
The terrace of the Phi Kappa Pai house is being saddled this week. Although the work is only about half a day, the place is already greatly improved.
TAYHAWK-TALK
IN COLLEGE LIFE
ON OUR CAMPUS
AND
OTHERS.
"Violence Marks Primary; One Man Killed."—Lillen, ladies! Is this the way you are starting your political career?
Ripe tomatoes are the latest kin of "Red" bombs in Chicago.
After a night's "work," five bandits had only $11.65. These are hard times indeed.
The Pleasanton Observer Enterprise says that cars are getting so
thick on Main Street that the citizens will have to keep their eyes open in crossing. Are there many somnambulists in Pleasanton.
'Japanese Brings Sweet Memories'
From Cuba?
"Perc" Collins, L. "12, visited the Alpha Tau Omega house Wednesday.
ALUMNI NOTES
Edgar L. Hollis, 1920 manager of the Jayhawk, and now advertising manager of the Picket Journal, at Red Lodge, Montana, has written to a friend here concerning the hard life he is leading. Among other things, he said that he is working with his team on his job and the Picket Journal is going fine. Further on he states that "tomorrow I am going pheasant hunting Thursday duck hunting, and Friday grouse hunting."
DR H. REDING, F.A. U. I... *ump. Eye nose, ear, nose and mouth treatment work*. Phone 5183. **WELCH FAMILER GRADUATORS**. Office 927 Mass St. Phones, Office 1515, Residence 151K. Office 1644, Residence 1646. Over McCullough's Drug Store. Phone 5183. Ree Phone 1424. **Disease of stomach, surgery and gynaecology**. Office 85, Residence 352K, Hospital 1745. **DR ALRIGHT**-Chiropractor-Radio therapy-Massage. Results guard residence Phone 1451. Residence Phone 1761. **DR FLORENCE J. BARRONS**-Osteopathic Physician办公室 House 383-385a. Phone 3279, 695 Mass Street. **EDWARD HURDEN**-Gardner Dentist. *Attention to extracting*. Phone 5114. **ED HIBTRE**-Dentist. 927 Mass St.
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jackson Building, General Practice Special attention to nose, throat and ear. Telephone 217.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrista). Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
You should purchase that Suit and Overcoat where you can obtain the greatest value for your money. Don't fail to come to my store and place a little of your time against mine. You will see for yourself that my prices are below what others are asking for the same material.
Z H TIBBETS—Dentist. 927 Mass St.
Phone 183.
SAM G. CLARKE 1033 Mass. St.
With Saunders and five pieces-featuring John Youngberg-clarinet SATURDAY Night F.A.U. $1.00-
Varsity-Bowersock
Four Shows Daily; 2:30,4:00,7:30,9:00
Given for the University- By—The Associated Student Governing Bodies the First-
TODAY—SATURDAY
Rex Beach's
"Out of the Storm"
and 2 reel Sennett Comedy
"Quack Doctor"
presents
Maurice Tourneur
Varsity Party
"The White Curde"
Also Pathe News
GIRLS!
We have silk Oxford Laces at 35c
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
1017 1-2 MASS. Also 726 1-2 MASS.
Clothes Called For and Delivered
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
THE STUDENT CLEANERS
EATON & FRAKER
We press 'em while you get your hair cut at
HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
We press 'em while you get your hair cut at HOUK'S BARBER SHOP 929 Mass. St. Phone 49
PROTCH The College Tailor
FIRST FOOTBALL
of the Season
GAME
HASKELL vs BAKER
Haskell Field 3 P.M.
Saturday, Sept. 25 Adm.75c
Halla-
s situation
are an
gun
area
been
nearly
boarded
and the
runt is
room.
The se
use
need
so high
of the porte
ortis
So large
volon
cent
the part
later
not out
gen
the
tie
thi
tlg
BY THE WAY
The Kappa Phi Club held a meeting at Fraser Hall rest room Wednesday evening. Ruth Adair gave a very interesting report on the grand council meeting which was held at Iowa City in June.
Kappa Phi, the organization of Methodist university women, held the first meeting of the year in Fraser rest room Wednesday evening. Reports of the Grand Council Conference held in Iowa City, Iowa, were given by the president, Marie Sharie c21, and Ruth Adair, c21.
Wilfred Wann, c18, visited in Lawrence for a few hours yesterday. Mr.Wann is on his way to resume his studies at the School of Bust- Administration.
Oscar V. Maurigny, formerly assistant chef of the Hotel Radicin, Minneapolis, Minn., has enrolled n the college.
Mrs. Paul Meaders, c18, left yesterday for her home at Pahuksu, Oklahoma. Mrs. Meaders a Sigma Kappa and was back for rush week.
5450287
Mary Ewing, c22, spent Thursday in Kansas City.
Miss Dorothy Miller of Kansas City and Miss Elsie Brace of North Western have gone to their homes after spending the rush week in Lawrence at the Alpha Omicron Pi house.
Miss Helen Hogue is going to spend Saturday and Sunday in her home in Olathe.
Miss Betty Watson spent the rush week at the Alpha Omicron Pi house. Miss Watson is teaching Home Economics this year in the Edwardsville High School.
Helen Moeer of Galena, who has been visiting here for the past two weeks, returned to her home yesterday. Miss Moeer wrote app and email back, and proof here last year.
I. E. Gants, c237, has withdrawn from his classes and returned to his home at Melvern.
Clark Brunington, A. B. B., 16, is visiting at the Kappa Sigma fraternity this week. Mr. Brunington is on his way to New York where he is engaging in the advertising business.
Eather Monteith, c24, spent the week-end at her home in Kansas City, Missouri.
Melba Parker of Wichita, who for the past two years has been a student in the University of Wisconsin, has enrolled in the department of journalism.
Bill Rielly, l23, spent Tuesday visiting in Kansas City, Kansas.
Phi Mu Alpha, professional musical fraternity announces the pledging of James R. Stagg, of Kirwin, Earl Mller of Burr Oak, Thomas H. Bracken of Glasco and C. M. Rose, of Dodge City.
WANT ADS
//LOST - Pocketbook on Indiana between 8th and 9th streets, Wednesday. Reward. Call 1056. 10-2-34.
e n a
FOR RENT.—First class room suitable for faculty member. Phone 232r or 188. 10.5-32.
ROOMS FOR RENT-Four double rooms for boys. 1131 Tenn, Phone 2508. 10-5-32.
STRICTLY modern well built six
room residence for sale. East front
situated in fine neighborhood.
n there is a chance to own a new home
LOST- In women's dressing room at Innes, silver vane case with fraternity crest. Liberator asked. Call Mary Poindexter, Phone 99. 10-5.37.
LOST—Silver hat ornament attached to long pin. Call 1198. 10-2-38.
FOR RENT—Large upstairs room for boys. Call 1534 Blue, 1329 Ohio.
10-5-36.
LOST—Down town or on street car
plain Kappa Sigma signa
please call 2374 Red. 10-5-40.
on reasonabe terms. Inquire at 1425
New York St. 10-2-32.
FOR RENT - For boys. One large double room, well furnished. Twenty Dollars per month. Call 1601 Rhode Island St. Phone 1090. 6-5-25.
A ROOM for two boys. 1340 Vt.
Phone 1361 Black. Mrs. C. L. Wall.
6-5-26.
pupils and 6 years up. Games,
songs, etc. Lorna Marie Reub. 1234
Oread. Phone 2304. 4-5-4
FOR RENT - Comfortable room on first floor with private entrance.
Suitable for one man. Price $10.00.
1320 Vermont. 6-5-22.
MUSICAL KINDERGARTEN—For
SOCIAL Dancing Class every Tuesday night, 7:30 to 8:30 over Dicro Bie's. Private lessons by appointment. Call 2236 White. 4-5-9
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ROOM FOR RENT - Double or single for girls. One block from campus. Phone 2509. 249 Ohio. 5-15. Garrett.
LOST—Pair gold riramed, tortoise shelled glasses. Between Snow Hall and John M. Shea's office. Return to Kauan office. 7-3-29.
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished rooms four blocks from University, $10 and $15 per month. Teelephone 2743 White. 7-3-28.
LOST—between Brick's and 10th Street last Friday, bottom part of Waterman pen. Call 2381 Blue.
5.7.97
FOR RTNT or Sale—New Remington
typewriter in perfect condition. Call
Adams, Phone 1361 White. 7-3-28.
LOST—Elgin bracelet watch, initials
J. M. M. in back. On Campus south
of courts courts Burlington.
Reward. Jesuite Mull, 814 Amani,
1655 Reward. Jesuite Mull, 814 Amani,
8.3-31.
Glasses that are good to look through and good to look at. Gustafson—Adv.—10.1.
"Put K. U. First"
TEXAS CLUB will have a short meeting in Fraser rest room Friday afternoon at 4:30. All students from all grades and get acquainted.-PRESIDENT.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The K. U. Coopmanipol Club will mase Friday evening, September 24, at 7:45 o'clock, in the Hall of the Coopmanipol Club House, 1409 Rhode Island St. Business: Reorganization and election of new officers, for the present term—F. V. BERMEJO, President.
Sphinx meeting Sunday, September 25 at Phi Psi house at 2:30.
A meeting of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debating fraternity, will be held Tuesday afternoon at the Hull Hall. It is essential that all members be present.
Ahoku will meet Friday afternoon at 4:30 in room 100 Green Hall. All members please be present.
The K. U, Society of Biological Research will meet at 4:30 o'clock Friday afternoon in the library of Snow Hall.
All Congregational students and their friends are invited to attend a mixer at the Congregational Parish House Friday at 8:15 o'clock.
Mrs. Johnson's Shop Now located in the Stubbs building
Shampooing Marcelling Manicuring
SPECIAL TREATMENT OF THE HAIR
Sale of first quality hair-nets at $1.00 the dozen
The following books are wanted at the W. S. G. A. book exchange, and students possessing copies are asked to sell them:
K Club meets Thursday at 7 o'clock in Green Hall. Very Important. John Bunn, vice-president.
Grammar, Blount and Nortup; Algebra, Fite; Trigonometry, Ashton; Handbook for English Writers; Oddsyde; Elementary Logic, Jevens, Psychology, Hunter; Botany; Spanish Grammar; Calculus; Language dictionaries, and freshman rhetoric books.
BROOKLYN COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL
3 ser duim.
Economics, Ely; Sociology, Blackmar and Gillan; Modern English
There have been a number of calls
First Baptist Church offers you
Inspiration Relaxation
Education Fellowship
Make It a Part of Your Program
Sunday School 10:00 a.m.
Live Music Wednesdays Women
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
B. Y, P. U. 6:45 p. m.
FRANK JENNINGS, Pastor
FOREST WITCRAFT, Asst. Pastor
Brevhan'S
The Music Business. Win Our Money
Welcome Students
$10.00
A MASKED WOMAN WITH A HEAD HELD UP IN AN EARLY TERRAIN CROWN. THE HEAD IS DESIGNED TO BE SHAPED LIKE A PEACOCK, WITH A GREAT FEATHERED PLUMAGE AND A BACKPACKING TRAVEL BAG.
SOME POET mistakenly referred to a woman's hair as her crowning glory.
We Serve CREAM WAFFLES
They are not merely ultra-stylish they are amazingly becoming.
CREAM WAFFLES with creamery butter and pure maple syrup and a cup of good coffee, all for
"Her Crowning Glory"
Had he seen our display of beautiful new fall hats he would not have made such an error.
15c
SUPREME CAFE
914 Mass. St.
OUR SATURDAY SPECIAL OFFERINGS for this week end are:
Ultra Stylish Hats at
=
STERLING
What your Tailor?
What your Tellor?
Suits and Overcoats for College Men
with superior workmanship and best of material
for Jevon's Introduction to logic. Will to sell it bring it to the student book persons who have this book and wish exchange in Fraser.
$40 up
Samuel G. Clarke
1033 MASS. STREET
Items of Interest From Your Store
Girdles in Roman Stripe by the yard and already made furnished with knotted fringe.
Long Gloves—real kid and Cape in black, tan, and brown.
Very scarce today.
INSURANCE
THE
133
AGENCY
Lawrence Kansas
"Quality and Service"
Radmore Silk Hose—Many of you know the line from your home merchant. Full fashioned pure thread silk. Come in black and white. The best here for the money on the market today.
WEAVERS
Party Dresses—All from the home of Peggy Paige, one of the student's favorite dress houses. Just received this morning. Satin Charmeuse over draped with tulle and other new styles.
DANCING SCHOOL
The Student's Store
Opening
Saturday Morning
September 25
I.O.O.F. HALL
CLASS 9--10 a, m.
SOCIAL DANCING
10--12 p. m.
Virtue by 12, equals per month.
$... (b)
A Secret—figure yours
Mrs. J.L. Newhouse
Take your pencil, please, and fill in as you go along—
Time to figure, 4 min. 20 sec. Don't tell anyone the real facts. Five minutes interview with yourself will suffice.
When I die my wife will need per month to live on at least
$ $ $ $ $
Deduct (b) from (a) ... $...
DEFICIT in necessary monthly income ... $...
Our COMPLETE FAMILY PROTECTION POLICY will furnish this amount every month to your wife, ex-communist friend or colleague. 123 now for an appointment.
SHAMPOOING
Hair Work, Cap Nets Marinello Preparations
Mrs. C. H. Sanders
1316 Tenn. Phone 1036
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Customers' Room Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
FOOTBALL CANDIDATES
SCRIMMAGE IN MUJ
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Prospects Brighter With Sixty Men Out for Place on Varsity
YEARLINGS IN WORKOUT
Last Year's Freshmen Show Up Well in Practice Yesterday
Out with one hundred and twenty men in football uniform every afternoon, working hard and crying for more. He was on a brighter aspect than the week. Sixty men out for the Varsity squad, plowed around through the mud Thursday afternoon, getting tired of playing for the coming gruelling season.
MIS SEN
Two squads picked out by the coaches gave a half hour scrimmage, wherein men from last sea-son's freshman squad did good work. Spurgeon, playing fullback, went through the line for big gains. Others of last year's first year men who showed up well, were Allison, at end, who went around the line and into practically every position in the game all the time, getting his man and holding his part of the line. Friker, 225 lb. guard, surpred some of the men with the ball by his speed. Higgins seemed to have no trouble in holding up his end of the game. Others of the new men on the Varsity who showed up given up in the quarterback positions. Ivy at end showed up particularly well.
SIXTY FRESHMEN OUT
SENT FRESHIE.
The freshmen, axiis strong, spent the afternoon in running down under pants, and practiced broken field running. The freshmen will prob- before not scrimmage with the Varsity Wednesday of next week. About one hundred loyal roots were out watching practice.
LOAFING ROOM READY
Football Men Given Place to Relax in Gym
The new variety landing room has been opened on the east second floor of Robinson Gymnasium. The Var., room proper, or "K" gallery, is fitted out for the purpose of athletics, to be themselves, and to get the human touch of athletics. The walls are hung with pictures of former K. U, heroes with a life size portrait of Tommy Johnson occupying the place of honour. The gymnasium is comfort to the men, chairs, tables, lounges and newspapers are supplied. A bulletin board where the sport dope is posted, occupies one corner and across the room is a blackboard and the coaches in illustrating plays.
Adjoining the "K" gallery is the treatment room equipped with work out benches and a vibrator for the children. The chair also with treatment in the mornings.
Here the Varsity men informally meet with the coaches, loaf during their idle hours and talk about what ever suits their fancy.
Bomb Found in Crowded Station of Brooklyn "L"
New York, Sept. 23—A dynamite bomb with a fuse was discovered in a wash room of the Reid Avenue station on the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Elevated Line today by policeman San Cinelo. He ex-tinguished the fuse. The elevated platform was crowded with scores of people who were on their way for several weeks ago was marked by considerable violence during the first few days. It is believed to be practically ended through the return of the men to their posts individually and the hiring of new men.
Why not have a good looking pair of glasses? Gustafson.—Adv.10-1.
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist
Eastman Kodaks
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
A. G. ALRICH
Vocational Training Men May Get Maximum Raise
Printing, Engraving, Binding
Office Supplies, Rubber Stamps
Stationery, Seals, Stencils
736 Mass. Street
"There is a possibility that vocational training men may get a raise from ninety to one hundred dollars a year. If the board will give it to them if they can be convinced that the man actually need the increased amount," said Prof. A. T. Walker, head of the Vocational Training department this mor.
The maximum, one hundred dollars a month, has been allowed to the Kan. Sai city schools and the Pittsburgh Normal men because, as they are in the city, they were supposed to be higher. There have been a number of raises in Lawrence prices since the last figures were sentin to the board and I am now, with the aid of the men, making out payments. The board," continued Professor Walker.
Vacancies in Orchestra.
According to F. E. Kendri, director of the University Orchestra, a number of vacancies have not yet been filled in the orchestra. Places for the following instruments are still open. Second flute, first and third oboe, trumpet, trombones, and tympan. Any assistant to Director Kendri is asked to report to Director Kendri at once in Room 115, Central Administration Building.
Mr. M. A. Follidori Jr., c23, has accepted a position in the office of the Southern Pacific R. R. at Kansas City, Mo.
Let us duplicate that lens. Gus.
tafson.-Adv.-10-f.
Announcement that K. U. would be represented next year in the national marksmanship contest at Camp Perry, Ohio, was made today by Capt. H. L. Burdick, commander of the Reserve Officers Training Corps at the University. The R. O. T. C. classes in his program will send to send a full team with the zeal to win big honors for K. U., Captain Burdick said.
K. U. MEN TO SHOOT
Kansas R. O. T. C. Will Send
Team to National Contest
Captain M. C. Grenata, of the Engineering Corps, newly-appointed member of the Kansas military defense agency a week ago, was the coach of the Camp Humphreys rife team, which finished well in the finals. Captain Grenata is a member of the faculty, will conduct classes in markmanagement.
Among the many rifle teams taking part in the rifle matches at Camp Perry, s. R. O. T. C. teams made an excellent show. The teams consisted of fourteen shotguners, all r. O. T. C. students from the following instruction camps: Camps Dews, Jackson, Custer and Kearney, Infantry camps; Camps Humphrey Engineering camp, and Fort Ethan Allen, Cavalry camp. There were fifty-two institutions represented in the matches. In the eight-three students attending the matches, fifty-one were from institutions of collegiate grade, thirty-one were from secondary schools, while among the latter were nineteen students from public high schools.
THE FASHION MAGAZINE
The result of recent purchases in the New York market from which our buyer has just returned, affords you a chance to choose form the newest and most beautiful creations of Women's Wear for Fall and Winter.
Dresses of Wool or Silk, for street, for afternoon or evening affairs, Party Frocks and Dinner Gowns.
There are Suits for every type, in long, medium and short coat styles, with beadings, embroidery and fur trimmings, or plainly tailored styles.
Blouses, rich in garniture, beads and embroidery in Flesh, White, Suit Shades and wonderful new colorings of Georgette and Crepe de Chine or combined with Satins.
NEW PLAID SKIRTS. You will find nothing smarter or more serviceable than the new pleated skirts of richly colored plaids, beautiful materials of qualities which have been very scarce.
Choose your Winter Coat now, while hardly cold enough today to be thinking about a winter wrap (and the wrap is decidedly the thing) you will find the selection just now at its best.
**Furs for early Fall.** Small neck pieces which add so much to the looks of suit or street dress, in Gray or Sable Squirrel, Stone Marten, Molene, or Sable Coney. Other Furs in Coats, Coatees, Wraps and Scarfs.
Innes Bullene Hackman
New Typewriter Record
LONDON, July.—A successful attack on the world's typewriting speed record was made by R. G. Curtis. He averaged 133 words per second if he typed from dictaphone records. He had to change the cylinders twice during the test.
Referring to the attached clipping, would say that Mr. Curtis used a WOODSTOCK typewriter for the test referred to, and had never seen the Woodstock until nine days before this test was made. Mr. Thompson, the London representative for the Woodstock Typewriter Company, received a letter to this effect while visiting in America.
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE, Distributors 737 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas Phone 548
The Norwich University队(Camp Ethan Allen, R. O. T. C. Cavalry camp) finished in third place in the Regimental Team Match, winning奖励 as they beat five teams Regular Army and fifteen National Guard.
Lightning Hit Chem Building.
The chimney and part of the roof on the south east corner of the Chem.istry Building are repaired and in good shape again according to John M. Shea, superintendent of buildings and grounds. This chimney and a portion of the roof were torn off by lightning a short time before the opening of this school year.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Death of Policeman Revenged Dublin, Sept. 23—Immediate revenge for the murder of two police, men last night was exacted today. A number of houses were burned and damage done by flying bullets. The reprintisal also visited the nearby villages of Carlisle and Wicklow, who were killed at the latter place and one at the former, the report said.
Miss Sammie Butler of Muskogee, Okla., will be the guest of Hazel Cook, next week.
Make your school work easier by giving proper attention to your eyes Gustafson..-Adv. 10-1.
H
If its football stuff
You crave
Just 'end run'
Up to our
Sporting goods department
And we can
'Snap' you
Ever'thing you'll need
From top to toe—
There's eighteen diff'rent
Qualities in footballs
And all of Spaldings
Regulation togs—
We satisfy the wants
Of the Regular
And the Volunteer
And the Practice-Hound
Sporting Goods Section Second Floor
Ober's
HEARTFOTO OUTWITTERS
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK 1047 Massachusetts St.
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
We are Pleased
With the large number of K. U. Students who have patronized our store.
We hope to increase our list of satisfied customers with Quality-Jewelry and prompt repair service at all times.
Landers QUALITY JEWELRY
Lander's
QUALITY NEWEST
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Ninth and Vermont Streets
ERIC A. BLECK, D. D. Pastor
Re-opens next Sunday after being closed for repairs and re-decorating
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Church Services 11 a.m.
GOOD MUSIC SERMON BY THE PASTOR
You Are Invited
Your Opportunity!
Covrielt. 1919. A. B. Kirschbaum Company
Carl's lucky purchase of 65 Suits from America's foremost clothesmakers—
$ 75,$ 70,$ 65,$ 60 values now—
$50
—the biggest values offered by any clothing store in the United States today-
Suits for Men and Young Men
These Suits are now selling at
CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XVIII.
K. U. EX-SERVICE MEN CELEBRATE WITH 35TH
Topeka Decorated in True French Style for the Re-Union
K. U. BAND IN PARADE
Over 100 University Students Present for Opening Festivities
One hundred University students, formerly doughboys, artillerymen, and pill rollers, attended the first and opening day of the second annual reunion of the 35th division at Tooka Sunday.
The veterans "fought the war over again" from Camp Doniphan to Commerce and return, airing with great gusto their experiences in the Veques, the Argentine, the armistice leave for home, and the mountain resorts in the south of France.
Yestearday was consumed in registering the thousands of returning divisional members and assigning them to billet in the Topela homes. The registration desk held forth in the basement of the state house.
Today regimental organizations met and elected new officers following the speaking of Major General Wm. Wright, former divisional commander.
Tomorrow "bookoo" entertainment will be dispensed lavishly on the closing day and in the evening five bands, including the K. U. and Aggie bands, will take part in the annual divisional parade.
Members Wanted on Persona Basis and Church Membership
Topeka is decorated in true French fashion for the meeting of the world participants. The street cars carry the "Hommes 40 Chevaux X" arm, half the French slant on tiing the more muscular stock, stock arms the "frog" names and phrases greeted the ex-service men on every turn.
OPEN Y. W. CAMPAIGN
The annual campaign for membership of the Y. W. C. A. will open Tuesday afternoon, September 27, at the regular meeting in Myers Hall and close Friday at the first Y. W. C. A. lmckenchel of the year.
NUMBER 11.
The pledge of application for membership is as follows:
The new basis, for membership is the personal basis, not the church membership basis that has been used formerly. Any woman in the Uni_versity may become a member of the Association by affirming her membership, and that it is her purpose as a true follower of Jesus Christ.
"The Young Women's Christian Association of the University of Kan., assuring the Christian Faith in God, the Father and in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord and Savior; and in the Holy spirit, the Revocator of Truth and Sacrifice of Power; according to the teaching of the Holy Scripture and the witness of the Church, declares its purpose to be:
"I. To lead students to faith in God through Jesus Christ.
"2. To lead them into membership and service in the Christian Church"
"3. To promote their growth in the church."
"4. To prepare for future journeys through the study of the Bible."
"4. To influence them to devote themselves in united efforts with all Christians, to make the will of Christ effective in human society, and to extending the Kingdom of God throughout the world."
Book Exchange Demands Still More Text-Books
The W. S. G. A. Book Exchange in Franer Hall will be unable to fill the demand for the following books: Calcutus, Love; Accounting, Kenter; Historia, Historia; Anatomy, Anatomy; Canopy, Bassett; and General Psychology, Hunter. The Book Ex. change will not be open this Saturday, but will remain open until Wed., midday of next week, and on Friday of next week, at the W. S. G. A.
There will be an informal mass meeting of all university women Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in Fraser Chapel. The program and further details of the meeting will be announced in Tuesday's Kannan.
Phi Chi announces the pledging of R. Herbert Loop, c22, Russell, and David Parker, c24, Hill City.
Tests Show Lawrence
City Water is Pure
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1920
Lawrence city water is safe to drink according to director A. H. Howell, head of the water and ewage laboratories. Director Jew_ll adds that the amount of chemicals in the water has been greatly increased.
The last test completed by the State laboratory was on Wednesday, September 22. It showed a negative result. The water is tested for the presence of the B.Coll. A daily test of the water of Lawrence is made.
KUKU'S FURNISH EATS
Gift of Fruit to Squad Welcome
By Alien
Plenty of fruit will be given the members of the , football squad throughout the present season. This has announced today by "Jew" young, president of the Ku Klu Klu. He ku Klu Khan in return for the oncission privilege as a returner to furnish all fruit that is desired by Coachorest C. Allen for his football quad.
At present, starting today, the members of the squad will receive an orange a day throughout the season. In addition to this they will each receive a lemon on the days of regular games. This will allow them to attend staff. "This will be a great help to all members of the squad. I think that an orange a day for each member and a lemon for each of the squad on the days of the scheduled games will be enough fruit for the boys. They will surely be grateful to the members of the Ku Klux Klan," said Coach Forrest C. Allen today when asked about the fruit supply.
This is the first of a series of bib things that will be accomplished by this five bunch of loyal routers. To *bib* them, go to www.mccook.com on McCook field for the squad.
Dr. Curran of Rosedale Performs Big Operation
As the result of an operation performed recently by Dr. E. J. Curran at the Rowside Hospital, William T. Newkirk, of Elk City, freshman in the faculty, faces a flood of both eyes, which previously had become crossed in illness. Newkirk, who had carried in the collage this fall for his second semester, her work, has withdrawn under the direction of Dr. Curran who advised
While suffering from a relapse occasioned by a bad attack of influenza last fall, Newkirk's eyes became strained, and the muscles of the right eye partially paralyzed. He arrived in the University and went through the semester's work. Upon the advice of Prof. William Robinson and Prof. G. E. Coghill, he studied in zoology and anatomy, he was Doctor Carran in Kansas City and obtained an appointment as a veterinarian. Newkirk harvested his wheat crop and in the fall underwent the sice.
cessful operation in Rosedead. Muscles of the right eye were severed and sewed together, those of the left out and lengthened.
Doctor Curran is an instructor in the department of Ophthalmology at Rosalea, a branch of the University of Kansas. His work is widely known and he performs many opera, including cataracts. He has followed his work with elderly people who have been afflicted with cataracts and total blindness.
Girls Glee Club Held Election of Officers
Pi Upison announces the pledging of Virgil Reid c24, of Stafford, and Benjamin Painter, special in the School of Law, of Beverly.
The first meeting of the Girl's Club was held Wednesday evening, Sept. 22nd. The following of, of, of the girls at the biennial jeresie joneslein bengerberg; Professor, Vera Nearly; Vice President, Marguerite Fischer; Secretary, Reba White; Treasurer, Ela McMullen, L.L.; Assistant Professor, Assistant Librarian, Florence Ferrer
All old members of the club who have not attended one of the three meetings will be required to try out to retain their membership. This try out is open Friday only. The members who have been trying out and the new tryouts will be announced the first of next week.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
NIGHT SHIRT PARADE
SCHEDULED SATURDAY
Snake Dance, Bonfires, and "Eats" to be Features of Celebration
ALLEN TO MAKE SPEECH
O. Bacteria are too small to see.
Pep is Expected to Run Riot But Without Disorderly
The "seventh" annual Night Shift Parade will be held Saturday night, October 2, after the Euproria Normal game. Cheerleader Sandy Winnor exports at least 2000 participants. They will meet at Robinson Gym at 8 o'clock and proceed down Fourteenth to Massachusetts Street where they will form in order for the dance by the dancer and the K. U. Band. The F. A. U. band in the center and the Haskell band in the rear.
Conduct
There will be three bonfires, one in South Park, another at Ninth and Massachusetts, and the third in Rockville. Doctor Forest, C. Allen will speak for about ten minutes in front of the Bower-sock. Chaneless Lindley will also take part, although it is not sure whether he will don the "rose" if he does.
The Snake Dance will start at South Park and proceed down to Street. Mr. Winsor announces that it will be well ordered and "run according to Hoyle,"—at any rate he says positively that there will be no repetition of the disorderly fights of last year. Eats and drinks, will be freely dispensed; mercies are made at 10:20 o'clock on the Varsity and Bowerstacks theater will be thrown open to the paraders.
All traffic on Massachusetts Street will be stopped from 7:30 till 10:40. The city officials are cooperating in every way to make the parade a success.
A meeting of a student interest committee with the business men of Lawrence will be held Tuesday noon, at which details of co-operation in the annual pp event will be fully worked out.
---
Bloodhounds Failed To Find Time-Thief
No arrests have been made in connection with the Gustafson Jewelry Company robbery which occurred at 4 o'clock Saturday morning.
Frances Lee Evans, c'23, has resumed her home in her inEd, Oka loha, after a two weeks visit at the Alpha Delta Pi house.
Mr. Gustafson estimated his loss to be between eight and nine hundred dollars. The watches taken were仁川 Gruen, Howard and Hamilton make, with the exception of one Swiss watch valued at a hundred dollar. He insured but the plate glass window, which will cost two hundred dollars to replace.
bloodhounds which arrived from Kansas City at 6 o'clock Saturday, evening failed to take the train at that time as the animals became confused at the large crowd that gathered on the street. Trails followed were fled.
Already forty candidates have reported to Head Coach Paine, of Ames, Iowa, for the coming football season of Ames, and the regular school year does not open until this week, when 'they are expecting 15 to 100 men to be in uniform for the Varsity squad.
Jack Waugh, L'20, arrived Sunday from his home in Eskerake, Kans. Mr. Waugh enrolled yesterday in the School of Law.
Regular football practice began September 15, and the man have been going through the preliminary work of the season. Indications are that the team will see big changes in the Varsity line_up for the coming season. Wallace, vet, even center on the Ames squad is being shifted to the backfield, and Lingenfelter, who worked at end last season, is doing the passing from frontline.
Ames Boasts Wealth Of Football Veterans
Quarterback material for the Ames squad does not worry the Iowa coach. There are four men who are in the quarterback position, out in anm, form every day.
Ames first game of the season comes October 2, with Coe College at Ames.
Many Now Mourn as Smoke Curls Upward
"Smoke," he said, is dead. The news that this humble Persian, loved and admired by so many of the student body, has passed away, brings a moment of sadness to those who knew him. Coming to Lawrence less had made his residence at 1541 Townsend, he had been coouten and kindly as he became most respected all over the Hill. It is indeed grusome to think that one, so beloved, should be taken from this earth in such a ghastly manner. Rather would all have and him leave for his celestial abode by a less horrible death. But, with the terrible accuracy of the Juggerman, he was sent to the Unknown Land, but leaving the knowledge with his friends that he had died tragically graveside victim of an enemy's superior
For "Smoke's" nine lives were swept away at once. Some degraded dog must answer to the Kipi Cane dog who slapped chewed on the neck of "Smoke."
And the Alpha Chis are left to mourn.
RALLY PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK ANNOUNCEI
first Pep Meeting to be Held Tuesday Afternoon at McCook Field
FRESHMEN TO LEARN SONG
Thursday Night is Set for an Of
official Display of En-
thusias m
Every freshman in the University must know the "Crimson and the Blue" by Wednesday night according to the plans of encercleander "Sandy" Windsor, and every upperclassman must assume his share of the respon- ability by seeing that every first year student in ms or her house does know the university song by that time.
"This plan was decided upon so that during conventions and raises everyone will be able to sing instead of merely the uppercassman," said in cheerleader, and in choreographer, for operation of both the contagion and the. uppercassmen.
The following program for the week for creation of pep for the first game of the football season Saturay may has been announced as follows A big rally of all university students will be on Tuesday. A success event. At that time it is probable there will be a short term movie
mage.
The band will play for the rally, and the cheerleaders have some new years and stuns to try out for the approval or the timing of the rally. A student of the university of Kansas is expected to be there according to the cheerleader this includes the women students who have, as Dr. Allen asserted at Fri. day's concession, as much responsibility in the cheering as the men
Thursday night is the time set for the official night rally. Delfni plans will be carried out in the organisa-
tions, but it is not clear attendance of every man is expected.
Topeka, Sept. 24. The utmost in scientific plans will be drawn for the new University School of Medicine Hospital at Rosedale, when the ideas of the legislative committee are carried out. The most modern and efficient architectural treatment will be given the new buildings.
According to present plans there will be a noon rally on Friday to cultivate the raily activities of the week. This will be held some place on the campus and will probably be something in the nature of the Doc Yak rally held last year. This last year it was also a raily that the women students may participate and all energy, pep and voices will be saved for the game Saturday afternoon and the night shirt parade Saturday night.
HOSPITAL GOAL FIXEI
Proposed Rosedale Structure to Be Utmost in Science
This was insured today when the appointment of Dr. Ralph B. Seem as hospital consultant was announced.
Doctor Seem has been associate, in planning some of the most complete and largest medical school hospitals in the country, including that at the University of Chicago. At least $2,000 will be paid Doctor Seem
HOWITZER FOR R.O.T.C.
ARRIVES ON CAMPUS
More Equipment on Way From Camp Eustis for Artillery
IS 8 INCH FIELD PIECE
Big Gun is Camouflaged—To be Set in Front of
Gym
An eight inch Howitzer gun for the use of the R, O, T, C unit has arrived and is now at the Mississippi Street entrance to the campus. This weapon was sent to the mount to arrive from Camp Estuia, Va. According to Captain Burdick, the Howitzer was originally made by the Bettleheim Steel Works for the Rossium Government, but was never dismantled. The gun is highly camouflaged.
The department of military science is expecting another gun and also a number of tractors and trucks, all from Camp Eustis, Va. The guns will be set up on the campus, probably in front of Robinson Gymnastium, until there is some provision made for housing them. They will be used by the team in the artillery unit. For learning the mechanism and care of guns.
It is thought by Captain Burdick that it will be advisable to leave the gun in its present position at the entrance of the campus, until the remaining equipment arrives. The weight of this piece is shown by the fact that the rear axe on the K. U. truck which was being used to haul the base and the sights up to the gymnasium, was broken this morning.
FRESHMEN WILL EAT
Five Big Talks and Filipino Orchestra to Entertain
The seventh annual freshman blow-
out will be held at Meyer Hall's Sall-
urday at 6 o'clock. Dinner will be
served by the Y. M. C. A. and a pro-
gram of speeches and entertainments
will be presented. Music will be fur-
nished by a Filippino orchestra. Veal
pasta, potato salad, hot rolls, pea
vegetable salad, hot rolls, ice
cream, cake and coffee are listed on
the menu. The program:
"Welcome to Our 'Y.' John Bunn
president; "Your 'Y.' Warren Blod,
gott, secretary; "The Glad Hand."
Herry Stewart; "K. U. and You"
Dean J. G. Brantley; "Pep," cheer
leader "Sandy" Winsor
Kansas Man Appointed Professor at Harvard
Wilbur C. Abbott, a former instructor at K. U., has been appointed Professor of History at Harvard University, and began his new work there recently. He will give courses in Modern English History and the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Ern. During recent years Professor Abbott has taught at Yale University where he was called to Harvard to leave to attend to war. Robert M. Johnston, who was considered one of the two leading authorities on military history in this country.
Among other distinguished additions to the Harvard teaching staff are William MacDougall, the noted British psychologist, and Frank A. Vanderipel of New York City, who is to give a special series of lectures in the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration.
Chancellor Lindley Talks at Union Meeting
Chancellor Ernest H. Lindley adressed the churches of Lawrence at a union meeting held in the Robin son Magnamusian Sunday evening. This was the first opportunity given the town people to hear the Chancellor speak on a religious subject and the attendance showed that the privilege was appreciated. Chancellor low Linder whose ashes are buried in Magnamusian's "speaking of common sense and knowledge as the first two ingredients and of religion as the third necessary ingredient of the well rounded life.
The singing was led by Dean Butler of the Department of Fine Art. The solo of the evening was sung by Harazine Hasselline of the same department,
Miniters, representing the differ-ent local churches, occupied seats on the platform with the chancellor.
Lois Bennet, c23, attended a house party at Kansas City, Mo., Friday.
Extension Department To Furnish Lectures
The Extenison department of the University is offering ninety different lectures, concerts, and entertainments this year to high schools and general audiences throughout the state. In the talent offered is Will Stern, who has taught at Dickerson's characters, and the Bostonian Sextette Club. Some of the university faculty members are also available for the lecture course work. An average of five programs is to be given in each town and will be put out by the department at less than $150 fee required by commercial agencies.
In addition to the outside profes-
ional talent, the department is in-
terested in the Dramatic Club pre-
ference. We also invite Chris con-
certs given in the state.
4. U. STUDENTS JOIN ORDER OF DE MOLAY
gible
Young Men Between the Ages of 16 and 21 are Eli-
Forty per cent of those initiated into the Lawrence Chapter of De Molay, for boys, Saturday, were K.U. students. This chapter is the see, one in Kansas, and is sponsored by the Scottish Rite chapter. The organization is composed of young men between 16 and 21 years old.
The name pet Molay, is that of a French patron who gave up his life for his Brother rather than betray a trust they imposed in him. Thus, in the order special stress is placed upon loyalty to the Diety, home, country, and to chivalry, courtesy, and clean living.
The De Molay is a secret order from the general public but all Mast. Masons are allowed to sit in the boke room during the officers' meetings, where they were chosen: Seventi Higgins, Master Councilor; Robert Laadon, Senior Councilor; Eugene Mason, Junior Councilor; James Thurston, Donald Higginson, Treasurer.
The advisory council from the Coordinate Scottish Rite Rites area. J. N. Johnson, Chairman; George O. Foster, C. O. Bowman, M. O. Mork,mans. M. Lee Sorey, J. R. Holmes,J. Frank Jones, S. K. Slyne, N. L. Roberts, H. B. Pears, John H. Robin, John H. Karb, Advisor to the Chapter. Mr. Kork is a graduate student and instructor of Physiology.
HONOR DEAN WALKER
Mechanical Engineering Features His Article
The September issue of "Mechanical Engineering," official organ of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, features an article on industrial research by Dean P. F. Walker.
The article reports the field of industrial research and tells of the atruments made to analyze the industrial possibilities of the State of Kansas, distracts of the article appear in three leading New York papers.
traits made to analyze the industry possibilities of the State of Kansas' districts of the article appear in three leading New York papers. Investigations are being made regarding the co-operative support of the governor's office and the state department of industry and labor. Assisting in this work are three graduates of the School of Engineering, C. A. Swigget, S.A. Almoussore, and J.O. Mahman, operating conditions in various enterprisees, a study of the industrial needs of the state, and a study of the economic factors underlying manufacuring in Kansas. A complete reame of the work done in industries surrounding Kansas is next in order of the Graduate Marzine.
Fo'mer Student to Marry.
The marriage of Mary Mose Nijhiono, '18, and Innes Whitehead, '20, has been announced for Satur day, September 25. Mr. Whitehead just recently received his commission as a First Lieutenant in the Aviation service.
Harlan Thompson Writes
The hero in "To Kill a Mockingbird" pulled in Wednesday's daily Kansas was written by Harlan Thompson, A. B. 15, a graduate of the department o journalism. He is an member of I A. H. College and Thompson has lately been very sure ccessful in writing plays, magazine and newspaper articles in New York City. One of his sketches was pr
Miss Helen Sortor will spend the week end in Kansas City.
COMPLETE PLANS FOR STUDENT TICKET SALE
Big Drive Starts tomorrow and Lasts Until Thursday Night
GOAL IS 1,000 TICKETS
Canvass
Organizations in Charge of Campaign Will Make Thorough Carries
Plans for the big drive of the sales of football] season tickets and student enterprise bocks have been completed and the campaign will start Wednesday to continue until Thursday night. Aboku club will charge of the sales, campaigns and campaigns, and or the Hill, Bob Lynn will be the manager.
The Ku Ku Klan will help in the student sales both in the University and in the student district rooming houses. "We should sell at least 1000 tickets easily," said Lloyne Young, president of the Ku Ku Klan, Mary Olsen, will take charge of the campaign among the women of the Hill and will be supported by W. S. G, A. the Y, W. C. A, and W. A. A. B, the men and women sales will make house to house campaigns, and the Ku Ku Klan will take charge of the vowors屋。
A booth is being planned for the entrance to the campus so that every one will have a chance to buy either one or both.
5 GAMES FOR FIVE-FIFTY
The football season ticket is to be for $4.50, for the five home games, which will mean a saving of $2.50, over buying individual tickets before each game. The student enterprise ticket seems to be the best to buy. For $8 the book will admit to 37 University events, all football, basketball, and baseball games, University concerts, and debates, which if paid for separately would cost $25.00. "There is no good excuse for any student to buy a ticket for good for the University as well as a big saving for the student," said Bob Lynn, University Manager of the campaign.
C. E. PLANS CAMPAIGN
Seventy-Five Delegates to State Convention in Topeka
rence is the executive secretary.
During the first of November a convention of the Eastern Kanas district will be held in Topena, and a goal of 75 delegates from Lawrence will attend. The attempt will be made to organize new societies in several of the church, in the county outside of Lawrence.
The other big event of the year will be Christian Endeavor Week, which is the first week in February. Other events are; 50 new Comrades of the Quiet Hour, 50 new members of the Tenth Legion, 25 new Christian Endeavor Experts, 5 delegates to the World's Convention next summer, 15 delegates to the state convention next summer, subscriptions to various C. E. nauva.
Office furniture for the newly opened headquarters of the Kansas Christian Endearth Union will be furnished by the societies of Lawrence according to a decision reached at a meeting of the executive committee of the local union at Westminster Hall yesterday afternoon. The headquarters of the state union are in Topeska, Kansas; the office of the Lawrence is the executive secretary.
Debating Fraternity Meets
Monthly luncheons to stimulate interest in debating were planned by Debate Hall Rho, honorary debating fraternity, and annual year Friday. Last year's officers were continued in office. They are: Henry V. Gott; president; George Gould, vice-president; and Whitson Rogers, secretary-crossroads. Representatives must pick the question for the annual Missouri debate are Claude Vorbeeh and George Gould.
Advocated "Good Roads"
P. F. Walker, dean of the School of Engineering, spoke at the good road meeting held in South Park, Friday night. Dean Walker emphasized the value of good roads from an economic and industrial standpoint. He said, "You will not be able to live on automobiles but you will be investing in a dollar and cents proposition."
Dorothy Craig spent the week end at her home in Osage City. She was accompanied by Dorothy Gage.
图
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kauai.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief... Walter G. Hieron
News Editor... Graeme Obsen
Campus Editor... Paul Singh
Editor... Patrick Lowe
Locals Editor... A. E. Davenport
Sport Editor... A. E. Davenport
Alumni Editor... Joe Bogle
Guest Editor... C. D. Campbell
Exchange Editor... James Austin
BOARD MEMBERS
BUSINESS STAFF
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry B, McCurdy ...Business Mgr
Lloyd Rupenthal, Asn't Business Mgr
Deane W, Malott. ...Coculation Mgr
Herbert Little
Catherine Oder
Gilbert Swenson
Media Smith
Paul White
Ruth Armstrong
Burt E. Cochran
Ferd Gottlieb
Alfred Graves
Geneva Hunter
J. K. Kistler
Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription price $5.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year, $2.90 for one semester; 36 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Published in the afternoon evening a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the Wimborne University, press office of the Department of Journalism
Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS!
Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture undergraduate life of the University, and the thaner simply printing the news by standing for the ideals the students embrace; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to wiser heads; in all to wiser hearts; in all to the students of the University.
MONDAY, SEPT. 27, 1920
FAST, FAST K. U.
A slander on the name of the Uni-
versity of Kansas is contained in a story printed in the Topeka Daily Capita-
l Sunday. The story told of the "wild" life of the K. U. rush week and its attendant fines in the Lawrence police court.
The University authorities should find out who sent that story. As a matter of fact, fewer fines were recorded in the Lawrence police court this year than ever before during rush week. Sororities, even more than fraternities, were slandered in the "news" story. The Capital's regular, authorized counsel here, knows nothing about the story and did not send it to Topela.
Facts were utterly ignored in the tirade on the University's "social act." The profuse use of quotation marks around such words as, dates, midnight parties, and the like leave the reader with the impression that the University is still as black as it has been painted by irresponsible newspaper stories of the past.
The article contained an interview with a Lawrence speed officer that was never given out. Chief Pat Fisher of the local police department was warm in his praise of the conduct of the rush week festivities.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Canital's many readers, including a majority of the farmers of Kansas should know the truth of K. U's "fast, fast life." There were but two police court fines for speed, during rush week, four of these were from Lawrence residents and some of the remainder were from K. U. students not connected with rush week.
Further incriminating himself, the writer of the article tells of wild midnight parties that never were staged, hair-raising automobile ride, promissious dates and all the attendant features that goes with the picture of the University of Kansas "as she is painted."
The worst feature of the entire story in the fact that the writer, evidently without a vestige of that old time chivalry that used to characterize such stories from Lawrence, says the women were far worse in their sins than were the men.
To further prejudice the people of the state against the University's Greek litter societies, the correspondent added, that "during the season the goddeses of gaiety and bhilarity raised supreme. Both boys and girls were 'wined and dined' in majestic style." And then the story goes on to the effect that after the week is over, the girs the drudgery of shining shoes shows the lawn, painting the fraternity home and running errands," for the men, and "waiting tables, washing dishes and other service tasks unbecoming an older member of the organization," for the women.
The utterly false statements of the story, together with the apparent unfamiliarity with the workings of a fraternity or sorority house denotes that the writer is a new student in the University. May we, representing the best interests of the University, not say to this irresponsible member of the University family that his flowy style, coupled with a more diligent search after facts might well be applied to rhetoric themes?
But the final responsibility rests, not with the correspondent, but with the editorial staff. Is it not better, we ask, for a newspaper to depend on a regular and trusted correspondent than to snatch at copy coming from a questionable source?
TICKETS, PLEASE
But next spring? Track, basketball, and baseball, are all supreme as sports in their seasons, all are major University sports, and deserve the support of the entire student body just as much as football does.
Probably 50 per cent of the 4,000 people who are connected with the University student body and faculty will see most of the home football games this year. The "who it up for Kansas" spirit is at its greatest height this fall, and everything points townas the greatest demonstration of spirit and loyalty in the history of the institution.
The loyal student will put himself on record right now, at the beginning of the school year, as being behind K. U's entire athletic program, for attendance at every athletic event of the season, as well as the band and club clubs, concerts, and other university functions, by purchasing a student enterprise tickets, admitting to every one of the University activities.
The saving is considerable, both of time, and of money. The moral support to the team of knowing that K. U. is behind her men, at every contest, is invaluable to the athletes.
"Don't fail to buy a football season ticket," you won't be likely to, any-way, but go it one better, and take in everything with a student enterprise ticket.
ONE AT A TIME
"We want no more class process, sions," was a statement recently made by an instructor to his class.
The instructor was right. The ever-tardy and loitering student is a nuisance and a pest. He becomes at one, a source of, annoyance to his instructors and his classmates. He imposes on the University; he cheats himself.
Ten minutes between classa is a short time, yet, in ten minutes, the average person can walk from Spooner to the administration building, read all the posters on the way, retrace
all the posters on the way, retreat his steps to the library and still have a minute to spare.
Architects to Award Medals.
The Architectural Society will hold its first meeting Tuesday evening, September 28, in room 305, Marvin meeting the medals will be presented to the winners of the Thayer prizes.
a minute to space.
Of course, if one stops to talk to friends, to smoke, or to make that date with the one girl that takes his eye, he is going to arrive in class with a red face, short breath, and a blah mark against his name. However, a steady stride from one building to an other will place one in his class on time and in a happy frame of mind.
We are college students today; workers in the world of affairs tomorrow. The later life demands that punctuality be an essential of success. Promptness is a worthy habit, and one of the best places to cultivate it is at the University of Kansas.
These medals are given by Mrs. W, B. Thayer for excellence in architectural design. This is the first medal won by a woman, and will be given annually hereafter. The winners last year were J. Leland Benson and Homer Forbes Neville.
Architects to Award Medals
Concert Course Tickets Out
Season tickets for the eightth an-
nual University Concert Course are
required. Students who have ordered them, 'The only way these tickets may be obtained is by mail from Prof. H. L. Butler. A check must accompany the order to:
1. a self-addressed,
tamped envelope.
Charles Krews, c'24, spent the week.end at his home in Topeka.
WORLD OUTLOOK
EDUCATION IN SIAM
Until comparatively recent years education in Siam has been quite primitive. Entirely under the management of the Buddhist priests it consisted mostly of instruction in Buddhist literature and Folk Lore, supplemented by enough mathematics to conduct the calculation of arithmetic and to calculate their calendar of religious festivals. To obtain an education it was necessary to enter the priesthood and live in the monasteries. The system of instruction was by oral repetition until memorized. The product was often quite refined in its character and due to the credit of missionaries from America that Siam has broken away from the past and is making remarkable progress in modern education. In illustration of how recent and how great the change. The chief of one of the Northern Provinces was a scholar who took part in missionaries—You have succeeded in teaching the younger generation that the Earth is a globe revolving in space and they believe it, but old duffers like myself still cannot understand why the fellow on the under side does
The first steps the Government took towards the change was to bring men from the University of England to start the work. Their pupils were sent to Europe to complete their education and come back and take part in the inauguration of the new. Now they are all throughout the country, entirely independent of the monastery system, ranging from the Primary to the University. This latter is situated in Bangkok the capitol. Prominent among the courses in this great institution are Education, Law, Medicine Engineering, Forestry and Agricultural Calculated to fit men for Government service in the offices, fields, mines, forests, railways, etc. Let it be said, incidentally, that Siam's laws for conservation of national resources are excellent and are consistently carried out effecting their purpose. One was to offer any criticism on the Eden Project, and it would be that European University methods are crowded down to far into the primary grades.
Campus Opinions
The American is most welcome in Siam and every concession is readily made him that will advance the mutual relationship for good.
Is This Putting K. U. First?
Editor The Daily Kansan:
The fair name of the University was beamirched, the contention of her enemies upheld, and her honor prostituted for a few dollars, Sunday. The governor, then appointed, used three fourths of a column described this year's rush week, employing such phrases as "cabaret dinners," "fast bunch," "wined and dined," "continuous round of midnight parties" and "friendlies in contenders in these postural parties."
The damning article was untruthful, exaggerated, and an example of the yellow hue type of yellow journalism. The most horrific part of the University of Kansas in the
The author of the article should be called to account and summarily punished. Paul E. Flagg.
The most beautiful building on the campus does not show up to the best advantage, simply because the grounds in front of it are so unattractive. The best thing is the newest addition to Mount Oread and could be the real beauty
Why Not Clean Yards
minds of the thousands of readers. Coming at this time when the Uni
versity needs the whole-hearted cooperation of the people of Kansas, such an article is unfair, destructive, and disloyal.
spot of the campus, if only more attention could be given to the sur. roundings.
No matter how attractive a build, may it be *milk*; be set off by means of landscaping or it does not. The landscaped ground is surrounded in front of Ad should be landscaped and then kept in the very best condition. Then cars would not be parked right up to the opening door; they would not accustom, late all over the place.
Time Clock is Hope Held Out For Blake
Perhaps this has not been done because of lack of funds since it would mean some expense. However, the weeds could be kept down, the trash collected and put away or paratively small sum. And this should be done as soon as possible.
In years to come we must look elsewhere for the butt of hill rid, rule. No longer will 8:25 be the standard time of the University for the old Blake Hall clock will soon be a thing of the past. A new clock has been ordered, and with a few changes the clock service will be placed in the old steeple.
"The present clock must be between thirty and thirty-five years old," said John Hill, superintendent of the school. "We've fully until about six years ago."
Wednesday evening the members of the Kappa Pi phi heard interesting reports from Marie Shaklee and Ruth Adair, who attended the Kappa Pi national convention at Iowa City last June.
Last year the hands of the clock moved up seven minutes. This gave rise to various interesting explanations. One was that the pigeons and batee of the steeple had brushed it with their wings, and so were responsible for this flight of time. Others say that the bat is not strong enough nor the pigeon is powerful on the clock. The mystery remains unsolved. It is evident, only, that even with a dead clock—temps fugits.
Erma Smith, c19, left Wednesday for Vassar college where she will instruct in physiology. Miss Smith is the assistant officer on the Hill last year.
Briand to Be French Premier.
Paris, Sept. 23. Parisa afternoon papers announced authoritatively to day that Aristide Briand would be appointed Premier by the new Press,敏 Alexander Millerand. Briand, it was said, will include in his cabinet Georges Clemenceau, Jean Monet, Steeve, and possibly former president, Raymond Poincaré as Minister of Finance.
Coal Supply Sufficient
The University heat plant has a larger supply of coal at present than at the opening of any previous school year, according to John M. Shea, superintendent of buildings and grounds. Mr. Shea says that there is now on hand a sufficient supply of coal to last until January 1st.
It is unofficially announced that the noon luncheons will be held every Friday before a football game. "Windy" Windsor stated that he would hold a conference with Chancellor Lindley on Monday and that the Chancellor is heartily in favor of tattoos. The team also stated that "Windy" also stated that hereafter there would be four entrances to the Gym instead of one.
Vacancies in W, S, G, A. Filled
Vacancies created in the W, S, G, A.
by the failure to return to school of
Rho Boerstow, Vie-Proc., Fine Arts,
and Mary Blakey, sophomore rehe-
sitative, were filled by the elect-
rical department. Fine Arts,
and Madeline Emmert, sophom-
more representative. The date for
the election for W, S, G, A. is set
for the first week in November.
More Football Luncheons.
Vacancies in W. S. G. A. Filled
WD C
TRADE MARK
A WDC Pipe is the biggest value that the World's Largest Pipe Manufacturers can put into a pipe. The WDC is a good, satisfying smoke, and bound to break in sweet and mellow every time. Highest quality of bit, band and bowl; craftsmanship of the highest order—that's what we mean by *biggest value*. Ask any good dealer.
WANT ADS
WM. DEMUTH & CO., NEW YORK WORLD'S LARGEST MAKERS OF FINE PIPES
WANTED—Typewriting to do. Reasonable prices. Glenn Pagett, 1228 La. 11,5,47.
LOST—Alpha Zi Delta Pin. Call
1953. 11-3-43.
ROOMS for rent for light housekeeping, furnished or unfurnished. 1216
Tenn. 11-2-48.
If any one has a "Wells and Hart."
Second Year in Algebra, Paul Gould.
120 La. St. will give them double
price for it. 11-3-46
YOUNG man wants roommate, Good location. Call 1215 Tenn. 11-3-45.
LOST—Pocketbook on Indiana between 8th and 9th streets, Wednesday. Reward. Call 105-24. 10-23-24
FOR RENT;—First class room suitable for faculty member. Phone 2329 or 168. 10-5-32.
ROOMS FOR RENT—Four double rooms for boys. 1131 Teen. Phone 2503. 10-5-32.
LOST- In women's dressing room at Innes, silver vault case with fraternity crest. Liberal reward offered for entry. Address: 1079 E. 45th St., Foxton, Phone 99. 10-5-37.
LOST—Silver hat ornament attached to long pin. Call 1198. 10-2-38.
FOR RENT—Large upstairs room for boys. Call 1534 Blue. 1329 Ohio. 10-5-36
LOST—Down town or on street car
plain kappa Sigma pin. Finder
please call 2374 Red. 10-5-40.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (EX-
CELERATION); glasses made, Office 1025 Mass.
DR. H. I. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jack
son Buildings, Suite 4, general practice,
special attention to nose, throat and
ear. 217.
H. R. HEDING, F. A. U. Building, Eye,
ear, nose, and throat. Special attention to fitting gauges and tonsilw
phone. Phone 513.
DRS, WELCH AND WELCH - PALMER
Welch & Palmer, 137 West 48th St.
Office, 111 Neighborhood, 11KD
DR. J R BECHELT. Rooms 3 and 4
over Driscoll's Drug Store. Office
309 S. 5th St., 6th Fl., 1207-634-2866
DR. G. W. JONES, A. m., M. D. M. Diacr.
Dr. G. W. JONES, A. m., M. D. M. Diacr.
Of stomach, surgery and gynecom-
tology.
Office 35, Residence 352K, Hospital 1745,
DR. ALRIGHTH-CHRISporator-Radio
Dr. ALRIGHTH-CHRISporator-Radio
untied. 161 Mass. St. Phone 1431,
Residence Phone 1761
DR. FLORENCE J. BARROWS—Os-
teopathic Physician, Office hours 8:30-9:30,
12:30-1:30; Phone 2337, 998 Mass.
Street
Room 511 Parking Bldg. Special at-
tenuation to extracting. Phone 611.
Z I TIBBETS—Dentist, 924 Mass St.
EDWARD BUMGHAUSER
Varsity - Bowersock
Four Shows Daily 2:30, 4:00, 7:30, 9:00
Today—Tuesday
Eugene O'Brien in "The Figurehead"
Also
Burton Holmes
Travels
Wm. Farnum in
At Both Theaters Wednesday May Allison in "THE CHEATERS"
"The Joyous Troublemakers"
A story of battle for a girl and gold. Also Mutt & Jeff Comely—"A TRIP TO MARS."
GIRLS!
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
1017 1-2 MASS. Also 726 1-2 MASS.
We have silk Oxford Laces at 35c
Clothes Called For and Delivered
and care for new ones
THE STUDENT CLEANERS
EATON & FRAKER
We press 'em while you g't your hair cut at
HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
929 Mass. St.
Varsity - Bowersock
Phone 499
Wednesday-Thursday—
Wednesday Only
May Allison in "THE CHEATERS"
A. Record Breaking Production
PRICES:-Children 11c; Adults 33c—War Tax Included
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BY THE WAY
Miss Essie Pumphrey, fa '23 and Miss Helen Buck, c'24, spent Sat. urday and Sunday at the home of Miss Buck in Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Orpha Pumphrey, e21, spent the week end with Miss Margaret Dawson of Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Agnes Jeffries, c'23, spent Saturday and Sunday at her home in Kansas City, Kansas.
Miss Marjorie Steele, c'22, and Miss Dorothy Steele, fa 24, spent the week end at their home in Kansas City, Mo.
Phi Alpha Delta entertained with a smoker Thursday evening.
Edda Root, c24, spent the week end in Kansas City with her parents, who leave this week for Cal. ifornia.
Elmer Bates, a former K. U. student, visited at the Pi Kappa Alpha house Thursday.
Byron Collins, e'21, spent the week end at his home in Kansas City Mo.
Marion Hargelt, fe'21, has re-entered the University. She gets the summer in Provincetown, Massachusetts, setting a School of Art.
Laverne Bronaugh, e21, spent the week end in Kansas City visiting her parents.
Phi Bhi Pi announces the pleid, ing of W. C. Spalding, Elder Free land, and H. L. Dixon.
Elise Brae, a graduate of North,
western University, has returned to
her home in Kansas City after wa-
tion week at the Alpha Omicron
PIi House.
Betty Watson, c20, spent a last week end at the Alpha Omicron Pis House. Miss Watson is teaching Economics and French at EDL wardville.
Beulah Quinlan, e23, is spending the week end at her home near Lin, wood.
Fred B. Jenkins Jr., 20", is to be married to Miss Emily Fitz, graduate of the University of Missouri, in Kansas City, October the 9th.
Miss Lula K. Holiday of Carthage, Mo., who has for some time past been at the head of a large school of piano in that place, has come to spend the winter here with ents, Mrs. Holiday of Carthage St. Miss Holiday will assist Mr. Prory in his work as well as do some private study.
Luther Hangen, c21, will spend the week end at the Acacia house.
Acacia gave a dance in honor of the pledges Friday evening, Sept 24th at Brynwood Place.
Acacia announces the pledging of Edgar Eckland and Ernest Clark both of Chanute.
Florence Klapmayer, e21. spent the week end at her home in Kansas City.
Wesley Noonkins, c'24, of Peabody left Friday for his home where he visited over the week end.
William Hatton, c24, spent the week end with his parents in West phala.
William Hume c.24, of Leavenworth, spent the week end at home
More than one hundred and fifty Masonic students and instructors of the University were entertained at a watermelon feed Wednesday night at the Masonic Temple by the Scotch Rite order.
19147
- Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity an-
nounces the pledging of the follow-
ing men: Gordon Saunders, Ottawa;
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
VENUS PENCILS
FOR the student or prof,
the superb VENUS out-
vival all for perfect pencil
work. 17 Black degrees and
3 copying.
American Lea-
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New York.
The largest selling quality pencil
in the world.
What has become of the college student who used to be the proud in-mate of the room with the bright colored pennants, pictures from the past and the photographs from the latest Broadway theatrical journals and clipings of the shapely beauties in full chorus vesture? That is a puzzling question today—why has the apparent clearness been doffered?
Pennants Are Thrown Away As K.U. Students Plan To Fix Up Rooms More Neatly
There is one explanation that will clear the situation in a conceptual manner. Students often desire to get away from the habits, precedents and customs of their forefathers. Likewise, the decorations of the rooms, his quarters in general and the environment in which he lives, are distinctly it. It is one of the secrets of this generation to change often, therefore, the same dirty pennants, pictures and trinkets pasted to the wall become disgusting after a few short weeks. One person might like to see the various colors of the many educational institutions hung lazily around the plate rail, while others of the later school of design and color arrangement would be well neatly draped with an occasional picture of a winter snow scene or a grazing cow.
Reports from various health com-
mittees throughout the United States
report that disease and vermine of
ten quarter in the loose decorations
Bedford B. Harlan, Fort Smith, Ark.; and Mark G. Dance, Pittsburg
PiKappa announces the pledging of Oron Taylor, c'24, Topkau, and William Barbiere, c'24, of Bonner springs.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Robher of Ablone, were visitors at the Gamma Phi Beta house house. Thursday. Mrs. Phaea was formerly Marie Nurz. a '17.
F. W. Pratt was visiting his son,
F. Pratt, c24, here several days
ist week.
Amos Quinlan, e21, and D. D.
Colt, e21, are visiting at the
former's home at Quinlan until Mon-
day morning.
Leta May Jackson Married.
Leta May Jackson, Phd. 21, was married to William Clayton of Peabody, at the home of Dr. Clifford at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Clayton is an Alpha Chi Omega pledge of this year. Mrs. Clayton is engaged with the Prairie Oil Company in Peabody, where they will make their home.
A surprise party by the Pharmic students was held at the home of Dean and Mrs. L. E. Suyay before I left for Feadow at 11:38 last night.
Phi Chi announces the pledging of Floyd Wahmlehner,24, Kansas City Mo.; Dean W. Chipin,23, Belleville Kas, Le Roy Hardt, Sabetha, Kans and Rosalid Deltz,23, Kansas City Kansas.
of the bedroom—the place where the ostentatious trinkets and keepsakes usually take asylum until finally destroyed. Dust and other aerial bacteria usually breed and lay dormant in places slumbed distortion by the ambitious housekeeper, who spends more than half the time in the bedroom. Everyone shaves in it when sleeping quarters, as it is indeed difficult to keep pennants imaculately clean and free from germs.
Mr. W. D. Lutz of Sharon Springs, Kans, was in town Sunday visiting his son, Clarence Lutz, c'24.
Robert Isaacson, c'24, spent Saturday and Sunday at his home in Leavenworth.
Since the termination of the war building cost has gone up, people have refused to build on account of the prevailing high money rates and quarters for students have become scarcer. Students are the shortage of available room, every inch of space has been taken in the usual student "hangout." Rooms are at times so small that the paper on the west wall is held tightly on the east wall. The thickness of the wall paper is a waste of room, in these cases the paper on the left Why waste the paper and the time of the paper, hanger when the student is crowded the wav he is this year.
One of the main reasons why students fail to decorate their rooms with the usual colorful rags and triangular foliets is the fact that they often sleep in sleeping quarters to hang them and yet have enough room to expand comfortably.
Marion Welch, a former Univ-
erity student, stopped off in Lawrence
for a couple of hours last week end.
Marion is attending the State
Norman.
Irwin Brown spent Sunday in Kan-
State Normal this semester.
sas City with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Tester have tested a bungalow on Vermont St. known as the Dream Lodge. Mr. and Mrs. Allen have developed a device in Geology on the Hill.
Frederick W. Bruckmiller, former professor of chemistry at the University, is visiting at the Pi Upsion house. Mr. Bruckmiller is now as, now a member of the dard Oil Company's plant at Sugar Creek, Mo.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
—For Rent—First class room suit. able for faculty member. Call 2329 or 168. 10_5_41
LOST—Pockeback, small. Black inside.
Friday morning either in or between Journalism Bldg and West Gymnasium. Phone 2509. 11-2-42.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The tea which the ladies of the Methodist Church announced for Saturday has been put forward one day on account of the football game held in the Methodist church Friday afternoon from 3:30 to 5 o'clock.
Girls classes in hygiene will meet regularly this week. Attendance is important and necessary—Dr. Bacon.
12
In Our Stock of Libbey and Pairpoint Cut Glass, Sterling Flat Ware, and Sheffield Plate Hollow Ware may be found many useful and attractive gifts.
Wedding Gifts Should be Selected With Care
With Care
The Hay Rack Party of the First Baptist Church, scheduled for this
Panders QUALITY JEWELRY
The First Presbyterian Church will open for services next Sunday. A welcome all at the Sunday Pastor, J. W Boyer, University Pastor.
evening, has been postponed one week.
There will be a reception for all the Catholic students of the University this evening at the Parish House, YL, from seven until nine oclock.
TEXAS CLUB will have a short meeting in Fraser rest room Friday afternoon at 4:30. All students from this club and get acquainted.-PRESIDENT.
Ahoka will meet Monday afternoon at 4:30 in Room 106 Hall. All members are urged to be present. Important business.
The K. U. Cooplinism Club will meet Friday evening, September 24 at 7:45 o'clock, in the hall of the Cooplinism Club House, 1409 Rhode Island St. Business: Reor-organization and election of new offi-cers for their present term—F. V. BERMEO, President.
Sphinx meeting Sunday, September ber 25 at Phi Psi house at 2:30.
The K. U. Society of Biological Research will meet at 4:30 o'clock Friday afternoon in the library of Snow Hall.
Ahoka will meet Friday afternoon at 4:30 in room 100 Green Hall. All members please be present.
All Congregational students and their friends are invited to attend a mixer at the Congregational Parish House Friday night at 8:18 o'clock.
K Club meets Thursday at 7 o'clock in Green Hall. Very Important. John Bunn, vice-president.
The following books are wanted at the W. S, G. A, book exchange, and students possessing copies are asked to sell them:
Economics, Ely; Sociology, Blackmar and Gillan; Modern English Grammar, Blount and Northup; Algebra, Fite; Trigonometry, Ashton; Handbook for English Writers; Oddyssey; Elementary Logic, Jevena, Psychology, Hunter; Botany; Spanish Grammar; Calculus; Language
F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggis
Eastman Kodaks
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
A. G. ALRICH
Printing, Engraving, Binding
Office Supplies, Rubber Stamps
Stationery, Seals, Stencils
736 Mass. Street
Oh, boy! Toasted Cheese Sandwiches
can't be beaten when you get them
at the old stopover,
Jay Hawk Cafe
RAY & HARRY Corner 14th and Ohio
YOUR Daily Kansan
$3.50 a year
As essential as a collar button. For the Daily Kansan is a Carbon Copy of What
K. U. Does
United Press News Service gives the touch of world topics every student wants.
Subscribe at the Daily Kansan Office Phone K. U. 66
Two solicitors needed.
dictionaries, and freshman rhetoric books.
A meeting of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debating fraternity, will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock in Room 106, Green Hall. It is es.
sential that all members be present.
There have been a number of calls for Jevona's Introduction to logic. Will persons who have this book and wish to use it exchange the student book exchange in Fraser.
Something Left for Them
His old horse died and his mule went lame,
And he lost his cow in a poker game;
* A cyclone came one summer day
And blew his house and barn away;
Then an earthquake followed to make it good
And swallowed the ground where his house had stood;
And then the mortgage man came around
And heartlessly claimed the hole in the ground.
This shock was so great that he up and died,
And his widow and children wept and crised.
But something was left for the kids and wife.
For the esteemed deceased had insured his life."
"Sovereign Visitor."
INSURANCE
THE
133
AGENCY
Lawrence Kansas
vice"
If you Phone 133
And do it today,
We'll insure your life
While you are young and gay.
But if you let it go
For tomorrow to come,
You can bet your boots
It will never be done.
- "133 Visitor."
PROTCH The College Tailor
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
1047 Massachusetts St.
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
VOGUE BEAUTY PARLOR FOR
Scalp Treatment Facial Massage
Shampooing Manicuring
OPEN EVENINGS
MRS NELLIE BEAL
Over Gustafsons 911 1-2 Ph.
WOXY PYRALIN
VOGUE BEAUTY PARLOR FOR
Phone 34
Cigars
Tobacco
Our fresh fruits and Candies
Are the best in town
Sodas
Lunches
The College Inn
Hall's
kitsch
in
london
A
grave
marry
seek
nearly
board
locations
and the
ties
wars
rounds
The she
cause
and
of
physical
the
porte
orifice
So
large
below
the
part
late
not
cut
gen
the
de
th
th
th
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HARD WORK AND HOT WEATHER FOR SQUAI
Friday Saw_Hardest Workout of Season on McCook Field
TO SCRIMMAGE EVERY DAY
New Men Unlearning Mistakes of High School Coaching Under Allen
TO SCRIMMAGE EVERY DAY
Ordinarily, hot weather and football do not go together, but it seems to be the policy of Head Coach F. C. Allen, that the hotter it is the harder they work, or such it seemed at football practice Friday afternoon. Probably because it was a long season in the way of conditioning the men, was gone through Friday.
NO NEW CRIPPLES
TO SCRIMAGE EVERY 'DAY'
There was no scripimage Friday,
but beginning Monday the sound
will be made of the opening of
this week in preparation for the
opening game of the season, with
Emoria Normal, Saturday.
To date there have been no new cripples developed, while for the first two weeks of last season, no less than ten men were put on the light duty list.
The old men who are carrying in juries from last year, have been getting lumbered up more, and with an other two weeks of careful training may be able to get into the first big games of the year.
STAGE FRIGHT ALMOST GONE
STAGE FRIGHT ALMOST GONE
The first year jersey men were working on tacking, pivoting and stuff-arm Friday. They are beginning to unlearn their football skills in the high school coaching, and will round out fair form in a short time. The nervousness of being on a strange field among men whom they have never seen before is wearing *of*, and by the last of the week, their stage fright should be gone entirely. The freshmen and Vanarity will go through their first seriegame against each other Tuesday evening, for a short time.
Tuesday evening at four o'clock, the weekly rally is scheduled. The thundering thousand is due to practice sello yells and songs. The University band is being asked to come out in full force.
WOMEN TAKE SPORTS
Classes in Hockey and Volley Ball Will be Started Soon
"Between eight hundred and nine girls are now enrolled in the department of physical education this semester," said Miss Adeliade Steger, head of the department to day. Miss Steger said that of these nearly five hundred were freshmen.
A new aspect of the women's department this year is the addition of sports which may be substituted at any time for regular floor work. Miss Gertrude Frame, who has charge of this new field, will **offer** hockey and volleyball to children and **volley ball** classes are open at 11:30 and 2:30 o'clock. The new hockey grounds will be in the South Field and will be completed very soon. Women are urged to attend these sport classes as it will promote a better spirit in women's athletics and will afford an opportunity for interaction with athletic classes at 4:30 o'clock every afternoon. The advanced class will give a series of programs during the year assisted by the beginning class. Freshmen are wearing a new gym uniform this year. The much de- apised one 'piece uniform' is to be replaced by white middies, black bloomers, high white shoes and black
"Many juniors and seniors who are not required to take gymnastics are enrolled in this department declared Miss Steger, "which shows that women athletics are creating more interest."
Dorothy Gage, e24, spent the week end at the home of Dorothy Craig, e24.
Lois Bennett, c'23, spent the week end at her home in Kansas City.
BAKER TAKES DEFEAT BY 14--0 ARGUMENT
Spectacular End Runs and Broken Field Running Mark Game
Followers of the pig-skin pastime who, on Saturday, journeyed out to Haskel *in* order to see the Iniang inflict a decisive defeat on the Baker eleven, were disappointed. Those who went to spectacle curved end runs and sensational broken-field running, were satisfied.
When the whistle blew at the end of the first quarter, Baker was trailing by a 14-4ally. When the same sound was heard at the last of the struggle, the count had not changed. In the initial period, two intercepted passes were responsible for two Haskell goals, but during the game, the Methodist hingered up, and prevented the speedy Aborigines lead.
Thompson, Anderson and Cambell backfield men of the Tribe, starred consistently on long runs around the Faker ends. Rice, playing quarter for the Baker aggregation, went through the Haskell line for consistent gains. Both teams made eight first downs, but the Lawrence eleven was penalized for a total of 95 yards to their opponents' 40.
The game was slowed up by the intense heat, as the oval chasers on both teams played listlessly after the first half.
Will Repair, Blake Hall
New tile is expected to arrive with,
in the next two weeks to repair the
roof of Blake Hall. Although it was
not generally known at the Univar,
students were lighting about the middle of last
July and fully 2500 tiles were shattered. The damage was estimated to be about $1500. As soon as the new material arrives, work will be begun, according to John M. Shea, Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings.
Baland Berry, c'24, returned from Kansas City, Mo., where he spent the week end.
PUMPKIN
"Betty" Says
Gridiron Squad Ponders On Tactics of the Game
NO JUNT 10
Extra-gridron activities in the line of the pigskin sport were in, duged in by Saturday by the football squad, when, after a look-see at the Baker-Haskell game on Hamilton field Saturday afternoon, the aggregation met at the home of Dr. Forrest C. Allen, ate several bushels of and talked to them on the tactics of the Methodists and In-dians.
1973
"I just simply adore a box of Whitman's Samplers, or better still, my old favorite, Wiedemann's. As for preference, I can't make up-my mind."
The feeling of knowing one another in civilian togs as well as the moleksis is invaluable to the foot_ball men, according to the coaches. Football rules and problems occupied a good part of the time, each man determining what he would do under certain circumstances.
PIGSKIN PATTER
"Sunday night dinner at Wiedies TEA ROOM is real treat. Delicious food prompt service and the delightful absence of kitchen oders afford a very pleasant meal."
Doctor Allen and Line Coach "Scrubby" Laski accompanied the men in the excursion into the realm of theoretical football.
A little informal get-together, get-acquainted walk helps the men to know the other fellow better, and to know him off the field as well as on.
The slogan "Know the men by their first name" is being taught on the field this year. Every man is learning the other fellows name.
MK 3910
Policemen are not needed this year to keep the men from breaking training. There is not a player out for them and could be hired to go over the rules.
Coaches Allen and Laslett have the men down to the old grindstone, and still they yell for more.
"I always look forward to Tuesday. Thursday and Friday afternoons at the SODA GRILL. Such good music and everybody goes." No dance Saturday.
SQUIRREL
Dutch Lonborg was limbering up his old kicking foot Friday afternoon. He says it is working fine so far, and all the roots are praying that it is.
Wiedemann'S
THE PLACE WITH 5.2 YEARS OF COLLEGE EDUCATION
Chabb Fraker, big 225 pound guard candidate can run 100 yards, in about eleven seconds, in his football tops.
Kenneth Welen, the smallest man out for Varsity, is also about the fastest man. Many a tacker has died in air at trying to catch the little fellow.
Suits and Overcoats for College Men
With Redi and Ivy playing ends it will be hard to skirt the Jayhawks.
It was nearly a case of the irresistible hitting the immovable Friday afternoon when, Arnie Bike went head on into Harry Kane's shim.
What your Teller?
with superior workmanship and best of material
When the two-hundred new football outfits arrive, McCook field, and Hamilton field will both resemble a team of four players with more teamwork at the same time.
$40 up
Coach Allen outran the whole field Friday afternoon for 50 yards, in a little sprinting practice.
HISTORIC COMMUNITY
What Your Teacher?
Samuel G. Clarke
1033 MASS. STREET
13
Like the little Heathen Hindu
Like the little Heathen Hindu
You do the best you kindo
But when your shirt
And pants wear out
You cannot make your skindo
You've got to be as keen
in the Cau
In the Gym
And most Eds
And Co-eds
As at the Prom
Look keener
If they've got on
Gym clothes That do'em credit
For men
And women
Sporting Goods Section
Second Floor
Regulation gym clothes
Ober's HEADY TO FOOT OUTFITTERS
Mid-Season Sale Extraordinary All Next Week September 27th to October 2nd Inclusive
Because of the continued warm and unseasonable weather business generally has been far below expectations. For that reason our stock of suits is entirely too large. Therefore in order that we may reduce our stock to a more normal size we make the following reductions effective for the week to come.
All Fall and Winter Suits Underpriced at Post-Season Prices Never before so early in the season have you been offered values so great at prices so small.
THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY (All Suits Included)
9—Suits,—Values $140.00 to $165.00...@ $115.00
8—Suits,—Values $110.00 to $127.50...@ $97.50
8—Suits,—Values $ 95.00 to $105.00...@ $85.50
13—Suits,—Values $ 80.00 to $ 93.50...@ $74.50
19—Suits,—Values $ 69.50 to $ 79.50...@ $52.50
15—Suits,—Values $ 57.50 to $ 67.50...@ $52.50
10—Suits,—Values $ 47.50 to $ 55.00...@ $44.50
4—Suits,—Values $ 40.00 to $ 45.00...@ $36.50
Buy your suit now—come early—get first selection These suits are of the finest quality, beautifully made, in all range of sizes and colors. Styles range from the strictly tailored to the elaborately fur trimmed. Materials are of Tricotine, Serge, Velour, Devet de Laine, and Veldyne.
No Alteration Charge—No Approvals—No Exchange or Refund
Branham'S
The Better Damesman than Our Men
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Halli
baths
the
Ai
wife
wife
of
the
and the
tart
bit
bet
from
rooms
was
and
go
to
go
to
give
to
the
port
ortic
large
large
ent
the
part
the
part
put
put
the
VOLUME XVIII
NUMBER 12.
BAND UNDECIDED ON
R. O. T. C. ENLISTMENT
Older Members Declare They Would Not Derive Full Benefits
PLAN HAS GOOD POINTS
Organization Would be Stabilized and the Unit Made Permanent
The fate of the Band as regards its entrance into the R. O. T. C. is as yet undecided. The rehearsals held Saturday and Sunday, the proposition was not mentioned. At present it seems as though the young members of the Band favor younger members of the R. O. T. C. and older members of the idea because they would not derive the full benefits of the organization.
If the Band should decide to join the R. O. T., the older members would probably sever their connections with the organization. This would no doubt weaken the Band, but for the time being only. In the opinion of several of the younger members, the R. O. T. (C. W.) would infringe many new rights that would stay with the organization for the full four years. This would tend to stabilize the Band and make it a substantial institution.
Although the enlistments for the R. O. T. C. should have closed Saturday noon, Captain Burdick is hold, ing them open from this week in the event that the Band should decide to join.
JAYHAWKS PREPARE FOR NORMAL GAME
Kansas Doped to Score Victory
In Saturdays
Contest
Saturday afternoon will see the opening of the football season for Kansas, for their second game of the 10 to leave with the Emporia Normal eleven, on McKeown field, at 3:00 o'clock. The Normal team must defeat Kansas in the fresh from a 19 to 15 victory over the Pittsburgh Normal team, at Emporia last Saturday, in which Pittsaum was doomed to win. It has been generally conceded by authorities that Kansas will win in a walk, way. Here is what Coach Allen says about Kansas prospects: "We have a lot of confidence but you know we would be Lawrence High school for the worst thing that could happen to any squond is overconfidence. While I do not like to think of being pessimistic and seeming to throw a wet blanket over Kansas hopes, I want to warn over them that this is such an and just remember that the score with Wash., burn last year was 0 to 0."
Guessing on the probable score seems to be a hazard at this time but most doppes are want to favor Kansas for the long end of the score.
Emperor is said to have one of the headiest bunch of linenen fighting for them that they have had in some years. The Kansas men should by this time know the rules as well as the teachers.
According to the coaches, the players on the squall will be used in the importa game as much as possible, saving the other as much as possible. The bigger games, minus this allowing the green man's chance to get into action and prove themselves.
The management looks for a record crowd for an opening game on account of the spirit that has been shown to date by the students in supporting the team during he pre-season workouts.
Martin Will Speak to Democrats Wednesday
Tomorrow afternoon, at 2:30, a meeting will be held in Green Hall for the immediate purpose of organizing a Democratic Club among the students. Henderson Martin, former vice-governor of the Philips, will speak. Also, a committee will be chosen to meet Mr. Roosevelt, vice-presidential candidate, who is invited to arrive in Lawn on October 5. The future purpose of the club will bring national and state candidates here to speak to the members. All are welcome to come to this first meeting, but a special invitation is extended to Democrats and Independents.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1920.
Gerald Hickok and Wendell Smith spent the week end in Kansas City
Luncheon Will Open
Membership Campaign
The first campaign for new Y, W, C. A. members will begin this p. m. at 4:00, at which time tea will be served. A luncheon in the form of a lecture by Hugh Hathaway moon and Dr. Edward, of Episcopal Church will speak.
At the last *Y. W. C. A.* National Convention the personal-basis plan for membership was adopted. Previous to this time members were taken from the membership of churches, the new plan this is not considered.
FEW ENGINEERS IDLE
Government Needs Men for New Road Program
Manhattan, Kan., Sept. 27—Un-
less more young men than have
studied to become civil engineers in
the last few years take up the pro-
fession in the future the government
will be seriously handicapped in its
federal aid road program, is the
opinion of R. A. Seaton, dean of
engineering in the Kansas State Agri-
cultural college.
"It has been estimated that only one-third of the civil engineers needed in the federal aid road program will be graduated in the next year, but more than two percent in enrollment in engineering schools," Dean Seaton says. "This year our enrolment in civil engineering is year, and no greater gain in enroll- only a ten percent gain over last years." He mentions the moments of the engineering division."
"I received three requests for civil engineers in one day's mail this week. Salaries ranging from $2,200 to $2,500 a year are offered inexpensively and are not guaranteed. I certain to embarrass the government in its road building program."
So acute is the need for engineers that the Kansas State Agricultural college has been asked to recommend young men who have completed one or two years of work in the engineer field. We have, having these qualifications range from $115 to $125, and expenses, per month.
LINDLEY WILL SPEAK
Freshmen Required to Attend
This Address
All freshmen are required to attend the lecture in Fraser Hall on May 10th at 3:00 p.m. Clock. This meeting was postponed from last week.
CHANCELLOE E. H. LINDLEY
Every freshman in the University is required to attend a meeting in Fraser Chapel, Wednesdays afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, according to an announcement from the chancellor's office. The meeting was postmortem from last week.
Chancellor Lindley expets this to be the first of a series of talks which he hopes to continue throughout the year and which will deal with matters which help the student team engage in debate in regard to University affairs.
Measures will be taken to check up freshmen attending at these meetings. This work will probably be done by older students.
Student Council Ousts Politics as Dead Issue
Politics and Moms Student Council are to be entirely separated this year. Council members are bushing up their political feelings and pulling to, together for the good of the organization and the University.
As soon as the Council is in regular working order politics will be thoroughly taken up and suggestions and requirements made. So far, nothing definite has been arranged as to elections. Discussions on the limitation of the time for tickets to be out and the amount of money spent on the elections can under way at the first meeting. This discussion should probably be continued at second meeting. Any rules made will apply only for the fall and spring elections and only for this year.
The college representatives on the Council feel that the least said about politics the better their work will progress. If the organization is broken apart on politics the council can never expect to work as a unit.
Olin Harner, c23, attended the Delta Gamma formal last Friday at Washburn College.
POLITICS DULL WITH ELECTIONS IMMINENT
No Tickets Have Been Filed
For Annual Class
Ballot
MAY HIT CAMPAIGN FUNDS
Limit on Advertising Expendi ture is Urged Before Student Council
Two vacancies in the Men's Student Council, one in the College representatives, and one in the Pharmic representa-tives will be filled by a vote of the remaining member of the Council next Wednesday night. Petitions of candidates for the by twenty-five students of the school in which they are en, roiled and must be in my hands until Wednesday, September 29.
Herbert Olson, See'y. of the Council
Politics on the campus, which last spring went through the hottest campaign in the history of the school seem dormant so far this year. Class elections, wherein twenty-one students will be chosen for class offices, were announced by the student council at their meeting last week to hold one week from next Friday. October 8, no tickets, or intima-tions of tickets, have as yet been opened over the campus sidewalks.
Legion Condemns Board Action Cleveland, Sept. 28—Following a sharp fight, the American Legion congratulates officers condemning the action of the National Executive board and the adjusted compensation act. The Committee was directed to take action as it may be necessary to secure the prompt passage of this bill.
Four officers in each class presen- dent, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer, will be elected. In addi-tion the junior class elects a manager and an editor for the 1922 Jay, hawker, and two managers for the Junior Prom, while the sophomores elect an additional officer to manage the affairs of the Stoh Ho, an avid basketball player this year on November 12, the Fri day evening when the homecoming football game with Nebraska.
Phi Delta Kappa to Meet
Phi Delta Kappa, the professional educational fraternity on Tuesday at 4:30 on second floor of Oread High School.
The president, Everett Gunn, c21, expects all members to be present
A date for all petitions for canvass, dates will be act Wednesday night at the weekly meeting of the Men's Student Council, probably for next Fri. A candidate, the officer, to have his name printed on the ballot, must present to the secretary of the student council, Herbert Olsen, a petition signed by at least twenty-five members of his class, that his name be put on the ballot.
Both men and women vote for the class officers. The elections are conducted by a committee from the student council, appointed by the president, John Tracey. Although no woman has ever been elected president, den of her class or manager of the Jayhawker, Pram, or member present on the ticket of each class, and work as vigorously for votes as do the men
The short time between now and elections is hoped by the council members to eliminate much of the money that has heretofore been spent in advertising and campaign cheerleading. Carler Carl Winsor at the council meeting last week, made a proposal that the council take action to limit the expenses of any candidate, and thus cut out much of the littering up of the campus that has been at tendant, with the elections of the council president. In response to this suggestion, but it will probably come in again at the meeting Wednesday.
In the election for filling the two vacancies on the student council, no petitions have ben filed. One vacancy in the School of Pharmacy, and one in the College were occasioned by a petition for Petitions for these positions must be dates to return to school this fall. signed by twenty-five mn from the school in which they are enrolled, and the petition must be turned in to Herbert Olson, secretary of the count. The election will be held by the council probably at the weekly meeting Wednesday night.
Student Still Dons Abbreviated Pants
A student in the University of Kansas and still wearing "short pants." This is the unique distinction of Corwin Waterson, 15 year old Freshman, who enrolled in the College this Fall. The home of the knickerbockered youth is in Vinhold, where he was born. Young Waterson should earn a degree from the University two years before he is of voting age.
Besides being the youngest student in the University, Waterson has another claim to fame. He will be the only Freshman who will wear the Freshman cap absurdly with a coolful prodigy of his calibre will not able to pass the Law Building in knee pants and say "I'm a Sophomore."
Old and new members of the Owls, junior honorary society, will meet this evening, Tuesday, at 9 o'clock at the Sigma Na house for the last meeting together, and theunching of the new junior society into the school in announced in an announcement by Bill Wells, president of last year's organization, today.
Twenty members of the men from each Sophomore class are selected each spring by the members of the society, who lose their connection with the organization and must attend some sessions. Officers of the society will be elected at the meeting tonight.
Old and New Owls to Organize This Evening
Black Helmet Society Will Initiate Tonight
Black Hemen, Sophomore class society, will install new members at 7:30 a.m. Tuesday night in the Music Building, many of the numbers are not ready for publication.
The details of the annual calendar will be decided tonight. Nicholas T. Hattison, president, says that they will put everything across with vim this year and that the two dancers hold each semester will be worth while.
The first Black Hemel dance will be held the right before the third game and the second, the third week in December. Both will be held at F. A.
Dean Will Speak at Denver
Dean Will Speak
from the School of
Engineering will leave tonight for Denver where he will speak before the National Convention'10 off O'Malley Drive.
Doan Walker will stop over in Garden City for a day to carry on some of his industrial research work he has done in the field. Mr. Wooler will speak at the convention on "The Methods of Preserving Oil and Gas in the Field," and he will also have conferences with men in industry, the best gutter industry in Colorado.
Miss Laer, secretary to the Dean of the College, is very busy this week. The number of students who have changed their courses exceeds that of any other year. Yesterday alone there were nearly a thousand chances; most of them were among upper midshipmen. The total number of changes made this semester, *A*f, October 2, students wishing to alter cours es must first consult the Dean of the College.
Schedule Changes Popular.
The department of home economics has over three hundred students enrolled. This is one of the largest enrollments they have ever had. There is a decided increase in junior majors over that of other years. The department of home economics teaching staff intact. They are well versed on the bill that was beenable to do this. 'The girls of the economic uses class, have a good display of fruit and vegetables they have canned this year.'
Increase in Home Economics
more than fifteen hundred students were enrolled in $\phi$ correspondence courses during the past year, accounted for 85% of the secretary of correspondence study.
During the winter months the enrolment is made up largely of teachers in the common schools of the state, but the enrollment is by no means limited to the large many students who were in the service made up deficiencies in college credits through the department of correspondence, study.
1500 Students Take
The W. S. G. A. Council will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock in the women's rest room at Fraser Hall.
LIGHT, FAST ELEVEN MAY MEET EMPORIA
Picking Eleven Men Fron Eighty Workers is Hard Job for Coach
LONBORG MAY BE QUARTER
To Scrimmage Freshmen for First Time at McCook Rally Today
Choice of eleven men from seven tons of beef and brawn is what Head Football Coach Forrest C. Allen has ahead of him in his preparation for the first game of the season with the Emporia Teachers on McCook Field, Saturday. Nearly eighty men weighs are available, register nearly 10,000 pounds is instalments on the scales in the sheds.
The men average only about 165 pounds, from expert mathematical computations by the Daily Kanan sport staff. Several of the men who bring up the average by tipping the balances at around twenty stone, however, stand little chance of doing it to Dr. Allen's fast fighting eleven.
The team which Dr. Allen will put in the field against the Pedagogyus will undoubtedly be the best he team is mister, or the first quarter at least.
The death of backfield men at the first of the season has slackened under the recruiting of the football fans, and a full dozen of the fleet, though not especially heavy, backs, are ready for the opening whistle. Lonberg has been used at quarter in practices this week, and will probably be inaugurated at the pilots' games. Both Mahin Weed are others who have received the favorable attention of the coaches at quarterback.
The other men in the backfiel will probably be selected from Simon Harrison and MacAdams halfbacks.
Ivy has shown up brilliantly at the wing positions in practice as a whizzer, among whizzers, and will remain a force for the next decade. Bell, Mac Donald, and "Tad" Reid's pro话 will be the other end. The coaches have been using Roid with kildgoves, and are probably giving him for a later game. The giant Sandefur will be used at tackle, with other Higgins Hale, Harris or Jones, at the other end of the box. He will key tackle last fall will probably be for the big games of the season. Wint Smith, Chubb Fraker, and Cliff Arthur are probably the best bets for the guard positions, and Gordon Sanders, tuck candidate from last year's squad, is given "Red" to play against the team in race for the position at center. Such a team would average about the same as would the total of the squad—about 170 pounds in the line and 160 in the backfield. Mr. Allen's light, charging tactics, however, are trusted by the fans to put them across
Such a team would average about the same as would the total of the 192 and 190 in the backfield. Mr. Allen's light, charging garties, however, are trusted by the fana to put them across the goal line at least three times during a sixty minute period against the championship conference team from Emporia.
The first scrimmage against the freshman team will be held on McCoack Field Tuesday afternoon before the admiring eyes of Cheerleader "Sandy" Winsor and about 1,500 spectators. The scrimmage of Tuesday Western Michigan will be one of the upsets of the season, will in a large manner, determine to Coach Allen just what men will go against the invading Normalites next Saturday.
Henry Widmer Matched With K. C. Pugilists
Henry Wiltmer, d'22, University lightweight galliot, who has gained an enviable reputation in Kansas City flatic circles, has been taken under the wing of a professor and editor of the Kansas City City Journal. Wiltmer has been giving boxing leasing-ups. Among the "high ups" with whom Wiltmer will be matched, is Dudley Steele, of Kansas City, who has received a long bone established.
Betty Gaddisc, '18, spent the week. end at the Achoth house.
Washington, Sept. 27- President Wilson today appointed Thomas F. Hunt, dean of the agricultural college of the University of California, as delegate to the meeting of the Committee of International Institute of Agriculture to be held at Rome.
In addition to his daily workouts, Wdmer has been giving boxing les, sons to a few students.
Chancellor's Son
Is Rhodes Scholar
Ernest Klindley Lindley, son of Chan celer Lindley, has been appointed Rhodes Scholar from the University of Idaho. He received his appointment here last week. Lindley was graduated from the University of Idaho in June 1920 with high honors. He was President of the Senior Class, Captain of Varsity Basket Ball; Editor of the Argonaut. He was a member and a member of the University debating team. He will enter Oxford in January 1921. At present Mr. Lindley is enrolled here as a student in the Graduate School.
Plain Tales From the Hill
COVENANTS OPENING
OPEN CovenANT
Prof. W. H. Davis found it necessary to get a larger room for his class in Diplomacy; and the one chosen is in the basement. What's this about open diplomacy?
A group of girls passing Pete Neighbors, laboring under the load of his Senior Law Cane, were heard to remark, "How much better it would be if the Laws would only let him carry a swapper stick."
Another good name for a moving picture of College Life would be The Red "F."
Dear Dot: You haven't given me a chance to look at you this morning.
DIAPLOMATIC CORRESPONDENCE
W. W. Davis' Diplomacy class,
Sept. 28. "This note of vari
importal import was found here
Yours.
(Two rows back—the boy to the left.)
This is also to introduce Mr. Wheeler, the boy with the purple tie.
"Is that a Sig Alph standing over there?" an old timer revivisting Mount Oread asked an engineer as he stood before the West enclosure to the campus.
“Don’t know,” said, the stude. There’s a stature over that way somewhere, and it might be that. Tell you how to find out. Watch it for five minutes. If it moves, it's the stute.
No hypnosis will be attempted in the Psychology course this year, says a news story. Isn't hypnosis a new thing? No, Hunter still lectures over there?
Societv note—
The Texas club, the Cosmopolitan club, and other societies of foreigners held meetings last week.
For Rent - first class room, suit
able for faculty member..Wanted.
Evidently far from the Hill, in the
low rent district.
For Sale—New typewriter in per-
fect condition—Wanted. They can't
no such animal.
WITH WHOM PRAY TELL?
"All the senior laureus need monocles and spats?" remarked the Freshman who supposed some of them have spatts.
A stranger at McCook Field apprehened a *variety* squad mann and told him he, was surprised that a town the size of Lawrence was able to turn on such a high school squad. He asked how he could solemnly; "Why this is the grade school team that is going to beat Missouri in a couple of months."
Plaintive voice over phone today.
"Say, Mr. Kansan, has 'Cap' Gar,
ein gek any other name?"
To which we replied that our Sport editor has two other names, but has pleaded us to secrecy, and we can't divulge them.
Professor Alter Denies Topeka Capital Report
The report recently published in the Topeka Capital concerning some research work done by Prof. Dima, more Alter, is in, part, denied by him. Prof. Alter is doing some work on the problem of weather and rainfall and will have it ready for publication in the near future.
He objects to the article because there are so many incorrect facts given, and this, with the premature publication, will injure his research. The photograph accompanying the article must have been obtained through some mistake as Mr. Alter did not give it for publication.
Locker assignments for freshmen and sophomores in the college and in the School of Fine Arts are being made this week in Robinson Gymnase. Junior and senior assignments will be made next week.
BRIG-GEN. C. I. MARTIN HEADS THURTY-FIFTH
Former Brigade Commander Elected by Veterans at Topeka Today
PAY TRIBUTE TO DEAD
Memorial Services Honor Fallen
—Meet at St. Joseph
Next
(United Press)
Topkicks, Kansas Sept. 28—The annual reunion of the soldiers of the Thirty-fifth division will close tonight at the naval trade and a dance at the state house.
At the morging program, the Thirty-
Fifth Division Association was organized.
General Charles I. Martin was elected president.
Memorial services in honor of the memorials of the division who gave their lives while in the service of their country was held this morning. The afternoon program was featured by speeches by Senator James Reed of Missouri, Senator Arthur Cappe of Missouri, Brigadier General Clark of Missouri.
The next annual reunion will be hold in St. Joseph, Mo.
NO RHODES SCHOLAR
PICKED FROM KANSAS
One Men From Kansas Were All Passed Up by Selection Committee
No appointment for a Rhodes scholarship was made by the committee in charge of the names, according to reports received this morning from headquarters of the Rhodes foundation in Equestrian. Five Kansas men from other schools in the state had applied for the scholarship.
The committee here which made the appointments decided by a large majority not to pick any of the men who had been appointed by the member of the board, this morning.
The selection committee is composed of Dr. Frank strong, chairman, R. E. Bike, St. Louis, J. A. Rice, of Nebraska University, and W. F. Britowis University, who are the three members, it was said this morning, are former Rhodes scholars.
"Women Following Style Blindly"—Miss Meguiar
Lawrence, styles - Women following clothing styles blindly, regardless of their figure or the fitness of the style for them, is an aband custom, according to Miss Elizabeth Meguari, assistant professor in charge of the shelter and clothing section of the home economics department of the University of Kentucky, wearing one standard dress for all women. It rather is her concern that her students learn right principles of dress and that they may know the proper costume for the individual and the occasion.
"Let the individual determine what style of garment best becomes her, basing judgment upon right principles of art and beauty, keeping that style for her clothing through the seasons," says Miss Meguiar, "This system will not result in a single standard dress, but in a number of standard styles for the various types of garments." Variety can be secured by change of material and color as well as by change of garment to suit the occasion."
Especially designed to the clothing designing students of the University of Kansas is the large Thayer collection of historic costumes which contain samples of garments worn by many nations through many periods.
Officers Will Prevent Free McCook "Tickets"
The days of climbing over or under the fence down on McCook field, for the football games are over, acording to Dr. F. C. Allen, manager of athletics. Dr. Allen has arranged with the county sheriff, for sixty minutes a day, until the day, one hundred feet apart and at fifty feet from the fence.
"It isn't fair to make some pay and then allow others to alip in," said Dr. Allen.
The new fence built where the grandstand and west bleachers were, is only nine feet high, but Dr. Allen thinks he can keep the boys out by means of human "six foot poets," placed around the field.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Total student paper of the University of Kauai
EDI@ORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief... Walter G. Horon
Newa Editor... Grace Hoon
Campus Editor... Paul Hings
Landmark Editor... Liam Kidwell
Sport Editor... A. E. Garvin
Alumni Editor... Joe Bogle
Academic Editor... G. C. Kneipp
Exchange Editor... James Ausdorf
BOARD MEMBERS
BUSINESS STAFF
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry B. McCurdy...Business Mgr
Lloyd Ruppenthal...Business Mgr
W. Malet...Cleculation Mgr
Buth Armstrong
Burt E. Cochrane
Ferd Gottlibb
Alfred Graves
Genova Hunter
J. K. Klster
Herbert Little
Catherine Oder
Gilbert Swenson
Meda Smith
Paul White
Subscription price $4.20 in advance for the first nine months of the accession year; $2.90 for one semester; 52 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, unde the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University Press or a press of the Department of Journalism
Address all communications to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K, U, 23 and 66.
The Daily Kaanen aims to picture the undergraduate life of the students in the then merely printing the news by standing for the ideas the students are to be clear; to be cheerful; to be charismatic; to be more serious problems to wiser heads; in all to help them understand the students of the University.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1920
WHEAT AND BOOKS
The year 1920 will go on record as a prosperous year for the state of Kansas. They've been harvesting just juts and lots of wheat; and the corn crop
prosperous year for the state of Kansas. They've been harvesting just lots and lots of wheat, and the corn crop is immense. The weather as a rule has been excellent for agricultural activities in general, and as a result farm hands have money in their pockets and the farmers are paying off the mortgage on the old home place. There will be hay in the loft, corn in the crib, wheat in the bins and money in the bank. Very few people will go hungry of necessity in the Sunflower State this year. Yes, sir, Kansas has a pretty healthy pulse right now and business is fine, thank you.
All of which causes the Mount Oread frequent to stop and ponder. He walks on the wood planks serving as a sidewalk in front of the Administration Building, and observes that the big structure is not yet completed. Investigation shows that gaping, unfinished walls on the north side of the building irritate the vision. He wonders why this is so, and the answer is simple. The University hasn't enough money to finish the Administration Building.
Another student walks into Spooner Library and asks for a certain number of the Literary Digest. The Librarian, after a thorough search, reports that every number is present and accounted for except the one the student wants. Why? The same reason—the University hasn't enough money to look after the binding and preservation of periodicals as it should be done, and as a result large amounts of periodicals in Spooner Library remain unbound.
A third student notes in his copy of the Kanan that Professor So and So has resigned to accept a position in another institution at a higher salary. The student soon learns that Kansas professors are paid salaries that would make a plumber look askance at a doctor's degree in philosophy. The same old answer—the University doesn't receive sufficient money from the state to pay higher salaries to the members of the faculty.
Yes indeed, the great state of Kansa will celebrate prosperity this year. There will be hay in the loft, corn in the crib, wheat in the bins and money in the bank, and the university stutt wonders if it isn't going to stay there.
VIVA WASHBURN!
Would that K. U. had a booster such as Washburn has in Lon McCarthy county attorney of Lyon County! Mr. McCarty is gaining much local fame because he arrested the bare-legged girls in a "revu" appearing at Emporia.
In a Topeka interview, Mr. Me
Carty explained his reason for closing the show.
"Emporia is a college town," he said. "There're a lot of innocent farmer boys at the College of Emporia and the State Normal both. I went to the show, and while it didn't hurt me any, I decided it would be bad for those boys."
When asked if he did not fear his theatrical policy would drive the boys away from the Emporior schools, to the benefit of K. U., Washburn, and other institutions, Mr. McCarty, who incidentally, is a Washburn graduate, was frank to admit it might.
How's that for undying loyalty to alma mater? Genine school spirit, ch? Mr. McCarty realizes very well that the adolescent Emperor student who admires the charms of the Follies queens, now legally barred from his sight, will hesitate only a moment in picking his new school. For Lawrence cannot compete for an instant with the variety shows and the burlesques of Topela—and even K. U. movies are censored.
"Maybe as, maybe so," he is quoted.
"But Washburn is a good school, and I don't grudge them anything they've got."
Yes, the University has been scored against by Washburn. The loyal alumni of K. U. can do only one thing to counteract Lon McCary's coup'detat for his alma mater. That is to open a free and uncensored roof garden somewhere on the hill—and advertise it in the Emporia Gazette.
LOYAL TO K. U
The banks of Lawrence are one hundred per cent for the students of the University of Kansas, according to representatives of the banks.
One banker remarked, "The purpose of our bank is for public service. We are always glad to handle the students' accounts. Although we lose money on individual accounts in the manner of issuing of bank books and clearing of checks we do not lose in the long run.
"The students bring a great deal of money into town and by handing the accounts of the merchants we are amply repaid for any service we can give the students."
In college towns many banks charge each student a fee of one dollar for deposits and for caching checks if the students maintain a balance with them of less than fifty dollars. Officials of the banks of Lawrence state that they have not found it necessary to resort to such a measure.
Statistics from fifteen banks in college towns in regard to the subject of students' accounts show that the majority of banks lose in handling money for college students.
CINDERS' VERSUS CONCRETE
Some of the students, new to the University, voice their impatience and annoyance at the inconveniences that the obstructions caused by the paying activities on the campus cause them in going to and from cafes, but no complaints are forthcoming from those who have experienced a windy wring day on Mount Oread.
We recall the finely ground dust and dinders from the cinder driveway that we acquired on our hands, faces, shoes, and clothing, and in our eyes and ears as we burried from class to class. When the pavement now under course of construction is finished however, windy days will no longer cause us such grief. The Laws and Chemists will be able to see more than usual from their points of vantage
without interruption from the clouds of dust that always spoiled the views in a windy day.
So when you have to walk several yards out of your way, climb over a pile of rock or a miniature lumberyard, or wade through a mudhole, remember that in a few months care will pass you at the intersections without kicking cinders and pebbles in your face, or leaving a trail of dust for you to pass through. Our campus is one of the most beautiful in the country and the pavement, when completed, will more than for use iflash and the inconveniences it now causes, in modernizing and improving the grounds.
THE WORLD KNOWN CHEER
That is our cheer, the cheer which should make the blood tingle in every student's veins when it is killed. That is the cheer that has carried us the ugh victory and defeat. It is known the world over, for wherever
Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U.
two or more K. U. students gather,
the Rock Chalk is there also, and
less whether that place be Kansas,
China or China.
Rock Chalk is short and snappy, since it only has six words that can he easily learned the first time they are ever heard. In spite of this, Friday at convocation there were many students from all classes who were looking aimlessly around during the hearing.
The clock ticks thirty minutes—and a man is killed through motor car accident.
Lets get the rock chalk spirit, and carry it with us to conversation, football games and everywhere. Then when the occasion presents itself, let us give a real Rock Chalk with all the vim we possess.
THE HARVEST
It ticks for another thirty minutes and another person is killed.
And so it goes, hour in and hour in
the twenty-four, day in and day out
of the twelve—every thirty min,
utes some one is killed in this country
the automobile accidents. The round
the world he receives fifteen thousand
deaths a year.
These were facts brought out at a recent meeting of the national safety council in Atlantic City. It is a bad record. With almost 10 million motor cars in use and the number growing, we can be sure that accidents will be fewer.
It behoves both the pedestrian and the driver of a motor car to take care, to be doubly careful. "Watch your step" is sound logic for walkers. "Be always on guard and your car should be on guard as well as chauffeurs. Each might figure that the other is a consumate fool—just as a safety factor.
SILK SHIRT GLORY PASSING
In the Chicago stockyards men are still wearing silk shirts that cost $16 and $18, and are still appealing for higher pay. On the whole it is an inspiring phenomenon. In spite of the poet, man wants a great deal here below, and keeps on wanting it as long as he lives. That is the tragedy of life and its inspiration. But of late one portion of his life has been a large measure satisfied. The workman has his silk shirt, the cook her sesalin coat, the shop girl her silk stockings. The shop girl is doubly fortunate. Whereas the workman perform云 clouds his glory beneath a coat and the cook displays the pride of her heart only
on Wednesdays and Sundays in winter, the luster of resplendent hose shines daily, aided and abetted by the prevailing fashion in skirts. For her, at least, this land, though vast and wild, was a place of Heart's Desire. The generation that witnessed her triumph has not altogether lived in vain.
Signs and portents multiply however, that the day of glory is passing. In New England and in the middle West—wherever there is much manufacture of dispensable articles—men are laid off and those that remain are being shifted to less remote areas. Where else is the art, as of late in Brooklyn, factory employees—themselves no doubt breastleavers with fine fainment—are turning up as strikebrokers. Even thus quickly the hard facts of existence, the innocable working of economic law, have overtaken them. The moth that falls beneath the flame is no more tragic. In all ordnance, where there is no best aim, even tonor of existence; where more is grasped as the result for the ninety and nine is disaster. New York Times.
Christian Children Gives
The annual church supper of the Christian church was held in the social rooms of the two Thursday and two hundred and twenty-five were present, it being the largest attendance at such an affair in the last three years. The annual reports of the church.Sunday school, missionary society and other organizations were given. The fi. financial and other programs for the year were outlined.
WANT ADS
Christian Church Gives
One fair student, a brunette, by the way, was seen demurely making her way to and from classes this morning, adorned most conspicuously by a huge and flamboyant "spit.curl." The most consistent part of the young lady's costume was the curl, which was defied gently to her forehead in the shape of a two-inch dot. "ar mark, like this 'B'."
WANTED—Typewriting to do. Reasonable prices. Glenn Pagett, 1228 La. 11,5.47.
"Next"
—For Rent—First class room suit.
able for faculty member. Call 2329
or 108. 10,5-41
LOST—Alpha Zi Delta Pin. Call 1953. 11-3-43.
If any one has a "Wells and Hart."
YOUNG man wants roommate. Good location. Call 1215 Tenn. 11-3-45.
LOST-Pockeback, small. Black inside.
Friday morning either in or between Journalism Bldg. and West Gymnasium in Gymnasium Park.
Phone 2569. 11-3-42.
ROOMS for rent for light housekeeping, furnished or unfurnished. 1216
Tenn. 11-2-48
Second Year in Algebra, Paul Gould,
1220 La St. will give them double
price for it. 11-3-46
LOST—Pocketbook on Indiana between 8th and 9th streets, Wednesday. Reward. Call 1056. 10-2-34
ROOMS FOR RENT—Four double rooms for boys. 1131 Tenn. Phone 2503. 10.5-32.
FOR RENT:—First class room suitable for faculty member. Phone 2329 or 168. 10-5-32
LOST - In women's dressing room at Innes, silver vanity case with fraternity crest. Liberal reward offered for $100,000. Poindexter, Phone 99. 10-3-57.
CUSTOM quality through and through. Fabrics from the nation's best looms. Smart, exclusive designs. Easy, accurate fit.
Material not skimped at chest or armholes. Correct sleeve lengths. Presbrain neck bands. Patented neck design. Loosen starched back buttonhole.
LOST—Silver hat ornament attached to long pin. Call 1198. 10-2-38.
FOR RENT-Large upstairs room
for boys. Call 1534 Blue, 1329 Ohio.
10-5-36.
1. OST—Down town or on street car
plain kappa Sigma pin. Finder
please call 2374 Red. 10-5-40
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LANCEBREIGHT OPTICAL COMPANY
(Exclusive
oplanetronics) Eye exam.
cryostat.made.office 1295.Mag
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
inod; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass.
DR. B. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 3, Jack
son Building. General practice
specialty in hospital. Office.
电话 2187.
DR H. REDING, Building E,
Farm. Special attention to
titting gasses and tendon
discs. WELCH and WELCH-PALMER
GRADUATES. Office 957 Mass. St.
DR J. R BEUTELT. Iooma 3 and 4
over McCubbald's Store. Office
Dr. G. W. JONES, M. D. M., D.
disces of stomach, aurgery and gra-
ness. Office 23, Residence 352, Hospital 1745.
DR. ARLIGHT—Chironiorator —
Therapy—Massage.results guar-
dance office 1431.
Residence phone 1741.
DR. FLORENCE J. BARROWS—Op
B. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggis,
Eastman Kodaks.
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
A. G. ALRICH
Press.
Nek-Batt-
back buttonhol
See our wide ran-
terns and colors in
and in all furnishing
Peckham's
Printing, Engraving, Binding
teoptic Physician, Office hours 8:30-
12:50; 1:50-5:30. Phone 2327, 909 Mass.
Street.
Office Supplies, Rubber Stamps
Stationery, Seals, Stencils
736 Mass. Street
Room 311 Porkine Bldg. Special attention to extracting. Phone 511.
Z H TIBIRTH—Dentist, 927 Mass St. Phone 183.
Emery Shirts
EDWARD BUMGARDNER — Dentist.
Varsity - Bowersock
Four Shows Daily 2:30, 4:00, 7:30, 9:00
Today—Tuesday
Eugene O'Brien in "The Figurehead" Also Burton Holmes Travels
"The Joyous Trouble-makers"
Wm. Farnum in
At Both Theaters Wednesday May Allison in "THE CHEATERS"
A story of battle for a girl and gold. Also Mutt & Jeff Comedy—"A TRAIT TO MARS"
GIRLS!
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
1017 1-2 MASS. Also 726 1-2 MASS
We have silk Oxford Laces at 35c
Clothes Called For and Delivered
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
THE STUDENT CLEANERS
EATON & FRAKER
We press 'em while you g:t your hair cut at
HOUK'S BARRE SHOP
Phone 499
929 Mass. St.
Varsity - Bowersock
Wednesday-Thursday—
May Allison in "THE CHEATERS"
A Record Breaking Production
PRICES:-Children 11c; Adults 33c—War Tax Included
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
Halla
uorth
nure
gun
NI
are a
ears a
Econ-
nearly
board
locat
and the
tetles of
rooms.
The
the se
suse
so
physic
is gu
of the
porte
orite
So
large
veloy
eust
the
part
later
not
out
gen
the
te
thi
ti
g
BY THE WAY
Phi Delta Chi announces the offer owled pliding. Kenneth Hay, Aransas City, Alfred La Bion, Lincoln Jean Murphy, Meade, Joe Schneider, Popoka, and Sam Schemberger, Burington.
Glen E. Smith, Ph. '20, Sofieville Kansas, visited at the Phil Delta Chi House the past week end.
Mr. Lawrence Gray, c'18, now of Baltimore, Md., is visiting at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon House.
Delta Tau Delta fraternity will give its first party of the year Friday night at F. A. U. hall.
John Milton of Stafford, who was as freshman on the hill last year, is continuing his studies of medicine at the University of California.
Rolland Brown, B. S. '18, who is an architect in Kansas City, Mo., was visiting at the Delta Tau Delta house Sunday.
Delta Theta Phi, law fraternity, an nomenque the following piedge; George Cavanaugh, Belot, John H. Gerey, Pueblo, Colo, William Ellie Leavenworth, Benjamin Painter, Beverly, John W. Williams, Ottawa, Guy Bayer, Kansas City Mo, George W. Beyer, Kansas City Mo, Philip Plerson, Stanton L. Sullivan, Holiday A. R. Wilson, Carl L. Simmons and Arthr Syms. Total 13.
Prof. Elwin Smith, tenor, of the Fine Arts department, has been enraged to sing regularly at the Central University Honors College in Harrison St., Kansas City, Mo.
Everett L. Bradley, c22, has returned to resume his school work after a short visit at his home in Cherokee, Okla.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Luther Hangen, A. B. 20, returned to Wichita where he is reporter for the Wichita Daily Beacon, after spend
ing a few days in Lawrence.
Alpha Chl Omega announces the pledging of Lucille Evans, c'24 Tonganoxie.
Gladys Fitzgerald, fn, '23 spent the week_end at the home of her sister, Mrs. J. H. Floh, in Kansas City.
Josephine Lee, c'23, spent the week end at her home in Bonner Springs.
Julia Carman, M. S. '20, has accepted a position at the University in the office of the Geological Survey.
Helen Moore has returned to her home at Galem, after spending two weeks in Lawrence.
Miss Lois Bennett will go to her home in Kansas City, for the week-end.
Miss Margaret Hughes, c23, is attending Christian College at Columbia, Mo, this year.
Nicholson-Whitehead
A meeting of the K. Club was held last night at which John Bunn, vice-president of the organization, presided. Because of the rain, the meeting was not a complete success, but it was decided that the K. Club dance should be postponed till Saturday, October 9, because of its former conflict with the night shirt parade, which is scheduled for October 2.
The marriage of Miss Mary Nicholson, c11, and Lieut. E. S. Whitehall, took place n Emporia Saturday, September 25. Miss Nicholson was a member of Torch and during the past year has been teaching in the Lawrence High School, Lectuentor Whitehall $_{4}$ a member of the school's newly established station at Camp Funton. Lectientor and Mrs. Whitehall will be at home in Junction City until his transfer to at aviation camp.
Harmony Prof: "What is pitch?" Bright Freshie: "The tune that the fork gives off."
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Phi Delta Chi will give a smoker and mixer for all of men of Pharmacontional society at the Phi Delta Chi Vermont, Tuesday night at 8 o'clock.
The Prince Hall Grand Chapter of the Eastern Star Scholarship, a gift scholarship of $50 will is open for students in grades 9 to 12, students, men or women, of classes above the freshman. Application should be made for this scholarship before October 4. Committee Pro Winston, Wilmington, Slawson, Wilton, Wilmington,
The Mrs. J. B. Watkins Scholarship, a g lift奖学金 of $75 is open for the year 1920-21 to young women of the freshman and higher classes. The committee will receive applications until October 11.
The first meeting of the Dramatic Club will be held tomorrow evening in Green Hall to discuss the plans for the current year.
There will be an important meeting of all Mining Engineering Students in Room 8, Haworth Hall, Wednesday at 4:30 o'clock.
The first meeting of the Spanish Club, "El Ateneo", will be held Sept. 30, 4:30 oclock at Fraser Hall, Room 205 in the Museum Building. It will be there for the election of officers.
Tau Beta Pi will meet Tuesday night at 730, room 11, Marvin Hall. John Tracy, president, will report on the school's activities at Cincinnati, September 13-14.
All Black Helmets are requested to attend a meeting Wednesday, 7:30 o'clock at the Stigma Chi house. N. Huddleton, President.
Christian Science students will meet at Myers Hall, Tuesday, at 7:30 p. m.
Phi Delta Kappa will hold a meet
Here's the Problem—Solve It!
(a) Increased paper prices
a Problem
(b) Increased printing prices
The First Presbyterian Church will open for services next Sunday. A welcome awaits all at the Sunday J.W. Boyer, University Pastor.
(c) Increased binding prices
GIVEN:
(d) Increased engraving prices
ing, second floor of Oread High School, Tuesday, at 4:30 oclock.
(e) Increased selling price of annuals at other schools similar to K. U.
There will be a reception for all the Catholic students of the University this evening at the Parish House, VT, from seven until nine o'clock.
TO FIND:
Abaku will meet Monday afternoon at 4:30 in Room 106 Green Hall. All members are urged to be present. Important business.
SOLUTION:
THE 1921 JAYHAWKER
"YOUR K. U. DIARY"
The Selling price of
TEXAS CLUB will have a short meeting in Fraser rest room Friday afternoon at 4:30. All students from the classroom and get acquainted..PRESIDENT.
Due to a special agreement between the managers and their printers and engravers, whereby—if—the managers can specify the exact number of books they will require, on or before October the 15th, they will be able to avail themselves of the advantages of early work—hence they can still sell The 1921 Jayhawker for the old price—$5.00.
Therefore—You can be assured of your Jayhawker for the old price
($5.00) IF you order NOW—BEFORE OCT· 15th.
The K. U. Cosmopolitan Club will meet Friday evening, September 24, at 7:45 o'clock, in the Hall of the Cosmopolitan Club House, 1409 Rhode Island St. Business: Reorganization and election of new offi- cers for their present term—F. V. BERMJEO, President.
1921 JAYHAWKER
CONCLUSION:
"JAYHAWKER TALK"
"YOUR K. U. DIARY"
All Congregational students and their friends are invited to attend a mixer at the Congregational Parish House Friday night at 8:15 o'clock
THE
It's the aim of the managers to make The 1921 Jayhawker Everybody's Jayhawker. We mean by that to cover every form of activity in the university in the greatest number of possible ways—hence to find the best, by actual elimination and selection.
K Club meets Thursday at 7 o'clock in Green Hall. Very Important, John
This plan has the advantage of an early start too! And it applies to every phase of the book. One thing in particular we are proud of, however, is the wealth of material we are gathering in the way of snappy snapshots. We think that'll help make a good book—don't you?
BURT COCHRAN, Bus. Mgr.
FERD GOTTLIEB, Editor.
REMBMBER—IT'S GOOD BUSINESS TO BUY A JAYHAWKER EARLY!
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
SINCE 1900
What your Teacher
WANTS TO SEE YOU AT
What your Teenager?
Wlos
Suits and Overcoats for College Men
with superior workmanship and best of material
$40 up
Samuel G. Clarke
1033 MASS. STREET
Bunn, vice-president.
The following books are wanted at the W. S. G. A, book exchange, and students possessing copies are asked to sell them;
Economics, Ely; Sociology, Blackmar and Gillan; Modern English Grammar, Bicount and Northburg; Algebra, Fite; Trigonometry, Ashton; Handbook for English Writers; Oddyssay; Elementary Logic, Jevens, Psychology, Hunter; Botany; Spanish Grammar; Calculus; Language dictionaries, and freshman rhetoric books.
A meeting of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debating fraternity, will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock
in Room 106, Green Hall. It is es- sential that all members be present
There have been a number of calls
for Jevou's Introduction to logic. Will persons who have this book and wish to sell it bring it to the student book exchange in Fraser.
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques, Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
We Like to do
Little Jobs of REPAIRING
WHETHER you have a watch to clean and repair, or a broken part to be repaired—
Or if there is a stone out of a ring or a necklace that is broken—
Bring the article to us and get the article repaired in the RIGHT way at the RIGHT price.
AND ALL WORK IS GUARANTEED
Gustafson
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
This Little Ad
in the DAILY KANSAN cost only 25c but just the same
it found the pocketbook and money
LOST-A **pocketbook** containing $12.00 bills and blank check on Ottawa, Kansas bank, between Victory Cafe and 1200 Kye-6-8-31.
3
Kansan Ads Pay
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FOUR ELEVENS TRAIN IN SIGNAL PRACTICE
No Freshman Scrimmage in Monday Practice; May Come Today
EMPORIA A STRONG TEAM
Teachers Are Heady, Fighting,
Speedy, Weighty Bunch
Says Schademan
Practice Monday evening was com-posed mostly of signal running by four Jayhawk eleveners. Scrimages with the freshman squad, rapidly forming into heady, fast football players under the coaching of "Ad" Lindsey, was delayed until Tuesday afternoon. A large representation from the student body is expected at the "well posited" of the coach on McCook Field this after, noon, and it is expected that Coach Allen will run his protégés against the yearling gridiron warriors for the occasion.
Lonberg, Little, Weed, Wilson, and Stucker all took turns at running the teams through the several formations adopted by the Kansas coaching staff, and all appeared to have a full grasp of the operations. The team practiced in guarding, with practice in guarding against "spiders," was also tried.
The freshman are shaping up well. John "Young Dutch" Lonberg, try out for half on the yearling eleven occasions much surprise from the onlookers, who think from the resemblance that Arthur "Smiling Dutch" has been relegated to the back row in "Young Dutch" is an all-around athlete, as is his brother, and just as handy with himself.
Coach Karl Schlademann, who scouted the Pittsburgh Normal.Emporia game in Emporia, which Emporia won, 19,15, is giving Coach Lindsay's men some Emporia formations which they will throw against the variety line in the first scrim. mage.
The Emporia eleven, according to Coach Schaidman, is the most intelligent team that the Teachers have had for some time, and will put up for the best fight that the state school has put up against the Uni. verity in recent years, but the team says, and speed and weight both must be brought into play to keep them away from the Kansas goal posts.
S. O. HENRY WRITES ON PRUSSIAN SPIRIT
K. U. Graduate is Author of Book on German Economic Condition
Stuart O. Henry, 'c1', is the author of a book upon the German economic condition. The book is causing some little comment abroad, though as yet little discussed in the States, says the New York Tribune
At a recent meeting of the French Academy, one of the immortals, Emmie Bouloux, gave Mr. Stantt's book, "Villa Elsa," much favorable criticism said he had ordered him to articulation to the Institute de France.
"Villa Elsa" deals with the pay, ecological effect of Prussianism upon the German people. In the author's opinion, Kaiserism brought about a mental and spiritual condition in which the people of Germany as a whole became "purgas at heart," so that they will never abandon the idea of revenge on France and England. The remedy he suggests is the education to democratic ideals of ten thousand German children each year in America. Such a program, he admits, would be costly, but no more so than building a dreadnought. If his plan worked well, then he begins at once before Germany gets upon her feet economically, at which time it would be more difficult.
M. Boutroux was under the impression that Mr. Henry was an Eng. Ishman. On the contrary Mr. Henry was born in Clifton Springs, New York. He came West in his childhood. In 1877, he entered the University of Kansas. He was described by a friend at that time as being "a palate thoughtful boy." Amira immortalized him myself in University Church. He organized and played in the first University band. He received an A. B. in '81 and an A. M. in '94. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.
He was at one time the secretary of the Colorado Loan and Trust Coast Denver, Colo. He isn't president now. He is not involved in offices in the Flatron Building.
He spent six years in Europe, which has resulted in several infar.
C. L. Edson, Once K. U. Stude Now Broadway Poet, Tells in Verse of Campus Vamp of 1904
Literary genius is a specialty of the University of Kansas. A comparatively large crop of folks who are able to get their things published have been turned out from Mount Oread, one of them, in an immature stage, may be attending freshmen rhetoric classes this fall. Even so, the crop for a decade can easily be numbered in two digits.
One of "Kansas" literary sons, C. L. Edson, who has made a success in the big game, paid Mount Oreand the biggest prize last Saturday. In his little visit he stopped for a look,see into the Daily Kansas office, and before leaving, was preplanned to sit down and jingle of his campus recollections.
"I had my day in K. S. U
"I had mud in k. S. U,
"And that was back in 1904)
"The biggest boob that blew
"Across the sill of Fraser's door
"The Maypole fight I well recall;
"The freshmen got me 'dead to
right.'
"I squealed and cursed and raised a baw"
"And I was off of Maynole fights
"And I was off of Maypole fights
"I had a little magazine,
"I sold one_half of it one day.
"Then gave the boob the other half
"And quickly made my getaway."
Mr. Edson's publication, which he edited, wrote, and sold, was called "The Automobile." Six hundred copies of the magazine were sold. It contained stories, poems, various editions of opinions, and jokes. Other misprints and impressions given by latter are detailed in the other verses:
"The campus vamp, a married Jane,
"(Who thought she was a Theda
hoar)
"Could charm a rube who had no brain,
"And so she got me in her snare.
"Of all the musky, squashy bunk,
"Of all the bull con ever builled,
"You should have heard the line of
junk
"That bush league Cleopatra pulled.
I fell for every word and line,
"I ate it up and came for more.
Oh, please taste such terrific list.
nne,
"You thrilled me to my bosom's core,
"Since then I've starred in Gothan.
"And chinned me' em' hear the Broad way lights;
"A sad, sophisticated clown,
"I've seen and heard the sounds and sights,
"But still those memories will not doom
"Those village vamp Arabian nights."
national books, mostly concerning France. He was at one time on the staff of the New International Ency- clopedia.
In contributing the poem, Mr. Edison declared that it was "not very good, but one really ought to have a couple of hours to write one as good as Tennyson, and as Tennyson, and as work." Then he made his way through the now strange buildings of Oread to seek out old literary acquaintances among the faculty. The Museum building was just being finished when he left, and he soon went on to teaching law classes in Fraser Hall, to two and three score of students.
Mr. Edson brecced from the Uni-
versity one day in 1904, and worked
for awile on the Kansas City Star
for which he has lately been contrib-
uted to the development of a humorous nature. His next step was in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where he was the editor of the Post. A short time on the reportorial staff of the "Appeal to Reason," a sociolitera or gan at Gilard, Kansas, he was an adjunct at the ondun publications and finally as a free-lance, he made a name for himself as a special writer in the fields of poetry and humor. Mr. Edson was editor of the poetry and paragraphs of the *New York Times*. Mr. Ed at the same time that Jerome Beatty, another of K. U.'s successful newspaper men, worked on it. The paper was purchased by agents of the German Kaiser, however, and K. U. lost its representation when German propaganda replaced Kansas
Mr. Edson made his way through the University by correspondence with newspapers in nearby towns. He failed in his classes in the depart, motion of journalism, which was then in its formative period, and did not receive his degree until three years older. His birth is now in Summerville, New Jersey, from which emanates the free-lance material that newspapers all over the country are publishing under his name.
stage "K" to Appear on Standpile
A huge letter "K" will be painted on the northeast side of the big stand-pile on Opead avenue for the purpose of advertisement announced the student council this morning.
The standpile, recently painted a battle-ship gray by the water company, makes a good background, say members of the council, and the letter can be seen from trains coming through the Kaw valley from east and west.
PIGSKIN PATTER
By "Cap" Garvin
Regular Meals
Are Quickly Served
Our overhead is light Our prices right.
Supreme Cafe That's the Place to Eat
Over one hundred students watched football practice Friday afternoon, and stayed till the last player had gone to the sheds.
If the freshmen out for football cannot keep their headgears on during practice, about nine-fourths of them ought to get a hair cut. Long hair looks nice in the dance hall, but in these modern days, the foot, ball player does not need hair to protect his head.
That the weather is still a bit too warm for football was evidenced out at the Haskell field Saturday, when he played a lostless game with Baker.
When a coach goes out in uniform,
and does not expect him to do any more
than he does, he is bound to
fail. "Doe" Allen gets results,
"wrong." Doe' Allen is getting results.
Little Tommy Anderson, halfback for Haskell, $i_{8}$ back in the game this
The Frost who says he trained as much in high school as they are going to retain them here, will change his mind in a few days now.
The freshmen are being fattened for the shauchter. Tuesday after, noon they go up against the Varsity for the first time this season.
Chili, Pies
Fruits and Candies
That Delight.
After Parties—
After Dances—
After Study Hours—
PROTCH
The College Tailor
Join the Gang We're Always Open.
The entire squad seems in better physical condition to fight the fin, right now than at any time durin last season, and it is their own fault.
fall, coming through with his usua number of long broken field runs.
"Poodle" *Allison ran into ground with his shoulder, Friday afternoon is a result, he will be on light duty or a few days.
Jayhawk Cafe
Ray and Harry
COR. 14th AND OHIO
And still the news that we had a seasoned quarterback in the practice would lighten the hearts of the coaches. But there is none.
Warsaw, Sept. 28—Grovoy (the ortress city near the river Nienen, has been captured by the Polish army, it was announced officially today by the general staff. Heavy fighting preceded the city's fall. The Reds still battling fiercely in the vicinity of Grovoy, according to advice received from the scene of the battle.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
PERSON who took green cap from Spooner Library last Friday please
ROOM for two girls at 1321 Vt. Next door to boarding club. Phone 1383 Black. 12-2-52.
The Store will Close at 12:30 on Wednesday Afternoon for the Douglas County Fair
LOST—Monday afternoon n Women's
locker room Gymnasium. Wrist
Gymnasium office Reward. 12-3,50.
The Co-operative Price Method
Of this store has gained the confidence of a host of customers who have dealt with us.
Just a Word to You About Your FALL SUIT
The
4
Our early Suit business was so unusual and so in excess of our expectancy that we were compelled to make a second buying trip to New York in order to reestablish our much depleted stock. These new Suits, together with the last word in Coats, Dresses, Blouses, are being shown and at figures consistent with the lowering market and our conservative style, qualities. A look at these new and authentic modes will be most convincing. May we show you?
James Bullene Hackman
Commissariat 1910 A. B. Uberrichts Commissariat
Carl's lucky purchase of 65 Suits—now here for your choosing-
Copyright, 1914. A. B. Kirachbaum Company
$75, $70, $65, $60 Values Now
$50
—Models for Men and Young Men—
Sizes 34 to 42
—a "tryon," before our mirrors, will convince you—
that we have a suit that spells your name all over it.
Freshman Caps—$1.00
return to J. O. Brehm 1640 N. H.
12-1-51
CARL'S
GOOD CLOTHES
2:00 P
12-5-53.
WANTED - A girl for one or two hours work daily. Dusting and light cleaning. Location very close to campus. Call Phone2094. 12-2-54
41
When a Pretty Girl Stops And Smiles It May Be You
But More Likely You've Got on Something That She Approves of So Why Not Try One of Our Clever New White Oxford Shirts With Collar Attached They're So Different And the Girls All Love 'em Different Five Plunks—
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You'll find the sort of People You'll Want to Know at—
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"BRICKS"
Good Wholesome Meals
Attractively and Pleasingly
Served, Too!
Fischer's Shoes Are Good Shoes
SO COMFORTABLE
that you never think about them
-
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those are the shoes which gives you
your money's worth of service.
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Fischer's Brogue's are that Sort of shoes. —
and naturally, we're showing them in pleasing variety of new colors. They are shoes you'll enjoy!
See them in our window
OTTO FISCHER
813 Mass. Street
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Maine
Hunters
Buffalo
Sarah Sweeney
beautiful,
money-saving,
and the
pleasantest
per cent
poem.
The woman
saw and
the philosopher
died of the
grief of her
father.
So
woman
wrote
the
future
not
gave
the
future
100
FROSH BUCK VARSITY IN FIRST SCRIMMAGE
VOLUME XVIII.
Register Four Touchdowns
Arguinei Allen's Men
A against Allen's Men
VARSITY WORK DEFENSIVE
Stop Normal Plays Given Fresh by Schlademan
Either the Varsity were purposely taking it easy in the first scrimmage of the season with the Freshman, last night, or otherwise they could not help themselves, for the yearlings carried the ball over the goal line for four touchdowns. Given the ball on the 50-yard line they took it to the Varsity ten yard line, not without some opposition, then proceeded to go around the ends for three perfectly good touchdowns. The fourth goal was made by the aerial route, with a forward pass from the 15 yard line.
The Varsity was kept on the defensive during the entire scrimmage, getting acquainted with some the Emporia plays that Coach Schaldemann brought back with him, after watching the Temporia-Pittsburg game last Saturday. Fumbles by the Emporia, and then several times, and some intercepted forward passes, also gave them a chance to do a little offensive work.
At the start of the scrimmage the Varsity backfield was composed of veterans, with the exception of Welch at fullback. Simon and Mandeville played the halfback positions, and Lonborg was quarter. In the line were Ivy, right end; Hale, right tackle; Higgins, right guard; Suntwers, left tackle; and Madison, left end. It was a hard line to buck and the first year squad had trouble galore in getting anywhere, losing the ball several times on downs.
John Longberg, Dee Miflin, and Hemphill, for the freshmen, were showing up well in the backfield. They also contributed a good gain around the varsity end.
After the fresh had carried the ball awhile, Coach Allen inserted new men in the Variety eleven, and before the practice was over had replaced practically the entire team that started the scrimmage.
"Those," replied the Serious Senior, "Mark the spots where Quantrell's victims fell."
"Well," the Freshman said, "Why don't they take them up? I blamed near fell over one of them myself."
"What," asked the Foolish Freshman, "is the purpose of those little crosses sticking up in the road at Fourteenth street?"
(Editor's Note: The Editor-in-Chief saw this and asked us if it had not been told before. We told him that we did not about the same cross.)
COSMOPOLITAN CLUB
NAMES NEW OFFICERS
Foreign Students Find New and Permanent Headquarters
The Cosmopolitan Club, which was organized last year through the efforts of the foreign extension committee, met with foreign students of the University met and elected officers Friday evening. The officers selected are as follows: F. V. Bermuto, president; S. W. Cervone, secretary; D. Millare, secretary and treasurer.
Last year the foreign students of the University were scattered all over Lawrence, and it was found very difficult to make the organization a success. However, during the past summer session, a house was rented at 1409 Rhode Island Street, and a cooperative boarding and rooming club was formed for the foreign students in the college. It will be used as a gathering place and social center for the Cosmopolitan Club, and it is hoped with this as a nucleus around which to build the club that it may be a decided success.
The Cosmopolitan Club has applied to the Men's Student Council for the privilege of using the word University in their name, in order that it may be called the University Cosmopolitan Club. The students who are carrying these plans into execution have the responsibility to contribute and of a number of business men of Lawrence. Several social events are scheduled for the year, and it is planned t put the club or a permanent basis by next spring.
Must End Exploitation
Declares Chancellor
Chancellor Lindley spoke to about one hundred freshmen at the Freshmen blowout at Myra Hall Saturday night given under the auspices of the
The chancellor gave a talk in which he said that an end must be put to the exploitation in the University of Kansas.
John Bunn, president of the Y. M.
C. A. presided as toastmaster. The following toasts were given: Warren Bledgett, "Your Y"; Harry Stewart, "The Glad Hand"; Dean Brandt, K. U. and You]; Erwin Glen, assistant cheerleader, spoke on college spirit and led some yells and songs.
EXCHANGE IS SUCCESS
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1920.
Students Asked to Send in Old Books
The W. S. G. A. book exchange, in Fraser Hall has been a great success in furnishing students with books that they were unable to buy at the stores. The book exchange not only enables the student to buy books at a reasonable price, but it also means of disposing of books for cash.
Former students are asked by the W. S. G. A. to turn in their used books, for the local stores are unable to obtain many of the required texts. Those turning in books to be sold will fill out a card giving name of book, owners name, and price desired for book, and when the exchange is closed the W. S. G. A. will deduct the cost from students' books were sold.
According to Miss Ruth Miller, business manager, the exchange has proved a success financially, for $63.00 has been deposited, while approximately $50.00 is on hand. The exchange will close this week, but will reopen at the beginning of the second semester.
TO DECIDE TONIGHT
Members of the Band will definitely decide at a rehearsal tonight whether or not they will enter the R.O.T.C. At rehearsals last week the question was brought up but no final decision was reached.
K. U. Band to Settle Question of Joining R. O. T. C.
According to S. Z. Herb, band director, the question of finances is holding many of the men back who are not as good at playing the band unites with the R.O.T.C., it means that each man will have to pay thirty dollars for a uniform. Just at this time of the year, the members consider that too much to bear and the band is unusually heavy. The band will undoubtedly lose some of its most capable musicians upon entrance to the R. O. T. C., but it is evident that there is much to be gained from the band members.
Y. W. Launch Campaign To Change Constitution
The annual membership rally campaign for the University. Y, W. C. A. was launched at the meeting Tuesday afternoon by the membership committee. A short business session was held and by a unanimous vote it was decided to insert a new membership basis clause in the constitution of the church membership requirement formerly included. Announcements, scripture reading and a piano solow were next on the table. Sidonia Shiara gave a brief history of the organization from its founding to the present time. The girls were urged to attend the Y. W. C. A. luncheon on Friday and also to sign the membership cards as soon as possible. Quite a number signed the cards after the meeting. About three hundred girls were
Sphinx to Announce New Members Oct. 5
The 1920 Sphinx were elected Sunday at the first meeting of the year. The new members will be announced at the dance Friday night, October
The Sphinx is an organization of Freshmen men for the establishment of greater cooperation among the men of that class. The new members are elected each year by the members of the breeding year and consist of two representatives from each fraternity and two non-fraternity men.
Put K. U. First.
FRESHMAN MEETING
AGAIN IS PUT OFF
Chancellor Left for Topeka Attend Conference With the Governor
HELD NEXT WEDNESDAY
Legislative Year May Stop Many of the Chancellor's Weekly Freshman Talks
The freshman convocation was not held this afternoon.
The Chancellor was all ready to make his address to the first year students at the meeting, which was to have been the first one of the year, but on receipt of a telegram yesterday, he sent a note for a conference with the governor.
Chancellor Lindsey pans to give these lectures throughout the year, but as this is a legislative year, it is clear that many will have to be notmonned.
The first freshman convoction will be held next Wednesday, the Chancellor's office announced. The initial meeting was scheduled for last Wednesday, but has been postponed until to have the date set up one more week.
The meetings are in to be held on Wednesday in Fraser椅 at 4:30. The purpose of these meetings is to help the new students to get the most they can out of this school year and assist them with their arrangements.
NUMBER 13.
OWL SOCIETY MEETS
Elect New Officers and Pledge Suport to Team
The first regular meeting of the Owl society was held at the Sigma Nu house Tuesday night. Officers were Derek Heywood (president); "Scoop" Olson, vice president; Albert Hindman, secretary and treasurer. The Sour Owl Board is "Cape Gavin, Sylvester Kendall, John Keeffe, Paul Dumon and Arthur Cempff."
Every member expressed his desire to co-operate with other organizations on the Hill to extend support to the football team. Methods for this cooperation and support will be discussed at the next meeting.
The Owl Board is already preparing for the next issue of the Sour Owl, which will come out in New York on December 20. The team will be devised by which the entire school will co-operate in the publishing of this magazine, so that it will be made a magazine representant of the efforts of the entire University.
ROOSEVELT TO COME
Democratic Nominee Will Speak in South Park, Oct. 6
A meeting of the Rooming House Association is announced for Thursday afternoon at 2:30 in Room 116, Prahran Hall. All women who house the rooms will be invited to the association. Matters of general interest to the rooming houses concerning the conduct of the houses, adherence to rules, and cooperation with them will be discussed.
The Kansas is authorized to announce that all students wishing to hear this speech, will be excused from classes.
Varied Program Planned For Rooming House Body
Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Democratic nominee for Vice-president, will speak in Lawrence Tuesday morning, October 5th, at 10:30 a.m. in South Park. The prominent Democrat may speak at the University Gymnasium. Mr. Roosevelt will be accompanied from Kansas City, in addition to the official party, by a special reception committee from Lawrence. They are on Monday, December 6th, m., Tuesday, and will leave at 11:37 the same morning for Topeka. Chancellor Lindley will occupy the platform with the speaker.
Texas Club will have a short business meeting in Fraser rest room at 4:30 Thursday, September 30. All old and new members should be there.
Mrs. Burnett, president of the association, will be unable to attend he meeting. Mrs. Olive Brush, vice resident, will preside.
Phi Beta Pi announces the pliding of Gerald Hickok, c23, of Kansas City, Mo.
Mark Waggenser, c'22, will spend the week-end at his home in Atchison.
The Reverand Mr. Blackman, "The Fighting Parson," will speak at the Y. M. C. A. Luncheen Thursday, Rev. Earl Blackman was a chaplain in the 58th Division, and inter served as a boxing instructor. Many men on the Hill have seen him referee bouts.
Fighting Parson to Talk At Y. M. C. A. Luncheon
The four-score of Kansas men listed below contain the names of the volunteers who will place Mount Oread on the Valley football map this year. For two weeks now they have slaved at the arduous conditioning exercises prescribed for all men, and have made a play of them.
Preparations are being made for at least 350. All tickets should be bought by Wednesday moon.
K.U.'s BEST MEN
much is due the unknowns who came out, worked their hardest for two weeks, and then were damned until next season, when they will return with experience and a better chance to make good on the Varsity.
Now the first game is coming. The squad will probably be cut in half, to allow the men sufficient quarters, and intensive training for the faster members of the squad soon. Much of the coaching in the squad, and gain honor and a name for themselves, but just as much is due to the unknowns who came
The members of the squad now.
Ellis Allison, Chanute
Clifford Arthur, Junction City
F. W. Alexander, Bartleaville
The members of the squad now:
Ward Cullum, Chanute
Arnold Bell, Gwaal Bond
Parker Brookway, Olathe
William Botkin, Kliowa
Fred Casto, Wallville
John Callahan, Burr Oak
Charles Cathers, Coffeeville
Olix Cox, Elk City
Oscar Davidson, Solomon
William Davidson, St. Johns
Frank Duff, Horton
Frank Dunkley, Lawrence
H. D. Ely, Turon
Earl Emopkott, Lawrence
Chubb Farrell, Garnett
Lefroy Farrell, Billion
Marshall Vineyard
Virgin Ford, Lawrence
Max Ferguson, Atchison
R. L. Gilbert, Lawrence
Clarence Grubb, Lamont. Okla.
Perry Godlove, Lawrence
George Gould, Lawrence
Floyd Grimes, Lewisburg
Gordon Gray, Chanute
George Hale, Lawrence
George Hart, Lawrence
Ray Harris, Hill City
Dan Harrison, Downs
L. J. Hockett, Wichita
Severt Higgins, Lawrence
Daniel Marker, Ozawake
Bruce Meeker, Wichita
Ralph Morrison, Lawrence
Dick McKean, Chanute
George McVey, Lawrence
Mac Andy Macdonald, Lawrence
Harry Kane, Parsons
Myron King, Ottawa
Harley Little, Russell
Max Leuwelin, Garnett
J. B. Lofus, Lenexa
Arthur Lonbur, Horton.
Pete Jones, Council Grove Bronze Jackson, Bernard M. L. Johnson, Pittsburgh
B. H. Pester, Hillboro
B. R. Pringle, Harvysville
Gilson Ross, Delphos
Golden State Warriors
James Rutherford, Wellington
Loren Simon, Palm Beach, Flir-
er Erwin Stugard, Lawrence
Tristan Spurgeon, Fall River
Edwin Faundel, Flirer
Edwin Sandeuf, Lawrence
M. Sproul, Lawrence
E. W. Seifert, Cheney
Gordon Saunders, Lawrence
Stanton Smiley, Lawrence
Winn Smith, Mankato
Harold Shores, Burr Oak
Myrle Ivy, Tescott
George Nettels, Topeka P. Nickol, LaCrosse
Kenneth Welch, Emporia
John Wulf, Vancouver, Wash.
D. A. Walker, Coffeyville
Mallon Weed, Lawrence
Braden McLaughlin, lawrence
Roy Wasson, Viola
J. M. Williams, Lawrence
THROAT CONVOCATION IS CALLED BY WINSOR
Ear-Splitting Rally to be Heed Thursday Night at "Crown"
"Gym"
IS SCHEDULED
Tarantula Dance is Planned on Way to North College Blaze
Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock is the hour set, and the "Thundering Thousand" constitutes the cast of characters or the biggest, most extirpating, as well as ear-splitting party figures in the room, to Sandy Winsor, cheerleader.
The meeting place for this great display of fighting spirit and exemplification of the enthusiasm that characterizes the 1920 Jayhawk e
leven will be in Kibbison Gymnasium. Winner is author of the suggestion "Prepare for a big 'stand up' rally." The main floor of the gymnasium will be cleared of all seats except those on the platform where the 1920 team was placed.
The band will be three in full force. The program will include a number of speeches, chief among which will be an address on "Fight" by Dr. F. W. Bauer and Mark McReynolds, known phrase, "jinnegar." Vice Chancellor L. W. L. Burdick will speak for the University administration, in the absence of Chancellor E. H. Lindley. Prof. S. J. Hunter, state entomologist, gave a lecture at the reception. Lastly, he has upheld the honor of the Crismon and Blue in many a Jayhawker contest, will tell what the team expects from the rosters. George Nettles, captain of the team, and fighters tackle of the team, will link to the roots on the sound.
At 8:45 the Thunderbird Thousand will wend its serpentine way to old North College hill where an immense fire will be built. cheerder Winner-Son announced this morning that every freshman in the University was expected to contribute something to the heat and intensity of the fire, two fires or something. In advice given the fract year son by Winger.
The entire rally will be under the supervision of Winston and his two assistants, Curve Glen, Shirley Petty and Terry Jones. The staff will be allowed in the way of destroying personal property. Winston said this morning that he expected Kansas rosters to get "rough armor" and wear old clothes to the rally.
The Thundering Thousand will rescue at about 11 o'clock Thursday night to resume again Friday at exactly 12 o'clock. Classes in the University campus will be turned over to the cheerleaders and with the aid of the Thundering Thousand, Winsor said this morning that he expected to put on the new coach's headband before being back at the University. No University student will be allowed to desend the Hill until the rally has been competed. Huku guards from the KuKu Khan and the University campus and all applicants for lunch will be turned back until the rally is over.
CIVIC HEAD RESIGNS
A. A. Long of Kansas Munich palities Goes to Texas
A. A. Long, secretary of the Bureau of Municipal Research, and also secretary and treasurer of the League of Kansas Municipalities, has assigned his position as secretary of the Bureau of Municipal Research in order to return to Austin, Tex., where he will work with Dr. M. C. Lowr. Mr. Long has done some valuable research work during his year and a half in charge of the Bureau.
Mr. John G. Stutz, graduate of the University of Chicago, has been appointed head of the Municipal Reference Bureau and is at present acting in Mr. Long's place as secretary of the League. Miss Annit Gardre, A.B. 26, is the assistant secretary of the Bureau and has charge of the research work. This summer Miss Gardre worked as Miss Lina Burger, a medical industrial Welfare Commission and together with four other young women, made a survey of the women industries of Kansas.
Earl Stenton, 1'22, will spend the week-end at his home in Leavenworth.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
All Journalism Studies To Organize Thursday
The Associated Journalists will day at the first meeting of the year, for purposes of organization, next Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, according to members of last year's organization who are in school this year.
Every student enrolled in classes in the department of journalism is a member of the organization, if they attend the meetings. Two banquets are given each year, at which newspapermapers and writers of note are imported for speeches. The meeting opens with a welcome will for the purpose of electing new officers for the year, and to determine the date of the fall banquet. Both old and new members of the department are eligible to vote on the officers.
THAYER PRIZES GIVEN
Homer Neville and Judd Benson
Won Design Medals
The first regular business meeting of the Architectural Engineering Society was held Tuesday evening in the McCormack Building. Thirty-five members were present.
The principal feature of this meeting was the presentation of the Thayer medals, given annually for excellence in architectural design. The winners of the medals that year were Homer F. Neville and J. Leland Bennett, successors of Mrs. Thayer Professor Golden Goldsmith made the presentation.
Each year two of these medals are presented to members of the classes in design, and anyone taking courses in design will be awarded prizes. This last year they were given to the two students showing the most improvement during the course of the year's work. The conditions of this year will be announced later.
Plain Tales Fron the Hill
A highbrow is a person educated beyond his intelligence, somebody said once. In which case, it's lucky he doesn't absorb much education. The Hill don't absorb much education.
Any human being, professor or Phi Beta Kappa desiring to have his, her or its name kept out of this column should communicate at once with the editor. Phone 62. No advance in rates has been made.
Hereafter these persons and organizations will get absolutely no publicity from this column.
Prof. W, W. Davis. (We're taking a course under him, and we can't afford the risk.)
"Cap" Garvin. (He gets his or the back page, anywav.)
Senior Laws. (Everything possible about them was said at this last year last time. Copies of the Kansans containing such items may be seen on applainment at the Kansan office or to Van, the animal man.)
(Note: This blacklist will grow from time to time.
Prof.: (To Freshman class) Let's see, are you Brown?
Home Sock Frosh: No, sir. Pn blue.
Oread High School To Elect Officers Today
The first meeting of the Oronigh Old School assembly will be held Tuesday, September 28, for the purpose of *v.* lecturing officers for the ensuing year. Officers to be filled are those of president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, and student of net of secretaries, composed of social, athletic, inter-school and minute secertaries, which will be chosen, which will look after school) activities. A student council, composed of one representative from each class, will also be selected. The purpose of the student council will be to act as an advisory body.
Sold Most Tickets Today
The record sale of fothall season and student enterprise tickets for the first day of the sales campaign was reached by Floyd Walhmern; c'23, who this afternoon reported to Robby Lynn, in charge of the campaign. Many of the tickets many of the salesmen requested for additional quotas to sell, but Walhmern sold by far the largest amount. He expects to sell at least another hundred, he says.
Carl Coors, c.21, is expected home from Nebraska the latter part of the week to resume his work in the School of Medicine.
Send the Daily Kanzan home.
ENTERPRISE TICKETS ARE SELLING RAPIDLY
Women Are Rivaling Men in Volume of Season Activity Books.
SALES NOW NUMBER 1600
All Students Grasping at Chance to "Cash In" on Bargain Offered.
Student enterprise and football season tickets are being bought by the students in a rush, according to Bobby Lynn, in charge of the sale. Fifty percent of women Women are buying them faster than men, too, and every sorority has promised a 100 per cent sale is their membership. The Gamma Phi Beta sorority had sold its fifteen minutes after Mr. Lynn turned the tickets over to them.
One thousand six hundred tickets, turned over to Mr. Lymn by the athletic management as enough to last him a day in camp, the campaign, were exhausted at noon today, the first day of the campaign. Some of them, however, were checked out to salemman who will conduct the mass of the student districts tonight.
The KuKu Klan, in its meeting last night, took more than 700 tickets, which are being sold today in the fraternities and all over the hill, and will be sold in the student districts tonight.
SERVICES SKIP INFANT
The ticket you buy for the at start now, Mr. Lynn says, because of the reservations features.
Students who buy their tickets Wednesday or Thursday will be able to reserve their seats for the first four games at home—all but the second game. The time Friday at the athletic office.
The ticket sale among the women is being handled by Mary Olson through the Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. The rooming houses and the student districts will be thoroughly combec or sales.
WILL HEAR K. U.HEAD
Chancellor Lindley W Talk to
Kansas City Alumni at
Luncheon Thursday
Chancellor Lindley will speak on "The New England Programs of Service to the State," before the morning City, Mo., at the Hotel Muxhobach, Thursday noon. Others who will attend the luncheon are Prof. W. J. Baumgartner and Alfred G. Hill; secretary of the University of Kansas.
The Kansas City alumni and former students have taken a lead in organized activity in the interest of the University. It is expected that Kansas City students are organized with active K. U. units in the near future in form similar to that of the Kansas City association. The formation of alert local K. U. associations is an important part of the action program of the Alumni Association.
Chancellor Lindley will speak at the Ladies Night Chamber of Commerce Dinner in Kansas City, Kansas Thursday evening, Sept. 30.
Students Show Cards To Check Out Books
A new ruling passed at Spencer library requires all students wishing to check out books to first present them, but not those that they are registered in the University. Books are to be taken out of the library by students only. Lawrence people and others have the right to borrow library books, but cannot take them out.
Other Universities have adopted this plan long ago, but it was thought unnecessary to make such a ruling among the students and the librarians knew who were students and who were not. Since the University has grown, the librarians no longer know all the students, means of identification is necessary.
The loss of books in the past has nothing to do with the present ruling, according to Miss Watton. The ruling applies to Spoiler library.
Dr. Greene, M.D., K. U/.05, will deliver the second of the *dies by gyrine* lectures at Myers厅 h7 on 3pm, Thursday, September 30. All University men come if you want to hear something worth while.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansai
EDITORIAL STAFF
BOARD MEMBERS
BUSINESS STAFF
*Miller-in-Chief*, Walter G. Hara.
*Nova* *Miller*, Graeme Olean.
*Telescope Editor*, James Austin.
*Telograph Editor*, Lucas Cleveland.
*Sport Editor*, E. K. Harvill.
*Alum Editor*, Joe Jebo Pike.
*Editor*, James Austin.
*Exchange Editor*, James Austin.
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry B. McCurdy...Business Mgr
Lloyd Ruppenthal.Asst Business Mgr
Mme W. Malotts...Ciculation Mgr
Herbert Little
Catherine Oder
Gilbert Swenson
Media Smith
Paul White
Ruth Armstrong
Burt E. Cochran
Ford Gottlieb
Alfred Graves
Geneva Hunter
J. K. Jintser
Subscription price $2.90 in advance for the first nine months of the one-month yes; $2.90 for one asemeter; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Entered as second-class mail mailer September 11, 1910, at the post office of Lawrence, Kansas, under the set of March 3, 1879.
Published in the afternoon
twice a week by students in the
Department of Journalism of the University
of Texas Press or a press at
the Department of Journalism
Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K. U, 25 and 66
The Daily Kaanen aims to prepare students for the University of Kansas, to go forward by standing for the ideas the teachers are to be clean; to be cheerful, to have nerve to move several problems to the best of their ability.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1920
"FLOATING SNOW"
"Floating Snow" will soon make its appearance in Lawrence again.
You might guess that to be a statement from the "weather man" but it isn't. It comes from the bankers of Lawrence.
"Floating Snow" is the term the give to the bad checks they hand every year for students. More than 500 of these went through the air banks of Lawrence last year. Now handling 50 bad checks in nin months and rebalancing them when they're made good is no trivial matter. It means a lot of work without any financial return. It's an irritating thing. It is so irritating that the bankers get to the point where they would almost like to charge students for handling their money, sell them the check books that they so carelessly waste, even refuse student accounts. But they don't. They just go on receiving their money and giving students the best of service.
Is it fair? Are we giving the banks a square deal when student checks average $1.18 and we ask them to handle 500 bad ones in nine months? Of course, these aren't the result of criminal intentions. They're merely student carelessness because they all come back marked "inefficient funds."
How much "floating snow" will fly in Lawrence this year? That's up to you. Will you do your banking in a businesslike way or will you be careless?
IS IT TRUE?
Someone walked down the Hill with you the other day and you started talking about college parties.
"Say, but that was a punk party they put on for the Prom last year," your companion excelsus. "One of the managers is stopping out right this fall. Guess he made enough to last him through school."
Now, did he? Is it true? Did that thought go through our mind? No, you probably agreed with your companion and went on to tell how a dozen students run the school, and that the Pi Z taz were "bumps" on five bides this fall and that about so many more things are so. It's a habit around here. We all do it more or less.
But, Is it true? How many times do we ask that when someone tells us a bit of guessing? Not very often. We just consider ourselves a little more on the "inside" of things and display our knowledge by telling it to someone else p perhaps with a few more fouures.
Is it true? ?Oh. "I don't know but so and so and so and so told him." And we believe it, don't we? It's much easier to believe than to doubt unless you get the "Is it true?" habit.
How much more satisfied do you
think you'd be with college people.
College life and college activities if you tried the "Is it true?" on the things you hear?
CUPID CAPITULALES
An year after year ships by and calendars of past twelve-months grow mostly in their eobweb nests, it is being to be an obvious fact that there are fewer love-matches on the Hill with each succeeding somester No more do numerous evidences of engagements appear on the dress fronts and fingers of the University women. The campus, once famous for its many blossoming romances, is no longer productive of fervent amounts True, an occasional marriage grows out of a University courtship, but these are not plentiful as in other days.
Reasons for this development probably lie chiefly in the rather well-known high cost of living. Students at the time they are in college, are not always sure of future compensation, and consequently feel backward in the art of proposing marriage. Then, too, the fact that both men and women enjoy "dating" promiscuously when there are so many different attractions offered in the way of entertainment.
"GRAFTS"
Have you looked about you and thought that something was missing? Perhaps you won't have to look long before you discover that it is the grafts that were so prominent on the Hill last year.
Do you think that they are missing or are they us in seclusion until school is in full awing? Will they come peeping out probably timidly at first, and then when the freshman with havewithdrawn the shock of such things, will they come out boldly and begin where they left off?
Do you believe this or do you think that such things are past on the Hill? What do you think are we?
Let us hope so.
Campus Opinions
Editor University Daily Kansan:
Editor University Daily No. 106
The people of Lawrence say that Kansas University is coming into its own again. During these years of unsatisfied existence, since the war wilters in Kansas have lost their spirit, the lack of unified spirit "on tha hill." But, now as we are on the brink of a new era in the life of Kansas University their tone changes, and a note of cheer takes the place of that which was formerly despondent.
The University is the life of Lawrence and the citizens of the city are glad the "thundering thousand" are here again as old. Let's make the old town hum. They like it.
A Town Student
Editor, Daily Kansan:
The appearance of our campus seems to be the favorite subject of student critics this fall—and rightly so. The campus is in dreadful condition. Those roads upon which vehicles pass are like a treasure railway with a few more plunges added for good measure; the new Administration Building is a credit to the University—or would be if we could train our eyes to look only at the building itself and not its surroundings; it is also certain that classes in West Air are reached on rainy mornings and that students slide about and stepping in the mud. It is all undeniably not what it should be, but why blame the University Engineer who happens to be the person most intimately concerned. He knows it just as well and better than he. His whole endeavor to give us a sense of the campus does not just happen, you know. They take infinite planning and then many thousands of dollars to carry out those plans.
So while we're exclaiming over the defaults of our campus, why not go to the root of the evil and blame the legislature which hasn't yet realized that we have a great state and that some more to make a great state school what it should be.
Four thousand students with con-
trusted effort can influence that
Legislature just as surely as they
can make the justice system work.*
Concentrated Effort.
Our merry puncher declares that the rain got lost last evening. At any rate, he assures that when he saw her, he looked for it and found it was mist.
Prof. (To Freshman class): Let's see, are you Brown?
Homesick Frosh: No, sir. I'm Blue.
JAYHAWK TALK
OF COLLEGE LIFE
WITH OUR CAMPERS
AND OTHERS
We wonder if the man who told the class in Elementary Law that he thought a certain amount of wife's money is right is thinking of getting married soon.
The climax of rush-week comes to the average Freshman, on enrollment day when he is rushed off of his feet by the collectors of fees.
It is right down impossible to do library reading at a moving picture show, and it is quite a task to work there on a bathroom floor.
You can generally tell what the average student is by what he does when he has nothing to do.
A smiling, good mature professor is not necessarily, an easy grader. You can't judge the force of 'mule' bicky by the size of his hind hoofs.
You can't say a man is a good student because his light burns far into the night. He may be reading the last number of the Police Gazette.
Do not think that, just because a man says "Oui, Oul," he has been to France. Ask him to describe the man as one who had well—well he has been there.
The fellow who shines his own shoes is to he commanded. He is not only saving money for more urgent work, but he is learning a trade as well.
There are too many fault finders in this old world. If some of them would use their feet less and their heads more, they would arrive sooner.
Antiroglites assert the signs of the zodiac under which one is born have much to do with one's characteristics. Goodness, how many K. U. men must have been born under the horn of Taurus!
The movie producer who is introducing Annette Kellermans latest picture advertises her as "the great queen" and "Wolaint "banker beauty" be better?
People with trusting dispositions were due for numerous jolts when they read the papers of Friday night. There were top-head stories of a hydrophobic pup, corruption in last year's world series, and of alleged partnership on the part of the Stars and the American Legion Weekly.
The man who collects. old rags hasn't been around this year, judging by the music heard from the student district.
The gentlemen who purchased lords or Franklin last Tuesday ave our understanding sympathy. We had the same feeling the other ay when we were told Christian needs not to need pay the $8 stipend fee.
"Joint Program is Announced for Boys"-Gazette. Quick, Watson, page the revenue officer and the juvenile court!
The "daring" robber who burglated the window of a local jewelry store evidently believed the old saying makes water "hit." He took plenty of photos.
Those freshmen who can't figure
The light-weight head writers continue to talk about the "Cork Mayor."
Possibly the mysterious saxophone thief was merely impersonating Everett True.
"Jacob H. Schiff has been associated with the financial history of New York and of this country for a quarter century first, then go to New York!"
On Other Hills
Alumni of Ohio State from coast to coast are to be organized within the next two weeks in the interests of the Ohio Stadium campaign. Members of the Stadium Committee and the athletic staff will make a tour to stimulate interest in the stadium among alumni of Indianapolis, Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas City, Denver, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.
Washburn will begin an organized athletic program for women this fall. Miss Katie Moore, athlete d rector of women at that school announced she would inaugurate girls basketball, hockey, football and baseball games.
According to reports issuing from the Pikeway camp, Washington University is confident of having a better eleven than last year, despite several losses. The new coach, George S. Kader has started dummy scrimmage and is placing special emphasis on offensive work.
—For Rent—First class room suit.
able for faculty member. Call 2359
or 108. 10.5.41
WANT ADS
Oldest Printing College at Agnies MANHATTAN, Kau., Sept.-The Kansas State Agricultural college may claim the distinction of having had a course in printing longer than any other American college. The Kansas State Agricultural college being an industrial study and not at all connected with Journalism. The journalism department was not started until 1910 but since then has had a rapid growth. Starting with eight students the first year the department has grown steadily to around three hundred students, the
WANTED—Typewriting to do. Rea
WANTED—Typerwriting to do. Rea sonable prices. Glenn Pagett, 1223 La. 11,5,47
LOST—Alpha Zi Delta Pin. Cal
1953. 11-3-43
If any one has a "Wells and Hart." Second Year in Algebra, Paul Gould. 129 Ln. St. will give them double price for it. 11-3-46.
FOR RENT;—First class room suitable for faculty member. Phone 2329 or 168. 10-5-32
ROOMS FOR RENT—Four double rooms for boys. 1131 Tenn. Phone 2503. 10-5.32
LOST—Down town or on street.
plain kappa Sigma pin. Finder
please call 2374 Red. 10-5.40.
but why it's called a gridiron will find out should they appear there without their caps Saturday. The telephone directory lists only one auto wrecking company. But several women we wot of (as Chaucer Tale) have shown themselves able to says on page 175 of the Knight's give very fair service in that line.
LOST--In women's dressing room at Innes, silver illumination case with fraternity crest. Liberal reward offered and no questions asked. Call Mary Poindexter, Phone 99. 10-5-37. FOR RENT--Large upstairs room for boys. Call 1534 Blue, 1329 Ohio. 10-5-36.
OUNG man wants roommate. Good
.OST—Down town or on street car
May Allison in "THE CHEATERS"
Wednesday-Thursday—
Wednesday Only
Varsity - Bowersock
A Record Breaking Production
Paramount Magazine Comedy "SOME BABY"
PRICES:-Children 11c; Adults 33c-War Tax Included
At Bowersock Thursday Llaine Hammerstein in "THE POINT OF VIEW"
location. Call 1215 Tenn. 11-3-45.
Call 1234 Teen. Call 1231 Vt. Next door to boarding club. Phone 1383 Black. 12-2-32
LOST - afternoon a Woman's locker room Gymnasium. Wrist Gymnasium office Reward. 12-3-50
FOR RENT - three rooms, furnished for four boys. Suitable for light-housekeeping. Near K. U. $12.00 a month. Phone 1688. Call 1:00 to 2:00 P. M. 12-5-58
WANTED—A girl for one or two hours work daily. Dusting and light cleaning. Location very close to campus. Call Phone2004. 12-2-54.
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jack
building. Building, General
special attention to nose, throat
car. Telephone 217.
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex-
clusive Optometrist) Eyes exam-
ined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR H. REDING, F.A. A.U. Building, Dearer, nose, and throat, Special attention to fitting grasses and toulson工 phone. Phone 312.
DRIS. WELCH AND WELCH -PALMER
858, 278, 143, 699, 105
Office 11L, Office 11K, Reediness 11K,
DRI. J R BECHTEF, Rooms 3 and
4 Room 313-761b, Drury's $14.
Drury's $14.
DR. G. W. JONES, A. M., M. D. Disease of stomach surgery. Ph.D. Phone 35. Residence 35K2, Hospital 1745.
DR. ALBRIGHT-HICRATOR-Radio-Player - Therapy - Message - Results guardians notice. Phone 1631. residence Phone 1761.
DR. FLORENCE J. BARROWS—Osteopathic Medical Physician, Office hours 8:30-12:00, 1:30-5:30, Phone 2537, 969 Mass. Street
EDWARD RUMGARDNER — Dentist
Room 511 Perkins Eldg. Special attention to extracting. Phone 511.
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
Z H TIBBETS—Dentist. 927 Mass St.
Phone 183.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
To University People
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
Customers' Room
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
Savings Department
Coupon Booths
THE ROUND-UP AT THE MOTHERS' HOME. THE LADY OF BENNY GARDEN, MADE A FILM BY WALTER STANLEY AND HER SON, FOR THE TWO THIRD EDITION, ON THE TITLE 'ROUND UP AT THE MOTHER'S HOME'. THE FILM IS NOT NOW AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE.
MARGARET MATZENAUER. Corritalto
Will be paid for her appearances in concert and opera the coming musical season
$120.000.00
For her recital here, Oct. 12, she will be paid $1,200.00
For each song and air on her program, she will be paid $75.00
For each minute she sings, she will be paid
$17.14
You can hear her for less than the price of TWO MOVIES
by buying a season ticket to the eight concerts of The University Concert Course
1086 season tickets are already sold. Only 414 seats remain. Sections A and B on the main floor and the second row in the balcony are COMPLETELY SOLD OUT
If you want to get inside the Gym that night Get busy and mail your order to
H. L. BUTLER, Lawrence, Kansas Season tickets admitting to all eight concerts $5.00 and $4.00
Halls
strictly
use the
accent
mark.
Also
are a
chair
second
room
board
located
and the
letters
of rent
rooms.
Then
the
mouse
used
co-
physics
in gui-
d of the
porter
article.
Soo long
years
elogic
cent
the
part
inter-
not
out
gen
the
de-
th
th
li
g
BY THE WAY
Beta Theta, Pi announces the pledge-
inf of Paul Cunningham of Kansas
city, Mo.
George Chandler, e21, and Gerald Keesee, e24, attended the 35th Division Reunion in Topeka Tuesday.
Flora Harrison and Lina Brown,
c24, will spend the week end visiting
friends at Garnett.
Lois Hampton c2'3, will spend the week end at St. Joseph, Mo., visiting friends.
Glen Smith Ph'20, visited at the Phil Delta Chi house Monday.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Harold Wall, 123, has withdrawn from his classes in the School of Law and has gone to his home in Sedan. kan.
Nestor Moore, c23, will go Thursday to Kanaa City where she will spend the day with her brother, Robert Moore, and Mrs. Moore of Wichita, who will be in Kansas an route to Chicago. Mr. Moore will rejoice that he is making his last year. He is a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity.
Dorothy Gage, '24, and Dorothy Craig, '24, will visit Mary Wood, '21 in Kansas City Oct. 2, 3 and 4.
Evelyn Horton who has been guest of the Phi Beta Phi sorority, will leave for her home in Omaha, Neb. Oct. 4th.
Alice Carnie will spend this week end visiting friends in Topeka.
Paul Oles, 22, will attend the University this fall. Mr. Oles was at the University of Chicago last fall.
Helen Olson, c'21, spent the week end at her home in Topeka.
Helen Bosier, c'24, spent Saturday and Sunday at her home in Kansas City.
Lloyd Young spent Saturday and Sunday at his home in Iola.
Ethel Minger, c'21, spent Saturday in Topeka on business.
Victor A. Newman, c22, is attending Whorton School of Finance, Philadelphia, Pa. Mr. Newman was on the debating team that defeated the University of Colorado team at Budder last year.
Kenneth Vaniman, c24, spent Saturday and Sunday at his home in Wichita, Kans.
Mrs. R. D. Richardson, formerly of St. Joseph, Mo., left today for her home in Abilene, after a week's visit at the Alpha Delta Pi house.
Meldon White of Kansas City, Mo. was a guest at the Alpha Dota PI house the latter part of the week.
Norton Dowd, c24, will spend Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City.
The Chi Omega sorority will give an informal party for its pledges Friday evening.
Edwin Manspeaker, e23, took the civil service examination Saturday morning for a position as clerk in the Lawrence postoffice.
ALUMNI NOTES
Opal Woodruff, c'13, formerly cataloguer at Spooner Library, and Olive Brown, c'15, formerly classifier at Spooner, have been visiting friends at the University. Both are employed with the Kansas City, Mo. Public Library.
Mark H. Adams, LLB. "20, is prac-
ticing aw in Wichita.
Tyson V. Anderson, A.B. '20, is teaching at Council Grove.
Helen Frances Bender, A. B. '20, is
teaching at Fredonia.
Clarence D. Burkholder, A. B. '20
William B. Cobb, LLB, '20, is practicing law at Casper, Wyoming.
is in the lumber business at McPheron.
Someone in the Geology department is a device of the art which Larder Rarder made famous. A Kan, san cub, on the trail of an assignment, was handed the following story. But that is not the worst of it; he came back and turned it in! Read me be edified:
"Weather report, September 24th.
"Indoofficial report says Bahamas are
vereeited by a cold wave. Sixty,
fourteen people were killed and
heir tails severely frosted. hibbitten."
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Meeting of all "A" girls at Robinson gymnasium Wednesday night at 7:30 o'clock—Marie Shaklee.
There will be a meeting of the Women's Roaming House Committee, Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock at Miss Coriin's home, 1184 Ohio Street.
The Biology Library in Snow Hall has been arranged to be opened on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday nights from 7 to 10 o'clock. It is also open every morning from 9 to 12 including Saturday and every afternoon from 1:30 to 4:30 with the exception of Saturday.
The Mass Meeting for girls will not be hold this week because of a conflict in dates.
There will be an open meeting of the Student Volunteers at 7 'oclock Wednesday evening in Myers Hall. Be sure and bring some one with you.
El Ateneo will hold its first meeting of the year Thursday afternoon at 4:30 in room 313 Fraser. Electon of new members—Leland M. Shout.
Mathematics Club will meet at the home of Prof. U. G. Mitchell, 1313 Mass. St. Wednesday afternoon at
YOU CAN BE COX SURE About THE 1921 JAYHAWKER "Your K. U. Diary"
C
THE JAYHAWKER Office is in Rowland's Annex, 1237 Oread. Number the Phone number by the year—it's 1921.
Politicks-
—don't exactly enter into this—'cause The 1921 Jayhawker is non-partisan—but—The 1921 Jayhawker will be "Democratic"—for it's Everybody's Jayhawker—and—as for the G. O. P.'s—well if
isn't a "Grand Old Portrayal" of a history of you—at K. U.—it'll be because the managers suffer a stroke of paralysis.
THE 1921 JAYHAWKER
"Your K. U. Diary"
Remember—its good politics as well as GOOD BUSINESS to buy your Jay-awkner early. $5.00—until October 15th. Order from solicitors or at office.
Business Mgr.
Burt Cochran
Ferd Gottlieb Editor
Keep the 1921 JAYHAWKER on your "Front Porch"
four o'clock. All members are urged to be present.
All old and new Owls will meet Tuesday night at the Sigma Nu House to 9 p. m. sharp. Very important.—Bill Wells, President.
All economics students are to meet Thursday afternoon at 3:30 in Room 202 Administration Building, for the annual organization. Officers will be elected.
O
The first meeting of the Spanish Club, "El Alenoc", will be held Sept. 30, 4:30 oclock at Prasser Hall, Room 1250 in the Conference Center to be there for the election of officers.
Quill Club will be Thursday night in Fraser Rest Room at eight o'clock. All active and faculty members are urged to be present. Business only.
The Mrs. J, B. Watkins Scholarship, a g ift scholarship of $75 is open for the year 1920-21 to young women of the freshman and higher classes. The committee will receive applications until October 11.
The Prince Hall Grand Chapter of the Eastern Star Scholarship, a gift scholarship of $50 will is open for students in grades 10-12, students, men or women, of classes above the freshman. Application should be made for this scholarship before October 4. Committee: Provenance: Winston, Schrader, Wilson, Winston, Oliver,
All Black Helmets are requested to attend a meeting Wednesday, 7:30 o'clock at the Stigma Chi house. N. Huddleston, President.
K Club meets Thursday at 7 o'clock in Green Hall. Very Important. John Bunn, vice-president.
All Congregational students and
Have YOU
Bought YOUR
1921 JAYHAWKER
IT'S "YOUR K. U. DIARY
$5.00 cash, or payments until Oct. 15th
their friends are invited to attend a mixer at the Congregational Parish House Friday night at 8:15 o'clock.
The K. U. Cosmopolitan Club will meet Friday evening, September 24, at 7:45 o'clock, in the Hall of the Cosmopolitan Club House, 1409 Rhode Island St. Business: Reorganization and election of new offi- cers for the present term—F. V. BERMEJO, President.
TEXAS CLUB will have a short conference in Faerra rest room Friday afternoon at 4:30. All alumatts from the university and get acquainted...PRESIDENT.
The following books are wanted at the W. S. G. A, book exchange, and students possessing copies are asked to sell them:
The First Presbyterian Church will open for services next Sunday. A welcome all at the Sunday Mass, J. W. Boger, University Pastor.
Economics, Ely; Sociology, Blackmar and Gillan; Modern English Grammar, Blount and Northup; Algebra, Fite; Trigonometry, Ashton; Handbook for English Writers; Odyssey; Elementary Logic, Jevena Psychology, Hunter; Botany; Spanish Grammar; Calculus; Language
THE BATTLE OF CANTON
Suits and Overcoats for College Men
What your Teller?
What your Tailor?
MADE IN BOSTON, MA. 02216. MASTER'S
INSTRUCTIONS. WWW.TAILORING.COM
with superior workmanship and best of material
$40 up
Samuel G. Clarke
1033 MASS. STREET
THE 1921 JAYHAWKER
A History of YOU at K. U.—
"YOUR K. U. DIARY"
Buy it now for $5.00 more after Oct.15th.
dictionaries, and freshman rhetoric books.
There have been a number of calls
for Jevayel's Introduction to logic. Will persons who have this book and wish to sell it bring it to the student book exchange in Fraser.
Special Sale Silks
All selected from our regular stock of quality silks.
$3.00 and $3.25 Messalines light and dark shades,
a yard...$1.95
$3.50 and $4.00 Chiffon Silk Tafeta, all in street shades, a yard. ... $2.48
$3.25 and $3.50, 40 inch Georgettes and Crepe de
Chine in every wanted shade, a yard . . . . .
$4.50 Chiffon Taffetas in light evening shades,
a yard. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.89
$4.00 Mignonette in white, black, taupe, brown and navy, a yard. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3.48
WEAVERS
Clothes Called For and Delivered
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
THE STUDENT CLEANERS EATON & FRAKER
We press 'em while you g*it your hair cut at
HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
929 Mass. St.
Phone 499
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
1047 Massachusetts St.
CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00
Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10,00.
This Little Ad
in the DAILY KANSAN st only 25c but just the s
cost only 25c but just the same
it
found the pocketbook and money
LOST-A pocketbook containing
$12.00 bills and blank check on Ottawa, Kansas bank, between Victory Cafe and 1200 Kry. 6-3.21.
Kansan Ads Pay
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
INDICT GAMBLERS ON PLAYERS' EVIDENCE
Act"
Eight Whitesox Are Involved in "Conspiracy to Do Illegal
JACKSON NAMES BACKER
All Evidence Is At Hand to Prosecute Both Players and Gamblers
Chicago, Sept. 29—The first indictment against gamblers alleged to have been connected with the conspiracy to throw the 1919 world series to Cincinnati was warranted by a court jury today. Bert Sullivan of Boston and a man by the name of Brown were named as the fixes by Cauldee Williams. The players to confess were charged with a conspiracy to do an illegal act. They voted initially after Williams had told his story to the grand jury.
Williams was named by Joe Jack-
sison as the man who gave him his
$5000. Williams named all of the
gambers who were involved in the
deal. Judge McDonald announced that
Williams made a complete confession:
Immediately after telling his story to the judge, the player was taken before the grand jury. Williams involved the same eight Whiteoxs players as Cicotte and Jackson in their story, the judge said. "We now have all the evidence necessary to prosecute every one interested in the conspiracy, players and gamblers alike," the judge said.
Classes In Sports Open To University Women
A course in sports is being offered to the women of the University. Upper-classmen as well as freshmen women are urged to enroll in these classes which are held Tuesday and Thursday at 17:30 and 2:30. This work may be substituted for the regular floor work.
Hockey will be the main sport during favorable weather. A field is being prepared, and in a few days the classes will be ready to start playing. In bad weather these classes will play volley ball and other indoor sports. Swimming also will be given during the winter weather.
Youth No Longer
Doffs Headpiece
Military terms and expressions have been added to the vocabulary of the millions of men who wore the U. S. uniform and are now under, stood by everybody. The slang of the drill sergeant is in everyday use. The expression "pipe down" means "to get down." A common, "Make it snapp" is understood without explanation. Thursday the crowd at the Y. M. lunch was asked by "Sandy" Winsor to enter the gymnasium in "column of twos" and somebody yelled, "He must have been a sergeant." The word "drives" is used to drive "over the top" is now stale. The young fellows even use a motion patterned after the salute instead of doffing the headpiece to a lady.
Phi Gamma Delta will cetertain with a dance at the chapter house Oct. 16.
Emporia will not have much luck with her forward passes here Saturday if she does not get away much better than the frisk did Tuesday. But she only one and that was across the goal line, which is not allowed.
PIGSKIN PATTER
Every man who plays on the Kansas team station summer will be eligible for Missouri Valley conference playing, regardless of whether it is not necessary in these smaller games.
N. Y. Jayhawkers On Kansas Cruise
Captain Kidd Foster has summoned all former Jayhawkers of New York City and Philadelphia to a voyage of adventure and pleasure, Saturday, October 2.
Kanaa will never be able to boast of a cleaner team than is being turned out by Coaches Allen and Laslett this season. If a run is yellow, the coaches can see that streaks for a mile, and they will either— or else—.
At 2 o'clock the good pirate ship, "Martina," puts to sea for a Kansas Kruise, from the Battery Pier where the Statue of Liberty reigns. After waking the echoes with a thundering "Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K.U." over the Spanish Main they want to take the boat to the station of Jayhawk. By the sign of the stars, the captain promises moonlight, mirth and plank walking.
Eats? Each pirate will bring his own sandwiches and cake. Roaring Pete Davis will ration the bacon, coffee, and weenies.
Burring mutiny and capture at sea,
all hands will be piped over board at
10:30 that evening.
(Kids, Kettles and Kuttle Fish.)
Garage for rent. Call 1286 Red or
1042 Ohio. 13-2-60
social dancing class every Tuesday
night over Dick Boss; 7:30 to 8:30.
private lessons by appointment. Call
236 White. 13-3-56
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
Lost Tuesday non on campus. A
Alaris & Son fountain pen, without
ap. Leave at the Kansan business off-
ice. 13-2-59
Wanted- One boy, for roommate also one rom for rent with enclosed sleeping porch for 3 boys. House modern, 912 Ala. Phone 1937. 13-3-58
Wanted—Carvers
Political Economy,
copies needed. John
Economics.
Principles of
A number of
Ise Dept. of
13-2-57
For Rent—Two rooms and sleeping
orch at reasonable price. 912 Ala
hone 1837. 13-3-55
Regular Meals
Are Quickly Served
Our overhead is light Our prices right.
Supreme Cafe That's the Place to Eat
LELAND M. SHOUT Magazine Subscriptions
Phones: 593 or K. U 58
925 Ind.
OUR STOCK OF RINGS
Pander's QUALITY JEWELRY
We also "make-up" barpins, vanity boxes, and cigarette cases with the crest or initial of any fraternity.
Is considered by people of choice to be one of the most pleasing in town.
---
No, there isn't a course in journalism called "How to Torture the Profs," despite the impressions created by some well-meaning but veridant cubs. For said cubs have a way of arousing keen suspense in the minds of most faculty members during that interval between the time they're interviewed and the time they see the Kansan.
Prof. Sinned Against Isn't a Bit Peeved
For instance, there's one H. C. Thurman, professor in the department of German and chairman of the committee on eligibility for University organization, other than athletic. But despite ample provocation, Professor Thurman has as yet committed no murder and uttered no profanity.
The story was very well written but—the facts were just the opposite So when Professor Thurnau very positively brought the facts to the attention of the editor, he learned the Kanasan was very sorry indeed. With a force of some ninety entirely inexperienced students, accuracy was obtained frequently only by personal threats. Professor Thurnau was very reasonable about it all, and the editor drew a breath of relief and considered the matter at an end.
First there was a story in Thursday's Kansan about the German department, given out by Professor Thurman and written by the wellmeaning but revivalist cuius. Although he had been far above that of last year, so the story said, that in Germany had fallen some 60 percent.
But not so. For Friday, the very next day another story was turned in
But Professor Thurman hasn't gone Bolhevich yet. He is still hopeful of the Kansan's possibilities, and doesn't play the part of the Frate Subcriber to the letter from the porter, and he still reads the Kansan, and has made no threats about the future. So in spite of the severe warnings, the well-meaning, etc., cubs have made him, they unite in asserting that Prof. C. H. Thurman is a "reg尔 foller." H
by an equally well meaning but verdant cub, in which Professor Thurau stated quite positively that men who did not have time to carry full work at the University did not have time to participate in athletics. This might have done very well too, but Professor Thurau did not say it at all. He has no connection whatever with athletic eligibility. His his duty, and because he doesn't see that From managers and editors and other functionaries keep themselves eligible. And the story misspelled his name, too!
Some Store for Students
Meeting to Organize Economics Students
SkofStadS
ELLING SYSTEM
All students enrolled in the Economics Department are urged to attend the meeting in Room 202 Administration Building Thursday afternoon at 10:30 a.m. Students are encouraged to organize into a club to be known as the Associated Economics Students and the purpose will be to foster the better understanding and interest in Economics. The club will have monthly meetings and be supported by faculty members who have Alpha Kappa Psi. They will have good speakers at these meetings and
For Least Possible Cash Buys
THE 1921 JAYHAWEER
"YOUR K. U. DIARY"
Valuable now later INVALUABLE
Sign up with solicitors on the hill or drop in at the Jayhawker office in Rowland's Annex.
Your Favorite Brands of Silk Hosiery Reduced
You will welcome these new and lower prices on Women's Silk Hosiery, effective at once.
Phoenix Extra quality
Thread Silk Hose No.
368, black, Cordovan and
brown. Reduced from
$2.60 to pair ... $2.35
Black Helmetz Meet Tonight
Black Helmets, more classical school, will hold its first meeting of the society at 7:30 this evening at the Sigma year at 7:30. The president, Nicholas T. Huttleton, expects all members to be present.
Phoenix Thread Silk Hose, No. 365, black, white, brown and gray.
Reduced from $1.80 to pair. . . . . . . . . . . $1.50
1
plans for a big year are being made.
At the meeting tomorrow, officers will be ectled and the amount of the dues will be discussed. All students that are taking any Economics are asked to come whether you are a Major in the Department or a Freshman.
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
Gotham Gold Stripe No. 100, the quality for which you have been paying $3.00 at pair...$2.65
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1035 Mass
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EI
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Brenham'S
By the Manager, December 31, 2010
Mid-Season Suit Sale Continues all this week
ALL FALL AND WINTER SUITS UNDERPRICED AT
POST-SEASON PRICES
To you women who are judges of QUALITY; whose touch tells of a FABRIC; whose eyes know TAILORING; to whom the language of FASHION is an open book; the garments we are now showing at reduced prices tell a significant story. They are BARGAINS.
We rarely use the word BARGAINS because it is abused and so often misleading. We use it now deliberately and adverbsly and it carries the full force of its original meaning.
BUY YOUR WINTER SUIT NOW!
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XVIII
COX AAILS LODGE
IN NANSAS ADDRESS
Characterizes Massachusetts Senator as "Narrow Minded Bigot"
CALLS HARDING A BREWER
Democratic Nominee Says Op-
ponent Has Dodged League
Question
Hutchinson, Kansas, September 30 Governor Cox, before a crowd of about 4500 people here this morning characterized Senator Haryan Cabot Lodge as the "arch conspirator of the war," a "mar minded biot" and "the man who e the hymn of hate against Prec t Wilson." His Kansas audience which filled the big municipal auditorium, cheered every mention of Cox, while men of Wilson wava information on his minute. Lodge Cox said, would not have had a chance to up hold the League of Nations if Truman H. Newberry of Michigan had not bought his sent in the senate.
A bedlam of cheers broke lose when Cox in response to inquiry in a local paper, asking as to his prohibition stand, challenged the editor to say why he is supporting a brewer for president.
"I challenged an editor in Omaha to answer that question, and he said that Harding wasn't a brewer, but only owned brewery stock," Cox said. "I believe nine-tenths of the people Kansas want a League to prevent var. Senator Harding has become a solicitor in the last week, after taking ten different positions on that issue." Cox devoted part of his speech to pleading that, if elected, he would give farmers greater representation in the government. His praise of the federal reserve system was given a big hand. Grant development of the St. Lawrence waterway was advocated by Cox, who told his farmer朋友们 that harding will net farmers 5 to 9 cents a bushel more if shipped to the Atlantic coast by water instead of rat.
He was escorted to the station by a band and a big crowd which choered him as he left for Newton at 11:30 o'clock.
Extensive Programs Feature Meetings in Four Kansas Towns
INSTRUCTORS PREPARE FOR ANNUAL SESSIONS
Nearly $6,000 worth of platform talent has been purchased for the coming meetings. This includes such speakers of national r-patent as Drew Newell Hills, Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, Ellis Parker Butler, Ida M. Tarbell, Judges Bun Littaly, Dr. Frank Gusaulea, Governor Mary Brumbaugh of Ohio, President of Omaha, Pres. Wes Jessup of Iowa University, Pres. B. Bryan of Colgate University, and many others.
Topeka, Sept. 30—Sixteen thousand and Kansas teachers will attend the fifty-seventh annual session of the Kansas State Teachers' Association to be held in Topeka, Independence, Hutchinson and Hays on October 29, 29 and 30. This is the prediction of F. L. Hawks who has seen the membership grow from 5,930 to 12,927 in the past four years.
The Western Passerrier Association has granted special railway routes of one and one-third for the round trip to all four meetings from all Kansas points. These rates apply only to members of the K. S. T. A., who must obtain from Secretary Alnet an identification certificate.
W. A. Lewis, president of the FLHays Normal, is president of of the Association, and will provide during one general session at each meeting.
Schools throughout Kansas will generally close for this big teacher event, and the teachers will pay the expenses of the teachers to the conventions.
4. Senior Laws Choose Officers
Helena Walters, c '23, will spend the week end at her home in Kansas City, Mo.
Senior Laws Choose Officers
"Doc" Bailey was elected president,
C. R. Randall, vicepresident, and Harold Blake, Secretary-treasurer of the senior laws at an election held yesterday.
The bimonthly meeting of the mathmetics club was held yesterday at Professor Mitchell's home.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 1990
W. S. G. A. Book Exchange Closes for Semester
This year's Book Exchange, conducted by the W. S. G. A., which has dispensed of twice as many volumes as it did last year, will be held for the remainder of the semester.
Cheeks will yet be given out and unsold books returned to the owners Supervision of the work by Ruth Miller has been efficient.
The nominal fee of ten per cent has been charged for handling the books. This year's exchange fees total about forty dollars.
MINERS HERE FRIDAY
Pittsburg Normalites to Play Haskell at Fair Grounds
The Haskell-Pittsburgh Normal game scheduled for Friday will be played at the fairground instead of at Haskell field. This is the second time the game has been also for the Pittsburgh team, Haskell comes into its second game with a victory over Baker University, while the sting of an unknotted-for defeat at the hands of the fast Emperor John Ames is shown. If the weather remains good as in the last two days, the game bids fair to be a fast one. Coach Bell of Haskell has one of the best teams ever turned out at the Indian school, while Coach Weedle's squad is counted on the Kansas conference this season.
Haskell will probably use the same line-up as started the Baker game last Saturday.
Campus Paving Delayed By Shortage of Cemen
"There is so much road construction going on now, the cement companies don't care if we ever finish paving," and John M. Sha in recent years was general areas of the construction company on the campus paving. "We can't get any cement and don't know when we will be able to get it in large quantities. A carload comes in every day but not enough to keep the curb busy."
"Then, the weather has gone against us. The job wwd have been finished before school began but the heavy rains in August kept them from starting. There seems to be no relief in sight."
Football Tickets on Sale At Fraser Check Stand
at the W. S. G. A. meeting Tuesday evening plans were made for the sale of Student Enterprise books and football tickets, these can be obtained any time this week at Fraser and at the stand near the balloon board.
Plans also were made by the Council for a woman's mass meeting, the exact date of which will be announced later. These meetings will be held often, and a large attendance is desired by the Council.
A report was made upon the success of he last two varsity dances.
Sombreros, Chaps 'n Everything
Sombreros, Chaps 'n Everything
Meet Havarr i舜 and Claude Kelsey, cratwhist residents of unremarkable Kansas, who have saken the wonted headgear of the citizens of this section of the country for head covering commonly ascribed to the Far West. Recently these ttwain ascended the hill attired by a vest that had been worn to those worn by men who occasionally are to be seen at the stock yards. Friends of the team are expecting two pairs of wooly chaps and clinking spurions on high-heeled boots to arrive at any time from a mail-order company. The Kelsey have been observed reading "The James Boys in Missouri."
An examination for the removal of incompletes in Chemistry III, where the incomplete has been received because of low examination grades will be given in Room 605. Chemistry II will be given on Saturday afternoon, October 9, 1920.
Quiz to be Held Saturday
This is the only examination that will be given for the removal of the above incompletes.
No Sphinx Organization Yet
A get-together meeting of last year, Sunday, has been as yet, nothing definite in regard to this year' organization has been taken up. Another meeting will be called soon.
H. P. CADY, Director.
Meeting of the First Cabinet,
Y. W. C. A. Meyers Hall, 7:30 tonight.
Definite plans for the coming year will be decided upon.
ELECT NEW MEMBERS TO STUDENT COUNCIL
DRAFT STRINGENT RULES
Dandereville and Miller Will FI the Two Vacancies in Organization
Two new representatives were elected to mount ramp in the skien's Stuart Council as their regular meeting had not right in Fraser Hall. The two new members are frank mountainville from the college and sister from the school of Pharmacy. The erection of these two members was made in March; increase in interest in the two respects, and under the new constitution its mount ramp is governed by commission in each school.
Chancellor Bernst H. Lindley addressed the Council, urging them to do everything in their power to stop exploitation. He also complimented the Council in the way that they have handled issues as argu this year.
The Council decided to immit the campaign for the coming class elections. In their initiatives, the Council made string-in rules which are to be strictly enforced. No prism matter will be allowed to be distributed before any assembly of FI students. The priority of election. No passing of monarch or any other kind of bus on or about the campus will be tolerated. The standwell near the edge of the campus which in years past has been the batting ground for posses and paint will not be touched. Provision was made for direct enforcement of these rules. Any times or days of loss to the campus the rule may be unquashed from participation in the comin-
An election committee, whose duty it will be to see that the enclause is carried on in an absolutely fair and square way, was appointed by President Iraq of the Council. The committee; Bobo Lym, chairman, Chirene Gorin, and Clark Goss. Chairman Lynn announced today that all petitioning of candidates, who expect to have their names appear on the ballot, have been taken into the hands of the committee; chairman not later than next Wednesday night by six volex.
Women's Glee Club Elects New Members
'Vasting of Handbills Prohibited —violation Means Disquarantion at Election
Election judges consisting of Arlie Eates, Henry屠贤, John Kinske, Paul Dunn, Dick McKee, Ernest Clark, Hugh Pendigerrand, Slawson Donald Bairst, and Fred Prelew, were also appointed at the meeting.
Altos: M. Anderson, F. Ferris, V. Neckley, M. McLatech, G. Ellenberg, I. Posebhy, H. Ayers, I. Reber, E. Parkle, E. Burkankle and Lois Robinson
Forty-two university women have been selected for the Women's Glee Club. They are:
It was also announced by President Trudy that there would be two separate assemblies held next Wednesday morning at 10:30 o'clock. The men meet in kobbinion (cym) the women will meet in Franz Hall Chapel.
Kansas City, Sept. 20—The R. A. Long building which houses the Federal Reserve Bank here was closely guarded here today after an anonymous tip that the building was to be blown up at 3:00 this afternoon. The tip was contained in an unigned box located across from it and digitally communicated to J. V. Miller, Junior Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank.
The ordinary routine of business came before the meeting and was disposed of in the usual way. Several students attended the student enterprise were discussed.
First sopranas: E. McMullen, E. Burkhalter, M. Atwood, M. Fischer, N. Cox, B. Shores, Z. Shleylp, L. Frisbie, E. Liverty, D. Campbell, W. Nashy, P. Dearr, R. Troup, M.韦le, E. Clark, and L. Hackney.
Secret Service Men Guard Long Building
Second Sopranos: R. White, D. Ellenberger, G. Heath, M. Iordan, E. Dyer, L. Sharples, M. Ihmale, L. Anderson, M. M. Anderson, and N. Gebhardt.
There will be a full rehearsal of the club, Wednesday evening at 7:30.
LaVerne Pratt,c '24, was a Manhat- tas visitor Wednesday.
Sandy Winsor, cheerleader, announces that all Freshman must wear their caps to he football game Saturday. In times past many yearlong have been able to slip by, but this year's action will prevent all Softball violation. The truly once will be tossed in a blanket.
Freshman Caps Due
NUMBER 14
At Saturday's Gam
Y. W. CAMPAIGN OPENS
This Week Women Will Be Asked to Join
Tomorrow night the W. Y. C. A. cabinet will meet and the reports of the Religious Meetings Committee, the Big Sister Committee, the Social Committee, and the Lunchroom Committee will be heard. The dates for coming functions for October will be netted at that time.
The membership campaign of the W, Y. C. A. was launched at the regular meeting yesterday. This was in charge of the Membership Committee and about 210 persons were in attendance. The new basis of membership was explained, and pledges were signed at that time. Each week will be arranged the week and given opportunity to become a member.
.
The four Friendship Tees given by the Y. W. C. A. have been a success. About two hundred girls were present. It is the intention of the Y. W. C. A. to continue the giving of these tees throughout the winter as a means of increasing the friendly spirit among University women.
EMPORIA TRIUMPHED
OVER KANSAS ONCE
But Eleven of Twelve Games With Teachers Have Gone to Jayhawkers
Back in the dusty touns of K. U. ridon history, there is a record unt the Emporia Normal football tench, which is invading McCook Field next Saturday in the first game of the season, was not always a member of the "first game of the season" status, with Kansas, in 1900, the Emporia Normal tench team, and the Kansas tench team in the latter part of the season, and then walked through the Jayhawkers to the tune of '8 to 0.
Of the twelve games played between the two schools, however, this is the only victory to the credit of the teachers. The first conflict ended with the score of 55 to 0 in favor of Kansas; the second conflict, of the twelve conflicts, the Normalites were held scoreless, Kansas' scores varying from 11 to 55.
K. U. 35, Emporia Normals 0.
The scores:
1899
1900
K. U. 0, Emporia Normr
1902
K. U. 17, Normals 5.
1903
K. U. 12, Normals 0.
1904
K. U. 34, Normals 0.
1905
K. U. 32, Normals 0.
1906
K. U. 11, Normals 0.
1909
K. U. 55, Normals 0.
1915
K. U. 21, Normals 3.
1916
K. U. 13, Normals 0.
1917
K. U. 33, Normals 0.
1919
K. U. 12, Normals 0.
Vaccination of Students Urged
Students are urged to come to the University Hospital at once to be vaccinated for small pox and inoculated for typhoid fever. Both vaccinees are required free of any drugs to free all students. As the two diseases are preventable, students neglecting or refusing preventive measures will not be entitled to free care from the physician. All students required to pay for the services of the physician, nurse and hospital.
Students desiring to hear Franklin D. Roosevelt Tuesday, October 5, in his speech at South Park, will be excused from their 10:30 classes that day.
E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor
RALLY FRIDAY NOON CUTS CLASSES SHOR
...
Each Morning Class Will b
Shortened Five Minutes
Says Chancellor
SNAKE DANCE ON. HILL
Allen, Nettels and Laslett to Tall To Fans in Gym—Quit Prompt at 12:30
To make time for the rally Friday noon, the morning classes will be shortened five minutes each, and the whistle will blow on the following schedule:
8;20
8;20
9;15
10;10
11;05
12;00
E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor
The hot heat of football enthusi
asm from tonight's rally will not be
allowed to cool during the day to
towror.
At noon Friday, all classes will be damiated, and Choreoader Sandy Winner will lead a coalition of the two and a fraction "Thuntering Thunserd" across the campus in a geilified "who it up" snake dance.
The parade will start at high noon, from the Law Building. The K, U, Band, the entire football squad, and the cheerleaders will lead the entire mob of frenched rosters to Robinson for a few minutes, until it is possible to get them into the gymnasium auditorium.
No sir!
Once inside, the hounds will again be released. The blood of the Emporia Pedagogyus **v** invade MeCook Field Saturday afternoon will be sought by bloodthirsty students fans by means of mental teletherapy.
"Doc" Allen, Captain "Father Time" Nettels of the football team, and Coach "Scrubby" Willie will make short talks] The zero hour will be declaimed at 12:30 'clock prompt, however, and the feroce students will be released to open a room on boarding hooks noon meals.
Any culprit who is caught trying to leave the Hill at 12 o'clock will be dealt with summarily. Paddies being obsolete, it is likely the fans will enjoy their investigation and degree investigation into his loyalty, according to cheerleader Winor.
CONCERT TICKET SALE
EXCEEDS ALL RECORDS
Nearly 1100 Tickets Sold—Mai Order Privilege Ends Tuesday
The biggest pre-concert sale ever known in the University, is the verdict of Dean Butler in regard to the sale of season tickets for the University Concert Course. Up to last night 1866 tickets had been sold which shows an increase of over 500% save the sale at this time last year.
The sse last year was only 800,
proving that there is a noticeable
growth in the student appreciation of
the concerts. There are 1500 seats
in all and the remaining number total
414.
All aeas are reserved and at present the sections A and B downstairs and the second row of the balcony are sold out.
stan orders will be filled until Tuesday, October 5. Again in the mail order sale the increase is enormous. Last year's sale was 276 in contrast with the 888 of yesterday and more coming constant. After Tuesday, the sale will bill for about on sale in Fraser Hall and the Round Corner Drug Store.
Although the sale has been rapid, Denn Butler says that there are still good seats in the first row of the balcony.
First Y. W. Luncheon, Friday
The first W, Y. C, A. luncheon of the year will be held Friday at Myer's Hall at 12:30. The program at this luncheon will be in the interest of the membership campaign and will mark its close. Dr. Edwards of the Episcopal church will be the speaker and he will emphasize the value of active membership in the association. Tickets are twenty-five cents each and only two hundred are for sale.
Only Ten Vaccinations Given at K. U. Hospital
The attendants of the hospital report that only ten inoculations have been given for typhoid. The physicians believe that if the students realized the importance of the inoculations they would respond to the advantages offered them. Medical attention will not be given free to typhoid or amoalcalp patients who have had no vaccinations.
Plain Tales From the Hill
Prof, (To Freshman class): Let's see, are you Brown? Home. Sick. Free. No. six. Do
The paper maché gentleman who rooms in room 102 *Journals* building was found badly mutinied Monday night. He was entangled, and parts of his chest, lungs and ribs were scattered about the room. The hope was generally expressed by the Advertising I students that the gentleman was not alone in any more members. They desire a class room, not a morgue.
Home Sick Frosh: No. sir. I'm Blue.
"Twas a dark and stormy night. Two women sat near the reading lamp. Suddenly one of them cried, "Dorothy, did you see this Rolle character?" Dorothy responded sleepily, "What's that? A new kind of soap?"
The Engineers maintain they are not getting as much publicity as they deserve. (Hereafter, one Plain Man gets to tell them. We want to be fair to all.)
Finchaircuts, $.40
Coarse Hair, the same.
—sign in front of the studio of a Torsoril Artist on the jitney side of Massachusetts street.
Introducing humor into advertising, as this column introduces it into the Kansan. Draw your own parallel.
Dramatic Club Tryouts Announced by Committee
Marguerite Adams and David Shewfrey, joint committee from the Dramatic Club announce that tryouts for membership in the club will be held in the Little Theatre in Green Hall at 4:00 cck Friday afternoon.
“An unusual system of truys has been planned,” said Mrs Adams. “By this system we hope to give such talent the part most suited to it.”
"We hope to raise the dramatic standard in the University," continued Miss Adams, "and to do this every member of the club will be presented in at least two productions during the year.
The society also west on record as standing ready to assist in any way possible Director of Athletics F. C Allom, and Cheerleader Sand Wynn were sent to these assuring them of the society's cooperation.
Black Helmets Issue Freshman Cap Warning
K U K U S Ask Donations For Squad Fruit Fund
The Black Helmets, sophomore society, at the first meeting of the year last night, issued a formal warning to all freshmen to imme- nate their own helmet and form of life insurance that comes with a small blue cap. The Black Helmets will be in the parade Saturday, and at the game in a body, wearing the Black Helmet colors, the team carrying a goodly portion of barrel.
A petition is being circulated by members of the Ku Ku Klan for donations of ten to twenty-five cents for the Varsity Squad Fund. It is essential that the Varsity squid have some kind of fruit after each practice. But the Athletic Association has donated $10,000 of its funds for this purpose. Hence the money is being raised by subscription.
Let's all get behind the team and give them all the help possible.
Basketball Men Out Early
The first basketball practice was called last night. About twenty-five varsity men appeared in uniform and about an equal number of Freshmen showed up. Ernst Urlaub resumed his position as captain and held a conference of the varsity men after the practice.
TICKET SALES REACH
1800 MARK AT NOON
Managers Expect to Break Record by Close of Campaign Tonight
WAHLEMAIER LEADS ALL
Many Sororities Report 100 Per Cent Sales—Fraternities Buy Fewer
This is the last day of the campaign and Manager Lanny hopes to have a new record to hang up by tonight.
Eighteen hundred Student Enterprise Tickets have been sold up to date, was the announcement given by the manager of the ticket selling campaign.
The KuKus have charge of the fraternity sales and they will make a report this evening.
Floyd Wahlmacher is the leading dispose of the tickets. The first day he sold 150, bringing in close to $1000.
Sororites are buying more tickets than fraternities and at the present time about 90 per cent of the sororites have bought tickets. FI Blata Phi, Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Kappa, Chi Omega, and Kappa Alpha Theta report 100 per cent salts.
Manager Lynn urges everyone to buy their tickets today so that seats can be reserved for the opening game of the season Saturday afternoon with the Kansas Normals. The campaign ends with the rally tonight.
GAME WITH EMPORIA WILL BE HARD FICHT
When the dayhawk eleven goes in to the initial game of the season Saturday at McCook Field against the Emporia Normal squad they will have a good job ahead of them, as this season's top scorer is going eyes and ears are going to fight hard.
Every Man on Kansas Team Eligible to Play in Conference Games
urday at McCook Field against the Emporia Normal squad they will have a goodly job ahead of them, as the Normal crew have blood in their eyes and are going to fight hard. Every man on the Kansas team will be eligible to play in any Missouri Valley conference game, as it is the game where the team plays low the ruling through the entire season with the smaller games as well as in the big games, although it would not be necessary in playing with a Kansas conference bunch. It is the privilege of the Kansas coaches to demand the same thing of the Emporia elephant but they do not intend to exact this privilege, as the Emporia team will probably be made up of one or two freshmen who would not be eligible to play in a Missouri
Every day on the Emporia gridiron the men are being trained in the ways they are expected to bent or at least score against their strong Jayahawk rivals. They have the advantage of having played one game already while the Kansas bunch has got as yet gone into battle.
Dopesters will have the privilege Friday of seeing just how strong the Pittsburgh bunch is that was beaten by Emporia last week, when the Tigers lost 9-2 in Lawrence for a game with the Haskell Indians at Woodland park.
K. U. football men have been getting hold of some new plays this week, and also working on the plays used by the Emporia team last week, so they should be fairly able to make progress Saturday.
K. U. CENTER IN 1892
J. C. Coleman was First Kansas Football Middleman
J. C. Coleman the first Kansas football center, dropped into the football lounging room in Robinson Gymnasium this morning, looked over the pictures on the wall, until he came to a picture of the 1892队, "That's me," he said, "that guy in the center with the mutche."
Mr. Colman is now engaged in business in Kansas City. He was here when football was inaugurated at the University in 1880. He played for four years and later coached at the University of Rochester High School and the University freshmen one year each. He was introduced to football men who happened to be in the lounging room, and visited with them. The picture of Tommy Johnson attracted his attention. He started reminiscing a few days after he coached with Tommy Johnson at quarter. "They made an over-vioratory fault. Blame it on Tommy."
M
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Lausanne
EDITORIAL STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Editor-In-Chief...Walter G. Heron
News Editor...Grace Olsen
Telegram Editor...Rachel Pond
Tebbler Editorial ...Laurie Cleveland
Sport Editor...A. E. & Garvin
Alumni Editor...Joe Bogle
Editor...C. C.
Exchange Editor...James Austin
BOARD MEMBERS
Henry B. McCardy...Business Mgr.
Dearie Ripperthal..Ask's Business Mgr.
Deane W. Malott...Citizenship Mgr.
Ruth Arnetrom
Burt E. Cochran
Fred Gottlieb
Alfred Graves
Geneva Hunter
J, K Jistler
Subscriptions price $3.00 in advance for the first nine months of the necissary; yes $2.00 for one semester; 5 cents a month; 15 cents a week.
Eseried an second-class mail matter September 17, 1918, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 2, 1879.
Published, in the afternoon, five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kopenhagen, press or paper at the Department of Journalism.
Address all communications to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence. Kanana
Lawrence, Kansas
Phones, K. U. 25 and 66
The Daily Kansas aims to picture the undergraduate life of the school, and the more merely printing the news by standing for the ideals the owes to be clair; to be cheerful; to be kind; to be helpful; to leave more serious problems to other heads; in all to preserve the academic spirit of the students of the University.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 30, 1920.
POLITICAL APATHY
There is something humourously pathetic in the dismay of the Hill's politicians this fall at the students' lack of interest in the approach class elections. The opening weeks of school have always been the politicians' own, and the activities of the year could not begin in a proper manner until the leaders of the classes had be n chosen. But now it's different. Football ranks first in the minds of students, most of whom do not like that the campaign should be on right now, since elections will be held Oct 8.
But there's a real danger in this lack of interest in politics, meritorious as is the supremacy of football. Just as it is every citizen's duty to take an interest in the government of his state, so should the student find out what manner of men are those who would rule his cans, put on his dances, and issue his year-book. Unsurprulous politicians—yes, there are still a few —could casually seize upon this opportunity to趴在 a figure "figure heads" so they and their clique might rule law.
The new constitution did much to end public rule at the University. But unless students take an interest in student government, matters are apt to return to the old status.
Causes and political meetings will soon be held. Go to them. Try to meet the candidates if the campaign is so show they don't come and try to meet you. Talk over their qualifications with your room-mate and the other students in the house. Know who you're voting for, and do your duty as one of a self-governing body—vote intelligently.
PURGE THE GAME
Every man on the campus and many women too are intensely interested in the baseball revelations coming out of Chicago this week. M members of the White Sox team, it has been shown in confessions from several of the players, deliberately throw ant year's World's Series to Chemtail for money paid by gamblers.
The Whites Sox wore probably the most popular ball team ever gathered tog th. r. They showed that on their trip around the world with the Giants several years ago. The personality of Charec Comiskey, owner of the club since the American League began, had much to do with the team's popularity. And now the "Old Roman" has done much to save the good of baseball by purging the team of all players who took tainted money, although the loss in contracts will be an early a quarter of a million to him.
How do the fans feel toward eight players who took money
keep their team from winning? The eight men but for Camikey's prompt action might have done much to injure baseball irreparably, just as horse racing has fallen into disrepute through "the activities of gamblers." The fans realize this, and though they appreciate the enormity of the wrong these athletes committed, there little bitterness.
The supporters of the game realize the inmate weakness of man—his failing for "easy money." There are few who would not fight a mortal battle themselves to keep $10,000 found under a pillow if its retention involved only the commission of a deed which in all probability would never be discovered.
"I did it to pay off a mortgage— for the wife and kids," said Eddie Cicotte.
Of course organized baseball snall he kept clean, and none of these players can ever enter its ranks again. They deserve the bitterness of fandom because they forget loyalty to the team and its backers, forget sportmanship and fair play when their moment of temptation came.
But despite all this "We're mighty sorry for you fellow!" is the message of the fans to Joe Jackson, Buck Weaver, Chick Gandil, Hap Folsch, Lefty Williams, Eddie Cicotte, Charley Riberg and Fred McMullin.
FRESHIE GET YOUR NIGHT
SHIRT
You may be a modest and model young man, K. U. fresh, but the Night Shirt parade is one time in the school year when you must put away your modest fairness, don you night garb and be one of the gang for the big rally. It comes once a year, and your reputation will not be impaired if you participate. However, it may be greatly impaired if you do not participate. Every man 'n the University is expected to be at this biggest outburst of pop of the year.
Saturday night is the appointed time for the annual affair, which is to be celebrated with the usual solemnity this year. It will be a time to eat, drink, and be merry," and whoever does not join in is truly a slacker. It is your chance to help make the thundering thousand known.
BETTING LOYALTY
Is your school loyalty the kind that has to be paid for? If so it isn't the true college spirit and the team should not be backed by such loyalty. You have no doubt heard the college student, "Says old man, you owe me in bucks on that last game."
If your loyalty the betting kind? Are dollars all you see in a K. U. victory? Be a loyal son of Kansas and watch your team go to victory with an interest in the team and your school, not with an interest in how much you will lose or gain in money. Try it, and you will find that your Alma Matr will mean more to you than the money you get through betting on her. Come with a whole hearted interest in her, her victories, and not for greed of gold.
How many of us, we wonder, in the rush and hurry of the first few weeks, have stopped to think of the new student in the next room or across the hall?
DON'T SNUB HIM
Too many of us, when we come back to our Alma Mater for another nine months, are so busy with our old friends, and our own private affairs, that we never stop to think of the one who is coming here for the first time and has no friends.
Maybe he is homeschic and lonesome.
Maybe he is blue and discouraged.
Maybe he is overwhelmed with lengthy assignments and the newness of the work even as we ourselves once were. Possibly we have flung a pleasant word to him, as we went our happy way; but is that enough?
Can we not do more than that? Can't we take him into our midt, sharing his burden and lightening it with our friendly interest? Can we not share our pleasures with him, asking him into our room, and thereby establishing that feeling of intimacy that only a college room can?
he Can't we make the new student feel
to at home? Can't we make him feel
that he is really wanted here? And then when he goes "back home" it will be with a feeling of pride that he talks about old K. U.
Who ever is responsible for the invention of tans and having elong to them all these years should be exiled.
"TEAS"
When no other entertainment can be thought of teas are usually given and the freshmen on the Hill are asked to attend, usually in such a way as to make it impossible for them to refuse, so they must attend and be bored to tears.
What good does it do them? It certainly isn't an asset to their education. Teens break into their afternoons, take away their appetites for dinner. The tea is usually like warm and makes them sick, the cakes, toast or candy is messy, conversation is general because they do not know any one, it is also interrupted by the arrival of new guests, then to end the happy afternoon they must bid their hostess adieu and tell they have had a nice time which is not so.
And yet teas continue to be given.
Fraternities and sororites have breathed their last at Bethany College. The faculty of the institution a short time ago recommended to the Board of Directors that definite action be taken in the matter. The board immediately called a meeting of sororites among the students and teachers of Bethany should be prohibited.
On Other Hills
FRESHMEN MEN DO NOT SUFFER ALONE
AT 11:00AM
Mysterious proceedings began at Odily Hall early Tuesday, when at 3 o'clock a. m. the freshman girls were dressed up from their slumber by the sophomore.
They were ordered to dress and were led blindfolded by their superiors outside the building to the rear lawn. Here they were fed clammy, slippery spaghetti, dried bread and raw meat.
MIKE THE MINING ENGINEER
Says that if there were more
institutions like the Missouri School
of Mines, and fewer dress suit
colleges, like some he'd hate to mention,
there wouldn't be much probability of
a coal shortage this winter — Missouri Miner.
The blindfolded girls were con-
cted across the campus into the
woods. The sophomores handed out
lashlights and disappeared, leaving
his innocents in the woods.-Ohio
State Lantern.
"Call 119 and ask for the man it the back room," were the instructions found by one Freshman when he returned to his rooming house from the lounge. He was able to stand the laugh which greeted him from the other end of the 'phone until he asked information, and found he had called an undertaker's establishment. And there, as in many cases, the back room is reserved for dead ones.
—For Rent—First class room suit.
able for faculty member. Call 2329
or 168. 10,5-41
Send the Daily Kansan home
WANT ADS
Send the Daily Kansan home.
WANTED—Typewriting to do. Reasonable prices. Glenn Penn, 1228 Ln. 11.5.47
LOST- a notebook from bacteriology lab. with Cockrill fountain pen attached. Return to Bacteriology department. 14-2-16.
ROOMS FOR RENT--Four double rooms for boys. 1131 Tenn. Phone 2503. 10-5-32.
FOR RENT—First class room suitable for faculty member. Phone 2029 or 168. 10-5-32.
FOR RENT—Large upstairs room
for boys. Call 1534 Blue, 1329 Ohio.
10-5-35.
LOST- In women's dressing room at Innes, 'silver vanity case with fraternity crest. Liberal reward offered and paid. Pointedphone, Phone 99. 10-5.37-
LOST—Down town or on street car
plain kappa Sigma pin. Finder
please call 2374 Red. 10-5.40
LOST—Monday afternoon n Womena
locker room Gymnasium. Wrist
Gymnasium office Reward. 12-3-50.
FOR RENT - Three rooms, furnished,
for four boys. Suitable for light-
ship renting. Near K. U. $1200 a
month. Phone 1688. Call 12-553-
2.000 P. M.
Lost Tissue non on campus. A.
Marks & Fountain fonnite, without
caple. Leave at the Kansan business
office.
13-2-50
Wanted—One boy for roommate also one ram for rent with enclosed sleeping porch for 3 boys. House mnd. rn1 912 Ala. Phone 1937. 13-3-58
Wanted-Carvers Principles of Political Economy. A number of copies needed. John Ise Dept. of Economics. 13-2-57
For Rent—Two rooms and sleeping
march at reasonable price, 912 Aln
Phone 1397, 193-35
Garage for rent. Call 1286 Red or
1042 Ohio. 13-2-60
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclu-
sive, Optomirax.) eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass
Clothes Called For and Delivered
We are ready to serve our old customers and care for new ones
THE STUDENT CLEANERS
EATON & FRAKER
We press 'em while you get your hair cut at HOUK'S BARBER SHOP
Phone 499
929 Mass. St.
We Lower the High Cost of Living
We do serve fine meals at
30c
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jack Building. Singing. General practice. Special attention to nose, throat and ear. Telephone 217.
GIVE US A TRIAL
H. R. HEPING, F. A. U. Building, Eye,
ear, nose, and throat. Special
attention to fitting grasses and tonnail
phone. Phone 513.
College Inn Cafe
DHS, WELCH AND WELCH - PAMER
GRADUATES. Office 9025 Mans. St.
Bldg. 1010; Phone (347) 846-7500;
DR. J R BECKETT. Rooms 3 and 4
over McCulkin's Drug Store. Office
404 West 5th Street. (347) 846-7500.
DR, G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Dise-
tomy of stomach, surgery and gynec-
ology. Suite 1, F A U Bldg. Phones
Residence 35, Residence 36, Hospital 1745
DR. ALBIGHIH - Chiropractor - Radiob
- Therap - Marriage - Results guar-
mented 1101 Mass St. Phone 1431,
Residence Phone 1761.
B. FLORENCE J. BARROW-Os-
ronathic Medical, Office hours 8:30-
12:50, 1:39-5:30. Phone 2337, 909 Mass.
Street.
EDWARD 1 BUMGARDNER — Dentist,
Room 511 Perkiss Hldg. Special as
to extracting. Phone 811.
website: iPhone 811.
Z II TIBRETS - Dentist. 927 Mass St.
Phone 183.
"Suiting You"
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
WM. SCHULZ
917 Mass. St.
Varsity - Bowersock
Four Shows Daily 2:30,4:00,7:30,9:00
F. B. McCOCLOCH, Druggis
Eastman Kodaks
L. E. Waterman and Conklin
Fountain Pens
THE REXALL STORE
847 Mass. St.
Today Only
May Allison in "The Cheaters"
Friday and Saturday
NORMA TALMADGE
"The Isle of Conquest"
11c and 33c, War Tax Included
and
Two Reel Comedy "Never Again"
in
Today Only Elaine Hammerstein
Comedy "Some Baby"
11c and 28c, War Tax Included
Paramount Arteraft Special
"A Fighting Chance"
Also Pathe News
Friday and Saturday
P
1234567890
You Can't Dress Up Without Jewelry
And poor jewelry is worse than none at all. You should wear Quality Goods—and they cost no more.
We have the finest stock of exquisite jewelry we have ever shown and it will be a pleasure to show you.
Brighten up with a new Ring, a Watch, a Brooch, Fancy Beads, a Doreine Box or with a piece or two of our beautiful ivory.
Remember, we have "Quality Goods" and one price to everyone. That saves you money and you have the satisfaction of knowing
that your Jewelry is "right" if it comes from here.
Maybe that watch or clock needs dressing up
WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING
"Ye Shop of Fine Quality"
Gustafson
The College Jeweler
To University People
We have the most complete and up-to-date Banking Room in this section of Kansas, and offer every convenience and safety for the transaction of business.
In addition to regular banking business we have Exclusive Safety Deposit Boxes to rent in a vault protected by the latest Burglar Alarm System.
Customers' Room
Customers' Room
Ladies' Rest Room and Writing Room
Coupon Booths
Savings Department
Bond and Trust Department
Lawrence National Bank
"Where Your Savings Are Safe"
2015年4月18日
2015年4月19日
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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BY THE WAY
Dorothy Donaldson, c24 will spend the week end at her home in Kansas City. Hazel Winkler, c22, will accompany her,
Dorothy Brandle, c2'3, spent the week end at her home in Chanute, Kansas.
The Chi Omega Security will entertain with an informal house dance in honor of its pledges Friday evening, October 1.
H. W. Huff, c'23, spent Tuesday in Topeka attending the reunion of the 35th Division.
Charles Peters, c'23, spent Saturday and Sunday at his home in Pasla Kansas.
Paul S. Oles c21, has returned after spending two years at the University of Chicago, to complete his work is the department of geology.
Derman O'Leary, a former student of the University, has given up his position with the Fidelity Trust Copain, of Kunawa City, to enter Dayton Graham, also a former student here, will take his position.
Sigma Phi Sigma announces the pledging of James Reese, c24 of Smith Center.
Victor Tate, class of '23 of the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, wished his brother, Cecil Tate, c'23 of U.S. Uniplanen House Saturday and Sunday.
Francis Martin, A. B. '15, is in Villahermosa, Tabasco, Mexico, working for the Mexico Petroleum Company. Mr. Martin was formerly employed by the State Geological Survey.
Mrs. B. H. Rogers of Olathe is visiting her daughter Geraldine at the Sigma Kappa house.
MEN—The National Alliance, the most popular Lyceum Bureau of the East and South, will invade Kansas next year. Excellent propositions with experience. I am training the state agency. See me any evening. $o$
KENNETT H. C. HARRIS
Phone 2344 White. 1338 Ohio
Lawrence Lodge No. 2 K. of P.
Meets Every Friday Night in Dick
Bros. Hall. Club Room Always Open
to Members.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Sphinx, Freshman Honorary Society for men, will hold their annual dance at kobitem Gymnastics, with dancers from various clubs. The first dance on the Hill this year.
The sames of the new Sphinx will be announced at this time.
There will be a meeting of the K. U. Alumni Association in Kansas City tomorrow noon. At this meeting there will be organized a women's division club. According to Alfred Hill, club. According to Alfred Hill, secretary of the Alumni Association here, the woman's division promises to be of special value in the work of club. The alumni expect a great deal from the women's division.
All men planning to play varsity basketball this season are asked to report at Robinson gymnasium at 7:00 p.m. t.m., tonight, Thursday, for the first workout—Ernest Uhlrlaub, Captain.
El Atenco will hold his first meeting of the year Thursday afternoon at 4:30 in room 313 Fraser. Election of new members.-Leland M. Shout,
The Mass Meeting for girls will not be held this week because of a conflict in dates.
Meeting of all "A" girls at Robinson gymnasium Wednesday night at 10:30 o'clock - Marie Shaklee.
There will be a meeting of the Women's Roaming House Committee, Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock at Miss Corbin's home, 1188 Ohio Street.
There will be an open meeting of the Student Volunteers at 7 o'clock Wednesday evening in Myers Hall. Rease and bring some one with you.
The Biology Library in Snow Hall has been arranged to be opened on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and
Thursday nights from 7 to 10 o'clock.
It is also open every morning from
9 to 12 in辅导 Saturday and every
day from 11 to 4:30 with the
exception of Saturdays.
The Women's Forum will meet Thursday afternoon in room 110, Fraser. Mr. Thomas Harley, the speaker will speak on Republican party issues. x
Mathematics Club will meet at the home of Prof. U, G. Mitchell, 1313 Maist. St., Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 p.m. All members are argued to be present.
Quill Club will be met Thursday night in Fraser Rest Room at eight o'clock. All active and faculty members are urged to be present. Business only,
The first meeting of the Spanish Club, "El Atenco," will be held Sept. 20, 4:30 o'clock at Priser Hall, Room 1809. Attendance to be for the election of officers.
The Mrs. J. B. Watkin Scholarship, a g ift scholarship of $75 is open for the year 1920-21 to young women of the freshman and higher classes. The committee will receive applications until October 11.
The Prince Hall Grand Chapter of the Eastern Star Scholarship, a gift scholarship of $0$ will be open for applications. It is open to colored students, men or women, of classes above the freshman. Application should be made for this scholarship before October 4. Committee: Professors, Galloo, Spangler, Wilson, Winton, Oliver.
K Club meets Thursday at 7 o'clock in Green Hall. Very Important. John Bunn, vice-president.
All Congregational students and their friends are invited to attend a mixer at the Congregational Parish House Friday night at 9:15 o'clock.
The K. U. Cosmopolitan Club will meet Friday evening, September 24.
We have silk Oxford Laces at 35c
GIRLS!
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
1017 1-2 MASS.
Also
at 7:45 o'clock, in the Hall of the Cormopolitan Club House. 1400 Rhode Island St. Business: Reorganization and election of new officers for the present term—F. V. BERMEJO, President.
7261-2MASS.
TEXAS CLUB will have a short meeting in Fraser rest room Friday afternoon at 4:30. All students from the college get and get acquainted—PRESIDENT,
The First Presbyterian Church will open for services next Sunday. A welcome all at the Sunday
Celebration. J. W Boyer, University
Castor
The following books are wanted at
the W. S. G. A. book exchange, and students possessing copies are asked to sell them;
Economics, Ely; Sociology, Black-
nar and Gillan; Modern English
Grammar, Blount and Northup; Algea-
bra, Fite; Trigonometry, Ashton;
Handbook for English Writers;
Oddyssey; Elementary Logic, Jevens,
Psychology, Huntur; Botany; Spanish
Grammar; Calculus; Language
dictionaries, and freshman rhetoric
books.
There have been a number of calls for Jevon's Introduction to logic. Will people who have this book and wish to exchange it with the student book exchange in Fraser.
French violinist
You can adjust yourself to the unusual situation and be thoroughly satisfied with your clothes by selecting your favored pattern and style and by having Lamm & Co. make you precisely the suit and overcoat that meets your requirements. You will save money by ordering today.
COST LESS THAN READYMADES
W. E. WILSON
712 Mass. St.
Phone 505
"Oh, It's Nice to go to the Movies"'—As Harry Lauder Might put it—
Oh, its nice to go to the movies
with Rickey Henderson.
With hocks all locked and brakes all set,
Till homeowner you shall glide;
But when the "filmm" flickers
in, you can say, "meadowhouse..."
Oh, it's nice to go to the movies But its nicer to stay at home
The yellow roadster parked outside Has just crashed down the hill— Will the owner kindly step outside And pay the damage bill?—
INSURANCE
THE
153
AGENCY
Jewrence Kansas
"Quality and Service"
Before you go to the movies be sure your car is fully insured. Phone 133 and insurance now. We write for Americas Automotive Solutions for prompt payment of losses.
We are Glad to Serve
The New Order of DeMolay
A nice assortment of plain and jeweled pins will arrive next week.
Also a supply of DeMolay Sister pins will be in the same shipment.
Lander's QUALITY JEWELRY
JOIN YOUR CHURCH SUNDAY
The churches of Lawrence have designated next Sunday, October 3, as STUDENT MEMBERSHIP SUNDAY. In most of the churches provision is made whereby you can join the church of your choice without disturbing your membership in the home church. You will also have an opportunity to transfer your membership from your home church to the local church of your choice.
YOU NEED A CHURCH HOME WHILE YOU ARE IN SCHOOL. THE CHURCHES NEED THE HELP YOU CAN GIVE. THEY WILL WELCOME YOU INTO THEIR MEMBERSHIPS NEXT SUNDAY.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Corner Eighth and Kentucky
Rev, Frank Jennings, Pastor
NINTH ST. BAPTIST CHURCH...Corner Ninth and Ohio
(Calgored) Rev, G. N. Jackson, Pastor
PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH 925 Vermont
Rev. Ray A. Eusden, Pastor Elect
FIRSTCHRISTIAN CHURCH... Corner Tenth and Kentucky
Rev. M. Lee Sorey, Pastor
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH Corner Tenth and Vermont Rev. Evan A. Edwards, Pastor
EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Corner Tenth and Conn.
Rev. J. K. Young, Pastor
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH . Corner Eleventh and New Hamp.
Rev. N. D. Goehring, Pastor
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH... Corner Tenth and Vermont
Rev. S.-S. Kline, Pastor.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ... Corner Ninth and Vermont
Rev. E, A. Blek, Pastor ...
SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ...Corner Sixth and Maine
Rev, P. B. Lawson, Pastor
ST. LUKES AFRICAN METHODIST CHURCH ... Corner Ninth and New York
Rev. Smith, Pastor.
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH ... Corner Seventh and Vermont
Key, McCafferty, Pastor
ST. JOHN's CATHOLIC CHURCH ... 1220 Kentucky
Father Fitzgerald, Pastor.
UNITARIAN CHURCH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Corner Twelfth and Vermont
Rev, Mark Mobler, Pastor
"JOIN YOUR CHURCH SUNDAY"
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VARSITY WANTS MORE AFTER BUCKING FROSE
Stiff Practice and 30 Minute Serimimage Doesn't Bother Squad Men
TEAM IN GOOD CONDITION
Coach Still Working With Many Combinations in
After fighting hard for thirty minutes in scrimmage with the freshman Wednesday afternoon, the Variety was still as fresh as a blythe. They are getting ready of the hard training the maven have been goingggh through in the last two weeks are showing. The men are thoroughly hardened and there is not an ounce of fat on any man who has been scrimmaged much the conditioning in good faith.
The freshman line was working better Wednesday than on Tuesday, but they could not get away for any big gains. The freshback field also worked better with the line than in the first scrimmage. The Varsity had the ball for a while and made some good gains. With Mandevince, Silmon, Welch and Lonborg in the backfield, the freshmen were up against their proper team, using Smith and Sandford as varsity line, Smith and Sandford as guards, McDonald and Iyne ends, Higgina and Hale at tackle started; but as the practice went on they were replaced by other men on the squad.
Practicing the kick-off occupied quite a bit of time, with Higgs and Sandefur doing t he booting. Tackling and running down r urspants has been given much attention this week. The ball also has come in for attention.
Most of the equipment ordered by the department has arrived, and all the varsity squad was out in new blue jerseys Wednesday. The new Jersey is plain blue with the white number on the back. The brecchies are heavy, and tan colored with socks the same as the old togs.
Rooters at the Wednesday afternoon practice were few, owing to the alleged "cold weather." Overcats were comfortable, but conditions were ideal for the men working out.
A complete line of toilet preparations and articles at Rankin's Drug Store. 12-2
All standard and safety razors and blades on sale at Rankins Drug Store. 19.2
PIGSKIN PATTER
It is taking just twice the chance of getting more men hurt when the first and second teams of the Varsity scrimmage against each other, as it is when the fresh go up against the big boys.
But what are you going to do when the freshmen do not come out for practice?
"Club" Frinker has lost most of that big bay-window in the form of fat, but has actually gained ten pounds since the season started.
The Kuku Klan looks like a great thing for Kanaas this year, and it will be greater as each year rolls around.
No, it was not Penn State University that Drake University walked over for a 54 to 0 victory last Saturday. It was Penn College, a Quaker school located at Oskaloosa Iowa.
The freshman line is too light for the heavy Varsity line, as the scrimimage showed.
Coach Allen wishes to make an official call through this column for more great big husky freshmen for the first year line. He thinks they are afraid to come out because there are so many out, but it is very urgent in his appeal to all freshman who have any weight about them at all.
The Variety looked good last night especially the line as the fresh could not get through them, except in rare instances.
Kenneth Welch looked mighty good last night against the freshmen.
The rally last night was rather a trab afair without the Band. We will hope they are back from Topkai next week.
Sandy Winster did not like the rally himself Tuesday, he said he did not want to do a solo yell. Better come out, you loyal rooters. The Varsity needs you as badly as they need more freshmen to buck.
Pittsburg Normal is figuring
protesting the game of last Saturday, with Emporia. Is it because they got beat? Surely they don't think Bill Hargas would play professional. And what did he admit it was quite a blow to Coach Weedle a victorious season hopes.
This pepy weather makes the foot ball go round better.
Dutch Lonborg had his old kicking toe going good Tuesday afternoon, and was putting out some "mean" punts.
Young "Dutch" Lonborg, working with the freshman squad, looks pretty good to us for Varsity material next year.
That old stunt of the KuKu Klan, about an orange a day, is one of the best movements put out in a long time.
GYM MEN HEALTHY
But Need Field For Outdoor Exercise and Games
Doctor Naimish stated, however, that in his own opinion, the standard of this year is better than that of 1916 which was the healthiest in the history of the school. The physical stature of the men is practically the same but this year's class, as a result of an increase in abnormalities, said Doctor Naimish.
Data concerning the weights of all men in the University will be completed in a week or two, according to Dr. James Naismith, head of the department of physical education. An yet nothing definite can be said by data concerning that range weight of the men in comparison to former years.
The gymnasium work will be about the same as last year, consisting of basketball, running, indoor baseball and other games. For the first two months the various classes are divided.
Social dancing class every Tuesday
night over Dick Boss. 7:30 to 8:30.
Private lessons by appointment. Call
2236 White. 13-3-56
Johnston's Chocolates, finest quality, on ice at Rankins Drug Store. 12-2
WATKINS NATIONAL BANK
1047 Massachusetts St.
SURPLUS $100,000.00
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Receives Deposits, makes Loans, buys and sells Liberty Bonds and other Securities. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, and Travellers' Cheques. Food Drafts in multiples of $10.00.
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Minimum student subscriptions to the Ohio stadium campaign have been fixed at $25. Such a subscription increase is an option on two seats for three years.
Ohio to Give Options for Stadium Donation
1033 Mass. Street
Students are given the opportunity to pay subscriptions in installments with ten months as the time limit.
West
Jones
Taylor
A Good Way to Conserve
Contributors of $100 or more are to have their names inscribed on tablets located about the stadium. Those who subscribe $5000 or more will be known as "founders." A box will be named in their honor and hey will be given an option on as many sents in it as they desire.
The slips produced exactly the results that the executive was working for. Seeing them the first three every day, tended to impress all the managers. But as the manager was styling to instill into his workers - System.
Glasses that are good to look through and good to look at. Gustafson—Adv.—12-1
Let us duplicate that lens. Gustafson,—Adv.,—12-1
One of the ways in which the manager of an eastern retail concern is keeping down expenses in his store is by conserving all the paper that he and his employees use in their work.
A short time ago he bead one of his employees take all the waste baskets and put a piece of cardboard in each one of them in such a way that was only space for half the amount of paper that the basket normally
held. A label was pasted on the cardboard slips where the employee would be bound to notice it when he threw the first waste paper into the basket. The label road: "To prevent the paper shortage from being produced, we will produce the waste of paper one-half Please do so by using onehalf of this basket for waste paper. Conserve the rest."
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